EVENING PTf&tip LEpOjBR-PHIBlf)ELPHIA, JMpKDAtT ' JXTNE- 23, ' 019 i! U ErI I I & ! t 13 I v'i m'i " f m m M ra- T WORLD FOR SALE I ITCopyrlsftf. JSJ, Iv llarprr f Bros.) "The Druses Arc Up!" li-WnilEAT Scott. look at tier! She's p' VJ goin' to try nnd take 'em!" r- jpioimcu usicriinui, ma jntn-ui-an- trades at Lebanon. J.;"She ain't Mich a fool as all that. MVhy, no one ever done it alone. Low (water, too. whin every rock's Rot its tchancc at the canoe. Hut. ni gracious, iho is goin' to ride Vni '." Jowctt, the horsedenlcr. had a sports - JrJinn's lov in n daring thine. fc'"See, old Injun Tekewani 's after - . ... i t .i... i i ;npri lie 8 caning ni uer irom mr unu 'He knows He done it himself jents "figo when there was rips in the tnh. in he had to evv up the tears He tfln them Rapids in his canoe " J .."Just as the Druse girl there K fyoln' " "An he's done what he liked with She Biackfeet ever since." "But she aln'l a chief- what's tin kise of her doin' if She'-coin' straight Jpr them. She can't turn bink mm She couldn't make the hank if he Jvnntcd to. She' sot In run 'i in Jloly smoke see mm vvnviu' tile paddle ."at Tekewani' (Merhaiit. she's the limit, that petti. oat so quiet and lij and don't look at me. too. with eves like brown diamond " "Oh, get out Jowe-fr she's nil right ' Sije'll make this umiitrv sit i.p ome day by corn -In 'li iunk- Mauitnti and Lebanon sit up toduv if she runs the Carillon Rapid -ate'" "She's ruiiiiin' 'em all light. nn She's bj jei mil done. Miss Prase" -Well done I .n- well doiu "' ex 'claimed Jowett. .hireing about and wav inz his arnii toward the adveni'iimis .girl. The cirl I ,nl ed tli. the in. nngiv . ks u nt 'thrashing wntti w licit Tf and tore into white libbnii the tirii-li Jlng current, and her tirt tinil had mine jjlO the nist, nit tut spittinc, niging nanthers of fn'iin -truck tin how if tier canoe The water- nm -n h that this i tii i si. whnh she had ni.nl' Notice before with In r friend. Ti kewain. the Blackfn ' . hn f liad piril tint met on that despei.it" ammoy llei .tii. struck a roil, l.intwi hinldi red and swung round l"it h a d' xtrmi troke she freed the trail . r.ift It righted "and plunged f.tiwaid again into ft-e-li death trap It was the-' new dangers winch had made 'Mmjnt n ! warn her from the shot e In and the ilocu brav with .him; but it i iliniacteri-tif of hi race that, aft' r the tirst warning, when sho must pla mil the game to the bitter end lie made tin further attempt to stop her I he Indians ran down the river bank hnwi vei. with eye intent on her headlong prngre grunting ap proval as sIr plunged safely from dauger to danger Osterhaut ami Jowctt lieeainc silent. too, and, like the Indian-, ran as 'ai as the could over fenee. through the trees, stumbling and 01 cuiouull,v urs Ing.'but watching with fas. in.ited cms this adveutuii-s of the north, taking chances winch not one rotneur-de bois or river driver in thou-and would tijlte, with a $."0t)0 prize as the line Vfhy should he do it'.' ' "'Women folks are s(eh dam fouls Nhen they git goin'," gasped (Merhaut n he ran. "Tlie clon't cam a -j.Ut pia what happens when the'e got the pip. Look at her ni hair's bleach - -'She's got the j n i all right. tired Jowett. a- he plunged "but she's foreign, and the ' stut along . all got the pip, foreign men and women both W)t the women go craz." "She keeps prettj cool lbbn, that girl If 1 Vd- ' Jowett inteirupted for a i ra.v owned her nupatieutlj ,'Tou d do what old man Pruso doe i-Vou'd let her be, U-terhuut. What s Vie good of hav in' Mur own waj with cjne that's the apple of our oje, if it tarns her agir on'' You want her to i,ss you on the high t hceklione, but if ou go to plai the cat-o'-nine-tails round her the high i heehboue gets froze. Gol blast What are the They're sajm it. look at her, mjd . wiht waes sajin'V 'This is a surprise, t iiit it read for je. Miss Druse . Sliss Druse.' VP, an t sl :.t the Tuck of the old devil!" I It seemed -o More than once the canoe half jamm si between the roiA-, and the stern lifted up bj the force Of the wild current, bu' again the nad ijle made swift plav, and again the Cockleshell swung clear. Hut now fleda Druse was no longer on her feet. She knelt her strong, slim brown arms bared to the shoulder her hair blown about her forehead, her daring