"'W' p-TT5.t . J? yr m p w vm nw m :.jf v. m i ? 7 . Kilt m ;su JNOBODY'S MANxByLPhlpsOpptnhdm bT yVv ipinaji i i ii i i - && KfUwyUl 1 . ... . . . - www w ' .rfsvnrt S"',w EVENING PTJBjJO, LEDGEKr-PHILADKIiPHIA, FBIUA1, juju fiwsis WHO'S WHO IN THE STORY MKff TAt.l.KSTK brilliant ttatetman. .vamiireaehing middle age, but ttill young in ttlrit, beftated ter Parliament, he bt- . comet tnterettca in a new political pariv aiming at co-operation of capital and labor ter the nuwic weltare, ana u ut cnoice for Premier, MRU. TALLRNTE who ha$ married Andrew te forward nodal ambulant, trading her srca wealth for hit political prettlge, rurleut at hit declining a peerage, the Jilal with hit tecretarv, Antheny t'alltter, whom the hat a tenemental interest, ANTHONY PALLlSKRwhe hat ttelen vat ,J abl political papert from Andrew, and V who, after a Quarrel, hat mittcrleutlv dlj- appeared, HUDY J ASK PARTINGTON Andrew't near- a.t netnhher. u he llr hi Interest ereattil it after hit teparatlen from hit calculating '"( TAoiieh ir daughter or a iiukc, M ft M emntinf nerlaKitlc, cmtducflne fcr tttate en tucn principles, sm " in iove tetlft ,lnrfrru. tTBPItAN DARTRRYthe great Laber-Liberal chief, a ttateiman, but without ability ' at a partu leader, for which he pickt Tat- lettte. NORA MtALLa fascinating ie una feminist M and radical. In love with Dartrev, MILLER a coarte-eralned radical, chapter vi mALLENTE, for the first time in his j J. life, was dining n few evenings later nt Dnrtrey'R house In Chelsea, nnd he J looked forward with Berne curiosity te this opertunlty of ntndylng hli chief under different auspices. Dnrtrcy, not net J withstanding the fnrt that he wbh a miracle of punctuality and devotion J te duty, both nt the offices In l'arlla- ment utrcet nnd nt the Heuse, seemed t te have the sift of fading absolutely 5 out of sight from the ken of even hli i closest friends when the task of the day 5 mtiuiHtilliiliKil Tin AVftfaAfl ll I tT niin uuiuiiiiuiuiw wv .-,tvu f.eir always, courteously diu nnuuy, I from accepting anything whatever In f the wnv of inclnl entertainment. He belonged te no clubs, nnd. if pressed, he frankly confessed n predilection wnicn m wmlfjKmk- The few lines seemed lllie a mes mes sage of bone npnthy of the very clnss for whom we fight." , , Miller gnnwed his mustache for a moment. "Then I was probably unpopular there," he said. "I have te tell the truth. Sometimes people de net like it." The dinner was simply but diilntlb served. There were wines of well known vintages, nnd ns the meal ni-nfrriuiin,1 Dnrtrer lltlbcnt. LdtlllK scarcely anvthing and drinking less, the purely lntcllectu.il stimulus of con versation seemed te unloose his tongue nnd alve te his pronouncements n mere amounted almost te passion for solitude imnge. t one. Nnturnll . I Hrtltl re I during these hours net actually devoted nmincd the subject ,,h " ","' )tr official duties. The imitation te Dartrey disclosed a lit le tie immj fei dinner, therefore, was received by Tal- the meeting which he In "",, lento with some surprise, ue nan " , 1 i..,rnrnilin inminiil grown into the habit of looking upon ! out. "mnke. but I. or nb 1 "am IIJIllll ncr l.uiuwcir ------ - - unity. The amazing thing is that thN Ir net cencrnl y realized, n ni-nu-j i. F T&. .u .. . 1 n 1A1 -1 KBIll t iarirey ns u man m mm . -... existence outside the routine of their t daily work. He welcomed with avidity, J therefore, this opportunity of under standing n little mere thoroughly Dartrey s pleasant but elusive per sonality. The house itself, slrunted In a Chel sea square of some repute, wns small nnd unostentatious, but was painted in spotless white and possessed, even from the outside, an air of quiet nnd (Unassuming clegnncc. A trim mold meld jseirant opened the deer nnd ushered Shim into a drawing- room of gray and silTer, with a little faded blue In the "silks of the 'French chairs. There were n few fine-point etchings upon the walls, n small grand piano In n corner, nnd very little furniture, although the little there was was French of the best period. There were no flowers nnd the