mind. He had just left the laboratory where one of those little accidents that:all chemists become acquainted with spoiled about two day's work and damaged some valuable apparatus. Unfortunate ly Mr. Johns the trainer was also irritated from overwork and the tremendous strain and anxiety that the fast approaching event had put upon him. It was like rubbing two match heads together and the consequence was a flare up. Hammer confident of himself thought he could ease up on hts hard work from now till the end of the week, but the trainer had other ideas and ordered •him to do a mile on time before he left the track for the day. This Jack refused to do, words followed, and the result was that he left the track shaking the dust from his feet and that night celebrated the fact of his breaking training by a grand treat to ice cream for a small coterie of friends. It was Tuesday afternoon just before supper that the conversation with which the story opens took place. Sufficient time had elapsed for some of the anger to cool down and Harry Keene who had been watching his chance, started to argue with .his chum and show him the foolishness of his posi tion: It was a fruitless task, and instead of listen ing to common sense Jack flared up again and stalked off to his room as we have seen. At the supper table he was very uncommunicative though the boys studiously avoided any talk that might irritate him • further. Without joining in the usual post prandial loaf on the veranda which had become a custom fixed as the laws of the Medes and Persians at the chapter house, he trudged upstairs and locking his own door tried to absorb himself in the next days recitations.- But it was of no use; the reactions of the Besse• mer converter become more mixed up and tangled the more he studied, while PV=RT was a "will o'the wisp" that danced before him and led him through such mathematical swamps and bogs that he tossed the book into the corner. To tell the - truth, he was beginning to feel that after all his course might have been the least bit foolish and for the sake-of the 'Varsity he really felt sorry THE FREE LANCE. that he had acted the way he did. It was con science starting to bring the prodigal back. Yet he would almost die rather than yield now that he had resisted so long. Finding study impossi ble, he began to dress feverishly and in about fif teen minutes he was off down street to the other end of town in search of consolation. Now this consolation was of a peculiar kind. It was alive and furthermore a human being, or to be more plain it was pretty Miss Carrie Archibald the daughter of Dr. Archibald, one of the promi nent physicians of the town. Ever since the Fall term of his Freshman year when that sweet face and those soft dark eyes had been among the few that did not look down upon his verdancy; there had been a warm friendship between them which had developed on the one hand into *a love deep, strong and inspiring and. on the other, what ? That was the question Jack asked' himself as he walked, but even that could not drive away the unrest under which he'was laboring. "Yes. Miss Archibald is home this evening. She is in the library. Won't you just step in there." Jack push%.d aside the portieres, and the one that was all the world to him rose radiant and smiling to greet him. "It was so good of you to conic this evening, Jack—Mr. Hammer. I felt lonely and needed company, and then do you know I heard some thing to-day about you that I didn't believe at all, Madge Graham told me that it was all over•town you were not going to •run on Saturday, but I said that it wasn't true and was not going ..to have her say things like that about my friends." She looked up at him as they were standing 'there just inside the curtains with such a trusting, Con fident air that a pang of almost physical pain shot through him and his brain seemed to swim, waver and almosi resolve to - apologize to Mr. Johns, but then his pride rose up•ciild and strong and choked him back into submission; Olcourse she noticed the rapid . 'change of countenance and the hard, • forbidding look that settled on his face.•• "Why what's the matter," she said' laughingly...