eves flashing to left and right, nitinnrv of i Ber course at wmk under uch a strain US lew can emiure witnoui ( uios oi fliind in the end. A uuiiurid times since fjlie day she hail run these rapids with Tekewani she had gone over the course fy her mind, asleep and awake, forcing I Ber brain to again evtrj al ot,.ss liki ttfnt waterv wav , bitau-e she knew i i,,,,. farr. (Jiat the day niiisi come when she would Uiake the jouruej alone. Why "! , jrould make it she did not know; she only knew that she would do it s, mo (lay; and the ilav h.nl come i or long It bad been an obsession with her as though some spirit whispered in lier ohr "Do ou hear the bell- ringing nt Carillon.' Do vol ar the sjnging toward Carillon'.' Do mu see the wild birds living ti.waid Caiillon'' T)o you hear the rapids calling the I Itapids of Carillon V" iJight and dav since she bad braved death with Tekewani, giving him a gun, a meerschaum pipe and ten pounds , ot bcautltui urowu ping louacu-u u & token of her gratitude night and "gay she had heard this spirit murmur ing in her car. and alvvajs the refrain vfas, "Down the stream to Carillon! Shoot the Itapids of Carillon!" Why? How should she know? Where- M A. ei-niihl she know .' 'this was ot the i.'- Mbjngs beyond the why of the human O'fc inlnd. Sometimes nil our lives, if we Li 1 t.'. .. .n.,1.. s.,,i, noil kpp tlio wnrtrl It we first saw it with ejes und heart ufiolled, we hear the murmuring of the Other Self, that Self from which we tnrntert when we entered this mortal sWiwe. but which followed us, invisible wt whispering inspiration to us. But tetimes wo only hear It, our own Uul's ortcle, while yet our j-ears are r'ftw, and Me have pot passed that frou ..4r between innocence and experience. MI Uiy uDU preieuae. i icivupc it. is ifti arlves me uiner oeu uvvuy wiiu line on its lips. Then we hear It cry Vtlio nluht when, because of the iblc of life, we cannot sleep; or at play when we ate caught away from Ires into another air than ours; music pours around us liko soft from a garden of pomegranates; when a child asks a question which us uacis lo me iuuu wncre every f X . "''! 2n -M orim ..IM -r--- ... 's5kj s" .'sawufiiaas4fcJ',r,v.', SRr- - - v-.v-'- :: vmN .... '.' '--" k - ' '-:-. " ' Now tossing to death as it Mmu tin e that it can b" shouted from the tree top Win was l'b da Lrn" tempting .Path in tin' I 'arillon Itapid-'' he dtnd Mamt wtril, do it the re had heatd u ln-per us she wan iiiiong tin pine trees there at 'ii. and it said simply the one "Now '" She knew that she mii-t she had ill i' en her ratine out inln i-tlis. Mint nt In rule the Itnpul of I'uilloii Her Dth. r Self had win- pereil to In r Voider, ti'ousands of nulls away n Sjria, thi'ic weic the Hill of I.cliani'ii ami there was one phrase which in.ult ever.1 Mrla hcnit beat ln-ter. if h were on the miiuli. it w.i-, "'1'he Pru-e are up'" When that wild tribe took t. the -adillp to war upon I he urnnir and against authoritv. from I.ebniion i to I'.ilinjra. from .leiu-.tleni in I 'anns-' i us men looked auiousl about them ami mde hard tit refuge And here al-o in the Tar North where the Itiicr Sagal.n inn n w il'l i ace to Carillon, Lining In hind the new (owns of Lebanon and Muiutoti. "the Pruse were up ' Thi daughter of linbriel Pru-e, the giant, wa- riding the ICapi'l- of the Sagalac Tin- u-pcii-e to hu- ami to those who .Tihed in i toiir-e to Teke wain and hi brines, to (l-teihant anl J.twett could not be long It was a in, Hu r of minute- onh . in whnh ecr si .nml was a urn in h and might be ,i itita-trophe I'ltuii nw k to rock, from wild white water to wild white water she sped, now tossing tn death a- it seemed, now shunt mg on nfe to the next test of t-k ill and coinage cu. on. till at last tin re was onlv one pa-sage to make befoie the cllloe would plllllge into the -Illii.it b water i tinning with great swiftm till it almost leached Carillon. Suddi nh . 