fHE FULTOU COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURQ, PA. FPANCIS LYNDE iHI5MIO5-CDPnOIt5 . 8YNOPSI3. 10 Knneth (IrlawuM, nn unmiei-r fill writer K-cnunn uI h.iclallHtlc l iidt iuii, hil. up Aniln-w ;u Ilinti i )i. n.idnt tit the Hhhiii Male ti urltli'H. hi Hie pival ffeiit'H private otlicu Hint i-araR- with $!. w In cu.sli. Ht Knell iibiuirii the h'-llu Julie n u deckhand. I'lini tutu I'linihurn f WahiiAk. Minn., who had bi-imi hltn rnah (iullinuth'a cluck III tlie lianlt. ri-c-i:nl-s him, mill nuntla a letter of bo. lrnvu.1 in i iall.niilh iinnny monly. lirls- old la urri'Med nt St. Luuta, but nrui' from IiIh i.ii.luii lie d-cldi-a on Wu hank. M I int., an u hiding placi', nnd takea th train, II falls III un the sleetr ltd la cur'U for and taken to tier home In (thaaka by .M.irRery liririson. ilauKhier rf Jawper lillerHi.n, the llnanrlal niaijliate f VVulmska. Margery IIihIk the BU'lin winnev In Orlawold'a auilraae. Hruflln. Viwtlva, takea the trail. Margery ak her father lo get Edward Itaymer Itilo fiiimiiiil hut water and then help him out f It. Itrtnwolil reeovera to llnd the stolen Binney gun. He furilla it frlelliUhlp Willi Hnyin.-r. the Iron nianulai tuier. Itrofiln omen to Wahoxka, In aeari h of tile woln ii who wrote the um.nyrnuu letter to alhri,lth. Mnricery takea tirNwuld to t aafeiy deposit vault and turns tho uilen money over lo him. Charlotte hliifT out Urnftln and Margery lgln to watch him. (JrlHWolil puta hi money In Itay itier'a plant nnd eoniineiu-ea to rewrite his book, liilnwohl In not sure that Charlotte "i a not reroitnU.-d hmi. He ii,-h .Mar ery und Charlntte 111 ino,e: for i In character In hi hook an, I ieaH the mariu, i.pt to tliern. Uroilln spies on Margery, who throws linn off tlio I ent "girding Orl.nvold. CHAPTER XX Continued. "And that was when you began to uspoct?" queried KuymtT. "That was when the suspicion he an to torture me. I fought It; oh. you don't know how hard I fought It! There be was. lying sick and helpless: utterly unable to do a thing or Bay a word In his own defense; and yet, If he were the robber, of course, we hould have to give him up. It was terrible!" "I should say so," was Raynier's ympathetic comment. "How did you let It straightened out, at last?" "It hann't been altogether straight ened out until Just lately within the past few days," she went on gravely. "After lie began to get well, I made him talk to me about himself, you kti'w. There didn't seem to be any thing to conceal. At different times he told me all about his home, ami bis mother, whom he barely remembers, and the big-hearted, open-handed fa ther who made money so easily In his profession he was the Criswold. the great architect, you know that he gave It to anybody who wanted It but I suppose he has told you all this?" "No; at least, not very much of It ' Mlsa Grierson went on smoothly, falling sympathetically Into the reiul iscent vein. , "Kenneth went to college without ever having known what It is to lack anything in reason that money could kuy. A little while after he was gradu ated his father died." "Leaving Kenneth poor, 1 suppose; he nas Intimated as much to me, once or twice," said Raymer. "Leaving him awfully poor. He wanted to learn to write, and for a long rime he stayed on In New York, living just any old way, and having a dreadfully hard time of It, I Imagine, though he would never say much bout that part of It. That Is why he thinks he Is a socialist. At last I felt that I Just must know, at whatever cost. One day when we were driving, 1 brought him here and and intro duced him to Mr. Galbralth. I was so oared that I could taste it but I did it!" Raymer lauched. "Of course noth ing came of it?" "Nothing at all. And then, right out of a clear sky, came anot! r proof that was even more convincing. Do you happen to know who the young woman was who discovered the bank robber on the steamboat?" "I? How should I know?" "I didn't know but she had told you," was the demure rejoinder. "It was Charlotte Farnham." "What!" ejaculated Raymer. Hut he was not more deeply moved than whs the man behind tho window cur tains. If lirollln's dead cigar had not been already reduced to shapeless in utility. Miss Grlerson's cool announce ment, carrying with it the assurance that his secret was no secret, would have settled it. "It's so," she was adding calmly. "I found out. How do I know? Ilecause her father bought the draft at poppa's batik, and lu the course of time It tame back with the liayou State Se curity's dated paying stamp on It. See bow easy