CHAPTER XX!il—Continued. se] Goon Mrs. Romilly finished her wholesale | order and wheezed out like a grand | old automobile of an early model, When they were alone the partners | gazed at Daphne's list and then at | each other, | Mrs, Chlvvis exclaimed. we can't fill it.” “We're going to fill it.” “But how?” “Darned if I know, but— Well, we'll | have to get a lot of sewing-women in | and. sit up nights” | “But the material. We can't buy those things on credit.” “Then I'll borrow cash and pay for! it.” “Borrow where? You said wouldn't trouble your brother.™ | “I'm not responsible for what I have sald or may say. Besides, I don’t mind | going to Bayard, mow that I ean go | with success. I'll eall on him in a business way and offer him interest and all that. I guess Mrs. Romilly's name is good enough collateral.” All unconscious of Daphne's affairs, | Bayard was approachin office | § i { i i { { you | g his Bayard hung up the receiver, pushed the telephone away as a bitter cup, “Great convenience, the telephone! money than I ever hoped to have. ‘For want of a nail the shoe was lost’ Oh well, It saves me from spending it ily. But if I'd bad five thousand My God! if I'd had five thousand dollars.” Daphne could think of nothing more helpful to say than a casual, "How's “Don’t ask me!" Bavard smiled, “Tell me, What can I do for you, honey, before I go to take some nasty medicine from the president.” “Nothing dear. I had to come down- town on an errand, so I thought I'd run in and say ‘hello! ” “Well, hello!” with doleful tenderness and she went out of his office into the elevator. Its iron-barred door and its clanking 1 aed Inz, and the bottomless pit it dropped CHAPTER XXIV. aphne wanted to run away from houghts she walked for up deep ravine She dared not go back to Chivvis just yet bad She thought of asking Clay for She pt the appalling {dea i mn brain with a puff of derisi rot and fn or two the of nile with er KW from her Besides, was out of town, Bayard had sald. She thought eof asking Tom rind to blow that Idea from her mind, but it kept drift. of stubborn thistle. could not outwalk it d ie She t She she At length grew 2 80 esperate booth 1 up Duane's num- ber. He chanced to be at home. When he heard her voice : "Oh Lord, it's good to hear you. again, he cried ior frser ssoves y sftohetinne Sing sing again, nighting “I'm no nightingale yr 4 you the w I'mahb an investment.” him ¥. The Hy made him whis- Romilly "Old Gorgon Zola,” he called her, in She told hole stor “But the clothes aren't made, and I em till I get some money. Mrs. Romilly Finished Her Wholesale | Order and Came Wheezing Out Like a Grand Old Automobile of an Early Model. with the brisk manner of a triumphant capitalist. But that was bluff for out- ward effect. He was actually dizzy with loss of bearings and control. Bayard had carried heavier burdens than Clay, and under the sting of Lella's whip had taken greater risks for higher prizes. The crash in the street had found him so extended that he could not recover without a idition- al help. That very morning one of his brokers had called on him for a re- newal of margins. He had to have five thousand dollars or he would lose fifty, Rebuffed from every door, Bayard had gone to Wetherell's office—a mys. | terious sort of place surrounded by guards and secret service men to ward off the menace of spies, real and imaginary. Bayard had unusnal difficulty in passing the lines. The reason he soon heard. A new man was in charge in Wetherell's place, a retired British of- ficer whose natural and affected gruff- ness was aggravated by the unpleas- ant nature of his tasks, He had only one eye, He made Bayard describe who and what he was and what he winted, Only Bayard's desperation gave him strength to ask this old Cyclops for sn advance on new contracts, Bayard went away in a stupor. He had intelligence enough to feel that he could less safely attack Wetherell now than before. He would seem to be tmaplicated in the fellow's malfeas- ance. He would only advertise to his ereditors that his vaunted contracts were worthless, Business men will en- dure much to escape such publication of their wrongs, Bayard kept his head high till he reached his own office, Then he fell Into his chair and propped his elbows on his desk and gripped his hot brows in his bunds as If he were holding his skull together. It is the business man’s attitude of prayer, It was thus that Daphne found him when she opened the door narrowly and closed it behind her as softly as Ia Tosca. She was beaming with af- fection and Importance, and when at her mischievous “Ahem 1” Bayard looked up she was so pretty that he forgot himself long enough to smile and rush forward to embrace her, She was wondering how to state her errand when the telephone rang. It startled Bayard strangely. He caught It to his lips as a toper lifts a glass. He pressed the receiver to his ear and _ ®vidently recegnized the voice that ald “Hello” from somewhere, a dd on the most excellent security 3 “How much do you want? Where shall I bring it? “Mail two—er—five hundred dollars to the shop, will you? And I ean never thank you enough.” “Hush. It's me that thanks you. Don't you want more?” “No, thanks” “It will be there in the early mail and I may call round later to put a mortgage or something on the place.” “Good-by,” she chuckied, and hung up the recelver. She was crying soft- ly as she stole from the blessed booth, and she looked less like a successful business woman than ever, Something made her think of Weth- erell. She stopped off at Bayard's floor and rang the bell Lella’s new Lella and Wethersil were They seemed to be a little shocked at seeing Daphne. She was horribly hurt at seeing them, but she chirruped ; “Just come In?” “Just going out” Leila answered, kissing Daphne nervously, “Where? Daphne asked, with In- trepidity, as she shook hands with Wetherell—a prizefighter’s prelimi- nary handshake it was. *"Oh~-er-—just motoring about bit” “Thanks—I'd love it.” Daphne dared to say, almost as much amazed as they were at hearing her accept the invitation that had not been given, She was quite shameless from thelr point of view, but she felt that it would be unpardonable to let her brother's wife go wunrebuked or at least unaided and unchaperoned on a crulse so perilous to reputation if not to character, ' While she was at the miserable business she decided to make a good Job of it. When they went down to the car she squeezed in between Leila and Wethereil. Leila blanched with Jealousy and cold rage. They dined at Long Beach and watched the dancers, In sullen mood. Wetherell ordered much champagne and would not listen to Leila's pleas that he let it alone. He frightened her a little’ by his reckless mood, and Daphne began to dread the Journey home In the dark with champagned hands on the steering wheel. After Daphne and he had executed a funeral dance Leila was emboldened to step out with him. They talked confessed his disgrace to Leila in the dance, and Leila was sticks ened with the sordid outcome of romance, She RUPERT HUGHES Copyright by Harper & Brothers Wetherell felt that she had turned against him and he reached for the last of the wine to fling It down his throat. Lella grimly took if from his fiagers and emptied it In the ice bucket, “Chauffeurs and champagne are a there was a sneer on her lips, “Oh, very well!” Wetherell sneered in turn. He paid for the dinner and tipped the walter with the lavishness of a bankrupt, He tipped lavishly the man who guarded his car, and swung out into the road with an instant speed that would have been prettier if there had been less danger, Daphne and Leila were good sports, but they were not merry. Wetherell furnished all the merriment, and his was from wine and despalr. It was the wine that brought out the truth, He had to tell Daphne what he had | told Leila, of his misfortune with his ibally old government. | He asked Daphne to explain to Bay- {ard how sorry he was that he was in. { volved in the crash. “Your broth’ Bavard's aw'fly nice {fel', Miss Skip. He's got nicest HY wife in worl’. Perf'ly good UT" girl Straight as a string- straight as they | make ‘em. No nonsense about HT fLefl', 1 just love her—perf’ly hon jor'ble love. I'd do anything in worl {for Leil’ HT” Miss Daffy- { broth’ Bay'd. Tell him ‘at, will like a goo’ HT girl? Tell Bay’ will-113” Daphne grew furious. that had justified her presen here, .She held Leila fast in her er {brace and commanded Wetherell “Slow down at Do you hear? Slow down this ear!” Wetherell i Pm goin’ take you home. with me--quite, born to be hanged ne automokilled—that's tomokilled-—eh, what? They whipped round a sorgher jut in the road, and his iw fue few » “y 13 instantly In white outlis “Or or ol she 5 goa ¥ once aughe You Man shafe that's ver good word-—ay- gearchil eS against a8 wagonload of turning from some church affair, were drowsily, “Merrilee we rola. long.” Daphne and Leila seemed to die at ance | black world children re singing ong-ro-la 1 hey Wetherell groaned, “Oh, my the UT chil'ren 1” do but what he did. He spun his wi and drove his thunderbolt into open concrete culvert, furious racket. The car turned a somersauit and crumpled in a shod dering mass, Wetherell, pinioned under the wheel, was knocked this way and that and his beautiful head cracked on the con- crete like a china doll’s, Leila was snatched from the car as if Invisible hands had caught her ex- quisite body for a lash to flog a tele a SAN Tg. Wetherell Furnished All the Merri. ment and His Was From Wine and Despair, phone pole with, then threw her Into a ditch, Daphne was flung and bat- tered and thrust under the car when it turned over. And then the gasoline spilied from the shattered tank and caught fire, CHAPTER XXV. I siisd : TRE HALL, PA. outrages the blind forces of momen- tum had wreaked on her with ths fury of a Bill Sikes trying to beat a woman to death. The chauffeurs and passengers of cars that drew up In lengthening quenes ran to the scene of Wetherell's disaster, At first they could pot see Weth- erell, but they saw Daphne and her peril, and they set frantically to work to drag her free. But she was so caught that they could not release her until they should remove the car. They pulled and heaved, but it was jammed into the culvert and the diteh so tight that they could not budge It, though they took risk enough and suffered blistered hands and charred clothes, om head cold as if a clammy hand had been laid on it. Death was at work. Where would he stop? In the chill white aisle of the corri- dor his frenzy gave place to a sense of bitter cold. A chill white nurse led him past doors and doors to a rogu where in a white bed lay a chill white thing, a cylinder of cotton. Lella's face was almost invisible in bandages; her whole body crisscrossed and swaddled. She whs an Egyptian princess mummlied. For a moment her soul came out of the drug at his gasp | of pity. It ran about inside its Cocoon trying to find a nerve to pull or a muscle to signal to him outside, The mere lifting of her hand brought from her a moan of such woe as canceled At last one chauffeur fastened a chain to the rear axle of Wetherell's | car and to the front axle of his, and, | by alternate backing and swerving, | dragged and hoisted Wetherell’s car | upward and rearward while other men | Daphne from beneath and away from the flames just as they were nibbling at her skirts. i At the same time they disclosed the | body of Wetherell and with huge dif i ficulty fetched it forth. Still others | found Leila .in a beap, a with | broken joints, | The last thing Daphne had known | was the sensation of being shaken to death, a helpless mouse in a terriers mouth. The next she knew was that | she was seated on the edge of a diteh | and leaning against the shoulder of t In evening dress, i A number of men and | women wavered the searing toy shadowy against giare of the gasoline, They arrived at last at a hospital, Daphne was lifted out and delivered | into the possession of two curt young | ternes. She was stretched on a lit ter, carried feet forem an ele- | vator, down a corridor to a ro wn, and rolled out on a bed. Tw 1 to undress her af Int wt Into spel nd : ee and bathe in and ex. Rho Bb o£ blus! | Then an older doctor came amined her injari shame, ome compl hardly more ight to a garage. He nodded of Hy and sald: “Not a8 bons iand no internal i i nn den {San Qis Wer Xx {and a big shock. burt Leila md. “He 1s no a friend.” { “Perhaps we'd bette: | What's his last name? i phone?” i relation notify Bayard Has he a tele Daphne 1 Then i sule pla eo : of water and num- ip and a glas uttered his name her head was lift in het eld to her lips is restored to her pillow her to subdue the is, ed, ac a sedative riot of She wondered what Duane would think of Ler now. She remembered the money she had asked him to her, It vould be in the morning's mail. But she would not be there to open it. Mra, Chivvis might not dare to, All her acquaintance Began to march past Daphne's brain in review. Thoughts and half-thoughts and whim. sies danced through her mind in a cars nival of stupor and frenzy, while to the eyes of the nurses she lay still and slept, In another room Leila was shriek. ing and fighting, whimpering and moaning, a torn gazelle under the claws and fangs of tigerish pain. Ab- ruptiy there came a lethal silence also from her. They had succeeded in drugging her at last * . » lend When Daphne had left Bayard In the afternoon she had found that he was depressed, but not how deeply. She supposed that his money loss was only a failure of expected profits, or the mishap of an investment. She did not dream that he was crippled flaancially, Bayard was so forlorn, so profound. ly ashamed of his bad guesswork, that he could not bear to show his face at any of his clubs that night. He had boasted there too often of having bought heavily of the stock. He had persuaded too many of his friends to Invest In it. 80 he went where busy men go when other places are closed to them. He went home. When he reached his apartment he found that Leila had given the servants a night out. Leila had left no word of her own plans. After a forlorn delay Bayard called for Daphne. She was gone, too, with no word of her return. At last the telephone rang. A man's voice spoke and explained that it spoke from the hospital, “Is Mr, Kip there? Is this Mr. Kip? Mr. Bayard Kip? Your wife is here, and your sister, and your friend Weth- erell—automoblle accident—out here on Long Island—pretty bad smash. Your wife's not very well—better come out--as soon as you can” The world reeled. Bayard seized his hat, played a tattoo on the elevator bell, darted Into the street, yelled at a taxicab with ferocity, got in, ordered the driver to “go like hell.” He kept putting his head out to how! at him, At the hospital he questioned the in. terne fiercely about Leila and Daphne, and had evasive answers. He did not ask about Wetherell, but the interme Sotutented the news that he was ad. That made the ultimate difference. all Bayard's grievances against her. Once Bayard's resentments and fealousies were swept from his mind, his old love came back throbbing and x 78 i Deceived That He Forgot Her State Z Sle == \ [THE MARKETS | Bi | iols of wheat, as $2.15, os. comet. Wheat to quality and cond $2.55 and $2.60 Bmall on, at barre} Corn-—Track yellow co better. for delivery, 3 hot $b a Oar y bushel fOLE on spot ’ rn, No domestic {ome car Corn Bales sag lots of yellow corn, lelivered, at $1.52 per bushel Oats—8tandard, white, 771%; white, 717. Rye » bushel “NJ, Hay-—-No. 1 a < Western, expert, tim jot $46; standard imothy, $456.50; No. 2 do, $44.50@ 45; NO. 3 do, $40@43; No. 1 light clover, mixed, $44@ 44.50; No. 2 light nixed, $40@42; No. 1 clos $244; No il; No. 1 clo wi iy clover mixed, $2050 2 clover, “yp IOVEer mixed $36.50@ Kissed It in Gratitude. behavior, and back to Lelia. Iamaged hand: § 4 Biifnl ac #4 1% bean +s 88 1{ better a He t was | i to steal Ge Un | Greek statue, and and col i. The into the gth out | Bavard ri rm of led corridor, remembered that he an only in thi pain. His heart went out to her, remembered, too, that they had a fa- th a mother to interne him at len And had also a siste fon ay nw How inter, ® Bame r and tell or decelve, The interne him Daphne's injuries hit. looked sad enough w hen he peered in | ¥ assured were slip dreary estate of Leila. She was ] asieep, but she woke at the sound of | his step, and. turning her head with | effort, opened her eyes and smiled at | and beckoned to him with one weak | finger, | Daphne's heart ached out to him; | she hugged him as hard as her weak arms would let her. She searched her | mind for comfort. She could think of nothing so comforting Just now as a hearty, reassuring lie. She whispered: “It's all my fault, honey. You see, Mr. Wetherell was taking me out for a ride. I met Leila. She told me you telephoned you weren't coming home for dinner. She looked so lonely that I asked her to come along and chap- eron us. I'm to blame for it all. Can you ever forgive me?” He was a» grateful, so eager to be deceived, that he forgot her state and clenched her hand hard and kissed it in gratitude for a priceless boon, The nurse, returning, saw the deed and smiled, not knowing what joy Bayard was taking in absolving Leila of sus- picion and loading himself with blame, At such a time we love to bow our own heads in shame and cast ashes upon our hair. The taste of ashes in the mouth Is good at such a time. Daphne's first visitor after Bayard was Mrs, Chivyis. “Oh, my dear!” she murmured. “I read In the papers about your misfor- tune. Such a night as I had spent! 1 was so afraid for you! And to think that you were lying hers in such paial And I might bave helped you.” Daphne smiled, and they clasped hands like the two splendid little busi ness women they were. “How's the shop?” Daphne asked. “I haven't been thers” “It Isn't open, then?" “No, Indeed. With you here?” (TO BE CONTINUED) EE Scale Reveals Salmons Age. A single scale from a salmon will tell its owner's age and whether the fish's pickings have been slim or the opposite. When viewed through a mi Croscope the scale will reveal tiny lines, which have developed st the rate Soa I Lines crowded, close t Bayard stopped short ia awe, his fore- Cheese a0ie ow make Spex iB, 21@31% vie milk twins, do, in, 30% @21; State wh specials, 31@31%; WL make uns current Average Butter—Wast- 32%c; nearby PHILADELPHIA. extra, prints, fancy, 6062 Eggs Nearby firsts case. do. current Western extra firsts, $13.80 firsts, $13.20; fancy 53@55¢ per dozen Cheese—New York and Wisconsin full milk, 32@32%e. Potatoes—South Carolina No. 1. $7 @9 per barrel; do, No. 2. $6@6.50; Eastern Shore No. 1, $850@%; do. No. 2, 34@450; Norfolk No. 1, $8509; do, No. 2, $4@5. ern creamery $1380 per $13.20; Western packed, rece pis selactod Live Stock CHICAGO. —Hogs—Bulk. §20200 20.45; heavy weight, $20.20020.40; medium weight, $2010@2050; light weight, BJ1985@20.50; light light $18.26@20: heavy packing sows, smooth, $19.75@20.10; packing sows, rough, $19.25@19.795;: pigs, $17.250 18.25. Sheep—Lambs, 84 pounds down, $12.75@ 15.85; 85 pounds up. 512509 15.85; culis and common, $9@12.35: springs, $16. 50@19; yearling wethers, $10.25@12: ewes, medium, good and choice, $7.5009; culls and common, $3.2507.25. Cattle—Beef steers, medium and heavy weight, choice and prime. $15 @16.35; medium and good, $12.3%6@ 1510; common, SL1@12.25; light weight, good and choice, $12.60814.75: common and medinm, $10@12.75; butcher cattle, heifers, $7.75@13.35; cows, $7.50@13; canners and cutters, $6@ 7.50; veal calves, light and handy weight, $15.260017; feeder steers, $0.75 @13.25; stocker steers, §8@12.25, a ———— PITTSBURGH. - Cattle — Prime, $14.25 015.