'as she neai id the"" lust dangeioiis oint. round which she nm-t swing between jagged anil uu-ien bar tier- of lock, her sht bnann for an m-tant dimmed, as though a loud pass, ed over her ce. She had inner tainted in her life, but it seemed to her now that -he was hineiiug on nm oii-ciou-ne-s Commanding the will and energv left, she fought tin' weakness down. It wa ins though -he foned a way through to--i iug. buffeting shadows, as though shn was shaking oil tioiii her shoulders 'hnduw hand- whnh -ought to detain lier : as though -nioihering things ki nt poking k her ud of hri'ith. nml d.nk wool gathered about sj. Hs lighting for her life, and fur veins it seemed to be; though in ,ini,j jt ,. nj , ,.,, before lier will I(..si'ited ittelf, and light broke again i upon her wav. i'ven ou the verge of the lat ambushed passage ber senses i ame back; but. tln.v lamo with a stark utilization of the peril ahead; it looked out of her e.vis lis a face shows itself , at the window of a binning building Memory -hook itself free. It piem-d ' th" tumult of waters, found the am- DOROTHY DARN IT Perhaps He Could Make the Boy Scouts (HARD LUCK FOLLOWS f j, fTcoOLDN-TQET INTO THE uJ ITRIED BUT COULDNtV7 I MV FEET A NT Mflfi ) ME EVERY WHERE yfiA ARMY ON ACCOUNT OF Xi (U-? ' J4 1 FLAT ENOUGHli M - J HI ' ' ' "fc- '""""' i II! 1MB. , , ,!1WWWM. I I -m J !! I I I ' II I U I !, J J' X;i"4& J, ' , 1 ' "V s' clv " 7 ii 'f'"l ' V - f ji.) i , . -- '5 i . . afc .-r -n':..A..j. r rftmrfetr -" . .- ,,..- 'lwitiM,M' v V'urififirifr- ..-i. ..Jkaaii&i, .KI ;M.-... AM--ft w'-M-r -'A? MfrfciMAii ''if-H-- on s.ifrlj to the net bu-hed ii" ks, and gunhd tin lithe blown arms and hands. that lh -witt paddle drove the caune straight onward, a- a ti-li diic it-elf through til flume of diagou's teeth beneath the llooil The canoe imiw-ri d for an in- -taut nt the lat cataiait. tlnu te- -ponding to Memory .mil "Will, -ped thiough the hidden chtisni. tossed bj spr,n and water, and Miipt into the swifi I'linent, of smooth water below. I'liila Prosit had urn the Knpid- of Carillon she could hear the bells ring ing for evening scivico in the Catholic Chinch of Caiillon. and bells soft, booming bells weie brain. Like mulll'd bells weic. ami she was as one who enter into a deep foiest, and hears far awa rnons in the bo-, nge the nitic suin of forest deities. Void's from the banks of the ii'.r behind called to her hilarious, approving, agitated voices of her Indian friends, mid of ' i-teiliaut and Jowett. those wild spec tator of her adventure, but thej were liotwhollv i al. nl those soft, boom iug bells in her lirain were rial. Shooting the KapiiU of Carillon was the bridge bi which she passed from the world -he had left to this other II r giilhood was e.idid wondering, hovering, iiunaiiziug girlhood. This adventure "as the outward sign, the rite in tin Lodge of Life which passed her fnmi one iiigieo of lit nig to another She w.i -afc; but now a lier canoe shot unwind to the tow n of Carillon, her sense again gnw faint. Again she tell the buffeting mil. again her face w.ts inufibd in smothering folds: again great ham! reach" d out toward lier; again her e.ves were drawn into a stupefj nig d.irkues ; but now- there was no will tn light, no eiieigy to resist The paddle laj iueit in her lingers, her head drooped She slovvlj raised her head onie, twice, as though the call of the oihaustul w ill was heard, but siiddeulj it fell ln.nilj upon her breast. For a moment so, and then as the canoe shot forward on a freli current, the lithe bodv sank backward in the canoe, and laj face upward to the evening skj . Tlie canoe sped on, but prcsentlj it swung round and lay athwart the cur i iMi r , dipping und rolling. I'loni the luniks ou either side the Indians of the Mauitou Reservation and the two men fiom Lebanon called out and hastened ou, for they saw that the girl had collapsed, and they knew onlj too well that lier danger was not .vet past. The canoe inig'ht strike against the pieis of the hi idge ut Carillon nnd overturn, or it might bo curried to the second cataract below the town. Thev were too far iivvaj to save her, but they shouted a they ran. None responded to their call, but that dehaiifc of the last cataract of the 1 Itapids of Carillon had been sieu b.v I one who, below an eddy on the Lebanon I i side of the liver, was steadilj string- ling upon mapletwigs black bass and I seemed, now sliootiii By GILBERT PARKER Author of "Tlio Scats of (lie Mighty," "The .Money Master," etc. test of skill and courage" j long-nosed pike. As he sat in the shade lot the tree, he had seen the plunge of j the canoe into the chasm, and had held his breath in wonder and admiration. j Lven at that distance he knew who it 'was. He had seen l'leda onlj a few I dm,.- before, for she was little abroad : but when he had set.u her he had asked himclf what such a face and form were doing in the Tar North It be longed to Andalusia, to the Carpa thians, to Sjrian villages. "The pluck of the very devil!" he had exclaimed, as I'lcila's canoe swept into the smooth current, free of tho linging ill her own I dragon's teeth: and as lie had some silver these brain- thine of the devil in himself, she seemed much nearer to him than the hundreds of vards of water intervening. Present -lv. however, he saw her droop and sink away out of sight. Kor an instant he did not reali7P what had happened, and rnen. with angry self repinarh. he tiling the oars into the rowlocks of his kiff and drove down and 'athwart the stieam with long, powerful strokes. "That's like a woman!" he said to himself as he bent to the oars, and now and then turned his head to ma,ke sure that the canoe was still safe "Do the trick better than a man. and then col lapse like a rabbit." He was Ma Ingolliv, the financier, contractor, manager of great interests, disturber of the peace of slow minds, who had come to Lebanon with the avowed object of amalgamating three laihvajs, of making the place the swivel of all the trade nm: interests of the Western North; but also with the de clared intention of uniting Lebanon and Manitoti in one inunicipalitj , one center of commercial and industrial power. Men said In- had bitten off more than he could chew, but he had replied that his teeth were good, and he would masticate the meal or know the reason whj. lie was onlv thirtv -three, but his will was like nothing the West had seen as .vet. It was sublime in its con fidence, it was free from conceit, nnd it knew not the word despair, though once or twice it had known defeat. Men iheered him from the shore as his skiff leaped through the water. "It's that blessed Ingolbj," said Jowctt. who had tried to "do" the financier in a horse-deal, and had been done instead, and was now a devout admirer and adherent of the Master Man. "I saw- him driving down there this morning from Lebanon. He's beet) fishing nt Seely's I'ddj." "When Ingolby goes fishing, there's trouble goin' on somewhere and he's stalkln' it," rejoined Osterliaut. "But, bj gol. he's goin' to do this trump triik lirst ; lie's goin' to overhaul her before I she gits to the hriuge. I.nok at hlni swing! Hell, ain't it prettj! There jou go, old Ingolbv. You're right ou it, even when jon're fishing." tin the other the Manitou shore Tekewani nud his braves were less talk- fltlvc, but they were more concerned In the Incident than Ostcrhaut and Jowett, They knew little or nothing of Ingolby tho hustler, but they knew moro ot rieda Druse and her father than all tho people of Lebanon nnd Mnnitou put together. Tledn had woti old Tckc wnnl's heart when she had asked him to take her down the Itapids, for the dajs of adventure for him and his tribe were oer. The ndventure shared with this girl had brought back to the chief the old dajs when Indian women tanned bearskins and deerskins day in, day out, and made pemmicau of the buffalo meat; when the jears were tilled with hunting and var and migrant journey ings to fresh game-grounds nnd pastures new. Danger faced was the one thing which could restore Tckewanl's self-respect, after he had been checked nnd rebuked before his tribe by the Indian commis sioner for being drunk. Daugcr faced had icstored it, and Fleda Druse had brought the danger to him as a gift. If the canoe should crash against the piers of the bridge, if it should drift to the cataract below, if nnj thing should happen to this white girl whom he wor shiped in his heathen way, nothing could preserve his self -respect; he would pour ashes ou his head and fire water down his throat. Suddenly lie and his braves stood still. They watched as one would watch an enrm.v a hundred times stronger than one's self. The white man's skiff was near the deielict canoe; the bridge was near alo. Carillon now lined the bank of the river with its people. They ran upon the bridge, but not so fast as to reach the place where, in the nick of time, Ingolbj got possession of the roll ing canoe; where Fleda Druse lay wait ing like a princess to be waked by the kiss of destinj . Only live hundred yards below the bridge was the second cataract, and she would never have walked if she had been cariied into it. To Ingolby she was as beautiful as a niman being could be as sho laj with white face upturned, the paddle still in her hand, "Drowning isn't good enough for her," he said, as he fastened her canoe to his skiff. "It's been a full day's work," he added; and even in this human crisis he thought of the fish he had caught, of "the big trouble" he had been think ing out as Osterliaut had said, as well as of the girl that he was saving. "I alvvajs have luck when I go fish ing," he added presently. "I can take her back to Lebanon," he continued with a quickening look. "She'll be all right in a jiff. I've got room for her in mj buggj and room for her in anj place that belongs to me," he hastened to reflect witli a curious, bashful smile. "It's like n thing in a book," he murmured, as he neared the waiting people on the banks of Carillon, and the rjnging of the vesper bells came out to him ou the evening air. "Is she dead?" sonn one whispered, as eager hands readied out fo secure his skiff to the bank. "As dead as I am." he answered with a laugh, and drew I'leda's canoe up alongside his skiff. He had a btrange sensation of new life, in. with delicacy and gentleness, lie lifted lier up iti his strong arms and stepped ashore. The Whisper from Ilcjond TNC.OLHV had a will of h:s own. but J- it had never been really tried against a woman's will. It was, however, tried sorely when Fleda came to iiin sciousness again in his arms and real ized that a man's faeo was nearer to hers than any man's had ever been ex cept that of her own father. Her eyes opened slowlj, nnd for the instant she did not understand, but when she did, the blood stole swiftlj back to her neck and face and forehead, and she started in dismay. "I'ut me down," she whispered faintly . "I'm taking jou to my buggj." he replied., "I'll drive jou back to Lebanon." He spoke as calmly as he criild. for there was a strange mut tering of his nerves, aud the crowd was passing him. "I'ut me down at once," she said peremptorilj . She (rembled on lier feet, nnd svvajed, aud would have fallen but that Ingolby and a woman in black, who had pushed her way through the crowd with white, anxious face, caught her. "Ciive her air. and stnnd back!" called the sharp xoice of the constable of Carillon, and he heaved the people back with his powerful shoulders. A space was cleared round the place where Fleda sat with her head against the shoulder of the stately woman in black who had come to her assistance. A dipper of water was brought, and when she had drunk it she raised her head slowly and her eyes sought those of ingolby. "One cannot pay for such things," she said to him, meeting his look firmly ami steeling herself to thank him. Though deeply grateful, it was a trial beyond telling to be obliged to owe the debt of a life to any one, and in par ticular to a man of the sort to whom material gifts could not be given. "I couldu't xery well decline, could I?" she rcjoiued, quick liuuior shooting into lier eyes. "I was helpless. 1 never fainted before in my life." "I nm sure you will never faint agaiu," he remarked. "We ouly do such things xv hen we are very young." She xvas about to reply , but paused reflectively. Her half-opened lip did not frame the words she had beeu im pelled to speak. (TO BE CONTINUED) The Man From the Clouds tfiyrlt. MKBTON," he said, "for 1VJL God's sake don't give me awny nud I'll tell you the whole truth. My cousin Philip can confirm It or nt least part of it. I came up hero because well, I'd married the wrong woman and gotie off the rails a bit and Philip settled mo hero to keep me straight. I had debts too I have them still, I may tell yoU frankly. That's why I took In O'Brien. I wnsn't supposed to keep any liquor in tho house thnt xvas ono of tho con ditions. But damn it I xvnsn't born to bo n teetotaler, and flint's the plain truth, Mr. Merlon. Thnt devil O'Brien found me out and started to blackmail me " "Blackmail?" I asked. "In his own way. He made me give him liquor and there xve xferc the pair of us! That's why I pulled down the blind. The decanter and glasses xverc all out on this tabic here! And that's why O'Brien was afraid you might be sent by ills relations. Thnt xvas the one thing he was afraid of that ho might be found out and taken away." I bent over him nnd sniffed. "You have had n dram now!" I cjclnimed. ' "And it's not the first sltre'e you've been here either. You see I'm perfectly frank with you, Mr. Merton. If you like to give me cvvny to Philip well be d d, you can if you like. But you'll surely not? I've told you xvhat I've told to no one else." There rushed into my mind confirma tion enough of part at least of the poor devil's story. His curious moods, his manner as he entered the room this evenhig. O'Brien's impish allusions to liquor when I lirst visited the house, nil fell into their plnces now. Yet utterly as this had exploded my hopes, I think I was more glad than sorry to sec the doctor come out of the ordeal with only this kind of stain ou his character. He xx as a likable innn, xve had been capital friends and he was Jean's cousin. "I promise you, doctor," I said, "that I shall repeat no word of this story except, of course, in confidence to those who arc on the track of this business iu Uansay. Only in return you must tell mo absolutely frankly 'it you have seen any grounds for suspect ing O'Brien of anything treasonable anything whatever." The doctor shook his head em phatically. "The only plotting the man was capable of was to get liquor. Otherwise he xvas just a gas bag. I've seen him too often iu a state when he'd have given everything nxx-ay, if there had been a uy thing to give." And then I remembered the pocket book. . "Hut this entry !" I cried. "How do you explain that?" The doctor looked at it again and his bewilderment xvas obviously sin cere. "I'm frankly d d if I can make head or tail of it," he said. "Bolton must have got on the wrong scent; that's the only thing I can imagine." And then, like a sharp smack in the face, Jean's rending of that entry came back tn me. Could she have guessed right, after all? It looked uncommonly like it. "And yet," Inid to myself, "it's a great thing to have tested the other hy potliesis." In fact, if one is not built to be easily dispirited, well, it is not easy to dispirit one. I looked at the doctor, and something in 'my expression seemed to make him smile. When he smiled he looked so pleusant that mv con science smote me. I told myself he cer tuinly deserved some reparation for the ordeal I had put him through. DREAMLAND AD VENTURES -By Daddy "THE CIRCUS BIRD" (hi fti5 slorv .Judge Owl turm inln ihc biggest biid in Ihc world, nnd Peggy and Billy exhibit him in a cir cus, where strange things happen.) Biggest Bird in the World THE circus was iu town. Peggy had watched the parade in the morning and was now resting comfortably in her hnmmoek at home. She was resting Vtonnnoo her husv father was going to i take her to the performance that night and had insisted that she have an af ternoon snooze so thnt she would not be too tired. ' As she rested, Peggy amused herself blowing up two rubber squaker bal loons her mother hnd bought for her ,.lilto xvnltlne for the morning parade. One of the bits of rubber xvhen blown , up became a bulging green watermelon aud the other became an elephant. Down the street xvniled another squawker und along came Billy Belgium with a balloon iu the shape of a pig. "Let's see who can blow the big- gest balloon," suggesteil jsiuy. ixnu so they blew nnd blew until the ele phant nnd the pig swelled up until they could bvvell no more. "Hoo! Boo! Too! Too! Is that part of the circus?" They looked up at this question and there was Judge Owl perched on a tree brunch ubovc them. He was looking at them through dark goggles. Of course, it was queer for a bird to xvear dark goggles, but Judge Owl, being u night bird, could not see well iu the1 Copyright, 1010, by the lltll Syndicate, Inc "Doctor," I said, "I nm devilish thirsty myself after this bout. Let's each have nwhlsky and sodat" It mnypr mny not have been the wisest suggestion to mnkc. I am not an expert In these matters. But nny how if he enjoyed his. drink us much as I enjoyed mine, It was at least a happy Idea. We had lit our pipes with our glasses at our sides, and I xvas in the midst of giving the doctor some further repara tion in the shape of the true talc of my adventures, when I saw him sud denly start and glance guiltily at 'his tumbler. "Is that some one In the hall?" he exclaimed. 'Trobably the servants," I sug gested. The next instant the door, opened nnd, xvithout nny announcement, in walked my uncle, Sir Francis Merton, followed by my cousin, Commander John Whiteclett. Tracked Down T TRUST we are not Interrupting you. Hoger," said my uncle. His voice was caustic and his eye severe, and as the costume he had select ed for this thunderbolt entrance was apparently designed to suggest n com bination of North Sea pilot and pirate King (including a fur cap with ear flaps tied under his venerable chin) ono. might have fired a twelve-inch gun in- to the room and produced mucu less Impression. "Not a bit," I said, bounding to my feet, "but cr wouldn't you like to untie your bonnet, Uncle Francis?" He frowned at me heavily but 1 xvas thankful to notice that his eye did twinkle for an instant. "What is the meaning of this?" he demanded. "That is just the question, sir, I was going to put." My cousin interposed. "Uncle Francis arrived this morn ing to see how things were getting on, nnd when 1 got your wire I brought him out with me. WhafWis happened?" "Got my wire!" I exclaimed. "Sure ly I'm certain I never sejit it off!" I put my hand iu my pocket, und there it was, right enough. "My dear Jack, here it is. It never was sent." His liana dived iuto his own pocket and then held out a crumpled telegram. I took it and read this message; "Request permission to be visited by my own doctor. Ilobhouse." "Do you mean to say you never sent that off yourself?" exclaimed Sir Francis. "Never !" "Then who the '." My uncle's expression completed the sentence. Jack Whiteclett was looking uncom monly grave. "This is a somewhat serious matter, Roger," he said quietly. "Didn't you write tills cither?" He handed me a half sheet of paper on which was written iu pencil tliee words: "Go to doctor's. If no further mes sage there go ou to Scollays' immedi ately." It. was printed in capital letters so as to give no clue to the handwriting. "When did you get that?" I ciied. "It was handed to me as we landed. The messenger went off again nt once, but I assumed, of course, it was from you." "Roger!" thundered my uncle. "Who have you taken iuto your confidence?" His eye turned menacingly on the doctor and 1 hastened to intervene. "Doctor Kendall Sir Francis Mer "Let's sec who can blow the big- i gest balloon," suggested Billy i ddy time, so Peggy had long before given him that pair of glasses. "Hello, Judge Owl! What are you doiiig so far from Birdland?" cried Peggy nud Billy. "I've come to join the answered the judge. "It's u in the woods jast now, and 1 circus, j bit dull ' long for I excitement. "But how can you join the circus." asked Billy. "Circuses like freaks aud you're not u freak." "What's a freak?" demanded the judge. "Why. something different from others of its kind. If you were the biggest owl in the world, or the small- est, or the fattest, you'd be a freak." t , By Chas. McManus By J. Storcr Clouston Author of "The fpjr In War." "The I.unntle at l.arnf," tie. ton," I Introduced. "But It certainly wnsn't Dector Kendall xvho sent theso messages. He had only just learned the facts." My uncle bowed very stiffly to tho doctor nm! turned ou me agaiu, "And how ninny more people have 'learned the faces' the facts, I may remind you, which It' wns so vltat they should not learn?" " I bared my metaphorical breast, and with as close an Imitation of n clear consclenced young man revealing the harmless necessary truth ns I could achieve without rehearsal, I told him, "I have only Informed one person, nnd she is thoroughly trustworthy." "She!" said my uncle, not very loudly but extremely unpleasantly. "She is Miss Kendall," I added. My relations to the doctor not hnving reached this stage when xve were in terrupted, I think I can honestly say that no utterance of mine ever pro duced a more telling effect on these men simultaneously. "Jean!" exclaimed tho doctor. "Oh, is that her name?" said my uncle as soon ns lie could trust himself to speak. My cousin alone came straight to the point. "Then she lias sent me this wire and this message?" "She must have," I agreed. "In that" case we had better push on for the Scollays at once aud see xvhat bhe means." "You don't think it's a trap?" nsked my uncle. Jack Whiteclett smiled slightly. Tho idea of the navy pausing to weigh tho risk appeared to amuse him. "We must take our chance," he said briefly. "We've both got our shooting irons." "And so have I," T ndded. "and certainly I nm going to the Scollays. You can trust Miss Kendall!" "You can that!" said the doctor heartily. "And it you don't mind I'll come xvitli you." I saw doubt iu my uncle's eye and put in quickly. "Certinly, doctor! AVe may nil bo needed. Come ou !" It xvas quite dark, and mortal cold: the road was frozen hard and the not 'east wind swept over it without a break from wall or hedge-row. Wo all four tiottrd for a little to get up our circulation and then settled down to n fast live-mile-an-hour xxnlk. About half the distance had been covered when I first heaid a little sound nhead. "What's tha't!" I exclaimed, and we stood still and listened. "Somebody running!" said my cou sin. . "Toward us?" asked Sir Francis. "Yes." Plainer and plainer sounded the pat tering steps on the frozen road, and as they drew nearer I thought I could tell thnt they were light steps u woman's or a boy's, tliey seemed. "Let's drop into the ditch and see who it is," whispered Jack. We broke, two of us to either side of the road, and I found myself xvith my uncle stooping in one ditch, with Jack and the doctor across the road in the other. Thus bent down, one could sec abjects against the skj more dis tinctly and in a moment I spied the runner dimly, pattering down the middle of the road straight for us. And then, in a few seconds, this runner gradually took shape and my eyes at last could see the swing of a skirt and thought they could even recognize the slim fig uie. 1 jumped up. "Wait!" muttered my uncle. "It' all light! We mustn't fnghtcn her," I saidA (TO BE CONTINUED) "Are those freaks you're playing xvitli?" asked the judge, eyeing the pig and the elephant. "N'o, they are just rubber balloons," explained Peggy. "If I blew up like that xvouid I be a freak?" demanded the , judge, after thinking the matter over for a minute." "You. surely would be u very funny freak," laughed Billy. "Then blow me up," ordered the judge. And xvitli that he swallowed the melon balloon, all except the squavvker end. ,. This surprised Peggy and Billy greatly, but it seemed n clever idea, so Billy blew and blew aud Judge Owl swelled and swelled, lie xvas well on the way toward becoming a freak, when, suddenly, lie began to wiggle and then to jiggle, and finally he jerked the squaw ker out of Billy's mouth. "Wnak-awk-awk !" wailed the squavvker and the wail seeined to tell how Judge OwHwas feeling inside. "Here, tome back. You're not ft freak yet," cried Billy. "If that's being u fieak, I don't want to be one," gasped Judge Owl, tuning the balloon out of his throat. "I nearly burbt." "Tweet! Tweet! You look funny!" laughed Mrs. Robin, who had been watching them from the lawn. "What are you trying to do.'. "Judge Owl wants to be the biggest owl in the world so he can join the circus," said Peggy. "Tweet I That's easy. Plant him in (lardener Phil's hothouse. Every thing grows big in there." "A good idea!" cried Peggy and Billy rand away they raced to (iardeucr Phil's hothouse with Judge Owl. "We will plant you iu this sunny corner," said Billy, leading the xvay" to a spot where tall tomato vines grew to the roof. "Just plant my feet," hooted Judge Owl, when they dug a hole big enough to hold all of him. And so they set him In the ground like a young tree, any Peggy sprinkled him with the sprinkling can. "Hoo! Hoo! It's hot iu here," hooted Judge Owl. Peggy and Billy thought so, too, nud so they ran out for n breath of fresh ulr. "Hoo! Hoo! It's hot! J.et me out !"' screeched Judge Owl, hut Peggy nnd Billy only laughed'. "Hoo! Hoo! I'm growing so fast there isn't room for inc here," hooted tho judge. Again Peggy nnd Billy laughed. "Hoo! Hoo!" screamed a terrific voice, "if you don't let me out quick I'll smash (lie whole hothotisa. Alarmed at the loudness of the voice, I'eggy nnd Billy looked inside. Where they had left Judge Owl was a, great moss of feathers the biggest -bird Peggy or Billy had ever seen. II wan Judge Owl, but Judge Owl grown" untU he was larger than an elephant. fToJnorroic trill bp toldthow fudge Oicl goes to join the crcwf J ,t; 'A