BjH Readii\c[ &i\d all ike R\iwil\j jPHU "The Insider" By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XVIII Copyright, 1917, Star Company "iliss Dart, this is my son, Tom Nor ton," her employer said. "Tom, I want you to know Miss Dart, Grace's gov erness." It was Sunday- morning and Grace and 1 had just entered the dining room. The young master of the house had arrived after dinner the night be fore. He and his father were seated at the table by the time that Grace and 1 came down to breakfast, for the j child had slept later than usual to day. "How do you do?" I said, holding 1 out my hand to the tall lad, who came s forward as soon as I was named. "1 1 am glad to meet you." "Thank you," he rejoined, returning j my handshake somewhat awkwardly. | "Hello, Grace!" "Hello!" she greeted liim, holding, out her hand as she had seen me do. | "Kiss him, daughter," Air. Norton! t ommanded. The boy flushed as if he did not care to force his demonstrations upon the] child, and she lifted her lips reluctant ly for his perfunctory salute. Since the Sunday noon, some weeks I nyo when Mr. Norton had had Grace [ and me come to the large table with j him, our ptaoes hud been laid here fori breakfast and dinner on the t\rst day of the week. If there had been any! protest about this arrangement on the part of Mrs. Gore, I did not know of it. On other days the child and 1 sat at the small table for breakfast and early aupper, and with Mrs. Gore at I luncheon. This morning 1 found myself oppo site young Tom Norton. The light from the window fell full upon his! face and 1 started as I met his gaze, i He was evidently interested In learn ing what his sister's governess looked like, and he stared into my eyes with a directness that was disconcerting. Where had I seen an expression that \ was the counterpart of his? A Resemblance. Then I remembered. The same deep-set eyes had gazed from the por trait above the boy's bed in the room upstairs. The expression was identi-! cal. The lad's mouth was like the 1 mouth in the painting. The dark curls; above the boyish face fell over the; forehead as did those above the fore- . head in that picture. Of course, that was Tom's mother! 1 might have known that. 1 told my self as I glanced away quickly. But how utterly unlike the boy and his sister were! IW was tall, sturdy, and dark, with keen black eyes, ruddy; cheeks and strong features. Grace) was slight, fair and dainty, with wide, light gray eyes and pale hair. It was hard to imagine the pair as children J of the same mother. Then, as I looked at my employer, 1 saw that his chil- ' lren bore only a slight resemblance to him —too slight to be noticeable. He was talking with his son as lie j might have talked with any fellow in whom he was interested. I thought that he seemed to be making an effort i > draw the lnd out. Tom himself! •chatted politely, but there was little' A^Pur^A^heLilly^^^SE and as clear and soft. Your skin and complexion will iS always have a \vonderful^^\/S^o appearance if you will constantly use £ Gouraud's Oriental Cream Send 10c. for Trial Size FKRP T. HOPKINS & SOX. New York [ LJl ™ Bl 111 IM "™" f ; 'X'^igTrryiip^ Spring and Sum- j mrr Goods \in *■>>•• Suit* hh l,un hk 915.00 It's the workmanship that counts! ; THOMAS |\ M(HI \ \ M l X. Third St. *' ii—n—^ is GEORGE H. SOURBIER * FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1310 North Third Street Phone. Anta Srrvler.W THORLEY'S DRUG STORE IS NOW LOCATED AT 404 BROAD STREET R.D.Pratt Specialist ) / \ 26 N. Third St. (Schleisner Bldg., I It's a serious mistake to impair the nerve f - „" y force of your ejes by continuing on without fIT "LMK glasses when they seem tired or the vision is I 'P? V .W imperfect. [ f A thorough knowledge of optometry and the 1 :> m finest instruments used in the profession en- V ■ K / ab 'es me to fit glasses that will preserve the \ X-M* nerve for ce, which is life to the eye. SATISFACTORY SERVICE I at the same reasonable prices that prevailed at Xfgy I my former location. tCoal Prices Going Up Better lay In your winter's supply now while low prices prevail. more" W#lt much lon B e r. you'll have to pay Remember your pocketbook is your beat J. B. MONTGOMERY THIRD AND CHESTNUT STS. Bell Phone 600 C. V. 4321 SATURDAY EVENING, y lof the affectionate camaraderie that (often exists between father and son. We had nearly tlnished breakfast '! when the boy spoke suddenly, as if try -|ing to make a confession. . j "Father—l have asked a man I J know at school to spend a couple of days and nights here. I hope you ' don't mind?" The father looked up In surprise. "Why, no, Tom," slowly, "I do not mind, of course. But who is he?" "Hugh Parker," Tom replied. "He has been doing some special teaching down at school—coaching, you know, jHe has been kind to me —and has helped me when 1 haven't understood Imy mathematics sometimes. 