f HE FULTOJR COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. 3heWkL SYNOPSIS. 7 Kenneth OrlnwoM, an unmici-eiirful rtttr. Iier&ll-.w of Hoclulmtic tfhit'-tH'l.'H, uM up AnOr-w OiiltimUh, pr.-lili-ril of ll'tt ItavuU Statu 8tH-urltlcn, In tlif ili-nl--nl prlvum i.rllrn ami nufi with H0.- lit iiikIi, lly orltfnal mi-tlin.la hf t-n-tup-! the hui ami cry ami K"-" uliiui'l t'.H in-lln Jull.- h a klmml. Cli.u l.tt Varnham of Wuhnnki, Minn., who IihiI i-en l;un i-anh (iHlttraltli'M ch- k In tho Miik, ninU" Mm. Hnil ilriMtlfx to d?-uiTit- lum. Rft'ii the tirulul niutu u-1 from dr-iwulnif by irl-wlil. Hi l.ilk to Crum-iM ft nil i,y ht aihlrt Ht-ml letti-r if txtravMl to ; ul triil I h Hnuiiy- uu.y ;rt.-woli I hit tt-'l tn tin- ai i.vmI of the tx :it at St. Iu:, lint I' m liN f-uptnra. lit' ilr. nl-s mi VVn I ik;i. Minn., an a hMintc plii-, anl afu-r i. Mttlnlf liilui.-lf )ro( rly, lik.-s tli" fci i n. Muritrv tlre-rimn. ti.iiniht.-r of it-r ilnrrnon. the IliiiinHiil tiKiitntiO' of T 'f.k;i, Ntartt u amimU'n f .r m m -i nl t- . :tntion by tli "uM fminll. " of tin- i i. (irtxwoM f.illn III on lli- nl.-.-p-r -l iard for an. I takn to lo-r lionn V V ului.-ka by Marx-Ty. who t1n1-. tho o? niurirv In hi Mtiitfiiiov Hrotlln, it !v. taken tin trill. .M uiiiTy H.k i ' . ither to g.-t Klwari Khwii.t Into inani i il hot u.itcr aii'l tlooi lo-lti linn it of It. (irlHW.iiil r Vi-rs to tl II-1 the ftob-n nionny i;onv lit- iiif-tn MnrK-ry's hhI.i1 clri.-lo ari.i farm n fru-tnlhhlp with !'-anir, the Iron rnariufarlurrr. CHAPTER XIV. Continued. "Maurice, I've got to find that young omau If I have to cha.se her half way luund the globo, und it's tough luck to fgure out that If you hadu't been In ruch a blazing h 1 of a hurry to 4ft your supper that night, I might be Me to catch up with her In the next lorty -tight hours or so. Hut what's Vine is dune, and can't bo helped. Chase out and get your passenger fist for that trip. We ll take the om ti as they come, a.id when you've lelped me cull out the names of the sues you're sure It wasn't, I'll screw y nut and quit buzzing you." The clerk went below and returned slmost Immediately with the list. To gether they went over It carefully, and r dint of much memory-wringing Haurice was able to give the detec tive leave to cancel ten of the 17 lames In the women's list, the remain tag seven Including all the might have-It-ens who could possibly be fitted toto the clerk's recollection of the woman he had Been clinging to the mloon deck stanchion after her Inter view with the deckhand. It was while he was Halting for the Vparture of the first northbound trala that he planned the soan'h for the young woman, arranging the lames of the eveu might-have-beens ii the order of accessibility as indi- "I've Oot to Find That Young Woman If I Chase Her 'Round the Globe." fated by the addresses given in the telle Julie's register. In this arrunge rent Miss Charlotte Karnham's name tood as Xo. 1. Landing In Walinska the next eve ilng, Ilroll'iii's first request at the ho tel counter was for the directory. Run ting an eagor tinker down the "K's," le came to the name. It was the only Farnham In the list, and after It he read: "Dr. Herbert C, ofliee 8 to 10, t to 4, I!01 Main St., res. 16 Lake knulevard." Then he registered for a room and prepared to draw the net which he ioped would entangle the lost Iden tity of tho bank robber. After a good light's Bleep In a real bed, he awoke refreshed and alert, breakfasted with tn open mind, and presently went bout the net drawing methodically and with every contingency carefully jrovlded for. The first step was to assure hlin lelf b-;yond question that Miss Farn ham was the writer of the unsigned letter. This step he was able, by a fiece of grent good fortune, to take almost Immediately. A bit of morn ing gossip with the obliging clerk of the Winnebago house developed the lact that Doctor Farnham's daughter lind once taught In the free kinder jarten which was one of the chari table outreachlngs of the Wahaska public library. Two blocks east and one south; flrollln walked them promtitly. made hlmaelf knuwn to the librarian as a visitor interested In kin SPREADING GOSPEL OF CHEER tlfe Would Be More Pleasant for All of Ui If These Suggestions Were Lived Up To. The following paragraphs may be found over the writing desk in one of the transcontinental