IfyW- """?!$ 'HT Vt'J.J5'Hf-tC7J ir.yrps I U" !.if1.i7. a lV ' V .IV ,", ;' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA. SATURDAY OCTOBER -14, 1922 - u-tf V' &vV" By Theodere Dreiser If 0 0 . ' ffiWl'iity&'WjfP'VV 1V MW.V'fS"" '"' ?iIi-?-1f-v.H"H P?l A CCI feW- it w t t. m M J. fOne of the Series of Evening Public Ledger en Married Life WnEVEVEIl I think of love and j rrhcc'l think of Wray. That Mirn 1 Thai clerkly mind. Hu wT. among these I met during my first 'w-r. In New Yerk. Like ke many of I fha millions seeking te make their way, h. was busy about his affairs, and, for- tunatelv with the limitations of the' ..mn ,1C hnd the ambitions of ! average- man nc mm ia ntnrfif- man. lie was cennccieu ( With one of these commercial agencies which inquire into the standing of busi ness men and report their findings, for a price, te ether business men. He was Interested In his work and seemed sit-.--.! tw in time he was certain te achieve what was perhaps n fair enough .Urinn- managership of some branch ambition, managers cenncctC(j ill. nd which might have paid him I In much as five or Bis thousand a year. I BO much as me or ei ,.,, . The thllif about mm "'" . me ntiart from a genial ami n.eu- .... IlAf - l1IF(II tnai till: concerned himseit i.i.j - facts of the different enterprises u hflMCter ne WO.l DUtilvvv. VII t A cre they solvent. - i.j .v nnv their bills ' w nai wm their capital stock? Hew' much cash did they have en hand? Such was the nature of the data he needed, and ie this, largely, he confined himself. Nevertheless, he was at times amused or astonished or made angry or seit seit rtshtceus by the tricks, the secretive , ess. the errors and downright mean mb. of spirit of se many he .came n ...1,1, for h mself, he had .-1.1. nil LL 1 M "" .. .,f.,- i.lra for t iue siniuincs 01 im- siuge. us wen as n.iu nuiui tuivij Bi'inirsiu-u or ru j wealth f errtUn'Cit;rciurce-. reading and living in general. Wrn, " said. studying the human mi m. - - nml had proved te be the Prince Charming The thought interested him at once. and resourcefulness, its in hg hnJ pMl,rmX ,h gC(,m c;ir()(.n ,J tt tatuned Ms practical and clerkly limitations, Its humor, t - hp w,lk,i til(! sleeping primes te a world K.ul. He left me hopefully and I saw ernl shiftiness nnd ' irul- ....',,, such as she had never dreamed of. She netMns iiwre of hlni for several months. ' the feeling that he was a person nt no cemae i "" little chara-ter, that no wua .." . straightforward, net ns limited or worthless as some of these ethers. On this score, as en some ethers, he was nrinrl that he would succeed. If l iennar .,..i .., i,e ..heulJ de. it he were K lUUil UH "- " i.ieKtrinus and honest ami mi""-" hoeemlng mere nicressive, mere iikiu.j- - " - - . , ", , , t SP i,nriitU n ,rti,fi rnm,r,, ,. his past love ler nor. ene una gene, neterc my lire, lie loeueu wen eneugn. inn- , , , ,.. nf .hose mnnv things .., mer K0!f.,. entered mere nrgu- "f what a haln and a wrignt a cuim . . . . f"' ;,,,,;.., "'.,, .e-, and with another man. He was cpiite the careful person who tnkes care that, either, it sue niiti eeeu me in,ui isr.es,.., tlie love, and a few mere . the.t m ltl mer s .t en tered. m re aw nn.hitim, bejend l ui 1b' i"' ;,"''' ,' losie 're f tlltlt- "'though he did net knew of his clothes, but thinner, mere tense sort of woman she ceuldn t have done -Tnily." I thought, "this is love- i. nil knew we ought te de, ne wu mcnl.ltlrS all the time, mere tin-, mere wi i - Wmi. l ",.'.' ,,Dt.lln,Iau ' ntii one who stoei . . T. .. , , ..,. n. ,,, ,. ...... fln .... .. s ,,. ,.,s dne." for one nt lenst. Ami this U mnrr!ni-. bound te get along better than these th.lt s!l(1 ,,, npt uke the same plays .,, k( , ,, , ns .ls all l)llt f ' ' ., lt 'J IplV , , .,:.."?' one of these two women about whom very well and was thinking of taking' He paused nnd clenched his hands f,. ntl0 nt rnHt Hn is s,,iri,nllT who did net What, an honest, in- , j.Cl, . L. antt,i ,daT ,hat was ,, ', r.,ti,i,.. There was a small m"; hb I S enh fur ra ! he had told me before, that Mrs. Drake, a long vacation te visit some friends nervously, ns though he wen- deneu.ic- weil(lp, , Ullt welllnII who ,MplM be did net. n . ' , nnd she Wanted one Krk i-nr'v and here he u:1 te he J","" zj"..c ' ""' J "I'sak en! for mj - , s tl(1(, lnterested Ik-ssle in things in the West, (lie had heard that lies- ing her te her fau- instead of te m. Jllm. Am, s. mnv I)P hvMtmn, dustrfeus, careful, courteous nan l--ht and am i-Inj,. and she wan e.i one . , en, an. i u sell, hew. .er. uhichdld net nnd could net interest him. , sie had gene te California.) Then of "New. Wr.u ." I i.i.-rp.-M-.l. "hew ,ji1p,, ,0 nllutier. who may di-spU. de better than these who was none et itll semc tCr,eii moral or Intell.-et.r-.l ";'. Vi!. " rria-'.- whenever h. duties , They were all alike, these people crazy , a sudden, noting that I studied him and use!c- te say that. h-.-li of us N as i,,.,.. lllt ()Vl. aml marriage, for one these things? What nonsense. It must n-.t te it. Mic rp!Ul ""'' "XrV wen. 1 'i i-riuir li" liked te -v' I'-ate TT WAS net lenir after that sir and notional and insincere. After n wondered, he grew restless nnd finally lie ought te he.' h will Jen nt le.-iht. I hnve seen; here ii. thi roeni, v n7 ,, there were accidents "eW and was nteiested in lectur,-. w-". I, ' ' ' l '. , , . I1 ";va net lenK ater that, six time he n(1(I(;lj thnt he lm(1 n t0 Bce get ., te iek at the shelf of books. talk seV" -,,.,., and with mine own '-(-..' be se. Of course t litre " wnnren-.hn.ii-. !e new confessed, wi- '" '" ''" '''.."'," i hundr. d ' month, or 1"19' thnt l ,,canl tllere her parents. I could net guess why. Suddenly he wheeled and faced me. "Hut let me tell you what she did," Co11,rtelf ,, ,,., ,.;,, Ftatu .s,.fa( and sickness, and men here and there , , or ,,.ss ber(.(1 by hPrl, ,Mink,. She , . I . t .1 ..-. . mi. a n )m been i ,vns lonely and exclaiming: "I can't stand it. That's he went en fidcelj . "Y.,u hiucn't an c.t A,ft; "ZnulJScXT vmX rtnln from one another, ns r.e na ' i iiheu mn---. or I..-.. ,n..i, ....I -.. Btole irem one n ( r( rP(.itaN .,,, ,hnt k , Illustrated in his own labors, and uanus . vj 1(,as , epPnl b((I(1 1 failed. And there w6re trusts anu . Amj JPt jf 1H w..i.;d net ncc.ui. ncc.ui. ncc.ui. comblnatlens being formed even then paMT icr kl. would co with one W wninh did net senm'te be entirely in both of the-.- women he was beginning vhieh did net s-e.m u ' te detest. They seemed te have no tune with the interests of the aerae lleUf!plu,j,1 ,j,11ps nn, ,.ou,i ,.nme anc .. man l?ut even se. All things ceii-dd- ns t,PV chesf.. It was they who wen ered! if the uM-iugc man followed the aj,i,ng nnd nbettiiu her in all the above rules he was sure te fare hotter t,ings and surnng her up te go ami d than the ether fellow. Th-re wjis a-h ' ,in,i he. What was l.e te de 7 Ne a thing as appre.lmntn justice, (j.fiid U(i c,,nld ei.me if thin-'s went en : AIA nrnvnil. in the ma.n, and th'' , thev (-. new gnin They were h-- . . ...11 wieked wete punished, as they saeuiu be TT il te interest me a great deal l en that score, lur he liked te urgue nnd j onenl-lti. n te tllO !lll" of lllS fc'lleW i men and te laugh at their foible and peccadilloes. ... long as tli-v did net sway tee tar t the left or what lie looked upon as the l.ue of h-mer u-i-i fair dealing. Ah for love nnd niarruge, he h . definite u-ws about this., a . that he was iin.-u! nart-nv te' censure thes v hose l! r 1 .1 '..'. hau 1 , worked out as we would, but th. r ; - 1 11 - i:.- - 1 . ' : .u pure us t .. i-r V" 101-i-v 1 eiu 111 tl' s niii'ti r which led te success nl.. ililimtics outlined iiLne , lead, te success 1.1 mattir, in r j 1 1- tinul or prat ti' ni. "no 1 " 'e Ha'.u t- little .-eik thing ui-eut wei.n , One had te hu Mire i!.-it wu-'i . n went a-ceurtuu. one selected .1 wei.i , of sense as well u-, ri.urin, ene w e came of geed .e.-k and hence weuid In possessed et gued taste and geed prin ciples,. She need net he rich "he n.ui t even be peel. Se nian wuiin-n were designing, or at leat light and tligl.M they could net t "lp a rrleus man t uccced if they would. K.-r v. Ic.-e of coure, was th" worth girl 1.1 it was an honor te mnrrj. und it was one of these he wu going te ch'.e-e. But even wit', one su-h it wu- iimcci, arv te evcrcise cine: vh" might he tee narrow and .enventluiial, would ' lint under-tand the world, perhaps b. full of prejudi In the emir-e of time, li.-r. .ng heenme BCcrelarj te a 1 i-rtaln mh,i hedi, l.e encountered in liu e-in nihc .1 girl who seemed te unbe'b ne.ul) ,i!l of the virtues and ipiiilitie, win h li thought Jieee -irj. She wus th ""daughter of verj me.lest'v cin-m.-etanced pnrentM, who dwilt in tin icr by buhurb of , and 11 vry ca uhh- r.tenegrnpher. She we- really pr. ti but net very wed infurun'l, a gnl 'i'." nppeured te be practical .ind sMi-.h'. but still in leash te the tenets nt.l 11 -structiens of lier home, her 1 hurLh .md her family circle three w 01 Ids whieh were as iised and dellnlte and worth as the most enthuHiastic of these who -eek te maintain the order and wrtue of the 1 world could have wi bed. Ter instai.ee, nbe was opposed te , the theatre, done ing, night dining or untlng in the city, ns well as nn.ithlng thnt in her religleua world might l,e construed us desecration of the Sabbath. I recall him describing her narrow "ns yet," but he hoped te make her mere liberal , in time. He told me thnt he had been unahle te win her te se simple an outing en the 1 Hahbnth as rowing en tne little river near her home, that never, would she Stay downtown te dinner. As for the theatre- -it could net even be mentioned. Hhe could net and would net dam i, nnd --,.-., 1. I.. ..!....' . ! .. I 1 loeueu upon Ml' 11 iiiuuimi ions 10 ene 08 net eniv weriui), nnr ioee nnu sinful. Although he prnlnl hluisilf en being n liberal, and even a radical te her hu proton lcl 11 profound indif- ference te such departures from conven tions, lie thought her tee fine nnd in telligent a girl te stick te such no tions, and wnH doing his best te influ ence nnd enlighten her Ilv s'ew do de greet (he was nbeut the b'isines-j of courting her two or three years), he was able te bring her te the pin e where she Wfielil utnv downtown for dinner en it "..,. 1' ..'... 1 i...,n 1.1 ... "wcvu-uuj, nun .iiiiiniieii.ii,, ...miu iii- 'Jcnd n sacred or musical concert en n1 Sunday night. Alse, whHi lie censld- , rl.i .' .T- ..t 1, 1... 1... 1. ...... 1 1.... ... 1 v.. H certnin l.oeliL. 'esnecln Iv Mm of t.j fc'tatnrv nml iihllmnnhv which hn tlmndit . I.i. it.-.' T ........ "..... I Wi'r,,l nml w"leli. no ilnuur, generated thMimL' thin wlsni of doubt In her own He had nlwa.iN looked uneu if.-tneatre as tne cincieet et me iaa or hli harmless entertainment, mJ&t perSuaded hn -te ! ttuiii .. . - - . . . I j.. i :.! 7.V, " J in ihs. by the Best American n performance, then another nml nn- ether. In short, he emancipated her, In se far as he could, and seemed de- lighted with the result. TiriTII their marriage came a new VV form of life for both of them, but mere especially for her. They ' took a small apartment In New Yerk, ,,..., . unu it was nor long ueiere sue jeineu u . literary club that was being formed in their vicinity, where she met two rest- i less, pushing, seeking women for whom ' he did net care a Mrs. Drake and n Mrs. Munhaw both of whom he In sisted could be of no aluc te uny one. Hut llessiu liked them nnd spent a great deal of time with them, I visited thorn at their small a part- nwnt about this time, and found that she wns proving a very apt pupil In the. realm te which he had introduced .. " ' ..." -,-. ..... ...- .... ........ It was plain that she had beeu , - I emancipated from her old notions ns te F k f certain nemilar author-, of an cllshtcn,nK hlst()r? of Frnn,.e M n rniillni nf hittf nf fihll.iwnriliv nni! HOI'fr h, h . adlll nt the club .. .. . . ... were uiscussing. i ceuiu see miii iii. was beginning te feel that the unse- pnutlcatea girl tie naa marrieu raigni yet outstrip him in the very reain in which he had hoped te be her perman ent guide. Mere than once she ques ques teonal or contradicted him a te a mat ter of fact, and I think he wnk nton nten nton Mied if net Irritated that see knew mere than he nbeut the import of a .... ". certain plot or the relativity of certain aaps m hlstery Whenever he met n.e affr this h would confide the growing nature of his doubts anil perpleUttv-i. IV'le was no mere like the gill he had met in his office than lie was like the boy he lmd been nt ten years of 020. She wa .in . i i . . .. nn.l! I.... .1 .. ;mung te rjunrre und meie than cm . l.ir, !v .ne li.nl thr 'ati'in'd le lease l 'i as he well knew sin nnd de for hersnit, could. AIIOIT two ninths aft.- thi . rv rav cut i , -i I 'ti V r trait state of V Otii I'nqh h nr sldcri 'Ihrvlen l'T Drciiir's t"l. " ' nlrii info hnth I r. ' n ;! 'in i ', I mrd .sf'ifei nh'iiit v t "in Ills fit Ij'i'ik. ' Mil.r ' J.' ncii nmif r 1'ir Mr Ihrm ' ni"' 'iW ,n n i.i u ... --e. .,... - ., .. ,, . 1.-.I ..1 11.1,.. .....I.. . .............. .. .... T i i imwBrW ii I tML 'mmi4 WlxSEBE&Bffl:W-k.l&& m " i -"tr.- "'-" '&3tw-ttimrW y i 1 jix-si&r i ! "'-r. the -'. ' it'. in tine laigrit t ifirt anil im.ic,! n'trr Am udefiif in Anc leiA, hmu-ihl jerth the .i ml of nurrri and dneiM.Kva tlmt i'H'0 hrrnmr continuum v ith his sucncnhmi navels. It Jialt viti life m mrcmy trims. It n tuml pceplr in a iicrrr-fo-le jainefm manner, and this id the vii'Wifi ei ainl in his later irerk. attempting t' 'l!-u-s ..ismil thl-igi eiinually lie cetifes-e.l th.lt lli-.ie I id left him. She hi'.l l i'.mi a room some where. Hud gene baik te work, and would net accept any money from lum. Although hu met her occasionally in the subway she would have nothing te de with lilm. And would I belli m- it? She was accusing him of being niurnw and Ignorant and stubborn! And enlv time or four years before she hud thought hn was nil" wrong because he vunted te en rewim: Oil SillldilJ ' Could such things be'.' And still In- loved her; he 1 couldn't help It. II'' r-i iilled hew swier ! nml innocent and ! range she had bei n ..hen he hrst met I , hew ner, new ii.ucii sne "- , . ,.. ,,,1. i,.,j ,,.,,1 ,,,,,. repectc-d her parents wishes, ami new Me-. , . . ,., , , i, ,tt..i ... "I wish te (101I, In- suddenly ex- claimed, "that I .hadn't been In such 0 hurry te chilli her. She wns all iljlit then. If I had only known it. s s,he wasn't interested In these damiied new- r,n,.n.i rtdnus. mid I wasn't sntiMnd .'. . .. . . until she was. And new see. She .1. .i .. a ..,.... .. .. leaves roe nnu bujs x u iwimw un trylnJOsljelil her back IntelkctuaUr." ,,;xXlMS.i Original Short Stories Jrictien Writers I shook ray head. Of whet value wns advlce in the face of such a situation as this, especially from ene who was satisfied that the mysteries of temper- ament were net te ge unraveled or ad- Jted nave by uoture? Nevertheless, "'" appealed te I ventured a silly Mi.ge-tien. borrowed from another. lie '"' wld that if he could only win her it i, nni, .1 h ..nil,,,. t, neviiiv ihn - - - pointless opposition and contention that liad driven her away. She might go her intellectual way ns r-he chose if she would only entile back. Seeing him se tractable and se very wishful, I suggested a thing another hnd done in n related situation. He was te win her back by offering her such terms ns she would nccvpt, and then, in order te bind her te him, hu was te Induce her te have a child. That would capture her sympathy and at the same tlir.e in- sinuate an image of himself into, her affectionate consideration. Thine who when liu dime te report that all waa well with him once mere. In order te ...I .,... .... 1... I I ...I.- - lnvMaM anrnl,n, in n mnri. ,m,,- imrt of "i" - --- """ tll0 cityi ueSsle was going en wltu her dub me and he was net orpesing !,(, And then within the year came a child, and for the nett two years all then simple, hemy and seemingly luiidii',' and restraining tilings which te villi the rearing and protection of a i''in.; life. 1'tit, ns I was seen te leatn, even during that period all was net a m i)i h af might he. One day in Wi.ij'i nb-encc Hes(, remarked that, iM'shtful as it was te hate a child nf her own. "lie could see lier-clf as i.ttle ini.re tl an a milk-cow with a calf, h ' in I te it- 'oni.'e until it should be il.ln !. liiel nr di en of ether-. A'l-e.-uly he was pun ning f"r lit'!" Mmie'e future It was find for .hi! 'nil t he cooped up Ml the it. if h uld win He-si,' te the idea thej would muc te some sub ui ban town. Th - wne prospering new and could engiig" a nuremiiid. ve Mis. 'r,i re.iui.el he intellectual pursuits. It wiin ..i'.v te si... that. i,-p.-ft Wray n-. !,' m.a'ht a- nn affei ti..-i-ite 'in.l no -th-. .! al mil n. she culd net h-i-' hun :.t. 1 that l.ei.i.-i- of lh" IT 1 1 til t lie- het wen th"-.- who thin', or uri m a lit-',- and th--e who h-jim-- nn.l .main i , , ' Th. win two di if- ling I .iti ..I" ;. .tl in. ll". ing side h .-ide l-.r tin- till,"- le.tl'.' en V, I.O ll'l- .leW.r. -he the liu.. T. Hli-i TMIIS II. .1.1 tlli.'lier olio . 'ill ' i. i. !,x pi-lMi.ll-1 p ti 1..1U i .ipliil 1 l,e V..I- h-r; li 'l a 1 !..' t 1-r and f.lt I nnirlist, .IrneM Itfnnett, eon- " - 1'ntiir Amirii mi titu'lnt. 1,. ni'iei; 7, Lrieli hate hi i n tmni I rre is prrhiipt m nutli'ir in tie 'i m irprrssrd fl '1 In mlair Urm.,. ii hi n he nas ripnrtmii en n urteni ii'intr- man nil many nf the hm ilnlni of tl. conditions by which I' wns ra il er .. lis Ulillt taut e he t i' ' il, while she hi Id Inin li.-ht'v in her thoughts or In r ii. liming wen iter back hn new . t i "'and Jier te him in anv wa ll' n.gli', while biie wi"hd only t f r -. I or tlm,.' old hlliee.lse she piling, i into netlvitles which had Se tieiibh-d him, and new in addition te liini'elf, the child wns being neglected, or wi h" thought. The arrival of Marie hud net inlluenced ln-r in thnt respect. And whnt was mom and wer.e. she had -ii.. ... 1....1. nfii.i. W.elf Shi. nril:e i i Mi- eitner hoeka or life in th.it u-ni. new taken te reading I- mini run' Kraft- i blend and cm liable and nrther cem-r.bbln-: und ullli-d thinkers and aiithnr-, menpliice. Hi- did net get en well at I-H-. men and works he lon-dilered mligc. nnd did net graduate. Se far sliaiiiiful even though snircely Kra peil u.- he Knew, Clink never saw him. by him. Once he wild t" me; "De "Th" boy himself believed that he lini knew of u writer by the nuine ef'wus an eriihini. and thut the Hines Pierre Let!'" ..... ,, I ... 11.1 l"T knew his . ,,ls' ,,,,'. ..!.,;',,-.. 11-ft Til 11 II 11 lllll'IIL IL . ..Vhnt llf) ye think of him' " rlu "" ' . , , "Wh. I respect 1dm very much. What about him .1 i ii , l'iii i.' . i i inn hii iiiiiii nnriiai i wu, j. ,.-. -i -- --".ihuum I point of view, no fln writer, maybe. She met a man I followed them Hut what de you think of hi views! ,,f i;,v, f i, U i.i..u n. i,nni.. t Ke'uiti, lr u-lileli nprhnns wnn lliecnl or ... ..... - .... u. u.e ravna ..a u.u..t . . rend by the mother of a little girl?" Wray," I said, "I can't enter upon which he was se fend. Net hearing di a dlcusslen of any man's works upon rectly from him as te this I celled upon I'lirelv moral crennds. He mieht he . enec ler Minn mother nnd nv 1 for ,.tl.... n-t. i- iti .'?.-... :."" . ..,. .. ",""".',. ."", The- ; ' V i" V.,i,V'i P.. .7., L '..?.. . .......... .... iijuik.1, ...in in,,-,- I,., in- te w henefited will be benclited. I can't NVien docs human nature crash under the strain of (car and tragedu? Must it pull deicn all loved ones in disaster? 1 1 w lin-s wnn in tiik story i was IiIh father, nnd there was some Henry was unens.i, for Cliften was net ! .A ..iV"ia7, In order te end it Henry like himself. He had spells of breed- lie vl.li n SlCret ClimvinitlO IdeillllU eRll.. .,1,,.,....I.I,I !, l. ,,,nn, n'hn'llll, nnd hn (nr.l.- ,.. mnl'liii, Innn lnlc rn-r b'leictl nevhevi with i.rcy. ;.ii sister, IOUII. fccieL-tti bu evervbeiu m Vh DICK UVIXGSTQXn in u-he't mem- ...w ,..-., ,, ,. uull f.rii, u liu ,, ur."l.".'. M"i'' tluu te an bad. te Xerntln. l.tt child Ih'OiI tiernr. 1,1 en'i- tn bntlcje the nnn. Hi i fuil et nfef iv nml v lievlsli leilcitic reiiZ nlirn in .me- e' li.s thirtu i,car and titefi-5 ii.nl rm.-r, tfr i In fore icith 1.11 llll. TH WitEhl.KH. a trhottieme Dlrl. .,,".'"' ,m r '"'" i ""J "dicrrlv. Hlll.Ili.Y f AUI.YSI.I. nctnss. v)he. ten I'url btfurt, ir-lt lillr.fl 10; hi ft Clirinii Merj, ihr hw-bend. .ms, liml lir-n shot te di'nth as unt L,,ifilv (Wlet'.il hu a ''"-'alii Jud Chirk, it , irlt i.uiiit man nbeut textn. t ,irh hiil d.inbi.rurtd immrdiatrlu. "'d It i.i l.('Ji-n( lie venshed In a WI- M'. I 1 I li miKaOHY. ll'-rrhi'i brother and " t'letr, uheii r.s.urc.fj line him tin e th 111 s DASSETT ,i nni iiinpcrmnn, ichn xi'iiecta thnt f)( . irlne.tnna t Jud ,.' eifc. fi ,, se, , te clinr (lilne- no. . I F'izniitl.'i t.'.tir. an ettravaeant . i ' 'I'm V He lilir WAIni. ;;:,fibri;'i bro(lir-(n-leu. U! in tf.'.s. 1Ylll.Kl.Kl:. tuvxcal .tincri- "l'l li'irruM. lYtlllt XAYIlt:. a rlrh veuth vhese se- ' j neUct viethrr unhri him te mam K ualrth. with whom he is smitten. V HKOTHKIt, Henry Living stone, wns net n strong man," I avid dictated. "He had the same heart condition I have, but it developed ear lier. After he left college he went te Arizona and 1 ought a much, and there i met nnl chummed with Kllhu ('lark, who had bought an old mini- and was u-werking it Henry leaned him n small amount of money at that time, ml n number of jenrn later in return lur iii.it. when Henrys he-iltli fulled, Chirk, who hnd grown wealthy, bought hiii u ram h in Wyoming at Iry Itlver, net i.ir fieni ('lark's own prepeity. "Il'iirv hud been teaching in an i 'i'i n unheisity, and then taken up ii.' Ming We saw little of him. lie wiis a -indent, and he ln-uune almost , a lei "ise, I kiw le's of him than ever n".-r Cliik gave him the run. h. In tin- spiing of 1!)10, Henry wrote ni" t -in r he was ..'.t i M'e him. net well, and I went' lie M'eined worried I .'nni w.ts in bud shape phsj ally. Llihu I I l.nl. had di'-d live years before, and l l"fi him a fair sum of money, lift thousand dollars, but he was living in 'n w;i whii h made me think he was net iisiic It. Tlie ranch buildings were dilapidated, and th"ie was nothing but tie i. ii rest in-i-e slues in I lie heus. I tivil II 'v with uilseiliness, and no then told me that the money was . past me. nnd he leiirned something about net I is, but h'll te him tn be used fer'Hultie Itiirges-, or Tlierwnld. She was .in ilhL'itiiiiiit.i sn of Clark's, born i married by that time, and lived en n before his marriage, the child of a siniili ruivher's dniiglittr named Ilattle I farces i. Tim Hurgim cirl hnil gene te (iiii'iha for it-, l,u tli. and tin; steiy was i ei known. In cirlv jenr Clark haul i ii iiil.r.. liruni"! tlireiieh his lnw - hild's beard through ills inw- ,,., n, nn iiimibn woman iiainfil Hines. nml had Intir aent him te college. The l'.ar-i'S, girl married a Swede named Uheiwald. The boy was eight years elder than Jiidsen, Clark's legitimate ,, "After Urn death of his wife Klihu ('lark began te think about the child, espechilh after Judsen becnimi a fair- sicd bej. He had the elder boy, who went b the name of Hines, sent te (ollege,- and l'l summer he stayed at ii. , ,..,. ... iw.nl lleiirv said lie bev was like the Hurgess family, woman had adopted mm as a leuim- ling Hut en the death of the woman; he found that she had no estate, nnd that n Urm of New Yerk attorneys had ; been paying his college bills. "He mid spent considerable time with Henr), em wny and nnetlier, and he began te think that Henry Knew wne he was. lit thought at first mat ireiy I. f , , ,i A v vx . ) when they came out and when they in Ho-ssie leavlnc him once mere, andl .. - - - T - .- i - -- unfair, she had taken the child of .- .... .. ... .1... i a ... ... ..... him inter a time nnu leunu aim iivingirer mucn ever a year, 111111115 which l.t 1 1... urn 1, a lni.i-n iinnrtmnnl flint.' liarl ! .- ec ....v- ..t.. .......... ...v., u... taken. Apart from n solemnity nnd ...1f ..1. 1-1 n reserve which snrnnc from a wounded and disgruntled spirit: he pretended an ....nn., .,.i .. i. ,i ...in. i.i (lllil 1,,., it,,, iv. 1 nji,.,.. ..c ...i.v.i ..ii indifference nnd u satisfaction with his present state which did net square with THE EREA By Mary Roberts Rieelnart ..luffter of "Dangerous Days," "li," "Tht Amazing Interlude," and man; ether stiiUIng ami successful novels Cepirlght, 10t2, by Geerge It. Deran Ce. .11..111., in.ii..nnii4ra i..... i.u n.iv.. ,... - the father was, und nfter tliat he had no pence Cliften his nnmc was Cllf - ten Hines attacked Henry once, and if it had net been for the two men en the place lie would have hurt him. "Henry begnn te ghe him money. Clark had left the fifty thousand for the boy with the iden that Henry should stmt him in busines. with it. Hut he mil turned up wild-cat schemes that H.iir would net listen te. He did net l.new hew Henry get the nuney, or from where. He thought for n long time that Henry hnd saved it. "I'd better say here that Henry was fend of Cliften, although he didn't ap prove of him. He'd never married, nnd the be was like a son te him for n geed many year-. He didn't have him at the ranch much, however, for he was ii liurgess through and through nnd looked like them. And he was always afraid that somehow the story would get out. "Then CHCtcn learned, somehe'w or ether, of Clink's legacy te Henry, nnd lie put two and two together. There wns a bad time, but Henry denied it and they went upstairs te hed. That night Cliften broke Inte Henry's desk nnd found some letters from Elihu Clark that told the siery. "Hi- almost went crazy. He took the p.ipeis up te Henry's bedroom and wakened him, standing ever Henry with ' tnem in his hand, and shaking nil ever. I think thev hud n struueli-. tee. All Henry told me was that lie took them from him and threw them in the fire. "That was a eur before Henry died, and at the time jeung Jud Clark's name was in nil the newspaper. He had left rellegu after a wild career thc. and although Ullhu hud tied up the prepert.v until Jud was twenty -one, Jud huil his mother's estate and a big allowance. Then. loe. he hei-rnweil en "is inespeeis, nnii no lest n uunurcii thou ami dollars at Mente Carle within six weeks alter he graduated. "One wav and another he was always In tin newspapeis, and when he enw hew Jud was throwing money away, Cliften went wild. "As Henry had burned the letters he had no proofs. He didn't knnw who Ibis mother was, hut he set te work i' mni out. lie lerretis;! into Klihu 8 . little ranch near Nerada. He went te sen her, and he accused her downright !' being his mother. It must have i been n had time for her, for after all ;ii was ner son, anu sue nml te disclaim , uim. mie nnu a liusheml am I him. She had a husband and a bev i by tlmt husband, however, by that time. and she was desperate. She threw him en me tracK somehow, lied and talked .him down, and then went te bed In (ellapse. She sent for Ileniy later and told him. "The queer thing wns that as seen as alie saw him she wanted him. He was her son. She went te Henry ene -night, and said she had perjured her .soul, and that she wanted him back, I Slut wasn t In leve with Thorwald. I i think shed always cared for (Murk. , Shu went nway finnlly, hnweier, nfter premising Henry she would keep Clark's secret. Hut 1 hove a suspicion that later en she acknowledged tlie truth te the hey. "What he wanted, of course, was n share of the Clark estate. Of courne he hadn't a chance In law, hut lie saw a chance te uiacKUiiiii young .Hid i;inrk nnd he tried it. Net personally, for lie hadn't any real courage, but by mail. Clark's attorneys urote beck saying they would jail him if he tiled it again, and he went back te Dry niver anu uner weury ngeni "That v was la the spring of 1011. were getting out of a cab I told them still very much In love nnd thought! thpv mlcht heln him te understand the . . . ...--- .... - .- - troublesome problem that was before him. There was no ether word from him .1 ... u .i....... ...i.i. . flin hn .onflnne1 te I1VA in tlm lllinrl mpnt they had occupied together. I .1 -! t 1.1.. ..Ar.tlA ...t I. .v ... .'.-. "-';: Hi- hnd retailed 1 agency and was new manager of a de ii in liuaiiiuu ilii the i.i-(ii j i..u i...r ...... ...... ...,.. . .. .... partnient. One rainy November night .,.. , n.. lie came te sec me and seated lilniseit (... - , ...... ..v ... ........B ,.,.. ....... 1 en his horse into the mountains, and 1 coining in with the nuimal run te death. . Henry thought, tee, that lie was seeing the Tlierwnld woman, the mother. Thorwald had died, and she was living with the son en their ranch and tijing te sell it. He thought Hines was te lng te have her make a lonfe sien which would give him a held en Jud Clark "Hi in y wat, net well, and in the early fall he knew lie hadn't long te live. He wrote out the ster and left it in his desk for me te read after he had gene, and ns he added te it from time te time, when I get it it was almost up te date. ".IinNen came back te the Clark ranch In September, bringing u.eng an actress named lieverly (ail&lc, and her lius-1 hand, Unwind Lucas. Tla-ie w'as con siderable talk, because it win known Jud had been infatuated with the wom an. Hut no one saw much of the party, outside of the much. The Carlisle wom an seemed te be u lad, but the story, was that both men were drinking a geed bit, espivlnlly Jud. "Henry wrote that Hines hud been In the l'.ust for some mouths, nt tluitj time, and that he liad n it heaid fieni, him. Hut he felt that it was enlv m trnen int. I tliui l.r. m.iil.l tiit.i . .!. maT i ..... e. ' ..." i. i. .. '' V."". i.sii ij'-tn. iei iitmui.', lie iiiuei- u w ill ..nil !,.- .1 1.1. ,.. ...1. ile umi llieuey ie llie, wild III- striictlens te turn it ever te Hiue'. It is still in the bunk, and amounts te about thirty-live thousand dollars. H is net inin.', and 1 will net touch It. Hut I have iicM'i- located Cliften Hines. "In the last entry in his recer'l I call attention te my brother's, state ment that he did net n-gnrd Cliften Hines ns entirely sane en till, one mat tcr, and te it It unit ns conviction tlmt the hatred Hines I .nil l.nr,. III,,. ,t. ing te a delusion of persecution, might .... l.:.. ., l . ' i ... i. ... .. ...... ....... (((..1.I...V en his death turn against Judsen Clark. lie instructed me te go te Clark, tell him the story, and put him en his guard. "Clark and his party had been at the ranch only a day or two when one night Hines tinned up nt Dry Kher. lie wanted the fifty thou-und, or what wits left of It, and when he failed te move Henry he attacked him. The two men en the place hiard the noise und ran In, but nines get nwu. Henrv swore them te secrecy, and told them the I story. He felt lie might in ed help. I "Irem what the two men ut tlie, .nnu i Irtl.l mr. n win I i.... .1 I ...!..,. i,v.. iwi-i ... i. ...ii i h.,i tuui,-, i .iiiuii nines Htnyed sniuewhcm la the meuii- tains ier tne next (lay or two, mid that he came down for feed the night Heni died. . . i . . Must what he contributed te Henry u.'iiin j no inn. uiinw . ij.-iiry eu inene room, aim was leuuu in uc-u in another when the hands hud been taking the cattle te tne winter range, ami bed been nleni- in the beuse. "When I get theie the funeral wan ever. I read the letter he bud lett, nnd then 1 talked te the two hand., Hill Arclnry and Juke Mu.etti. They would net talk at llr-t, hut I showed them Henrv's record and then they were free enough. The autopsy had shown Henry had died fieni heart disease, hut he had a cut en his head also, and thev believed that Hines had come back, anil ipiarrelcd with him uguin, mid hud knocked him down. "As Henry lmd in a way handed ever le me his responsibility for the boy, nnd us I wanted te trim 'fer tin money, I waited for three weeks at the ranch, hoping he would turn up again. I saw the Thorwald woman, mt she protested that she did net knew where he wns. And I made two attempts te see and warn Jud Clark, but failed leth times. Then one night tlie Tlierwnld woman came in looking like a ghost, and admitted that Hlass had been hiding m ' . 1.& ,TV1 titfirt- fiH-ltiie KING both what I thought of them what's the matter. I've tried and tried. I thought that the child would inauu . . . . .... .. ,,,..,. things wen; out nil right, mu it iiiuii i. , She uhn t want children aim never ier- . 'gave me for persuading her te have .uuic-. .11 "; "-...... - - - i...iA .i .Mir iiiiip'irv ,iii i AInrle. tlmt u-:is inv fault. I was the one that encouraged her te read and go te the theatres. ,1 used te tell her he wasn t im.te.dntn. lh:it she eUL'ht te Wllke UP .j. . , .- and lmd out what as going en in the worm, miu sue nugm uj um nn.i uimh inuM"'. , , ''-''- POINT That nlpht c.iften lindie into Hene's il sli .mil found some let ters Irem l-.lihu ( l.nU that told the dmy tjlC IllOUtllllllls Mil! 1 ielirv 's denlh I lint h' insl led lie had l.ilhd him. and that li.iiili. il .In.l I'lin-l. r.... tl,,,, ,,,..1 c... si. .a hii ine rest ,,i i,ls timihl.M,, ,si, I, , -1 1-' Llllll) l(ll Wi airani n,. ..ui.i ,, i'-irk. The threi ei us, ti,c two ni-,, at th.. lanch.nnii mjsi'lf, lu'epiind te g into the uieuii- tains and hunt ler him, before In In eot snowed in. " 1 hen eniiie tin place, and I red "ting ni the Clark tlmt night in ii howling stnriii and hi lin-,1 ii I , .." l"'t Iti'" I (MWIIll , ".' ' -snii-u ter in tne c.-.uuiinutien. .Ill III.' l'l I CI1I" H.l LI...I. ... .... Hn'-'H L , 1IIIJ.I i ehI Itn lei'lll IV Is illimlni' 1. 1. .,, ii iiwaj. Hut I iili,v .. en Jiniiii- IllefW.ld out en ,i veranda he'il ,.u winking the Ikiiisc and I didn't need ,m vei'Mitien te ic'l me what she theu: All she said was; nn..!. i .... ii .1 i . sill nt 'Oil Sht lie (Udli t de it, inn t r in the mountains." He still "lies been here tonight, Hat He mil j ou knew il. He shot tin- wi, ,. i, an." Hut she swe.e In- b.-,,n', i ,i ... ,iie rim j ill I. mill I .... i 1'lrlit new i en I ,l,m'i i ,.; say , loe, that 1 helnne ihm L what happened, ami that lime, i rel Vbh -taji'il hidden that night , t , , OH ill . .i.. . ' lull, Il , iiierwuiii .s piai c. i w.-iil , next day, but IV and the she ilelil,. 1 it ..II Mini lie w. is Mill ill II, e meilll-.ii is. s;he ,..,.,.. in . . , .-ni., iiiriii'.i tin no. nil mi- ili.iu'il uinl ll.-llli: lieci'll ill OI'IUII III In. V think she was telling gun te I .till- tl III id what i "I lie next i,u . i K ndei feet uiimni.iiiu would iie. s, a, i.il p,,,, ,!, alone. Hill i ml .i, ... ,,.. out with a posse uftiT ('hm.. and I pinked up mine feed and Mm,. j' nut go into details of 'inn n.,, i went in fieni the Dry Itlver Cuin-ui and I gue.h I fa 1 duilli a de.eu time' tlie first day. I hud u map, hut 1 lest 111 self In sh hums, 'I hud feed und blankets mid mi a. along, und I built a shelter and stayed then- over ever night. I had te cut up one f ,. blankets the next morning an I tie u'n tlie horse's feet, se In- wouldn't sn tee dee I In the snow. Hut it si'ned cold und the snow luiidi-m-il, nnd 'w,. gut along better nfter that. "I'll haye turned back mine than once, hut I thought I'd nieet up wu some of the Sheriff's puil). I ilidii' de that, but I stumbled en a trail en tlie third day, towenl evening it was the trail iniulc by .m I,''m,)(l. son, as I learned later. I fellow ed It but 1 conclude, after a while that whoever made it wub lest, tee it seemed te iie. going In n circle. T wns in had shape and hnd frozen a part III ' 1111191 . 11 E&?wSmI iiimn i rs' "tr im i . t k a . va i IMBHBK5!2. - v- L Idea of what I've been through, net tg Idea. She tried te poison me once nnd here followed n nad recital of tht twists nnd turns nnd despcratldn of eni t who wished te be free. "And she wai In love with another man, only I could never find out who he was." And he gnve me details of certala mysterious goings te nnd fro, of secret pursuits en his part, of actions nnd evidences nnd moed'a nnd quarrels whlek ; pointed nil tee plainly te n breach that could never be healed. "And what is mere, she tortured mi, You'll never knew you couldn't. But I loved her. And I love her new." Once mere the tensely gripped fingeni the white .face, the flash' of haunted eyes. "Once I followed her te n restaurant when she said she win going te visit a friend, nnd she met n man. I followed them when they came out, ind when they wcre getting Inte n cab I told them both what I thought of them. J threatened te kill them, nnd then h went away when she told him te go. When we get home 1 couldn't de any. thing with her. All she would say wu that if I didn't like the way she wm doing I could let her go. She wanted ine te glve her n divorce. And I reuldn't let her go, even if I hnd wnntel te. I loved her tee much. Why, she would sit nnd read nnd Ignore me for dnys days, without ever a word." "Yes," I said, "but the felly of It nil. The uselcssness, the hopelessness." "Oh, I knew, but I couldn't help It, I was crazy nbeut her. The mere ah disliked me, the mere I loved her. I have walked the streets for hours, wheli daya nt n time, because I couldn't eit or sleep. And nil I could de was think, think, think. And that is about all i de new, really. I hnve never been mjr self since she left. It's almost as bad right new as it was two years age. I live in the old apartment, yes. Bnt why? Because I think she might come hack te me. I wnit nnd wait. I knew It'H foolish, but still I wait. Whv? !ied only knows. Oh," he sighed, "it's three years new three years.' -- ..----., .... TI.. 1 1 1 . .... .. . n, ." 'X " v fn SifS?i.1 , ":;;,""V '"-" , """ :": I out solution by any one. I wondered uhere f.he ivns. whether uhn ava imiiRin ui ,ihi ..,, miciuir una wi ....... . ... ... n.A. .i.i.n.a.Mu .... . : hiitniv in her new freedom. And lin without mere ado, he slipped en hii raincoat, took his umbrella and inarched nut Inte the ruin jienln t.. ivnll- ...I .-... ...... ...v ...... .......... ... nun, mil, think, I presume. And I. closing the uoer. stuiiieci me wails, wnnuenns. The (upmr. tut iKiien, tiic rnge, tue hope Can evil idcnlitrj be lest in geed? See hew this throbbing story of myntcry, regeneration and love selves these problems. of my right hand, when I saw a cabin, and there was smoke coming out of tlie chimney." l'rem thnt time en David's state ment dealt with the situutien in tin cabin ; with Jud Chirk and the Ponnld Pennld Ponnld sens, und with the snow storm, which began nnd lasted for dajs. lie spek at leic'th of his discovery of Clark's lentil, and or the fact that the dot mil lest nil memory of what lmd happened, and even of who he wns, lie went into tlmt in detail; the peculiar effect of fear and mental shock en a high-strung nature, especially when the phj hic-iil condition was lowered by excess and wreng'-livlng ; his early at tempt, ns the boy improved, te pierci the veil, nnd then ills slew-growing con viction that it were an act of mercy net te de se. The Donaldsons' faith- I fulness, tlie co.ssntleii of the search under the conviction that Clark wai dead, both were there, and also David'l growing liking for Judseii himself. Hut David's own psychology was ia tcrestlug and clearly put. "I'lrst of all," he dictated, ie hii careful old voice, "it must he remem bered that 1 was net certain thnt tht bev hud committed tin- crime. I be lieved, and I still believe, that I.c was shot by Cliften Hines, probably through nn open window. There wert . no powder marks en tlie body, i I believed, tee, and still b"llec, that I lines had lied after the crime, either I te lluttle Therwuld's house or te thl mountains. In one case he had escaped and could net be breugb' re justice, , and in the ether he wan dead, and be- , end, conviction. I "Hut there is another element which 1 li re.) tin! In iiiifi.tiLn lint tn fivnlnilll i,, Vi... .,,. i,u,','i'i,.i, ,,nu new .,,,, 1( v,.,tI, (m He ,, I1(1V(,r nnJ ,n i 11.. 1... I....1 . 1. ,.inial ,,.,. ,....!. i...'. '.'.'.' "'.'..' ,,.. . '.,:,.l. '"".'. """.". iim-ll ,11111 lilllf ivr'- His errors hnd been wined away '. ' l.lll. hj the less of his memory, and hj had. 1 felt, u chance for n new nnd useful life. J 1 did net come te 'I iuickly. It was a long my decision ft-'lit for Ids j life, for he hnd ceutrncled piieiuiiniil.ii and he had the drinker's heart. Hut In the long days of his cimvuk-eenWi , while Maggie worked III the lean-te. I had lime te see what might be done. If in making tin experiment with man's soul I usurped the authaiity of , my Lord and Master. I am sorry. Hut i he knows that I did it for the best. 1 "I (lelihoinleh built un fur Judsen i CI. til; u new Identity. He wns ray '"'I'hew. my brother Henry's son. IJ liilil l lie UilUIUOIls 111 llll iiiniiii.i"" faiuily ie carry en, und these n-uli' liens wen- honor, integrity, clean Hir ing and weilj. I did iml tres lvi for tlmt I felt must 'lie e.perii'liOP'li net talked about. Hut hue w.h t " I he foiindiitieu en which I built IM boy had had no love in his llie. "It hud worked out. 1 may "J live te see it at its fullest, but I defy tin- world tu produce tedn , a finer or meie honorable gentleman, n mere u ful ineiitlKT of the cemuiuult . And It "l'l Inst. Tim time may i nine y.MH ludseii Clark will again he JiuNeii nnrlf. I liu..,, I I f .,,- mils. IlUt . iiii. i- 1-ajii-i ,-, i, ,ni iiiuii.. ,. - , lie will never again In- the .I'liNim ' of ten jeurs iiue. Hi may even will te return 'te the old reckless' ), siitt W 1 lie here, perhaps never I i M'e hlnji i sii this: he caunet go lines. " character mid liablts of thought established. , ... "Te convict Judsen Clark of murder of Heward Lucas Is te cenrl" a probably or al least possibly innocent man. Te convict Hicliard l.lvlnW of thnt crime is te convict a diftereDj man, innocent of the crime, Innocent of its memory, Inneceiit of any ,Blnl impulse te lift his hand ngulmt law of fied or the Mate." ' Te be continued Monday r m i raife i,ai iliA ilMffi.'' t&