1L EVENING LEDGER PHILABELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1915. IT ' a THE 5DOAD HFOHWAY KX -. A " ' ' -. .-. j A Talo of 19th Century Englnnd, Full of the Thrills of Adventure and Spirit of Romnnce Copyright, IDIS, Little. Drown A Co. Peter Vlbart, an Kngllth ecnolar, de tndent upon Ma uncle. Sir Cleorge Vlbart, Mtqueatneil only 10 gulneaa (7fl) toy tna eM man, Maoric c muck") vioart, a no--torleue rrle fighter and rake, a couetn if reter la lert 20,000 pounde (Itoo.rwo). The will eleo provides 1300.000 (or tha ena who merrlee the Ldr Hotihla Befton within a rtr Peter, agnlnit tha prnteetatlone o( hie old friend with whom he Iliad, Blr ''rne Uroad Highway ot Kent and live. :il clahi to work attar tha money la (one. nv t telle of hla lL..lnr advnturee until ha reer;ee Sleelnghurst villain where ' hi becomee a blacksmith In tha emptor ot r "mark". Oeorge. Tatar roee to live In a r "haunted ' houee In a hollow The prin cipal (eaiura In tha flrat book la that Peter l three tlms mletaken lor hie coualn MaurKe, ine only umciciiiv urvwect, ttt two le that Peter la clean ehaven and llavrlce nee beard. .,.... Peter, at tha Veglnnlnr ot.DooV II, la midenlr awakened by a min'i voles tall. Inc "Charmtanl" Ruining from hla bed room, he flnde a etrenge woman about to thnot at a man entering hie home. It la hla eoueln Maurice, whom he brata Into In fimlblllty alter a fierce etruggle. A poa tilien hrpe rater remove the proetrate ""Black" George, whoee Jealouiy ot reter bee ben growing eteadlly, auddenly leavee the thop. Prudence, who lovee Oeorge. remei to Tettr for adlce. and the two decide to Indue him to return. Oeorge. however, le convinced that Trudence and T-ir are In love. A few nljhta later reter meet! a broom vender, who tella htm trU "Black" Oeorge Hn vowed to fight "Se ceve" who haa Helen hla sweethearts love until one or tha other le dead. . One morning, while Veter le at work, the reetlllon who helped him remove Maurice a body looka In. The poetlllon trlee, Mlnly, tn bribe Peter Into telling him where Chrmlan le. , That night reter meete "Black" Oeorge. and after a terrlflo fight, lasting until beth men are nearly eihaueted, the Utter niniiti to land a tremendoue blow on Peter! head. Peter falle aa If dead. When ' he regains contcloueneae he le In Char mlan'e arma. ..... Peter, fearful that Maurice may return, glrre Chirmlan an old platol with which to frotect hcreelf BOOK II. CHAPTER XXIII-(Conttnucd). IHTTES, reter." She was busily cm- JL plocd upon a piece of embroidery. find began to sing noftly to herself again a sho worked, that old sons which worthy Mr, Pcpys mentions having heard ifrom the lips of mlschlcvous-cycd Nell IGwynn. "In Bcarlet town, where I wae bom, ThrA kii a fair maid dwellln. Made eiery jouth cry Well-a-wayt Her name Barbara 'Allen." "Are you so happy, Charmlan?" "Oh, sir. Indifferent well, I thank you. "All In the merry month of May WUCn Kiev" uuu- mry n?i? Dncuill Toung Jemmy drove on hla bcath-bed lay, For love of Barbara Allen. "Are you so miserable, Peter?" "Why do you ask?" "Because you sigh, and sigh, like (poor Jemmy Grove In the song." "He was a fool I" saia J. "For sighing, Peter?" "for dying," "I suppose no philosopher could ever lb so-foolish, Peter?" "No." said i; "certainly not!" "It Is well to be n philosopher, isn't It, EFeter?" MR "Humr- sam j, ana once more sot about lighting my pipe. Anon I rose s, and. crossing to the open door, looked By JEPFERY FARNOL the wild face below, "tomorrow I will go far hence." Now while, I yet gazed at myself I heard n. sudden gaap behind, and, turn ing, beheld Chnrmlan. "Peter' Is It you?" sho whispered, drawing back from me, "Who else, Charmlan? Did I startle you?" "Ves-oh, Peter!" "Are you afraid of me?" "You are like one who has walked with -death!" I rose to my feet and stood looking down at her. "Are you afraid of me, Charmlan?" "No, reter." "I am glad of that," said I, "because I want to ask you to marry me, Char mlan." CHAPTnrt xxv. 'QUTGni" XT "year "I wish you wouldn't." "Wouldn't what, Charmlan?" "Btlr your tea round and round and round It Is really most Exasperating i" "I beg your pardonl" said I humbly. "And you eat nothing; and that is also exasperating!" "I am not hungry." "And I was so careful with the bacon sec it Is fried beautifully cs, ou are very exasperating, Peter!" Here, finding I wns absent-mindedly stirring my tea round and round again, I gulped It down out of the way, where upon Charmlan'toolr my cup and refilled It; having done which, she set her elbows upon the table, and, propping her chin In her hands, looked at me. "Von climbed out through your window last night, Peter?" "Tea." "It must have been a dreadfully tight squeeze!" "Ves." "And why did ou go by the window?" "I did not wish to disturb you." "Thnt was very thoughtful of ou only, you see, I was up and dressed; the roar of the thunder woke me. It was a dread ful storm, Peter," "Yes." "Tho lightning was awful!" "Yes." "And you were out In It?" "Yes." "Oh, you poor, poor Peter! How cold you must have been!" - "On the contrary," I began, "I" "And wet, Peter miserably wet and clammy!" "I did not notice it," I murmured. "Being a philosopher, Peter, and too much engrossed In our thoughts?" "I was certainly thinking." "Of yourself!" "Yes-" "You are a great egoist, aren't you, Peter?" "Am I, Charmlan?" "Who but an egoist could stand with his mind so full of himself and his own concerns as to be oblivious to thunder and "Do you ever see any any men lurking about the hollow?" put Unon the summer night, and slched." and coming biick sat 'watching Charm- rian-g ousy ringers. ''Charmlan." said I at last. Ic "Yes. Peter?" Li ; "Do you ever see any any men H'uming about tha Hollow when I am Laway?" Her needle atoPDed suddenly. land the did not look up as she answered: It "No. Ptar!" "Never? nrA vmi hup nhnpminn?" The needle began to fly to and fro again, ewttt.still she flld tint InnW nn. if "No of course not how should I see P,Miy one? I scarcely go beyond the Hol- w, ana rm busy all doy." r'A Eve a Eve!" said a voice In my r. "Eve tricked Adam, didn't shc?-a .'" After this I sat for n. lone time without wring, my rolnd harassed with doubts no. a hideous, morbid dread. Why had W avoided my eye? Her own were pure Rd truthful, nnri rnliM tint lint Whv. hy had they avoided mine? If only she r-w looked at met lUPrrsentlv T rrMA nnd tieirfin in nne nn Ifcnd flown the room. rre.iou ar very restless, Petcrl" rr'YS," said I. "vh.I fear I am vou "let pardon me " m.r"y not read?" liook'4 l hsa not lh0UBbt ot my E;Pn.rea(1 me something aloud, Peter." win reaa you the sorrow of Achillea ,S0r the 1ib m tiji tk ..I., t ... -.- ?c into the corner, I raised my hand to m shelf of books-and stood there with ?nd upraised yet touching no book, for sudden spasm seemed to have me In SJflutchei, and once again the trembling Pea me, and the hammer had recom- jicea its beat, biatlng upon my brain. 7". "i a while, I turned from my na, crossing to tha door, leaned with mv back to her. lest she should ' nyr face Just then. -A oon t think I-will read-tonlghtl" L '. at last. jry well, Peter, Jet ua talk." laiay- said I; "I-I think I'll go to Pray." I went on hurriedly, for I wnscious that she had raised her no wm looking at me in some J,, pray excuse me I'm very CO. Whlld ahe vet atapd at me. w4 away and, (numbllng a good- t. Wne Inln ... t.H.k. ... .In.. Cll'. -'" ,MV ,117 (.IIMIIIWI ,IU, V' Lf" door, leaned against It. for my r was sick with dread, and sorrow, I Kreat anguish, for now I knew that rsn nao, lien (o me-roy Virgil kook '( movea from lt usual place. CUAPTBrt XXIV JMORROW" said I. clenching my , flats, "tomorrow I will go away!' ing now come to the Hollow I turned jo me brook at that place whera the pool In whlrh i an wont to Orm mv tnnralnir nViltitlnnai and. jUrtg down. I gased at tayU In the lT,"' i Indeed, set Its mark upon me. "vuow," saUl I agKln. MCMMHWf w lightning, and not know that he Is mis erab!y clammy and wet?" "I thought of others besides mself." "But only in connection with yourself; everything you have ever read or seen you apply to .yqurself, to make that self more worthy In Sir. Vlbart's eyes, Is this worthy of reter Vlbart? Can Peter Vlbart do this, that or the other, and still retain the respect of reter Vlbart? Then why, being In all things so very correct and pieclse, why Is Peter Vlbart given to prowling abroad at midnight, quite oblivious to thunder, lightning, wet and clamminess? I answer: Because Peter Vlbart Is too much engrossed by Peter Vlbart. There! thnt sounds rather cryptic and very full of Peter Vlbart; but that la as It should be," and she laughed. "And what does it mean, Charmlan?" "Good sir, the sibyl hath spoken! Find her meaning for yourself." "You have called me, on varloua oc casions, a 'creature, a 'pedant' very fre quently a 'pedant,' and now, It seems J am an 'egoist,' and all because" "Becauso you think too much, Peter; you never open your lips without halng first thought out Just what you are go ing to say; you never do anything with out having laboriously mapped It all out beforehand, that you may not putrage Veter Vlbart's tranquillity by any im pulsive act or speech. Oh! you are al ways thinking and thlnklng-and that Is even worse than stirring, and stirring at your tea, as you are doing now," I took the spoon hastily from my cup, and laid It aa far out of reach as possible, "If ever you should write tho book you once spoke of, It would be Just the very sort of book that I should-hato." "Why, Charmlan?" "Because It would be a book of art fully turned phrases; a book In which all tho characters, especlilly women, would think and- speak and act by rote and rule as according to Mr, Peter Vlbart; It would be a scholarly book, of elaborate finish and care of detail, with no lr. regularities of, style or anythlpg else to break the monotonous harmony of the whole-lndeed, sir. It would be a most unreadable book!" ("Do you think so, Charmlan?" said t, once more taking up the teaspoon. ' Why, of course!" she answered, with raised brows; "It would probably be full of Greek and I-atln quotations! And you would polish and rewrite It until you had polished ivry vestlga of life and spontaneity out of t, as you do out of yourself, with your thinking and think- ,n" . . "But I never quote you preek or Latin that la surely something", and, aa fyr thinking, would you have me a thoughtless fool or uu Impulsive ass?" "Anything rather than calculating, In. trospeetlve philosopher, seeing pnly the tnota in the nunbcara, pnd nothing of the glory" Here Mho gently disengaged tha teaspoon roro my finger and laid It In fewr own MUCr, fcavlavr do which - sighed, and looked at mo with her head to one side. "Were thcyi all like you, Peter, I wonder those old philosophers, grim and atern, and terribly repressed, with burning eyes, Peter, and with very long chins? Hplctctus wns, of course'" "And jou dlsllko Kplctetus, Charmlan?" "I detest him! He was Just the kind of person, Peter, who, being unable to sleop, would hae wandered out Into a terrible thunderstorm, In tho middle of the night, and, being cold and wet and clammy, Peter would have drawn moral lessons, and made epigrams upon the thunder and lightning, Gplctetus, I am quite sure, was a person!" "He was one of the wisest, gentlest and most lovable of nil tho Stoical" said 1. "Can a philosopher possibly be lovable, Peter?" Hero I very absent-mindedly took up a fork, but, finding her e)i upon me, laid It donn again, "You nre very nervous, Peter, and ery pale and worn and haggard, and all be cause you habitually ovcrthlnk yourself; and. Indeed, thcro Is something very far wrong with a man .who peraeverlngly stirs an empty cup with a fork!" And, with a laugh, she took my cup and, hav ing once more refilled It, set It before me. "And jet, Pcter-I don't thlnk-no, I don't think I would have you very much changed, after all." "You mean that you would rather I re mained the pedantic, egotistical crea ture" "I mean, Peter, thnt, being a woman, I naturally love novelty, and you are very novel and very Interesting." ' "Thank you!" said I, frowning. ina more contradictory than any woman!' Hum!" said I. "You nre so strong and simple so wise and brave and so very weak and foolish and timid!" "Timid?" said I. "Timid!" nodded she. "I am a vast fooll" I acknowledged. "And I never knew a man anything like you before, Peter!" "And you have known many, I under stand?" "Very many." "Yes you told me so once before, I believe." "Twice, .reter; and each time you be came very silent and gloomy! Now you, on the other hand," she continued, "have known very few women?" "And my life has been calm and un ruffled In consequence!" "You had your books, Peter, and your horseshoes." "My books and horseshoes, yes." "And were content?" "Quite content." "Until, one day a woman came to you." "Until, one) day I met a woman." "And then ?" "And then I asked her to marry me, Chnrmlnn." Here there ensued a pause, during which Charmlan began to pleat a fold in the tablecloth. "That was rnther unwlso of you, wasn't it?" said she at last. "How unwise?" "Because she might have taken you at your word, reter," "Do you mean that that jou won't, Charmlan?" "Oh, dear, no! I have arrived at no de cision yet how could I? You must give me time to consider." Here she paused In her pleating to regard It critically, with her hend on one side. "To be sure," raid she, with a little nod, "to be sure. you need some one to to look after you mat is very evident! "Yes." "To cook and wash for you." "Yes." "To mend your clothes for you " "Yes." "And jou think me sufficiently com petent?" "Oh. Charmlan. I es." "Thank you!" said she very rfolemnh'. and, though the lashes had drooped, I felt the mockery of her eyes; wherefore I took a sudden great gulp of tea. and came near choking, while Charmlan be Kan to pleat another fold in the table cloth. "And so Mr. Vlbart would stoop to wed so humble a person aa Charmlan Brown? Mr. Peter Vlbnrt would, actually, marry a woman or wnose past he knows noth ing?" "Yes," said I. "Thnt. again, would be rather unwise, wouldn't ill" "Why?" "Considering Mr. Vlbart's very lofty men is in regard to women." "Whnt do you mean?" i "Didn't you once say that yqur wife's nnme must be above Huspiclon like Cae gar'a or something of the kind?" "Did I? yes, perhaps I did well?" "Well, this woman this Humble Person has no name nt all, and no shred of repu tation left her, Sho has compromised herself beyond all redemption In the eyca ot the world." "But then," said I, "this world and I have always mutually despised each other." ''She ran away, this woman eloped with the most notorious, the most accom plished rake in London." "Well?" "Oh!-ls not thnt enough?" "Enough for what, Chnrmlan?" I saw her busy fingers falter and tremble, but her voice was steady when she an swered' "Enough to make any wise man think twice before asking this Humble Person to to marry him." "I might think twenty times, and It would be all one" "You mean ?" "That If Charmlan Brown will stoop to marry a village blacksmith, Peter Vlbart will find happiness again; a happiness that is not or tne sunsnine nor the wind In the trees Lord, what a fpol I was!" Her fingers had stopped altogether now. but she neither spoke nor raised her hend. "Charmlan," said I, leaning nearer acroaa me table, "speak." "Oh, Peter!" said she, with a sudden break In her voice, and stooped her head lower. Yet In a little she looked up at me ana her eyes were very sweet and shining. Now. aa our glances met thus, un from throat to brow there crept that hot. slow wave of color, and In her face and In her even. I seemed to read joy, and fear, and shame, and radiant Joy again. But now she bent her head once more and strove to nlalt another fold, and could not. While I grew suddenly afraid of her and of myself and longed to hurl aside the table that divided us, and thrust my hand deep Into my pockets, and, find ing there my tobacco pipe, brought It out and fell to turning It aimlessly over ana over, i wouio nave spoken, only I knew that my voice would tremble, and so I sat, mum-chance, staring at my pipe with unseeing eyes and with my brain In a ferment. And presently came her voice, cooi ana sweet and sane! "Your tobacco, Peter," and she held the box toward me across the table. "Ah. thank you!" said I. and began to fill my pipe, while she watched me with her chtn propped In her hands, "Psterl" tl-Vmm Pkarfnllint" 7 "I wonder why so grave a person reter vioari suouia seex tcv marry so Impossible a creature aa the Humble Person?" "I think." I answered, "I think, If there I any special reason, It Is because of your moutn." "My mouth?" ''Or your eyes or the way you have with your lashes." Charmlan laughed and forthwith drcoped them at me, and laughed again ana snooK ner neaa. itCONTtNUBD TOMORROW ) $ scrapplY" 1 WITH THE ENEMY THE PADDEF) CELL j9J . ,. . London Opinion. l&f L HES "AUlhelm HIndenburg Zeppelin Tlrpltz Abdul Franz Joseph Schmidt." S-T Iw ' 1 r" V W rian-o-ln How to Get It " )" M ' . . ( hFj3 But then, of course, ho didn't know t'' lil . fmtSS95T1SS5SMBaBTS?l?Sri Z' j'CVtn. I V J ';safl k IkaliCLlJIf f w8tlRUjdtS i T-T VHUS ljj f I jSasaBBal dHRafc l) ) "rm rry, old chap, but I haven't .. . . "T . i niSrirt' Mfl A'lwW iiV WP lv (A i the cash to spare! However. I can tell Edith What made you so late to- Tommy-Say, dud. who was BhyiiKkr fHB W f "-L. you now ,0 Bet ' very easily." dny' Dad What! Don't know who Shy- 13 9 AJ "How?" Edythe Well, jou sco I took my lock was? What do I send jou to Wk M JsBsm "Hero's a nickel; go home and get shoes to tho cobbler's to have them Sunday school for? Go and reajLyour B jm H I IssbbbbbV your wallet." heeled, and he soled them. Bible. 'B M JKis? jP DID IT EVER HAPpEN T Yu? ia VsW lFBaiaaaaa. I THETTO0BLE Vlttrt I IdAuGOUT I'VE I , I ll Wl H s. , MOST HftRRlEP HEN lt ga, HI53CDTHE&I5. I rTTT I "p JH umlll'W,ulMllllllf l.,ni iWW W0tT THEY TOO 300ti FORtET JaBBe. HMCT?.rp Ji nO,i ,IL Wk vmw 111 'li .fill!1 wmimm w fflsMKK xJ--o-Jn Ja j 3 . wA cw llygg' w a i Itwpecmums Tlyv I1 M -ftM paP M. tkiLam W lm 1 f im L Bit ft I I HA jSSBl . - . L fTLxr s Ksi i I " i J tsl story man?" Sa .T ImLM?1 - .aflttsV ? jh V llMfflfflMlJ. i"?W "Tough luck boss. I waa never able MKfA WMUi?1 s' x- .essFsaa. ( ? ' 'f?s& r " to get In wd a good thing on de easssOHL WMflyJ y C .Tgy efsai. . A a A I "" v?PI ground floor." 4rwES2iTy y Uill 3 tfBgLNsaaaaV tjH Hard Luck mZnL'' 'SPW M "What aro you here for, and why, s -. mmmm r s 5 )r cently. ATT HIS TINE, vm DIDCI'T; f0l) VSMT ftPChSC. 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