Made te Order Wiring repinishing tfP ophelsteriSg .. ' Smclallf 'n flrat-dasa ' worn W ' nf dlicrlmlnatlen. I (or pw" -- i!Fv ,(rni"h- iw' IiiMASlNDACO ,VMUBRv' J.iii.,tiHrkUi l '.i-'i'ii' MMi nT.- --." BEfJiTii!i 1 1 tfn r' -I MVBHH X i.- Safe i , Milk .FerlafsaU . ft: iBTtlidi NO COOKING .. . ., . 1 -- All A. i!Lfc Lunch at Heme, Offica, aad lgJAT01a IBUMi. euuum V OUR" STORE ORDERS Ittwir the Buying QMMtiwi iZm tbt fa are alin with Sum. Arm m whom etr. ems EJri.ll. Our lUn nbte joe IT!, Iht leadlnff ter t Phl. m 2rt f enr pnr'bMM. WlITB'rOR DETAILS TONIGHT Marriett Bres. nilCHE JTNU f ITKEETj rS u fZjL m Has your skiii at clean healthy outdoor leek? Or is it blotchy and repellent? Resinol Seap and Ointment are natural aids te skin health and they de build attractive complexions RESINOL Soethinq And Hc&linq JWEBia PSHVH RRMHHHHRi"nFaffiPR THE MASTER OF MANJBy SifHafl Caine An OutflDekeii and MevincrStudv nf a TWn S Problem bv -the Noted Auther of ".The Manxman: "The Deemster;" "The -Eternal City, The Weman Theu Caveat Me," Etc J h. Man's 'Lay Je Hard for 'the rr uinun. in inc vasci, IS OH' .4 'ttterlcc Eniugli" Punishment . or ;;,. Mitf She Pais the Legal Penalty? j, j : . In this Fjrank and Gripping Story th'e Alan,, "as judge, $its rn Sentence" en the Cirl Tried i 4? in sn ' '''"isV'i I SttaiMqtfdc4&wa Till 8 BEGINS .! 'UK STORY Victer Sloieell'Sent of the Deemster or Chief Judge, ef.Jheusle of Man, is iininuemc una of fine nature, lie is in love with Fenella Stanley, daughter of the Governer, a beautiful girl and with advanced views en the rights of women. In a moment of mutual passion he has had illicit relations uslth Bessie Cellisfer. a handsome peasant girl, stepdaughter of Dan Ilaldremma, a harsh firebrand. She is loved by Alick Oell, Victer's chum and fellow at at terncy, Victer feels he must marry her, especially when he learns she is trying te educate herself. liutjie is unable te marry Hcssic. With the burden of the wrong off him Victer proposes te I'e'nella. Aliek is drivei from home by his choleric father. AX I) IlEltE IT SOXT1XVK8 AVXVAX thut there could be 110 disguise between them. Ilewtle felt ne,shnmc, nnd tt never occurred te her that nlic had been fittllly f trohsen. Hut Oell ta'kcd about disloyalty and said he would never be at pqbc until die made a clean breast of It te Rtewcll. "Then go and tell him we couldn't help loving each ether," she said. When he wan f;ene she was very mppy. Mr.-Htewell would give her up. Of course he would. What hird hap pened between them was. d c a d a 11 d hurled. Whatever else he was, Victer Stewcll was a gen- tTpinnn. TTn ifnitM say nothing te Alick. Then come 11 shock. On the follow ing morning she felt unwell. She had often felt unwell since hIic came te Derby Haven, und the Misses iJrewn, simple old maids, seeing no cause except the change in the girl's wav of life, wanted te send for a. doctor. Hut doc tors were nsseclnted in Bessie's 'mind with death. If you saw n doctor going into a farmhouse one day you saw a coffin going in the next. Chemists were net open' te the same objection. Often en market tluys, after she had sold out her basket of butter and eggs, she had called at the chem ist' at Ramsey for medicine for her mother, He. savins unfiling in imr housemates, she slipped round te the chemist's at Castletown and asked for a bottle of mixture. The chemist,' an elderly man. -with a fatherly face, smiled at her and said : iiut'wiiat is It for,, miss?'. Hewde described h'er symptoms, and 1 thcn the smiling face Was'treve'. "Are yeU a married w jUR-am.?"' asked the chemist: Uessie caught her breath, "stared nt the mun for a moment with eyes full j of fear, and then, turned and tied out of .the shop. .aKaPaH M illy V .ssssssWWWWWWWwsmW. .ssssssssWWWWWWWWl MO I ?