it was!" Kaymer's laugh was not altogether mirthful. "You are a witch." he said. "Is there anything you don't know?" "Not very many things that I really Deed to know." was the mildly boast ful retort. "But you see, now, bow foolish my suspicions were." Raymer nodded. Though he would not have admitted it under torture, the entire matter figured somewhat as a mountain constructed out of a rather mall molehill to a man for whom the ubtleties lay In a region unexplored. He wondered that the clear-minded little "social climber," as his sister called her, had ever bothered her nimble brain about such an abstruse avnd far-fetched question of Identities. "You said, a few minutes ago, that Criswold calls himself a socialist. That FISH ALMOST A CLEAR WHITE ttamirkable Specimens of Albino Trout That Ar Of Exhibition In Nw York Aquarium. Among the Interesting exhibits t tht New York aquarium la a collection of albino trout These creatures, which ar all of clear r.-eam white. Including their fins, with no color about them except that of tbelr char acteristic bright ruby-red eyes, are tost striking ana curious la appear- Isn't quite the word. lie is a sociolo gist." Miss Grierson Ignored the nice lis Unction in names. "Socialism goes with being poor, doesn't it?" she remarked. "Since Mr. Grlswold's ship has come in, 1 suppose he finds it eatler, and pleasanter, to be a theoretical leveler than a practi cal one." "That Is another thing I have never been quite able to understand," said the Iron founder. "You say his father li ft him poor; where did he get his money "Why, don't you know ?" was the In nocent query. And then, with a pretty affectation of embarrassment, real or perfectly simulated: "If he hasn't told you, I mustu't" "Of course, I don't want to pry said Raymer, loyal again. "I can give you a hint, and that Is all. Don't you remember 'My Lady Jezebel,' the unsigned novel that made such a hit last summer?' "Why, bless goodness, yes! Did he write that?" "He has never admit! J It In so many words. Hut I'll divide a little secret with you. He has aeen reading bits of his new book to me, and pshaw ! a blind person could tell! I asked him once If he could guess how much the author of 'My Lady Jezebel' had been paid, and he said, with the most per fectly transparent carelessness: 'Oh, about a hundred thousand. I suppose "Tally!" said Raymer, laughing. "Criswold Imis put an even ninety thou sand into my little egg ba;ket out at the plant, liut, of course you knew that, everybody in Wahaska knows it by this time. .Miss Grierson did not reply, and for a little while they were both silent. Then Raymer said: "I wonder if McMurtry doesn't think I've dropped out on him. I guess I'd belter go and see. Don't wait any longer on my motions, unless you want to, Miss Margery." When Raymer had gone, the oppor tunity which Rrotlin had so lately craved was his. Miss Grierson was left alone on the big veranda, and he hud only to step out and confront her Instead, he got up quietly and went back through the lobby with his head down and his hands in his pockets, and the surviving bit of the dead cigar disappeared between his strong teeth and became a cud of chagrin. There had been a goal In sight, but Miss Grierson had beat him to It And the winner of the small handi cap? With a deep breath-drawing that was almost a sob. Miss Grierson sprang up, stole a swift confirming glance at the empty chair behind the window hangings, and crossed the veranda to Etand with one arm around a support ing pillar. And since the battle was fought and won, and the friendly pil lar gave Its stay and shelter, the vel vety eyes tilled suddeuly and the ripe red lips were trembling like the lips of a frightened child. CHAPTER XXI. All That a Man Hath. For four entire days after Margery Grierson had driven home the nail of tho elemental verities in her frank criticism of the new book, and Char lotte Karnham had clinched It, Wa haska's public places saw nothing of Criswold; and Mrs. Hulcomb. mother ly soul, was driven to expostulate scoldingly with her second-floor front who waB pushing the pen feverishly from dawn to the small hours, and evidently in the kindly widow's phrase burning the candle at both ends and lu the middle. Out of this candle-burning frenzy the toiler emerged In the afternoon of the fifth day, a little pallid and tremu lous from the overstrain, but with a thick packet of fresh manuscript to bulge In his pocket when he made his way, blinking at the unwonted sunlight of out-of-doors, to the great house at the lake's