atmosphere would nave eecn cmny but for the brightly burning fire. Tal lente was scared surpricd when Dartrey's entrance alone indicnted the fact that, as wns generally supposed, he was free from family ties. "I am n little carl. I am afraid." Tallente remarked, as they bhoek hnnds. "Admirably puncitunl," the ether replied. "I shall make no apologies te you for my small party. I have asked only Miss Miall and Miller te meet you just the trio of us who enme te lure you out of jour Devenshire paradise." "Miller?" Tallente repeated, with instant comprehension. "Yes! I wns thinking, only the ether day, that jeu scarcely see enough of Miller." "I see all that I want te," was Tallente's candid comment. 'Dartrey laid his hand upon his guest's shoulder. In his somber dinner garb, with low, turned-down cellar nnd flowing black tic, his gray-black beard cut te n point, his high fore head, his straightly brushed-baek hair, which still betrayed its tendency te natural curls, he looked a great deal mere like an artist of the dreamy and esthetic type than n man who had elaborated a new system of life and government. "It is because of the feeling behind .these words, Tnllentw," he said, "that I have asked jeu te meet him here to night. Miller hns his objectionable points, but he pesesses still a great held upon certain types of the work werk ingman. I feel that jnu should appre ciate thnt n little mere tnoreuguiy "You're llke en Infernal boarding bearding school, with your detentions nnd Impo sitions and cnstlgntlens. There must be something bcjeml." "A Cabinet Minister " she be gan. "The sixth form," he Interrupted. "There's just one aspiration of Ilfe te be i.rnntcil under that reef and te wt'i it )ou nrc asked te stlfle all the rut It Isn't worth It." "It".' the greatest game at which men can piny," she declared. "And also the narrowest because It is I lie most absorbing," he answered. "We have our triumphs there! nnd they end in a chuckle. Don't you love sunshine in winter, strange cities, pic tures, rirtures of another nge, pictures which tuk( your thoughts back Inte an other v prld. architecture that Is net utllltnrlnn, the faccH of human beings en whom the strain of life has never fillcn" And women women whose c;m vt'H laugh Inte yours, who hmen't a single Wew in life, who don't care n fig about improving their race, who want jusl love, te give nnd te tnke?" .Mic gnzed at him in astonishment, n little carried nwnj, her eyes soft, Irr lips parted. "Hut jeu have turned pngan!" she cried. "An Instnnt's revolt against the tmttmillMri of life," he replied, his feet nice mere upon the earth. "Hut the feeling'-, there, all the same," he went en doggedly. "I unnt te leave school. I luiM' been there se long. It seems te mi' my holiday Is overdue." Hlic pcfsctl her arm through his. She wns a ery clever nnd a very under standing woman. "Hint comes of veur hnvlng Ignored us," the murmured. "ft int my fault If I hnvc." he re minded her. "In t. sense It Is." she Insisted. "'I he woman In our life should he the itiet leautlful part of It. Yeu chee tu ui.iki her the stepping-stone te jour .iinbltinn Censciii(iitlj jeu go through ' life huiigrj, jeu wait till jeu almost' iiuvp, ami then suddenly the grcntest 1 things in the world which He te your hand Mtm like baubles." "Yeu nre hideously logical," he gri' milled. They were walking slower new. within a few yards of the entrance of ll.,H (lit Ileth of them were n little disturbed she, full ns she was with all the gen erous Impulses of sensuous humanity, intensely uwnkened, Intensely syiupd- llinllr. "Tell me, where In your wife?" she asked. "In America." "It is hopeless with her?" "Utterly nnd Irretrievably hopeless." "It hns been for long?" "Fer years." "And for the sake of your princi ples," she went en, almost nngrilj, "niir stnnlil. cnmmiciil and dry-as- dust little principles, jou've let your Ilfe shrivel up." "1 can't help It," he nnswercd. "What would jeu have me de? Stand in the miukct place nnd shout my needs?" She clung te his arm. "Yeu dear thing!" she said. "Yeu'it n great baby I" They wire in the shadow of the en trance te the flnts. He suddenly bent Mtr her; his lips were almost en hers. There wns n frightened gleam In her ejes, but she inaile no movement of re tie.it. Suddenly he drew himself up right. "That wouldn't help, would It?" he said simply. "Thank jeu, all the same, Nera. Goed-byl" On his tnble, when he entered hlc rooms thnt night, lay the letter for which he had craved. He opened it almost fiercely. The few lines seemed like ii messngc of hope : "Don't laugh nt me, dear friend, but I nm coming te Londen for a week or two, te my little house in Chnrlr." street. I don't knew exnetly wher. Yeu will find time te come nnd sec me? "Here the mists seem te hnvc fallen upon us like a shroud, and we can't escape. I galloped many miles thlt morning, but It wns like trying te find the edge of the world. "I'li'iiN call en my sister at 17 Mount street. She likes j-eu nnd wants te set mere of you. JANIV Te be continued tomorrow Cemright, 1911, Bell Bvndlcate. tne fnuMnn nnumlnH. te dlsSPIlt from ever thing, te cultivate the ego in its narrowest sone rather than te try te reach out and grasp the hands of these nreund. The fault. I think, Is In nn ever-developed theatrlcnl sense, the de sire which se many clever men have for individual notoriety. We Demo crats have prospered because we have been free from It. We have been able te sink our individual prejudices in pur cause. That is because our cause has been great enough. We nlm se high, we see se clearly, thnt it is rare Indeed te find among us these individual dif ferences which have been the ruin of every political party up te today. ' have no Urewn who will net serve with Smith, no lloblnsen who declines te be associated with Jenes. We forget the small things which nre repugnant t ub in a fellow man, because of the great things which bind us together. "Te a certuln extent, yes,' Tallente ngreed, with some reserve In his tone, "jet we nre all humnn. There arc some prejudices which no man may conquer. If he pretends he does, he enlv llcs In an atmesphere of false hood. The strong man loves or hates. "Yeu will find that I nm net alto gether an anchorite," Dartrey observed us they settled Inte their Places. I a-n a lever of old brandy. The 1H I iccemmcnd especially. Tallente, and bring your chair round te the fire. There nre cigars and cigarettes at our elbow. Miller, I think I knew your taste. Help yourself, won't you?' Miller drank crcmc de menthe nnd smoked homemade Virginia cigarettes. Tallente watched him and sighed. Then, suddenly concieus of his host s critical scrutiny, he felt (in Impulse of bhnme, felt thnt his contempt for the man had in It something nlmest snobbish. He leaned ?erwnrd and did his best. Miller had been n school school beard teacher, an exhibitor nt college, nnd wns pesses'ed of a singular though limited Intelligence. He could deal nde quatclv with any one problem presented by Itself nnd affected only by local con ditions, jet the mere Tallente talked with hira, the mere he realized his lack of breadth, his curious weakness of judgment when cnllcd upon te con sider questions dependent upon varying considerations. As te the right or wrong wording of n clause In the Facter Amendment Act, he could be lucid, ex nlnnutnrv nnd convincing; ns te the jus- .The politician, as jeu should knew jlce of th. ' -ante clause h cmpnred better than I. has no personal feelings." "The politician is left with ery few luxuries," Tnllente replied, with n cer tain grimnesB. Nera was announced, brilliant nnd gracious In n new dinner gown which she frankly confessed hnd ruined her, and close behind her Miller, n little ungainly In his ever-long dress coat and badly arranged white tie. It struck Tallente that he was aware of the ob ject of the meeting nnd his manner, obviously intended te be Ingratiating, had still n touch of self-conscious truculence. They went Inte dinner, n few min utes later, and their host's tact in in cluding Nera in the party wns nt once apparent. She tnlkeil brightly of the small happenings of their dny-bj-dny .political life and bridged ever the me with ether forms of legislation, he wns vague and unconvincing, didactic and prejudiced. If Dartrey's object hnd been te bring these two men into closer understanding of each ether, he was ccrtnlnly succeeding. It is doubt ful, however, whether the understand ing progressed entirely in the fashion he had desired. Nera, curled up in nn easy chair, affecting te be sleepy, but still listening earnestly, felt nt last that Intervention wns necessary. The sclf-revelatlen of Miller under Tal lente's surgical questioning wns begin ning te disturb even their host. "I am being neglected," she com plained. "If no one talks te me, I shall go home." Tallente rose at once and sat en the lounge by her side. Dartrey steed en the hearth nig nnd plunged Inte nn ingenious effort te reconcile wirleut ments of nwkwnrdness before general i points of difference which hnd arisen conversation nssumed its normal swims. I betwien his two guests. Tallente nil dbartrey encemnged Miller te talk nnd . the time was politely acquiescent, Miller 'they all listened while he spoke of the mammoth trades unions or. tne norm, where his held upon the people was greatest. He spoke still bitterly of the war, from the moral effect of which ,he rgued, the working man had never wholly recovered. Tallente listened a little grimly. "The fervor of self-sacrifice and so se called patriotism which some of the proletariat undoubtedly felt at the out 'break of the war," Miller argued, "was only an incidental, a purely pasr!ng bensntinn compared te the Idle nnd greedy Inertia which followed it. The war lest," he went en, "might hnvc ncted nB a lash upon the torpor of many of these men. Wen, it created n wave of Immorality and cxtrnvagance from .which they had never recovered, f "They spent mere thnn they had nnd they earned mere thnn they were worth. That is te say, they lived an unnatural 'life.f "It is fortunate, then," Tallente re marked, "that the new generation is almost here." "They, tee, carry the taint," Miller insisted. Tallente looked thoughtfully across toward bis host. i "It seems te me that this is a little .. Wsheartenlnc." he sum. "It is exaetlv '"k'tyhat one might liuve expected from iS'iHttrleck or even I.ethbrldnc. Miller. -Mjwke is nearer te the proletariat than JMr of us, would !mc us believe that ?) people who should be the bulwark te rv r.,s (ha state nre net tit for their pesl- p. r lir M I, i-v... -. i .... x inucy, i7iirirey sniu BOOIUingly, yMthat Miller was tulklng mere ns a .-philosopher than a piuctical man." K "I speak n cording te mj expert nice," the latter insisted, u little dog gedly. "Among jour own constituents?" ,rllente asked, with n faint smile, X'liilnlscent of a recent unexpected do de 'flit of olio of Miller's partisans In a large constituency, lll..,..,H Al.n.i. .....1 ll. It fS.4j " ililMIHU IMl-HI HUH UIIIlTsV' WHS ff-'-ite ftemcivhat "Wri it ply. "Sands lout L.W.W MV-iPt lUfUUKU UIO 1 p n little sullen, j.ike nil men witn brains acute enough te deal legicall with a precession of single problems, he lesented because he failed altogether te understand that a wider field of clr lumstanccs could possibly alter human isinn. Tnllente wnlked home with Nera. They chose the longer way, by the cmbnnkment. "This Is the Cockney's antithesis te the moonlight nnd hflls of you country folk, Nera observed, as she pointed te the jellew lights flushing across the blnck water. Tallente drew n long breath of con tent. "It s geed te be here, nnyway. I am glad te be out of thnt house," he con- fesf-ed. "I'm nfrald," she sighed, "that our dear host's party wns a failure. Yeu and Miller wcre born In different enmps of life. It doesn't seem te mn that am thing will ever brim: veu together." "Fer this rensen," Tnllente explained eagerly. "Miller's outlook Is narrow nnd rgedstical. He may be a shrewd politician but there isn't n grain of btatcsmanihlp In him. He might make an cxrclient chairman of a parish coun cil. As a Cabinet Minister he would be impossible." "He will demnnd office, I am afraid," Norn remarked. Tnllente took oft his hnt. He was watching the lights from the two great hotels, the red fires from the funnel of n little tug, black and mjeterleus in the windy darkness. "I nm sick of politics," he declared suddenly. "We nre n parcel of feels. Our fuet mee day nnd night te the solemn music." "Yeu, of all men," she protested, "ti. be talking llke this!" "I mean it." he Insisted, a little ileggully, "I hnvc spent tee many of my jears en the treadmill, A mnn was born te be either nn egoist nnd riercl out the earth according te his tastes, or te develop like Dartrey Inte a dreamer. Curse you !" he added, suddenly shaking his fist nt the tall towers el the Heuscn of Parliament. rjv" jrFC' .LiiiW ' ' im -mA-; '. H "Everybody talks a let about the weather, but nobody does anything about it" Mark Twain This summer you can de something about het weather. Yeu can wear Palm Beach Suits. If you start wearing your Palm Beach Clethes the day you put en your straw hat, and wear Palm Beach until the day you threw away your straw hat, you will be cool. Palm Beach Suits will stand all the wear you can give them, and be geed next season. They can be had in all the desirable colors and shades and patterns. They will save your woolen clothes for spring, fall and winter wear. There is only one Palm Beach Cleth. It carries the Palm Beach label. Loek for it. Gelf Knickers made of Palm Beach are cool and geed-looking practical and durable. THE PALM BEACH MILLS COODALL WORSTED CO. StUutt Jints A. Rehuitt 119 Fourth Avenue, Nw Yolk City MsssSmi ... ..tVjfflfflfaiii,.., .. cjhls Labd Identifies the Genutaa PALM. BEACH SUITS at Geed Clothing Stores See this Great Fordseiv Dellar-Defying' Industrial Demonstration ImVM viiiHiin Learn What Yeu Can De With a Fordseiv THE UNIVERSAL TRACTOR Te Reduce Overhead Cut Time Charges Cut Laber Costs Speed Up Heavy Werk Take a little whiie effaway from puzzling ever costs that won't come down. Step Figuring Actually See at this huge National Industrial Shew hew overhead charges will come down immediately in all work where heavy leads must be handled. Demonstrations going en from 9 A. M. te 9 P. M. doing the kind of work which is costing you tee much money with your present methods. Manufacturers in every line see hew time and labor costs, from leading platform te pick-up station te delivery points, can be cut. Contractors in every line of building and construction work see hew all costs, excavating, dumping, power winch, leading crane, material hauling can be cut. Operators, Steel Mills in every line from mining te finished product, deck or yard hauling, see hew the cost per ten for moving can be cut. Lumber Yards see hew all hauling charges in all the work you de can be cut. Municipalities see hew street cleaning, sprinkling, park main tenance, garbage disposal and ether costs can be cut. WareheusesShippers See hew all lead moving can be speeded up, man per sonnel pat en a mere efficient basis and all costs be cat. Traffic Superintendents, there is a world of informa tion for you in the demonstrations being made. Factory Superintendents, there is a rea,' help for you in the greatest show of industrial power ever presented. DAILY DEMONSTRATIONS Inter-factory hauling portable power shovel work trailer train operation side and end dump body operation read construction portable power winch operation bridge and steel structure methods. Coen and aee theae demonstrations they will ahew ttvetry jyeaaiblet uae of the Industrial Fardaen in rniportvlen and power application, July lO te 15 Inc. Under auspices of the Ferd Moter Ce, and the Ferd Dealers of Eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware at Ferd Shew Grounds Bread St. at Allegheny, Philadelphia 9 a.m. te 9 p.m. Daily FREE m tm.-:M The Portable Winch The Heavy-Duty Haulage Tractor The Portable Saw Rig The Portable Scoop Conveyer Te Reach Tractor Shew Penna. R. R . te North Philadelphia Street Cars Frem Down Town Reute 53 or 20 en 13th Sti; Reute 2 or 24 en 16th St. Going North Step at 13th and Allegheny CM i VM 9. 'J ah 'f'rt't. f. arf A 'cWf-Jj bkuh.! it . 1 .'Jr !,;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers