The Plotters A New Serial of East and West Br Virginia Tfrkait Vnn de Water CHAPTER xxvn Elizabeth was so astounded by Clifford Chapin's question that she did not reply immediately. When she did, it was slowly, as if feeling her way. "Why, yes—if there is anything especial you want to talk about. But as this is your last evening with your mother, I dislike to take you from her." "Oh. that's all right," Mrs. Chapin assured her. The parent began to fear that Clifford was in a bad humor, and she dreaded crossing him. She had al ways let him have everything he wanted, and the habit of years was strong. "I will detain you only a few min utes," Clifford said to Elizabeth. "Will you walk down to the gate with me?" Mutely, she arose and joined htm at the top of the steps. Here she paused and glanced back. "I will be gone only a few min utes, dear people," she remarked with a little laugh. "All this sounds ■very mysterious, doesn't it?" In the dim light, her eyes sought Butler's, and he smiled at her. "We'll be waiting for you," he said quietly. Clifford was silent until he and his companion were out of earshot of the group on the veranda. "I just wanted to tell you," he announced then, "that I know who you are." The girl at his side made no re sponse. It was too dark for hint to see that she pressed her hands tightly together. She must keep her senses about her and not let her temper get the better of her dis cretion. When the gate was reached. Clif ford spoke again. "Suppose we go down the road a little way. We can talk better there." "I prefer to remain here," Eliza beth answered quietly. "We can talk quite as well standing as walking." A Blunt Attack Her equanimity surprised the man. It also irritated him. He had an ticipated an appeal for mercy. "Perhaps." he said bluntly, "you do not understand what I meant just now. I know you are not Lizzie Moore. You are no cousin of mine." "I certainly am not," she admit ted with unflattering promptness. "Then why did you pretend to be?" he demanded. "For reasons that are good and Vj'flivient to myself." she told him. but which I am under no obliga tions to explain." "Is that so?" he speered. "Well, you don't need to make any expla nations. I know who sent you here." How long have you known?" she asked. There was no curiosity in her manner. She behaved as if his reply concerned her very little. "I suspected you from the first," Clifford Chapin burst forth. *But i I knew to-day, as soon as I saw that letter, who sent you here." "I noticed that you were studying the address with much interest." she observed coolly. "I noticed it par -- \ FOR CORNS ■ I WJa 9g m BUNIONS CALLUSES Immediate Relief —25 cents GOKGAS DRUG STORES : J For Enameled Furniture Kemoves dirt. stain* and murks from enameled furni ture, baby curriuges, metal beds, plate glass, mirrors, etc. Manufactured and sold by Hoover Furniture Co. 1415-19 NORTH SECOND ST. The Finest Kind Of Dry Cleaning Done Here IT) That means everything to the [rjjj man or woman who has fine zlothes. You need not hesitate to send us your very finest garments. : We will clean them and make them as bright and fresh as when new and not injure the fabric in the least. We Will Call For ] And Deliver All Work MONDAY EVENING, • % Bringing Up Father *—* Copyright, 1918, International News Service *— * *-* *- * By McManus —, I i wish rc [ I F L - t il llr^r ij . -ou,§ , o H |T vi< —. >x\Jt f •*#.r^-,F factory: hf akj"G tlcularlv, because the men in my class do not do that kind of thins. It is not considered good form." She was intensely angry, yet her tone was so calm that it exasperated the listener. "The men in your class!" he snorted. "Perhaps you think I am not aware who they are." "You could hardly have met them," she reminded him. "Well," he spluttered. "I know who one of them is—and that's the one who sent you hefe. Douglas Wade sent you and pays your ex penses." "That is his privilpge," she re joined. Her unruffled demeanor took away his breath. "You admit it!" he exclaimed "You have the shamelessness to ac knowledge it!" "I see no shamelessness in it," she affirmed. "This farm belongs to Dr. Wade, please remember." Clifford Thinks Again Her reminder checked the torrent of words that came to his lips. Did the girl suspect his father's scheme? Was she warning him that it would be unsafe just now to cross Wade? Did Wade have more money than Amos fancied? If not. how could he pay this girl's expenses? What was the game anyway? "If you have nothing more to talk about I will return to the house." Elizabeth said. "But." slowly, "since you know the truth, I would suggest that you be careful how you use it. You may have Dr. Wade to reckon with—and when he pays a score he pays it thoroughly. My disinterested advice to you would be to keep your lips tightly closed un til you understand just how matters are. More depends upon it than you realize." Turning sharply, she went on up the walk alone. She was so angry that she could not trust her voice to say more. This cad had had the audacity to intimate that her brother had no right to send her out here to a farm that, he owned. She was also per plexed at Clifford's attitude. How dared he resent her brother's ac tion? It was all too much of a puzzle for her to understand. This fellow would soon be gone. He would hardly have an opportunity to speak alone with Butler within the next hour or two before his departure for Midland. She must try to arrange that no opportunity offered itself for a tete-a-tete between the men. Upset and indignant as she was she must remain on the veranda until the son of the house took his departure. John Butler arose at her ap proach and pushed forward a chair for her. "Sit down." he said gently. "We are glad you returned so soon." She could scarcely speak as she listened eagerly to his kind words and refined intonations. How pleas ant it was to be in his protecting presence! (To Be Continued) THE KAISER AS I KNEW HIM FOR FOURTEEN YEARS By ARTHUR N. DAVIS, D. D. S. (Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) (Continued) It was because the Kaiser's un derlying purpose was to some extent frustrated when Harvard sent Prof. Muensterberg, a German, to Ber lin to occupy the Harvard chair, that that well-known psychologist was so badly received. It was noted by the newspaper correspond ents at the time that the Kaiser conversed fully half an hour with Prof. Smith, of the University of Virginia, who occupied the Roose velt Chair, but that he devoted only five minutes to Muensterberg. What was the sense of wasting time and effort on a German? The object was to Germanize Americans. The report that although the Kai ser attended Muensterberg's lecture, he paid very little attention to the lecturer, brought a spirited rejoinder from the professor in question. He declared that it was quite untrue that' the Kaiser had slighted him tn any way. On the contrary, he in sisted. the Kaiser had been a most interested listener and had been seen, indeed, to nod his assent sev eral times in the course of the lec ture —which led an American for eign correspondent to comment that "not only was the Kaiser seen to nod at Muensterberg's lecture: he was likewise observed to yawn!" Some time before the Kaiser con ceived the scheme of the exchange professors, he sent his brother. Prince Henry, to this country to draw the two nations closer together and to instill in the heart of every child born in America of German parents an abiding love for the Fatherland. Just before the war broke out, he was planning to send one of his sons here with the same object. He told me of his project and asked me to which part of the United States I thought he ought to send the Prince. '"That depends, your Majesty'" I replied, "upon the object of the visit. If the purpose is to meet American society, I -would recom mend such places as Newport in summer and Palm Beach in winter. To come in contact with our states men and diplomats. Washington would naturally be the most likely place to visit." The Kaiser thanked me for the information, but did not enter into further details as to the object he had in mind or which son he had planned to send across. # It was to curry favor with Amer icans that the Kaiser had his yacht Meteor built in our shipyards, and it is a fact that more American women were presented at the Ger man court than those of any other nation. When he presented a statue of Frederick the Great to this country, in McKirUey's administration, it Daily Dot Puzzle 12 • " II 13 14 lo *.5 • if 9 • 4 ' *'B 8 7 ' *? * s . V l ?*' 7 3 " "V •€> * . ? • 45 * *25 J, 43 45 •• •41 • * IB 27 4. 3o 34 . 4o 32 •S3 - • S3 33 K Next Piffle says to trace these dots. And you'll see his Uncle Watts. Draw one to two and so on to th end. fiCOUUSBURG ly '.WfICAPg created a great stir in Congress. | What could be less appropriate, it j was argued, than the statue of a j monarch in the capital of a repub- | lie? The statue was not accepted' in McKinley's administration, but j Roosevelt accepted it in the interest j of diplomacy and had it erected in j front of the Army Building. Seeing that his gift had had just' the opposite effect to that intended, the Kaiser reprimanded his ambas- | sador for not having interpreted ■ American sentiment more accu i ately. * A few days after the death of 1 King Edward. Robsevelt arrived in ! Berlin. Despite the fact that all j Europe was in mourning, the Kaiser j arranged the most elaborate mill- j tary dress review ever given in honor of a private citizen to cele- | brate Roosevelt's visit The review was held in the large military res- j ervation near Berlin. More than 100.000 soldiers passed In review! before the Kaiser and his staff and j their honored guest. How far the Kaiser would have | gone in his attentions to Roosevelt had he not been in mourning it is ( impossible to say, but I don't be- j lteve he would have left anything | undone to show his admiration for i the American ex-president, and to curry favor with this country But Roosevelt was not only | American to whom the Kaiser made 1 overtures. He was constantly inv'.t- j ing American millionaires to pay l him yachting visits at Kiel or whtr- j ever else he happened to be He sat for a portrait by an Amer- | ican painter, which was exhibited j with a large collection of other j American works under the Kaiser's j auspices. There was nothing that the Kaiser did not do in his efforts to ingrati- I ate himself with this country in the ! hope that he would reap his reward! when the great war he was antici- | pating eventually broke out. Taken individually, these various j incidents seem trivial enough, i but I have every reason to | know that the Kaiser attached con- ! siderable importance to them. I I know that there was a good deal of! chagrin in the tirades he delivered! to me against America for her part j in,supplying munitions to the allies) —chagrin at the thought that the | seed he had sown in America had< failed to bring forth better fruit, i When we finally entered the war' ©MAKING THE MOST OF ~ OUR CHILDREN \J A Series of Plain Talks to \ foffm )By Ray C Beery, A.8., MJL President of the Parents Association, No. 8. Should Children Be Allowed to Quarrel? (Copyrighted, 1918, by The Parents Association, Inc.) YOU may think quarreling is necessary among children. You may even, if you are quite de tached and much in need of enter tainment. enjoy seeing a good chil dren's quarrel, Just as some persons enjoy a cock fight, or a bull fight. But If you are a wise parent you will know that quarreling only tends to make children selfish and unreason able and should*therefore be discour aged at every opportunity. "What can I do to stoiy my ten year-old daughter and my twelve year-old son from quarelling? They are at it continually." , Sometime, just after you have plan ned a little trip with your daughter, or when she is in good spirits, speak very confidentially to her and ask a favor of her in this manner: "I want you to help me with brother. He has been developing a temper lately and I want to help him to con trol himself. Sometimes I catch my self saying things to him which make him angry and I am going to try to watch myself more closely. And I want ybu to help me, too. Let us I both be careful not to say anything to him that will make him lose his temper. Will you help me as much as you can?— All right. I know we can help him overcome his temper If we do this for a while. Of course, neither of us will tell him that we have this arranged, but we will carry out the plan." After you get your daughter to agree to co-operate with you in this way, your problem will be largely solved. If you find It necessary, yt>p and he realized that all his carefully nurtured plans of years had availed him naught, he could not restrain his bitterness nor conceal his dis appointment "All my efforts to show my friend ship for America —exchanging pro lessors with your colleges, sending my brother to your country, all— all for nothing!" he exclaimed dis gustedly, after we had entered the war. On another occasion he showed even more clearly how far America had fallen short of his expectations: [ "What has become of those rich Americans who used to visit me with their yachts at Kiel and come to my entertainments in Berlin?" he asked, sarcastcally. "Now that we have England involved, why aren't they utilizing the opportunity to serve and to make their own country great? Do they think I put myself out to entertain them because I loved them? I am dis gusted with the whole Anglo-Saxon race!" The Kaiser couldn't understand Why the United States did not seizo :>oth Canada and Mexico. Appar ently, from the way he talked from time to time, it he had been sitting in the White House he would have grabbed the entire Western Hemi sphere. That the Kaiser followed Ameri can politics very closely, especially after the war broke out. was very natural. The fact that there was a great German-American vote In this country wis not overlooked in rotsdam, and I haven't the slight est doubt the Kaiser imagined that he could exert considerable Influ ence on our elections through his emissaries in this country. I know that in 1916, after Hughes had been nominated for the presidency, the Kaiser spoke to me several times about his candi dacy. I got the impression that in Hughes the Kaiser thought he saw a chance, perhaps, for a more favor able attitude towards Germany tnan this country had displayed under Wilson, and that his early intention was to throw whatever influence he possessed in America into the scale in Hughes' favor. I returned to Berlin late in Oc tober of that year. Within a day or two after my arrival I received a telephone message from the Reichskanzler von Bethmann-Hcll -1 weg to the effect that the Kaiser can deal with the boy In a similar way. After you have snown him some special consideration, get him to co operate with you in treating his sister kindly. Whenever you see any indication that a quarrel might start, quickly "nip It in the bud" if you can. That is. say something—no matter what — just so it is something to divert their minds. For example, you might ask one of the children a question or call their attention to something which will take their thoughts away from quarreling. Children quarrel only when they have time for it. Therefore, keep your children busy with whatever is of interest to them. Furnish the boy with hammer and nails to make some flower boxes for you and then ap prove the workmanship. Likewise, furnish the girl with materials for whatever work you will be in teresting to her. Too often, when children start to quarrel, we hear the parents say something like this: Children, chil dren, when will you ever learn to play together? I never saw such children for quarreling in my life! Now, Robert, hand that over to Esther at once and don't bother me again." ,Such remarks, If they have any ef fect at all, actually make the habit worse, through suggestion. The proper method is that describ ed because it is based upon confi dence. You co-operate with the child and get the child actually to exert self-control In order to help the other child. had sent him word of my return j and that he would like me to call. at his palace either that noon or | at 4 p. m. I told him that 4 p. m. would be more agreeable to me. That noon, however, the president of the min istry of Vienna was assassinated and the Reichskanzler called me up again and stated that owing to cer tain developments since morning, he tyould be too much engaged to keep the appointment he had made with me and asked me to make it 10.30 the following morning, which was Sunday. The next morning, accordingly. I called at the Reichskanzler's palace on Wilhelmstrasse, wondering very much what it was they wanted of me. I was ushered into a very large room in the corner of which was a business-like looking flat-topped desk but which was otherwise eian orately furnished. The Reichskanz ler, a tall, broad-shouldered, hand some specimen of