[]ifl| fteadiivj ai\d all Ihe S&miKj ]p|E "The Insider" 1 ' 1 By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XXXVI Grace was not to be put off by Tom's failure to answer her question. "Didn't Auntie say that Daddy had gone to Connecticut?" she re peated. "Yes," Tom replied curtly, "sho did." "1 had to run up on business," Mr. Norton said byway of explanation. "Ton isked, darling, if it was pretty up there. 1 suppose it was pretty-out at Hillcrest, but I was not there." "Where were you?" she queried. "In a big business building." he told her. Then, as if to change the subject, he turned to Tom. "Well, son, and what have you been doing?" "Nothing especial," the boy re plied. "You were not out late last even ing. were you?' his father observed. "1 saw your hat on the rack when I came in about 11:30." "No. sir; I went to bed early," Tom rejoined. "Then why are you so pale this morning?" the parent asked. "Don't you feci well?" "Yes, sir. I feel well enough," the boy answered. Catching his eye. I raised my blow significantly. He must make more e'fort to l>e pleasant to his father. Torn, seeing my signal, shook him self out of his self-absorption.. "You know, father." he ventured, "that I am going back to school to morrow." "Yes," Mr. Norton said, "I knew it —and I want to have a little talk I with you some time to-day or this evening." At this moment Julia brought in the mail and laid it hy her master's plate. As he finished his breakfast he pushed his chair back from the table and began to open his letters and glance through them. Suddenly he looked up at me and started to speak, then thought better of it. A Recommendation But as we left the dining room he said: "Miss Dart, 1 would like a moment with you. Kindly step over into the library." He followed me as I did his bid ding. He held an open letter in his hand. "You were kind enough," he be gan. without further preliminary, "to be interested in Tom, so I thought you might like to know that I have here a letter from the principal of Tom's school. He has known Hugh Parker for years and speaks very highly of him." "I was sure of that"—l started to Bay. Then —"I am glad." "So am I," he went on. I had a little talk with Parker himself the ®ther night, and am pretty sure you ©*n get him to tutor Tom next sum mer." "I am clad." I said again. "Then the matter is virtually settled?" "Yes. I may as well tell Tom so," replied. My heart gave a glad throb. Mrs. Oere had forgotten, in the stress of I •ther emotions, to complain of Tom. I Thirty at Birthday Party For Little Julia Hurst Mechanicsburg. Pa., April 23. — Thirty happy children gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. Wil son Hurst. West Main street, on Sat urday afternoon, to celebrate the ■lxth birthday anniversary of their daughter. Julia. Games and contests were part of the entertainment and pretty favors were given each child. Luncheon was served, and assisting Mrs. Hurst were Miss Rebecca Good year, Miss Lou Stephens, of Carlisle; Miss Grace Gardner, of York; Mrs. Julia Hurst, Mrs. N. L. Euwer, Mrs. MeCallister, Mrs. Bishop, Miss Gsace Gardner, and Miss Elizabeth Hurst, of Mechanicsburg. Among the little merrymakers -were; Isabel Ibach, John and Charlotte Rakestraw, Paul Kberly, Margaret and Rachel Mc- Coy, Sara Anna Ross, Robert Weid l*r, Winifred Smith, Marian Shelly, , iff* CHATTER r^W Omelets According to the old saying "an omelet covers a multitude of sins" but this does not mean to reflect at all upon the good standing of this dish of mystery. Its popu larity cannot be denied. Did yon ever have the experience of eating an omelet in a restaurant? Yon read over a large and lengthy menn vainly trying to formulate in your mind whai will constitute your re past, when the waiter standing close by and noting your puzzled expression hisses in your ear "omelet." For no other reason than not to offend the waiter ycm reply in the affirmative. While waiting mental pictures surge through your brain. You endeavor to forget the omelet but it refuses to be cast aside In such an un gentlemanly manner. You pictutfc the chef with an evil smile spread o'er his countenance as be hears the order for an omelet. You see him take a large can full of oap iuds, then a little salt and pepper, a fau- helping of arnica Is then added. The family cat happens along and the culinary monarch with a gleeful chortel snatches the Innocent feline and thrusts it In the can with the rest of the tempting morseL By that time the York MONDAY EVENING, j If the arrangements for the summer ; • could be completed at once, her ob- i . jections would be useless. "Tom!" Mr. Norton called, step • I ping to the door. "Come here, please!" s As the lad entered, I slipped out | of the room and left father and son ; . \ alone. But before my employer went! ■ down-town. I heard him call my : name from the foot of the hall-stairs., | I happened to be in Mrs. Gore's 1 room, talking over some new frocks : she and I were planning for Grace's i Spring outfit. I started to the door as I heard i ; the summons. 1 noticed that Mrs. '■ Gore stood still, listening. Tom Is Delighted "Miss Dart," Brewster Norton said, I "remember you are to dine with us I , at seven-thirty—the usual dinner I hour to-night. That is to be an es tablished custom hereafter. Don't forget it. please." "If"—I hesitated, "If Grace —" i But he interrupted me. "There's : ino 'if' about it! We went over all i that the other day, you know. Grace | ; | will have her supper at the hour at; : which she always has it, thus leaving I ' you an abundance of time to get her ' ' into bed before our dinner time, j Good morning!" He was gone before I could voice any further protect, even had 1 dared ; ito do so. Mrs. Gore said nothing and ! I made no comment on the new or- I der. I could but obey. Thus it came about that T was | ! present that night when Mr. Norton j i | gave the results of his investigations ! about and conversations with Hugh ' ; Parker. "Tom." 'he remarked, "I carried I out to-day the program I told vou 1 of this morping. I sent for Mr. Par ker and had a long and satisfactory ; ; talk with him at my office." The boy looked eagerly at his! father, but did not ask a question. "We have agreed upon terms," Mr. Norton continued, " and he is to . come out to Hillcrest as the close of j school, 'in June. He will spend the ; entire summer' with us as your tu tor. That's oft' my mind —and it's on ; J yours. I shall expect you to prove to I me that the arrangement is a good : one." Mrs. Gore looked blanklv from i Brewster Norton to his son. ' "Am 1 to understand." she asked, "that Mr. Parker is to *pend the whole summer 'at Hillcrest?" "Yes," her brother-in-law replied, in a matter-of-fact manner; "he is to coach Tom during vacation and prepare him for his fall examina | tion." "I thought." she ventured timidly, and yet with a flash of temper in her eyes and a quiver in her voice. ; "that Tom was going away to a suni | mer School." "You were mistaken," the man In formed her. She subsided into silence. I won dered if she did not feel nowadays | as if the reins of power were slip i ping from her nerveless fingers. (To be continued.) j Josephine Mumper. Albert Craw ford. Jr., Catherine Wertz. Olivia Baum, Martin Sharp. Benjamin j Hunt, Elizabeth Euwer, James I Robb. Mary MeCallister, Helen Por ter. MAdeline and Katharine Krall, t j Julia and Jean Hailman, George Ful _ , ton. Julia and Mary Caroline Hurst, | Eleanor Goodyear, of Carlisle, and John Musser Goodyear, of Harris burg. CARLISLE CHI'HCH DEDICATED ! Carlisle, Pa.. April 23.—Many visl ; | tors were here yesterday for special - services to celebrate the anniversary ; of the rededication of United Evan j gelical Church. The Rev. T. J. Petit of Red Lion, a former pastor, was I the main speaker of the day, pre siding at a gathering held in the af j ternoon, while the Rev. W. P. j Nicholson, the evangelist, assisted by J. Raymond Hemminger had | charge in the evening. of the "conspirators" dawns upon ycm and with a stiffled cry you blindly scramble for your hat. But too late! The waiter places the dish before you and you've got to eat. One taste, and then another taste. Your face lights up and you discover that the omelet Is not so bad. Thus we see that after alt, the omelet is a very satisfying dish. For a plain omelet break three eggs in a bowl, add one teaspoon ful of cold water and beat with a fork until well mixed. Add one ! half a teaspoonful'of salt Turn it | into a very hot buttered pan and shake and stir until eggs begin to i * e *- -ket them form, then fold over, and turn out on a hot platter. Finely chopped parsley, cooked meats, vegetables cut very fine and various other ingredients can, be added to a plain omelet according to one's taste. A very light and fluffy omelet can be made by adding a little milk to the omelet while it ia cooking; Omelets have disguised many a fault but It really ranks now as ons of the greatest and most popular breakfast dishes used bjr the -■ Americas, public The Scribb Family—They Live Here in Harrisburg—By Sullivan ' tUul—lL~ It " , A ' ft IL 11, ... ► Nan Music j Mountain j k Br J x FRANK H. SPEARMAN £ Author of "WHISPERING SMITH ' J iCuprritit by Chaj'tt Scilbsal'i Sou) Continued CHAPTER XIV. A Vesture in the Dark. Pushing his way hastily forward I when lie could make haste; crawling | slowly on his hands and knees when held by opposing rock; flattening j himself like a leech against the faca , of the precipice when the narrowing ledpre left him only inches under I foot; clinging with torn hands to every favoring crevice, and pausing I when the peril was extreme for fresh strength, De Spain dragged his in jured foot across the sheer face of El Capitan in the last shadows of the day's failing light. Spetat by his effort, De Spain reach ed the rendezvous Nan had indi cated, as nearly as the stars would tell him, by ten o'clock. It was only after a long and doubtful hour that he heard the muffled footfalls of a horse. He stood concealed among the smaller trees until he could dis tinguish the outlines of the animal, and his eye caught the figure of the rider. De Spain stepped out of the trees, and, moving toward Nan. caught her hand and helped her to the ground. She enjoined silence, and led the horse into the little grove. Stopping well within it, she stooped and be gan rearranging the mutflers on the hoofs. "I'm afraid I'm too late." she said. "How long have you been here?" She faced De Spain with one hand on the pony's shoulder. "Did you have any falls?" " You see I'm here. You! How could you get here at all with a horse?" "They are hiding on both trails outside watching for you—and the moon will be up— "She seemed very anxious. De Spain made light of her fears. "I'll get past them —I've got to, Nan. Don't give it a thought." "I don't know wht you'll tlflnk of nie ; —" He heard the troubled note in her voice. "What do you mean?" She began to unbutton her jacket. Throwing back the revers, she felt inside around her waist, unfastened after a moment and drew forth a leathern strap. She laid It In De Spain's hands. "This is yours," she said in a whisper. He felt It questioningly, hurriedly, then with amazement. "Not a car tridge belt!" he exclaimed. "It's your own." "Where —?" She made no answer. "Where did you get it, Nan?" he whispered hurriedly. "Where you left it." "How?" She was silent. "When?" "Tonight" "Have you beew to Calabasas and back tonight?" "Everybody but Sassocn is in the chase," she replied uneasily—as if not knowing what to say. or how to say It. "They said you should I never leave the gap alive—they are i ready with traps everywhere. I didn't' know what to do. I couldn't bear- - J * % • HARRISBURG SfiSSi TELEGRAPH [ after what—you did for me tonight I —to think of your being shot down ' like a dog, when you were only trying ;to get away." "I wouldn't have had you take a ride like that for forty belts." "McAlpin showed It to me the last j time I was at the stage barn, hanging where you left it." He strapped the cartridges around him. "You should never have taken that ride for It. But since you have —" He it*d drawn his revolver from his waistband. He broke it I now and held it out. "Load it for J me, Nan." "I Hate Him."' "What do you mean?" "Put four more cartridges in It yourself. Except for your cartridge, j the gun is empty. When you do that you will know none of them ever : will be used against your own except to protect my life. And If you have t any among them whose life ought to } come ahead of mine name him, or i them, now. Do as I tell you—load ! the gun." j He took hold of Tier hands and, in spite of her refusal, made her do 1 his will. He guided her hand to draw the cartridges, one after another, | from his belt, and waited for her to | slip them in the darkness into the j empty cylinder, to close the breech, |and hand the gun back. "Now, Nan," he said, "you know j me. You