1 hate 1 maths," he added, parenthetically, l "Your marks show that fact," Ills j 1 father remarked dryly. "But never j mind about that now. You say you! asked Mr. Parker to come here'.'" j j "Yes, sir. The way of It was this," | JTom hurried on. as If to exonerate! I himself of any possible blame. "Mr. ; Parker happened to say he was com-! ling to New York this week. He wants I |to go to the opera and theater and! j things like that—and I said I was sure | ! you would be glad to have him here; Ifor a night or so. "He thanked me, but said he had j engaged a room at a hotel. But I j ; know where he is stopping, and lj thought if you didn't mind I would call ' him up there and tell him to come I 1 here." Mr. Norton smiled indulgently. "I think, my son." he observed, "that Mr. j Parker would hardly come on your, invitation unless mine accompanied it." The Puzzle Deepens. The words were not unkind, yet I j saw that they mortified the person to ; whom they were addressed, j "I beg your pardon," Tom said, : i stiffly. "I did not mean to presume." j "You could not presume in your i own father's house," the parent cor- i rected. Then there was a long silence. From time to time the older man glanced at j i the younger one thoughtfully, yet! 1 with a certain baffled look in his eyes, i It was almost as if he were apologizing i lo his son in his heart, although at the same time criticising the youth and; ' his evident sensitiveness. - ! Later, 1 heard Mr. Norton calling' j up the hotel at which the lad's tutor | was staying. 1 was sure he was trying i .to atone for the manner which his boy had resented. I wondered why I this father and son misunderstood each other, while Grace and her! father seemed thoroughly congenial. ; Pondering on the matter later in! the day when I was alone with Mrs. j ; Gore. 1 spoke a part of my thought.! i "The picture above your nephew's bed is of his mother, isn't it?" "Yes," Mrs. Gore said quickly, "it is. ! 1 Tom looks like her." Although the speaker changed the! ! conversation abruptly to another topic, as if to avoid further questioning, my mind lingered upon the subject. If that was the children's mother.; why did Grace not know whose the' picture was? Surely some one should ! have told the child about her own 1 mother! (To Be Continued.) FATIIKR AXI) SOX BANQUET Waynesboro, Pa., March 24.—The! j father and son banquet at the Young Men's Christian Association this even ing will be one of the best events of the boys' department for the year. C. \V. Cremer will be toastmaster and preside over the speeches, which in- ! elude an address by the Kev. Charles i W. Savors, boys' secretary of the * oung Men's Christian Association at Lancaster. HK.MtV AKMBI/STER BI'RIKD Williamstown. Pa., March 24.—llenry j Arnibuster, aged 59 years, died at his j home. East Market street, lie is sur | vived by his wife, one son and one j daughter. Funeral services were held this morning, with burial in the New [ Catholic Cemetery. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Retrard for anj ctse of Catarrh that cannot be cured br llall'c i Catarrh Curr. i F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O. ! We. the undersigned, hare known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hia perfectly honorable in all business transaction! 1 and financially able to carrj out any obligation* made by hla Ann. NAT. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo, Ohio, j | Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting | directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonial* sent free. Prlca TC cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. ; Take tfall'4 Family Pills for constipation* Copyright. 11, by Do u bladay, "p aga A Ca! (Conunuiid.) "ljuiiung is the one thing you have to pay cash for throughout." said Tal bot regretfully. "Labor and materials demand gold. But I see my way clear, and a tirst class, well appoi ed busi ness block lu this town right now is worth more than the United States mint. That's cash coming in for you regularly every month. It will pay from the start four or five times the amount necessary to keep everything else atloat. Jim Reckett has taken the entire lower floor at thirty thousand. The offices upstairs will pay from a thousand a month up, and they are every one rented in advance. Once we get our rents coming in the strain is relieved. I can begin to take up my mortgages and loans, and once that is begun we are on the road to Milllon alrevllle." Once more he recapitulated his af fairs—the land on the Plaza, two hun dred thousand; the building, eighty thousand; the Harbor View lands, any thing they might rise to, but nearly a quarter mlltion now; ten thousand par value of the wharf stock already pay ing dividends; real estate here and there, and everywhere In the path of the city's growth; shares in a new ho tel that must soon touch par; the plank road —as we jotted down the figures nnd the magic total grew such trifling little affairs as gold mines dropped quite below the horly.on. We stared at Talbot, fascinated. And then for the first time we learn ed that the $5,000 we had sent down from Hangman's Gulch and the sum left from the robbery were not slum bering in some banker's safe, but had been sent dancing with the other dol lars at Talbot's command. "I didn't know just what you fel lows Intended," said he, "but we were partners up there at the mines, and I concluded it would be all right. You didn't mean"— "Sure not!'' broke In Johnny hearti ! ly. ''You're welcome to mine." "Same here." agreed Yank and I. And then Talbot let us see that he considered us to that extent partners in the business. "I have the date it arrived," he told I us. "and I know just how much actual i capital I had myself nt that time, so I'm computing: your shares in the ven- I ture on that basis. It comes to cbcot S one-tenth apiece for Yank and Johnny, ! Frank and I have an agreement al ready." i Johnny stared at the paper on which the totals had been penciled. "Not any!" he protested vehemently. "It isn't fair! You've made this thing by sheer genius, and it isn't fair for me to take a tenth of it on the strength of a measly little consignment of dust. You give me your note for a thousand dollars, or whatever the sum is, at in ! terest, if you want to, and that's all | that is coming to me." "I feel the same," said Yank. "Boys," argued Talbot earnestly, "that doesn't go. That five thousand saved me. It came at n time when I had to have money or go down. I had been to every bank, to every firm, to every mnn In town, and I couldn't raise 10 cents more. If you refuse this thing you will be doing something that"— "Oh, hush up, Tal!" broke In Johnny gruffly. "If that's how you feel"— "It Is." "It is now," said Johnny firmly, "10:?>0 a. in., but I'm going to have bubbles. If you fellows don't want me all drunk and dressed up you've got to help me drink them." CHAPTER XXX. Plutocratal WE felt very elated and rather small. Talbot had alone and without, so to speak, moving from his tracks made a for tune, while we, after going through many hardspliis. adventures ami hard work, had returned almost penniless. One of our first tasks was to convince Talbot of the injustice to himself in giving us shares based on a propor tionate money Investment. VVe made him see after awhile that his own gen ius counted for something in the mat ter. He then agreed, but reluctantly, to reduce our shares to a twentieth each and included me In this despite our previous agreement. If we had adhered to that my proportion would have been nearer a fortieth. Tills lin vine been decided after con- Pimples Disappear There is one remedy that seldom fails to clear away all pimples, blotches and other skin eruptions and that makes the skin soft, clear and health}-. Any druggist can supply you with zemo, _ which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pim pjes, rashes, black heads in most cases give ( way to zcmo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight. Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to use and dependable. It costs only 25c; an extra large bottle, SI.OO. It will not stain, is not greasy or sticky and is positively safe for tender, sensitive skins. Th E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, C HARJRJSBURG TELEGRAPH sUeruble argument. we s.ttlcl down I to wait for the completion of the Ward i block. Once the rents from that struc | ture should begin to come In. it was agreed we should take out ready mon ey enough to return east. The remain | der. less Talbot's expenses, would of | course have to go back Into releasing | all the other interests. The formal opening had been arranged for the Ist of January. In the meantime we loafed magnifi cently and lived 011 my money. Now that our futures were all assured, Yank and Johnny condescended to tempora ry loans. Occasionally we could help Talbot in'some of the details of his varied businesses, but most of the time we Idled. 1 do think we deserved a rest. Our favorite occupation was that of reviewing our property. To this end | we took long tramps over the hills, j hunting painstakingly for obscure eor j ner stakes or monuments that marked some one of our numerous lots'. On | them we would gaze solemnly, al though In no manner did they differ from all the other sagebrush bill coun | try about them. In a week we knew accurately every piece of property be : longing to our Interests. and we had j listed every other more tangible equi- I ty or asset. One of .Tohnhy's favorite 1 feats was to march Yank and me up to a bar, face us and interrogate us according to an invariable formula. We must have presented a comical sight, I with my great bulk ntul round. | fresh face alongside the solemn, lauls "Mors likely shot," put in Johnny bluntly. and leathery Yank, both of us drawn up at attention and solemn as prairie dogs. "How much is one-twentieth of two thousand thousand?" inquired Johnny. "One hundred thousand," Yank and I chorused. "Is that a plutocrat?" demanded Johnny cryptically. "It Is!" we cried. (To Be Continued) DAILY DOT PUZZLES '9 2o 27 • 1,. 24 " *• • " . -2 l?" 3 " .3 51 * S <- •• 6?:-' ? • •' . 9 .a • % • What shall I draw? Draw iror- one to two and so on to the en< "THE ROAD THAT LEADS TO LOVE" ■Beatrice Fairfax Is Sorry She Was Not One Who Wrote It By BKATRICE I'AIBF.\X. Have you ever read a beautiful ' poem or listened to a wonderful line in a play and thought to yourself: "I | wish I had said that! It's exactly what i I think. Why didn't I express it?" Of course you have, and so you . will understand my feelings when first : I heard the newest song: by that young genius of life as it is, Irving Berlin. I'm not envious—Just happy that he could so exquisitely express what 1 feel. The very name—"The Road That ■ l.cads to Love," harmonizes with my i thoughts, and the lines which accom pany the haunting, lilting refrain, even as it accompanies them, say what is in my heart. And I know that even as I feel, you must too> —the great charm of this beautiful new song lies > in the fact that it expresses in terms | of music and poetry a simple thought I that lies in all hearts attuned to real beauty. "The road that leads to fortune and fame, [ Is paved with gold in your dreams; [ But after you've journeyed and reached your aim. It seldom is all that it seems. To have, to hold, to love and caress, _ Is all we can ask from above. For the road that leads to happiness, Is the road that leads to love." Doesn't that say just exactly what you would say If you dared be honest and knew how to marshal your In articulate longings into thoughts? Isn't that the very essence of your dreams? Does it not hold in the silver message of its song the spirit of life at its best? The sweetness and lilting rhythm of the music hold the essence of longing. The spirit of the song is the spirit that makes for eternal youth. It reaches out to you with its gentle mes sage and holds a blessing for you, if you hear and heed. In its over-tones there is the silver melody of joy; in its chords there lies the harmony of life. And it sings to you, "Don't cheat yourself. Don't strive for empty honors and cold gain. Only joy that is shared, only success that belongs to your beloved as well as to you can matter." What is idle ambition? There are dozens of paths leading to success; and you think that success spells it self out in tiaming. golden capitals and surmounts the hill of human de sire. But v.hen you have climbed that hill you find that success unshared is written in letters of tarnished gilt and lies at the top of a long, steep hill on the other side of which there lies the cold and forbidding cliff of dead de sires towering above the barren land of loneliness. But success shared, ambition whose fruits you bring to lay at the feet of your beloved, and glory which you offer humbly at the shrine of real de votion are warm and glowing and worth all the struggle their achieve ment meant. In the midst of shrieking, self-sat isfied one-steps, gay and indifferent fox-trots and exotic and impassioned tangoes there is still the waltz with its message of genuine pdetry and real feeling. And in the wonderful new waltz he has composed Irving Berlin, has put life's truest and tenderest message so exquisitely that I offer! him now my earnest gratitude for! sending out to the world in waves of melody the philosophy I long to have all of you know. The road that leads i to happiness is the road that leads to I love. There is eternal truth, the great underlying spirit of life. Having gold and fame and fortune, you dream per haps in your unknowing youth you Jwik a; Qjutcißb Milk hm^HaAj/ NatureJrbe/tfood II j Holstein, Jersey and Guernsey | PP* INSPECTED CATTLE I —produce the milk we distribute so that you get the fin est, most nourishing milk possible. —rich in butterfat, the result of fine stock and the most I nourishing feed. Our dairy inspectors keep a "score" on the sanitary conditions of all barns wherein our cattle house, | according to the regulations of New York City and Wash ington, the strictest in the United States. —and the milk is pasteurized in our plant and delivered to in you in sterilized bottles. —-y I \ Are you getting MILK from us? \kK)7 f j B Penna. Milk Products Co. vffiy || -iu£ Uj SURH fanm. Milk fWiic&Cb. MARCH 24, 1917. ( TIMELY HINTS FOR THE HOME GARDENER Onions in the Home Garden I Washington, D. C., March 24: Onions, like potatoes, are a staple crop that is grown commercially on a very extensive scale. The home gardener, however, may like to have a few early home-grown onions for Ills table or. If space permits, he may wish to grow enough of later varieties to last his family through the winter. The onion will thrive under a wide range of climatic and soil conditions, but a rich, sandy loam containing plenty of humus Is best suited to It. As the crop requires shallow cultiva tion and it may be necessary to resort to hand work in order to keep it free from weeds, it is very desirable that the land should be In such condition that it Is easily worked. As a general rule. It is well to have the crop follow some other one that has been kept un der the hoe and free from weeds the previous season. In the North, seed is sown as early in the spring as the soil can bo brought to the proper condition. In the South, onion sets are frequently put out In the autumn and carried through the winter with the protec tion of- a little hay or straw. There are three methods of propagating onions: the first, by sowing the seed In rows where the crop is to grow; second, by sowing the seed in es pecially prepared beds and trans planting the seedlings to the open ground: and third, by planting sets