Ave. oo Es andle le to ment cars y and per- elley, presi- hotel \erous d ser- $1.50 $2.00, ditional with or : Club dinner from lean, illon. tural CO. H, PA. 1 by 'y PA. @ gick cow or Nathan Picken’s ~ tings’s feed and grain store. That was ed. ¥ | t Een Mm os a AB RES EBA SD TOTO YW 2 88 88 B 88 8 g' 3 I = ® Copyright, The Frank A. Munsey Co. Mr. Johnson Bennett nodded to him- self most hearty approval of the young man who had just left his of- fice. : . He had seen to it personally that young Chapwell be promoted from kitchen utensils in the basement of the Johnson Bennett department store to be floor-walker of ladies’ suits on the third. He knew, too, that young Chapwell wouldn’t linger long there—linger long anywhere, for that matter—on his persistent upward climb. It wouldn’t be long before he was buyer; nor would he stop there, either. Young, Chapwell, too, was confident of all this, and more, as he walked home that evening to his boarding- house. But that did not in the least inter- fere with the fact that his present promotion was very good news—news that couldnt be carried in a heart without making it swell somewhat. But what is the use of good news unless there is some one to whom to tell it? That’s what young Chapwell thought. So he started out early next morning, that he might stop and tell Kittles about it. Kittles, of course, was already in his little antiques shop. He was giving the place its morning sweep when young Chapwell arrived, brushing up a little of the flour dust from under carved tables and from between mahogany chair-legs. “You don’t tell me!” Kittles ex» claimed, smiling his wrinkly, neigh- borly smile at young Chapwell’s news, for Kittles had brought to New York exactly the same neighborly heart that years ago, back home, had been so concerned about old lady Cooper’s new barn. “You don’t tell me! Why it don’t seem more than a jiffy ago since you was an independent, uppish little chap just startin’ in bein’ a cash-boy! You're like Ira Briggs, back home. He started out sweepin’ up in Al Has- fifteen years ago. Now he’s got a third interest in ths store. Where're you goin’ to stop?” He beamed affectionately on the youth and then added: “Bet you'll go and get married now.” Young Chapwell regarded Kittles with candid, boyish eyes. “No, I'm not gcing to get mare ried,” he gravely =z cured Kittles. “Yes, you will,” old Kittles insist- “And T tell you what: you come to me when you set up housekeepin’. There’s a lot of good things I've kep’ out of sight, savin’ ‘em for my neigh- bors. Neighbors come first.” Young Chapwell moved toward the door. “But I'm not,” he protested. Kittles laughed scoiingly. “Don’t you tell me,” he said. Young Chapwell looked very as he walked down the street. As a matter of fact, he always in- tended to marry when he reached that particular salary, and here was the salary and yet no girl. But it was no use. And, fortunately, that first morning in the new department he had no time to brood over it, for a special reduc- | tion sale of fall suits was advertised. Young Chapwell was too busy get- ting the stock arranged and the. sale started to give even a word of instrue- tion to Number Forty-One, Miss Ever- man, the" saleslady starting new that morning. Miss Murdock, the head saleslady, had, however, reassured him on that score, and had promised to have an eye to the new-one herself. The morning was half over “before he really saw Forty-One, and then he caught sight of her standing with Murdock over by the glass-case where the high-priced suits were kept. And oh, what a girl! Sweeter .and younger and dearer than ever he had dared to hope! The dressiest and most coiffuraed ladies on the floor became nomentities beside. her in her plain little dark blue serge with its white collar. But the morning wasn’t offering him leisure to marvel at his miracle. In- deed, that very moment there entered a stout, peremptory matron with three snobbish-looking misses in her charge. “Forty-one!” he called. She looked at him but made no move. Apparently she had forgotten her number. Poor little thing! She didn’t belong in a place like this, any- haw. He motioned for her. Her eyes opened a little wider, but still she did not come. He motioned again, and this time she came, a deep flush mounting to her cheeks and a queer, little one-sided smile on her lips. “Did you want me?” she asked. #This lady will show you what you want, madam. The special sample suits? Right over there.” A few minutes later he made a point of passing that way again to see how she was making out, and was tenderly amused to hear how bravely she was recommending the garments in Miss Murdock’s own special manner. «That fits you lovely. Perfectly lovely, lady. Believe me, madam, I'd grave - ! she could get naggy about it. never want you to take it if it didn’t. Presently Miss jock, a blue velvet costumne thrown over her arm, | came back to the glass-case of the ex- | nanan, Soe yy ai] pensive suits, gave a Dewildered glance round, caught sight of Forty- One with her customers, gasped, and said—young Chapwell heard her dis- tinctly—*Oh, my. glory!” It irritated him exceedingly to see how she stood and stared at Forty- One. The girl was doing splendidly, young Chapwell told himself. And suppose she didn’t make a sale? What of it? Murdock needn’t think She'd Letter be careful. When ths peremptory matron and fhe three snobbish misces left without buying he managed to be near to give ber a friendly smile. She was stand- ing ard looking a little dejectedly at the array of suils scattered over choirs. , “Thai’s all right,” he assured her kindly. *“F-~»~ ’em vn and get ready for the ncxt cre. Better luck next time.” A few ceconds later, from another r rt ¢f ike floor, he ~lared at the retry view of Idizs Murdock as he saw her join Forty-One and talk long and cx- citedly with her. ; “She’d better lst her alone,” muttered to himself, Then he saw Miss Murdock begin to explain to her about charge ac- counts and credit slips, and felt eas- ier. But when shortly after, that head geleslady motioned to him that the stout matron who had gone out with- out purchasing had been one of her best customers, and other seasons had often bought as many as four suits in one afternoon, why then he couldn’t even trust himself to reply. It was surprising how many oppor- tunities the day offered for talking with her. First of all, he discovered on a chair over by the glass-case of the expen- sive suits a soft little velvet hat and a blue serge coat in a heap, and he knew in a thrilled instant where they belonged. «Forty-Ond,” he called sternly. And when she came he pointed a renroochful finger at the heap, but in spite of himself he couldn’t keep his eyes stern; they kept laughing in ten- der amusement at her. : Forty-One fiushed adorably picked up the coat and hat. “Never, in all my experience in this store—"’ he began, genuinely trying to be stern. “1 don’t know where to put them,” she interrupted. «You certainly must have been told,” he chided her. “Take them to Miss Murdock and she will show you.” And as he walked on his eyes still refused to fill in line with his dignity. Again she came to him to say that the $18.75 suits were going pretty fast and Miss Murdock wanted to know yrére there any more in stock. “No,” he told her, a little dizzy over the joy of talking to her again. “I telephoned not five minutes ago.” “But people will keep asking for them,” she protested. “Couldn’t we —_couldn’t we reduce some of the fif- teen-dollar suits to eighteen seventy- five?” Not until she laughed did it strike him funny. “You've got a lot to learn,” he said. Then they both looked each other full in the face and laughed and laughed—silently, of course, but with convulsive shoulders, until young Chapwell felt that never before in his life had he been so deliciously and in- timately well acquaintea with any cone. But in thinking it over afterward he didn’t feel very sure why they had laughed, because it really wasn’t very funny, after all; just $15 suits reduced to $18.75. : She had always something to tell him whenever he came near. She had almost lost her life in try- ing to keep a red-haired lady from buying a mulberry suit; and didn’t he. think she ought to discourage the middle-aged, stout ones from buying the very tight skirts? And when they looked rather poo.- ish, ought she to let them buy the draped skirts that were sure to go out before another season? And weren't they having a good day of it? He could scarcely trust himseit to answer that. Their relations had traveled so cmazingly for this day, with only glances and smiles and a bare handiul of words for milestones, that he was awed with the wonder of it and, con- sequently, more and more concerned over her white tiredness. «She’s not used to it,” he thought «poor little kid! And just as soon as 1 decently can—" : He found that he wasn’t the only one that kept watching her. During the day he saw the sales- wemen in little groups staring at her, and was annoyed with the curiosity or jealousy, or whatever it was, that prompted it. He found himself under observa- tion, too; and more than often met stares that were curious and amused. For himself, he didn’t mind — he had encountered a little of that every time he had gone to a new depart- ment—but he was indignant for Forty- Cne’s sake. The worst thing of all happened right after lunch. He had felt, rather than seen, a new epidemic of excite- ment suddenly spread over the de- partment, and his eye, searching the cause, had found Mr. Bennett him self, standing there on the flmor, star- ing, staring, staring at Forty-One. Whether the girl was aware of it or he and not couldn’t be told, for she went icht or ] ing twelve. d r suits to an u 1=bby, middle-aged customer. Young Chapwell walked away with an angry scowl. Bennett himself] Bennett, Bens nett, who owned the whole place! He didn’t pretend to understand, but he didn’t like it. He wished he could take her away that very evening—but he supposed people had to know each other a few days before that sort of thing. Ie begrudced even those few days. Then when closing time came she | sought him out to say “Good-by”’; and | that, he knew, must be quaintly and ! dearly like her. | “Good-by,” he said; and hoped she knew how much more than “Good- | by” he was really saying. She took a deep breath and smiled up to him. “Good-by! Haven't we had a glorious day?” Then she was gone, but he knew that she did know. : : And all the way home he was weav- irg vivid, wondexzful dreams that be- came more real every minute. So he stopped in at Kittles’s dusty, cluttered store, this time not because Kittles was a2 good neighbor-soul, but now because the dusty contents of the : store held for him a new and mys- {ctious—they were the things that hc'~ed make a home. ilitiles shook a coquettish finger as he noted Chapwe'l’s new interest. «Aha! You ARE goin’ to get mar- ried, ain’t you?” “Yes, 1 an,” young Chapwell re- plied with his usval frankness. de “Well, well, well,” Kittles mused. Then with a sudden air of mystery he went to the back of the store and presently appeared with a pink-band- ! ed gold-edged tea-set which he im- pressively displayed on the counter. «Jinks! That's some class!” Chap- well breathed with admiration. “I’ve been savin’ that for a bridal couple,” Wittles confided, “and I'll make you a weddin’ present of that for ten dollars.” If young Chapwell didn’t reply at once it was because he was caught with a vision of her ecstasy over them. Dear little kid! Guess she'd open her eyes some at a tea-set like that! Kittles misinterpreted his silence. “No, sir! I am going to make it eight,” he corrected himself, “That’s how big-a fool I am over briual couples.” Besides the tea-set, young Chapel bought her a work-box and a tea-et- tle and a gilt frame mirror. It was not unitl he was about to leave that he saw the little mahogany rocker, which Kittles assured him was the best veneered rocker in the place. | It wasn’t the veneering or the finish | that caught young Chapwell’s fancy, | but rather a picture in his mind of | that chair, by a window, ard an eager girl waiting, watching—for—HIIi With the exception of cents in small change, young Ch had already emptied his pockets, but 7 repeated. #7 thought I'd never catch up,” she Faspe her boyish eyes smiling into Speechless, he stared back at her, She went on, “] wanted ito apologize for yester- day—that trick I played — but I couldn’t do it in the store in front of every one. Could I? So I got your address from the manager, but when I got there you'd just left, and you wouldn’t turn cnece to look back, or slow down, or anything, I thought I'd never catch up!” Then Kittles, displaying chairs to a woman customer in the rear of the store, turned and saw them. “Blest if there he ain’t now!” he exclaimed in delighted surprise. He left his customer and came for- ward, nodded with businesslike po- liteness to the girl, ‘and then spoke confidentially to young Chapwell. “Now, loot here,” he said, “you know that chair you’re going to buy for your young lady? Well, I got a customer back here that wants it tad. Wouldn't care to give it up, wcald you?” “She .can have it.” Kittles’s face dropped with dicap- pointment. “But I told her she couldn’t!” “She can have it,” young Chapirell “I’ve decided not to get it.” “But I want you to have it,” .it- tles persisted. “Even if you ain’t got the money now, it’s all right.” “No—" young Chapwell began to object, but Kittles wouldn’t let him do it. He returned back to his wom- an customer. ! “I'm goin’ to hold it for you,” he warned young Chapwell. The young girl drew a bit nearer to the dusty onyx table and to young Chapwell, a little of the gay daring and the brightness gone now from her eyes. “] wish you'd let me buy her,” she begged. “Don’t!” he stopred her sharply. The girl’s mouth drooped with her hurt. “] knew,” she said, “that ycu’re awfully put out about yesterday, and it for I'd like the ‘chair to be a peace c er- ing and a—a sort of thank you for the awiully nice time I had yesteid::.” She looked at him anxiously. “ou ARE cross, aren't you?” she snl’. He shook his head. No, he wosn’t CY Oss. He would have answered if he c~uld. “Of course, I shouldn’t have cone that yesterday,” she admitted. ‘But it WAS fun, selling things, ard I’ve always wanted to. I think it’s i) my blood. You see,” she exp ined sim- ply, her boyishly frank eycs upon his until they gave back to him for the moment the strange illusicn that she was again Forty-One, so: 'e onc of whom he micht take care “nd make happy with pink and gold tea-sets and “mahogany rockers— “You see,” she ' was continuing Littles promised on his horor and.“shess my fathes-met my rcther; she under no circaiisiances whatsoever | fo z<ll it te ~uy one else. “Give my boot to yeur missus,” Kit- 3 coiled facetiously as young Chap: ICH, vou” yey, gravely. ia couid scarcely wait to g S young Chapwell re- get back .ore next morning to see her. Arrived there, he eagerly sought the s of each entering saleslady. Sha vos late. Very late. Even by eight- tli: ty she had not come. He went to Miss Murdock. Where is Miss Everman?” he de- manded. : Miss Murdock grinned in evident enjoyment and pointed to the tall blonde with the unpleasant, bold eye. “] mean Forty-one,” he corrected. “That’s her.” “But where stammering. “That young lady you was calling Forty-One”—with what glee she rubbed it in!—*“yesterday happened to be Miss Minerva Bennett, and she was selecting a hundred-dollar velvet cos- tume from her father’s store, though she most generally has all her gowns made in Paris, as was that very dress she had on yesterday. And her father gave her a third interest in the store on her eighteenth birthday, and be- sides when her mother died she got a fortune which she couldn't spend if she was to take all her time to it.” He remembered how he had pic- tured her ecstasy over the tea-set— she, who could haye bought out Kit- tles with a litile of her loose change! “She’ll think she’s dreaming fairy stories!” he quoted himself bitterly. None of these excuses did he make even in his own heart. to the 5 is—" He stopped, With a dull apathy he remembered the gilt mirror and. the work-box and the tea-kettle, He remembered, too, the veneered mahogany rocker at Kittles’s—the one that was to have stood by the window. That night after supper he walked wearily around to Kittles’s to tell him not to save the rocker. So immersed was he in his heart- achy gloom that he didn’t hear his landlady from her doorway call, “Hi, Mr. Chapwell!” Nor, of course, her subsequent as- surance to the slim young girl in dark blue who stood on her door-step, “Hurry on, miss! Youll catch him easy.” But it was not easy to catch him, though the firl in dark blue hurried and hurried and hurried. Now and then, when the passers-by were not noticing too much, she téok little running steps, but even then she did not overtake him until he had turned in Kittles’s door. lipned in the door, too, and . leaning against it, too actually She stood © breathless for the moment to speaks | | 1 i was clerk in a dry-gocds sto.e and he was in a grocery. I was born above a little five and ten, the first store my father owned. And we’d never in this, world be where we are now if moth- er’s brother hadn’t died in Alaska and left us some gold—that and father’s