may have doubts —they will jail die. You will hear many stories about me—but you will say: 'I put the cartridges in his revolver with ; my own hands, and I know he won't i abuse the means of defense I gave I him myself.' There can never be any real doubts or misunderstandings he ! tween us again, Nan." He waited for | her to speak, but she remained silent. "You have given me my life, my defense." he continued, passing from j a subject that he perceived was better left untouched. "Who is near est and dearest to you at home?" "My Uncle Duke." "Then I never will raise a hand ; against your Uncle Duke. And this man. tonight—this cousin Gale? Nan, i what is that man?" "I hate him." "Thank God! So do I!" "But he is a cousin." "Then I suppose he must be one of ' mine." i "Unless he tries to kill you." "He won't be very long in trying i that. And now, what about yourself." ! What have you got to defend your | self against him, and against every other drunken man?" She laid her own pistol without a word in De Spain's hand. He felt it, opened, closed, and gave it back. "That's a good defender —when it's |in reach. When it's at home It's a ' poor one." "it will never be at home again ex i cept when I am." "Shall I tell you a secret?" "What is it?" asked Nan unsus- I pectlngly. "We are engaged to be married." ! She sprang from him like a deer, j "It's a dead secret," he said gravely: I "nobody knows it yet—not even | you." •' You need never talk again like that if you want to be friends with me," she said indignantly. "I hate it." "Hate it if .you will; It's so. And it began when you handed me that little bit of lead and brass on the mountain tonight, to defend your life and mine." "I'll hate you if you persecute me the way Gale does. The moon is almost up. You must go." "You haven't told me." he persist ed, "how you got away at all." They had walked out of the trees. He look ed reluctantly to the east. "Tell me and I'll go," he promised. "After I went up to my room I waited till the house was all quiet. Then I started for Calabasas. When I came back I got up to my room without being seen, and sat at the window a long time. I waited till all the men stopped riding past. Then I climbed through the window and down to the ground. Some more men came past, and I hid on the porch and slipped over to the horse barns and found a hackamore, and went down to the corral and hunt ed around till I found this little pinto—she's the best to ride bare back." "I could ride a razorback —why take all that trouble for me?" "If you don't start while you have a chance, you undo everything I have tried to do to avoid a fight." The wind, stirring softly, set the aspen leaves quivering. The stars, chilled in the thin, clear night air, hung diamondlike in the -heavens and the eastern sky across the dis tant desert paled for the rising moon. The two, standing at the horse's head, listened a moment together in the darkness. De Spurn, leaning for ward, said something in a low, laugh ing voice. Nan made no answer. Then bending, he took her hand and, before she could release it, caught it up to his lips. I For a long time after he had gone she stood, listening for a shot—won | dering, breathlessly at moments, whether he could get past the wait ! ing traps. De Spain, true to all she (had ever heard of his Indianlike ; stealth, had left her side unabashed I and unafraid—living, laughing, pay ing bold court to her even when she \ stubbornly refused to be courted — | and had made himself in the twink i ling of an eye a part of the silence j beyond—the silence of the night, the ; wind, the stars, the waste of sand, and of all the mystery that brooded | upon it. She would have welcomed in her keen suspense, a sound of ! some kind, some reminder that he yet lived and could yet laugh; none came. • • • 1 Day was breaking when the night | boss, standing in the doorway at I the Calabasas barns, saw a horseman ! riding at a leisurely pace up the Thief River road. The barnman scrutinied the approaching stranger J closely. There was something strange and something familiar In the out lines the figure. But when the night rider had dismounted in front ! of the barn-door, turned his horse loose and limping stiffly walked for j ward on foot, the man rubbed his ' eyes hard before he believe ; them. Then he uttered an incredulous greeting and led Henry de Spain into the barn office. "There's friends of yours In your room upstairs right now," he de clared, bulging with shock. De Spain, sitting down, forbade the barnman to disturb them, only asking who they were. When he had asked half a dozen more leisurely questions and avoided answering twice as many, the barn man at De Spain's request helped him upstairs. Besides himself with excitement, the night boss turned, grinning as he laid one hand on the doorknob and the other on De Spain's shoulder. "You couldn't have come," he whispered loudly, "at a better time." The entryway was dai/k, and from the silencfe within tne /oom one might have thought its occupants, if there were such, wrapped In slumber. But at iniervals a faint clicking sound could be heard. The night man threw open the door. By the llgfct of two stage-lamps, one set on the dresser and the other on a window ledge, four men sat about a rickety iable in a life-and-death struggle at cards. No voice broke the tense silence, not even when the door was I thrown broadly open. No one—neither Lefever, Scott. | Frank Elpaso nor McAlpln—loowed ! up when De Spain walked into the room and. with the night man tip toeing behind, advanced composedly toward the group. Bven then his presence would have passed un noticed, but that Bob Bcott's ear mechanically recorded the limping step and transmitted to his trained intelligence merely notice of some thing unusual. Scott, picking up his cards one at a time as I-efever dealt, raised hlsj eyes, startling us thv sight of the| ; man given up for dead must liavel been, no muscle of Bob Scott's body I j moved. His expression of surprise! slowly dissolved into a grin that j mutely inv'ited the others, as he ha.i j found out for himself, to find outj j for themselves. Lefever finished his deal, threw | .down the pack, and picked up his j ! hand. His suspicious eyes never rose j j above the level of the faces at the) | table; but when he had thumbed his | j cards and looked frvn one to the I | other of the remaining players to , read the weather signals, he per ceived on Scott's fact! an unwonted j expression, and looked to where the j I scout's gaze was turned for an ex- j j planation of it. Lefever's own eyes,' I at the sight of the thinned, familiar I face behind Elpaso's chair, startine;, I I opened like full moons. The big t'el-1 I low spread one hand out, his cards | | hidden within it, and with the other j | hand prudently drew down his pile j of chips. "Gentlemen," he said light- j ly, "this game is interned." He rose \ I and put a silent hand across the table Qver Elpaso's shoulder. "Henry," he exclaimed impassively, "one ques tion, if you please-—and only one: How in thunder did you do it?" CHAPTER XV. Strategy. One week went to repairs. To a [ man of action suqh a week is longer j than ten years of service. But chained | to a bed in the Sleepy Cat hospital, : De Spain had no escape from one, j week of thinking, and for that week I he thought about Kan Morgan. And the impulse that moved htm the first moment he could get out of bed and into a saddle was to spur his way hard and fast to her; to make her, against a score of burley cousins, his own; and never to release her from; his sudden arms agatn. With De Spain to think was to do; at least tp do something, but not l without further careful thinking, and not without anticipating a chance of failure. Ahrt his manner was to cast up all difficulties and obstacles in a situation, brush them aside, and have his will if the heavens fell; and he now set himself, while doing his rou tine work every day, to do one par ticular thing—to see, talk .to, plead with, struggle wiili the woman, or girl, rather—child, even, to his thoughts, so fragile she was- — this girl who had given him back his life against her o%vn marauding rela tives. , His friends saw that something was' absorbing him In an unusual, even an extraordinary way, yet none could arrive at a certain conclusion I as to what it was. The one man in the country who could have sur mised the situation between the two —the barn boss, McAlpln—if he en tertained suspicions, was far too pawky to share thent with anyone. When two weeks had passed with out De Spain's having seen Nan or having heard of her being seen, the conclusion urged itself on him that she was either ill or in trouble— perhaps in trouble for helping him; a moment later he was laying plans to get into the gap to find out. Nothing in the way of a venture could be more foolhardy—this he admitted to himself —nothing, he consoled himself by reflecting, but something stronger than danger could justify it. Of all the motley Morgan following within the moun tain fastness he could count on but one man to help him in the slightest degree—this was the dereliea. Bull Page. There was no choice but to use him, and he was easily enlisted, for the Calabasas affair had made a heroic figure of De Spain in the bar- I rooms. De Spain, accordingly, i lay In wait for the old man and | intercepted him one day on the road i to Sleepy Cat, walking the twenty miles patiently for Ms whisky. I < "You must be the only man in thi. j gay, Bull, that can't borrow or steal I • APRIL 23. 1917. | a horse to ride," remarked De Spain, ! stopping him near tho river bridge. Page pushed back tho broken brim of his hat and looked up. "You | wouldn't believe it," he said, impart ! ing a cheerful confidence, ."but ten years ago 1 had horses to lend to ! every man 'tween here and Thief j river." lie nooded towrd Sleepy Cat | with a wrecked smile, and by a dra- I malic chance the broken hat-brim i fell with the words: "They've got | 'em all." "Your fait, Bull." j "Say!" Up went the brokeii brim, i and the whiskied face lighted ■with a shakin smile "you turned some l trick on that Oalabasas crew—some fight," Bull chuckled. "Bull, is old Duke Morgan a Re • publican ?" Bull looked surprised at the turn jof De Spain's question, but answered jin good faith: "Duke votes' most any ticket that's again the railroad." "11 ow about picking a couple of good barnmen over in the gap. Bull?" [ "What kind of a job y' got?'* "Se McAlpin the next time you're \ over at Calabasas. How about that I girl that lives with Duke?" Bull's face lighted. "Nan! Say! ! she's a little hummer!" j "1 hear she's gone down to Thief t river, teaching school." "Came by Duke's less'n three ; hoursago. Seen her In the kitchen ' makin' bread." "They're looking for a schoolteach er down there, anyway. Much sick ness in the gap lately, Bull?" "On'v sickness I knowed lately is what you're responsible for y'self," retorted Bull with a grip.. "Pity y' Ton Years Ago I Had Horses to Lend Kvcry .Man 'Tu eon Hero and Thief River. ; left any chips at all from that Cala- I basas job, et?" i "Se McAlpin, Bull, next time you're I over Calabasas way. Here"—De Spain draw some currency from his pocket and handed a bill to Page. "Go get your hair cut. Don't talk too much —wear your whifkers long and your tongue short." "Right-o!" "You understand." "Take it from old Bu 11 Page, he's a world's wonder of a sucker, but Ihe knows his friends." "But remember this—you don't | know me. If anybody knows you for ! a friend of mine, you are no good jto me. Sec?" Bull was beyond expressing his comprehension in words alone. He winked, nodded, and screwed his face into a thousand wrinkles. De Spain, wheeling, rode away, tho old man blinking first after him, and then at the money In hia hand. He didn't profess to understand every thing in the high country, but he could still distinguish the principal figures at the end of a banknote. When ho tramped to Calabasas the next day to intedvlew "McAlpin he received more advice, with a strong burr, about keeping his own counsel, and a little expense money to run him until an opening present ed itself on the pay roll. Hut long before Bull Page reached I Calabasas that day De Spain had act ! ed. When he left Bull at the bridge he started for Calabasas, took supper there, ordered a saddle horse for one o'clock in the morning, went to his room, slept' soundly, and, shortly after he was called, started for Music mountain. He walked his horse into the gap and rode straight for Duke Morgan's fortress. Leaving the horse under a heavy mountain pine close to the road De Spain walked care fully but directly around the house to the east side. The sky was clotldy and the darkness almost complete. He made his w ay as close as he could to Nan's window, and raised the soft, crooning not of the desert owl. To Be Continued —i-:. > J Flagraising Ceremony } at Duncannon Iron Work# Duncannon, Pa., April 23. Em ployes of tho Duncannon Iron Worka raised a 20x35 ling with appropriate exercises on Saturday afternoon. Preceding tho ilagralslng, the town had Its own patriotic parade that ended at tho foot of the pole where tho tlas was to be raised. School children sang several patriotic selec tions. Tho Rev. George H. Johnston and tho Rev. W. W. Sholl made ad dresses llttlng to the occasion. Tho llag was bought by a speclat committee of the employes of the Iron Company, after the money hacl been raised by popular subscript tion. EDWIN BAUM DIES Mechanlcsburg. Pa., April 23.— The death of Edwin Baum, a Civil war veteran, occurred on Saturday at tho home of Mrs. Susan South Washington street. He was 89 years old and had been In 11) 1 health for inoro than a year. Ha was a member of tho First United i Brethren Church. The following 1 children survive: Mrs. William Guy er. Harry Baum, Mrs. Anna Yost and Mrs. Mary Fishel, all of burg; John Baum, of Illinois; Mrs. Miohael Hctghes and Mrs. Monda Long, of Harrisburg. The funeral service will be held to-morrow morn ign at 10.30 o'clock, conducted by the Rev. E. C. B. Castle. Burial -will be made in Mechanlcsburg Ceme tery. WOMAN'S CLUB OFFICERS Mechanlcsburg, Pa., April 23.—A{ a. meeting of the Woman's Club on Friday evening, the following offi cers were elected for the ensuing year: President, Miss Caroline S. Saxton: first vice-president, Mrs. Sara Flrestine; second vice-presi dent, Miss Grace E. Witmer; cor responding: secretary, Mrs. W*. F, Fisliburn; recording secretary, Mrs. Murray L. Dick; treasurer, Mrs. Eu gene A. Burtnett; directors, Mrs. R, A. DeFrehn, Miss Cara G. Titzel, Mrs. Robert H. Thomas, Jr., and Miss Liio George. Delegates to the Central district meeting at Milton, on May 16, Mrs. Sarji Firestlne, and alternate, Mrs. N. L. Euwer. It was arranged to hold the annual club luncheon at the home of Mrs., James Li. Young on Friday, May 25, DISTRICT CONVENTION IN MAY Carlisle, Pa„ April 23.— Preparaw ions are being made for the eigh tieth semiannual convention of the Newville district Sunday school workers to be held at the Church of God in North Middleton township on May 24 and 25. Dr. W. A. Hut chison, of Conway* Hall, head of tha prohibition movement In this county, will conduct a temperance service, COLORED MEN TO ENLIST Carlisle, Pa., April 23.—Stimulat ing patriotic Interest among tha members of that race, a patrlotia service was held here yesterday af ternoon in the. West Street African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, under the auspices of all of the col ored churches of the Many men pledged themselves to enlist, • find a committee -was appointed ta co-operate in defense movement, whilo colored boys will form a-Bo?-* Scout troop and aid in various iways, FLAG RAISIN cf AT FACTORY 1 Mechanlcsburg, Pft., April 23. —i Flag raising ceremonies took plac< on Saturday morning, when a large American Hag was run up on th Snelbaker Shirt Factory, in Easi Simpson street. The employes con. gregated outside and sang patriotic airs and a stirring address was given by the proprietor. FREE POLAND CERTAIN ' Philadelphia, April 23. The eri< trance of the United States Into th< war will assure the freedom of Pq< land declared Justice Von Mosch< zicker, of the State Supreme who addressed the delegates of th Polish American Citizens' League oi Pennsylvania which opened a con. vention hero yesterday. He • advo. cated selective conscription and urg. Ed his hearers to enlist as and not as Poles. GRVYBILL-HOLLMAN WEDDING Marietta, Pa., April 23. Miss Myrtle Mae Hollman, of Manheim, was. married yesterday to Lloyd B. Graybill, of East Petersburg, by tha Rev. M. L. Landis, of Neffsvllie, They left on a tour to Harrisburg and other places. They -will live at East Petersburg. DIES FROM TYPHOID FEVDR Marietta, Pa., April 23.—Samuel Minnlch, of Washtngtonboro, died Saturday night from typhoid fever, aged 34. His aged mother, his wifei four children and.f out brothers sui> vivo. ' WILL BUILD CHAPEL ! Duncannon, Pa., April 2 3.—OfH< clals of the Union Sunday school ar making preparations to build q chapel in the east side of North High street and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Daily Dot Puzzte / / 46. // II A* . I • v.aa •' 35 •v.- 2 y 7