yjl|lj Re<\di^ T HWIWHYEES &♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦+ . Capyrlght by Chas. Scribner'a Sob* (Con tinned) The young woman's laugh was soundless. "Mr.l Macauley wasn't asked. He thinks you are dead," she eaid. "What!" "It's so. You were not the only one wounded in the fight at the dam. There were two others—two of McGraw's men. Three days later, Just as colonel-daddy and Billy Starbuck were getting ready to steal you away, one of the others died. In some way the report got out that you were the one who died, and that made everything quite easy. The report has never been contradicted, and when Mr. Macauley reached Brewster the police people told him that he was too late." "Good heavens! Does everybody in Brewster think I'm dead?" "Nearly everybody. But you needn't look so horrified. You're not dead, you know; and there were no obituaries in the newspapers, or anything like that." The man got upon his feet rather unsteadily. "That's the limit," he said defini tively, "I'm a man now, Corona; too much of a man, I hope, to hide be hind another man's grave. I'm going back to Brewster, to-day!" The young woman made a quaint little grimace at him. "How are you iiiiiniiiirinnircmitiiiunNiiitm^ 9 Education is the foundation on which one's life work depends. jij i Build for success. Equip yourself for worthy, practical cervice. I A thorough course where actual practice is made to empha i size and enforce the theories taught is given at the PENNSYLVANIA STATE NORMAL SCHOOL off Indiana, Pa. Thousands of successful graduates demonstrate the value of Indiana training 'J |, A Faculty of Fifty-five Members. Healthful location, ( il i j C ° nS^" e( * ' m P° rtan * ' ac, °™ school .| / - —- Willow Grove SEASHORE EXCURSION Excursions Sunday, July 15th r vi Special Excursion Train Reading Railway SATURDAYS From Fare Lv.A.M. Y I 01 HarrUbtirg **•?> O 6.00 J Illy Z\ Hummelitown 2.50 o.is , Sixteen Day Tickets, good on Swatara 2.50 0.24 any train. Stop off allowed at Herahey 2.50 0.27 I Philadelphia going and return- Palmyra 2.50 .35 I ' n S within time limit of ticket Lebanon 2.50 0.57 I _ m.r r~ Willow Grove, arrive 10.15 ! SU PIDA YS Returning, Special Trnln will Q J OO leave Willow Grove 0.00 P. M. for tlUiy O ' \—J I WNR.JI** 1 I NO -,'M OUT 1 I I I I II Dl ° FM.L II 1 DIDN'T NOTICE I I . VOU ARE IN ? OF TO I SITHES ° N Hit, KN EES INHERE HE FELL going to get there?" she asked. "It's twenty miles, and the walking is awfully bad—in spots." "But I rr\ust go. Can't you see what everybody will say of me?— that I was too cowardly to face the music when my time came? Nobody will believe that I wasn't a consent ing party to this hide-away!" "Sit down," she commanded calm ly; and when he obeyed: "From day to day, since I began coming out here, John, I've Jbeen trying to re discover the man'whom I met just once, one evening over a year ago, at Cousin Adda's house in Guthrieville: I can't find him—he's gone." "Corona!" he said. "Then you recognized me?" "Not at first. But after a while things began to come back; and what you told me—about Miss Rich lander, you know, and the hint you gave me of your trouble—did the rest." "Then you knew—or you thought —X was a criminal?" She nodded and her gaze was resting upon the nearby gravel heaps. "Cousin Adda wrote me. But that made no difference. I didn't know whether you had done the things they said you had, or not. What I did know was that you had broken your shackles in some way and were trying to get free. You were, weren't you?" "I suppose so; in some blind fash ion. But it is you who have set me free. Corona. It began that n'g-ht in Guthrieville when I stole one of your gloves; it wasn't anything you said; it was what you so evidently believ ed and lived. And out here; X was simply a raw savage when you first saw me. I had tumbled headlong into the abyss of the new and the elemental, and if I am trying to scramble out now on the side of hon or and clean manhood, it is chiefly because you have shown me the way." "When did I ever, John?"—with an up-glance of the gray eyes that was almost wistful. "Always, and with a wisdom that makes me almost afraid of you. For example, there was the night when I was fairly on the edge of letting Jibbey stay in the mine and go mad if he wanted to; you lashed me with the one word that made me save his life instead of taking it. How did you know that was the one word to say?" "How do you know anything?" she inquired softly. "The moment moment brings its own inspiration. It broke my heart to see what you could be, and to thlnk x that you might not be It, after all. But I came out here this morning to talk about something else. What are you going to .do when you are able to leave Sunrise Gulch?" "The one straightforward thing there is for me to do. I shall go back to Lawrenceville and take my medi cine." "And after that?" "That is for you to say. Corona. Would you marry a convict?" "You are not guilty." "That is neither here nor there. They will probably send me to pris on, just the same, and the stigma will be mine to wear for the remain der of my life. I can wear it now, thank God! But to pass it on to you —and to your children. Corona * * * •if I could get my own con sent to that, you couldn't yet yours." "Yes, X could, John; I got it the first time colonel-daddy brought me out here and let me see you. Tou were out of your head, and you thought you were talking to Billy Starbuck —in the automobile on the night when you were going with him to the fight at the dam. It made me go down on my knees, John, and kiss your poor, hot hands." (To Be Continued) SMPi MADE LIFE WORTH LUG Harrisburg Man Tells of Remarkable Work Done by Sanpan I may say, for years I was bother ed with liver trouble and constipa tion, says Mr. Harry liines, 1001 Cowden street, Harrisburg. I would get dizzy, would bloat and belch up gas, had severe pains in my stomach and side, my back felt as if it would break. Had very bad headaches, just over the eyes, 1 felt dull and drowsy, espe cially during the middle of the day. My kidneys seemed to trouble me a lot, and I had no ambition, I seemed to lack the punch, as every thing .vas an effort. Well I just felt that the whole world was against me. Finally I began to take Sanpan, and my pains have gone, I do not get bloated with gas, those headaches are a thing of the past, my kidneys no longer trouble me am not con stipated nor dizzy,' and drowsy no more am I; life now appears worth living, and to think of it, just a little medicine fixed me up. I don't won der that the sales of Sanpan are getting so big, my own case is proof enough of what this wonderful medi cine has done. I am glad to recom mend it. Sanpan is now being introduced at Keller's Drugstore, 405 Market St., Harrisburg, where the Sanpan man is explaining it to the people. Sanpan will be sent postpaid upon receipt of price. * A Pure As theUy^g and as dear and soft Your skin and complexion will jY always have a wonderful \/v A transporentLily white \/> appearance if you will W constantly use A> * GouraucJ's Oriental Cream Sand 10c. tor Trial Site FERD T. HOPKINS & SON, New York V. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH All's Well That •e Ends Well *r How a Country Girl Found Good Place By Jane McLean She was very sweet and very young and very ignorant. Any one would have guessed that from her blue eyes and the way she fixed her hair and the artless manner she told and the artless manner she told people that her name was Daisy Montmorency. Her real name was Daisy Thomp kins, and she lived in a small vil lage in New York State. The truth about the matter was that she had been told by so many people in town that she looked like one of the most famous motion picture heroines that she really believed it was so and had fixed her hair in curls and be gun to pose a little when she thought people would notice the resemblance. She used to go to the little movie house and sit through every picture, and dream wonderful dreams about a career. Plenty of others girls have done this, and perhaps there are plenty of girls just as misguided as Daisy was who do what she did, but let us hope not. After a great deal of thought on the subject, Daisy decided to run away. So she gather ed together a sum of money that was pitifully small, dressed herself in her Sunday best and took the train for New York. In the Grand Central Station Daisy gulped once or twice, but she was game and she went to one of the big gest hotels where she registered and took a room. She knew just how to do this because she had seen her be loved heroine do it in the moving pictures. Of course it wasn't such fun to do it secretly, but just as soon as she settled aboutj her position and had started on her first picture she could let the folks know and things would be different. When Daisy ventured out on Fifth avenue, she noticed a something dif ferent about her general get-up that made tter feel uncomfortable. Then, too, there were so many pretty girls, so much prettier than she herself was, and they all looked so smart and well-groomed. This fact threw the first dash of gloom about her undertaking, but she perked up again when she arrived at the movie studio, and she was quite herself when she gave her name and asked to see the manager. Daisy never quite forgot that day. She had a long list of addresses which she went through carefully. By the time that night set in, her weary feet would hardly carry her and she was heartsore and discour aged. At most of the places she had been turned down immediately. The movie studios were besieged daily by sweet little girls with curls and soft voices who come down from the country to be stars. The big hotel that had seemed so grand somehow now looked cold and stiff as she went into the lobby. Dis couraged, she went to her room and Daily Dot Puzzle RRlr *: • *9 {r I 22 ir -/? *'® \, I • • .ir I V-r V .is I \ \ -25 „ 6 A 2b 2 .14 *ii * ' \VJ* , • \ \*? > w, + 6 s - ' ? } . e 12 V ' V \*' 9 MM ■ r J W * \ * 3B S f* F \ Can you finish this picture? Draw from one to two and so on to the end. That Home Was a Prettty After All packed her little bag. Then she paid her bill, which took almost all of her small amount of cash, and went over to the big station again. There was nothing for her to do but to go back home. She knew that the girls in the movies never did such humiliating things; they always stayed In the city, and eventually won out. But winning out in a strange place with no friends and the many rebuffs that she had had that day did not appeal to Daisy. It was a tired little Daisy Mont morency that got out at the small station that night at eleven-thirty and walked the short distance to her homo. Somehow, the thought of the little white room and something hot to eat did wonders to her tired feet, and she burst in upon the little group in .the sitting room like an apparition. Her mother was all doubled up on the sofa crying. Mrs. Jenkins, from across the road, was trying to comfort her, and Harry Jenkins was talking to Daisy's father. Daisy had never seen her easy-going dad look like this be fore. There was an instant's hesitation on the threshold, and then with a glad cry Daisy was folded to her mother's heart. Such a lot of talk and welcoming home, and not a word for the wrongdoing of the cul prit. Her tired feet were put up on a cusjiion and a hot supper placed before her in the twinkling of an eye. It was all so lovely During the meal Daisy looked up suddenly and met the tender regard of a pair of brown eyes. She had never thought of Harry Jenkins before, but now her heart gave a sudden leap and she smiled a little tremulously. Then she turned to her mother, who was hovering over her anxiously. "You shouldn't do all this for me," she cried a little wildly. "I don't de serve it. O, mother, X never knew you cared so much." "Seems to me it's worth the pain we've gone through Just to have you know that," her mother said softly, and Daisy felt that home in a movie was a very cold place com pared with this one she had nearly thrown away for good. FARMER'S ARM BROKEN Killinger, Pa., July 14.—While Fred P. Snyder was unloading hay a small rope at the fork broke and threw him off the wagon, breaking his arm. —Mrs. Christian Weaver and her daughter, Dottle, spent the week-end at the home of her son in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William Deib ler, at Speeceville.—Lee Shiffer, of Palmyra, came home with his bride and will make their home here with his home, Mrs. Thomas Shiffer. — Mrs. John Feidt had an attack of vertigo on Wednesday morning and was unconscious for some time. — Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Miller and daughters, Misses Elva and Reba, were guests at the home of their brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. How ard Engle, at Flsherville, on Sun day.— Mr. and Mrs. Claud Ferron. of Sparrows Point, Md., are spending several weeks with friends, this be ing their first visit here in thirty one years.—Miss Ella Lehman, of Mlllersburg, spent the week at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lehman. —Mr. and Mrs. John E. Motter and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Motter and daughter were entertained at the home of John F. Hennlnger on Sunday.—Mrs.Thomas Shiffer on Sunday night attended services at the Lutheran Church and lest her purse containing twen ty-four dollars. EDUCATIONAL. School of Commerce Troop Building. IB 8* Market Square Noted fdr thorough training in Rubtncss and Stenegraphy. Wonder ful demand for Bookkeepers and Stenographers. CIVIL SERVICE COURSE Be Patriotic —Save Time—Begin Now School Open All Summer Oliß OFFER —Right Training b> Specialists and lligh-r;ra.i little mnc*ionl or diced potato may be added. Such pie? to be at their best i*iust be well seasoned. FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS Eckman's Alterative SOI.D BY ALI. I KADING DRUGGISTS UNDERTAKER 1713 Chas. H. Mauk~.Tr pitivvrr AMnri.ATvcp, in<>\r 5