nerve and luck. “And ‘waitin’ on trade’ is in mw bloqd just as some folks have’rheu- matism and others natural piety. And Paris and check-books can’t take it out, either. I'm more Forty-One than vowd think. And there are heaps of things I've always wanted to do”— she drew little circles on the dusty onyx as if to indicate the heaps— “and I couldn’t do them. I don’t know just why, except that I couldn’t. “No one expected me to, because I'm an heiress-person. And then yes- terday when you called me it sudden- ly seefned as if there was one thing I wanted to do that I could do. You made it possible for me to do it. And we did have a good time, didn’t we?” He didn’t answer. “Didn't we?” she persisted. “Yes,” he maneged to get out. “So that’s why I want to give you the chair, for—"” she faltered-a little —4or HER. She’ll like it. It’s a nice, homy little chair.” «please don’t,” he blurted out in agony. She regarded him gravely. “You aren’t angry NOW?” ‘No, he wasn’t angry. “you are going to get married, aren’t you?” «Don’t make things worse?” he begged. Her eyes opened wider, puzzled. “How worse? What do you mean?’ He shook his head wretchedly. “You must explain. Can’t,you see that you must?” she demanded with grave dignity. He winced as he brought it out. “It —it was you I planned to marry when—" «when I was Forty-One?” He nodded. For a moment there was-silence and trembling nerves. Young Chapwell felt his bones turn to cobwebs. Then the girl said “Oh-h!” in a half-sobbing, halflaughing sort of way. For a dizzy mcment their eyes held each other, and then, blinded with too much light, looked away. «youn could call very soon,” the girl said dreamily. “That’s one of the things they hadn’t planned for me to do. But I don’t mind if it isn’t—if you don’t.” From the rear of the store sounded Kittles’s voice. “Sorry, ma'am, look at some of the others. young man over by the it for his but you'd better That sweetheart, if I have to have to give it outright.” ALCOHCL 3 PER CE . AVegelable Preparation forAs- similating the Food andReguta: ling the Stomachs and Gowe!s of ET 18 Promotes Digestion Cheerfid- | ness and Rest Contains neither | Opium Morphine nor Mioeral. | |NOT NARC OTIC. oil: Aperfect Remedy for Consfipa ; fion, Sour Stomach. Diario : Worins Convulsions. Feverisl. 20 | ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. | FacSimile Signature of lca. fo Ee Tae CENTAUR COMPANY, [ht NEW YORK. i i~ At6 months old | FT ee ——— lil llr Exact Copy of Wrapper. rm, Linoleum Logic doors goin’ | High Grade Merchandise The policy of stocking only high-grade merchandise is back of our recommenda: tion of Armstrong’s Linoleum Careful investigation carried conviction. All materials are tested and every inch is inspected before it leaves the factory. The new patterns and colors put Arm strong’s in a class by itself. Patterns for every room in the house. R. REICH & SON THE HOME FURNISHERS Complete From Cellar to Attic 120 Center St., Meyersdale rem A For Good Looks a woman must have good health. She can do her part by helping natureto keepthe blood pee, the liver active and the wels regular, with the aid of the mild, vegetable remedy— BEECHAM'S Largest Sale. of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25¢. A A PA PrP op AINA Wm. C, Price Successor to W. A. 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Hall's Catarrh Cure is ont a quack medicie. It was prescribed by one of the best ‘physi- cians in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is compos- ed of the best tonics known, combis- ed with, the best blood purifiers, act. ing directly on the mucous surfaces: The perfect combination of the two in gredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrk. Send for testimonials free. Send for testimonials F. J. CHENEY, & Co., Toledo, Sold by all Druggists, 76 cents pur bottle. Pake Hall’s Family Pills for Con sipation. ad aE HGS Ne How to Cures a La Grippe Cough. Lagrippe cougns aemand instant treatment. They show a serious condi tion of the system and are weakening Postmaster Collins, Barnegat, 'N. 3. says: “I took Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for a violent lagripps cough that completely exhausted me nn | and less than a half bottle stopped tha | ws | RIA cough” Try it. Sold everywhere Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers