! Runaway | June 11 By George Randolph 111 Chester and Lillian Chester. ; | j! Coprrlarht mm. by Serial Pabll- ![ rntlon Corporation. TBIRTEENTB EPISODE Trapped CHAPTER I. fTTI RAPED as the Spirit of the | I l| Marsh, the beautiful ruuaway | |/I bride stood, daz/ed aud trem ' I biiujf, on the uldewalk lu frout ot the studio from which she had been ■driven. At the curb ato<id a limousine with its black silk curtains drawn. The white mustached man, who had sprung from it, grasped the lovely modal by the wrist aud drew her to | 'the car as the dark, handsome, black | Vaudyked man who had followed cov- j •red her (auztly clad form with the i 'voluminous black cloak which he car-j Med. Down the atreet at a tearing pace came | 'the family car of the runaway bride's fattier and mother, and in It with them were two of her friends aud the de serted gToorn, his teeth gritting and his Iflsts clinched as he saw these two •eoundrels bundle his pretty June into 'the car and hurry In after her. Just behind the family came an elec tric conpe, driven by a sharp featured woman with a long nose and high arched brows, and as she SRW this bold abduction she shrieked and ran her oar into the curb. As the door of the luxurious limousine slammed shut the quiet block seemed suddenly alive. Around the corner of the studio came bounding a handsome collie, which ran to the car, loudly barking. A woman xvtth high cheek bones and accompanied by a tall policeman followed the dog. She dashed up to the limousine ns it started and jumped upon the running board, while the dog barked and leaped. From a doorway on the opposite side of the street there sprang a short, wide man with a thick stub of a cigar In his mouth, who pursued the limou sine, hopped upon the spare tires at the back of the car and hung there. The woman on the running board opened the door of the limousine and forced her way In as they dashed around the corner, furiously pursued by the family car, the electric coupe and the barking collie. The luxurious limousine was speedier •than Its pursuers, but not speedy ♦nongh entirely to lose the family car "with the deserted groorn. It had gained •everal blocks' headway, however, ■when it turned a corner and stopped abruptly in front of a house where a vivacious brunette and a large blond ■woman stood peering eagerly out of the window. Only for an instant It paused. 'The door opened. Out of It sprang th ■ 'white mustached man and drew aft/ 1 liim fhs J»alf falatiug girt in the volu inliKuns black clouk. He put his arm around "her aud hurriedly fprced her up the steps. The woman with the high oheek bones darted after her. She hes itirtefl a moment and vaguely recog nised £be cloak; then she sprang after the beautiful young girl. The man with the black Vandyke caught her by the arm and held her back. He spoke sharply to the driver, who WR-S the treacherous Scatti,-and the limousine jerked forward just as the door of the house opened and the beauCfnl girl was thrust inside. The thick, wide man on behind Strug gled to get down from his uncomfort able position, but his cravat was caught In the strap of the tire covers, and so the well know n and justly famous pri vate detective. Bill Wolf, stooped over the tires, with his wide feet in the rack, bis arms around the rims and his head held (town, was carried swiftly away The Treacherous Scatti. from the scene of his sleuthing. The black Vandyked man talked earnestly with the high- cheek boned woman foi an Instant and gave her some money, For Agonizing Corns You Can't Beat It Certainly pot, "Putnam's" has 'em all beat a mile. It's a marvel on corns and foot lumps, acts like magic. Why for nearly fifty years Putnam's Ex tractor has been the standard remedy, the dependable one, the sure kind that never disappoints. It's painb ss 100. Think of It! Paint it on to-night. In the morning tho pain Is all gone. Small wonder the sale of Putnam's Corn Extractor is so large, 25c at dealers everywhere and at C. M. For ney's.—Advertisement. - r MONDAY EVENING,^ r 1 - ; 1 1 > i j }fj e h re Ready tO Fix Up YoW Home Nature is busy, and making the whole outdoor world more attractive—more inviting. She sets an example I that home-makers may well follow. \f'~- 111 /dfl/ We are ready to help you fix up your home with the things needed to make it more comfortable and home >!' during tlle Spring anc * Summer. , This big store is simply brimming with the newest creations in guaranteed things for the home. In order to start the season, we are, THIS WEEK, offering things at underselling prices that mean big savings to you. CLEANS polishes preserves A 1 1 • , . , «."«v »'V»» *-"& J ALL VARNISHED SURFACES ■ han< Jy nnplement for the wv *x« perfect «ano and auto i-oi_i*h Buy Now—Your Credit Is Good w f , r , T n tS fo,-undc trowel and dibber. 10 Hiram Polish. The best Special 15JC i% a - furniture polish you can our to a customer. Hrinjr coupon. T< t* 1 J-J c • 1 fjl l| Armchair & Rocker /fv a jt\ W Th ee Sp endid Specials Ideal for outdoor SKZI An Alaska Family Size _ _ f -11 c " %/// u • mTtt/iJ Refrigerator, drv air circu- In Comfortable Easy- W use; the pair lation metal Running Carriage* / ——— v lining / J Collapsible Go-cart, folding hood i $5.50 Waite Grass Rugs in T |r i 1 1'!™" CA are better than others. They are smoother, hold their color better. The patterns are hand- 1 wheels somer than other lines —you could hardly think that it was possible to get some of the ef- Ivi) Reed Carriage, roll around body „ T1 ... . . ... , . .... , X£»'»t I p I and hood, wood ar (1 A P-fi fects in Grass Rugs wjpich we are showing. We have them in all sizes. tillery wheels .... Jpli/.OU L— - - |j|^ rZI ~! | Regent /—•—. I H Floor Coverings vacuum F : ''NEW SPRING DESIGNS Cleaners '| 1 An Alaska Refrigerator ft I r b T>| nffIIiREGENT 1 lllniiKu —easy running, JjCeSKSaKßffa. .1 _ • 1 . , \ lllC M| —Patterns of careful selection, and they will perfect cleaners. in the side icer style, very i |'i 1 1 • 'i?,-'.' \\rf " a suit the needs of any floor you wish to cover. on easy pay- n«M i ooniy and liai d- fji CA ; | Regent F I Prices just now are especially interesting. I ments. wood case I \WI U ** 11 Brussels Rug, 10 /.XB4 $15.00 Two Exceptional Brass Bed Values * ~~Washer Axminster Rug, 9x12 SIB.OO s » ffj] UTf* is the easiest running Velvet Rug, 9x12 $23.00 j Tj |l|||l||| Porch Hammocks ?? s,ie - r 11 , , at ,r e kn ow °f. wntonßug, 9x12 $32.00 IJL e i lil L **uuimvvj*w j ts gmiple, llie parts are & ft i- (/01 ly i in large varieties.' There is noth- few, so there is nothing to Straw Matting, per yd v . ;25<5 ■■ t'THrffi j 4; fllll ing just as cooling on a hot. sum- «' et out of °!" der -. °" c " n Brussel Carpet, per yd 800 f MWS&IW \SI Ifttll i - 11 i do your washing in half the . r , , m. 0 . l\J /f ///£/.«, l i •AA 111 I'l l I iill iliilimr mer day. Our prices on Porch tinie with a REGENT Velvet Carpet, per yd $1.20 «JJTOli!ll/|i! MtH&R •0P B ® r Hammocks, including (jh WASHER Wilton Carpet, per vd $1.65 , .13 J. j|| \\T , Brass Bed. Colonial design. 10 to CA Contlnnous post, good tio en MattreSS, start at \\ e are agents, ___________— filling rods 1» head and foot.. quality of lacquer , ... .*Y * O.DU 28, 30, 32 South Second St. BURNS & COMPANY CASH OR CREDIT hurried up the steps and les himself in with a latchkey, while the Woman ran down to the basement door and pushed past the servant who opened it. At that moment the family cat swerved around the corner and flashed by, still pursuing the luxurious limou sine. it had lost this scene of alight ing through having stopped long enough I to take on the handsome collie, which now sat on the front seat with the! driver. There was no mistaking that luxurious limousine, with Its black cur tain's tightly drawn and a bit of fllmy gauze fluttering from the door and the faithful Bill Wolf still stooped on be hind. So It was that beautiful June Warner came Into the l>oarding house of Mrs. Itussel. June was ushered into the parlor, where several of Mrs. Russet's guest? were seated. All were impressed by the beauty of the girl as she was intro duced to them. A young man suggest ed to one of the three young ladles present that they play a game of cards. June stood before her new acquaint anccs hesitatingly. She did not know who they were, and yet she did not de sire to offend them. Her chief thought was to get her clothes and try to pro cure some work tU"t would provide for her expenses. And as she paused at entering the card game the door to the parlor sud denly opened, and in came Orln Cun n Ingham. lu Mrs. Russet's select boarding house was now a strange combination ot people. These were Gilbert Blye, the maid, Marie; Orln Cunningham and June, the runaway bride. CHAPTER 11. EAR out on Broadway the luxuri ous limousine, with the black curtains drawn and the bit ot ttilmy gauze fluttering from the door, turned toward the river, with the faithful Bill Wolf still stooped over the tires, bis cravat still firmly clutched in the strap of the tire cover and his empurpled face turned partly up, »o that the corner of t one pink eye could gaze back imploringly at the pursuing car. In that car, strained tensely forw'ard, Ned Warner sat with gritted teeth and clinched hands, never removing hi* i eyes from the fleeing limousine into which he had seen his lovely runaway bride bundled by the scoundrelly Gil bert Blye. Again he urged the driver, Jerry, to greater speed. He was de termined that this time the sbas# should cot end until he had his Angers clutched around the. throat of that dark, handsome man with the black Vandyke and had strangled him to death. He had wrecked Ned's life, this dastardly Blye, and nothing but a life would pay. On the very day of Ned's marriage the fellow's evil machinations had begun. The black curtained limousine just ahead wheeled around the corner and: dashed up the hill nt high speed, withl the faithful Bill Wolf wabbling on be hind like a Japanese balloon. As Cunningham entered, June, afraid, railed for Gilbert Blye. and he came hurrying into the room, a scowl upon his dark, handsome face. Gilbert Blye poluted sternly to the door, and Cun ningham, after a moment of sullen hesitation, affected to treat the matter lightly and swaggered from the room, twirling his white mustache. At the door he turned and cast upon June a malevolent glare. The boarders looked on In surprise. "Please: Please, Mr. BlyeT begged June. Come! His' low voice soothed her. ] "You must He down and rest for a few moments, and I promise that no one shall disturb you." He led her to a room. She up her pleading eyes to him, and he smiled down at her. He covered her with the folds of the voluminous black coat. "I shall return In ten minutes," he said. In the basement Marie stood with Gilbert Blye's money in her hand. She started for the door. She came back and started for the stairs. She turned again to tlte door, again to the stairs, then stood and looked at Gilbert Blye's money, her high cheek bones white and Indecision on her brow.. Uphill and downhill rushed the black curtained limousine with the Moore family car still in hot pursuit. Occasionally the well known and Justly famous private detective, Bill Wolf, loosened his clutch for an In stant, but tlrlr ■ 'it Immediately See Runawav June In motion pic tures every Monday at the Victoria Theater. The pictures each week por tray the episode published in the Tele graph the week previous.—Advertise- ment. hunaway June will be shown in mo tion pictures every Monday at the Royal Theater, Third street above Cumberland. Be sure to see ttoem.— Advertisement. (To be continued Wednesday.) HXRKISBT7RG TELEGRAPH ROBBED BY HIGHWAYMEN Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 19. —A middle aged man. who said ne was Miles Marteey, of Berwick, Pa., a traveling man. staggered into a hotel here last night a mass of blood and with blood streaming from a wound in the head. He declared he was walking along the street when he was attacked from be hind by highwaymen and robbed of his J3G gold watch and S7O in money. He was sent to the Mary M. Packer Hospital. He Is much better' to-day but can give no Idea as to the Identity of his alleged assailants. 92.400 FOR NOXIOUS AXIMAUS Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 19.—According to the records in the office of the Northumberland county commission ers at Sunbury, $2,400 was paid out last year for bounties on noxious ani mals. Weasels are the most numer ous, more than 600 of them having been killed. Your Baby Should Gain Four to Eight Ounces -j-gf If the baby gets plenty of m air and the little body is —W B straight and well-formed — and yet he does not gain that JSMkUMJTv \(^r" much each week—the food is £ —-jC probably wrong. Perhaps your own milk is not enough. Nurse your baby as long as you can—but when he stops gaining at least four ounces each week —try substituting one or two feedings a day of NesttesFowl Begin with th* six o'clock •▼en- of N«stl6'a Pood milk from claaa, Ing feeding—th* hour whan your healthy cows in sanitary daidea, own milk is likely to b* scant. Giv* carefully inspected. To it are add a bottle of N*st!i's than. If b* sleeps ed th* food *l*m*nta that cow's calmly until hia next feeding la due milk doea not contain, and that you'll know that NestlFs has sat- baby needs. iia*d the needs of his Bttle bit of Pecked ID air . «l«ht ease, KeetWe body; that it will add muacl* and reaehee you pure and safe. You edd bon* and blood—bit by bit to mak* onl ' fr ** h '« ,tmdr ' b k ß on', ,U |l bOT ■' r • Don t riak cow a milk. Cow'a BmbFREE. milk is all right for calv** (they hav* four atomachs to digest It) H , but It a too heavy for th# one deli- NESTLfi'S FOOD COMPANY, cat* stomach of a baby. And cow's Weelwerth Bldf* s New Yark milk may carry danger-germs from Pleaae tend me PREE year book end unclean dalri.a - conaumpdon - " Ul audden epidemics Ilka the foot and Name..... mouth disease of last year. The best cow's milk is tha baala aaareaa................................... NEW REPORT FILED Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 19. Aaron Raker, Shamokin. Northumberland county controller, to-day presented his first annual report to the court for approval. It was his second state ment, the first having been too in sufficient to satisfy Judges Cummings and Moser, and they directed that he prepare and tile a new report, telling him the first was "bungled." The new document contains more than 100 pages. BAD EGGS SOIiD Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., April 19.—Hundreds of spoiled eggs. It is alleged, have been bought during the past few days in the Sunbury markets and the con sumers are up in arms over It. They declare that infertile eggs are bought up from men who run large chicken farms and are palmed off on the people as fresh eggs at the full price. Tho police here have been asked to investigate. •j 'APRTI; 19, 1915. L—. I Holmes tested w«da, dure to (row. Big VvJW / producer*. Shrubs, Bulbs, Plants, Fer- tlliwrs. Now is the time to plant. Come in and H look around, you will And Jmtt what you H want and the quality and price will be right. ■ Bell phone Cumberland 70 Try Telegrapk Want Ads. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers