THE Copyright by Little By William MacHarg Edwin Balmer “AN ACCIDENT? en Gabriel Warden, Seattle capital- ist, teljs his butler he is expecting a calier, to be admitted without question. He informs his wife of danger that threatens him if he pursues a course he considers the only honorable one, Warden leaves the house in his car and meets & man whom he takes Into the ma- chine. When the car returns home, Warden is found dead, murdered, and alone. The caller, a young man, has been at Warden's house, but leaves unobserved, Bob Con- nery, conductor, receives orders to hold train for a party. Five men and a girl board the train,” the eastern express, The father of the girl, Mr. Dornd, is the person for whom the train was held, Phillip D. Eaton, a young man, also boarded the train, Dorne tells his daughter and his secretary, Don Avery, to find out what they can concerning him The two maks Eaton's acquaintance, Dorne is found nearly dead from a murder. ous assault. A surgeon operates. Dorne is revealed as Basil San- tolne, blind, and a power In the financial world as the adviser of ‘big interests.” Eaton is suspected and questioned. He refuses infor- mation. about himself and admits he was the caller at Warden's house Eaton pleads with Harriet Santbine to withhold judgment, telling her he is In perious danger, though Innocent of the crime against her father, He feels the girl believes him. Santoine recov. ers sufficiently to question Iaton, whe refuses his identity. The financier requires Eaton to accom- pany him to the Santoine home as a semi-prisoner Eaton meets na resident of the house, Vialiace Blatchford, and Mildred Davis, a stenographer, with whom he is ac. quainted, though they the fact, Eaton's misslon is to secure certaln documents which are vital to his interests. conceal CHAPTER Xl|—Continued. a he further back une passed into the through laton drew Ricove. as some the hall above, overhead ; Eaton, assured no one was coming down the stairs, spoke swiftly to tell her much as he might their moment. “He taken ill on the train, Edith; a tacked.” “Attacked I" Her lips barely moved “He was almost killed; but they concealed it, Edith-—pretended he was only fll. I was on the train—you kuow, of course; 1 got your wire—and they suspected me of the attack.” “You? But they didn't find about you, Hugh?” “No; they are Investigating toine would not let them make thing public. He brought me while he Is trying to find out about me. So I'm here, Edith—here! here too?” Again steps sounded above. The girl swiftly scif with gloves and hat: Eaton stood stark in suspense, The servant above ~-it was a servant they had heard before, he recognized now-—merely crossed from room to another overhead. Now the girl's lips moved again, “RT™ She noiseieasly, “The draft of the new agresment.™ “It either has been sent to him, or it will be sent to him very soon— here” “Where will it be when it Is here?” “Where? Oh!” The girl's eves went to the wall close to where Eaton stood; she seemed to measure with them a definite distance from the door and a point shoulder high, and to resist the impulse to come over and put her hand upon the spot. As Ea- ton followed her look, he heard a slight and muffled click as If from the study ; but no sound could reach them through the study doors and what he heard came from the wall itself “A safe? he whispered, “Yes; Miss Santoine—she's In there. isa’'t she?—closed It just now. There are two of them hidden bend the beoks, one on each side of the door” Eaton tapped gently on the wall: the wall was brick; the safe undoubt- edly was backed with steel “The best way Is from inside the room,” he concluded, She nodded. “Yes, “Look out!” Someone now was coming down. stairs. The girl had time only to whisper ‘swiftly, “If we don't get a chance to speak agaln, watch that ¥ase” She pointed to a bronze an- thiue which stood on a table near them. “When I'm sure the agreement is In the house, I'll drop 8 glovebut- ton in that--a black one, If 1 think it'd be In the safe on the right, white on the left. Now go” Baton moved quietly on and into the drawing room. Avery's volee Im. mediately afterward was heard; he was speaking to Miss Davis, whom he had found In the hallway. Eaton was cectnin there was no suspicion that he had talked with her there; indeed, Avery seemed to suppose that Eaton ‘was still In the study with Harriet Santoine. It was her lapse, then, which had let Wim out and had given him that chance; but It was a lapse, he discovered, which was not likely to favor him again. From that time while never held strictly fn restraint, he found himself siways In the sight of someone; ns he was out any- in the hall husled one formed the question If you" daton let himself think, ldly, about Harrjet-—how strange her life had been—that part of it at least which was spent, as he had gathered most 4 of her waking hours of recent years had been spent, with her father. Strange, almost, as his own life! And what a wonderful girl It had made of her—clever, sweet lovable, with more than a woman's ordinary eca- pacity for devotion and sel{-sacrifice But, If her service to her father was not only on his personal side but If also she was Intimate ih his busi- ness affairs, must she not therefore have shared the cruel code which had Eaton for the last four at any hour yet, threat. ened to take lHfe? A grim set came to Eaton's lips; his mind went again to his own affairs. and which, his The Man From the Train, In the supposition that he was liberty, Eaton proved cor- Harrlet Santoine, to whose (m- due his first privi- to less pulses had been She did not suggest hostility, us constantly did; nor, she the toward him: seemed merely to be maintaining often Eaton if they avoided him. were together, understood not yet able to leave his bed, by of the had only not he the other Eaton and Davis name pillows ; heen one nurses dismissed ; Was did though or anot was West, at all; Miss whose that stenographer, to encounter ]auy There was no longer room for Ea- plete extent {1, Now that Rantolne wns worked with him dally and Eaton learned that did the same when he was well. she she But ablde by his decision ing; for he knows; that he knows and honest.” Eaton was silent for a moment as they walked along. “How can he come to his decision?’ he asked at last, ” “How? “1 mean, much of the material pre- sented "to him must be documentary.” “Much of it Is." “Then someone him." “Of course” Eaton started fralned, “What were yon going to say?’ she questioned, “That the person-—or persons—who reads the documents to him must oc- cupy an extremely delicate position” “He does. In fact, 1 think that po- sition Is Father's one nightmare.” “Nightmare? “The person he only be absolutely solutely honest” “I should think so that position wanted without fight- and they know is absolutely must read it to to speak--then re trusts not fo must but discreet If anyone In to use the could make himself millions over. men.” kill Father too” quietly, “Yes,” she looked at hor “FF nothing above his trust. If were liot the girl said puts trust added rther that to blame kill him.” in any I think it “No you are the or position.” “Yes: that is. 1 have “You mean there Is ar that is, of course, Mr “Yes: here at this house Mr, Avery and I, and Mr. Avery at the Before Mr. Avery came, | only who helped house.” “When was “When Mr way would wither now: " Avery? office 1 was [he here at the one that 7" Avery ecame® About five years ago Father had an im amount of work nat conditions | mense that time i Business Were very macs Was it not that Avery, and not Harriet. was en matters: that this girl, as she did, that, or was it possibie could know and be sure because her father they were right? A hundred times a day. as Eaton him. A score of times during he found himself turned some question which would aid him in determining what must be the fact; but each time he himself, until} morning-—it fifth after his arrival at house—Harriet was one taking the house. She had just told him. at’ his inquiry, that her father was very much stronger that morning. and her manne more than ever evidenced her pride in him. They walked on slowly. you could tell me self, Mr. Eaton." “1 wish so 100.” he said. “Then why can you not? She turned to him frankly: he gazed at her a moment and then looked away and shook his head. Did she know all of what was ‘known even under her father's roof ; and if she knew all, would she then loathe or defend it? A motor sped near, halted and then speeded on agaln; Eaton, looking up, saw It was a runabout with Avery alone in it; evidently, seeing them in the road, Avery had halted to pro- test, then thought better of it and gone on. But other motors passed now with people who spoke to Har- riet and who stopped to Inquire for her father and wish him well “Your father does not seem to be one of the great men withofit honor in his own neighborhood,” Eaton sald to her after one of these %ad halted and gone on. “Everyone who knows Father likes and admires him!" she rejoiced. “I don’t mean exactly that,” Eaton went on. "They must trust him too, in an extraordinary way. His asso ciates must place most complete con- fidence in him when they leave to him the adjustment of matters such as I understand they do. He tells them what Is just, and they abide by his decision.” | Harriet shook her head. isn't quite that” she sald. “What, then?” “You are correct in saying that men of the most opposite sorts-—and most irreconcilable to each other — con- stautly place thelr fate In Father's hand; and when he tells them what they must do, they abide by his de cision. But he doesn't decide for them what Is just.” “I don't understand. What does he tell them, then?” “He tells them what would be the outcome If they fought, who would win and who would lose and by how “1 wish more about your- “No; It “Every One Who Knows Father Likes and Admires Him!” She Rejoiced. unsettled. There was trouble at that time between some of the big eastern and big western men, and at the same time the government was prosecuting the trusts. Nobody knew what the outcome of it all would be; many of the biggest men who consuited Father were like men groping in the dark. I don’t suppose you would remember the time by what | say; but you would remember It," as nearly every- body else does by this: it was the time of the murder of Mr. Latron” “Yes; I remember that” sald Ea. ton; “and Mr. Avery came to you at that time?" “Yes; Just at that time 1 was thrown from my horse, and could not do as much as ' had been doing, so Mr. Avery wus sent to Father” “Then Mr. Avery was reading to him at the time you spoke of-—the time of the Latron murder?’ ' “No; Mr. Avery came just after. ward, I was reading to him at that time.” : . “The papers must have been a good deal for a girl of eighteen” “At that time, you mean? They were; but Father dared trust no one else.” “Mr. Avery handles those matters now for your father?” “The continuation of what was go. ing on then? Yes; he took them up at the time I was hurt and so has kept on looking after them; for there has been plenty for me to do without that; and those things have all been more or less settled now. They have worked themselves out as things do, though they seemed almost unsolvable at the time. One thing that helped In their solution was that Father was able, that time, to urge what was Just, as well as what was advisable,” “You mean that In the final settle ment of them no one suffered?” “No one, 1 think—except, of course, poor Mr. Latron; and that was a pri vate matter not connected In any di much, And they believe him and ¥ rect way with the question at lssue. i HALL, PA. Why do you ask all this, Mr. Eaton? “I was merely Interested In yoti— in what your work has been with your Father, pud what it in,” he answered quietly. They had been following the edge of the road, she along a path worn in the turf, he on the edge of the road Itself and nearer to the tracks of the motors. Suddenly she cried out and clutched at him, As they had stopped, she had heard the sound of a motor approaching them rapidly from be hind. Except that this car seemed speeding faster thzr the others, she had pald no attention and had not turned. Instantaneously, as she had cried and pulled upon him, she had reailzed that this car was not pass ing; It was directly behind and almost upon him. She felt him spring to the side as quickly as he could: but her the wheel struck; but the car hurled him aside and rolled bim over over, As she men in turned rushed the rear their heads without to Eaton, the seat of the and looked checking its two car gpeod She bent over Eaton and took hold tottered so that she supports ed him. ror at the turn in the road where the car had disappeared. “Why, he tried to run you He meant to! He tried to hurt cried, - Eaton denied. think so. It must accident, He was—frightened when Le saw what he had done.” “It wasn't at all like an accident '™ persisted. “It you. she “No,” don't “Oh, she couldn't have been behind the he did! No: you see who was in the Way Did was driving™ » turned to her demanded 3 “One of the people who was on The morning Father was Ii -3 little s{rong. & man like an : shuddered elf. “Yes, nductor and then controlled I remember a fellow the co tried to seat 12e. oppo site.” * nr) This Eaton shook his head be: I think Was the same man! “That he could You must mis » “I am uot mistaken: it that Was “Still, 1 think you must be She stared, studying him I waz" she agreed: had not been. “1 it was he didn't right, aren't “Quite.” he “Perhaps but she knew she am glad, injure you. You are you®” axsured “Please don't They she walked back rather appreciating how had he silently, expressed herself for him quiet becanse of this and in front as they They found Donald Avery of the house looking for then succeeded but he Eaton in Without umping ; his clothes “Harriet, I've just come from your to go to him directed “Good What's happened?” slessness.” Eaton deprecated, rather in the way of a motor and was knocked over for it” Harriet did not correct Avery, She went up to she was still trembling, with horror at wha: she he wi Avers Enton ints you “Cat “Lit this te her father: still had seen— side. She stopped outside her fa- ther's door to compose herself: then she went in The blind man was propped up on his bed with pillows into almost a sitting position; the nurse was with him. “What did you want, Father?" Har riet asked. He had recognized her step and had been about to speak to her: but at the sound of her voles he stopped the words on his lips and changed them Into a direction for the nurse to leave the room. He waited until the nurse had left and closed the door behind her. Har riet saw that, In his familiarity with her tones and every inflection of her voice, he had sensed already that something unusual had occurred: she repeated, however, her question as to what he wanted. “That does not matter now, Hare riet. Where have you been?" “I have been walking with Mr. Eaton.” ! “What happened 7 She hesitated. “Mr. Eaton was al most run down by a motorcar.” “Ab! An accident?” . She hesitated again. “Mr. Baton sald It was an accident,” she an swered. “Bat you? “It did not look like an accident. Father. [It--it showed intention.” “You mean It was an attack?” “Yes; It was an attack. The man in the car meant to run Mr. Eaton down; he meant to kill him or to hurt him terribly. Mr. Eaton wasn't hurt. 1 called to him and pulled him-~he Jumped ‘away io time” “The attack made on me was meant for you" ‘ (TO BE CONTINUED.) A CNA 5 ARAN. One fountain of perpetual youth. fs to refuse to wear old folks’ clothes, “The KITCHEN CABINET Lf. A0is, Wentern Newspaper Union.) Don't think people judge your gen erosity by the amount of advice you Eive away, ORANGE WAYS One or more oranges a day will keep the average individual In good health, Strained orange juice Is an invalu- able toule, and may be given a three - months-old baly, If given bhe- tween feedings, Orange Juice Is rich In vitamines, { the growth-producing food principle. { & baked shell with oranges cut in small and mixed with sugar: cover | with & meringue and brown quickly in 1 hot oven. Serve cold As a simple salad there Is no more | ippetizing one than sliced oranges {with a French dressing. Cover the | fruit with boiling water and let stand | ten minutes, then drain and cover with | told water ten minutes, hen come off easily, leaving the fruit free from the” white Inner peel, {tn rounds : in pleces arrange Use three tablespoonfuls of oll the Ingredients; chill and serve. i | 48 a dessert, Ambrosia, an old-fashioned dish, Is sliced oranges, sprinkled in layers with ! sugar Served in | & glass dish, it is both attractive apd ‘asty, In serving oranges In any mixture, like custard or fruit fruit is become overheating. The served very lightly heat- tly fresh and grated coconut { naked puddings, the because apt to jitter rult «i or perfe of is best Orange tenke Is a great favorite rich dough, bake in Prepare a rich biscuit ayers or but another before baking, then split, ter and heap up mixed to sweeten with allowing the Jjulce to somk at once but- : well anges into | ake. Serve | cake Is hot and sauces: the julce used with pow- dainty icing dered sugar a8 most pudding A small glass of freshing and quite ag valuable for the aged as for the small baby. ange julce acts the keeps them In healthy activity, on Cease to lament not help, And study help for that that lamentest. Shakespeare for that thou canst thou MORE GOOD THINGS When a roast or leftover cold meat with : Curry Sauce, two tablespoonfuls til brown, one of curry powder smooth and tomato, season well; simmer for twen { iy minutes, then strain and serve hot | Cinnamon Apples.—These {eat.-Corg and pare greening apples {and boll In the following sirup until soft: One cupful of sugar, one cup- ful of water bolled together five min- utes, add .a half cupful of cinnamon candies (called in some places “red bote”}, let stand In the sirup until the apples are a good color. These are especially good for a dinner, serving one with a slice of baked ham on the dinner plate. Raisin and Buttermilk Bread.— Take four cupfuls of flour, three tablespoon. fuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of soda, five table spoonfuls of shortening, two eggs, two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, one cupful of seediess raising and butter. milk to make a soft batter. Mix, roll out and bake in four pleces In greased pans in a hot oven for twenty-five min- utes, Raisin Macaroons.—Take two cup fuls of toasted cornflakes, one cuplhul of sugar, one teaspoonful of vanilla, two egg whites and one cupful of seed. less raisins. Beat the egg whites until stiff, add the sugar gradually, then the flakes, vanilla and raising A dash of salt and a few chopped nuts Im prove them. Bake on greased sheets, dropping from a teaspoon. This recipe makes thirty macaroons, Cheese With Olives.—Put one-quar ter of a pound of Rogaefort and one quarter of a pdund of cottage cheese into a bowl, moisten with cream of condensed milk and mix well, Chop one small bottle of stuffed olives, add enlt, pepper and a few drops of onlon Mix well and use as a cheese dish or as filling for sandwiches, Stale cake, cookies or lady fingers may be used to» line the molds for gel- atin pudding. and give your stomach a Mit Provides “the bit of sweet” ia beneficial form. Helps to cleanse the teeth and keep them healthy. Livy: Baby Carriages & Furniture Ask Your Local Dealer The Lloyd Manufacturing Company (Hegwood- Wakefield Co.) Dept. E SAS AO am SALESMEN! fiers loze for energetic men to make good mohey selling our celebrated nursery siock. Some of our men make $100 per week. Profitable for pert or whole time. FPleasati outdoor work. Coss mission paid on receipt of orders. Write W. T. HOOD & COMPANY Richmond, Virginia for full particulars. 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