PAGE SIX THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1913. 1 A A ,t. .ti .t. I WW TH TTT' f, itl itl !f I itl itl A I Her Return It Was Long Delayed By CLARISSA MACKIE For three long years Genet Savllle had nursed a bitter resentment against her husband. During this time there was over before her the mental pic ture of their quarrel and the parting.. ffho recollection of his whlto, con temptuous face always stung her to fresh hatred of him. She could hear his low spoken acrid reply to her up braiding. The few words that had sent her fleeing from the room and later from his house with all tho quick passion of her southern nature stirred to Its depths. ' She had sought solitude In nn ob scure Swiss hamlet. She, who was without kinsfolk, had cut herself loose from tho only tie that bound her to her world. She had not seen a familiar face nor heard tho sound of a well known voice In all those thlrty-slx months. She had not read a news paper nor heard any tidings of the old life. Her private fortune, In negoti able securities, afforded her every ma terial comfort. She had music and books, her favorite dog and bitter thoughts. Threo years, thlrty-slx months, a thousand days, and moro, ages ago, since their parting In the library. Never had she once longed for tho sound of Korman's voice, for the sight of his face, for reconciliation. Sho hated him for his outburst that night, hated him for his cool contempt of her "heroics," as he called It. Always sho -would re member him as she had last seen him, cold and stern and bitter, with no lovo for her. She fed her soul on these un wholesome reflections. Then one lovely morning Genet climb ed up the verdant upland pastures re claimed from the rough mountain sides. Sho paused In tho shadow of a dark clothed pine tree, Inhaling the pure air and glorying In the panorama of moun tain and valley, pine forest and dis tant glacier, when close beside her there sprang Into view a tableau a young dairy farmer and his sweetheart. Genet had often watched tho peas ants, her fair face amusedly con temptuous of their crude lovemaklng. This man might havo been Norman's twin brother handsome, clean cut, gray eyed, brown skinned. The girl was fresh and sweet and fair. She was In his arms, and his firmly molded chin was pressed against the parting of her golden hair. Genet watched them, a strange new feeling leaping to her head, to her heart a white flame of jealousy that seared her wounds the bitterness, the anger, against her husband. Her pulses throb bed, and the blood flew to her cheeks. She watched the man's face wistfully, hungrily, as one who looks on n be loved forgotten picture and revels in tho wonderment of rediscovery. The face of the man was curiously llko that of Norman the finely shaped head with its closely brushed chestnut hair, the straight nose, the resolute mouth now softened into tenderness. Tho steadfast gray eyes, deep set and black lashed, were fixed on tho girl's face, shyly lifted to his and exquisite in its virginal purity of expression. So Norman must havo looked at her when ho had told Genet of his love. Genet drew back among the pine boughs and leaned her face against the rough bark of the tree. Sho was trem bling with long controlled emotion, de llclously thrilled at tho wild prompt ings of her wayward heart. Impetu ously she had withdrawn from her hus band, too hurt to render him Justice. As passionately would sho return to him and heap the smothered riches of her lovo and a lifelong devotion at his feot to repay for his suffering, his re gret, his loneliness, for ho would have suffered keenly, he who worshiped the ground she trod. All tho world should know that sho who had left him in an ger without duo reason acknowledged her mistake and had returned to him. After awhile sho descended to tho village, singing all tho way to tho tiny chalet where she lived. Tho simple peasants among whom sho had spont her exllo looked after her and wonder ed and smilingly agreed with ono an other that tho sad faced lady had found happiness after all. All the nightmare of Genet's nurtur ed resentment which had robbed her of three years of Ufo was banished by her preparations for immodlato depar ture. Now that sho saw herself in tho wrong sho chafed to be humiliated be fore her husband In expiation of her sin. Arrived in Now York and settled In a hotel under an assumed name, sho called n cab and motored slowly past tho town house. As sho expected, It wna closed and shuttered. Sho looked up at tho familiar windows with dim eyes and registered a vow to live moro earnestly, moro worthily, if sho was permitted to go back. Tho next day tho train carried her (own to Fairflolds, whero sho ontered the ancient surrey which served all transportation purposes for tho casual traveler. Leaving the sleepy village, tho surrey rolled lazily along tho