v I y EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY OCTOBER G, 1919 0 L5V 8f I fi- fr H- fj j n The Second Bullet Copnltht. 1919 by th Public T.erlijar Co. Copyright. 1010. by nobort It. JlcllrWo & Co. THIS STAIITS THE STOttY A dinner party is being held nt the home of Colonel find Mrs. Lcdynrd. Among those present nre their dnugh ter, Trlxy: her friend, Hebe Cowles; Cornelius Swarthmoro, emiic urnu dock and Mrs. Allison Ilnrtshorne. airs. Hartshorne's past history Is clothed In mystery. In her presence mention is made of the release from prison of the president of the IMver lon Bank after serving four years of a twenty-year sentence for conver sion of the bank's funds. Mrs. Hart shorne suddculy leaves under the pre tense of a severe headache. She is accompanied by Swarthmore. who ex presses his love for her and obtnins her promise of marriage. She sees a face at the window which fills her wlfth terror, the significance of which b not revealed. She is lounei cieau on the floor in the morning by her sus piciously acting French maid. Ma tildc. Detective Paul Harvey ami other officers arrive on the scene. The officers believe Matilde U concealing Information from them. Harvey brings out various facts by the ques tioning of servants and other wit nesses Mrs. Hartshoriio's peculiarity In keeping large sums of money loose about the house; her carelessness with her jewels. Hnrvey asks Hose Adnre, social secretary, in close touch with Mrs. Uartshornc's friends, to assist him in unrnveling the mystery. Brnil dock admits to Harvey that it was he who sent Mrs. Hartshorne the ?.!-,-000 pearl necklace, that she promised to be his wife and that an antagon ism exists between him and Swarth more, whom he accuses of unscrupu lous business methods. Miss Ledjnrd is accused by Harvey of the murder because of jealousy, hue denies the accusation, but admits that Mrs. Hartshorne was killed at her mother's home and that she had the body removed in the middle of the night to the woman's own home. Harvey hears from Miss Adarc what happened at the funeral. AND HERE IT CONTINUES rpHE coffin was down tho center 1 aisle, in front of the altar, with a fow big set-looking floral pieces grouped around it. The service -had started and the choir was chanting when an old man tottered dpwu the aisle past me toward the altar. He looked almost seventy, toll and stoop ing, with sennt white hair nnd the palest face I ever saw; like wax, and deeply lined. I shouldn't have noticed him particularly but for the way his watery eyes were fixed on the coffin with a stare as if he were walking in hb sleep, no kept right on until he stood beside the casket and laid his tremblinc old hand on it. An usher came from behind me and led him back and he looked rather bewildered. "Doctor Perrine was eloquent in her praise, but you could see he wasn't any too pleased to be conducting the service. I'll wager he wnq shaking in his boots to think of what the woman he wns eulogizing might turn out to'ultation. have been or done before ever she set "Is this Mr. narvey? This is Mrs. loot in his aristocratic parish. I fsuicy , Cowles speaking. Mr. Hnrvey, would others were thinking the same tmng, j you find it convenient to call on mo this for once somebody in the pew just be- , evening? I have some some Informn , bind' me laughed right out; not loudly tion. which I think would be of value bjltAa 6ort of scornful, derisive chuckle. , to you." "I looked around quickly to see who "Yes, Mrs. Cowles. I shall be glad It could hnve been. There were two fat to hear what you have to tell me, but women in the pew, an old man with nis mouth open and his hand cupped be hind his ear, a girl scribbling away in a note book, an old lady sniffing nnd eat ing peppermints, a dark, thin, young man with a smooth face and bold black eyes. He gave me a bhnrp look and I turned nround again; but it was easy to see they were nil just there irom change your whatever opinion you curiosity. may have formed. Can you come "Atter the service was over I went soon?" out and waited in the vestibule ns you "In half an hour, Mrs. Cowles." told me to do. Jenny nnd the cook. On his arrival, he found tho lady came out together, talking so busily I pacing the floor in unconcealed per they never noticed me, nnd though lturbation. There was no attempt at stood there until everybody had gone, I pose as she offered her cold little hand. didn't see a thing more that would have Interested you, Mr. Harvey. The people all seemed solemn, but there wasn't one who looked as if that death meant anything to them, one way or the other." "It was good of you to have fol lowed my instructions so exactly, Miss Adare." Paul paused and glanced at har. "I wonder if you would be willing to help me still further? There is something thnt only you can accomplish for me " "Oh, what is it?" She halted and turned sparkling eyes upon him. "I'll do anything in the world that I can!" "Don't promise rashly," he warned. "What if I should ask you to renounce for the time being the principle on which you have built up your business; to carry, not to seek information, and to do it blindly without even knowing tyhy? Would you be willing to do that In order to help me get at the truth?" She eyed him uneasily. "Just what Is it you want mc to do, Mr. Harvey?" "Gossip!" he replied briefly. "I want you to gossip most outrageously ; to enrry such a tale as will makf- the hair of your client stand on end! I cannot tell you ray reasons, but it is vitally important that a certain bit of news should reach Mrs. Cowles without delay. You would not be telling any absolute falsehood, for the story you would repeat has a solid basis of fact. It will not make any trouble for you if Mrs. Cowles is discreet, and I think I can promise that she will be ; she will have the best of reasons for not per mitting what you tell her to go any farther. Will you do this, Miss Adarc?" i She drew a deep breath. "It's asking n good deal, Mr. Har vey, for I vowed that I'd never let a tattling word pass my lips in business. i tut if, it really is going to help you find the murderer of Mrs. Hartshorne, I'll chance it. What is it that you .firm me to tell Mrs. Cowles?" Well, for a start, you might reveal certain of your own private affairs. You f have made a conquest; a young man is crazy about you, and for all he i ' thinks be b clever, you can wind him around your little finger and make him tell you everything he knows." Paul - smiled, "That young man is myself." " "Wbattl" She flushed scarlet and I "eyU him in blank amazement. '"He b quite er official," he laugh ed, "Don't you sec? You have cajoled ,me into giving you my confidence, tell ing you things about the Hartshorne in vestigation that the newspapers don't dream of. If you only dared tell Mrs. Cowles, she would be the most sur prised person on earth! Now, if I lead the lady aright, she will move ; t ..heaven and earth to find oufwhat you kuow." ri'I eeeMtose U slowly. The flush. fearf dicd'wwy.. "And what is jt that' '33tiYlt!..vrM witf rT dcred, not In her own homp, but in tho conservatory nt the Lodyards, during the dance." "You can't mean It!" She caught his ir . -. i t ..if ini. m- I mill us il iu su'.iuy iutsi'ii, ju, .ii. llnrvcy, that s not the trulli, is ltr "Yes, Miss 'Adnre. Please say that was why the conservator door was locked at midnight; don't forget, be ' cause it vas Mrs. Cowles who dis covered and rcmniked upon that closed door. Tell her, too, thnt the body was removed secretly to Mrs. llartshorne's home after the dance, that I have abso lute proof of all this, and ask her if she noticed anything strange u Miss Ledjard's appearance or manner." "Miss Lcdyard!" Hose gasped. "Mr. Hnrvey, don't tell me she knew any thing about it! I can't believe it, I won't! It's too horrible." "It was Miss Ledjard, her butler and the chauffeur who took the body Lome," he explained quietly. "But what I want you to impress on Mrs. Cowles's mind is that I nm on the point of ar resting Beatrice Lcdyard for the murder of Mrs. Ilartshorne. She must believe that absolutely ; that is my whole ob ject in asking your co-operntion in this. Mrs. Cowles must be sure that I am convinced of her friend's guilt." "But you're not." lloso eyed him shrewdly. "I can scarcely believe it yet, thnt she was the woman Miss Ila.Mic saw from the window, hut even if she is, there can't be murder on her soul '. You nrc not going to arrest her!" "That may be necessary. If your little talk with Mrs. Cowles docs not have the result I hope for," he responded. "You can realize now how important the task is, which I am giving you." "Oh, I'll do my very best!" She hesitated and then asked: "It won't be bringing trouble on Mrs. Cowles, too. will it?" "By no means. Mrs. Cowles has nothing whatever to do with the murder, herself; I can assure you of that. The next corner is yours and I will leave you now, Miss Adare. I hope you don't mind ?" "I don't mind anything!" she cried recklessly, as she gave him her hand. "This affair is too terrible! And I feel ai if I had gone too far in it to stop now. I would do anything in the world to help ou find out who killed Mrs. Ilartshorne!" After her trim figure had disappeared around tho corner Paul paid n call on n theatrical agent of his acquaintance, stopped nt one of the larger newspaper offices and then returned to his rooms. He had succeeded iu the purpose of his interview with Miss Ludynrd, hut this achievement left him with no sense of victory. Instead ho felt oddly baffled. Had she, indeed, killed Mrs. Harts- norne .' nan swarthmore ; or was there still a third as yet unknown per son to be reckoned with? The telephone nil at once invaded his meditation. At the sound of tho agi tated feminine voice which came to him over the wire he smiled in quiet ex- i think that I am already in possession of the main facts of the case- "Oh, no, you are not!" bIic broke In upon him. "You couldn't bo! What I want to tell you is known to no'one in the world but myself and one other person. You couldn't possibly have learned it nnd I am sure it will totally "Mr. Harvey, I don't want you to scold me for withholding information from you when you came to sec mo Inst Saturday," she began. "I did not tell you then only because It did not seem to have any bearing on the caso you were Investigating. Then, too, I could not endure the thought of being dragged into tho affair myself, even as a witness!" "You hnve changed your mind now?" he asked significantly, "Yes." She flushed. "I've been thinking, and it really seems to be my duty to tell you. Besides, so many wild rumors aro flying about. Some people question the fact that Mrs. Hart shorne was killed in her own home where she was found, and I have even heard it whispered that the crime might in some way have been committed at the Ledjnrds', during the dnticc. Of course that is absurd, but it convinced me that I ought to tell you everything nnd save you, perhaps, from from making a ter rible mistake." "Thank you," he responded quite gravely. "1 shall be grateful if you will tell me now." "Do jou remember asking ine the last time you were here if I saw or heard nnj thing at the dance which might havo suggested a motive for the crinje, and I said that as far as I knew Mrs. Ilartshorne hadn't an enemy in the world? Well, I fibbed, Mr. narvey! I daren't suggest that sufficient motive for such a crime was established, bur! Mrs. Hartshorne made a very bitter and vindictive enemy thnt night. I DOROTHY DARNIT'Tis (you men think I WHY DO S BECAUSE. You ) how' If&ftli ) you're, smarter you say waste too pHsai I THAN LADIES. BUT I I THAT? I MUCH TIME JSP9 By Robert On Chipperfield told you, too, that I passed Mrs. Ilarts horne in the conservatory, but did not notice who her companion wns; that was another fib. I did not pass her, she never even knew I was there, and I did not sec who was with her audi heard what passed between them." "At what tlmo was this, Mrs. Cowles?" "Somo time, between 11 and half past." "And Mrs. Hartshorno's compan ion?" "It was Corncllui Swarthmore." Her voice had sunk to n whisper hut she rallied quickly and went on : I 'nd rnmisn.1 th. snmo ,ln H,, . inreo u'n. and I didn t know how I could get nut ol it, so I slipped into the conservatory and I didn't know how I could get out of nnwrrnl-nrv and sat down on n bench behind some palms. Mrs. Ilartshorno entered with Mrr Swarthmoro nnd I would have made known my presence; but the first words I heard rooted me to the spot and then it was too lnte. " 'An older man, in whom you can feel a greater sense of protection? Mr. Swarthmore seemed to bo repeating the words. He wns in one of ills seething rages, only more intense than l had ever seen him. 'So you re throwing me over for somo one else? By God, if It's thnt sanctimonious old goat Braddock r "I shrnnk back behind the palms, but he evidently lost control of himself and seized her, for I heard tho quick rustle of her gown nnd then she spoke in n cold, disdainful way which must have been maddening to him. Stop, please, you are hurting me. There is no need of melodrama, Mr. Swnrthmore, nor is there occasion for insult. I hnve exercised a woman s privilege nnd changed my mind, that is I all, and your present mood shows me thnt my decision Is a wio one. If I choose to marry Mr. Braddock or any one else that Is my affair.' Ho gave a nasty sort of laugh. " 'And only yesterday you permitted me to hold you in my arms, you lvom ised to be my wife! God, what nn in fatuated assxI was! X think I under stand you now. No wonder you wanted .... . . ...- - to keep your engagement a secret! YmiP sue um not nonor mo witu ner wouldn't commit yourself publicly until ' confidence." you had played the bigger fish to seei "Mr. Swarthmore, I have evidenco if he would rise to your bnlt! Did you, that Mrs. Ilartshorne did acquaint you think me a sentimental boy, n fool of with her intention to marry some one whom you could dispose so easily? I else and that you denounced her ns an was disarmed before the Woman I adventuress nnd threatened to expose thought you were, but I know how to her mercenary motives to the mnn she leal with a common ndventuress! Ill spoil your little came for you " 'Will you really?' Her tone seemed to be filled with quiet amusement. 'What will you do, Mr. Swarthmoro?' " 'I'll go to Braddock and show you up, by God! I'll look up thnt past of vours nnd find out why you ve been so d d secretive! I'll ' " 'I don't believe that you will do any of these things.' Her voica was still quiet, hut there was something in it like the snap of n whip. 'You will remember that I could show you up iu turn, my friend.' " 'What do you mean?' It sounded like the snarl of some animal the way he spoke. " 'How about your contracts with the government? The undergrade stuff and the padded bids? Did you think I was n child not to understand, to accept so easily your statement that there was nothing illegal about your transac tions?' " 'Prove it,' he dared her, and she laughed. " 'My method b not so crude as yours, Mr. Swarthmore! I never threat en anything I cannot prove. A cer tain privato secretary whom you dis charged helped me to verify your state ments nnd a foreman let out on the last strike corroborated him. I col lected this data merely as an Invest ment on which it might be possiblo for mc to realize some day. Your animos ity might drive me from Enstopolis, but for me the world is -wide; for you there is the federal prison if I speak !' "Well, after that it seemed as though a perfect storm of fury burst from him upon her! I can't remember what he said or the names ho called her, it all came in such a hideous rush of invective nnd threats and curses, too ! I sat there stunned and shivering, and I think she must have been a little afraid of him herself, for she shrank away from him, but he followed her. I was simply dy ing to escape without their discovering mc, nnd I peeped out between the palms to see If the way was clear, "They had retreated to tho other side of tho conservatory over by Colonel Ledynrd's orchids, and with their backs turned I saw my chanco and slipped out of the door into tho ballroom. You don't know, Mr. Hnrvey, what a relief it was! I found Freddie Gaylor and made him sit out a dance on the stairs with me whilo I collected myself, and in n moment Mr. Swarthmore tore his way through the crowd, still in a white hot rage, and made for tho cloakroom. "It was then that poor Trix Miss Ledyard met him and tried to speak to him, but he never noticed her in his fury. She'd beon standing near the foot of the stairs, looking into the 'ballroom. As he shouldered his way past bhe laid her hands on his arm, but ho shook her off unsccingly, with a savago thrust like a struggling animal! lie must havo left the house at once." "You are sure of the words you have repeated to me?" Taul abked. "Absolutely!" Bebo Cowles shud dered. "It seems as though they had been stamped on my brain!" "But you can remember no more? False! Nothing dcllnlto of tho threats Mr. Swarthmoro uttered just before you Bllpped away?" "Isn't it enough?" Her eves wid ened, then she turned her head slightly from him and added very low I never. saw Mrs. Hartshorne ngnlu. Did any one else? Did she leave that conserva tory alive?" Tho Second Bullet ftfQJOnitr to intrude upon you at such M into hour, Mr. Swarthmore." Paul's tono wns conciliatory, but be neath Its smoothness there sounded nn unmistakable note of nuthorlty. "A ' "-' "'uumuiiui lucis liuve come lO my .i.ifti A i . , ....,... i .,.. .., ", ?", , , ' '" ".",ls0"e casc; " """" "u,u "' u01v "" " "u uuu amplify your former statement to me. 'Tire away, Mr. Harvey!" Swarth more smiled, hut his geniality wns obviously forced and his dark eyes were somber. "Will you smoke? No? Well, don't mind if I do. Now go uhend; I am quite at jour disposal." "You told me that you had shown Mrs. Hartshorne n certain nmount of attention beeaubo she amused you, Mr. Swarthmore, but you neglected to tell me that an engagement existed between you." Paul went straight to the point at issue. "It did not, nt the time of her death." Swarthmore shrugged. "I can't see how you obtained that in formation, nnd frankly, since bhe was dead, I did not consider the incident ns being any one's affair but my own." "But it was only on the day before the dance that Mrs. Ilartshorne prom ised to become your wife." "Now, how tho devil did you know that I" Swarthmore frowned nnd added hastily: "It makes no difference, how ever; the engagement wns just a mo mentary whim on the lady's part. She changed her mind almost immediately." "In favor of somo one else?" "You are going a bit too far!" Swarthmorc's voice trembled. "I'm not on the witness stand, you know. If the .... . .. . .. "'y iau maue any other matrimonial had chosen, i endle Braddock 'What do you mean?" tho other cried. "Who gave you that informa tion?" "Some one who overheard a part of your conversation together in the con servatory," responded Paul. "You told me that you had had no quarrel with Mrs. Hartshorne." "Because it was no one's d d business!" Swarthmore had sprung from his chair and his face was crimson nnd mottled with rage, but beneath the bluster there was an underlying note of fear. ho was the eavesdropper? What do jou know? How much did they hear? Tell mc, or I'll " "Don't get excited, Mr. Swarthmore; j-ou may need to keep all your wits about you," Paul advised coolly. "You told Mrs. Ilartshorno that you would spoil her game, jet instead of making good your threat and denouncing her tu Braddock when j-ou met him face to face in tho ballroom door a few minutes later, you merely laughed at him and left the house. Why did you not keep your word?" Swarthmore laughed harshly hut in unmistakable relief. "The woman wasn't worth It! I could get even with old Braddock more satisfactorily by letting him marry her and find out later the sort of woman he was saddled with. "A man may threaten anything in the heat of pabsion and then think bet ter of it." "You aro sure that is why you re frained? You were not afraid that bhe would retaliate by making certain dis closures against you, Mr. Swarth more?" There was silence for n moment nnd then the other man flung himself back in his chair with a gesture of sur render. "So your eavesdropper heard that, too, did he?" ho said slowly. "I've nothing more to say, Mr. Harvey. I'm not the first man to meet his finish through a woman, but by God, she's paid for it in advance!" "By her death?" The other nodded grimly. "Tho wo'man was a blackmailer. Your informant must havo told you that, if he heard the whole altercation. She followed up what I had told her in confidence until' she had the goods on me, clean; she boasted that bhe had verified my statements ns an iu--.cstment on which sho could make me pay dividends. She only got what was coming to her and I'm ready to pay the consequences of my own idiocy. I gambled and lost, that's all." (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Locubts Used as Food ' Locusts arc eaten in many countries where they nre roasted or fried in but ter. They nre also preserved in brine nnd often dried in the sun. They thus appear In the markets ot Arabia, Syria, Egypt and Madagascar and are even ex ported as an article of commerce. They are also candled and eaten as a deli cacy in China. Easton Free Press. DAILY NOVELETTE ROMANCE VS. RICE " By Adclnldo It, Kemp ANNE PBESTON boarded the crowded Pullmnn of a through train with an expression of absolute weariness on her pretty face. Tired from her hnrd winter in tho office, bIio felt glad in deed sho had resisted tho pleading of the other girls to spend her three weeks' vncntlon with them nt a fnshionnble sca'sido resort. With closed eyes she remembered gratefully the kind letter from dear Aunt Mnrla Inviting her down to tho old home in Mninc, where she spent buch happy summers when sho wns a little girl. It wns Into iu the nftcrnoon when the train enme to her station. Coming to ward her was n tall, well-built young man with eyes gray. Could this be Aunt Maria's adopted bon, the merry freckle-faced lad with whom she had spent such hnppy dnys fishing and pick lug berries? With outstretchrd hand and a slow friendly smile he met her. "You nro little Anne. I should have known you anywhere," he said. "Why!" she exclaimed, his calm deep voice causing an odd, flutter in her heart, "you must be David." As they jogged along the country road they were soon chatting merrily to cether. nulcklv bridging over the years since they last met, ns is the wny of youth. Anne breathed in hungrily the sweet breath of the pines and tho tang of the salt nlr. "Oh !" sho bald, "was anything ever so lovely!" On the brow of the hill overlooking tho sea stood the lovely old farm' house. As they drove up Aunt Mnrin's motherly figure rose from the wicker rocker on tho porch and with a kind, ruddy face beaming with nflection, enmo to meet her. Anne felt n tightening at her throat, and with a sudden mist blurring her eyes she hid her face in the ample bosom. One morning she entered the kitchen nt nn earlier hour than usual, to find it deserted. A few dishes nt the end of the table gave evidence that the men had finished their breakfast. Rut the fire was low and nn unusual nlr of deso lation seemed to pervade the ntmosphere. Anne quickly ran upstairs to Aunt Ma ria's room, only to find that kind-hearted soul stricken with a severe headache and unable to dress. "Oh, auntie, why ever didn't you call mc?" exclaimed Anne, laying her cool little fingers on the aching brow. "You mustn't worry, dearie. I'll soon be better," answered Aunt Maria. "If I could only sleep a short time. But there is so much to be done down stairs." "Auntie," said Anne, with deter mination. "I can do everything if you will tell me whnt to get for dinner. And then you can take a good rest and feel all right by afternoon." Aunt Mnria, with a relieved sigh, gave a few directions, adding at tho Inst, "and David loves rice pudding. So j-ou can make a big ono and he can have it for supper, too. "You will find plenty of milk and eggs in the pantry." Anne, having seen the patient comfortably settled for n quiet sleep, returned to the kitchen and set to work humming cheerily to herself. It might havo been two hours later that David, returning to the house as was his habit for a little lunch, heard a queer choking noise in the kitchen Hurriedly entering, he saw a slight figure huddled on the old sofa. "Why, Little Anne," ho said, hurry ing to her side, "what has happened?" For a moment she lifted her tenr stnlned face and glancing dcspairlnglj toward the stove, sobbed "Rice." David looked wonderingly in the same direction. "I don't understand," he said. Annie's face was hidden On his broad shoulder now and ho held her close. "Why! Why!" she stammered in muffled tones, "Auutio 'asked me to mal'e j-ou a rice pudding a big one. And I opened her new five-pound pack age and put it to soak ulid, oh, dear!" she was overcome now and could say no more. A look of understanding enme suddenly to David's face. Over on the stove were kettles of rice, little kettles, big kettles, even the dlshpan had been called to service. He drew one long breath and then hb peals of laughter could be heard in the attic. Anne looked up indignantly and tried to draw away, but he only drew her closer. Suddenly the humor of the situation struck her nnd her sobs changed to merriment equal to David s. It was at this Juncture Aunt Maria appeared iu the doorway, her headache Dauuago perched on one car, bewilder ment in her eyes. On the old sofa Rnt her help blissfully unconscious of hoe ing undone or dinner to be cooked. Late in the autumn when they started on a happy wedding journey, David picked a few tiny white nnrticles from the Lfolds of his wife's dainty suit. LOOK, utile Anne." he unld. mis- chlevously, "shall wo save these for a pudding?" The next complete novelette Fate! Egyptian Pyramids It took 123,000,045 Blaves, working twenty-four hours a day for three cen turies, to complete the pyramids of Egypt and tho mummies exported from them have not brought, nil told, $1,000,000. New York Sun. WHEN YOUf? HAlf? GETS THIN .YOU 8UV HAIR RESTORER DREAMLAND AD VENTURESBy Daddy "MONKEY-LAND" (In Ma iiorv Peggy, Iillly and tnctr schoolmates pay an unexpected ntl m ' trP'lcal Jungle ruled by ' vnaiicr'Vhcc.) Tho Dream Stlcli pCGGY finished her work in school and looked up nt tho clock. It was half an hour to going-horae time and so, to keep herself busy, Peggy opened her geography. She liked her geography best among all her books, for It told of strange lands lands that Peggy would like to visit and that she did visit in dream voyages thought out in her own head. Turning the pages, Peggy came upon pictures of scenes in South America, and there among them was a glimpse of n tangled jungle In which monkeys nnd birds were hnving n jolly frolic. "I wonder if that is the jungle in which Wandering Monkey lived when he wns little," thought Peggy to her self. "I wonder if he ever gets lone some for It." "You can Just bet I do," whispered n low voice, nnd there was Hollo, the Wandering Monkey, squeezed up closo beside her in the narrow seat. "Gracious me, what are you doing hero?" said Peggy in another whisper. "Don't you know that 'a monkey in school is against the rule? You're like Mary's little lamb; you'll make the children laugh and play." "They look ns though they needed to luugh nnd play," answeied Wandering Monkey. "How serious every one is, how still they sit on these hard benches, how busy they seem doing nothing." "They aren't doing nothing," do 'clared Peggy. "They are studying and learning lots of useful things. You'd THE BUSINESS DOCTOR By HAROLD WHITEHEAD Author of "The Business Career of Peter Flint" and "Bruno Duke Solver of Business 'Problems" STENOGRAPHERS FLIRTING -AND TOV x In OVERHEARD two women talking the trolley. Of course, it wns wrong of mc, but they occupied the sent just ahead of me, and they talked loudly. Both women wcro mothers; both had reached the "fair, fat and forty" stage. Said tho woman in the gray dress: "I think you're right, Mrs. B . I never let Sadie or Nellie work In no office." The woman in the brown dress nodded and replied: "And so I says to Minnie, 'No, me girl, no office for you. You get as much money in a factory, and there's safety in numbers. I know the carryings-on in offices.' " Tho woman in the gray dress clucked sympathetically as she shook her head sagely: "Men nre all alike; let 'era be with a girl for a while and they can't help flirting with her. I suppose it's natural with them, but I wouldn't let my sirls take a job in an office Jum tho same. Tho tales I've heard! Ah! "Yes," agreed the other woman, "and the more educated they nve, the j worse they seem to be. "Well, my dear," the woman In gray said, "I think the old ones nrc lie worst." Tho car had reached their street and they, departed. As the car started forward, I wondered if such weird ideas of business men "in offices" were at all common. x By asking nround, I waB surprised to find that the opinion generally was, that, while most men were gentlemen, there were somo who felt that flirting nnd filing went together; that spooning and stenography were natural team mates, and that "there was no telling what any man might do" if encouraged by a pretty face. This opinion, let mc add, was found among women who had never worked in an office. From stenographers, themselves, I received assurance that most men were in business for business, and they looked upon their stenographers with the same impersonal attitude as they would their men bookkeepers. Here and there, of courso, I heard of cases where bosses proved them selves to be stupid oglers, who were so satisfied and proud of themselves that they wero sure they were quite irresistible, and that any girl would feel flattered to receive their sloppy atten tions. "Some girls," said one clever secre tary, "are rather silly. They forget that men are naturally friendly with each other in business, and if they nre friendly with their stenographers or secretary, they think the man is 'mak ing up' to them. Most men," she continued smiling slightly, "like to talk over their troubles and problems with a woman nnd get some sjnipatliy. I think they are just big boys, and they never get over their desire to be mothered a bit." "I've worked In several offices," said a telephono operator, "nnd I usunlly find tho men nre pretty decent. Of course, a girl usunlly gets what she asks for, and If she wants to make a fool Copyritrht. 1010, by th nH Syndicate. Ine. ) THEY BUY HAIR I JW- c3 i what do the. ladies do in fag I (vntfMfll ' THAT C7ASE' F!-. .' " ' ' ""T'HR" -l - lWMLM I'cggy opened her geography better study, too, for if Smiling Tench - ci sees you Idling, she'll fix you." "Wouldn't you rather play with the monkeys in the tree tops away down south in Monkey-land than study those dull-looking hooks?" asked Wandering Monkey, squirming about uneasily. "Of course, I would, but ono has to go to school to learn things," said Pfggy. "You can learn lots of things In the jungles without studying!" whispered Wandering Monkey. "Como with me." "Teacher wouldn't like it," answered Peggy. "Wo will tnko Smiling Teacher with us," declared Hollo. "Sco, I have a Dream Stick. Ono touch of it will whisk you nway to Monkey-land." Just then Smiling Teacher turned toward Peggy. She saw something stir ring behind Peggy's geography. "Peggy, what have you there?" she asked, her smilo turning into a frown. Peggy, felt much embarrassed. She didn't know what to say. But before of herself, she will And some men will ing to flirt with her." "Business men generally laugh at the idea," Baid one qulto big man in the commercial world. "If there s any flirting done, it's usually by the girl. I've had them fight here, nnd they Bit nnd roll their eyes nt me until I've just hud to get them out of the office. I think the reason is that many glrb havo had their nature starved. They want to experience some of the emotions of life. They rend love stories nnd they want to be the .heroine ot one. It's usunlly a caso of being in love with love." "Lots of girls," a manufacturer said, "nro not averse to a bit of blarney. With tho least encouragement they nre willing to jolly with the boss. They won't make the first advance, but they have a weather eye open for a chance. No harm's meant or done. It's simply a liking for a good time. I guess it's natural for girls to like to ho Hssml I know when I was a young fellow " "Some girls," a professional man said, "have been warned about 'wicked men and they are forever trying to mis construe some rcmnrk into an attempt to be familiar with them. That sort of girl Is a plain menaco to nn office. Her mind is s- wnrped on this matter that sho believes every man is a devour ing scamp." ORIGIN OF 'KANGAROO COURT' Kangnroo court is an expression which, however strange it may bo to the layman, is familiar to most United States marshals, postoffice inspectors and tho police forces of larger cities. What it really stands for is explained by a postoffice inspector who has had much experlenco with offenders nnd criminals. It appears thdt in a number of the larger prisons in this country the prisoners, from timo to time, nro ac customed to hold what they call kan garoo court, and that every notorious criminal in tho United States is proba bly not only familiar with tho term, but has no doubt presided often enough as Judge or prosecuting attorney in this relation, or perhaps has been tried for soma of the numerous mock charges that aro preferred against those who have the misfortune to be haled before such a tribunal. Such a court is held only in the great prisons of the country, being entirely unknown iu the county jails. Tho institution of kangaroo court seems to date back somo forty years in tho United States. Iu the days when Australia was n penal colony the convicts nt Botany Bay, by way of amusing themselves and relieving tho monotony of prison life, usod to organizo aort of mock court at which the shrewdest and often the worst criminals of tho lot presided as judge, while others acted as jurjmen, prosecuting attorneys, bailiffs, crierb and the like. At such trials the prisoners were wont to take on recent arrivals from England on all manner of mockchnrges, such as snoring too loudly, washing their faces with soap, and so on. If it was found that among tho batch of newcomers, convicts just from the old By Chas. McManus K1' sho could open her lips, the Wandering Monkey leaped upon her desk and gavo Smiling Teacher n low how. Then Iio grinned happily at the startled pupils. "Mercy me! A monkey!" shrieked Smiling Teacher. "Peggy, you stay after school for bringing that creatura here." "Wc-c-ck! Wc-o-e-cEl She ''can't stay after school because we're going to Monkey-land," squccked Rollo. Ho Teaped from desk to desk toward Smil ing Teacher, while the twenty pupils scattered in every direction, the girls screaming nnd the boys shouting. Smil ing Teacher climbed on top of her chair nnd 'screeched. Hollo climbed the chair as nimbly as though it wet! a ladder, and gave Smiling Teacher a sharp slap with his Dicam Stick. Then a surprising thing happened. Tho instnnt the Btlck touched Smiling Teacher she turned into n monkey. Round nnd round tho room she went chattering nnd shrieking, and the pupib lied wildly from her. Itollo leaped to the black board and drew n round circle. Hmlllni TVn,o,nr jumped into tho circle nnd went right uui. vi signt as tnough It wcro a door. Tho children yelled nnd Itnlln l,n,l them with the Dream Stick. Right nnd Kit fell his blows nnd every blow rhnnged a boy or cirl into n nmt.n And ench new monkey followed Smiling .vuuvi luiuusu iuu circio ami out ol sight. Billy Belgium and Peetrv worn , lust. As the Dream Stick turned tlim into monkeys, they jumncd thrnur-h the blackboard nnd found thems-plwon in a wild, strange-looking jungio. (Tomorrow toill lo told how Peggy and Billy find itrango adventures in Monkey-land.) When girls first began to work In offices they may havo, been subjected to embarrassments which their very new ness in the business environment would create. That time is past, but the thought of it Is kept alive by garrulous busy-bodies who relish a bit of scandal liko carrion enjoy garbage. Most men are too busy to waste Urns ?ui F" ,ost S1 nro t0 h"PPy with tho boy whom they meet at night to Jeopardize their happiness by stupid flirting with the boss. Mr. Whitehead will anstcer in this column questions on marketing, buying, selling, advertising, letter-tcriting, busi ness education, and on matters pertain ing to the choice of a vocation. All ques tions will be answered in the order of receipt. No anonymous correspondence will be acknowledged. Reader's initials will be published. It will take from four to fifteen days for a reply to appear. tlnM1"" aid.v';; .w t0 mV"t nw lln ot First of all secure n fow ,nnfnn from big houses. I should think that this glass would be excellent for auto mobile windshields. Would your glass be suitable for kltchcnwnre, dishes, plates, glasses and similar articles? A line of unbreakable glassware would be very much appre ciated by most housewives. If what you have is a machine which will make this kind of glass you may perhaps do best by renting it to glass manufacturers. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) country, there wero severnl -,. ...... sesscd money, court was immediately convened and the ones suspected of hav ing funds were haled up on the charge of having red hair or wearing box toed shoes. The trial was held with mock grav ity and decorum, and in the end th prisoner would be found guilty and fined whatever amount he was known to have o:i his person for the offense charged. J. he money thus obtained would be di vided among the old, long term con victs, who would buy tobacco and other luxuries with it, while the-victim of thb form of extortion would have no re course except to await the tlmo when ho himself got n chance to preside as Judge or sit on the jury at the 'trial of some new arrjval. " It was called kangaroo court becans in those days tho Botany Bay convicts spoke of themselves as kangaroos, an animal very abundant, ns everybody knows, in Australia. The institution, us well ns th t traveled from Australia tn T-nij' whither it was brought by returning Botany Bay convicts, whose terms had expired. It had a short life in England, however, where it was speedily discov ered by the jailers and turnkeys and broken up ; but it wns not long after ward thut it found its way into the prisons of the United States, where it has remained ever since. Detroit News. SOLAR SYSTEM ON A TEAR Sun's Family on Way Into Space at Rate of Twelve Miles a Second Spectroscopic studies and sky ob servation alike tell us that our sun and his family arc nil headed in a great migration across the sky toward a point between ho constellations of Hercules "i Jiyr,a (Lyra i3 the constellation identified by tho- bright, bluish star, egn, Hercules is an irregular group to tho west of Lyra, about one-quartcr ot the way to the horizon.) The speed with which we are travel ing in thnt direction is twelve milts a second. The velocity of an artillery Bhell is around 3000 feet a second ; that of the sun 03,000 feet. An artillery shell with the velocity of the solar sys tem through space would, according to Kippax, penetrate a sheet of steel four city blocks thick, Think how far we travel every year and how complex our Journejr I In the first place, thoso of us who Itvo near tho equator cover upward of 0,000,000 miles In our flight around the earth's uxis. In the second place, in our journey around the sun wo travel nearly COO -000,000 miles. While we are doing n'll this we are also being carried off into new and untried" regions of space at th rate of 400,000,000 miles a year. Is our great fumlly Journey through space along a straight road, or is it re volving nround some greater body", even as the eath revolves around tho sun-1 and tho moon around the earth? Tho -jl! astronomer tells us frankly that If fi. mn, b'n Mt ltrtsiirrs'ti yet deSe irteetioa. WiliUm 7Mtpb Bi-owalte , fe'Uw tftipel QewVpUe Ktaalti, i IttJiiii-rtli lit i " iiiiiiitlimKMttllnkfaiilMmtfMmmMffl itPt n . Jm iW ufeUikn.. .j ,jfei jUtr.-T-iAi