trains. There Is meat for thought In all of them. Tbcy ireach the goBpel of cheerfulness: Learn to laugh. A good laugh Is letter than medicine. A well told tory Is as "eioonie at a ray of iiiq- dergarten work, and was cheerfully bhown the records. When he turned to the pages signed "Charlotte Farn ham" the last doubt vanished and assurance was inude sure. The anony mous letter writer was found. It was Just here that Matthew Prof tin fell under the limitations of his trade. Though the detective In real life Is as little u may be like the Inspector lluckets and the Javerts of Action, cer tain characteristics persist. When he found himself face to face with the straightforward expedient, the craft limitations bound him. He thought of a dozen good reusons why he should make haste slowly; and he recognized In none of them the craftsman's slant toward Indirection-the tradition of the trade which discounts the straight forward attack and puts a premium upon the methods of the deer-stalker. Sooner or later, of course, the at tack must be made. Hut only an ap prentice, he told himself, would be foolish enough to make It without mapping out all the hazards of the ground over which It must he made. In a word, he must "place" Miss Farn ham precisely; muke a careful study of the young woman and her environ ment, to the end thut every thread of advantage should be In his hands when he should finally force her to a con fession. For by now the assumption that t-he knew the mysterious bank robber was no longer hypothetical In nrotrin'a mind" It had grown to the di mensions of a conviction. With the patient curiosity of his tribe he suffered no detail, however, trivial, to escape Its Jotting down. To familiarize himself with tho goings and comings of one young woman, he made the acquaintance of nn entire town. He knew Jasper Orlerson's am bition, and Its fruitage In the practical ownership of Wahaska. He knew that Edward Itamer had borrowed money from Grierson's bank and was likely to be unable to pay It when his notes fell due. He had heard It whispered that there had once been a love affair between young Kaymer and Miss Farn ham. und that it had been broken off by Haymer's Infatuation for Margery Crierson. Also, last and hast Impor tant of all the gossiping details, as It seemed at the time, he learned that the betw Itching Miss Crlerson was a creature of fads; that within the past month or two she had returned from a Florida trip, bringing with lur a sick man, a total etranger, who hud been picked up on the train, taken to the gnat house on the lake shore and nursed back to life as Miss Crierson's latest defiance of the conventions. It should have been a memorable day for Matthew Ilrofl'm when he had this hick man pointed out to him as M;sa Cri.Tson's companion in the high trap. Hut Drollin was sufficiently hu man to see only a very beautiful young woman sitting correctly erect on the slanting driving-seat. To be sure, he saw a man, as one sees a vanishing fig ure in a kaleidoscope. Hut there was nothing In the clean-shaven face of the gaunt, and as yet rather haggard, con valescent to evoke the faintest thrill of Interest or of memory. CHAPTER XV. In the Burglar-Proof. A week and a day after the opening pf new vistas ot Miss tirlerson's "eve ning." Criswold-rtaymer's interces sion with the Widow Ilulcomb having paved the way took a favorable op portunity of announcing his Intention of leaving Mertslde. It figured as a grateful disappointment to him one of the many she was constantly giving him- that Margf ry placd no obstacles In the way of the Intention. On the contrary, she approved the plan. 'i know how you feel," she said, nodding complete comprehension. "You want to have a place that you run call your own; a place whore you ran go and come as you please and settle down to work. Von are going to work, aren't you? on the book, I nn-nn?" Criswold replaced In Its proper nic he the volume he had been reading. It was Adam Smith's "Wealth of Na tions," and he had been wondering by what Ironical chance it hud found a place In the banker's library. "Yes; that Is what I mean to do he returned. "Hut it will have to be done in such scraps and parings of time as I can save from some bread-and-butter occupation. One must eat to live, you know." She was Fitting on the arm of one of the big library lounging-chalrs and looking up