which have been kept through the winter. The first method is used by large commercial growers on account of the amount of labor Involved in the others. On small areas, however. It may be preferable to plant sets. Un der normal conditions these may usu ally be obtained at planting time for about $2.50 a bushel, 8 or 9 bushels being required to plant an acre. Onions planted from sets will ripen earlier than those from seed sown in the fields. When the transplanting method is used, the seed i.i sown in greenhouses, hotbeds, cold frames, or specially prepared beds at the rate of 3'a to 4 pounds for each acre to be shall have all. But having all these, life and its experiences teach you have nothing unless you have the one great joy, the true vision beautiful— Love. Harvard University Makes Plans For War Work By Associated Press Cambridge, Mass., March ?4. Harvard University announced yester day the steps that it had taken to prepare for war. A committee of the faculty, appointed February 12 has been actively at. work on all university plans for military preparedness, it was stated, "to the end that the facili ties at Harvard may be used to the fullest advantage in the event of war." Although it is not contemplated that during the coming academic year the regular courses of Instructions shall be suspended, it has been sug gested that all men who may enter tho government service will be al lowed to take a special examination and end their studies, with credit for the work performed. The Reserve Officers' Training corps now numbers 1.200 men and approximately 500 others are enrolled memebrs of the National Guard, naval reserve or avia tion corps. For the next academic year, the Harvard authorities announced, they were prepared to offer the same courses of instruction in all depart ments as in other years. It was stated that if the government requested the use of the dormitories as barracks during the summer, "it is reasonably certain they, will be available." planted. The seedlings are transplant ed when they are somewhat smaller than a lead pencil and rather stocky. The root end of the seedling is pushed into the soil with one finger and the soil is then firmed about the plant. The seed Is sown thickly in drills about 12 to 14 Inches apart. After the plants become established, they ara thinned to 2 or 3 inches apart. The maturity of the bulbs may be hastened by preventing the continued growth of the tops. This is sometimes accom plished by rolling an empty barrel over the rows and breaking down the tops. After these are practically dead, the onion bulbs may be pulled up by hand from the soil and spread in a. dry, well-ventilated place to cure. Thereafter they may be stored in crates or hags for winter use. In the North, tho crop ripens and is har vested during the latter part of the summer and early autumn. In the Southern States where the crop is grown during the winter, the harvest ing and marketing period takes place during the spring months. There are several kinds of onions that may remain in the soil over win ter. The multiplier, or potato onion, for example, can be planted from sets in the autumn and will produce ex cellent, green early onions. A largo onion of this type contains a number of distinct hearts and, if planted, will produce a number of small onions. On the other hand, a small onion contains but one heart and will produce a large onion. A few of the large ones may be planted each year to produce sets for the following year's planting. The shallot is a variety of small onion that is frequently planted in early spring for its small bulbs, or "cloves," which are used in the same manner as onions. The leaves are utilized for flavoring. Another onion like plant is the chive, the small round hollow leaves of which are used for flavoring soups. These leaves may be cut freely, as they arc soon replaced by others. Murder Cases Will Be Taken to Supreme Court Carlisle, Pa., March 24. An nouncement was made to-day that, tha cases of Archie Miller and James Anthony, tried, convicted and sent enced to death for lirst degree murder will be appealed to the Supremo Court of the State. Attorneys are pre paring their claims. The reasons are understood to be the same as those for new trials which were refused by Judge Sadler. Miller shot J. IJ. Beisser, a railroad oflicer near Worm leysburg, and Anthony killed Michael ITry, a construction foreman at New ville, with a shovel. GERMAN MONKY IX MEXICO By Associated Press El Paso, Texas, March 24. Ship ment by German commercial Arms of a large sunt of money into Mexico yesterday, it is learned from a relia ble source, has been brought to the attention of tho government investiga tors here. The amount of the ship ment Is not disclosed. American se cre service officers continued to keep a close watch to-day on the move ments of Germans here who are not American citizens. GUARD CAM,IOI) INTO SERVICE By Associated Press Portland, Ore., March 24. Tho Eighth company coast artillery, Ore gon National Guard, was called to federal service last night and imme diately began preparations to entrain for a destination which was not mado public. 5