a man. came over to me. and putting his arm' in mine, walked me to a seat beside the desk. He asked me what I would smoke, and upon my taking a cigaret, he did likewise. "The Kaiser's been telling me. Doctor,"' he said, "of your recent' \isit to America, and I would like to ask you a few questions." I said that I was always glad to talk of America. Indeed, I was particularly glad of the opportunity to speak with the Prime Minister of Germany at that time. Then followed a bewildering suc cession of questions, the purpose of which was not at all clear to me. We had a peculiar conversation— half in German, half in English. The Reichskanzler did not speak English particularly jvell. "How are things in America?" he asked. "Did you have any op portunity to gauge the political sit uation? Who do you think will be the next president? Do you think that Americans are opposed to peace because that would end their chance to make money out of the war? Are your people so mercenary that they would like to se the war prolonged for the sake of the money they can make out of it?" "No, your Excellency." I replied, "you are quite wrong if you imagine that my countrymen would like to prolong the war for the sake of war profits. That is very far from being the case. On the contrary, the country at large is anxious for peace." "Don't forget your people are mak ing a lot of money out of this, war," the Reichshanzel persisted. "They are becoming very rich. They will soon have all the gold in the world. Putting an end to the war would to a great extent end American oppor tunities for making money on this enormous scale." "That may all be true." I replied, "but fortunately my countrymen think more of the blessings of peace and liberty than they do of war and profits, and the sooner peace can be brought about on a basis which will have some assurance of permanency the better we will like it." He switched the subject. He asked me how I had been treated in America in view of the fact thai I had come from Germany "It made a difference, your Ex cellency," I replied, "when I first arrived in port. That is to say, I was examined more thoroughly by the officials than I had even been before. It was considerable of an ordeal they put me through before they established to their own satis faction that I was not a *py, but when it was all over I felt rather glad to fc-el that my country was so keenly alive to the fact that the greatest precautions were neces sary" "Wilson has the greatest oppor tunity ever presented to a man to make his name immortal —by bring ing about peace in the world," he w-cnt on. "We feel now that he is not our friend, but friendly to the allies; but. nevertheless, he may be able to see that if this war is pro longed indefinitely, it will mean the destruction of all the nations in volved in it. Do you think there is any possibility of America entering the war?" "That, of course, will depend, > our Excellency." I answered, "upon developments. I dtfn't believe my country is anxious to fight, but I'm quite sure that nothing in the world will keep us out of it if our rights as a neutral nation are not re spected." "V.'e certainly don't like the way Mr. Hughes has been talking on the stump," declared the ReichskaAzler. "Did you hear any of his speeches or any of Wilson's?" I said I had had no opportunity |to hear any of the campaign speeches, but that I had followed tncm in the newspapers. | "Well, did you gather from what you read that the American people want to see peace in Europe or do they want the war to go on so they can continue to make fortunes out of it?" Again I replied that 1 was certain our country would never be influ enced by such sordid consideration* a* were implied in the Reichskan y.U'.r'a question, but -.hat U the right kind of peace , could i>e brought about, the whole ccit.Uy would eg; braee It. "(To Be OontbrnM.) AUGUST 19, 1918. How to Conserve Canning and Packing For Win ter's Use Explained in Detail by National War Garden Experts. CANNING TOMATOES Select fresh, ripe, firm tomatoes. Grade for size, ripeness and quality. They will cook better if the same de gree of ripeness apt! quality, and will look better. Wash, scald one-half to one and one-half minutes or until the skins loosen, but do not break. Scald means to immerse in boiling water. Cold dip, but do not allow them to remain in the cold water. Cut out the stem end. taking care not to cut into the seed cells or the seed and pulp will later be scattered through the liquid. Remove the skins. Send for the free canning manual which the National War Garden Commis sion. Washington, will send to you upon request for a 2-cent stamp to cover postage. Pack the tomatoes whole in the jars, doing one jar from the begin ning to placing in sterilizer, before starting on another. Shake down well, hitting the base of jar with palm of hand, and also press with a table spoon, but avoid crushing. Do not add water. Hot tomato pulp may be added, otherwise add no liquid whatever. Tomatoes are an exception to the general rule of hot water for vegetables and hot water or hot syrup for fruits. A large part of the tomato is water. It is not neces sary to add anything but one level SBfl fIBHaSaS Resinol does wonders for sick skins A skin that is rough, reddened, blotched or disfigured by eczema, sore spots, or other eruptions, needs at tention. Let Resinol Ointment help you to get rid of these annoying, unsightly affections of the skin. Yes; S. S. S. Is Purely Vegetable Nature's Safe Blood Treatmen' Known for 50 Years as the Best Remedy for Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula. 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