sandy, wooded roada under tall growing whlto oaks and chestnuts. Genet sat with clinched hands and temo lips watching the sand drift in jrohlen streams over tho tires, con scious of tho intoxicating summer scents, ncutoly responsive to tho pa thos In the thrush's tender song. The driver humped drowsily on tho front scat and slapped at the files on the broad backed horse. It was a ride to be remembered for Its suspense. At tho stono pillared entrance to Fairflolds Genet dismissed the carriage and entered tho winding avenue that led to the house, a half mile dlstnnt, on the very edge of tho bluffs overhanging the sound. The house must bo open, for there were recent tracks of broad tires in the drive. Tho gate lodge was tenanted, lor curious heads lurked behind the curtains. Sho wondered if Mrs. Leo nnd her lame husband still lived at tho lodge. Sho longed to stop and talk to them nnd thus bring herself imme diately into tho swing of tho old life. Her slender, girlish figure was clad in pale blue linen coat and gown, with a veil tho same tint shrouding her whlto hat. Sho stepped across the turf with eagor feet, her charmlug face now rose red with anticipation, now Illy pale with sudden dread. The low, rambling house lay quiet in the hot sunshine. Tho broad verandas, awnlngod and vineclad, seemed to be deserted. Her glance wandered to the launch. Tho party had boarded her and were lounging In wicker chairs about tho deck. Norman was at the wheel. She saw his backward glance at the house. The whistle tooted im pudently, nnd they were away, cutting the water into a thousand twinkling lights nnd a shower of falling spray. When they had rouudod the point sho hurried across tho drive and entered the veranda. There was a litter of smoking things on convenient tabo rets, heaps of sporting papers and gay ly covered magazines. A siphon, a de- cantor and a tray of empty glasses wore on a round table and bespoko re cent refreshment. It wns very like old times when she had gone away for a fow weeks and left Norman to hold bachelor revels with old cronies. She smiled at the disorder. It was nil so natural that the past threo years were blotted out as if they had never been. Sho was merely returning homo from a day's shopping In the hot town. Thus she deluded herself. The wide, cool hall was quite desert ed. Tho polished floor gave back blur red reflections of tho heavy furniture. Tho huge flreplaco was crowded with fresh branches of fragrant bayberry. Tho library door was closed, but other open doorways offered cool vistas of drawing rooms, billiard and dining rooms. The stairs wound In a broad spiral to tho second floor. Genet paused, her eyes lingering on each well known object There was no change In the arrangement of furni ture. Even the hatrack bore its cus tomary heterogeneous array of coats and caps, riding crops, golf sticks and tennis rackets. With a quick nervous gesture she threw back her veil and turned to tho library. Before she sought her own apartments sho would pcop in here. And now tho creeping fear at her heart found shape and sug gestion. If her portrait, tho one Giddy had painted, still hung over the fireplace in the library, then all would be well; Norman would bo forgiving, would ro leut. Ills mother's plcturo bud graced that spaco until Norman married, and then It had given place to Genet's. And now that sho had forfeited her right would it be there? If not sho would steal away from tho house and never return. Tho nnswor to her questioning heart lay behind tho closed door. Suddonly sho turned tho knob and slipped inside, closing tho door softly bohlnd her. Then sho loaned panting with emotion against its mahogany surface. The long room lay in shadow save for ono sunny window at tho farther end. Here n high backed winged chair was placed. She fell to trembling as sho heard tho flicker of a turning page behind tho winged chair. In tho silence it seem ed as If her heart throbs would betray her presence. In her Joyful Imaginings of her return to her husband thorc wore no such fearful terror nnd apprehen sion as camo upon her now. Her glov ed hands wrung together in a supremo effort for control. Suddenly a little sigh of relief escaped her. Terhaps no ono was in tho room after all! Then, as if her sigh had been heard, a voice came from tho chair, a voice of quiet inquiry, Norman's voice. "Who is there?" Genet's lips were dumb. "Who Is there?" ho repeated. And after another silence tho winged chair creaked with his uprising. Gonet's glanco flashed to tho flreplaco for cour age and reassurance, and then a great Joy came into her dark eyes. Her portrait was there In Its place and beneath it a vaso of fresh violets. Norman camo down tho room, his eyes half blinded by the sudden change from tho sunlit window to tho gloom of tho room. Genet saw that tho smooth chestnut of his hair was fleck ed with silver; that his faco wns worn and his eyes were weary. Then the su premo moment camo when he saw her and recognized her. Puzzlement gavo way to surpriso and something else. What was It? lie stopped abruptly, ono hand rest ing on tho tablo, his deep gray eyes fixed upon her face, whlto as snow against tho dark paneling. "I am sorry. I havo como home. I lovo you, Norman," sho whispered. Then sho hung her head, not daring to look Into his beloved faco. "Afraid? Afraid of mo? Why, I have been waiting for you all these years 1" Safe In her husband's arms onco moro, Genot Savllle know that her greatest punishment would; l(o In tho knowledgo that sho had brought sor row to him. PKOFESSIONAI, CARDS. Attornev-at-Low. ME. SIMONS, . ATTORNEY A COUNSELOU-AT-LAW Office in the Court House, Honesdale Pa. SEARLE & SALMON, ATTORNEYS A COUNSELORS-AT-LAW Offices latclv occupied by Judge Searle CHESTER A. GARRATT, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Office Dlmmlck Building, Uonesdale, Pa. WM. H. LEE, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office. Foster Hulldlnsr. All lecal business promptly attended to. ilonesdale. Pa. MUMFORD & MUMFORD, ATTORNEYS A COUNSELORS-AT-LAW. Office Liberty Hall building. Honesdale HOMER GREENE. ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW. Office: Rolf Building, Honesdale. nilARLES A. McOARTY, VJ ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-IT-LAW. Special and prompt attention given toth collection of claims. Office: Relf Building, Honesdale. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF THOMAS GEMZA. Late of Salem, deceased. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay ment to tho undersigned; and thoBo having claims against said estate are notified to present them, duly attest ed, lor settlement. ANNA GEMZA, Admrx. Ariel, Pa., March G, 1913. 19wG Searle '& Salmon, Attys. Honesdale, Pa. Physicians. PB. PETERSON, M. D. . 1120 MAIN STREET, HONESDALE, PA. Eye and Ear a specialty. The fitting ol glass es given careful attention. F. G. RICKARD Prop II VERY 1 MRST-CXASS WAGONS, RELIABLE HORSES. Given to Especial Attention Transit Business. ! STONE BARK CHURCH STREET, LEGAL BLANKo for sale at The Citizen office: Land Contracts, Leases, Judgment Notes, Warrantee Deeds, Bonds, Transcripts, Sum mons, Attachments, Subpoenas, La bor Claim Deeds. Commitments, Ex ecutions, Collector's and Constables' blanks. W. C. SPRY BEACHLAKE. AUCTIONEER HOLDS SALES ANYWHERE HT STATE. H. F. Weaver ArchitBGt and Guilder Plans & Estimates Furnished Residence, 1302 EastSt. The Citizen wants a good, live ly correspondent in every village in Wayne county. Will you he one? Write this office for particulars. OVER 66 YEARS' PERIENCE TriADE Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone tending a sketch nnd description mar IT III tptctal nolle;, without chargo, la tho hether au quickly ascertain our opinion free invention is prunapiy njuemnnie. ictirconuaoniiai. IIANUUUUI e. Oldest aaoncr for accurlne de Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T.anrest cir culation of any aclentluo journal. Terms, 3 a year: four months, th Bold byall newsdealers. MUNN &Co.3B,B'Md"s New York Branch Offlce. 625 V St- Washington, I). C. J. E. HALEY AUCTIONEER Huv6 mo and savo money. Wi attend sales anywhere In State. Address WAYMART, PAXR.ID. 3) JOSEPH N. WELCH SB Fire insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Offlce: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over C, C. Jadwln's drug store, Honesdale. (E We wlsli to secure 'a good correspondent in every town in Wayne county. Don't be afraid to write this office for paper and stamped envetapt ASK ANY HORSE r Sold by cfoalers otrssywfeei The Atlantic Refining Company WE WILL MAIL YOU SI for tacb full act of TxU Tettb or 50c for S L rartui lets in proportion. Higiiwt cata pricei paid for Old Cold, Silver, Piitlnom, Diamond and jtwtlrr. Send what yoa hart todar. PUILA. SMELTING k REFINING COMPANY Established 20 Yhaxs. CHESTNUT BTM PHILADELPHIA, PA. KCCP ADDRUI POM PVTUM MCPBHBNCC Suffering Men fc Women, it.iih ! weaiib, tfa UcKrYIAN TKLATfflbNTIi the onljCnr patblfl Kdtetle A llolaale 8jttcna ol medicine. ALONK Caret alter Otfaera Fall, NerToaa, Heart, Btomirh, Liver Blood 8klat Bladder A all Cbronle A Llaaerlar Allmenti. IlthllliT. new, Catarrb, Throat, Hoie Open Canter, Balldi Cp the Broken Dowa, Beitoree Tlror( Tim. Health, Baeeeiifal Ball Treatment. OLD DR. THEEL.Xoe., 1710 SPRING GARDEN ST., PMiXTK.. 47 TelX lraitlee. Send for Hook, a Herein t Ion to the Sick, Expoaea Advertising Quacka As Medicine Sharks For Sale Large Dairy and Hay Farm NIAGARA FALLS. THE TOWER HOTEL is located directly opposite the Falls. Rates are reasonable. 19eoily GOOD SUMMEK RESORT. The Buy-TJ-A-Homo Realty Com pany has just listed ono of the finest and best-known farms iu Wayne county. It is located In tho heart of the summer boarding business, In Wayne's highlands. The property consists of 325 acres and is well watered both by crooks and springs. A most beautiful natural lake, con sisting of 15 acres, Is one of the at tractive sheets of water in Preston township. Ideal for the location of summer cottages. Tho farm Is 2 miles from tho Lakewood station on the Ontario & Western railroad, three miles from Poyntello on tho same road and two .miles from Como. Of the 325 acres 275 are under good state of cultivation, consisting of meadows, plow ground and well-watered pasture fields. The balance are In maple, beech and birch timber. This farm is especially adapted to raising hay and for dairying. There are rour dwellings and cot tages upon the premises. Dwelling No. 1 will accommodate from 40 to 50 guests. Near this house is a never-failing spring for domestic use. The second cottage contains nine rooms. Good water. Small barn near house. Home No. 3 Is a very good seven-room cottage furnished with water by ono of the best springs in Wayne county. Cottage No. 4 is near beautiful natural spring lake, which consists of about 15 acres. The above mentioned places are located in an ideal sum mer boarding district visited every year by boarders from Philadelphia, New York, Scranton and other cities. Other cottages could be built on the border of this lake. Situated upon the premises is a laundry, coal and wood house com bined, size 20xG0 feet. The second floor is equipped for holding enter tainments, etc. The barns are as follows: Horse barn 2Cx5G feet, with running water; hay barn 2Gx3C, with two cow Bhods attached 20x50 'feet. Ono building wun scales nna wagon house with underground stablo for cows. Ono good 'blacksmith and carriage shop,"" with second story for storage. Chicken houses, capacity .for 200. Darn No. 4 situated near House No. 3, size 30x40 feet, two sheds for cat tle, with good spring water. Two other hay barns, size 2Cx3G feet, and 18X2U reet. There are threo apnle orchards on the farm and a small fruit orchard. Tho property will be sold for a reasonable consideration and upon easy terms. Consult Buy-TJ-A-IIomo Realty Co., Box 52. Jadwln Buildlns, Honesdale, Pa. Mttttmi mtrrrrtttTtTttttttttMmttttttttttttt MARTIN CAUFIELD Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC MEMORIALS Office and Works 1036 MAIN ST. I HONESDALE, PA. Money-mak GET THESE log Secrets WITH THE Farm Journal u It M cock properly held? "Poultry Secrets" f.'.j hivi to carry fowls, aiui ether secrets far v.orc important. TCARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little - paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country people that grow, and they always say the Farm Journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal. Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal ? By showing how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody cm go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. The Farm Journal is bright, brief, " boiled down," practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit. Practical as a plow, readable as a novel. Clean and pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper. 32 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for Si. 00 only. Less than 2 cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price. What Our Folks Say About F. J. "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoy ment out of it i:i one year than I did out of my other papers in ten years," says,C. M. Persons. " It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read It through ami thought I was ilonevilh it, then pick it up again and find sonietliiuj; new to interest me," sajs Alfred Krogli. "Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our home. It is making a tetter class of people out of farmers. It was first sent inc a? n Chiistmas present, nnd I think it the choicest present I ever levelled," says 1'. R. LcValley. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40 years. Now we don't live on the farm any more, et I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that I belong to the family, and every page is as dearand familiar as the faces of old friends,' says Mrs. li. W. Edwards. "I fear I neslect my business to read it. I wish it could belli the hands of every fanner in Virginia," saysW.S. Cllne. "I live in a town where the vnrd is only 15x 18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I get lots of books and papers, and put lhem aside for future reading. The only paper I seem to have in my hands all the time is Farm Journal. 1 can't finish reading it. Can t you make it less interesting, so I can have a chance at my other papers ? " writes John Swail. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired, I go to Farm Journal for comfort, next to the Uible," says Mabel Dcwitt. "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through It that makes it a splendid cure for the "blues." When coming home tired In mind nnd )dv, 1 fit down and nad It. ar.t It seems to give ine new inspiration fur life," writes C h. Halderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live In Greater New York, anil consider ourselves quite citified, so when he sent us the Farm Journal as a New Year''.- gift we nearly died laughing. 'How to raise hops' we who only use bacon in gliss Jars I 'How to keep cows clean' when we uc c mdensed milk even for rice pudding! 'How to plant onions' when we never plant amthlng more fragiant than lilies of the valley. I accepted the gilt with thanks, lor we are loo well-bred to look a gift horse in the mouth. Soon my eye v as caught by a beaulifut poem. I began to lead it, then when I wanted the Farm Journal 1 found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then my oldest son began to ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come yet?" He is a jeweler, ana hasn't much time for literature; but we find so much Interest and uplift in tills fine paper that wo appreciate our New Year's gift more and more," writes Ella II. Burkman. "I received 'Corn Secrets and 'Poultry Secrets,' and consider them wortli their weight In gold," says v. G. Newall. "What your Egsr Hook tells would take a beginner years to learn," says Koy Chancy. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck raising," says F. M. Warnock. "If your other booklets contain ns much valuable Information as the Egg-Book, I would consider them cheap at double the price," says F. W. Mansfield, "I think your Egg-Book is a wonder," says C. T. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Everv issue has reminders and ideas worth a ) tar's subscription," wii.es T. H. i'otter. "One year apo I took another agricultural paper, and it took a whole column to tell what Farm Journal tells in one paragraph," says N, M. Gladwin. "It ought to be in every home where there is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, of a cucumber," says I. U. Bordus. The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundred? of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEY MAKING in home industry. People all over the country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymcn. It gives Fclch's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of "bish- oplng," "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of "gyps" and swindlers, and enables any one to tell an unsound horse. Gives many valuable training secrets. CORN SECRETS, the great NEW hand-book of Prpf. Holden, the "Corn King," shows how to get ten to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, rich In protein and the best stock-feeding elements. Tlctures make every process plain. EOQ SECRETS tells how a family of six can make hens turn its table scraps Into a dally supply of fresh eggs. If you have a back-vard, get tins booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of butter each yer year. (HO pounds Is the average). An eye-opener. Get it, weed out jour poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the dis coveries and methods of I.. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fall strawberries almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crup3 iu two ) ears, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery bills, keep a belter table, and get cash for jour surplus. How to pUnt, cultivate, harvest and market. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duck farm near Boston makes every ) ear 60 cents each on 40,000 duck lings. Tells wiiv ducks pay them better than chickens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who sup plies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to pre vent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch FAY. The MILLION EQQ-FARM gives the methods by which J. M. Foster made over $18,000 u year, mainly from eggs. All chicken-raisers should learn about the "Kancocas Uiiit," and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quantities of eggs, especially in whiter. DRESSAIAKINO SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make her own clothes, in the height of fashion. The author has clone it since she was a girl. She now lias a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this Important question. It wanis you pf dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells how to start, equipment needed, its cost, chances of success, how to get government aid, etc, Tliese tooHets areSxg inches, and profusely illustrated. Farm Journal FOUR full years, with any one of these booklets Tie CooUtU ttr K0T soil epirttlr on! Fra JoanuJ. suit to say WHICH booklet you want. both for $1.00 WIUIEH ATKINSON COMPANY. I'UBLISHERS FARM JOURNAL. WASHINGTON SQUARE. PHILADELPHIA,