at him with a smile that was suspiciously innocent and child like. "You mean that you will have to work for your living?" sho asked "Exactly." "What were you thinking of doing?" "I don't know, he confessed. Again he surprised the lurking smile In the velvety eyes, but this time It was hnlf-mlschluvous. "We have a college here In Wahas ka, and you might get a placo on the faculty, she suggested; adding: "A an Instructor iu philosophy, for 'exam ple 'Philosophy? that Is the one thin rdilno In a sick room. Learn to keep your troubles to your self. Tha world Is not interested in them. Learn to stop croaking. If you can not see any good In the world, learn to keep the bad to yourself. Learn to hide your pains and your aches under pleasant unities. No one cares to know whether you have ear ache, headache or rheumatism. Don't cry. Tears do well enough In novels, but they are out of place In real life. Iu the world thut I know least about." "Oh, but 1 do mean It, honestly," Bhe averred. "You uro a philosopher, really and truly, and 1 can prove it. Do you feel equal to uuother little drive downtown?" "Uelng a philosopher, I ought to be equal to anything," he postulated; and he went upstairs to get a street coat and his hat. She had disappeared when he came down again, and he went out to alt on the sun-wurmed veranda while he wait ed. He had already forgotten what Bhe had said about the object of the drive the proving of the philosophic charge against him and was looking forward with keenly pleasurable an ticipations to another outing with her, the second for that day. It had come to this, now; to admitting frankly the charm which he was still calling sensu ous, and which, in the moments of in sight recurring, as often as they can be borne to the Imaginative, and vouchsafed now and then even to tho wayfaring, he was still disposed to characterize as an appeul to that which was leust worthy In him. Passing easily to Miss Farnham the Ideal from Miss Crlerson the llesh-and-blood reality, he was moved to won der mildly why the fate which had brought him twice Into critically Inti mate relations with her was now deny ing him even a chance meeting. For a week or more he had been going out dally; sometimes with Miss Orlerson In tho trap, but oftener afoot and illSlS T ft 'Open That Box cn the table, Please." alone. The walking excursions had led him most frequently up and down the lakeside drive, but the doctor's house stood well back in its enclosure, and there was much shrubbery. Once he heard her voice: she was reading aloud to someone on the vine-screened porch. And once again In passing, he had caught a glimpse of a shapely arm with the loose sleeve falling away from It as It was thrust upward through the porch greenery to pluck a bud from the crimson rambler, add ing Its graceful mass to the clamber ing vines. It was rather disappoint ing, but he was not impatient. In the fullness of time the destiny which had twice Intervened would intervene again. He was as certiSn of it as he was of the day-to-day renewal of his strength and vitality; and he could af ford to wait. For, whatever else might happen In a mutable world, neither an Ideal nor Its embodiment may suffer change. As If to add the touch of deflnlteness to tho presumptive conclusion, a voice broke In upou his reverie; the voice of the young woman whose most alluring charm was her many-sided changeful ness, as If she had marked his preoc cupied gaze and divined its object: "You must have a little more patience, Mr. Grlswold. All things come to him who waits. When you have left Mere sldo finally. Doctor Bertie will some time take you home to dinner with him." For his own peace of mind, Grls wold hastily assured himself that It was only the wildest of chance shots. Since the day when he had admitted that he knew Miss Farnham's name without knowing Miss Farnham In per son, the doctor's daughter had never been mentioned between them. "How did you happen to guesB that I was thinking of the good doctor?" he asked, curiously. "You were not thinking of Doctor Bertie; you were thinking of Doctor Bertie's 'only,' " was the laughing con tradiction; and Grlswold was glad that the coming of the man with the trap saved him from the necessity of fall ing any farther into what might easily prove to be a dangerous pitfall. It was not the first time that Miss Grierson had seemed able to read his inmost thoughts. The short afternoon drive paused at the curb In front of Jasper Grier son's bank and a moment later he found himself bringing up the rear of a procession of three, led by a young woman with a bunch of keys at her girdle "Number tJlree-forty-flv-A, please," his companion was saying to the young woman custodian, and he stood aside and admired the workmanship of the complicated time-locks while the two entered the electric-lighted safety de posit vault and Jointly opened one of the multitude of email safes. When Miss Grierson came out, sho was car rying a small, Japanned document box under her arm and her eyes were Bhlnlng with a soft light that was new to the man who was waiting in the corridor. "Come with itve to one of the coupon rooms," she Bald; and Learn to meet your friends with a smile. A good-humored man or wom an Is always welcome, but the dyspeptic and hypochondriac Is not wanted any where, and is a nuisance as well. Don't- bother others when they wish to work. Because you are a loafer you should not force others to become so. Perform ypur manicuring In your own boudoir, not in the street car, where there Is no escape for others. If you must pick your teeth, do not do so la public. then to the custodlau: "You needn't stuy; I'll ring when we want to be let out." Grlswold followed In mild bewilder ment when she turned aside to one of the little mahogany-lined cells set npurt for the use of the safe-holders, saw her press the button which switched the lights on, and mechani cally obeyed her signal to close the door. When their complete privacy was assured, she put the Japanned box on the tiny table and motioned him to one of the two chairs. "Do you know why I have brought you here?" she asked, when he was sitting within arm's-reach of the small black box. "How should 1?" he said. "Ton take me where you please, and when you please, and I ask no questions. I am too well content to be with you to care very much about the whys and wherefores." "Oh, how nicely you say It!" she commended, with the frank little laugh which he had come to know and to b ek to provoke. She wns standing against the opposite cell wall with her shoulders squared and her hands be hind her: the pose, whether Intention al or natural, was dramatically perfect and altogether bewitching. "I was born to be your fairy godmother, I think," she went on Joyously. "Tell me; when you bought your ticket to Wahaska that night In St. LouIb, were you meaning to come here to find work?" "No," be admitted; "I had money, then." "What became of It?" "I don't know. I suppose It was stolen front me on the train. It was In a package In one of my suitcases; and Doctor Farnham suld " "I know; also he told you that we didn't find any money?" "Ycb; he told me that, too. We agreed that somebody must have gone through the grips on the train." "So you Just let the money go?" "So I Just let it go." She was laughing again and the be dazzling eyes were dancing with de light. "I told you I was going to prove that you are a philosopher!" sha exulted. "Sour old Diogenes himself couldn't have been more superbly indifferent to the goods the gods provide. Open that box on the table, please." He did It hair-absently; at the first sight of the brown-paper packet with in, the electric bulb suspended over the table seemed to grow black and the mahogany walls of the tiny room to spin dizzily. Then, with a click that he fancied he could hear, the buz zing mental machinery stopped and reversed Itself. A cold sweat, clammy and sickening, started out on him when he realized that the reversal had made him once again the crafty, cor nered criminal, ready to fight or fly or to slay, If a life stood In the way of escape. Without knowing what he did, he closed the box and got upon his feet, eyeing her with a growing feroc ity that he could neither banish nor control. I see: you were a little beforehand with the doctor," he said, and he strove to say It naturally; to keep the malignant devil that was whispering In his ear from dictating tho tone as well as the words. I was, Indeed; Boveral days before hand." Bhe boasted, still Joyously ex ultant. You you opened the package?" he weut on, once more pushing the Im portunate devil aside. Naturally. How else would I have known that It was worth locking up?" Her coolness astounded him. If she knew the whole truth and the demon at his ear was assuring him that she must know it she must also know that she was confronting a great peril; the peril of one who voluntarily shuts himself Into a trap with the fear- maddened wild thing for which tho trap was baited and set. lie was steadying himself with a hand on the table when he said: "Well, you opened the package; what did you find out?" "What did I find out?" He heard her half-hesitant repetition of his query, and for one flitting Instant he made sure that he saw the fear of death In the wide-open eyes that were lifted to his. But the next instant the eyes were laughing at him, and she was going on confidently. "Of course, as soon as I untied the string I saw It was money a lot of money; and you can imagine that I tied It up again, quickly, and didn't lose any more time than I could help in putting It away In the safest place I could think ot. Every day Blnce you began to get well, I've been expecting you to Bay some thing about It; but as long as you wouldn't, I wouldn't." Slowly the blood came back Into tho saner channels, and the whispering demon at his ear grew less articulate. He took the necessary forward step and stood before her. And his answer was no answer at all. "Miss Grierson Margery are you telling me the truth? all of It?" he de manded, seeking to pinion the soul which lay beyond the deepest depth of the limpid eyes. Her laugh was as cheerful as a bird song. "Telling you the truth? How could you suspect me of such a thing! No, my good friend; no woman ever tells a man the whole truth when Bhe can help It. I didn't find your money, nnd I didn't lock It up In poppa's vault: 1 am merely playing a part In a deep and diabolical plot to-" Grlswold forgot that he was her poor bew'ficiary; forgot that she had taken him in as her guest; forgot, in the mad Joy of the reactionary moment, everything that he should have remom bered saw nothing, thought of noth ing save the (lushed race with Its glo rious eyes and tempting lips: the eyes and Hps or the duughter or men. Above all, lose no chance of giving pleasure. You will pass through this world but once. Any good thing, there fore, that you can do or any kindness that you can show any human being you had better do It now. Don't de fer or neglect It, for you will not pass this way again. Public Health Work. Although local public health organi zation In America Is over two hundred years old, It Is still the weakest part of our defense against disease, accord- She broke away from hltn hotly after he had taken the Hushed fnce be tween his hands and klssc-d her; broke iiway to drop Into tho chair at the other side of the tablo. hiding the flashing eyes and the burning cheeks and the quivering lips in the crook of a round arm which made room for It self on the narrow table by pushing the Japanned money-box off the oppo site edge. It was the normal Grlswold who picked up the box and put It on the other chair, gravely and methodically. Then he stood before her again with his back to the wall, waiting ror what every gentle drop or blood In his veins was telling him he richly deserved. His punishment was long In coming; so long that when he made sure she was crying, he began to Invite It "Say It," he suggested gently, "you needn't spare mo at all. The only ex cuse I could offer would only make the offense still greater." She looked up quickly and the dark eyes were swimming. But whether the tears w ere of anger or only of outraged generosity he could not tell; "Then there was an excuse?'1 she flashed up at him. "No," he denied, as one who finds the second thought the worthier; "there was no excuse." She had found a filmy bit or lace bordered linen at her belt and was rurtlvely wiping her lips with It. "I thought perhaps you might be able to to Invent one or some sort," she said, and her tone was as colorless as the gray skies or an autumn night-, full. And then, with a childlike appeal In the wonderful eyes: "I think you will have to help me a little out of your broader experience, you know. What ought I to do?" His reply came hot from the refining fire of self-abasement. "You should write me down ns one who wasn't worthy of your loving kind ness and compassion, Miss Grierson. Then you should call the custodian and turn me out." "But afterward," he persisted pathetically. "There must be an after ward." "I am leaving .Mereside this eve ning," he reminded her. "It will be for you to say whether Its doors shall ever open to me again." She took the thin safety-deposit key from her glove and laid It on the ta ble. "You have made me wish there hadn't been any money," Bhe lamented, with a sorrowful little catch In her voice that stabbed him like a knife. "I haven't so many friends that I can ar ford to lose them recklessly, Mr. Grls wold." "Damn the money!" he exploded; and the malediction came out of a full heart. Her fingers had found the bell-push and were pressing It When the cus todian opened the door, Miss Grierson was her polseful self again. "Number three-forty-fivc-A Is Mr. Kenneth Grlswold's box, now," she an nounced briefly. "Please register It In his name, and then help him to put it away and lock It up." Grisvvold went through the motions with the key-bearing young woman half-absently. Man like, he was ready to be fo.-civen und comforted; and there was at least oblivion In her charming little shudder as the custo dian shot the bolts of the gate to let them out. "Hr-r-r!" she shivered. "I can never stand here and look at the free people out there without fancying myself In a prison. It must be a dreudful thing to bo shut away behind bolts and bars, forgotten by everybody, and yet your self unable to forget. Do you ever have such foolish thoughts, Mr. Grls wold?" For one poignant Becond fear leaped alive again and he called hlmseir no bettor than a lost man. But tho eyes that were lifted to his were the eyes of a questioning child, so guilelessly In nocent that he Immediately suffered another relapse Into the pit of eelf-de-splslngs: "You have made me your prisoner, Miss Grierson," he said, speaking to his own thought rather than to her question. And when they reached the Bldewalk and the trup: "May I bid you good-by here and go to my own place?" "Of course not!" she protested. "Mr. Raymer Is coming to dinner tonight and he will drive you over to Mrs. Hoi comb's afterward, If you really think you must go." And for the first time In their com ings and goings she let him lift her to tho high driving-seat. CHAPTER XVI. Converging Roads. Matthew Brotlin had been two weeks and half or a third an unobtrusive spy upon the collective activities or the Wahaskan social group which includ ed the Farnhams before lie decided that nothing could bo gained by fur ther delay. Having his own private superstition about Friday, Broffin chose a Wednes day afternoon for his call at the house on the lake front. It was a resplen dent day of the early summer, which, In the Minnesota latitudes, springs, Mlnervaliko, full grown from the nod ding head of the wintry Jove of the North. In the doctor's front yard the grass waB vividly grefn, gladioli and Jonquils bordered tho path willi a bravery of color, and the buds of the clambering rose on the porch trellis were swelling to burst their cnlyxes. Uroflin turned In from the sidewalk and closed the gate noiselessly behind him. While he had been three doors away in the lake-fronting street, a Bmall pocket binocular had ansured him thut the young woman he was going to call upon was sitting In a porch rocker behind tha clumberlng rose, reading a book. Ing to Dr. J. W. Kerr of Washington, D. C, assistant surgeon general or the United States public health ser vice. In many rural districts no at tempt is made at health supervision, while In other places the compensation is so small as to make satisfactory public health work Impossible. These conditions, Doctor Kerr says, are largely due to lack of recognition b7 the public of the value of full-time, health officers to the community. Re cent advances In Maryland, New York and Massachusetts providing for She ha4 rlsir to meet III in by th time he lir.d mounted the nteps, and he knew that her first glunce was ap pralslve. He had confidently counted upon being mistaken for a strange pa tleut In search or the doctor, and be was not disappointed. "You are looking ror Doctor Farn ham?" she began. "He Is at bis of flee 201 Main street." llrollln was digging in bis pocket ror a card. "I know well enough where youi father's office Is, but you are the one I wanted to see," be said; and be gave her tho round-cornered card with Its blazonment of his name and em ploynienL He wa3 watching her narrowly when she read the name and Its underline, and the quick indrawlng of the breath and the little shudder that went wltb it were not thrown away upon blra. But the other signs; the pressing ot the even teeth upon the lower lip and the coming and going of three straight lines between the half-closed eyei were nut so ravorable. "Will you come Into the house. Mr." she had to look at the card again to get the name "Mr. llrollln?" she asked. "Thank you, miss; it's plenty good enough out here ror me If It Is ror you", he returned, beginning to rear that the common civilities were giv ing her time to get behind her de reuses. "I guess we can take It ror granted that you know what I want, Miss Farnham," he began abruptly, when be had shifted his clnlr to race her rocker. "Something like three months ago, or thereabouts, you went Into a bank In New Orleans to get a draft cashed. While you were at the pay ing tellers' window a robbery .was committed, and you saw it done and saw the man that did it. I've come to get you to tell me the man's name." "I have told it once, In a letter to Mr. Galbralth." Broffin nodded. "Yes; In a letter that you didn't sign. I've come all the way from New Orleans to get you to tell me his real name, Miss Farnham." "Why do you think I can tell you?" was the undisturbed query. "A lot of little things," said the de tective, who was slowly coming to his own in the matter of Belf-assurance. "In the first pluce, he spoke to you In the bank, and you answered him. Isn't that so?" She nodded again. "You know so much. It Is surprising that you don't know It all, Mr. Broflln," she coin mented. with gentle sarcasm. "The one thing I don't, know Is the thing you're goln' to tell me his real name," he insisted. "That's what I've come here for." In spite of her Inexperience, which. In Mr. Hroflin's field, was no less than total. Charlotte Farnham hud imagi nation, and with It a womanly zest for the matching of wits with a man "Damn the Money!" He Exploded. whose chief occupation was the meas urlug of his own wit against the subtle cleverness of criminals. Therefore she accepted the challenge. "I did my whole duty at the time. Mr. Brollin," Bhe demurred, with a touch of coldness in her voice. "If you were cureless enough to let him escape you at St. Louis, you shouldn't come to me. I might say very Justly that It was never any affair of mine." Matthew Broflln's gifts were subtle only in his dealings with other men; but he was Bhrewd enough to know that his last and best chance with a woman lay In an appeal t ber fears. " I don't know what made you write this letter, In the first place," he said, taking the well-thumbed paper from his coat pocket; "but I know well enough now why you didn't sign It. and why you didn't put the man's real name in It. You you and him fixed It up between you so that you could say to yourself afterwards what you've Just said to me that you'd done your duty. But you haven't finished doln' you duty yet. The law says" "1 know very well that the law says'," was her baining rejoinder; "I have taken the trouble, to find out sinco I came home. I am not hiding your criminal." Broffin was trying to galtv a little easo by tilting his chair. Hut the house wall was too close behind hltn. "people will say thut you are helpln' to hide hltn as long as you won't tell his real name what?" he grated. (TO BE CONTINUED.) i sanitary districts and reasonably paid health officers encourage the hope of better things In the future. In Doc tor Kerr's opinion physicians should not only advocate public health work, but should engage In It to a greater degree than heretofore. Had Heard Her. "Are you going to the muslcale at the Robinson's tonight?" "I don't know. Are they going to have music or Is Josephine going to iConditrtPd by the National Woman') Christian Temperance Union.) EFFEQTS OF BEER DRINKING. The political strength of liquor li furnished by the wine and beer drlnk srs. Whisky Interests may be better organized than the brewers and Inter fere more activoly In politics, but the votes which make possible the sale or Intoxicants are not furnished by whisky drinkers, who do not al ways vote aa they drink. The beer drlnkor gonerally will vote to protect his habit, bocause he Is far from con vinced or Its malignancy. From Edt torlal In Chicago Tribune. And that Is why tho W. C. T. U. and other temperance organizations are bringing to tho masses the truth about beer and Its malignant effocts upon the human organism. Concerninj thoso effocts the Life Extension Instl tuto says In a published statement: "One half of one quart or beer ii sufficient to distinctly Impair memory, lower Intellectual power and retard simple mental processes, such as the addition or slmplo figures. This nar cotic or deadening influence Is first exerted on the higher reasoning pow ers that control conduct, so that the lower activities of tho mind and nerv ous system are for a time released. The everyday, well-polsed, self-controlled man goes to sleep, as It were, and the primitive man temporarily wakes up. Eventually, the nervom system Is narcotized, and tho drinker becomes sleepy. Muscular efficiency Is at first Incroased a little, and then lowered, the total effoct being a lout of working power." A CORRECTION. Newspapers and magazines are con tinually publishing erroneous state ments with regard to the number of dry states. A leading weekly periodical publishes a prohibition map showing 17. Iowa Is omitted. A writer In one of the Juno magazines gives the num ber as 16, Iowa and Idaho both being counted among the wets. Up to Sep tember 21. 1914, there were nine pro hibition states. Since that time nine more have been added. The IS pro hibition states, In tbo order of their going dry, are: Maine 1351 Kansas 1S80 North Dukota 1S89 Georgia 1907 Oklahoma 1907 North Carolina 1908 Mississippi 1908 Tennessee 1909 West Vlrglna 1912 Virglna 19H Colorado 1914 Oregon 1911 Washington 1914 Arizona 1914 Arkansas 1915 Alabama 1915 Idaho 1915 Iowa 1915 PROHIBITION PROGRESS. (By JAME3 Minm.KTON. In WorU'i Work.) About two years ago Mr. William Jennings Bryan gave a diplomatic din ner in Washington, distinguished par tlcularly by the absence of wine. Im mediately the world burst Into a roar of luughter; Europeans, especially, hailed the proceeding as an amusing Illustration of American provincialism. A few months ago the king of England announced that he would himself ab stain from alcoholic drinks ror the rest or the war, and that wines would no longer be served In any or the royal households. Nine American statei have adopted -prohibition in the last eight months. France has legally for bidden the manufacture and sale of absinthe, and the Russian empire U "dryer" at the present moment than Kansas or Maine ever were. Facti like these testify to the progress that the cause or antlalcohollsm has made In less than a year. When the leader or the most sophisticated society l Europe follows the example of out own somewhat homespun secretary of state, the cause of tcetotallsm bai ceased to be ridiculous. THE SOCIALIST VIEW. The special committee appointed or the Socialists a year ugo to atudy the liquor problem says In Its report, P' sentcd Mny 13 to the natlonul commit tee In Chicago that "total abstinence Is the only absolutely safe -and wise course to pursue" In view of the dis astrous effocts of excessive drinking- ' Many .of tho authorities quoted In the report in coudemnntlon or beef are German. Among alcohol's recorded opponents are SOO German and Aus trian doctors. One statement Is that "beer Is not the harmless bevcrags many or the German people think 1' is." "The Socialist party," declares the report, "cannot remain Indifferent w Inactive, but should take a definite po sition and activev part Iu combatlnf- the evils of alcoholism." ILLINOIS GOING DftY. ' Illinois had twenty-eight Frohll,i' tlon counties when the women eIt asked to assist In destroying the sa loon by their votes. They respond by driving them out of twenty-three additional comities nt the first tlon. FcJur more counties wore md dry this year, making a total of five. Reventv enimtv Rpntfl are dfJ' 1,234 out of 1,430 townships In state have outlawed the faloon. one foot of dry territory has changed to wet during the two 'M" from May 1, 1013, to May 1.' SOLDIERS DENIED LIQUOR. Pilraitant in n nv.ln laulicd 07 Colonel Arthur ft Donnelly, the members of the First regiment, tlonal Guard of Missouri, find the selves aboard the water wagon. TJ order prohibits the use of Hiu"" w every officer and every private. PAY BONDED INDEBTEDNESS. Bedford county, Pennsylvania. i i i . . frnnl I reason 01 Having oeeu ueo i.- saloons ror some time, has boen abled to make the final paJ'016"' its bonded Indebtedness of JS.00l.