H&& ymmmml9WHUm; mil mil " w-ii luimppp aawr.ii mi i i)ifniiliiin tun mint .i r ? T"v x rs'Cr.,.,,i fe . &:' - . '... t. ,. .."' gu uc AttW:-BrtMBAAe'm aMM W.e AH By HAROLD MecGRATH .. - . 4IU Sew tfM9M mud m hfmtifmt WW Um 2jSrV TA5 Mmi . ll,""lm Hlri," . 4 ok 'wjwMim ?;- etttmmt ! ww wwfiw 1 - . - -.- li'iitWiiri?l4ltfMte-t' ZMwgmm vwmtiBi :w i.tA v .. v. , Jx . jv . :f ;xi. ' " - . ... a f w.- wit vvonue twicr x?& irwm '' i.1- N R& I tiiiftt.fc rw Weirr te V' Witm Mt.iJf.Hf h . J . wvu conteiwtd a coo MSM w? 5L-. l aw - s - BBva sr- bbbt sssv. cssssi& SL-SLskwm BLsasai ssssa sssi .i nv? nr'iiP ni ! VMt Mrnr . l! ...h wno'aeee Mt, TM T,J.. who dOM.Mt !, IB 'IB - "i ji . "A ?. t ufc wn it li -," V h k la f iffijea-W :i rset-. ji -fcSffir fciips .7 But for , all that. .'? thither heart was mm w- Tigging biras. w". r- 5r..'ii have te wait uttit tm. Mr. Mnnlil",k" beta ffflfr irbn my contract uPlrei. 2 le'ni te foUew,the foot feet "of "be Follies glrls-imarry a 5un'Wwnnt any tales (.friends, " wait. u halloo te intud,n you want v , Jt. ; -Hrt-i id ttVeurs in.the village, the room c a r these m";. ?s;j,riu treur father iKLfift ffiJ: rst te reaa w "- TO. Mimtnt we return.' . . .... &.fMxs;ffi fSK S htedi. frbe peer an. li"lD.- tht-euih BO fault Of. MB W But bear with me, Jerry. In tt ' lceme. I' n often moody and iiiMT I am n feundllnf ; I den t ? "i " i. are: and never i? end that make me want te weep "Jr-JSie has lest everything rift I have brooded ever my own &". much. Remember Thanks- 1 'That night I tow jar. uwa Strrv him; and then I backed out. 3 Wm in that I wanted; was his St hurt Mm, who bad been . "5.fc ." L. 1.1-A a ll m' net half a. ead la". Jenny, t, "... i..m that veu loved Of- K an or later thU queatlen fed a sft v &.d ftt wm e t U the" truth!' '''I liLSPutettet maybe It la; but Jdfen the night I klsaed Jenny." riwu. or an:. i peer devil I" UiftVifi-Jenny?" h '.. Prl." P-;.?."v:i.rv: tV It. Jerry. Itiwai hard te cenfeai, even In the 3f,V:Vi.. .11 t hnv te confess." f'fte man dewnstnira i eeuld wait; V-.iS.tar could wait; this hour would SEi be repeated. The crest et bucu fT.K but for little; then i5he celebrated Nancy Bewman!" '&enie! I am like Koke In The llBade.' .Wafted by a favoring gale, '!? As ene sometimes Is in trances, tvrmtZ L.I.I.. .k.. nu Ann BI..1. pv'" Btvc by long and weary dances. K.fTliere acaln. lam qneer. I abeuld MO with Jey; ana ,i nnie loewneio m. wnat mn inmiiiB tu hk like this!" ti.nn tn nnnii.K and te worry KiflMUe, tee. All thU In the dark. KwfiF would be their sensations when iWhced each eher In, the light? lfiWn't she become critical? Weuldu't KMetetrve flawa In him she could' net fiSi (Utcern?, fr',What is the matter?" she asked, as I mm his baud bad translated his ljniht. B.r'Netblng." RtVTtllme; whnt is it?" If; "Iou won't change your mind In the t, wr 007 I vi ceurnv nut. x iuu im. Jernr. and I didn't love Mr. tfaiH. I wanted te set war from I ?Bmi. VhaV vawl. nn.1 lAth.H Ifn.a nnil "tte, theatre. I'll gar-in te Jenny, and .ai NtHiI I Kennedy may have my room. 'eon it rather forlorn. That deer- SUI And you must have believed your her a hypocrite ! Hut I must read net letter. He didn't have anything u Tite tnose scoundrels in the He told me se. what a dear, boy Mm nre! Would vnn llkn tiki me again? It's still quite eut." felt wm net two flights of stairs that ,m atr down. He stepped from wua peak te mountain peak, with w clear winds of earth and sea w into his face. Nancy loved Til ttxienh wnn nt ilia rnrh. TT.n. .ft ltlng patiently inside. '. "1 hire tu put out the llshts and g up," he snld. "It's a house I leuiht recent v." ."aive mt the key," said Bancroft, ;We was still n little doubtful. "I'll Alene sorry for forgive iJ'He will alnavs full n . S?i;,.Mldennct,yi "ff h the stnuman being I have ever known sue ... m 1 1 .B ,0 ct"ceal. Never per el M?lrhMml8h ""U upon the mirror .h. h.?". Yeu leve him?" V. II SK, ei everything." iVery well," Kennedy agreed, ,"J" sncy be snld: "I'm !Sv, """ you. Will you' was stranse. hut the. ? ldl? 50t jmbarraiB her. hain .kl'L Ket 80me "me I have El. ..Ui A jed you. A little Be &. J. t.b,ught et dy,n: but no. swjiMMd, Fer yettri theM hag . Sirft iV.m-?etHi,nr but venom; and Wu ;5 tmpty. J everything. I can't Stti' m lnt Iec- ! hve emerged IWaD7Jrlne?'but x nm nothing. vmspi you aiifi h. v.n. ii " W JOU fthrL h. V.. "HVni!il !ry w,,th eU ou' hearts." Wien flint ,,f ,nave bcen ln fn that 1 lmve killed a man?" '" UUt Mill ill.l n a- ttt,?M.e,?t t-ii7.7-: nuai veu miii. v.. e gene te prison at all if everything. Why did you Egu't hav had told Ml.nttl, 1 wag mad. (lUltA tnflrl ..J All -.-l Z WJL l hd only one' &,; ZJW "Wnd 'fills. TanM. EN a neeV.?" aeD?. me possessed ft ilgy trick f'en !at 0 lawv.. . .il. '"," Vu ie sp- 0t de Lea, ..lBrraA' W'' Cl " une&'K.Mth'e in th. ..'- i "Peciea the sen- . - ..v bi:liiiii na.. a ai staq me milt. ." .TLS'5"i. BUL nl irvmV.,.l' IV I had I waa BivvunuBn vmk "' .-: -" vr b rwy h. . . iWfe3Twara W lt me" be new .?Y,U' perhaw gT hVnrWVnsV0" ", "47. 'or : l the boy.""' But no mer FCdrivearnCr0ft -1' ". flWei .h!J? JFC??" ''aleits WterT K,k1 'VH' usle, ' ""W'tlity will be " tot In, ..u,, NMcy M . " alt f yeunt wemari with m talent for buMness meltfer making money, who la surrounded by cloud of tela tlves, friends,' levers, schemers and adventurers who tax their wits' plan ning hew te spend her money. As a result she makes an arrangement with a ypung man which te as, un heard of, and clever, and utterly .brand new as. anyiplart-even that, original novelist, Bert Ruck, has' ever thought of. Of course, the 'plot develop Inte charming and complicated romance. Begin te read "The MtaHBMlMM Ceartehfe" Tharsday ' between, lie was transcendentally happy, and he had te express aloud this happiness te keep his body, from flying up through the reef et the tail and vanishing into the ether. lie said se. But underneath 'his bubbling nonsense was a serious purpose, Fer a long time te come Kennedy would breed ever the death of Silas Bancroft, lie would be eternally seeing Silas reach out lewara him and die. nimseir a gassive murderer. He had shocked lias Bancroft te death; but any one of a thousand surprises would have shocked Bliss Bancroft te death. The point was te make Kennedy accept this fact. Kennedy had brooded himself into one madness; he might easily breed himself into another suicidal. Be sides, he would new be drawing com parisons Bancroft's loyalty as against bis own, and finding his a flabby thing indeed. Se young Bancroft was deter mined te keep by the man. If he saw that the son rejected the Idea that murder had been done, eventually Ken nedy might be made te de se. j Bancroft analyzed his thoughts care fully and found that there was no emo tion ether than profound pity for the man' his father had se loved. The hell through which the man bad passed! A weak man might have whimpered and gene en; but a strong man, vital In brain and body ! Something had twisted in Kennedy's brain,' under tba terrific Impact of his mlfertunes, and only tonight had this kink straightened out. The letter had said that there were high and worthy qualities te love, in this man; and these might be un covered and their luster renewed by the process of time. Se then',' te keep close by antll Kennedy bad get some perspectives. What a companion be would be. I The Great Adventure Com pany! . "will you be wanting these -books, sir?" he asked. "Ne. They are yours. They mean a geed deal mere te you new than they de te me. But what became of your father's; thlnge?" "Don't you remember? He said In the letter that he had te sell everything te make a new start." "A new start." There was a lull. Bancroft searched for Nancy's hand and found it. Then be fell te describing the adventure of the ambassador's suite, of his majestic sensations, of renting his first dress suit, of discovering Nanev'a who te- graph, all Interpolated by shrewd com mentarlea. Innocent Bystanders Strange. te. state, Kennedy; found, this chatter amusing. The boy bad the gift ei uescriDing things as they were, or tearing oil the motley and revealing the bones but without the bitterness of the matured philosopher. Kennedy felt himself nmused; and ftem this basis n thought began te work eutwnrd. If the boy could amuse him in this black hour, It might be that contact with the youngster would stir Inte life again all these attributes se long atrophied for want of usage. Of course, this Incon sequent chatter was uttered purposely te divert a-breeding mind; but, the point was, the ruse succeeded. Kennedy found himself amused. "Jerry," said Nancy, "what's Jere miah mean?" "Hanged If I knew." "It means the Lord's exalted In his case," said Kennedy. "What It means in my case, only Ged knows." , "Nancy, what am I going te de? My father's letter which Is really the true will orders that I pay ever te Mr. Kennedy half of what I have, and be refuses it." ' "And always will. I am no longer troubled by an obsessien: I am troubled only by regret. When I came out of prison It waa tee late te pick up the truth; and such was the power of my obsession I shouldn't have recegnised the truth had I seen it. A little patience in the beginning, and Silas and I might have worked together te retrieve our fortunes. But no. Battle, murder and sudden deatlr! But always remember, I went te prison for an act of my own. We shall net relate it te the original catastrophe." "Sir, they are inseparable. Cm beard the ship, before you put In, you were tremendously happy. Yeu were, ac cording te the market reports, a rich man; the years of bondage were ever. Frem the peak of happiness te the bot tom of despair, all In an hour, or two, Ik mere than any human brain can stand. Something become twisted in your peer head and only this night readjusted Itself." "But what confuses me Is your at titude. Yeu should bold me In horror." "But there Is always my father'a letter, sir; bis will that I should find you and help you if I could. That waa enough for me. Besides, you were com ing back en your own. Your original notion was te de away with me ; in the end you demanded only what you con sidered legally yours. The past was coming back. Yeu began, perhaps sub consciously, te me my father-in me, when you were eung. After all ran your thought I was guilty of nothing. Be you would take what you considered yours, and vnntmi. une ureal Ad venture Company ! Don't you see, sir. that I am greatly Indebted te you? Yeu have indirectly given me mere than I ever dreamed of having. If you. had net lured me out of it I might still be In that village; whereas I cams te the great city and found adventure and love." Nancy, with pnsstonate tenderness, pressed bis band. It came te her that 1.I10 would always be two things in this boy's life his mother and his sweet heart. "Innocent bystanders," mused Ken nedy, it "All of us, every human being that Uvea, passively or actively. Innocent by standers, paying the price et another men's roguery, naif the time a man we never heard of." "Dd with me aa you will," said Kennedy, In cemplete surrender. "The Shadow was right." "The Shadow?" "Fer several daya you ware under constant surveillance. He warned me that I waa underestimating you. And I told him net te think, thinking being my part, He was right. What a wild night that was I I steed outside your window, watching you, weiihlns you." 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers