I .la., S33 wm.. Wb tahi-K r.ij - nP ' mvwmw r .jjf- iv w c jvw! aw?TB"Tiw :,..:?., ,"". 'iff1 'M' ' K,t lVlTlTW'.Wli IT '-.' " ' Tll.',Uii" ",'- sgKHHVHhHVQQhSHIIHHHwI VVWtffoe"4 Mi 4 .n y r rJUSV JLJUMJt&iJ irlilfivfi(jrZb lufier e 'Vi Mnn' Way." "The One VmcanM,n "A Bacheler Uutbanil" etc. ' tepit3M, illl, fcv Tutdc Ltigtr Company ' IS K B'.i i I tpIIAT in was a nightmare te mc: X all my "" " rn-iuci i ? Ien hour, -and tlie Bolemn .striking of V the church clock. Elsa would be mnnled In that church 4 thd, church wherd T wns married. j I closed my burning eyes, and tried ! picture her In hor'weddlng drew. 1 I knew she would leek as fair as a irfum. T told myself that even If Richard did net enre for her new lie -A,ild erew te de se. I una up and dresed before the servants were abeut: T s'lpped the belts of the side deer, and vent out Inte the girden. It wns se beautiful and peaceful, the .(r sd freMi. I opened the gate and wctft down the retd toward the church. I suppose Impulse led me te my boy's 'short bush rees grew theie In the -nirrew bed. and clustcte of -hep red C'inioed looking nl them, and nt his .sinie engraved en the tone. nnd I wondered If It would have made things tulcr had he been alive. lint In the end. no doubt. I should hive loot him toe: ne weuM have hed wife of his own. and she would bave nushed me aside In his heart. I went back te the boufe feeling en If I carried a Mone lu my breast. Kine wan en the" doorstep in the tunshlne, with Richard. They both caw me, and Lisa called ionic gay greeting. She looked very pleasant ami happy ; Richard avoided meeting mv eje. . We all went in te breakfast; Fran-' els hid had hie. it appeared. amKgene' nut dnwn te the farm, which he run for amusement. , "Richard nnd I aie going te, wulk our te Kenten, mother." Klsn telil me. She looked nt him ulready im n ' woman leeks nt her husband, with that nert of proud. ho-bclengs-to-mc mrt of joek. 1 iriCfi le Ret nu irwui lilt' loom hifere she did, but T tiled In vain. Richard and I wcic left together at the table. "I think it's ceins: te be line, I said Should a wronged man Wreak revenge even te ' The eeeeni generation? Should 0 dauehter be mad Me tcaprtiet for her fethtrh tlntt Rey Vlcktri aniwert thU qucttlen In en unmual novel, TheK Vengeance of Henry Jarreman" WATCH FOR IT Tomerrotv en This Page UlLiif f wrf .fJ"-v bed-T md pinned td the ground by some dreadful weight. I felt numbed And there wm dull pain at the back of my head, and prei ently I felt something trlekllnj down StfJT' il ." MenJ' l kn- d when I renewed my efforts te get frei 1 fait a dreadful falntness ei-cenin nv . I tried te cry for help, but we were 'wTi'W& twauMti&Her Wffr: 1 !" ; if?' LJQ m 1 1 ''- 1B 'J r . ;, mm0MmMmf &jim y!W-ff -Vt'' 'sutaa. ViELt- TK6 QUO UNCLt'S GcNfc THINK Wft5T eeiV. TXe LKT OME Wt'tU fcVfc 6EV- JOST1 THE MWUTt THE MASTER. SArX l nenw rnoweuNci ew MAH eNrJO WFt" - fffnTO VVLL JV)T t COVPIE 0 POO. 1?eAT0rtS WHH THE SMAU.OX Ve N0t4"T W TO PUT fc SVOK OM THE POO. EV.YHE&. T6 Keep HER OUT- KNO OV)T 0M e S WOVCt MM XOVJT-V. Stt THE TEMATinfc r euv ABOUT 20 PE6REES- tJUST LIKE" A HAL VT6RM KNOCKING' THE EMS OFF OF THE. TANStE-. NTEA Of JUMPING A0N N ?L0WEH,1 M XO Ht MtCK HE'S 60tH0 TO HW6 A COV Tt?- UKE CHOSN( THE E VATH EUZA- r - ' ' " v i " - t n i. ' - -" v J 1 L y Z 1 V V 1 ' TI iQN . V-SS I WW r -VS bK. C I B I l f t i. VttWKT CHANCE VJOOLD Ht HAVE F CfCe'HMbO0CH? TVTE. tRSTs TIME HE SEES THKT T,EwCH ASKtT "SHE NEf OX HEt teK1 "tTH& OH THE tEEfc AHO THOM. OtY CHEEW ?AIS VHt rWOMJ 'AMP THOE HANP'flKWTED ?1t.9tOVl3 WOH.N OFF HET.U THINK SOMCBODX'S 9VTCEP WWW ON. HlrVS- tuDidlr He did net answer. "Hew de j ou think the patty went off lust night?" I nuked. I forced myself te fate him. lie was loeklnsr nt me with witli an ejprwlen in his e.xe.i that 1 hid my I me BO far out in the cennfrv II, n. a .- peer chance of any one coming. I Knew. ! and I thought ' "Thin In hntr niMmrJ .11 ..I i 'im.i- .. I he.w my boy ' life went out 'aa I hope mine will go." ' And then everything seemed te sink away from me and the sunshine faded. When I next remembered anything I ,was lying fiat en my back en the dining, room table where, as a child. 1 had watched mv mother die and the air was heay with the sickly scent of chloro form. The yenna doctor who had bought pr. rnills1 Drnetiec the old man hed been dead KemC years wn standing bes hie me ami another man whose face l (lid net knew, nnd some one e'se was holding my hand nnd crying. I tried te turn my head, and the strange doetei vpeke qithkly. "Don't trv tn mnvp- I. In i.nii .nil T looked up nt him. , '.x.m 1 0,nt t0 (,leV" T '"'"'d wcaklv. ae no-you've hurt jour back SOMEBODY'S STENOGHave Yeu Your Little Hiking Suit? tfOOD MQRum l!esItcrJ V. .. i'awnt Offle? By Hayward we can t move you for n llttle while eui j mi ii ue nil right " I wn-i conscious of n thrill of bleak disappointment. .r"i0h'", I snUl' wlth llTerlng Ups. 'I hoped I wns I hoped It was all all ever!" ".Mether: Mether!" It was Klsa's voice that hreke the en- slljnca with t hut bitter crv. Hlsn'n teniv tntwdmv "ela "" lnul"ltlfRt fell en my hnnd-Elia'T klwc" ljHAlvniAktLt-tiMtAfefrttAL Kflft HA lifllllA I Blh- ft ... iur lilt hi ri m ". "- iiwi ic iiuuit.-i "U0I1 t t.n I ml'" uI.a ..kl...1 ' lltvL a.. . I.n I.. II.. tlt .... ..v.M.'u-.iiuiii.'uii. went nay Hint FELLOW SLMEfc .' "" VAHAT 'D OF fbOL OUTFIT S THIS T&vWEAP fAi .AM ORflCB ? ARE Y'-SbMEBODVs SHOOFER ? SILLY! ITlS'THE Latest. ts my AJEW WALklAifi SUIT J J- ng OH l ANV WHERE ARE YOU 6391 A4 TO WALK FAIR ON. ? OH, I DUNAlO- I M HADM'T THOU6HT. Vf-r 3T 'The Yeung Lady Acress the Way U HbLl ILL TELL T23U .' kieUi?E GOM'Te WALK OUT 6? THJ5 OFFICE, prettt Soen: SOMETHWeSS Af? UhfB. STRAWS Vhat Beer Camel's backs : p YU MAKE. xr -yr' " Tlr?C - - JtWJI. " .M this! le me that I had neright te allow tneirlnRe te tiiKc ii'nce. EIm wns my only eljlld. nnd Illeh ltd had no love for her. 1 had forced Mm Inte this engagement: was I also forcing her Inte n man lid )if of un bnnlneiR such n I mjsclf bid kne5 lie get up suddenly. , CHAPTER MA "This cannot tje en. Mnrjeri'." Rich ard paid hoarsely. "We have no right te drag thU child Inte our own unhap- Jinesx. I ought never te have wine fre; I must lime been mad last night when I arked her te marry mc " He .broke off for a moment, breathing heav ily. Then: "Will j en be brave and come nway with me''" he askul. "I Ice en. nnd it's the only way te save uh all from everlasting misery. I'll de cvct.i thing .la uiy power te make jen happy. T'c waited twenty years for you. Mm Mm Mm Jerie. will eti peme?" "I can't!" I snld. I can't ! Theie Is Kl.a te think of it would break her heart " "It will break hei henrt if she mnr ries mc." he answcicd In a haul voice. "I care nothing for her. Yeu knew He stepped abruptl and moved awny ii the noer opened nnd I'ranciM tame In. He looked angry : he glanced p.h p.h flclensly from me te Itlchnrd. "Where's EUaV" he n-keil sharly, Richard answered for me; I don't knew what he snld; for the moment J vh blind and dear. Frinels went On talking mi;ill,i ; r.e sniil that things had nil gene wieng t (lie farm and that he hsd te go oer te Ektlie, the nemen marktt town, en uiiness. "l'en can come .with me If "yen like." e snld te inc. ''I'm taking il.e car I found my voice : "'I'd lather stay nt home," I au wcred. "Yen knew I hate motor metor moter itt." . His fare darkened. "I wich ieu te come," he said. "De you think EUn and Tempest here want jeu nanging about with them nil duyr I tried te laugh, and 1 saw Richard's Midi clench. Elsacnme In and stepped furthercon furthercen furthercon vtryatlen; she and Kkhard went out to te Itther. When rinncls nnd I had get about a mile en the lead he looked down it me. "I haven't brought ou out for the pleasure of jenr chniming society," lit Saul. Knt- ltAiteiicn T it nnt t-n fnll )nu. Hew long has this affair fceen ""c f J eomfert. t tall. I.rtn. I t I1. 1 .1- I . ' .nil i. uiai ii. vll, 1 (III IOVC JOU i mv en my nnck for weeks, and Elsa nursed me .devotedly. "We've only get each ether new." she told me with a bi caking voice, and then she broke te me ns gently as she could what I nlreadv knew that her father was dead. It was net the accident 'te the car that Imd killed him, but the seizure which hnd cniwed the accident. All his life he had lived tee well well gene the pace tee fast, nnd new he was uenn. lVrhaps Klsa saw the tel'ef In mi eyes, rer she turned her face away quicklv. "I loved him." the said faintly! I I IWCSSed tllC hand tlint tnv In mlnn i "He loved jen, tee better than any one. ' I nniwereil. I wanted te ask about Richard, but It was (several days before I could summon enough courage, and then she answcied with a little laugh: "1 sent him away! He wanted te slny. but men arc a nuisance when any one is ill, se I sent him away. CHAPTER XLVII During all the weeks I lay 111 he neur eiue cniue te the house, though I'.lwi sometimes went te Londen te meet him; but I never questioned her nbeut him and she nucr eluutcered nnv Infor.iii Infer.iii Infor.iii tlen. Then in July, the decinm sini I might go ttwnj. I could walk a lit rie then, and every day I felt m.self grow ing stronger. "Where .will jen go, Mummie. dar ling?" Elsn asked me. She wns such. a clear little daughter te me since my accident, nnd I had grown te depend en her se much that my greatest dread new was the thought that f should se seen have te lese her. I tried only te think of Richaid as her husband I tried only. te wish for her happiness. ( "There's a little village In Devon Deven shire," I began, when she Interrupted: "I knew Mr. Temncst told me about It weren't you there once wheh he I was?" Ke he had told her that! Fer n moment I shut, my cjes te the pain of tue ineineiy tnen l .nilleu. "Yes it's such n dear llttle place. I am sure I shull get quite n ell there." Elsa arranged It nfl. She took looms in the same cottage where I had stn.icd before, nnd she went down n day earllei than 1 did te see that cvet.ithlng w.ihi ' jf GRANDMA, THE DEMON CHAPERONE Tli young lady s.is they call it w IV lui nciess th manicuring some unknown ieuseu,,but she liu iigims at leat ten women te om em nia n lime It done. :- Ity FONTAINE FOX Ms VZrZ.2mi'TCr.y, l " " , r1 SCHOOL J)AYS IVvsvJ" -CrutC Ahx PETEY Still at Pinehurst By DW1K SM'. vihatt veg Tie v. W c s $ Tue. etsr Ja 232). ftyJUL tvCft HAD-' I -Jfe- AV POM 6erviwt ceow?e & v -yfHiftfe JUT " A 60B rAWUteNl " vll jtT II - gglMaUgfulttkv'CJA k ' Itef MetAVHW6 Beil M Se AFRAIDlTlE MAkJAtcc of The HeTLVat OiiceVEta ,Vt- HVE HOJ40WJET Te PAV xeu and Rlchaul Wng et. between Tinirif ' I felt as if some one bad struck mc ' blew 0er the hcait ; I teiild net an-v,i-r, "Yeu need net tij te m-t the in nocent with mc." nij husband went a. "1 knew n geed deal mom than jeu think I de. Yeung ThoreM saw ou Inst nlglit in thn gnrdt-n with tempest making violent love te jeu. He "Mewed ou. thinking Tempest wns "If IJNa. Thoreld's madly in hne ltn her, peer boy, and of ce-irse wlldl jwieus. This meinlug when he heard M. was engaged te Tempest he refused stellevc it; he wns se furiously angry wt I asked him for a reason. He eterted it out then he sweie It was liifVii "nat hae you te say for your- iijYihat ve" Rn' ,s l,0,t,J tiue." 1 'em him with n flash of desperate (our ,,? "I hove leed Richurd all my iL'n i ll ,mdu't been for ou we weuia lime been mauled twenty jenis ni'i1 fnce Blew 1,vll'i l ""'hi seu hew i,..i s wcre 'inched en the steering Tt tnn ft nVlnnk ftn n flftttftua .TnK I evening when 1 dreu- up le the little! cottage by the sea the fient deer steed ! open, and the deer of my sitting room, ' nnd I i eiihl see that tlicte weie manj flew era in the room. "It leeks almost like n wedding," I thought, as I went Inte the room. "Elsa," I called. "lINa." Hut there was no answer, (imp I wns tinning away in surprise when I saw a letter ling en the tnbk ad-1 dressed In Klsn's writing with the one word, ".Mether." I took it up with xaguc apprehension. Why should she write te me? Wh was she net here? And this was the lettc-i : "Mether Darling: "Forgive me, but I hed te de It this way, or I knew you would never have consented. I breke off nn engagement te Mr. Tempest the night nftcr umi accident. When thy bi ought you home we both thought you were dean I have never seen any one se broken-henrtod ns he was and it wns then that he te'd me the truth. l'e been a silly llttle idiot ! I can see it new. and I hone ou will forghe me. When ou -I GOTTA 5CHETME Thimk VJIU Hake mim rci fHEi? Thaw OCKCFELLEP. AMD HEWOkft WORRN US ABelTtTUe. T5U. . JfPSri 1 VaTieu.'.' Rockefeller. F V N .AMD MEWOMTl - tdt . 0r.LVjfORRN US GASOLINE ALLEY Yeu Can't Stump Avery TTSwmtt MahagecTse-ll out TRat mA NlrPROFlT AkID PUT ll By C. A. Voight m METFi) A UTTLe CASH jS5 MAuagebT PHOWET HAS jflH cHHI AOeuT te, oeo mm r "Oeeu out of m iBI B&H II . . . iret this, darling. I shall be Teny Ther lne , , .,'":"'". ." fttea""! "c'!d's wife he loves me and he's a dear ... T - "I" Illl lilUlll J1LLII' tlllll'll'lll'l! ff aid hnd during our married life. ii. t,?d te keep my temper, but my .:"-" oreho down at last. I an- Inir Pns,sinately that I wanted noth neth impre than te be free, that our mar- n. .V w,been a tav bltteier tragedy te i t.tJ,a.1? t had te him that I wished Jgjied hs fnce-he grew gray-like 0f tVr.,?itheyb '"I Ulls mevtd ns ,f I thim "'" " iviii, nu nuuiiii paH-ivu h n L' ul f"10'' "e seemed te el C ? if '""'icath tin- blew of n giant CnM ""I'fcd Hidewash. helplely feirn ii, 'i . "amiH lll'""g ilmplj wlieej. CHAPTKIt XIA I WrnW0 in m I10"'1' ' d'd .". tbl,,K. for the uir swened llii- wa un Vi.. ..' J..'.. " Y J "' "7Tl.Vu ",,u I M T T "."" ,,,Pl UTiu-rcii me iiur; IM .ial-1"870 wnK " grinding Hound .Si i '!'"c swayins movement be 57 i , w,,ele th'na tinned ever. kJ:WIB lint Hll.tn i.tnn .....I tU ..1. 1 U'jQ "vv ... iii-ui, iiuu luuilgll A ?yvviiQ enerts te iree mvseir. I'm very fend of him. nnd we'm going te be quite happy. I knew. And se are jeu ! I couldn't have left you like this, only I knew ) ou w ill be looked after, . even better than I ceu'd have dene it. Teny and I nre going abroad for a month. I shall write often nnd ncu-r forget, Mummie (tailing, that I love i;ija. rend the letter through twice before seemed eb!c te cinsp its meaning. and for a long time hi termini 1 nhi witli it in my Inp, tifield te ircegnbe that at last the gates of happiness had been iinlniked for me "1 knew jeu will be looked after eien beltei than I leuid hue done II." Theso words fiein her letter leaped te my mind ns I heard the click of the gatu. nnd a step en the garden path outside then n step In thn hall. I I could net rnitw my eyes but my heart seemed te step beating. i Then "MarJerle." bald the veice I had letcd nil my life, nnd I looked up j Inte Richard 'lempcst's luce. I THE END. Wre Me H Thsvt-sS listen Fellas! Vie Can - I COOD! HADN'T THOOCHTjifl DEDUCT THAT ONE - A' MNUTF 0 OF That.' i must oil- stecc less from rf LLTMe BUNCHj ' vOlNCOME TkX NEXT YGARy X A tiy King M"r?gg SHuChrS ' THATS NeThin' ! I Just chacced off ioeo OF COM 6 LOME f?ATD CROCECV bTOf2E FROM MINE VpSTepaw I m l 3 iH vT.1 ifl v w i-1 s ' a V I', m TV. 41 i ii .aim L. 1j Ll vytm '- " . r 1 . .;,? t , . wb v 4& r". iMMMiMk& v." sMthWAh MJtelBfttti iW 'iv't'-V p '. ft".JiJ-fJ I $$iik' $mM I ) t 1 . A tt.&te&!&,.. . -. .-ir..i. . fr.i'k
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers