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M.i Sun. vt da? h, 10 •. a. to 1 p. a. >■ BElji PHONE 3322-B. _ , if • KASY teums ow Ar PAYMENTS jUtUyl * 329 Market St. #jx|pE (Orer the Hob) Harris burg, Pa. „ hvrt Wt j —fiSill—lll II 'MI i MWBMBB——MM If you are looking for a cigar that has quality and If you want to get satisfaction out of a smoke, then supply yourself liberally with KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS and every time you light one up you will get the smoke comfort that satisfies. What's more, they're all the same, each one as good as the last. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO., MAKERS | GOOD REASONS FOR BEING THANKFUL 35 a Pp roac^es are p os " " ione^ r * s sa^ e> arc we 'i an< i s en ~ facility, convenience and courtesy SB''mM l^at a bank can offer is given them, t^l^^ iave assurance also thc same capable and efficient man agement will continue in the future 1 ..'cNw/ ,s 224 s MARKtT STREET FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 24, 1916. sovetynsuranee 8® Earl Copyright, 1914, by th- Eobbs-Merrill Co. ssss p ® ® (Continued From Yesterday.) | "I felt like a rotter when I heard about it," Harrowby put In. "Martiu j : "The Lileth," she said. mistook you for some one else. You must forgive us both." "Freely," said Minot. "And I want to apologize for my suspicions of you, ; Lord Harrowby." ''Thanks, old chap." "I never doubted you would come— after I saw Miss Meyrlck." "She Is a ripper, isn't she?" said Har rowby enthusiastically. Martin Wall shot a quick, almost' hostile glance at Mlnot. "You've noticed that yourself, haven't I you?" he said in Minot's ear. At which point the Meyrlck family arrived, and they all went in to dinner. It was after dinner when they all stood together in the lobby a moment before separating that Henry Trimmer ! made good his promise out of a clear ! sky. Cynthia Meyrick stood facing the ] others, talking brightly, when suddenly her face paled, and the flippant words died 011 her lips. They all turned in stantly. Through the lobby, in a buzz of ex cited comment, a man walked slowly, ; his eyes on the ground. He was a tall, blond Englishman, not unlike Lord Harrowby in appearance. His gray eyes when he raised them for a mo nient were listless, his shoulders stoop- ; ed and weary, and he had a long, drooping mustache that hung like a weeping willow above a particularly cheerless stream. However, it was not his appearance that excited comment and caused Miss Meyrick to pale. Hung over his shoul-! ders was a pair of sandwich boards such as the outcasts of a great city carry up and down the streets, and on the front board, turned full toward Miss Meyrick's dinner party, was printed in bold black letters: AM THE . REAL LORD HARROWBY With a little gasp and a murmured apology Miss Meyrlck turned quickly \ and entered the elevator. Lord Har- 1 MADE ROM SUGAR-CME J[ SnfTRAFINEj I Standard I THE franklin I sugar repining co. ft 'milaoilpmia. pa- 4 Sold in 2,5,10, 25 and 50 lb. cotton bags Ask for Franklin Granulated Sugar. It is the best sugar you can buy. Franklin sugar satisfies Granulated, Dainty Lumps, Powdered, Confectioners Use Telegraph Want Ads ! rowby stood like a man of stone, gaz inp at the sandwich boards. It was at this point that the hotel detective sufficiently recovered himself to lay eager hands on the audacious ! sandwich man and propel him violent ! ly from the scene. In the background Sir. Minot per j ceived Henry Trimmer, puffing excit edly on a big black cigar, a triumphant I look on his face. Mr. Trimmer's bomb was thrown. I There was suppressed excitement in 1 the hotel next day when Lor 4 Ilarrow by refused to meet the cidknant to his , title. The drowsiness of a Florida midday was in the air. Mr. Minot lay down Lord Harrowby Stood Like ■ Man of Stone, Gazing at the Sandwich Board*. on his bed. A hundred thoughts were his —the brown of Miss Meyrick's eyes, the sincerity of Mr. Trimmer's voice when he spoke of his proposition the fishy look of Lord IfSrrowby re fusing to meet his long lost brother Things grew hazy. Mr. Minot slept. On leaving Lord Ilarrowby's room? Mr. Martin Wall did not immediately set out for the Lileth, on which he liv ed in preference to the hotel. Instead he took a brisk tur_i about the spacious lobby of the De la Tax. The courtyard of the Hotel de la Pax was fringed by a series of rnodisb shops, with doors opening both on the courtyard and on the narrow street I outside. Among these, occupying a , corner room, was the very smart jewel | shop of Ostby & Blake. Occasionally In the winter resorts of the south one may find jewelry shops whose stocks would bear favorable competition with Fifth avenue. Ostby & Blake conduct ed such an establishment. For a moment before the show win dow of this shop Mr. Wall paused and with the eye of a connoisseur studied the brilliant display within. His whole manner changed. The air of boredom with which he hail sun-eyed bis fel low travelers of the lobby disappeared. I On the Instant he was alert, alive, al : most eager. Jauntily he strolled Into the store. A tall man was In charge. From outside came the shrill scream | of a child, interrupting. The tall man turned quickly to the window. | "My God"— he moaned. "What Is it?" Mr. Wall sought to i look over his shoulder. "Automobile"— j • "My little girl," cried the clerk Id | i agony. He turned to Martin Wall ! hesitating. His sallow face was white ; now, his lips trembled. Doubtfully hf ; gazed into the frank open countenance of Martin Wall. And then— "l leave you in charge!" he shouted and fled past Mr. Wall to the street. For a moment Martin Wall stood, frozen to the spot. His eyes were un believing. Ills little Cupid's bow mouth ! was wide open. Mr. Wall's knees grew weak. He felt a strange prickly sensation all over him. He took a step and was staring lj << wli Hie Eyee Fell Upon the Door of • Huge Safety Vault. at the finest display of black pearls The Magazine that is made for You If you have a zest for the newest in life, in fiction, and in art —if you have finished with yesterday and want the best that today has to give—then Harper's Magazine will make 1917 a new and inspiring year for you Here are a few striking features "The White Peopie," a remarkable Novelette Mark Twain's Letters to the great of the by Frances Hodgson Burnett, touches on earth—-and to little children —letters the world of the supernatural, and its written from the heart of thephilosopher | heroine, Ysobel, is one of the most humorist, have been edited fcr Harper's 1 ; charming and appealing figures in all Magazine by Albert Bigelow Paine and I fiction. It begins in December. well form the outstanding Magazine A Great Serial Novel by Gilbert Parker scr ' cs of the new year. which he has been planning for years. More Old Chester Tales by Marget Deland. It has developed into a fascinating and The much-loved Dr. Lavendar is once 3 tensely dramatic romance^— a story of more to be the central figure in a group j love and adventure—of brilliantly con- of new stories. 3 ceived plot and constant action. 1 My Trip to the Verdun Front, by Mrs. W. K. \ Booth Tarkington's New Hero, so real and Vanderbilt is the intimate narrative of i lovable, is "Mister Antonio," and he is what she saw and what she experienced. I one of the most human characters the ... _ .. author of "The Turmoil" ever created. Days of A Diplomat's Wife." Mrs. iNelson O Shaugnnessy, shows the Mrs. Humphry Ward knew Wordsworth' inside features of crisis after crisis—the | Mathew Arnold, Taine, Renan—the fall of Diaz, the triumphal entry of great figures in the English and French Madero, his election and tragic end, f literary worlds. Her literary reminis- Huerta and what followed —and more cences will appear in a series full of of that delightful thing the author calls 2 anecdotes and unpublished incidents. " Mexican Magic." | A year of Great Short Stories, for Harper's publishes more than any other illustrated magazine—at least seven in every number. Among the 1917 writers are: Margaret Deland, Booth Tarkington, Mary E. Wilkins, Katharine FullertonGerould, Meredith Nicholson, Ellen Glasgow, Fannie Hurst, Forrest Crissey, Alice Brown, Susan Glaspell, Clarence Budington Kelland, Margaret Cameron, Howard Brubaker, and many new writers. Centennial Offer HARPER'S MAGAZINE Next year (1917) will be the one hundreth birthday year of the house of Harper & Brothers. To fittingly celebrate this centennial anniversary the publishers have determined to make 1917 the most brilliantly notable year in all the splendid history of Harper's I Magazine which for more than two generations has had an unmatched record of success. In order to bring the Magazine into fifty thousand new homes during this centennial year and in order to make permanent friends of these new readers, the publishers are making this unprecedented offer Two Years for s 6^2 Regular Subscription Price, $4.00 a Year Here is what will be yours hi each year of Harper's Magazine —or what ft would equal if published in book form: . A 3 volume# of fiction (the two novels _ _ ||g| — of the year) 53.70 VrjW-' y- * volumes of world travel and ex- !W' 8 volumes of short stories 8.00 , X X. * vo ' ume poems 1.50 _ , ... , „ / \ 2 volumes of essays and literary PSMftjSsWl Each year of Harper s Msg- X X articles 3 .00 jii* aiine the greatest illus- r-_ nrl" I* 'J' jj?' 2 volumes of history and biography 4.00 " Wtvi*trated magazine in the world ranT~Dj 1 volume of authoritative aruoles al!Ql7WHlhi will bring you the equivalent L' If 3fiigj if ,on vital questions. ... . 2.00 I mm o !r ,y^ book ; <,monlh iiiuf! Sffiiiili I I lTO lxM nttfio .. d rrr! , rr a .oo I I. °' * contemporary * |, ,g 5 |1 wj volume of clean, Joyful humor. • 1.33 I The Regular Price of Harper's Magazine is $4.00 a year, 35 cents a copy, but you can get TWO YEARS FOR $6.00 if you accept our great Centennial Offer. Send your subscription now, through your dealer; or the Franklin Square Subscription Agency, New York City; or direct to Harper & Brothers, Franklin Square, New York City. Established in 1617 south of Maiden Lane, New York. | Quickly be turned away. His eyes | fell upon the door of a huge safety ! vault. It was swinging open! Little beads of perspiration began to [ pop out on the forehead of Martin j Wall. His heart was hammering like j that of a youth who sees after a long | separation his lady love. His eyes | grew glassy. , Then Mr. Wall shut his lips firmly i and thrust both of his hands deep into! his trousers pockets. He stood thers i tn the middle of that gorgeous room, a fat figure of a man suffering a cruel, j Inhuman agony. He was still standing thus when the j tall man came running back. Appre- ] hension clouded that sallow face. "It was very kind of you." The | small eyes of the clerk darted every-, where, then came back to Martin j Wall. "I'm obliged—why, what's the j matter, sir?"' Martin Wall passed his hand across his eyes as a man banishing a terrible dream. "The little girl ?" he asked. "Hardly a scratch." said the clerk, pointing to the smiling child at his side. "It was lucky, wasn't it?" He was behind the counter now, studying the trays unprotected on the show case. CHAPTER VI. Chain Lightning's Collar. OR. TOM STACY of the Manhat tan club, half dozing on the veranda of his establishment, was rejoiced to see his old friend Martin Wall crossing the pave ment toward him. "Well, Martin"— he began. And then a look of concern came into his face. "Good heavens, man, what ails you?" Mr. Wall sank like a wet rag to the steps. "Tom," he said, "a terrible thing has Just happened. I was left alone In Ostby & Blake's jewelry shop." "Alone?" cried Mr. Stacy. "You— alone?" [To be continued.] MISTLETOE MUST GO 80 say the government scientists, who brand It as a destructive pest. It fastens Itself upon trees, deformlnß them and sapping their vitality. Birds feed upon the mistletoe berries and scatter the seeds from tree to tree Popular Science Monthly, MICE DO "STUNTS" FOR OLD CONVICTS Loop the Loop, Perform High j Dives, Play "Dead" and Answer to Names Chicago, 111.—As a thief, says the American, William Rankin was a fail ure. So he went to prison and achieved success. He was convicted of larceny in Chicago in 1913 and sentenced to .Toilet for one to ten years. At Joliet he met a mouse. Ordinarily one would not think of attempting to scale the Jungfrau of success on a mouse. Bui the ascetic life of the cell had trans formed Rankin the thief into Rankin the thinker. He fed the mouse. They became friends.. Other mice came along. He befriended them. Then he started to train them. He taught them to loop the loop, perform high dives, play "dead," answer to their Individual names, hunt peanuts and cheese. Now Rankin has a mouse circus, said to be one of the oddest "menage ties" In existence. He wants the world to see it. He has enlisted tho aid of Dr. R. Emory Lyon, head of the Cen tral Howard Association of Chicago, in an effort to gain a parole. His case has been presented to the state parole board. 1 ™9^ s „ e 1 1 CARTER'S That Flush 9 tfiTTLE ; — rr~ —~ I lygp oil apotieaa akin is a tribute to ■ R PILLS. the correction of Constipation I Genuirm bears Signature || ioh!* DULL, SPLITTING, SICK HEADACHE ' Dr. James* Headache Powders relieve at once —lO cents a package. Tou take a Dr. James' Headache Powder and in just afewmomentsyour head clears and all neuralgia and pain fades away. 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