[jjjlj all Ike farcak] jjßfß !! The Real II ]| Nan I ! By , I FRANCIS LYRDE | I 1 nill!tin w iwn imas I < Copyright by Ch.iA Scriimer's Scat (Continued) "All right. A little while past din ner this evening, Stanton had a hurry call to meet the 'Xevada Flyer." Tailed onto the train there was a private luxury car, and in the pri vate car sat a gentleman whose face you've seen plenty of times in the political cartoons, usually with cuss words under it. He is one of Stan ton's bosses; and Stanton was in for a wigging—and got it. X couldn't hear, but I could see—through the 1 car window. He had Stanton stand ing on one foot before the pulled out and let Crawford make his get-away. Tou guess, and I'll guess, and we'll both say it was j about this Escalante snap which isi aiming to be known as the Escal- ; ante mine. Ain't it the truth?" Again Smith nodded, an 4 said. "Go on." "After number five had gone Stanton broke for his autocab. look ing like he could bite a nail in two. I happened to hear the order he gave the shover. and I had my cay use hitched over at Bob Sharkey's joint. Naturally, I ambled along af ter Crawford, and while I didn't beat him to it, I got there soon enough. It was out at JeS Barton's roadhouse on the Topai trail, and Stanton was shut up in the back rcom with a sort of tin-horn 'bad n.an' named Lanterby." "You listened?" said Smith still without eagerness. "Right you are. And they fooled m. Two schemes were on tap; one ponting at Williams and the dam, and the other at you. These were both 'last resorts' Stanton said he had more string to pull first. If that broke —well, I've said it half a dozen times already, John; you'll either have to hire a bodyguard or go heel ed. I'm telling you right here and now, that bunch is going to get you, even if it costs money!" "You say Stanton said he had one more string to pull; he didn't give it a name, did he?" "No. but I've got a notion of my own," was the ready answer. "He's trying to get next to you through the women, with the Miss Rich-pasture for his can opener. But when every thing else fails, he is to send a pass word to Lanterby. one of two pass words. "Williams' means dynamite and the dam; 'Jake' means the re moval from the map of a fellov named Smith. Nice prospect, isn't it?" Smith was jabbing his paper knife gently into the desk blotter. "And vet we go on calling this a civilized country!" he said meditatively. Then Saturday Sale of Trimmed Hats^ %A The response to our special Saturday Sales of high grade Trimmed Hats has been truly remarkable. For this Saturday we jraß offer a wonderful variety of the most beautiful and charming mid - season n?y models at prices that spell BIG SAVINGS for you. Included are Mpj Large Black Lisere Hats Genuine Panama Hats fjS H Leghorn Hats White Hemp Hats M jy Trimmed Tuscan Hats Hairbraid Hats M g| Classy Tailored Hats Military Novelty Turbans, Etc. jg§ jgj Small Black Hats For Middle-Aged. Women jgj js| Children's Hats Included in This Sale |§Y If AU $ 2 - 98 Hata A -e jj All $6 - 98 HaU Are •$5 jjjj if || All $3.98 HaU Are .{q All $7.98 HaU Are . gfl (j(j || 0 * 0,44 All $8.98 HaU Are . (tl'nn B S All $4.98 HaU Are . til U. „. Qno „ 7 j'.OO j|| All $5,98 Hats Are . All $10.98 Hats Are j(j jjjj 1 J 308 MARKET STREET FRIDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service ■ *— —*• m l m By McM C. ) 1 (r.,3 "trow j~ WHO BROKE ] ° >N, = £ -—4F— OP MIR n rv I S TUCCP XOUR BE C/\REFUL x IMITT"b- GLOBEL_ JAvV ,_ V YOU'RE |well with a sudden change of front: "I'm j in this fight to stay until I win out or die out, Billy; you know that. As i I have said, Miss Verda can kill me! off if she chooses to; but she won't l choose to. Now let's get to work. It's pretty late to route a justice of the j peace out of bed to issue a warrant j for us, but we'll do it. Then we'll go j after Lanterby and make him turn state's evidence. Come on; let's get busy." But Starbuck, reaching softly for! a chair-righting handhold upon Smith's desk, made no reply. Instead he snapped his lithe body out of the i chair and launched it in a sudden tiger spring at the door, which j should have been latched, came in at Starbuck's wrenching jerk of the knob, bringing with it. hatless, and with the breath startled out of him. the new stenographer, Shaw. "There's your state's evidence." said Starbuck grimly, pushing the half-dazed listener into a chair. "Just put the auger a couple of inches into this fellow and see what you can find." Richard Shaw had an exceedingly bad quarter of an hour when Smith and Starbuck applied the thumb-' screws to force a confession out of him. Nevertheless, knowing the dan gerous ground upon which he stood, he evaded and suffled and prevari cated under the charges and ques tionings until it became apparent that nothing short of bribery or phy sical torture would get the truth out of him. Smith was not willing to of-,' fer the bribe, and since the literal thumbscrews were out of the ques-1 tion. Shaw was locked into one of the vacant rooms across the corridor until his captors could determine) what was to be done with him. "That is one time when I fired and ; missed the whole side of the barn," ! Starbuck admitted, when Shaw had; been remanded to the makeshift cell across the hall. "I know that fellow is on Stanton's pay roll: and it's rea- ! sonably certain that he got his job with you so that he could keep cases on you. But we can't prove anything! that we say, so long as he refuses to j talk." "No." Smith agreed. "I can dis charge him, and that's about all that can be done with him." "He is a pretty smooth article," said Starbuck reflectively. "He used to be a clerk in Maxwell's railroad office, and he was mixed up in some kind of crookedness, I don't remem ber just what." Smith caught quickly at the sug gestion. "Wait a minute, .Billy," he broke in: and then: "There's no doubt in your mind that he's a spy?" "Sure he is," was the prompt re joinder. "I was just thinking—he has heard what was said here to-night—which is enough to give Stanton a pretty good chance to outfigure our outfit again." "Right you are." "In which case it would be little short of idiotic in us to turn him loose. We've got to hold him, proof or no proof. Where would we be apt to catch Maxwell at this time of night?" "At home and in bed. I reckon." "Call him upon the phone and state the case briefly. Tell him if he has any nip on Shaw that would warrant us in turning him over to the sheriff, we'd like to know it." "You're getting the range now." laughed the ex-cowman, and instead of using the desk set. he went to shut himself into the sound-proof tele phone closet. When he emerged a few minutes later he was grinning exultantly. "That was sure smooth one of yours, John. Dick gave me the facts. Shaw's a thief; but he has a sick sister on his hands—or said he had—and the railroad didn't prosecute. Dick says for us to jug him to-night and to morrow morning he'll swear out the necessary papers." "Good. We'll do that first; and then we'll go after this fellow Lan terby. I want to get Stanton where I can pinch him. Billy; no, there's nothing personal about it; but when a great corporation like the Esca lante Land Company gets down to plain anarchy and dynamiting, it's time to make somebody sweat for It. Let's go and get Shaw." Together they went across the cor ridor, and Smith unlocked the door HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH of the disused room. The light switch was on the door jamb and Starbuck found and pressed the button. The single incandescent bulb hanging from the ceiling sprang alive—and showed the two men at the door an empty room and an open window. The bird had flown. Starbuck was grinning again when he went to look out of the window. The roof of the adjoining building was only a few feet below the sill level, and there was a convenient fire escape ladder leading to the ground. "It's us for that roadhouse out on the Topaz trail before the news gets around to Stanton and Lanterby," he said definitely; and they lost no time in securing an auto for the dash. But that, too, proved to be a fiasco. When they reached Barton's all night place on the hill road, the bar was still open and a card game was running in an upstairs room. Star buck did the necessary cross-ques tioning of the dog-faced bartender. "You know me. Pug, and what I can do to you if 1 have to. We want Hank Lanterby. Pitch out and show us where." The barkeeper threw up one as if he were warding; off a blow. "You c'd have him in a holy minute, for all o' me, Blly; you sure could," he protested. "But he's gone." "On the level?" snapped Starbuck. "That's straight; I wouldn't lie to you, Billy. Telephone call came from town a little spell ago and he got outa bed t' answer it. He borra'd Barton's mare an' faded inside of a pair o' minutes." "Which way?" demanded the ques tioner. "I" the hills; leastways he ain't headin' f'r town when he breaks from here." Starbuck turned to Smith with a wry smile. "Shaw beat us to It and he scores on us." he said. "We may as well hike back, 'phone Williams to keep his eye on things up at the dam, and go to bed. There'll be nothing more doing to-night." CHAPTER XVI. At Any Cost. With all things moving favorably for Timanyoni High Line up to the night of fiascos, the battle for the great water-right seemed to take a sudden slant against the local pro moters, after the failure to cripple Stanton by the attempt to suppress two of his subordinates. Early the next day there were panicky rumors in the air, none of them traceable to any definite starting point. One of the stories was to the effect that the Timanyoni dam had faulty foundations and that the haste in building had added to its insecurity. On the heels of this came clamorous court petitions from ranch owners below the dam site, setting forth the flood dangers to which they were ex posed and praying for an injunction to stop the work. That this was a new move on Stan ton's part neither Smith nor Still ings questioned for a moment; but they no sooner got the nervous ranchmen pacified by giving an in demnity bond for any damage that might be done, than other rumors sprang up. For one day and yet an other Smith fough mechanically, de veloping the machlnellke doggedness To Be Continued. Daily Dot Puzzle 21 2 l ") f 19. 2 . 6 * U 'S fie*-(ft:* ) i 6. v ,s A.?.** / V ; f - I •<* 34 I ( it O J \ O .35 ° .( -a ® £ 33* * J 7 .'. 5. 39. 64- 50 * 4o 62 • 49 61 • 53 -51, * *4B *4l SA : 4 7 . 4Z 59 . -55 . "Tzt 46* ,sfc 43 |- „ 46 44 "The Insider" By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER LX Copyright, 1917, Star Company Like a ghost I crept downstairs. The front door was bolted, and I un fastened it carefully. Nervousness and oppression caused by the heat made me breathe quickly. I felt that I would smother if I did not get out of the house. As I stepped upon the veranda I drew a long sigh. The night air was heavy with fragrance, but it was not nearly as hot here as it was upstairs, i I had not brought a wrap with me, and a delicious coolness struck my bare throat where my negligee was open. I started to take a chair upon the veranda, then I hesitated. It was here that I had made that half prom ise this afternoon, the promise tha,t ! my companion had told me harshly ihe knew would bind me. I suddenly I hated the chairs in which he and I j-had been seated at the time. I i wanted to get away from the scene. | Impulsively I hurried down the 1 front steps, then turned toward the lend of the house at which the orch • ard was, and where stood the bench ' on which Tom and I had sat on my I first evening at Hillcrest. It was | under the nursery windows, and I ' reflected, as I had on that other oc j easion, that I was near enough to Grace to hear her should she call. I Seating myself upon the bench, I I leaned against the old apple tree that grew against it. A gentle breeze was [rising and every little while an ap | pie from one of the trees in the orch ard would drop to the ground with a dull thud. The fruit was not yet ripe, I knew. My employer had told me that some of the trees seemed to have a disease this year, causing their fruit to fall before it had reach ed perfection. "I must have a specialist come and look the orchard over before next year," he had observed. "It's a pity to see an apple that might be per fect falling while it's yet green. It makes one sorry for it—as if it could feel and be disappointed at its fate." He had smiled when he said it. I could not smile now as I recalled his speech. He could be whimsically \ sorry for an inanimate piece of fruit. It did not occur to him to be sorry | for a girl who might marry a man j old enough to be her father, whom I she did not love. But I had been fond of him —was 1 fond of him yet, of course. He was 1 very good to me. Surely I had once fancied I could be happy with him. What had made such a change re cently? I know to-night, as never 1 before, that I did not love him— j that the hope I once had of loving him was feeble now. A Faint Sound ' A faint sound made me start and lean forward. It was the cautious opening of the front screendoor. This door always creaked if opened slow ly. Was somebody coming out? There could be nobody going in. for all the family were in their various rooms'. I was not frightened. I only sat listening. My sole fear was that my employer might have come down stairs and, finding the heavy front door open, would search for the per son who had come out. I would sit still until I heard him go down the steps and walk on the gravel path toward the gate of the garden. Then I would slip in noiselessly and return to my room. I had reached this decision when I saw a figure coming through the orchard. In spite of the darkness of the night the flashes of lightning, which were almost incessant, showed me who it was. It was Hugh Parker, and the same illumination that had enabled me to discern him had re vealed to him my white-clad figure outlined against the dark background of the treetrunk behind me. He came straight to me. "Why!" he exclaimed. "You out here, and all alone?" "Yes," I said, in a low voice, "it was so hot Indoors that I could not breathe. So I came out here. I thought you were all fast asleep, and that nobody would know of my rash ness." "May I sit down here by you and get a bit cool, too?" he asked. Then, as I made room for him be side me, he added, "We're going to have a big shower soon. The wind is rising. Are you sure you are not chilly?" * "Ouite sure," I told him. "Wait a minute," he ordered, "I'll be right back." He left me for a moment, and re turned, bearing a light shawl. "I happened to remember seeing this in the hammock on the veranda this afternoon," he remarked. "Here it is if you need it." "Thank you," I rejoined, "but I don't need it just now." He sat down again, and there was a silence, but not an awkward one. Somehow I never felt 111 at ease with this man. "I heard you come out of the house a few minutes ago." I said, presently. A Strange Sound "Oh. no, you didn't." he smiled, "for I have just come home from a i walk. Tom and I went right outi after supper, you know. We had a swim about an hour ago, then he came on home and I strolled across the fields down below there, watch ing the cloud effects on the hori zon." "But I heard the screen door open only a short time ago," I insisted. "I am sure I did." "It was probably somebody going into the house—Mr. Norton, per haps," he said, easily. "It was not," I insisted. "I heard him go to his room a good while ago. If I hadn't I wouldn't have come"— I got as far as this before I rea lized the admission I was nearly making, and stopped confusedly. "What were you K°tng to say?" Hugh demanded. "Do you mean that you did not want him to know you were here because you did not want to" He paused. "Yes," I said, steadily. "I wanted to be alone." "Then" —he started to his feet. "I ought not" I laid my hand on his arm. "Please stay!" I begged. "I only meant I did not want Mr. Norton to come out here. You are different. I am glad you are here." "Why?" he asked with a direct ness that compelled a truthful an swer. "Because," I replied bluntly, "you are sane and normal. And I am not!" (To Be Continued) It's Refrigerator Time Our June Bride Sale Provides a Host of Extraordinary Values EQ A backward season has been responsible^^ l " a spe- -f-J cial price reduction on our entire stock of sanitary refrigerators. Any family in need of a good, ice saving refrigerator should not miss this great sell- The outer case of all our Refrigerators is made of weath er-seasoned, selected hardwood, thoroughly kiln-dried, and varnished in rich Golden Oak. The entire case is tongued and grooved throughout, producing a practically air tight construction that cannot weave, twist, or come apart. All are enamel lined. All sizes and all styles included—thirty THISSIDE ICER REFRIG- - r. Come in and let us show inches and y ° U JUSt why OUr Re " Water Cooler equipment frigerators are superior to which consists of a Water BSSia' > ~ , , Bottle, Block Tin Coil Pipe, P™!) sJ all others and at the same time effect a BIG SAVING —— THIS TOP ICER REFRIG- V II H A D ERATOR, in- VUD UK, ches and has an ice capacity of THIS SIDE ICER refrigerator, 45 pounds inside body made 33x i8x43% inches with * 75-pound P-j.-L CL 0 JL, odorless wood enLmel | CB capacity very substantially rorcn jnaaes lined perfectly sanitary built of beßt masoned wood has removable drain pipe and throughout enamel lined and IMclk© YOUr Porch ue wa^s * ce g a l va " guaranteed in every respect. A /'"'/-vy-vl nized steel a regular $14.50 regular $28.00 value. Specially Cool and becluded. value. Specially priced at _ rlc<> „ at * $2.50 ana up $12.00 $23.50 North Market Square JUNE 15,1917. i Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton* 945° Slip-Over Blouse, 34 to 42 bust. Price 15 cents. The blouse that is slipped on over the head without any closing is, without doubt, one of the most fashionable. This is a very pretty model and also it is an exceptionally practical model because you can make it as it is here or sleeveless, without the pockets and band, and cut a little shorter to be an over-blouse and give no hint whatsoever of the model illustrated. Wool jersey is the material shown here and it is trimmed with a striped silk to be very pretty and attractive but you can get the same color effect by using linen or cotton gabardine or material of such sort, if you prefer it. For the medium size will be needed, 3% yards of material 36 or 44 inches wide with yards 36 inches wide for the trimming. The pattern No. 9450 is cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper on receipt of fifteen cents. 9