f ■< BIG TIMBER By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR Copyright. 1916, by LKt!*, km 6 Co. Vi (Continued.) Trained to repression, schooled ir self control, Stella rose to obey, foi under the smoothness of his ton there was the iron edge of com mand. Her hoart apparently ceasei to bear. She tried to smile, but slit knew that her face was tear wet She knew tho.t. Jack Fyfe had see: and understood. She had done nc ■wrong, but a terrible apnrehensior of consequences seized her, a feai that tragedy of her own making might stalk grimly in that room. Sitting beside a window, chin in hand, her lower lip compressed be tween her teeth, she saw Fyfe, after tho lapse of ten minutes, leave by the front entrance, stopping to chat a minute with Linda and Charlie Renton, who were moving slowly to ward the house. Stella rose to her feet and dabbed at her face with a powdered chamois. She couldn't let Monohan go like that; her heart cried out against it. Very likely they would never meet again. She flew down the hall to the living room. Monohan stood just within the front door gazing irreso lutely over his shoulder. lie took a step or two to meet her. His clean cut face was drawn into sullen lines, a deep flush mantled his cheek. "Listen," he said tensely, "I've been made to feel like—like— Well, I controlled myself. I kne\p it had to be that way. It was unfortunate. I think we could have been trusted to do the decent thing. You and 1 were bred to do that. I've got a little pride. I can't come here again. And I want to see you once j Lemon Juice j I For Freckles I Girls! Make beauty lotion at j ! home for a few cents. Try it! j Squeeze the Juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounce." of orchard white, shake well, nnd vou have a quarter pint of tho best r reckle and tan lotion, and complex ion beautifler, at very, very vmall cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard whlto for a few cents. Massage this sweet ly fragrant lotion Into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes dlsap and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It Is harm less.—Adv. EDIt'ATIOSAL School of Commerce AND Harrisburg Business College Troup Hullrtlntt. IS So. Market Square 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 Vou Want. Fall Term Day and Night School. Enter any Monday. Bell. <B6 Dial. 4393 l fer Fm> . . i fIrfRKUWIUQ. a / A. • Your New Furs --They Should Be Purchased Now Selections and Prices Are Advantageous The reputation of this store as the /Sfegitjkji leading Furrier in this section of the state bears out the fact most emphat ically that it is safe and wise to buy (\ ./ j'_ -\ 10ur exceptional experience has g&f o \ given us practical and keen judgment ' n selection of pelts—thereby as vil -'''MB, suring you of the choicest to be had. IPn - f/jf dAt this moment the stock is at its jl J I height and considering the scarcity 1 j and difficulty in procuring furs of the j finer kinds, now is your most oppor \ / tune time to buy. Vy - 7 We will reserve in storage for you Furs selected now upon which a deposit is made FRED B. HARRY, N. * I - THURSDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service — By McManus THEtaC Clothed look | ~ - vell who an old p/\l hello | vht D'On't <1 c !o o f~~ j i toN-biDER that 1 . FOOLISH ON ME- T ISN'T THE. ISTHIS OFM.neWI LADT: TOU VES I SHc " 1 • / V, 1 <_ CLOTHES-NOW PERSON? S L - VCXR PUMP*? /PL INSULT TO ME | NO ONE U SJ fc)o AS SA>T AN _ TO THEOA N a- ' * ? < 1 ZJ — J COU >-D i T i"i '' 1 • "ii ,| l( \n more before I leave here for good. I'll be going away next week. That'll be tlie end of it—the bitter finish, i Will you slip down to the first point , .south of Concur bay about 3 in the |afternoon to-morrow? It'll be the : last and only time. He'll have you ( for life: can't I talk to you for I twenty minutes?" "No." she whispered forlornly. "I can't do that. I —oh, goodby; good by!" • "Stella, Stella!" she heard his vi brant whisper follow after. But she ran away through dining room and j hall to the bedroom, there to fling herself face down, choking back the passionate protest that welled up 1 within her. She lay there, her face ' buried in the pillow, until the sput tering exhaust of the Abbey cruiser 1 growing fainter and more faint told I her they were gone. She heard her husband walk ! through the house once after that, j When dinner was served ho was not there. It was 11 o'clock by the I 'timepiece on her mantel when she heard him come in, but he did not | come to their room. He went quietly into the guest chamber across the : hall. She waited through a leaden per j iod. Then, moved by an impulse she did not attempt to define, a mix ture of motives, pity for him, a crav | ing for the outlet of words, a desire to set herself right before him, she! !.slipped on a dressing robe andj crossed the hall. The door swung rtpen noiselessly. Fyfe sat slumped j in a chair, hat pulled low on his i ! forehead, hands thrust deep In his j pockets. He did not even look up. i His eyes stared straight ahead, ab- i ] sent, unscelngly fixed on nothing. i j He seemed to be unconscious of her I | presence or to ignore it, she could not tell which. "Jack." she said. And when he' made no response she said again! tremulously, that unyielding silence; chilling her. "Jack!" He stirred a little, but only to! take off his hat and lay it on a table beside him. With one hand push ing back mechanically the straight,' , reddish tinged hair from his brow, ! he looked up at her and said briefly j ; in a tone barren of all emotion: j "Well ?" She was suddenly dumb. Words ; I failed her utterly. Yet there was' | much to be said, much that was I ! needful to say. They could not go '■ with a cloud like that over them, a | cloud that had to be dissipated in E| ||| \ With Cuticura 1 I olntment2sandsoc the crucible of words. Yet she could not begin. Fyfe, after a prolonged silence, seemed to grasp her diffi culty. Abruptly he began to speak cutting straight to tho heart of his subject after his fashion. "It's a pity things had to take this particular turn," said he. "But now that you're face to face with something definite, what do you pro pose to do about it?" "Nothing." she answered slowly. "I can't help the feeling. It's there. But I can thrust it into the back ground ; nd go on as if it didn't exist. There's nothing else for me to do that ' I can see. I'm sorrv Jack." "So am I," he said grimly. "Still, it was a change we took—or I took, rather. I seem to have made a mis take or two in my estimate of both you and myself. That is human enough, I suppose. You're making a bigger mistake than I did, though, to let Monohan sweep you off your feet." There Was something that road for contempt in his tone. It stung her. "He hasn't swept me off my feet, as you put it," she cried. "Good heavens, do you think I'm that spine less sort of creature. I've got a little self respect left yet if I was weak | enough to grasp at the straw you | threw me in the beginning. I was i honest with you then. I'm trying to I bo honest with you now." "I know. Stella," he said gently. | "I'm n'ot throwing mud. It's a very unfortunate state of affairs, that's i all. I foresaw something of the sort when we were marrie(J. You i were candid enough about your at- I titude. But 1 told myself like a con- I ceited fool that I could make your | life so full that In a little while I'd i lie the only possible figure on your 1 horizon. I've failed. I've known I for some time that I was going to | fail. You're not the thin blooded type of woman that is satisfied with pleasant surroundings and any sort iof man. You're bound to run the gamut of all the emotions, some time and somewhere. I loved you and I thought in my conceit I co'uU make myself the man, the one maft ! who would mean everything to you. | "Just the same," he continued, , "you've been a fool, and I don't see how you can avoid paying the pen- I alty of folly." "What do you mean?" she asked. (To be continued.) I'VSTOH AT CONFERENCE j Halifax, Pa., Oct. 4. The Rev. C. i E. Rettew and James E. Neitz are at ! Annville attending the annual United ; Brethren Church Conference. Th. ; Rev. Mr. Rettew has just closed a suc : cessful year as pastor of the local .church, during which time nearly s4on was raised toward the support of tho Rev. C. A. Funk, a former pastor, who is a missionary in China. HARRISBTTRG TEI.FGRAPH 1 I pMWWUVHVWWWWWWWWWWWMMWTOwmwvWK ii All's Well That! I • SB Ends Well M \\ i I By Jane McLean 1 The girl stepped into the canoe f , anil .settling herself among the cush , ions, looked lazily across at the boy | as he pushed away from the shore. ; Such an absurd boy, she thought to •'herself, who would persist in treat • i ing her like a piece of Dresden china j ".when she could paddle a canoe as j 1 j well as he could. And yet she liked 1 j him rather well. It amused her to '; be told that her eyes were noticeably ] . ' blue and that she was conceited all r I in one breath. Boys are funny when j they're very young. ■ I "Well," said the boy. "are you t' sorry you came, or have you decid ed to be nice?" ,! "I'm always nice," the girl an il swered uncompromisingly —"some . j times nicer than others. I'm really ■> I very nice to-day." : | "Why wouldn't you dance with me , i last night?" the boy returned abrupt , | ly. His manner showed plainly that , i he was serious, very serious, and her ! half-moeking manner hurt him. The girl raised her eyebnows in ; j pretended surprise at his tone. "I . did," she retorted. '' "Twice!" he exclaimed scornfully. "Well, you can't expect mo to prance around all evening with a " I young race horse, when I'm suppos ' ed to be up here resting." '' lie laughed shortly and then lean ' ed forward to look closer into the " amused blue eyes opposite. 1 "I don't suppose I'll ever know > you," he said grimly "you'll take I care of that." 1 The girl drew back. "Why discuss t personalities?" she parried, although ; there was a touch of discomfort ,in s her manner. i, "I brought you out to discuss per -1 |'sonalities," he said stubbornly. "I j [t love you!" . I For a moment wide, startled blue : , I eyes looked into serious gray ones;! ijthen she laughed a quavering little! . laugh. "Children shouldn't play with , fire," she began; then she nesitated charmingly. He had been such a nice! playmate—why must he spoil it all ? | j She liked him, but she did not love i ] him. He was only a boy, she argued . j to herself repeatedly. "Seriously, boy," she said after a , moment's silence, "are you trying to I l make love to me? You mustn't say | 1 another word. I don't believe you ' know what love means." They paddled through an open ] space, and the sunlight shone gold | ; j on the boy's blonde hair. If she had | ■ not been so sure that he was amus ! ing himself, she would have thought - that he was suffering. | "What do you think love means?" i he said gravely. The girl was more certain of her < ground now. "Love," she laughed triumphantly, "Is that set of sensa- I tions which finding their . way through the afferent nerves, stimu | late certain ganglionic centers of I the occipital portion of the brain, ! and extend upward through the higher areas of cerebral conscious i ness. There," she finished breath- I lessly, "I wasn't sure I could re j member it, but it must be so, wo I studied it in psychology at college." The boy didn't even smile. He ■ paddled silently under a tree that! j hung rather low over the water, and ; then turned the canoe skillfully ] around. "Will you let me paddle back?" he~asked. "Why bother?" he said shortly. j ) "You won't spoil me at any rate," ' she said slowly. "Most people do j you know, why don't you try?" She was trying to keep the con- I versation in lighter channels away ; from the danger of deep water. She ! was light and frivolous herself,. | afraid to look into the deeper, chan-1 ! nels of her womanhood for fear of , what she might find there. Things | wero so pleasant as they were now, I and responsibility terrified her, and j this talk of love, lately the bov had POSLAM PROVES PACIFYING BALM ! TO ITCHY SKIN | Try Poslam for any bad case of Ec ! zema, particularly when nothing else j seems to help and the itching is al , most Intolerable. | Poslam is so active, stops itching, so quickly, that it does away with | much uncertainty. This , directness —this getting right I at the trouble—is a quality exclusive lin Poslam. Poslam possesses healing | energy in such concentrated form that | one ounce of Poslam is worth a pound lof ointments less efficient. Use it to | ! drive away any eruptlonal disturb- I ance of the skin. 1 I Sold everywhere. Kor free sample ' write to Kniergency laboratories. 213 I West 47th St.. New York City.—Ad vertisement. ( dwelt too much on it. The thought troubled her. Itenlly if he were to continue in this strain she would have to refuse to come out with him again, and yet, as they suddenly shot out into the sun again, his yellow hair glit tered and she felt a strange chok ; j tng feeling In her throat, something that defied analyzing and which | frightened her with Its strangeness. I She took to wondering h'ow one • knew when one really fell In love, and she fell silent as they reached I the little landing place and the boy i helped her out ol' the canoe. I Going up the bunk she stumbled against Mm. Instantly she had drawn away but he had caught her | before she could escape. Even then i she would have parried with him in a last desperate attempt to avoid . the truth, but the expression in his | eyes and the grim set of his lips silenced her. Again that feeling | . came into her throat, and then slid- j denly she knew what It meant, and ; and nothing else mattered. Love silenced the mocking words! on her lips, and crept like a prodigal into the blue eyes that had jeered so , often. A ray of sunlight suddenly shot across the boy's blonde hair, and with a little sob of surrender she buried her head on his shoulder. Advice to the Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Every Bight to Happiness Dear Hiss Fairfax: A young lady refuses to consider! marrige and insists on breaking her i engagement in the spirit of unsel fishness and generosity. Sho had j one leg amputated at the hip, and is! . for the rest of her life confined t*> | crutches. Her finance insists on che ! marriage. Who is right? We think |so much of your clear judgment ini I these matters and await your answer I with interest. R. R. S. j I It is perfectly natural that a wo- [ ! man who has gone through this ex j perience should offer her fiance his j freedom. Sensitiveness and pride j lead her to do that. But real love | and loyalty would naturally refuse ; absolutely. If the girl were going j ; to be a cruel burden to the man she j | loved she might be justified in con- j tinuing to insist. But even on i crutches a woman of fine feelings, j | unselfishness and generosity can be j ! far' more of a helpmate to a man 'than could a woman who had her! full quota of limbs and a distorted i soul. I think there is every reason i why love should be more important 1 than pride and why the girl should ' | marry and make a beautiful thing! o* the partnership on which she is entering. She musn't let herself be afraid that only pity and chivalry i are influencing her finance. If the: Daily Dot Puzzle 5? 2 4- _ j 53. * 6 'S C 7 • m 9 7 " 7t s> i # • / m's'H ' 5> *l4 W .15 •18 ** 22 23 * 2. . * *4 o 48 2o **s j 47 *>" . 27 V .32 50 / . v J 42 *>*> U \fj JSi i 4l "4o Piffle's frightened—it's a That made him run from the house. Draw from one to two and so on I |to the end. i case were reversed woulnd't the girl' be proud and happy to be the wifo| of the man she loved? Does she, think for a minute that if any of ourj soldier boys come back maimed and I wounded the woman they love will; even consider giving them up? Don't Do It- DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: 1 am eighteen and know a young j doctor five years my senior. 'My parents are off to Chicago for' t'-ree months, and my friend has j asked me to go to Atlantic City for: two months and board in a hotel and j go under his name. We are not on- 1 gaged-and I am puzzled as to what 1 should do. He admits he loves mc | dearly and desires to make me his wife when my parents return. MADGE. My dear child, of course you can't do this. Going under this man's I name when you have 110 right to il j would put you In an Impossible sltua- ' tio'a. You must not dream of going I to Atlantic City without the full j ■;now.edgc and consent of your par - k , - ' ■ • ** j Something V i I In Bed Room | Genuine Quartered Oak : , Bed Room Suit For s temp 1 "\JO DESIGN CAN TAKE THE TLACE OF THE / IN COLONIAL for general all-'rotmd service, beauty £m and harmony. Here is a suite—very substantially built— JP graceful Colonial design large mirrors and plenty of §|. drawer space. We olTer this suite as a leader for October home outfitters for the very special price EASY PAYMENTS CAN BE ARRANGED U i bulky waist-lines more Give Style, Comfort and per- j bi' i' ' HHR graceful; awkward bust- Jcctly fitting Gown. Long Lb rfolvl T K nes sma '' er and have the wearing, they assure the L'j l /MZf / " Old Corset" comfort with utmost in a corset at most H r™ .3..° & s s.°° s l.°° to 33.00 lAt All Dealers WEINGARTEN BROS. Inc., New York Chicago San FrancUco I OCTOBER 4, 1017. ents. A'on are too young to bo in 11 la hole! unchaperoned. No man who . really cared for you would suggest I ! such a thing unless he were so young ! 1 that he did hot realize the enormity |of what he was asking. I think you | I should take your mother into your | ! confidence at once, since your young : j doctor is (I say it sadly and thought- 11 fully) either a bit of a knave or a good bit of a fool! This isn't the I j way a man treats a girl he wants for j 1 his wife. It would bluclten your' I name and might, ruin your character, i ! Remember, it can't be done. | MARIETTA IIIIIS IN SKIIVKH j Marietta, Pa., Oct. 4. Mr. and Mrs. U. Grant Hippie, of Marietta, have | given two sons for tho service of tho j present conllict. Walter, the youngest, is on tho battleship Nevada, and | j Italph, the oldest, is in Georgia with I Company C, Fourth Regiment, of Co -1 lumbln. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Mayer i elso have two sons in service. The j youngest, James, is a member of the | Engineering Corps, and Wayne left j yesterday morning for Camp Meado with the drafted men. Most any pood druggist or depart ment store in this city can supply you at small cost. Among others Gorgas, Kennedy, Croll Keller, Bow man & Co., Dives, Pomeroy & Stew art. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers