KF?2; fW"-'-'.'""-'" ' ' " Z ZZ rJ 3 " w-'-iJ" - 'l -aW EWERT MEMBER OF THE FAMILY CAN FIND SOMETHING INTERESTING HERE TO READ . :! w. r &5 iMV THE Jty George Gibbr. ?Y, (Covvrloht. 111S, -"W , TIIK STORY Till'!. I Alt ttTfitl RKNU'II'K. under aecretnrv of LLflrltlsh embitditv In Vlnnii nnd the ITIKI.H .MAKI-tllltA MKAI1I vvnnm rvt?s. overhenr on June 1. nin. mo Ry the torv onens, n conversation in t 'mA pnnVm at Konnntnht lictwpfn Si ' ,4toe German Knlarr. Von 'limits nnd the Ja.'ilAHrtrlan Archduke, In which the "destiny ft , -,'t Kurooe" Is staled. , .... Tne pact entered mm is nc-ninm in uumkka th Archduke and til mnmanatli-?-Nlfe. Sophie Chotek. Important naurt" In i". '-itrletid of Sophie but when fthe learn- i-.AWhat l aroot she reaiixen that ner nrst aimit-r Is to her country and the Austrian . monarch. Frani Josef While she Is re 10 mm. iienwirK is iiiiiinui.. "i- triiat ati.l In f it-m Ini- his rhtef 1 means an estraniremcnt between Ileum Mttrlahkn. WVIIU H'IMIT. fhlpf nt the Austrian P.". .'Secret Service. Is placed In.chnrc of that l-KIcountry'ii affairs, with orders to thwart stwi ssor pmii-i eu pine in- .uniuui.'- .... ...... Mt,.Jien ordered murdMred In S'.iriii yo. I. i".', .1 . .. , I.. .... ,1,. IPC 1.1 wuerman E-et-ret ncrvirc - un mr '"" -" ,-J circumvent the proposed assasination iJ tTtih rtonwllr rnfAnR.H from hl oHlcm :- duties. Is at Jlsrlshka s service mm n . "that Oorltl. who has caotur-d Marlshki Wfrom Wlndt promises to .do all In his Cower to save the Archduke and booh'' ut not to release his fair prisoner It i i. Ttlck. meanwhile Is in Wl-dfs pc;ver : T.lnlr a AniA.I liv Win, II is sonll taken Into custody hy a tall indMJuai in black who trails liim to Sarnleo (rorll and Marlshka dlsuuls. d ns on Austrian r.t officer ana wne. nrrun m .ii-j--w j.,-. RfliW too late. When Marishka awiiKens aiu r zalntlnir at the aicni or ine ns.ii.iiiiiMi-i. EbM v " 1hl herself prls.iner in a ll.irem ana Ifi fh sends a note d:. a. one or the elrl- " ,to ,uenwicK at me i-.uruii.fc ., t,.....p, .her location. L , ft 'Tho Ennllshmnn's raptor, the chauffeur. nd Henwlck. after a serks of acildinls. approach Sara Je o. , CHAPTER XV (Coniimietn IN LESS than half an hour they were again upon their way. rcachlnR thr hills aboe the Bosnian capital just bc ore nightfall. Here, for some reason, the machine again halted with a loud ex plosion of back-fire and a prodlKlous amount of smoke. The chauffeur Rot out. looked Into the hood and utralght ened, gesticulating wildly, llerr l.tnke followed, and a conviri-atlon ensued, the import of which was lo-t upon the liiic llshman. But when It was finished. Llnke turned to Renwlok and explained that the mach.tiery wa Injured beyond (repair and that the car could K'i no further. Titu Ttoin.ui policemen who had appear d m thf road before Un.ni i now rode up and madi inqulrle Renwick shtugptd and was about to walk away wita the Inti nt'.o:, or tlnlsh- ' lng his journey afoot when the rhatif- i feur came forward and caught him by , th arm. shouting oinething in an ev- i cited and angry voice, appealing to the men on horseback and pointing alter nately at the Englishman and at tti i Injured mac.ime The Bosnians got down and listi ned while nnc of them.' who seemed to understand, addressed ' Henwlck In German "This man says that you engaged to pay for any breakages to the m.iihine. and that you hae not paid h.m all that I you owe " "He lies. I paid him at I jvldek Herr Linke here will hear me wlt nestf " As he turned to address his 'traveling companion, ho paused in I azement for without u word, or it cpund, Hcrr Linko had suddenly an- ished Into space. But tho Hungarian was screaming again, and what he said must hae tin- pressed the policeman who nan spoKen ' a 1.1m fn In. Ii.rnm I i l?OllVVicU f SY scratching h's head dubiously, and j Vf- 1 suggested that the matter lie f urtht r 1 Olscussed before a magistrate in tne if. .1 city below. Itcnwlck agreeci, gave in--1 I r . ! i. ha1Uav.iiii Kin snfA -it1i I'm cnrfl tint 1 1u4 B would find him at the Kuropa Hotel ',V nd leaving his suitcase in the car as ;, security ror Ills appearance wnen .siim- . fc. Minnad nan till l-ri rl 1 rlftlVTI the bills l? i. toward the city The colloquy had oc- i cuptea some niomenis. uui w ovu ien-is?- -a wick camo to a straight reach of road , t which led toward the tobacco factory hK tulldings he was surprised to find that J'Herr Link-- was nowhere in sight The fflpL man was an enigma, a curious mixture o cesnerado anu nuitonn, uui nis suu- SlvSC'Oen nlEappearance witnout a word nr A V'iKanlta ir.lnir nr evnlnnnl loll lruve ' tl itenwlck something to puzzle over as hi 'made his way to tne nnnge. us pos- slblfl significance escaped him unt'l he ihad reached the ihvi. when, a thought . suddenly occurring fi him. li- put his hahd Into the breast pocket of It's coat, feeling for the note from Marlhk:t. Jt was gone' He huntnl feverishly. one pocket after another, and was on the point of going biclt fur a . ar-h of the machine when th" truth suddenly dawned. Herr Linke hud taken It from J him last night when !.. slept h-ul ! drugged him that h might pel it with, out commotion! In an Illuminating flash he remembered the sharp look In , the man's eyes yesti rday morning in the S' train from Budapest when Tti nwiek had . taken the note from his pocket. Linke ' 1 He hurried his footsteps, bewailing his I own simplicity and wondering what this new phase of Herr Linke's activi ' ties might signify. Renwick had as sumed that the Austrian was an agent of Herr Wlndt. who. uinble to follow him on to Sarajevo. b'id guessed th" ' train upon which he had left and had sent this man up from Budapest to in t Into his carriage. But h s most recent accomplishment seemed to lcaie this t presumption open to doubt. If Herr Linke had stolen the letter In the be lief that It contained secret information i ' which would be ot value to Austrian , secret service officials, the nu re reading ' ' of.' it would have convinced him of i's '.., Innocence In so far n Mari-dika was i .v'.. 1 4. If n nnn.. ( TAKV.n.. iyjsfff something In the messag- which Hen sJtJE' -wick had overlooked wiu'd put him upon k, rat tne track 01 tne ituow 01 tne grtm '? 5,sllmouslne. 55 He went aloncr the river bank from Jl. thA tirlrtcre toward the hotel th.. locn- JkJ s tlon of which was famllar to h'm. hur- jj' , Tviner hl nc. At nnv ml., thw tioto ij . "was gone and with it the mvsterious .o,. Linke. facts which clearly Indicated bjt -.one purpose. VT. tl.. T 11a ...na l.ant nnnn Int.FMnl. fF, iJ.tIfC7 tlU lini. Ul'l. (,, t 1 Ll-p. - w c'fr Ing: any message which might come to tne Hotel i;uropa tor tne i.ngusnman C And given that to be his purpose what was his Intention with regard to the Countess Strahnl? Still puzzling over the mysteries, which Si rained In eluslveness as he hurried Inlo ,.TIV JTonef tttfAt 1ia ren-herl thrt tiotel. vft",' -which was near the Carsi'a. and made ft,-k-.hu.rrled inquiries of the Turkish porter. ; who smiled and professed ignorance but -cSvsald to the Kxcellency fiat he would MIei!ll II1IJUIIC, lillllbtllh tvnin IVR yX.'"Wm that a note hearim? fhe nntna of .. ,'Herr Renwick bad been left at the hotel fS' n hour before, but that not twenty isr, n minutes ago. Herr Renwick had called 'JS5 and claimed It. fiTP,.. "That is not possible" paid R"nw!c': f Dotty, "since I am Herr Uemvlck i H ' mo ruajur.uuiiiu sin uk u iiiii uij.i 'jl Akatnlniiylv It wfi mnt Itnf orl II ntitp iSS-V he said. hut. of course, as Kxcellency lt?i poetofllce and could not be held respon Sp&li sible for the proper delivery of letters :fer wpen It Knew nuilllUK ui inu nieiiiiiy ui . those to whom they were addressed. YfftVf Renwick paused a moment, and then .l'vStit QUiCKty. io ivnoni was me note p.. ".3i,VYes, Kxcellency. The person who : ,'T sId he was Herr Renwick was tall, at- tfA In Vtlnl r.lotVilnf anil enrrla.l on ntimbrella." tai'-'If your Excellency will permit. It R fKfi. afternoon. It was brought by a woman i. 4Ji,l' yashmak a Turkish woman. Of i. iyj?" , -vwi ,ww .w.. ..-., ."-- -" av Wtoiit wim aterieu cjvo uijuii nie num. IS'", Itenwick naused Irresolutely and Elv f the man a tee, went out oi me noiei o the street, mingling with the crowds ion Frans Josef street, where but a hours before on a noaroy corner tne hduke and Duchess had met their ths. Deciding that at all hazards he t- remain inconspicuou.i wnue ne ght out a plan, he crotsed the river went Into a small park, where he k wearily Into a bench and burled self in new speculations. finurlck rosA suddenly and. wltn a fful glanca about him, made slowly the Latelmer Bridge, sure at least t' h had not been followed and con vinced th-tt he must equalize the haz- rua between tnis utrman anu ninisru 'J playing tne game Rccoruint, io m- idaros of mo vviineimHirasst-. ou iie I nis wayicnreiuny into tne v.arcija. found a 'stall where he managed buy a native Bosnian costume fez. snirt. unori jacit.i. wiuo uuiuns close below the Knee, sasn ,rOf- Islam, nut sne wouiti nave come A'-lrom the Turkish quarter of the town - s'drm beyond the Carsija perhaps. I do & ffcit know. T can sav no more." i" .- Kis JMf-ftBi r 23R-' fjffll ana SECRET WITNCS !! riibllc Lcdocr Company. Copyright 1918 Renwick watched the uimlov. too. slippers. His automatic having been taken by tile prudent Linke. he was unarmed, but managed to find a revolver of Ameilcnn make and cartridges which fitted it With bis newly acquired pur chases he leturned In the darkness to the other bank of the river, where he found a small inn in the Blstrick quarter. He concealed ten on hundred kroner niie in mo lining .u me noil 01 1 no ITiHI"n, illl.l IU!1CI. 11 Htllll l. Illf remainder of lil money, a f-w llftv crown no'es nnd coins, he pu' in his pockets v tth bis w.iteli and oMier vnlu nbles. and 1 hinged bis rlothinir When ho had finished dressing be txamincd himself in a mirror His f;tc. w.is ijm ned by exposure, and the duvt ,if the journey w-hic'i lie ietaln'I ci bmi soiled nnnearnne sufficient l.v iirlental He was now Stefan Thoni.isevic. n seller I of sheep and conts. which he had brought to th- market. He left his Kngllsh clothing In a bundle in the care I nf the innkeeper and advising the man 1 that be would let urn later In the night t nr a( i,.nt upon the morrow, went forth 1 fi irros the tlvor ;.p;iln. with a t-pnse f proater security from tho nbrorvntlnns of any w Iio tneont mlprhfpf to Tluch I UenwicU. If he not know what tho prpon 1lmnus.no rhnn lookpfl Hkp. thf I limouslnu chap at least could net know i him. ; As he Oour'iPil thrnuch the alley of j the Carsija, reassurpd as to the com- pJeteneFs of his diFulse. ht smoked a native cigarette, and asked ninny hups tlon amoriK th1 kppoerf of the stalls, pqiiattlntr oross-leRired with them upon the ground and learning much of all mnturH sap of the rne with which he was most concerned. "I'fw but Moslem people had parsed i through the Car.-dja upon this day." tVin c Iil "tnf tlii. tnrrllilu hnnnAiilnrre i . -.' .'it it, U1 i i.i- ewiiof .u..e..iinP,i nf Via iitnrnlnn- Vi n il bant llm Aiulrlin 'l HI' IHVII lllllrl HtHI 111)11 1.111.- Jllt.Tll Kin i T""..- tlI I.. sl...l .. ., , l.l i ......" "V.l ,' .. " , ..:.:!" i'.."1.,"' "'riwhere he stood, but opposite lrouhle was .ilwavs wKe to tl-d Its com. tnnv nmene It" own i, ,V" (rll elllll .rillll I IIHIII III IIIIIU III Henwlck task seemed boneless, but he did not despair, leaving the bazaar at Inst, nnd I'liml'lntr the bill tn tho old town b'eynrm the Itasllon Here lie ;igatn oiietionevl everv P'i-ser-b . "I'.i'l the KflVndi seen a tall Excellency dressed In black who carried .111 umbrell.i? lie Stefnn Thomascvic. bad 'ild the Km' llency some sheep and pouts, but tho Kxcellene bad not yet paid ali of that which he owed. It was rot a matter about which to laugh If the l'cellene.v did not soon appear in the Cars-lit. it was a matter for tho piUct-" But no one could help him. Herr it watt probable that if such a creatuie had strolled through the Cars'ja. there would be a dozen Idlers who would haie observed and noted the fact. Ilenwiek s chief hopes were crumb lng. And yet. f l.inke suspecteei that tne note wnicii had been sent to the Hotel Kuropa was a halt, he would of e'ourse act with great caution, it was nearly midnight when, weary nnd disappointed, ften wick returned from the Kastele quarter in the direction nf the 1 arsija. The houses were dark .-ave for a glimmer of light in an upper window here and there, but the moon had come out, and Ilenwiek, moving silently along in the .-hadow of walls and hou-.es. cazed about him with the eagerness of despair. For .1 while he stopped In the angle of a wall, and listened to tho sounds ot the cit below him. the rush of the river below the Iiastlon. the motor and bell of the electiie tram-car. the whistle ot a freight locomotive at the further end of the town strident noises brought from the West to break the drowsy mur mur of the Orient, but not a sight nor a sound which could give him a clue as to the whereabouts of Linke or Countess Marlshka. The inaction was maddening. In hi belt the American levolver bung its futile weight. Had it not been for Linke, he might have '-i,t n ehfinee nt least to follow the In structions of the note of the Hotel Kuropa to some conclusion whether for good or 111 it did not matter. If Marlshka herself had written It ! . . . .She would be awaiting him now and he could not come to her. . . . In his ateml Linke the gigantic, the melliflu ous. .... Itenwick turned slowly into a side .treet. and crouched In the dark angle of a wall, for a motor car was coming toward him. Motors In the region of Franz Josef street and th.- rier were not uncommon, but as a rule they were seldom to be seen In the hillv region near the Bastion. From his dark van- PERCY AND FERDIERat-Tat-Tat-Tat-BOOM! i . . -. ., .,.-,-, . --r.. ., ..mr i I I .-n u.i.i n telsni- llncnc. Al R rw MlrF 1 1 RnAT'S REACHED TM t-. TMF STARBOARDER AMD MISS DILPICHIF. ORVjMMERS HAVE QUIT! P- LET'S APPUf J HERCAPACITY- F THEY KNEW WE VERE QOiNq OM OHE OF IDWTlmrf olo." " TH6SE S04 A TRIP EXCORSWM B0AT5 Z3nTte ' Juthor of Sty YcfowOo'o ' Vu It. Jjip.f A lijlil burned dimly within. tage pn'nt Renwick saw the car ap proach and pass blm. quietly coasting, and stop .1 hort distance below the nngle of the street from which ho had emerged. Ho caught a glimpse of the proflTe of the chauffeur, and noted the condition of tho car. He ludged that , It had com long journey, for Sara ,evo a,1(j tlln jevo and the part of Bosnia thtough which lin own machine had traveled had suffeted much from th" drought. Thl'i machine was covered with dust, of course, but it. was also literally sp.iuoio'l with mud. The lZngllshman watched the machine for a while, but the chauffeur, having silenced the en gine, remain' d lr.otionlf ss. in deep t'hadow. waiting f course belated visitors from the Kumpcan section of the city to th" ICastcle were n possi bility, but the quietness with which the chauffiur had approached. and tho I eager way in which he now leaned for ward in ins seat watching the meslne biya windows of n bouse at some dis tance, excited Renwick's curiosity. Why wan th'1 man there? Who was be watch ing in the hiiiM. of the lighted window? Had this mystery anything in common with his own Ilenwiek watched the windows too. A light burned dimly within, and once he ' thought ii shadow passed. The window and the chauffeur Interested him. but he was too far away to distinguish the house clearly, and so, moving stealthily, be stole etuietly up the hill to a cross itreet, nnd turning to the left, in the shadeiw of n wall, walked rapidly down 1 to a small alley which he took at run- ' tlom, nt the end ot which be paused I 1 ' " ' observation. The house with the shrebiya windows was now just below linn was .t .i a - .. .. It l J. .. an auciciu none' wan. aim in us center I was a blue door. There were trees "'"". ...r run. ...... ..-.- i.e-u.u mc found or tailing water. e tounil a "rk doonvay and crouched silently. w.iecninK A cul-de-sac? Perhaps. Plsappoint ment and chagrin had done their worst to him. He would wait and see what was to happen, and if nothing came of 1 the entuie he would merely have his , labor tor his pains. lie noted above t the wall that there were windows of 1 the house winch overlooked the girden I n one of them, in the loom whih the I chauffeur had been ob,ei un- the 1 ght 'sun dimly burned, but !. saw no sbad- 1 mvs r cring out from the angle of the I a lie. -wa. hi I a eloorw ay 1 he w "-. wat. t toward the 1 fancied thai thought he had discovered eoeiit between the house 1 ng and Ihe one below it '.irsij.i. .mil in a moment he cnild distinguish the I sound of e b volet b fioin that direction ; but th sn.ulow of n moseiue nearby threw lis bhadow upon this part of the street, and h" c mid see nothing cleatly If there were m n thevr. they were keeping tn the shadow of the wall around the urn of tin stroe-t. beyund the range of Kenwick's vision, but the night breeze which carried the sound of the whispers also wafted the odor of a native cigarette. The smell of it maele Ren wick wish to smok". for the suspense and Inaction were telling upon him. but he lesisted th impulse sinking lower into the shadow, and awaiting events. Minutes pisced hours they seemed to the waiting Itenwick and tin 11 came the deep boom of a bell, which echoing down the silent streets, seemed just at llen wick's elbow another another until be counted twelve, of the belfry of the cathedral announcing midnight. He waited, thinking deeply The ma chine which had come a long lourney? The lighted windows which the chauffeur watched" Th- whisper of voices from th ' s'leet below blm? There was inys'-ry h-re He couched lowt r and watched the dark shadow ot the aich j below th house. COXTIXL'KD OX KP.IDAY r.rmt demnnd for the i:vi:NI(i n'lll.IC I.I.IlfillK may cause oll to miss an Instullimnt of this -cry Interesting story. Y0.1 had better, therefore, telephone t,r write tu the Circulation. Department nr ask -.our newsdealer tills unerncon tn leae the I'vr.MMi rriu.it- ..i:ih;i:k at jour home. THE CRACK A STORY OF POLITICS IN PHILADELPHIA By Peter Clark Macfarlanc CHAPTER XLl (Continued) I 4iT D.Mti: to till J on." Itnlllnsnii went JL til "Ihut wealth which re-Is tron social Injustice mid political fmnrltWtu, not to su.v iipnn eorriipUon, U Insecure. ! Who known liuiv tunny Aiircntsk are brnndlng their uit.v to nindncss In the cits of Philadelphia loiln.i ? Who knows hnw sunn this Mttltude tif inillfipreiice and lr rcspnilslblllt.l nil behalf of mime holders f grout wcnllli I say s.omc. lur Phila delphia has holders of great wealth who Admit their responsibility 1 say who knows how soon men like you, Bucking ham who regard neighborllucss to the wot Um s as a chimerical dut., will havi urnid the In ails of liundrcds of thou sands of lndiistr.nl woikrrs ot foreign birth within our borders men who hae little education, little capacity to reason and little experience nf trio government and are lacking, therefoic, In that patient intelligence of tho masses which makes democracies possible who Knows bow long before these men sbnll turn into mobs mid rnge through our streets, ile strnjlng propert. nliies becniise proper ly ttilucs luitc been turned ililo u melius nf extorting from them the price of life, without returning to tbcin t lie means of life In any coliifurttililc form." Wild! wild, sill thoughts!'' ejaculat ed Biimingnani scornfully. "But they ale not only my thoughts. Mr. Buckingham." pecs sted Rolllnson. his tone gr.ter anil less ek nunc.atory They sue al.-,o my leais. There aie scores, do.e ns, biuulicds of p-uplc in I'hiiailelpni i . Iio are beginning tu think wildly and beginning to act wildly. Aim not in rhil.nlelphui only; nor are you the only lnespnisible trustee ot great wea'th in Ann r 'a Po you not read the papeis? Id jou not know that there exists In this country .in otganlzatlon In '.imed by uh.it they e'one-elve to be In dustrial wrongs a ml estlm.itiil to lie as bigii as L'.Oiiii.iiiiu In iHimbeis L',000 OHO that Is a number na largi its the population (if l'hi.,Kh lphin--who all over t'ns nation are preaching destruction of property? That nolle. s have been posted suggesting the burning nf crops, and if Mainline; timber, the ruining of ina einneiy, the destruction ot manufactured goods, and oven the poisoning of live stock? And lli.it sueli human ghouls tiled the poor dupes who follow and be lieve in and bee nne their emissaries of crime among the Aiuenlskys who have despaired of ever obtaining justice lrom society as at present oiganizeel? "Do sou not know it lie feel Hint as on'e on whose shoulders there do rest the nst lldiiclur. rcsintnslhllllles ol which Jiiu ure so i oncitius, sour llrst mid leire tuost cflort sin uld he for the wellnre (it the hum at the bottom upon whose bcud inir buck all iironcrts Mlluc rest'.'" llue-kinglniiu u.ntil lis h mils and tiled lo speak but lol inson cut him on with this final indictment : ' "1 ask sou, Wlllurd II. Itiickiiighilui, ( to cease tn iiun't of Hie magnitude of Sour income, to cense to boost of the sums sou gUe to cliarits and to prute no more about faithfulness (o fldiiciur.v responslblllts', so long us In the great i est rcspmtsililllt.v of all sou hue , fulled enllrel.v." 1 Outraged and angry beyond words, the 'flnanc.er turned and tried to walk aw ay I loin Rolllnson. who, to use a reporter's figure in describing the incident, was stl.l limiting in;e a Human volcano, but the crowd lrom without the rail had flowed , inside, wedging chaiis and desks about I him so tightly that an exit was for the i moment Impossible, and the man had to stand with flushed, wrathful face while Jtolllnsoii hroko into a llnal burst of something l.ke eloquence with: 1 "Recently there has been nreranlzed litre a political movement looking tn the bettciment of conditions in Philadelphia .1 cienii iuiu nome young man lias neen found to lead It hundieds. and Indeed thousands, of men have given themselves up with the fervor of a crusade to this enterprise. You should have been the first and surest man to help it, because you have more at stake than any nne else. Instead, you were at first Indiffer ent, then 'scornful, then openly opposed to It. You have made cowards of men who would have helped In it; ou have threatened with a blow In the hack the men who did not withdraw their sup port lrom tins great cause at your corn- 1 - . ." I nianii. i ou nave even conspired to nun I a great manufacturing Institution of ....- .... , .....u , iuiu mc icauvis in th.s great movement "That was morally unjust: legally It wus n crime. Why, .Mr. Itiicklng Itam, were .von not sn big 11s to be regarded In th s community as almost be.vciid the law, I might, nt this mo ment, be sulnc you under the stntutes for an Insidious kind of business pirne.v, that is no mure honorable tlinii the process of extortion by which li'M'pli Mahlnito robbed this l:n ITen-.11 e .lew of bis grocery store. You liuve (iilb'd this Hutu Aurenlsk.v Insane and 1111 iimm hist. .Mr. Iliicklnglinin, It is .viiu who arc 1 lie anarchist. It Is tinly .viuir man, oilier altogether admirable tlilttlltles as a citizen and 11 business iniin Unit keep tfie knowledge of this fail from being reflected in (he face uf ever, trlend who loalts at jou." Rolllnson b.id finished. The crowd senhi d th s instantly and began to fall h.iek be ton Buckingham, whose red, healed features and seething anger made h"i inriieeliate proximity none too pleas ant a place for any one to linger. As the banker made his way past the chair In which Jerry Archer had sat motion less during the ten minutes of this col loeiuy, that toward the last had become a monologue on Victor's part. Bucking ham's outraged eyes seemed lo pause and scan the face of the young man keenly, as if hoping to find there some sympathetic appreciation of his position and the wrong that had been done bun. But Jerry returned his glanco with nn more than a look of recognition. He had been greatly disappointed in Buck ingham this morning. if only the man had softened, If only he had been horrified instead of enraged , watching at tho pollf, on the part of re-l- the discovery of his relationship to i forJn representatives had in times past mi', i-oiiiiiiion oi in" nouse in wnicn 1 been s-o dangerous that it was now llitle Isadorc Aurentsky had tiled, If only entitled to rate as a hazardous occupa he had mustered one word, one' thought , ton. Whenever reform watchers had or 1 xnret-sion nf consideration for tho .hnu-n n dlsnnsitlon to be morn than man who had attempted his life But. no, the man could think today only rf him- self and of his hurt and offended pride. Therefore it was but just that Victor had said to Mr. Buckingham in public what Jeny had tried to say to him in private; but Victor, being a trained speaker, had said it so much better, more cuttingly, and with so much more smashing force than Jerry had been able to i-ay it. But net even Jerry had suspected that the reason Victor Rollinson had been able to speak with such feeling of the bioader social consequences of a cold, stubborn indifference like Buckingham's was that the lawyer was In the t-screts of the Federal investigators and knew Hooray for the Fourth! what the) knew nbout the anarchist Laxene, knew that he was h direct hsso date of the leaders of tho I. V. w. movcmfcnt, knew that Aurntsky was not dreaming when he h.thbtcd to his daugh ter of the plot of widespread nets ot sabotaga In Philadelphia tiiat went even 10 the -taking of human life. I-.olIlm.un knew, moreover, thnt even In these days while .leiry's campaign was pushing to its close, while Aiircnfk.v was being tried for bis murderous at tack, the net or tho L'nlted States Gov ernment Was belmr ilhiu-n closer nnd c'loser about these plotters of wholesale destruction, nnd that there was real anxiety lest the alarm be given nnd the cr, initials escape or that some sudden throwing forward of their plans might make tho wholesale arrests that were In contemplation come after the series nf crimes had been perpetrated Instead of before, as the Federal agents naturally hoped. In other words, while Philadelphia came and went nbout the business of the day. and while Its citizens were more or le s Interested In the p.'lltlcnl campaign of the Ileal Republicans ngninst the Machine Ilt-publlcans, the city as n whole was living upon a powder mine. Ttollln 1 on did not permit .lerrv to know this because he felt thnt anything which distracted his attention from the cam paign issues was bad for the campaign Itself. Willi Buckingham gone, the crowd quickly meltee! out of Judge Boynton's court room. Aurentsky hid been takeij away to Jail with an oilicer. but not without being made to understand by Sylvy thnt some mlghtv change In his fortunes had taken place, that the law e-oulel forgive nnd even he merciful, and that liberty nnd an opportunity to re habilitate himself were almost In his grasp. Rachel and the little Aurentskys were clamoring about Victor and thank ing him volubly. Victor listened to them indulgently for a while, but soon man aged to get Sylvy alone and In front of him. Just for one lover look Into the girl's eyes. They were swimming with tears of gratitude: but there was also admiration In them heights of admira tion nnd depths of love. Victor's heart leaped as he saw it and hope, a great, rare, uplifting hope, built itself higher and stronger In hl.i heart than ever bc foi e. CHAPTER XLII The Day of Decision JHRRY walked out of the courtroom greatly depressed by the realization that this was Ruth's father whom Vic tor Rolllnson. In the Interest of truth and Justice, had just excoriated so ruth lessly. "Don't read the papers tonight. Ruth : nor tomorrow morning. ,Iu-t eion'l lead 'em at all,'1 he telephoned her. "Aurent sky? Oh guilty, of course, hut with a recommendation to mercy. Vic tor handlejl the case marvelously, and the man will piobably not go to lull in all just go out with a suspended scn tvpec. Sylvy? Brave ns ever, and twice as beautiful ; and Victor twice as determined. I saw libit turn and look at her when It was all over. Such a look ! Ruth. It would make you believe in love 11 you knew there wasn t nnv such thing. Yes ; he nut tonight I tell you all about everything." The trial was concluded on Friday. The campaign was In Its llnal days. Tuesday the Iw-ue would be deeded. The story nf the dramatic events of the trial, nil of which had taken place aftei the prisoner was convicted., and events wh'ch were themselves surpassed In iu-tere-it by the severe arraignment of Buckingham with vvliich Rolllnson had "onoludcil his brief passage at anus with the banker, created a profound impression. For one tiling it gave the lie finally (n the hypothesis that Jerry Archer could be construed ns In any sort of real or prospective alliance with the projects of Buckingham. For an other, It gave one final and striking In stance ot the ffect of misgnvernment upon the lives and health of a whole city. Xot was It alone upon the mlnibt nf the humbler classes, the dwellers Ina tene-ments, that this Impression was maele. "There l pestilcnc enough bred dally In that on alley tn bring a nlague to the whole e'tv," Doctor Clwcn baugh had declared In an interview with the reporters. There was a wave of outspoken sym pathy for Aurcntskv. too. and generoutt approval of the judue's action with re gard to sentence, while Jerry's magnan imous spirit toward the man who had stabbed him did more than anything else to drive home to tile c'ty the fact th-it his administration. a he had tried to tell the people of Kensington, was to lie characterised by the human touch This was the atmosphere in which .lerrv at headnuarters rallied h'p force' on Friday n'ght for the last two days of I battle. Saturday and Monday. I.ven the young leaner, mmse.i. wnn sausneu that be had by now got tin? virus or Ills fight beneath the skin of the coldest, most btmlgv of Philadelphia tempera ments. Kve'rybody knew the contest was on ; everybody knew what It was about ; everybody hiid taken h dcs. It was the tensest battle of give and take, blow on blow, attack upon attack that Philadel phia had ever seen in a municipal cam paign. Convinced now that vote- enough were going to be ca-d to elect blm, Jerry began to concern himself with getting these votes counted. There were all sorts of rumors about false reg'nrations. about plant for stufllng the ballot boxes, and for muti lating and disqualifying in the count the votes cast for the Real Republican can didates. The rltction boards, were, ac cording to custom, entirely bi the hanels ot the opposition. The safety of tho ballot for tho Real Republicans lay In the shrcw-diics-, the persistence nnd the .......... .. .. I ...n.nl.nnn at t tl a ni-lllc perfunctory In the performance of their eluties. they had encountered very cavall r I treatment Sometmes this took tho form of belner coolly gnored. elhowed ' or jostled out of tho way. Thin was tho mildest form. In tho more violent forms It expressed itself In threats and in bodily assaults. lvpenlv cocnlzant of this, anel abso lutely incapable of doing anything In the conventional or commonplace way, jerry issued a call for workers that In itself fell upon the opposition like the rain ing of hombn from the sky upon an enemy s works. last paragraphs of the call "If you are afraid don't come. They have treated ie win nut lie- 1111 caoy jun. i.eu nit- SURE. PflOFESSOR- WE CAN HANDLE HEY ! IN THE BELL The job. Years Ago yve drummed THIS for oof none Tov-m twnu-etc. CHAPTER III ! The Spy Is Surprised (General StrnUnw calls to PegoU tn sec an nrmv ninrchlno throupli the cltv. It is the IIVils army under General Tin lit. Ulir accompanies It to an airplane factor), ichcrc she limit a Herman spjl at work.) AS PEGGY made the discovery that tho forcmnn was secretly injur ing the seaplane, a young man in nn army aviator's uniform entered the room. The foreman quickly slipped his file into n pocket and pretended to be giving the machine a final Inspec tion. "Got her ready for me, Carl?" cried the young man. "She's fine nnd fit, Lieutennnt Young," answered Carl, "Good," responded Lieutenant Young. "She looks like a bllnger! I'll have a chance to test her in real notion today. We're going after those German U-boats with every machine we can get." Lieutenant Young was so much ab sorbed in admiring the seaplane that he did not notice tho gleam in Carl's eye. Peggy saw It, however, and she clenched her fists. She wasn't going to let the foreman send tills brave young olllccr to his doom if she could help It. The seaplane was mounted on a truck and workmen called by the foreman quickly ran It out of a large door to nn incline used In launching the miichlnc-i upon tho bay on which tho factory faced. Peggy ran after. .She didn't know just hnw to warn tho lieutenant. She was Invisible because ot the effects of Camouflage Perfume, and she was so tiny she couldn't whisper in his ear. By the time she reached the Incline Lieutenant Young had climbed into the pilot's seat. "You've tested all tlte '.vires and everything?" lie linked Call. "You know I wouldn't neglect that," said Carl, so hypocritically that Peggy wanted to pinch him. She had to act quickly to upset his plot. "Give me a booit to the lieutenant's shoulder," .she cried to General Swal low, lie fluttered above her and she grasped his legs. He rose into the air lifting her to the cockpit that in closed the officer and the controls with which he worked the seaplane. 1'eggy leaned far over nnd shouted: "Look at your wires! They've been cut!" Motors popping within the factory drowned her tiny voice so that it scarcely got through Lieutenant Young's aviator helmet. Yet he heard her and looked around to sec who was speaking. Of course she was In visible, and when lie saw no one he thought his imagination was playing tricks on him. So he prepared to start his engine. "Look nt your wires again the watchers nf reform roughly In the past. A few years ago a man who was lighting the gang In erne of Ihe wards was attacked In the polls Itself; he de fended himself with a stick of timber till the police came, and to them, officers in uniform, he surrendered. After thin surrender he was maltreated Indescrib ably and died In the hospital. A few years ago some young men from the V. XT. C. A. volunteered to serve as watchers at the polls'. Some of them were beaten brutally. Other such crimes have happened. Reform workers have been insulted, threatened. arrested: thev have had their window books taken from them and torn up and thrown in their facet'. We mav expect things like that on Tuesday, for, I tell you, the machine is desperate. "You citizens of Philadelph'a tl" not like to have me refer to these things. . .in not like to refer to them. ,ou te 1 kite it shames the city before tne ' wn mu. and gives IV a nnei name-. '."","""" that It was not 1 who shamed and gave the c tv the bad name. It was the men who did these things In the c Ity vyi icie It was first written and widely adver tised that all men were 'e,ne',vf'!"?' equal My appeal to yoj h that brave, dauntless men surround the polls to morrow, and make these things impas sible by their prei-ence. lint when ynu mine out for this, kiss vonr wives and tm.thcr, Bond-.v. for 'oil may die ns (leorgr 1-pi.le.v died, be fore your loved ones see jmi again. This sentence was melodramatic, but it was apt. It maele memory connec tions with an Incident that still burned de.-p in the public consciousness. R gh along In his speeches Jerry had been taking potshots at misuse of the Assistance Tto Voters" claut-e in the clec- el..- lo.fn "Xovv I want to remind you," he was In tho habit of saying, "that -"very voter who. not inquiring it. asks for assistance perjures himself.'nnd I warn -.pu that the Real Republlcin organization has provided the necessary macniueiy . check every such case, and I pledge you mv word that, whether 1- am elected or defeated, every man who asks for assist ance who does not require It will face a rhninal prosecution, coin- , ...... .... , But I'll lose my Job If I don t ask for assistance.' T say to von tnai you n iu some years oi your iiut-tij- n i '"'";,' for It." nnd there was a snap to Jerry f. .1.1.. -.u bo forked thin sentence out that showed the wholo conviction of the man was close behind the announcement of his purpose. "That's the alternative, and just so you may know that it will bo a real pros ecution, I want to add that Victor Rol llnson will volunteer as a special prose cutor In election fraud cases this tear Xow. you men who. have been In the habit of delivering j'our vote weakly to the enemies of good government In this city picture yourselves sitting in the criminal dock with Victor Rolllnson shaking his long foi dinger at you and saving, 'Thou art the man,' and see if It doesn't stiffen your knees n little. Set-, too. If it doesn't make your old boss a little wary about telling you to vote for this man or that one, because, as ynu well know, that's against the law Itself, and we'll 'get' the boss who tries to de liver Ills worKingme-ii as ii.em us wen I 'get' the man that lets himself be de- .? livercu. .,,.,,, . ,,,,-,.,,. CONTINUED OX l RIDA YVATCH YOUR BEAT BONEHEADT AIN'T TA2Z MUSIC WE'RE PLAYW now: r rt., f J MA sr- r jf S 5ZJ CSs'' S f t) m -.l SL JSIv-i. fekfrT3Baar-T- DREAMLAND ADVENTURES By DADDY FIGHTING FOR AMERICA A complete, new advent ur each tvezk. leglntoina Ilonv li ;';': . '. ' "Look at your wires! been cul!"' They" screamed Pcsgy, as loudly as she could. Tho warning worried Lieutenant Young, who evidently thought it was Just a fancy of his mind. He exam ined the wires close to the cockpit, but not at their other ends, where Carl had tiled them. "Are you sure the wires are all right?" he called to tho foreman. "Sure I'm sure," repeated Car!, get ting his Kngllsh tangled tip in Ills nervousness. "I just looked at them." Lieutenant Young put out his hand to his throttle. Peggy was desperate. She called on General Swallow for help. "Show him the wires are cut," she screamed.' "Rap on them! Tear them!" General Swallow acted instantly. lie hammered at the cut wires with his beak, shaking them and making tho putty fly from the filled places. Lieu tenant Young couldn't see General Swallow becouse of the effects of the Camouflage Perfume, but lie did see the quivering wires and the Hying bits THE DAILY NOVELETTE Shell Shock By MARY LOXG SILAS ALLEN, of ceived a telcgtn of Whitmarsh, had re- long before every one in town had heard the news. In fact more than two-thlids of the inhabitants had read the contents of tho yelleiw paper which the messen grr had brought that morning. It said: "Private Samuel Alien home for three months' furlough. Arrive Whitmarsh Center, Tuesday, 11.10 a. ill. Xlect." And nearly every one who had read t lie message had volunteered to go to the station to meet the hero. "I.em Crolbers Is tiie only one I hain't seen." said Farmer Alien tn ".Ma" Alien, as Ihey sat on tho porch of their comfortable farmhouse. "Wonder why he lialut been over." "Well." replied his wife, "I hear he's got u summer hoarder soino young girl who's been awful sick. She jest wants to set on the beach all day and git built up. so Lent's busy cleanin' up ills shore front, haulin' away all the shells and stcvies so's to make it more com fe.riabie for her." And then silence fell between them, nnd they sat there In the late twilight, eieh busy with thoughts of their only son. who was coming home to them next day A dn-ien willing hands and shoulders wi re offered to help him into his father's machine and home. The wholesome life of the farm, to gether with his mother's devoted care, worked wonders and, six weeks later, the young foldler was able to lake short walks every day, and slowly his strength returned tc him. One especially fine summer day, when he was feeling much stronger than usual, he slarted out to pay a visit to his father's old friend, Lem Crothers, but finding the walk still a little loo much for him, ho picked out a nice sandy beach spot and stretched himself out at full length to rest. In less than five minutes he was sound asleep. On the beach In front of the Crothers home Aline Lee sat Idly gazing out over the smooth, blue stretch of water. Her book lav neglected on the sand beside her, and every little while she would pick up a pretty shell or stone and send it splashing or skimming out into the water. "Well," she reflected to herself, "that's more than 1 could do when 1 first came here. I'm surely getting well and strong again, thank goodness. I wonder how far I could throw one of these stones. I think I'll just test my strength and see and then later I'll walk around the beach and see If I can find it." Sho became quite excited In her search for a shell or stone that should be so different from all the rest that she would be able to recognize it later. "Aha !" she exclaimed with satlsfact'on By H. A. MacGILL L-HY F VT SH'T THE B0YS!i AREN'T YOU tH THE VJRON NM f BERTH PERCY? THIS BOftTi DOESN'T dO TO ttliwu'- C1TT "1 11 ft 1 1 lfl it'ltt mtll tirr III i n rl on fin, . with excitement, the little crowd waited ,"0"" ,l"a,' , tr,,CKI,T "own Ms fac0 fr01" for a sight of Whltmnrsh's hero. Then u V.','!.,,"" "'V " lle' , - , .. Sammle Allen, with his six feet of husky. ,,,.." l'-'"?:."'1,-' r .Stan.,"-7C(' ,' strapping manhood, stepped weakly from ?,','" c?.l,,,m,e,el'v mit ot "ream from lur th.. tr-iin i. ,ii-i-- ,i ii i c Viii.ap' .Mm lun. 'u hy er a ro you.tlie one?" pr t and ending Saturday. of puttv. He climbed out on the wWrs of the seaplane and reached up to the wires, in a moment no nau louiiu the cuts made hy the file. Carl went pale as he saw that his evil work was discovered. Peggy saw him move as if to run away. Then, like an actor, lie forced nn uncon cerned smile to his lips and came to the side of the machine. "Anything wrong?" lie said. Lieutenant Young stepped hack from the injured- wlrea and looked Carl full in the face. ' "What made you think there might he something wrong?" he nsketl in a. very calhi, very cold voice. "You Just said the wires were all right." 'That's what the Inspector said," quickly answered Carl. Lieutenant Young called to the in spector. "Inspector Mordyce. will you kindly come here?" Lieutenant Young pointed to tho wires. "Did you give your ap proval to these wires?" The Inspector carefully examined the wires. Then lie grew as white as Carl had beqn. "Some one has tampered with them," he whispered to Lieutenant Young. The ofllcer. his face set hard nnd stern, and the boyish fun all gono out of It, nodded his head. "That's plain to be seen." he said. Ho looked Carl square in the eye. "Foreman Carl, you' nnd your crew were tho only persons who touched this seaplane after its Inspection. Line up here." Nine men lined up with Carl. "Which of you ten tampered with tlie wires?" The men looked nt him In astonish ment, even Carl simulating surprlse.y No one answered. Peggy turned eagerly to General Swallow. "Make him confess." she cried. "Tho way you did Blue Jay." That was enough for General Swal low, lie darted to Carl's shoulder and seized him by the ear, nipping It fiercely. The foreman let out a yell of pain and fear. "Wow!" he screamed, Jumping for ward. "Wow! Wow!" ' "Humph!" muttered Lieutenant Y'oung. "I half suspected It." "Xo, no, no!" yelled Carl. "It wasn't me!" General Swallow nipped his ear again, and Carl screamed the louder. "Pull the file from his pocket," cried Peggy. General Swallow let go Carl's ear and jerked the file partly out of ills Jumper pocket. Lieutenant Y'oung saw it. stepped forward and took the file. He fitted It to the marks in tho wires. Then nodded his head and beckoned to two guards. "Place tills man under arrest!" Ho ordered. On Friday icill he told lioio the seaplane, irtth Peggy on board, goes searching for submarines.) after n few minutes, "this ono, will be just right," and she picked up a small tightly curled shell, the Inside of which was packed with fine, hard sand. "The sand just makes It heavy enough tu throw," she said, unconsciously speak ing aloud In her Interest. "I'll try to lilt that dark spot over there on the other side of the beach." So, standing up and taking careful aim, sho sent tho little shell spinning across the water. Fascinated, bho watched it go and then "Xlercy, what was that?" for a hoarse, cry burst out upon the stillness. Aline stood alone for a moment, stunned. "I must have struck home one." she de cided quickly : and fear lending wings to her feet, sho sped around tho curve of the beach and over the hard sand to the other side. "l Hi. why did I ever do such a silly thing," she almost sobbed In her anx loty. "I may have killed soma one." And in her terror she rushed on with a. frc-h burst of. speed. Hardly seeing where she went, and milium; so fast that she was not able lo stop at once, Aline nearly fill over the figure of a young man sittln-jr against a rock, ruefully rubbing his forehead with one hand, and with tho other wiping away the little stream of "The eine." bo answered, n little mi. zled. " hy er yes, I guess I must be; that Is, whichever one you mean. I guess I'm it,'" getting slightly mixed in his Kngl'sh. but smiling into the gill's troubled face. "Why, I mean are you tho one that shouted for help just now," explained Aline. ".Shouted," he replied. "Well, I should say I did. You see, I was sound asleep when this thing came along In such a hurry. Why, I thought a shell from a 12-Inch field gun had struck mc, and I eertnlnly must have yelled loud enough to have scared olf a whole, regiment of the enemy. You see, at first I really didn't know just what had happened. I'm sorry If I frightened you. Won't you sit down a moment?' and he spread his coat out on the sand. "Well, really, you did give me quite a shock," admitted tho girl, sinking down upon the sand, just beginning to feel ' the reaction. "Hut then," she went on, "I re.al!y deserved it, for, you see, I threw the shell. I do hope It hasn't really hurt you," she finished anxiously. "Nothing' but a scratch," he assured her, taking down his handkerchief to prove his words. "It's not worth talk ing nbout and certainly not worth the awful racket I must have made. Dut you see 1 was the shock, coming as It did when I was sound asleep. But there's no harm done, so don't give It another moment's thought." And so they sat there In the glory of the summer sunshine and chatted as only two young folks can talk, who are mutually attracted to each other, and for the rest of the morning and many, a morning thereafter .Sammle Allen and I.em Croihers's summer boarder walked together on the hard stretch of sand that lay between their two homes. But three months is not forever, and the end of the furlough was drawing near.' Again, the two young people sat on tho sand' at tho very spot where thex had first met In such an unex pected manner. . In low tones Sammle Allen was sneaking to the girl at his side. "My time's nearly up, Aline," he said, "and I shall have to.go.back. Aline, now. and think that our pleasant days are over." Ho looked at 'her suggestively. "Must they be quite over. Aline?" He rose nnd. taking her- two hands In his, J helped the girl to her feet. "Aline, little 1 girl, won't you tell me that there'll be j even happier days for me for us when j I come home for' good?" ! And with smiling eyes and a little . tremulous smile on her lips, the girt i went Into the outstretched arms that' awaited uer, ana wnen no sougnt ner lips she did not deny him. ,'ir really think that I am the only man in the company who can truth fully say that he has suffered twice from 'shell shock" n,ml survived," fcald Sammle Allen some time later, "The llrst took away the use of my arms and legs for a little while, but the second robbed me of my heart for ever." "Well. I was frightened out of my wits when It happened." confessed Aline, "but since it has turned out like this.'' giving his arm a little squeeze, "why now, of course, I'm very glad that I gave you that Eecond 'shell shock.' " Ana to-gemer tney wenaea tnelr way toward the Allen farmhouse. Friday' Complete. 2Cavelctc VUdi.ni..vu, t & Xi v: m J I Ti 1 t Ht 51 V.I !i) X vt rji $ m ' ?fi A' I ri I -rl sjl VI S h& ?- .. 3-tir-.r'' ',Jf -.-''- l&S,.,- J. -t" LIT- 1,1 ;..-" e.y-v ?ST$S&:f&.: n -. ., . .-AVflg2f B jmj:x tl -? -.-iiiai, & MP-S . 13 r "SB-it :i-.sb i ' -.-g Ht" . " Kt ;'-.XsZ- i -Zdh&YtlS-'