&. JSWSMMMWMmSm w 7 jl SWSMSMMnSMMMMMMSMMMMMMMTSWSMMMM9r mmstWmWm'L 1 " MSstwstttmAistsmsStttttttW t .A-ii-ft ; l,ft WstmsttW MALL CAINK Gell sat en a low steel at Heinle's feet, and beganrte pour out his story He was laughing se loud that the china in the room rang, but Heinle wits turning cold with terror. "And what about your fa ther?" she faltered. ' "My father? "Well te tell you the truth there was a bit of n breeze there," he said, and then followed the story of the scene at the Hpcaker's. "Het no matter 1 I'm net without money, go we can be married at once, and the sooner the better." "But Alicki" she said (he wax strok ing her hand and she was trying te draw It away), "de you think it'M best?" ' . "Best? Why. of course 1 think It's best. Don't you?" Khe did net reply. "Don't you?" he said again, and then, getting no answer, he became aware that she, who had been se eager far their, marriage before he went te Kallnmear, was new' holding back. "Bessie," he said, "has anything happened while I've been nwuy?" "Ne ! Oh no !" . "You're you're net thinking of the less of the income, are you?" "Xe, ne: "deed; no!" "I, knew you ' wouldn't. When my father taunted me. with that, saying you would give me tip lis seen as you knew my allowance was gene, I said, 'Net Bessie! I'll trust her for that, sir. " Bessie began te cry. Allele was be wildered. "What is it, then? Tell me! Are you are you thinking of Stow Stew ell?" At that name she was seized by the mad impulse which comes te people en dizzy heights when they wish te threw themselves ever she wanted te blurt out the truth, te eenfews everything. But before she could speak Alick was saying : "I shouldn't blame you if you were. I'm net his equal I knew that. Bessie. But even if he were free I shouldn't give you up te him new. Ne, by Ged, net te him or te any one." Ills voice was breaking. She looked at him.- There were tears in his eyes. She could bear up no longer. With the cry of a' drowning soul she flung her arms about him and sobbed en his breast. . , An hour later, having comforted, nnd quieted her, (Jell was going off, with swinging strides through the mist te catch the last train buck le Douglas. "She was thinking of me that was it." he was telling himse'f. "Thought All that dav she felt dizzy and denf. 1 1 would come te regret the sacrifice and I The., enrth seemed te be slipping from I wanted te save ine from being cut off She lay a long tfme awake, ,wtth. her ceiling. arms under her head, looking up at the Yes. Alick will forgive me, what ever happens,' she thought. And then she. blew out her candle, buried her head .ln"hc,r pillow, and fell asleep. C II When Oell reached the railway sta tion he found fhe carriages waiting tit the platform, half-full of Impatient pas sengers. A trial, which was going en in the Castle, was nearlng its clew, nnd the station-master had received orders that the last train te town wns te be kept back for the Judges nnd adve- cnM- ... . ,. .. "The Peel fisherman," thought Gell. And, remembering that this wns the case in which Stewcll was te represent the Attorney General, he walked ever te the courthouse, whose lantern-light was showing like a hazy white cloud above the Castle walls. . The little place was thick with sea mist, het with the acid odor of per spiration, and densely crowded but breathlessly silent.- The trial was ever, the prisoner had been found guilty, nnd the Deemster (It wns Deemster Taub man, sitting with the Clerk of the Rolls as Acting Governer) was begin- n middle-aged man who had.jtnce mar ried a rich widow'. , . ' ,,, At Easter, Morrison had pone off with the fleet te the mackerel flshlnr nt Kinsalc, nnd while there he had received an.anonymeuslctter. It told him Uint his young wife had given birth, less than six months after their marriage, te a sti'1-bern child. ... , , it Morrison had said nothing about the letter, but he had made inquiries about the man who had f tven mm tne neuu and been told that lie hnd borne n bad reputation. At the end of the mackerel season Morrison had returned te the Island with the rest of the fleet, and for everybody else there naa Dcen me uwu joyful homecoming. It hnd been late at night en the first of June, when the stars were out and the moon was In its first quarter. As seen as the beat3 had been sighted out side the Castle Reck the sound signal hnd gene up from the Rocket Heuse, mid within live minutes the fishermen s wives had come flying down te the quay, with their little shawls thrown ever their hcuds and plnhed under their chins. Then, h the beats had com) gliding Inte' the harbor, there had been the shrill questions of the women ashore ana the ueep-tenca answers or me men afloat : r,Are you there, Bill?" "Is It your self, Nancy?" Seme of ihe younger women, who had had babies born while their husbands had been away, had brought them down with thein, und one young wife, holding up her little one for her man te scp, by the light of the moon nnd the harbor master's lantern, had cried: "Here he is, boy! What de you think of him?" Almest before the beats could be brought te their moorings the Usher- men had leaped ashore in their long beets and gene off home with their wives, laughing and talking. Morrison had net gene. His wife had net been down te meet him. Some body had shouted from the quay that she was still keeping her bed and was waiting at home for him. But he had been in no hurry te go te her. When everything wns quiet he had shouldered his beat te the top of the harbor, un stepped her past and run her ashore en the dry bank above the bridge. Then going back te the quay, which was new deserted, he had broken the padlock of an open yard for ship's stores, taken possession of a barrel of pitch, rolled it down te the bank by his beat, nlnv tn nmnnnnpn Kintenri : "Prisoner nt the bar, it will be my j the bridse. fixed it under duty te communicate te the proper 1 pulled out. its plug, applied a match quarter the jury's recommenuauen te t0 it, nnd then wnlted until both bar mercy, but I can held out no hope that rel and beat were afire and burning it wi'l be of any avail. Yeu have been fiercely, found guilty of the willful murder of After that he had walked home veman, your wife, therefore I bid you pre pare "." ' And then followed these dread wer.ds In that dread stillness, which bring thoughts of the day of deem. Gell caught one glimpse of the pris ener, as be steed In the deck, In his through the little sleeping town te his house in the middle of a cobweb of streets at the back of the beach. Open lng the deer (it bad been left en th latch for him) he had belted It en the inside, and then going te the bedroom nnfl 'finilinir Inn vnunp ivlfa tn fiml tth fisherman's guernsey, looking steadfastly , u frightened leek under n timid smile, 1: A CIvX VA LAVA-VAR nished furniture and floors resist water and weather. Won't whiten. Prove vir tually playproef and accident proof. Their bright, clastic surface reflects light and beauty. LAVA-VAR flews en easily. Dries ever night. Try best-by-far LAVA-VAR! At Your Dealer's All Celers and Clear Felton,Sibley&Ce. !ncerpnrftt4 IV rillL&DCLPHU It U-3 Mat:iiatlurers of Celers, Paints and Varnishes since 1863 UWVAfi ffioeg SttSKSKM ' under her. Memories of whnt she had beard from elder women came spring lug te the surface of her mlrid, nnd she asked herself why she had net thought of this before. Fer a long time she strucclcd te nersuade hprself flint Hip chemist wns wrong, hut conviction , forced itself upon her nt last. 1 Then blic asked herself what she was . te de, and remembering what she had 1 learned as a child at home of her ! uiuthcr's miserable life before her mar- I rlngp. she found only one answer te that . ; quei-tlen. She must ask Mr. Stowell te ' marry her. The thought of parting 1 from Alick wns heartbreaking. But the me.t terrible thlnjj was that nhc found 1 herself hoping thut Stewcll would re- , fuse te release her. 1 1 had been a wretched day. dark and , cheerless, with driving mist and driz zling rain. Toward nightfall the old maids lighted a fire for her In the sit ting room, which was full of quaint kuicknacks and old glass nnd china. The tide, which was at the bottom of the ebb, was fobbing against the uukccii breakwater, nnd the gulls en the cob bles of the shore were culling contlnu centlnu , ally. Bessie was crouching ever the fire with her chin in her hand when she heard the sued; of the garden gate, a quick step en the gravel, a light knock at the front, deer, a familiar voice in the lobby, and then old Miss Kthcl nay lug behind her: "A gentleman te see you. Bessie. " Her heurt did net leap up as before, 'und 'she did net rise with her former ii'ncrlty. but Allele Gell came Inte the room like a rush of wind. "What's this unwell?" he cried. "It's nothing! I shall be better in the morning," she said. "Of course you will." And then, after a kiss, Gell sat en a low steel ut Bessie's feet, stretched 1 his long legs toward the tire, and began I te pour out his htery. He hnd seen Stewcll ami the matter ' had turned out just as she hud expected. 1 Splendid fellow ! Best chap in the 1 world, bar none! "Bui what de you think. Bess? The 1 most extraordinary coincidence! Dear old Vic, he has been busy fulling in love, tee! Fact! Kciieila Stanley, daughter of the Governer! Magnificent Itirl, nnd Vic Is madly in love with her! Se there's te he no heartbreaking en either side, and thut's the best of it. j Makes one thiul; these must lie some thing in Providence, doesn't it?" by my family. Se unselfish ! Never thinking of herself, bless her!" And BcKsle. In her bedroom, wns say ing te herself: "He's that fend of me that he'll forgive me, whatever happens." into the face of his Judge, end another glimpse ns a way was cleared through the spectators nnd he walked with a strong step te the deer leading te the cells. Then the courthouse cleared te a low rumble that was like the muffled mur muring that is heard after a funeral. Gell asked for Stewcll, and was told that his friend had gene down te the Deemster's room with one of the ad vocates for the defense te draw nn the terms of the recommendation. There fore he returned te the station with n group of his fellow advocates, and en the way back he heard the story of the trial little knowing bow close it was te come te him. The prisoner (his name was Morri son) had married the murdered woman lu the winter. She had been a comely girl who hnd always borne a geed char acter. On their wedding morning they had received many presents, one of them being a fishing beat. This had been the gift of a distant rclntien of the bride's, he had charged her with her unchas tity, compelled her te confess te it. and then strangled her te' death with his big hand? the marks of his bread thumbs, black with tar, being en her threat nn'd besom. In the middle of the night the fisher men who lived In the streets nearest te the harbor, awakened by a red glow In their bedrooms, bad said te their wives 1 "What for nre they burning the gorse en Peel hill at this time of the year?" But ethers, who were neighbors of Morrlsen'B, having heard cries from his house in the night, hnd gathered in front of his deer in the morning, and, getting no answer te their knocking, had burst it open and found the woman lying dead en the bed and the man hud dled up en the fleer at the feet of It. Te be continued tomorrow (Copyright, 1921, International ilaea:nt Ce. THE I'MTKD HAT STORKS, J217 MARKKT Hlrcet. ars Bhewlns a dltlnctle new li.it. It la culled The Comfert. Ailv. Let us help you save te meet any emergency Every man with a family leeks with dread upon the possibility of unemployment. With a saving fund account here, you will have some money te tide you ever a period of idleness. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers