Established By Wm. Need, 1870. VOLUME XLII. FREDERICK RAILROAD Tliurniont Division Schedule In Effect September 24, 1911. Leave Leave Arrive Thurmmt Lewisiown Frederick •6.15 A.M. 6.31 7.0UA.1W. * 8 lU 8.42 “ •8.15 “ 8.31 8.55 “ *10.45 “ 11.02 11.30 “ 112.50P.1V1. 12.47 1.15 P.M. • $2 25 “ 2.42 3.10 “ t3.16 “ 3.32 4 00 “ •6.20 6 37 7,00 “ J7.05 “ 7 9 2 7.50 “ Leave Lea.e Arrive Frederick Lewis'.own Thurmont •7.15 A.M. 7.47 8.05 A.M. •7 30 “ 8.0; •9 45 “ 10.17 10.35 “ ti1.35 12 05 12 25P.M. $1 30P.M. 2.02 2 20 “ 1 1. 15 “ 2.47 3 05 “ •4 10 “ 4.42 5.00 “ ♦6.10 “ 6 42 700 “ $9.3!) “ 10.02 10.20 “ •Daily. tDaily except Sunday. §Sunday only. only. 1] Remains at Thurmont Western Maryland R. R. Schedule In Effect September 24, 1911. GOING WEST. Leave Leave Arrive Baltimore Thurmont Hagerstown •4.10 A. M. 6.10 A. M. 7.20 A. M. t7 50 “ HlO 30 “ *8 57 “ 10.45 “ 1155 “ •4.15 P.M. 6.17 P.M. 7.30. PM GOING EAST. Leave Leave Arrive Hagerstown Thurmont Baltimore •7 00 A.M. 8.15 A.M. 10.20 A. M t 12.30 P. M. 3.05 P. M. ti'.OO P. M. 3.15 “ 545 “ •4.0a “ 5.11 “ 7.05 “ LIME. Agricultural Ami Building Lime at Isanogle’s Kilns lOcta, bu. f. o. b. cars Tliurniont, I He. A. 31. ISAXOGLE, Tliurniont. 3ld. inch 151 if TRESPASS NOTICE. Notice is hereby given to all persons not to trespass with dogs, guns, fishing or cutting down of any timber upon my mountain land, home place or the Will hide place, or on any land belonging to me wherever situated, as the Law will be strictly enforced against such person or persons. MRS. CHARLES SHIPLEY. July 16 tf THE OLD RELIABLE MUTUAL INSURANCE CO, OF FREDERICK COUNTY. Organized In4.‘L Odice—4o North 3larket Street Frederick, Md. A. C. McCardell, 0. C. Warehime President. Secretary. SURPLUS 825,000.00 No Premium Notes Required. Insures All Classes of Property against Loss by Fire at Rates 25 percent, less than Stock Companies charge. A Home Insurance Company f< Home Insurers. Feb. 18 lyr. ASTHMA - CATARRH CURED Expert Medical Scientists Announct Startling Results Obtained by Senpine New York;— Thousands are taking ad vantage of the genereus offer made by The Woodworth Company Dept. G 1161 Broadway, New York City, requesting an experimental packing of Senpine, the great discovery for Asthma, Hay Fever. Bronchitis, and Catarrh, which is mailed free of charge to all who write for it It makes nodifference how longyou hav< been suffering or how severe the climati, conditions are where you live, Senpim will cure you. If you have experimented with othei treatments and have failed to find a cur do not be discouraged but send for atria of this wonderful truly meritous remedy which is a scientific compound discovered by a Professor of Vienna University, and is being recommended by thousands, apr 6 lyr The Catoctin clarion. r jNoviuztD mon the CDMEDYOIT/iE SAME ILLUST/MTED tjzoj'a ¥ PHOIOGALAPHS OF THE PLAY AS P/JODUCED M w. SAVAOE-. wSBr / r~ ' ~i COPY/Pianr yu jv, n k.flv co, ■■■■■■■UBHBHBHBBBRnMnaHHnHIi This pierced even the baseball news, and be threw his arms around her with glow of devotion. She snuggled closer, and cooed: “Aren't we having a nice long engage ment? We’ve traveled a million miles, and the preacher isn’t in sight yet. What have you been reading wedding announcements?” “No—l was reading about the most wonderful exhibition. Mattie was In the box—and in perfect form.” "Mattie?” Marjorie gasped uneas ily. “Mattie!” he raved, "and In perfect form.” And now the hidden serpent of jeal ousy, which promised to enliven their future, lifted Its head for the first time, and Mallory caught his first glimpse of an unsuspected member of their household. Marjorie demand ed with an ominous chill: "And who's Mattie?. Some former sweetheart of yours?" “My dear,” laughed Mallory. But Marjorie was up and away, with apt temper: “So Mattie was In the box, was she? What Is It to you, where she sits? You dare to read about her and rave over her perfect form, while you neglect your wile—or your—oh, what am I, anyway?” Mallory stared at her in amaze ment. He was beginning to learn what ignorant heathen women are concerning so many of the gods and demigpils of mankind. Then, with a tenderness he might not always show, he threw the paper down and took her in his arms: "You poor child. Mattie Is a man—a pitcher—and you’re the only woman 1 ever loved —and t you are liable to be my wife any • minute.” The explanation was sufficient, and she crawled into the shelter of his arm with little noises that served for 1 apology, forgiveness and reconcilia- j tlon. Then he made the mistake of mentioning the sickening topic of de ferred hope: “A minister’s sure to get on at the next stop—or the next.” Marjorie’s nerves were frayed by too much enduring, and It took only a word to set them Jangling: “If you say minister to me again, I’ll scream.” Then she tried to control herself with a polite: “Where Is the next stop?” "Ogden.” "Where’s that? On the map?” “Well, It’s In Utah.” “Utah!” she groaned. "They mar ry by wholesale there, and we can’t even get a sample.” CHAPTER XXV. The Train Wrecker. The train-butcher, entering the Ob servation Room, found only a loving couple. He took In at a glance their desire for solitude. A large part of his business was the forcing of wares on people who did not want them. His voice and his method suggested the mosquito. Seeing Mallory and Marjorie mutually absorbed in read ing each other's eyes, and evidently In need of nothing on earth less than something else to read, the traln hutcher decided that his best plan of attack was to make himself a nuis ance. It Is a plan successfully adopt ed by organ-grinders, street pianists and other blackmailers under the guise of art, who have nothing .so welcome to sell as their absence. i Mallory and Marjorie heard the train boy’s hum, but they tried to ig nore It. “Papers, gents and ladles? Yes? No? Paris fashions, lady?” He shoved a large periodical be tween their very noses, but Marjorie threw It on the floor, with a bitter glance at her own borrowed plumage: ; “Don’t show me any Paris fash ions!” Then she gave the boy his conge by resuming her chat with Mal lory; “How long do we stop at Og den?” The train-boy went right on auc tioning bis papers and magazines, and poking them into the laps of his prey. And they went right on talking to one another and pushing his papers and magazines to the floor. "I think I’d better get off at Og den, and take the next train back. That’s Just what I’ll do. Nothing, thank you!” this last to the train boy. "But you can’t leave me like this,” Mallory urged excitedly, with a side glance of "No, no!” to tne train-boy. “I can, and I must, and I will,” Mar jorie Insisted. "I'll go pack my things now.” "But, Marjorie, listen to me." "Will you let me alone!” This to the gadfly, but to Mallory a dejected wall: "I—l just remembered. 1 haven’t anything to pack.” "And you'll have to give back that waist to Mrs. Temple. You can't get oft at Ogden without a waist.” “I'll go anyway. I want to get home.” "Matiprltc If jrou talk that way— l’U A Family Newspaper—independent in Politics—Devoted to Literature, Local and General News. THURMONT, FREDERICK COUNTY, MD., THURSDAY, MAY 9. 1912. throw you off the train!” She gasped. He explained: "I wasn’t talking to you; I was trying to stop this phonograph.” Then he rose, and laid violent bands on the annoyer, shoved him to the corridor, seized his bundle of papers from his arm, and hurled them at his bead. They fell In a shower about the train butcher, who could only feel a cer tain respect for the one man who had ever treated him as he knew he de served. He bent to pick np his scat tered merchandise, and when he had gathered his stock together, put his head In. and sang out a sincere: “Excuse me.” Hut Mallory did not hear him, he was excitedly trying to cairn the ex cited girl, who. having eloped with him. was preparing now to elope back wlihont him. "Darling, you can't desert me now,” he pleaded, "and leave me to go on alone?” “Well, why don't you do some thing?” she retorted, In equal des peration. "If 1 were a man. and 1 had the girl I loved on a train I'd gel her married If 1 had to wreck the —" she caught her breath, paused a second In intense thought, and then, with sudden radiance, cried: “Harry, dear!” "Yes, love!” "1 have an Idea —an Inspiration!" "Yes, pet,” rather dubiously from him, but with absolute exultation from her: “Let's wreck the train!” "I don’t follow you, sweetheart.” "Don't you see?” she began excited ly. “When there are train wrecks a lot of people get killed, and things. A minister always turns up to admin ister the last something or other— well —” “Well?” “Well, stupid, don’t jmu see? We wreck a train, a minister comes, we nab him, he marries us, and —there we are! Everything’s lovely!” He gave her one of those locks with which a man usually greets what a woman calls an Inspiration He did not honor her Invention with an alysis. He simply put forward an ob jection to It, and, man-llke, chose the most hateful of all objections: "It’s a lovely Idea, but the wreck would delay us for hours and hours, and I'd miss my transport—” “Harry Mallory, If you mention that odious transport to me again, I know I'll have hydrophobia. I'm going home.” "Hut, darling,” he pleaded, “you can’t desert me now, and leave me to go on alone?" She had her answer glib: “If you really loved me. you’d—-" “Oh, I know,” he cut In "You've said that before. Hut I’d be court martialed. I’d lose my career.” "What’s a career to a man who truly loves?” "It's just as much as It Is to any body else —and more.” She could hardly controvert this gracefully, so she sank back with grim resignation. "Well. I’ve pro posed my plan, and you don't like It. Now, suppose you propose something.” The silence was oppressive. They sat like Stoughton bottles. There the conductor found them some time later. He gave them a careless look, selected a chair at the end of the car, and began to sort his tickets, spreading them out on another chair, making notes with the pencil he took from atop his ear, and shoved back from time to time. Ages seemed to pass, and Mallory had not even a suggestion. By this time Marjorie’s temper had evaporat ed, and when he said: "If we could only stop at some town for half an hour,” she said; “Maybe the conduc tor would hold the train for us.” "1 hardly think he would.” "He looks like an awfully nice man. You ask him.” “Oh, what’s the use?” Marjorie was getting tired of de pending on this charming young man with the very bad luck. She decided to assume command herself. She took recourse naturally to the orig inal feminine methods: “I’ll take care of him," she said, with resolution. "A woman can get a man to do almost anything If she flirts a little with him.” "Marjorie!” “Now. don’t you mind anything 1 do. Remember, It’s all for love of you—even if I have to kiss him.” "Marjorie, I won’t permit —” "You have no right to boss me— yet. You subside.” She gave him the merest touch, but he fell backward Into a chair, utter'y aghast at the shameless siren Into which despera tion had altered the timid little thing he thought he had chosen to love. He was being rapidly Initiated into the complex and versatile and fearfully wonderful thing a woman really Is, and he was saying to himself, "What have I married?” forgetting, for the moment, that he had not married her yet, and that therein lay the whole trouble. CHAPTER XXVI. Delilah and the Conductor. Like the best of women and the worst of men, Marjorie was perfectly willing to do evil, that good might come of it. She advanced on the In nocent conductor, as the lady from i Sorek must have sidled up to Sam son, coquetting with one arch hand and snipping the shears with the other. The stupefied Mallory saw Mar jorie In a startling Imitation of her self at her sweetest; only now It was brazen mimicry, yet how like! She went forward as the shyest young thing In the world, pursed her lips In to an ecstatic simper, and began on the unsuspecting official: “Isn't the country perfectly—” “Yes, hut I’m getting used to It,” the conductor growled, without look ing up. His curt Indifference jolted Mar jorie a trllle, hut she rallied her forces, and came back with: "How long do we stop at Ogden?” "Five minutes," very bluntly. Marjorie poured maple syrup on her tone, us she purred: "This train of yours Is uu awfully last train, Isn’t it?” "Sort of," said the conductor, with just a trace of thaw. What followed made him hold his breath, for tho outrageous Utile hussy was actually saying: "The company must have a great deal of confidence in you to en trust the lives and welfare of so many people to your presence of mind and courage." "Well, of course, I can’t say as to that—” Even Mallory could see that tho man’s reserve was melting fast as Marjorie went on with relentless treacle; "Talk about soldiers and firemen and life-savers! I think It takes a j braver man than any of those to bo 1 a conductor- really.” "Well, It Is a kind of a responsible job.” The conductor swelled his chest a little at that, and Marjorie felt that he was already hers. She hammered the weak spot In his armor: "Responsible! 1 should say It Is. Mr. Mallory Is u soldier, but soldiers are such ferocious, destructive peo ple, while conductors save lives, and —lf I were only a man 1 think It would be my greatest ambition to ho a conductor —especially on an over land express.” The conductor told the truth when i he confessed; "Well, 1 never heard It put just that way.” Then he spoke ! with a little more pride, hoping to in crease the Impression he felt ho was making: "The main thing, of course, is to get my train through On Time!" This was a facer. He was going to get his train through On Time just to oblige Marjorie. She stammered: "I don’t suppose the train, by any accident, would he delayed In leaving Ogden?” “Not, If I can help it,” the hero ■■■ -- \ MARJORIE ASKS THE CONDUCTOR TO HOLD THE TRAIN SO SHE CAN SHOP. averred, to reassure net. "I wish It would,” Marjorie mur mured. I The conductor looked at her In sur prise: “Why, what’s it to you?” She turned her eyes on him at full candle power, and smiled: “Oh. I just wanted to do a little shopping there.” “Shopping! While the train waits! Excuse me!” "You see.” Marjorie fluttered, “by a sad mistake, my baggage Isn’t on the train And I haven’t any—any—1 really need to buy some—some things very badly. It’s awfully embarrassing to be without them.” “I can Imagine,” the conductor mumbled. “Why don’t you and your husband drop off and take the next train?” "My hush—Mr. Mallory has to be In San Francisco by tomorrow night. He Just has to!" “So have I.” "But to oblige me? To save me from distress —don’t you think you could?” Like a sweet little child she twisted one of the brass buttons on his coat sleeve, and wheedled: "Don’t you think you might hold the train just a little tiny half hour?” He was sorry, but he didn’t see how he could. Then she took his breath away again, by asking, out of a clear sky: “Are you married?” He was as awkward as If she had proposed to him, she answered for him: biiCfif.PP.urae joii. are. The women wouldn’t let a big, hand some, noble brave giant like you escape long.” He mopped his brow in agony as she went on: "I’m sure you’re a very chivalrous man. I’m sure you would give your life to rescue a maiden In distress. Well, here’s your chance. Won’t you please hold the train?” She actually had her cheek almost against his shoulder, though she had to poise atlp oo to reach him. Mal lory’s dismay was changing to a boil ing rage, and the conductor was a pitiable combination of Saint Anthony and Tantalus. “I —I’d love to oblige you,” he mumbled, "but it would be as much as my job s worth.” "How much Is that?” Marjorie asked, and added reassuringly, "if you lost your jon f:n surr my father would get you a better one.” I "Maybe,” said the conductor, "but — I got th’s one.” Then his rolling eyes caught sight of the supposed husband gesticulating wildly and evidently clearing for ac tion. He warned Marjorie; "Say, your husband is motioning at you." “Don’t mind him,” Marjorie urged, "just listen to me. I Implore you. I —” Seeing that he was still resist ing, she played her last card, and, crying, “Oh, you can’t resist my pray | era so cruelly,” she threw her arms around his neck, sobbing, “Do you want to break rny heart?” Mallory rushed Into tho scene and the conductor, tearing Marjorie's arms loose, retreated, gasping, “No! and 1 don’t want your husband to break my head.” Mallory dragged Marjorie away, but she shook her little fist at the con ductor, crying: "Do you refuse? Do you dure refuse?” i "I’ve got to,” the conductor abject ly insisted. Marjorie blazed with fury and the ' siren became a Scylla. "Then I’ll see that my father gets you discharged. If you dare to speak to me again, I’ll order rny husband to throw you off this train. To think of being refused a simple little favor by a mere con ductor! of a stupid old emigrant train!! of all things!!!” Then she hurled herself Into a chair and pounded her heels on the floor In a tantrum that paralyzed Mallory. Even the conductor tapped him on the shoulder and said: "You have my sym pathy.” CHAPTER XXVII. The Dog-on Dog Again. As the conductor left the Mallory* to their own devices, It rushed over him anew what sacrilege had been at tempted—a fool bride had asked him to stop the Trans-American of all trains!—to go shopping of all things! He stormed Into the smoking room to open the safety valve ot his wrath, and found the porter just coming out of the buffet cell with a tray, two hol low-stemmed glasses and a bottle swaddled In a napkin. —i .-• -