4 BIG TIMBER By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR Copyright, 1916, kjr Little, Brown 6 Co, SYNOPSIS Estella Benton, left a penniless orphan, goes to join her brother Charlie, who is logging lumber in j British Columbia. Amtinucd Sne affirmed this, and ho took her baggage, likewise her trunk ! check when she asked how that ar- j ticle would be transported to the j lake. She had some idea of route and means from her brother's writ ben intstruetion, but she thought he might have been here to meet her. At j least he would be at the Springs. ' So she was whirled along a coun- i try road. Jolted in the tonneau be- ' tween a fat man from Calgary and a rheumatic dame on her way to take hot sulpnur baths at Sit. All woods. She passed seedy farm-| houses, primitive in construction, ' and big bams with moss plentifully j clinging on roof and gable. The \ stretch of charred stumps was left I far behind, but in every Held of i grain and vegetable and root great j butts of tir and cedar rose amid the j crops. Her first indefinitely agree- I able impression of this land, which J so far as she knew must be her home, was of those huge and num erous stumps contending with crops fo 1 possession f the fields. At first she had been overw>wered with a sense of insignificance utter ly foreign to her previous experi ence, but now she discovered with an agreeable sensation of surprise she ' could vibrate to such a keynote. And i tvhile she communed with this pleas- i •ont discovery the car sped down a | straight stretch and around a cor-1 ner and stopped short to unload | sacks of mail at a weather-beaten yellow edifice, its windows displaying indiscriminately Indian baskets, gro- j ceries and hardware. Northward opened a broad scope of lake level, girt abound with tremendous peaks whose lower slopes were banked with-thick forest. Somewhere distant along that lake shore was *o be her home. As the car rolled over the 400 yards between shore and white and ureen St. Allwoods she wondered if Charlie would be there to meet her. She was weary of seeing strange faces, [ of being directed, of being hustled about. But he was not there, and she re- i called that he never had been notable for punctuality. Five years is a long time. She expected to find him changed for the better, in certain directions. He had promised to be there, but in this respect time evidently had wrought no apprecl- j able transformation. She registered, was assigned a room and ate luncheon to the mel- j ancholy accompaniment of a three- ; man orchestra struggling vainly j with Buch in an alcove oit the din- j ing room. After that she began; to make inquiries. Neither clerk nor | manager knew aught of Charlie Ben- ; ton. They were both in their firstj season there. They advised her to ( ask the storekeeper. "MacDougal will know," they j were agreed. "He knows everybody around here and everything that goes on." The storekeeper, a genial, round bodied Scotchman, hau the infor maton desired. "Charlie Benton?" said he. "No; he'll be at his map up the lake. He was in three or four days backs. X mind now he said he'd be down Thursday. That's to-day. But he isn't here yet, or his boat'd be by the wharf yonder." "Are there any passenger boats that call there?" she asked. MacDougal shook his head. "Not reg'lar. There's a gas boat goes t' the head of the lake now an' then. She's away now. Ye might hira a launch. Jack Fyfe's camp tender's about to get under way. But ye wouldna care to on her, I'm thinkin'. She'll be # loaded wi' lumberjacks—every man drunk as a lord, most like. Maybe Benton'll be In before night." To lie Continued EDUCATIONAL, School of Commerce AND Harrisburg Business College Tronp Hulldlnx. IB So.' Mnrket Squnrr Thorough Training in Business and Stenography. Civil Service Course * OUR OFFER—Right Training by Spe cialists and High Grade Positions. You Take a Business Course But Once; the BEST is What You Want. Fall Term begins. Day and Night School, Monday, September 3. Bell, 485 Dial, 4393 Tfce Office Training School Kaufman Bldg. 4 S. Market Sq. Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In th? Office < Call or send today for interesting booklet. "The Art oil Along In Ik* World." Bell ptoonc 649-R. Kodakeryl •and all Photographic Materials Jas. L e tt Second St. SATURDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father --.*- copyright, 1917, international News service By McManus I Ifftjfff. " I■ r- fllL . - i l" v -'JTSI/ v 'V- erert \ h * n . d Lightning Kills Mule anil Which 'wore fastly smothering Mr. just issued under the names of three held high with new courage in hi* WgUinillg IVIIIB ITIUie and Campbell and rescued bis helper local dairymen This is an advance veins, he ran into Mr. Graves. Cgj. C* 4 M an ' s Clothin? from under the mules - Mr - Camp- of one centner quart advanco "Hello, Forsyth," said that big man, OCIS r,re 10 ITldn 5 V,loUling be „ although.il> a serious condition, of ono cent P° r l uart - "how well you look. I see you've en- „ „ is expected to recover. The team {■■■■■■■■■■■ l listed, good for you. Well, a '' ■Sr'j belonged to H. R. Wentzel, on whose 1 position is ready for you whenever rt nnlmnm lfi* 1 "J 1 farm the men were working. B ¥ G Rdlein (Sap you come back. How'd you like to be struck a nair ' of m ules.°killing"onl 1 " a salesman. You re the very man foi | ns tantly and etunning the other. MltiK PIUCE RAISED I 212 LoCtlst St* the Place. the Btunned mule fell on a farmhand, N ew Bloomfleld, Pa., Sept. I. H v .„ And Forsyth, the man. the soldier, w h o was standing near. The light- t ? , , . I New Location walked on proudly, after all there ning passing on set the clothing of t - ommencln * to-day local house- ■ Optometrists Opticians was P a voun/man with °the w'orid A,ex Cam P bell on "re. The driver holders aro obliged to pay eight H Eyes Kxamlncd (No Drops) still unconquered. it was good to be of the team, after securing help, cents per quart for all milk in ac- H Bclsinger Glasses as low as $2. alone and feel contented. succeeded in putting out the flames cordance with an announcement SesSS>W*Sl*B*a™*sH*eewe CARRY PARCELS JlgL-AVOID RETURNING POSSIBLE Do Not Ask A Fighting Man To Carry Your Parcels The United States Government Snakes the request of Retail Merchants and the Public at Large Avoid waste in labor, capital, material and equipment and thereby release when needed men and capital for the defense of this Nation." To conform to the Government's request Retail Merchants of Harrisburg will after August 15,1917 . Make "but Two Deliveries to Each Home Per Day Help Harrisburg Stores Help the Government MAKE CAREFUL SELECTION A HABIT BUY ONLY THAT WHICH YOU ARE GOING TO KEEP AVOID C. O. D. PURCHASES WHENEVER POSSIBLE ' A number of vacancies have already been caused in • Similar action is being taken in all cities of the the delivery departments of the stores of this city on Country. • account of enlistments, and no doubt future enlistments Every citizen can now do his bit. and drafts will bring about a mortf serious shortage of Opportunity to serve in this war has come to few men in this line of service. The Government says that J. s s P rea ding to all. This is your opportunity. the places of these men cannot be filled by taking men England smarting under bitter experiences, due to from occupations more vital to the conduct of war. delay, urges the United States to act immediately. ~ , ... _ ... . France allows but three deliveries a week. The United Merchants and the Public must organize to meet this States Government asks that you help reduce deliveries condition before it becomes acute. * - to one a day, and may later request further sacrifice. These Stores Are Co-operating With the United States Government and the Council of National Defense Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, The Hub, Walk-Over Shoe Store, Bowman & Company Bogar, Sporting Goods, v/m Strouae Kaufman's Underselling Store, R e | a l Umbrella Store, .DoutrichV Steckly's Shoe Store, ? 7? , ' The Globe, * Crego Shoe Store, Ladies Bazaar, Rothert Company, H. Marks & Son, Salkin's Golden Rule Department Store, J. H. Troup Music House, p. G. Diener, The Hoff Store, New Cumberland. Goldsmith*, j. H. Brenner, Harrisburg Light and Power Company, Robinson s Woman Shop, Paul's Shoe Store, Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Company, Witmer, Bair & Witmer, Fackler's, Robinson & Company, SEPTEMBER 1917