igrii'i'iMHHH Tm f liWGt ! ' - - V w . : $ K & i u ?A A 4. it:! t;4 IShe Gentleman From Indiana "By "Booth Ta.'Rkijgtojv Copyright. 1899. btf Voubteriay 3L McCturt Co. Copyright. 1902. o.?..?.! ; 04 Atit tin k . ,V ,, ,) (CONTINUE!) FIIOM LAST WEEK.) "Kilt It did. I am remembering very fast. If you will wait a moment I will tell you xonie of the things you said." The girl laughed merrily. Whenever Bin; Inuirhed lie realized that It was be coming terribly ditlleiilt not to tell her how adorable she was. "I wouldn't rial; It IT I were you." she warned him, "because I didn't weak to you at till. I shut my lips tiht and trembled all over every bit of the time I was danc ing with you. I did not sleep that night, and I was unhappy, wondering what the .real llarkless would think of me. 1 knew he thought me uuultor-' ably stupid because I eouldn't talk to ' bliu. I wanted to send him word that' 1 knew 1 had bored liliu. 1 eouldn't endure that he shouldn't know Unit I knew 1 had. Hut lie was not thinking of me in any vny. lie had gone to sen again in his white boat, the un- gratcful pirate, cruMng with .Mr '"n ' 3!uiyt. "Ilow time does change us!" said John. "You are wrong, though. 1 did think or tm. 1 have ul" "Vox," she Interrupted, tossing her head In airy travesty of the stage co quette, "you think so 1 mean, you say no now. Away with you and your blarneying!" And mi they went through the warm noontide, and little he eared for the heat that wilted the fat mullein leaves and, "jade the barefoot boy who passed by skip gingerly through the burning dust with unguMicd mouth and watery eye. Little he knew of the katydid that suddenly whirred its mills of shrillness in the maple tree and sounded so hot, hot, hot; or that other that railed at the country quiet from the dim, cool shade around the briek house, or even the. rain crow that Mit on the fence and swore to them In the face of a sunny sky that xney siiotiiu see rain ere the day were milk and apple butler llavored like spices of Arabia and fragi'ant, tlaky cherry pie and cool, rich, yellow cream. Llge Willetls was a lover, yet lie said he asked no better than to Jusi go on eating that cherry pie till a sweet, deatii overtook him; but railroad sand-1 j, wiclies and restaurant chops might i have been, set before llarkless for all the difference, it would have made to' him. i At no other time Is a man's feeling of . companionship with a woman so strong ns when he sits at table with her, not at a "decorated" and becatered and bo wallcrcd table, but at a homely, appe tizing, wholesome, home table like old Judge I'.riscoe's. The very essence of the tiling in domesticity, umWhc im plication is utter confidence and liking. There are few greater dangers for a bachelor. An insinuating Imp perches m his shoulder and, softly tickling the bachelor's ear with (he feathers of an arrow shaft, whispers: "Pretty gay, Isn't It, ehV leather pleasant to have that girl sitting there, don't you think? Enjoy having her notice your butter plate was empty? Think It exhilarat ing to hand her those rolls? Looks nice, doesn't she? Says 'Thank you' rather prettily? Makes your lonely brenkfast seem nighty dull, doesn't it? Ilow would you like to have her pour your . 4 V w AA4AAAAAA4,,t4AAAAAAAA4 llMIl.,i'.l!..'..1..'..'.A.'.AJ..1.A.t..l.J..I..1.J..t..t,.).J.,t..4..l..l.....I..I.A.I..I..t..., . . .... done. Little the young man recked of """ , ..' V , UL"""" ' 'u'1 what he ate at .Indue Hriscoe's good V . '.' W"n"r n,'Ut noon dinner-chicken wing and young " ; ! x l'ss' ';v c'ar' " roas'n ear, hot rolls as light as the Unit ,,e" 1 ?,l,d my llpl,r" ! f .. snmmm- ..ln,.,ll..t ,1 l,,.,. .,.,,1 BI,oku U lOIWH. -sm ....- . iwitiBii mill IIWHt.l lllll I coffee for you tomorrow, my boy? HoW Mr. Martin and determined not to sit would it seem to have such pleasant , within a hundred yards of him; here company all the rest of your life? rolled In the orbit of habit the town Tretty cheerful, eh? It's my conviction bacchanal, Mr. Wllkerson, who politely fhnt your one need in life Is to pick her' answered In kind all the uncouth roar "fip In your arms and run away with ' ings and guttural ejaculations of Jun- her, not anywhere In particular, but Just run and run and run away!" I After dinner they went out to the veranda, and the gentlemen smoked.! The Judge set his chair down on the ground, tilled back in It with his feet on the steps and blew a wavery, dom-j cd city up In the air. He called it lie liked to sit out from ' solid comfort. under the porch roof, he said. He1 wanted to see more of the sky. The others moved their chairs down to Join In the celestial vision. A feath-j ery thin cloud or two had been fanned f across It, but save for these' there was nothing hut glorious and tender brll-J llant blue. It seemed so clear and close one marveled the little church Bpire In the distance did not pierce It. Yet at the same time the eye ascended miles and miles Into warm, shimmer ing ether. Far away two buzzards bwuiik aiu i,v in iiiiuiiui iimitwij iu iiiu sun. "O brluht, translucent, cerulean hue, Let my wide wings drift on In you," Hnrkless ;yotcd, pointing them out to Helen. "f "You seeni to got a good deal of fun jiout of lliis kind of weather," observed UgQ as he wiped his brow and shifted bis chair into the shade. ' TT by McCturt. ThiUipj t3L Co. "I expect you don't get such skies as tills up !n Itoucn." said the Judge, looking nt the girl ironi between his lazily half closed eyelids. "It's the same Indiana sky, 1 think," she answered. "I guess maybe In the city you don't eee as much of It or think as much about It, then. Yes, they're the In diana skies," the old man went on. "Skies ns bluo Aa the eyes of children when tlir-y smile nt you. "There aren't any others anywhere Hint ever seemed mueli like them to me. They've been company for me all my life. 1 don't think there are any others half as beautiful, and I know there aren't any as sociable. They were always so." He sighed gently. and .Miss Sherwood fancied his wife must have found the Indiana skies as lovely as he had In the days of long niro. "Seems to me thev are I lit- soflcv and bluest and kindest In the world." "1 think they are," said Helen, "and they are more beautiful than the Hal-' Ian skies, though I doubt if many of lis Iloosiers realize It, and certainly no one else does." The old man leaned over and patted her hand, llarkless gasped. "ls Oooslcrs!' " chuckled the judge. "You're a great Hooslor, young lady! How much of your life have you spent in the Btute? 'Us Iloosiers!'" "Hut I'm going to be a good one," she answered gayly, "and If I'm good enough when I grow up maybe I'll be a great one." The buckboard had been brought Around, and the four young people climbed in, llarkless driving. Iteforc they started the Judge, standing on the horse block in front of the gate, leaned over and patted Miss Sherwood's band again. llarkless gathered up the reins. "You'll make a great lloosler, all Walt," said the judge, still holding the little hand. "You'll make a great lloosler some day; don't fret. You're already a wry beautiful one." Then he bent his white head and kissed her gallantly. "Good afternoon, judge," said John. The whip cracked, and the buckboard dashed oil' In a cloud of dust. "Kvery once In awhile, llarkless," the old fellow called after them, "you must remember to look at the teanl." The enormous white tent was tilled Willi a hazy, yellow light, the warm, dusty, mellow light that thrills the re joicing heart because it is lotmd no where else in the world except in the tents of a circus, the canvas tillered sunshine and sawdust atmosphere of show day. Here swayed n myriad of palm leaf fans; here paraded blushing youth and rosy ina'den more relentlessly arm In arm than ever; here crept the octoge narian, Mr. Hodcffor, slinking on cane and the shoulder of posterity; here waddled Mr. Snoddy, who had hurried through the animal tent for fear of meeting the elephant; here marched sturdy yeomen and stout wives; here came William Todd and his true love, the good William hushed with the em barrassments of love, but looking out warily with the white of his eve for gle and fen that came from the animal tent in brief, here came with lightest heart the population of Carlow and part of Amo. Helen had found a true word; It was a big family. Jim Uardloek, broadly smiling and rejuvenated, shorn of de pression, paused in front of the "re serve" heats, with Mrs. Uardloek on his nrm, and called loudly to a gentle man on a tier about the level of Jim's head: "How are ye? I reckon we were a leetle too smart fer eni this morning, huh?" Five or six hundred people, ev ery one within hearing, turned to look at Jim, but the gentlerann nddrensed was engaged in conversation with a lady and did not notice. "Hi! Hi, there! Say! Mr. llarkless!" bellowed Jim Informally. The people turned to look at llarkless. Ills atten tion was arrested, and his cheek grew red. "What Is It?" ho asked, a little con fused and a good deal annoyed. "I don't hear what ye say," shouted Jim, putting his hand to his ear. "What is It?" repented the young mnn. "I'll kill that fellow tonight," ho added to Llge Wllletts. "Some one ought to have done it long ago." "What?" l.lt ,...1.1 il 1.1 f "I said. What Is It?" "I Jest wanted to say me and you certainly did fool these here Iloosiers this morning. Hustled them two fel lers through the courthouse, and no body thought to slip round to the other door and head us off. Ha, ha! We were jest a leetle too many fer 'em, huh?" From an upper tier of seals the rusty length of Mr. Martin erected Itself Joint by Joint, like an extension ladder, and he peered down over the gaping faces at the town marshal. "Kxcnso me," he said sadly to (hose behind him, but his dry voice penetrated every where. "I got up to hear ,11m say 've' ngaln." Mr. Uardloek Joined In the laugh against himself and proceeded with his wife to sonic seats forty or llfty feet distant. When he had settled him self comfortably he shouted over cheer fully to the unhappy editor. "Them shell men got it in fer you. Mr. Hark less!" "Hain't that fool shet upyltV" snarl ed the aged Mr. HodelVer Indignantly. He was sitting near the young couple, nnd the expression of his sympathy was distinctly audible to Uiem anil many others. "(Jot u more regards than a brazing calf-dlsturbln' a feller with ids sweetheart!" "The both of 'em says they're going to do fer ye." bleated Mr. Uardloek; "swears they'll ketch their evens with ye." Mr. Martin rose again. "Don't git seared and leave town, Mr. llarkless!" he called out. 'Mini 'II protect you." Vastly to the young man's relief the band began to play and the equestrians and equestriennes en if red out from the dressing tent for the "grand en trance," nnd Hie performance com menced. Through l he lung summer Ifternoon it went on wonders of torsfimiushlp and of horsewonianshlp, iialr raising exploits on wires tight and slack, giddy tricks on the high trapeze, feats of leaping and tum bling iu the rings, whjje, the tireless musicians Ida I ted iusplrlngly through It all, only pausing long enough to allow Hint riotous lester, the clown, to ask the ringmaster what he would do If a young lady came up and kissed him on the street, and to explode his witticisms during short intervals of rest for the athletes. When It was over, John and Helen found themselves iu the midst of a densely packed crowd and separated from Miss Briscoe nnd Llge. People Were pushing and shoving, nnd he saw her face grow pale. He realized with 11 pang of sympathy how helpless he would feel If lie were as small as she and at his utmost height could only Bee big. suffocating backs and buga shoulders pressing down from above. He was keeping them from crowding heavily upon her with all his strength, and a royal feeling of prolecllvenes-' came over him. Siie was so little. And yet, without the remotest hint of hard ness, she gave lilm such a distinct im pression of poise and equilibrium. Shu seemed so able to meet anything that might come, to understand it ccn to laugh at It so Americanly capable and sure of the evi nt that. In spite of her pale cheek, lie rould not feel quite so protective as he wished to feel. lie managed to gel her to one of tin. tent poles and placed her with her back to It. Then he set one of his own hands against it, over her head, brac ed himself and stood keeping a little space about her and ruggedly letting "Please don't do that," he answered. the crowd surge against him as It "would. No one should touch her in rough carelessness. "Thank you. It wns rather trying in there," she said and looked up Into his yes with a divine gratitude. "Please don't do that," hd answered In a low voice. "Do what?" "Look like that." She not only looked like that, but more so. "Young man, young man," she said, "I fear you're wishful of turn ing u girl's head." The throng was thick around them, garrulous and noisy, but they two were more richly alone together, to his appre ciation, Win if they stood on some far satellite R' Mars. He was not to for get that moment, and he kept the pic ture of her, as she leaned against the big blue tent pole there, In his henrt; tho cleart gray eyesjlftedjo his, the rpp-cr .y I U "J I n I I n js LftJ2 ) in A T i Mfl&Br y I ) I l xM TBI wm piquant face with the delicate Hush1 stealing back to her cheeks and tho brave little llgtire that had run so straight io him out of the night shad ows. There was something about her and iu (lie moment that suddenly touched him with a saddening sweet ness too keen to be borne. The forget-me-not linger or the Hying hour Unit could not come again was laid on his soul, and he Telt the tears start from his heart on their Journey to bis eyes. He knew that he should always reinein-' her that moment. She knew It loo.1 She put her hand to her cheek and Hirtii'il iitvni (Yum lilt,, (i llMl.t tiitiitii.l ....... ..i...t, ....... ...in , miii; ii,i,i- lously. ltoth were silent. They had been together since early morning. I'lattville was proud of him. Many a friendly glance from (lie folk who jostled about them favored Ills suit nnd wished both of them well, and many lips, opening to speak to Hark less In passing, closed when their own ers, more tactful than Mr, Hardlock, looked a second time. Old Tom Martin, still perched alone on his high seat, saw them standing by the tent pole and watched them from under his dusty bat brim. "1 reckon It's he'n three or four thousand years seucc I was young," he sighed to him self. Then, pushing Ids hat still farther down over Ids eyes, "I don't believe I'd ort to rightly look on nt that." lie sighed again as lie rose and gently spoke the naine of his dead wife: "Mar Jle, I reckon you're mighty tired wait In' for me. It's he'n lonesome sometimes"- "Do you see that lull old man up there?" said Helen, nodding her head toward Mai tin. "I think I should like to know him. I'm sure I like him." "That Is old Tom Martin." "I know." "I was sorry and ashamed about nil that coiispicuousuess and shouting. It must have been very unpleasant for 3ou. It must have been so for a stran ger. Please try to forgive me for let ting you In for It." "Hut I liked It. It was 'all Iu the family,' and It was so Jolly ami good nn lured, nnd that dear old man was so bright. Do you know," she went on In n low voice, "I don't believe I'm so much a stranger I think I love all these people a great deal In spite of having known them only two days." At that a wild exhilaration possessed him. He wanted to shake hands with every soul In the tent, to tell them all that he loved them with his whole heart: but, what was vastly more Im portant, she loved them a great deal in spite of having known them only two days. He made the horses prance on the! homeward drive, and once, when she told him that she had read a good many of his political columns In the Herald, he ran them into a fence. After tills it occurred to him that they were Hear ing their destination and had come at n perversely sharp gait, so ho held the roans down to a snail's pace (If It be true Unit a snail's natural gait Is not a trot) for the rest of the way. unij they 'talked of Tom Meredith and books and music, and discovered that they dif fered widely about Ibsen. They found Mr. Flsbee In the yard, talking to Judge Mrlscoe. As they drove up ami before the horses had quite stopped Helen leaped to thu ground nnd ran to the old scholar with both her hands outstretched to him. He looked timidly at her and took the hands she gave him; then he produced from his pocket u yellow telegraph en velope, watching her anxiously as sho received It. However, she seemed to attach no particular importance to II, find Instead of opening It leaned to ward him, still holding one of bis hands. "Tlie.se awful old men!" Harklost groaned Inwardly as he handed tho horses over to the Judge. "I dare say he'll kiss her too." Hut when the ed itor and Mr. Wllletts had gone It wns Helen who kissed Flsbee. "They're coming out to spend tho evening, aren't they?" asked Hriscoc, nodding to the young men ns they set off down the road. "Llge has to come whether ho wnnts to or not," Minnie Inughed rather con sciously. "It's bis turn tonight to look after Mr. Harkloss." "I guess he won't mind coming," said the Judge. "Well," returned his daughter, glanc ing at Helen, who stood npnrt reading tho telegram to Flsbee, "I know If ho follows Mr. llarkless die'll got hero pretty soon after supper as soon ns tho moon comes up, anyway." The editor of the Herald was late to bis evening meal that night. It was dusk when he reached the hotel, and for the first time In history n gentle- man snt down to meat In that houso of entertainment In evening dress. ' , There was no one in the dining room When ho went In tho other boarders bad finished, nnd it was Cynthia's "evening out" Ijjit tho landlord, Co lumbus Lnndls, "fame nnd attended to bia wants himself and chatted with him while he ate. "There's a picture of Henry Clay," remarked Lnndls iu obvious relevancy to his companion's attire "there's a picture cf Henry Clay somewhere about the house In a swallow tall. Gov ernor Hay spoke here in one, Hodeffer says; always wore one, except It was higher built up 'n yourn about tho col lar and bad brass buttons, I think. viu mini huuj ivmi nviu iikium iu- jJiHiii, i lie mnuioiu cqimniieu, ciiaiig-1 Ing the subject. "He waited around f"i yo a good while, but last he had to go. He's he'n mighty wrought up sence tho trouble this morning an' wanted to see ye bad. I don't know If you seen It, but that feller M knocked your hat olT with a club got mlglitv near tore to pieces in the wd before ho got nway. Seems some of the boys re-cog-nlzed him as one of the Crossroads Skillets and sicked ttie dogs on him, and ho had a pretty mean time of It. Wlmby says tile Crossroads folks Ml be worse 'n ever, and, says lie, 'Tell him to stick close to town,' says he. 'They'll do nnythlng to git lilm now,' says he, 'and resk anything.' I told lilm you wouldn't take no stock In what any one says, and 1 kuowetl well enough you'd laugh that ii-way. Hut, seo here, we don't put not hln' too mean for them folks. 1 tell ye, Mr. Hnrkless, all of us tiro Beared for ye." The good fellow was so earnest that when the editor's supper was llnlshed nnd he would have departed, Lnndls detained him almost by force until thu arrival of Mr. Wllletts. who, the land lord knew, was his allotted escort for the evening. When Llge came (wear ing a new tie, a pink one he had has tened to buy us soon ns ids engage incuts had given opportunity) the land lord hissed a savage word of reproach for bis tardiness In Ids ear and whisper ingly bade lilm not let the other out of reach that night. Mr. Wllletts replied with a nod Implying his trustworthi ness, nnd the young men went out Into the darkness. CH APTKIl VII. Ill) moon had risen, and (hero was a lace of mist along the creek when John and Helen reached their bench. (Of course they went back there.) She turned In him with a little frown. "Why have you never let Tom Mere dith know you were living so near lilm less than a hundred miles when ho bus always liked and admired you above all the rest of mankind? I know that lie has tried time and again to hear of you, but the other men wrote that they knew nothing, that It was thought you had gone abroad. I had heard of you, mid so has he seen your name In the Rouen papers about thu White Caps and Iu politics but he would never dream of connecting thu Plattvlllo Mr. llarkless with his Mr. Hnrkless; though I did, Just a little, In a vague way. I knew you, of course, when you caino into Mr. Halloway's lecture the other evening. Hut why haven't you written to my cousin?" "Houen seems rather far away to me," he answered quietly. "I've been there only once, half a day on business. Except that, I've never been much far ther than Amo and then for a conven tion or to make a speech since I caino here." "Wicked," she exclaimed, "to shut yourself up like this! I said it was flue to drop out of the world, but why have you cut off your old friends from you? Why haven't you bad a relapse now and then nnd come over to bear Ysayo play and Melba sing, or to seo Mans field or Henry Irving, when wo have had them? And do you think you've boon quite fair to Tom? What right lind you to assume that ho bad forgot ten you?" "Ob, I didn't exactly mean forgot ten," In; said, pulling a blade of grass to nnd fro between his fingers nnd staring at it absently. "It's only that I have dropped out of tho world, you know. They rather expected mo to do a lot of things, and I hnv"'t done them. Posulbly It Is because I am sen sitive that I never let Tom know. They, expected me to amount to something, but I don't believe his welcome would bo less hearty to a failure ho Is a good heart." "Failure!" she cried and clapped her hnnds and laughed. "I'm really not very tragic about It, though I must seem consumed with self pity," be returned, Twilling. "It Is only that I have dropped out of the world while Tom Is still In It." " 'Dropped out of the world!' " sho echoed Impatiently. "Can't you seo you've dropped into It? That you" "Last night I wns honored by your praise of my graceful mode of quitting itl" "And so you wish me to be consist ent," she retorted scornfully. "What becomes of your gallantry when wo abide by reason?" "True enough; cquulity Is a denial of privilege." "And prlvllego is a denial of equal ity? I don't like that at all." Sho turned a serious, suddenly Illuminated face upon him nnd spoke earnestly "It's my hobby, I should tell you, am nml ..... r. , . .'..WH.f . JWW, ..Ml I'm tired of that nonsense about 'worn-' en always sounding tho personal note.' It should bo sou tided as we would sound it. And I think we could bear tho loss of 'privilege " He laughed and raised a protesting band. "Hut we couldn't." (TO HE CONTINUED.) HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Busy Medlolno for Busy FeopU. Bring Golden Health and Renewed Vigor. A. HPfclflo for Constipation, Indigestion, Ltvd Iot form, m contB n box. 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