edge. .Margery was waiting for him when he rang the bell; be guessed it grate fully, and she confirmed It. "Of course," she said, with the be witching little grimace which could be made to mean so much or so little. "Isn't this your afternoon? Why shouldn't I be waiting for you?" Then, with a swiftly sympathetic glance for tho pale face and the tired eyes: "You've been overworking again. Let's sit out here on the porch where we can have what little air there Is. There must be a storm brewing; It's posi tively breathless in the house." Criswold was glad enough to ac quiesce; glad and restfully happy and mildly intoxicated with her beauty and the loving rudeness with which she pushed him into the easiest of the great lounging chairs and took the sheaf of manuscript away from him. declaring that Bhe meant to read It herself. When It wai over; and he could not tell whether the Interval should be measured by minutes or hours; the re turn to the realities the hot after noon, the tree-shaded veranda, the lake dimpling like a sheet of molten metal under the sun glare was almost pain ful. ai ce, an exchange says. In Its natural coloring the lake trout shows on Ita upper body white or grayish Bpots on a brown background. On the large albino lake trout the spots can be discerned, appearing a very faint -tpots of the same color, but of a different weave In a woven fabric. These spots show so 'alntly that the; would never be noticed by one un familiar with this species and Its mark ings. To the casual eye these lUbes present bodies of solid unbroken I white. "It Is wonderful simply wonder ful!" he said, drawing a deep breath; and then, with a flush of honest confu sion to drive away tho work pallor: "Of course, you know 1 don't mean the story; I meant your reading of It Hasn't anyone ever told you that you have tho making of a great actress in you, Margery, girl?" "No" She was smiling across at him, level-eyed. "Let me pass It back to you, dear boy," she said. "You have the making of a great novelist In you. It may take years and years, and and I'm afraid you'll always have to be helped; but If you can only got the right kind of help. . . ." She looked away, out across the lake where a fitful breeze was turning the molten-metal dimples into laughing wavelets. Then, with one of her sudden topic-wrcnchlngs: "Speaking of help, reminds me. Why didn't you tell me you had gone Into the foundry business with Edward Raymer?" "Ilecause It didn't occur to me that you would care to know, I guess," ho answered unsuspectingly. "As a mat ter of fact, I hud almost forgotten It myself." "Mr. Raymer didn't ask you for help?" "No; it was my own offer." "Hut he did tell you that be was In trouble?" "Y-yes," hesitantly. "What kind of trouble was it. Ken neth? 1 have the best right In the world to know." Criswold straightened himself In his chair and thj work-weariness became a tiling of the past. "You can't have a rlfsM to know anything that will distress you." ' Foolish!" she chided. "You may a, well tell me. Mr. Raymer had bor rowed money at imppa's bank. What j was the matter? Did he have to pay It back nil at once?" There seemed to be no further open ing for evasion. "Yes: I think that was the way of It," he answered. Criswold expected something in the nature of an oul burst. What he got was a transfixing glance of the pas sionate sort, quick with open-eyed ad miration. "And you Just tossed your money In to the breach as if you bad millions of it, and by now you've almost forgotten that you did It!" she exclaimed. "Ken neth, dear, there are times when you are so heavenly good that I can hardly believe It. Are there any more men like you over on your side of the world?" At another time he might have smiled at the boyish frankness of the question. Hut it was a better motive than the analyst's that prompted hi answer. 'Plenty of them, Margery, girl; too many for tho good of the race. You mustn't try' to make a hero out of me Once In a w hile I get a glimpse of the real Kenneth Griswold you are glv ing me one Just now and It's sicken- ng. For a moment I was meanly Jealous; Jealous of Raymer. It was only the writing part of me, I hope, but" lie stopped because she had sudden ly turnea ner back on him and was looking out over the lake again. When she spoke, she said: "See! The breeze Is freshening out on the water. You are fagged and tired and needing a bracer. Let's go and do a turn on the lake In the Clytle." From where he was sitting Griswold could see the trim little catboat. re- plendent In polished brass and ma hogany, riding at its buoy beyond the lawn landing-stage. He cared little for the, water, but the Invitation point ed to a delightful prolongation of the basking process which bad come to be one of the chief luxuries of the Mere- side afternoons. At the landing stage Criswold made himself useful, paying out the sea Hue of the movable mooring buoy and haul ing on the shore line until tho hand- "I've Got Him!" H Cried. some little craft lay at their feet. Strictly under orders he made sail on the little ship, and when the captain had taken her place at the tiller he shoved off; and when the hclmswoman had laid the course up the lake, Gris wold, pipe filled and lighted, pillowed his head In bis clasped hands and a great contentment, flowing Into all the interstices and leveling all the Inequal ities, lapped him In Its soothing flood. He was still half-dozing when he was made to realize Hint the murmuring rush of water under the catboat's fore- foot bad changed Into a series of re-1 The lake trout Is a handsome fish and these albino trout are perfect specimens without a blemish. Tbey appear not as freaks, but simply as graceful and beautiful white fishes. To display them to greater advantage by contrast the larger albino trout are shown In a tank of brook trout. Delicious Wild Strawberry. Speaking of the beautiful-flowered, toothsome-fruited wild strawberry, Izaak Walton, tbe patient fisherman, is aid to have declared' "Doubtless sounding thumps; that the wind was rising, and that the summer afternoon sky bad become suddenly overcast The pretty tiller muidon was pushing the helm down with her foot and liuul Ing In briskly on the sheet when be sat up. "What's this we're coining to?" be asked, thinking less of the changed weather conditions than of the charm' Ing picture she made In action. "Weather," she said shortly. "Look behind you." He looked and saw a huge storm cloud rising out of the northwest and spreading like a great gray dust cur tain from horizon to zenith. "There's a good bunch of wind In that cloud," he said, springing to help his companion with the slatting main sail. "Hadn't we better He up under tho Island and let It blow over?" "No," she snapped. "We'll have to reef, and be quick about it. Help me!" He helped with tho reefing, and the great mainsail had been successfully reduced to its smallest area and hoist ed home again before the trees on the western shore began to bow and churn In the precursor blasts of the coming storm. "It will hit us In less thnn a min ute; how about weathering that Island?" he asked. "We've got to weather It," was the instant decision; "we can't go around." Then, the catboat still hanging In the wind's eye: "Help me get her over." "Hadn't you better let her fall off a little more and run for It?" he sug gested, and he had to shout It Into the pink ear nearest to him to make him self heard above the roaring of the wind and the crashing plunges of the boat. She shook her head and made an im patient little gesture with her elbow toward the storm-lnHhed raceway over the bows. Griswold winked the spray out of his eyes and looked. At first he saw nothing but the wild waste of whltecaps, but at the next attempt he made out the hotel steam launch, half way to the entrance of tho southern bay and a little to leeward of the Cly tle's course. The small steamer was evidently no seaboat, and with more courage than seamanship, Its steers man was driving straight for the Inn bay without regard for the direction of the wind and the seas. "That's Ole Halverson!" cried the tiller maiden with scorn in her voice, "He thinks because he happens to have a steam engine he needn't look to see which way the wind is blowing. "She's pitching pretty badly," Gris wold called back. "If he only had sense enough to ease off a little . . ." Suddenly ho became aware of the finer heroism of his companion. He knew now why she hnd refused to take shelter under the lee of the island and why she was holding the catboat down to the edge of peril to keep the windward advantage of the laboring steamer. "Margery, girl, you're a darling!" he shouted. "Take all the chances you want to and I'm with you, If we go to the bottom!" She nodded - complete Intelligence and took In another Inch of the strain ing main sheet. Criswold looked again, this time over the catboat's counter, and saw a big schooner, close reefed, hauling out from a little bay on the north shore. The launch's plight had evidently Im pressed others with the necessity of doing something. The need was suf ficiently urgent. Once again the Swed ish man of machinery In charge of the craft In peril was Inching his helm up In a vain endeavor to hold the course, and the little steamer was rolling al most funnel under. Griswold forgot his companion was a woman and swore rabidly. "Look at the fool!" he yelled. "He's trying to come about! It he gets Into the trough" The thing was done almost as be spoke. A wilder squall than any of the preceding ones caught the upper works of the launch and heeled her spitefully. At the critical instant the steersman lost his head and spun the wheel, and It was all over. With a heaving plunge and a muffled explosion the launch was gone. Once again Griswold was given to see the Btuff Margery Crlerson was made of In the finer warp and woof of her. "That's for us," she said calmly; and then: "Help me get another Inch or two on this sheet. We don't want to let those people on the Osprcy dc all the heroic things." Together they held tho catboat down to its work, sending It ripping through the crested waves and fighting sturdi ly for every foot of the precious wind ward advantage. None the less, it was the big schooner, thrashing down the wind with every square- yard of its reefed canvas drawing, which was first at the scene of disaster. Through the rain and spume they could see the schooner's crew picking up the ship wrecked passengers, who were cling ing to lifebelts, broken bulkheads and anything that would float. So swiftly was the rescue effected that the res cuer had luffed and filled and was tear ing on its way down the lake again when the close-hauled Clytle came up with the first of the floating wreck age. The tiller maidens dark eyes were shining again, but this time their brightness was of tears. 'Oh, boy, boy!" she cried, with a little heartbroken catch In her voice; 'some of them must have gone down with her! Can you believe that the Osprey got them all?" And then, with the sweet Hps trembljng: "I did my best, Kenneth; my very best and it wasn't good enough!" She was putting the catboat up into the wind, and Griswold stumbled for ward to get the broader outlook. Sud denly be called back to her. "Port port your helm hard! There's a man in a lifebelt he's lust out of Ood could have made a better berry, but doubtless he never did." And those who have tasted the wild straw berry will agree that cultivation has added nothing to Its flavor, however It may have increased- the size Tbe duke of Gloucester, who became Rich ard II, had weakness for the wild strawberry. It Is said that In 1483, as certain great lords were sitting In council arranging for bis coronation, the duke came in and, "saluting cour teously, said to tbe bishop of Ely: 'My lord, you have verie good straw- reach. Hold her there steady steady!" He had thrown himself flat, face down, on the half-deck forward and was clutching at something In the heaving seas. "I've got him I" he cried, and a moment later he was work ing bis way aft, holding the man's face out of water. It asked for their united strength to get the gray-haired, heavy-bodied victim of the capsize over the Clytle's rail. Tbey bad to bring tbe lifebelt too; the old man's fingers were sunk Into it with a dying grip that could not be broken. At first Griswold was too much preoccupied and shocked to rec ognize the drawn face with its hard lined mouth and long upper Hp. When he did recognize It the gripping fear was at his heart the fear that makes a cruel cowurd of the bunted thing in all nature. What might have hnppened If he had been alone; if Margery, taking her place at the tiller and busying herself swiftly In getting the catboat under way again, had not been looking on; he dared not think. And that other frightful thought he put away, fighting against It madly as a condemned man might push the cup of hemlock from his Hps. Forcibly breaking the drowned one's hold upon the lifebelt, he fell to work energetically, resorting to the first aid expedlents'for the reviving of the drowned as ho had learned, them in his boyhood. Once, only, he flung a word over his shoulder at Margery as he fought for the old man's life. "Make for the nearest landing where we can get a doctorl" he commanded; and then, in a passion of gratitude: "O Cod, I thank thee that I am not a mur derer! he's comHig back! He's breathing again!" A little later he was able to leave off the first-aid arm-pumplngs and chest- pressings; to straighten the limp and sprawling limbs, and to dive Into the cuddy cabin, under Margery's direc tions, for blankets and rugs. Wben all was done that could be done, and he had propped tho blanket-swathed body with the cushions so that the crash and plunge of the pitching catboat would be minimized for the sufferer, he went aft to sit beside the helms woman, who was getting the final wave-leap of speed out of the little vessel. "He is alive?" she asked. "Yes; and that is about all that can be said. He Isn't drowned; but he Is old, and the shock has gone pretty near to snapping the thread." "Of course, you remember him?" sin said, looking away across tho leaping waters. Griswold, with his heart on fire with generous emotions, felt the cold hand gripping him again. "Ho Is the old gentleman you Intro duced me to at the Inn the other day: Galbralth; is that the name?" "Yes." she rejoined, still looking away; "that Is the name." e Griswold fell silent for the time; but a little later, when the catboat was rushing In long plunges through the entrance to the Wuhaskan arm of the lake, ho said: "You are going to take him to Mereslde?" "Yes. He is a friend of poppa's. And, anyway, it's the nearest place, and you said there was no time to lose." Griswold helped the bearers lift the blanketed figure out of the Clytle's cockpit, and while he was doing It, the steel-gray eyes of the rescued one opened slowly to fix a stony gaze upon the face of the man who was bending over him. What the thin Hps were muttering Griswold heard, and so did one other. "So it's you, is It, ye mur dering blue-eyed deevll?" And then: "Eh, man, man, but I'm sick!" Griswold walked with Margery at the tall of the little procession as it wound its way up tho path to the great house. "You heard what he said?" be in quired craftily. "Yes; he Is out of his bead, and no wonder," she said soberly. Then: "You must go home and change at once; you are drenched to the skin. Don't wait to come in. I'll take care of your manuscript." CHAPTER XXII. The Valley of Dry Bones. The cyclonic summer storm had blown Itself out, and the clouds were beginning to break away in the west, when Griswold. obeying Margery's urging to go home and change bis clothes, turned his back upon Mereslde and his face toward a future of thick ening doubts and unnerving possibili ties. Griswold had not deceived himself, nor had he allowed Margery's apparent convlncement to deceive him. The old man's mind had not been wander ing in the eye-opening moment of con sciousness regained. On the contrary, what he had failed to do under ordi nary and conventional conditions had become instantly possible when the plunge into the dark shadow had brushed away all the artificial bocloud Ings of the memory page. What action he would take vvhen he should recover was as easy to prefigure as It was, for the present at least, a matter negligi ble. The dismaying thing was that the broad earth seemed too narrow to hide in; that invention Itself became the clumsiest of blunderers when It was given the simple task of losing a sin gle Individual among tbe millions of unrelated human atoms Thus the threat of the perl) which might be called the physical. But be yond this there was another, and, for a man of temperament, a still more ominous foreshadowing of evil to come. Of some subtle, deep-sealed change In himself he had long bean conscious. Again and again it had manifested itself in those moments of craven fear and ruthless, murderous berries In your garden at Holbonne; 1 require you to let me have a mess of them." Stage Humor Has Changed, Stage humor today isn't quite as outlandish as it used to be fifteen or twenty years ago. Charles 11. Iloyt once wanted a certain type of come dian and, hearing of a team called Coyne and McGee playing in an up stairs theater on Third avenue, went to see them. The Coyne was Jo Coyne, now a great favorlto both her promptings, wben kindliness, grati tude, love, all the humanizing motives, had turned suddenly to frenzle hatred, and the primitive savage bad leaped up, fiercely raging with the blood-lust. For a long time after be had reached bis room, and bad had his bath an change, GrUwold sat at bis wrltln table with bis head in his hands, think ing in monotonous circles. Tbe tiny chiming clock In his dress ing case in the adjoining bedroom had tinkled forth its 10 tapping hammer strokes when bo heard voices In tb lower hall, and then a man's footsteps on the stair. To a hard-pressed breaker of tbe traditions at such a moment an unannounced visitor, coming up in the dark, could mean but one thing. Griswold silently opened a drawer In the writing table -and groped for the mate to the quick-firing pistol which after the change of wet clothing, he bad put aside to dry. The visitor came heavily upstairs, and Criswold, swinging his chair to face the open door, saw the shadowy milking of the man as be camo through the upper hall. When the bulk filled tbe doorway It was covered by the pistol held low, and Grlswold's finger was pressing the trigger. "Asleep, old man?" said the Intruder In Raynier's well-known voice There was a sound like a gasping sob, and another as of a drawer clos ing softly. Then GrUwold said: "No; I'm not asleep. Come in. Shall I light the gas?" "Not for me," returned the oed time visitor, entering and groping for the chair at the desk-end, Into which when be had placed It, he dropped wenrlly "I want to smoke," be went on. ' Have you got a cigar no. not When the Bulk Filled the Doorway II Was Covered by the Pistcl the pipe; I want something that 1 can chew on A cigar was found, In the drawer which hnd so lately furnished the wea pon, and by the flare of the match In Raynier's fingers Griswold saw a face haggard with anxiety. "What is the aiatter. Edward?" be asked. "A mix-up with the labor unions. It's been brewing for some little time, but I didn't want to worry you with it I'nless we announce a flat Increase of 20 per cent In wages to-morrow morn ing, and declare for the closed shop, the men will go out on us at noon. I've seen It coming If the god of mischance had chosen the moment It could not have been more opportune for the fire-lighting of malevolence. Grlswold's swing-chair righted Itself with a click. "We'll see them In hell, first, Ray' mer! The ungrateful beggars are merely proving that It Isn't in human nature to meet Justice and fairness and generous liberality half way. If they want a fight, give It to them. Hit first and hit hard; that's the way to do. Shut up the plant and make It a lockout. "I was afraid you might say some thing like that in the first heat of It, said the young ironmaster. It s a stout fighting word, and I guess, under the skin, you'ro a stout fighting man, Kenneth which I'm not. Where are your convictions about the man-to- mnn obligations? We've got to lake them into the account, haven't we?" "Damn the convictions!" snapped Griswold viciously. "If I've been giv ing you the Impression that I'm an lm pratlcable theorist, forget It. These fellows want a fight: I say give them a fight all they want of It and a lit tle more for good measure." Raymer did not reply at once. This latest Griswold waB puzzling him, and with the puzzlement there went sor rowful regret; the regret that has been the recanter's portion in all the ages. When he spoke it was out of the heart of common sense and san ity. "I know how you feel about It. I don't dare to pull down a fight which may not only shut us up for an In definite time, but might even go far enough to smash us " Criswold took his turn of silence, rocking gently in the tilting chair. When the delayed rejoinder came, the harshness had gone out of his voice, but there was a cynical hardness to take its place. "It's your affair; not mine," he said. "If you've made up your mind not to fight, of course, that settles it. Now we can come down to the causes. You've been stabbed In the back. Do you know who's doing it?" (TO BB CONTINUED.) and in London. McGee began telling Coyne about a chance be had to make a lot of money. "All I need Is a stake," said McGee. "That's easy," replied Covne. With that he took a piece ot beef from bis pocket, stuck It on his cane and broiled It over the gas foot lights. New York Letter to tbe Pitts burgh Dispatch. Lightning Rod Indorsed. The United States government has vindicated the llghtokig tod by rigid testa. 111 l&flMlii it mSm f mm FARflSSWlFE TOO ILLTO WORK A Weak, Nervous Sufferer Restored to Health by Ly. dia E. Pinkham's Veg. etable Compound. Kasota, Minn. "I am glad to t,, that Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetabW iximpounu has doo, more for me th anything else, and 1 naa tne Dest phyaj. clan here. I wai i weak and ncrvoui that I could not do my work and strf. fered with paina lot down in my tight side for a year or more. I took Lydj, E. Pinkham's Ve?, table Compound, and now I feel like different person. I believe there k nothing like Lydia E. Pinkham's Vsge. table Compound for weak women and young girls, and I would be glad if could influence anyone to try the med cine, for I know it will do all and muct more than it is claimed to do." Vr, Clara Franks, R. F. D. No. 1, Mspl. crest rarm, Kasota, Minn. Women who suffer from those riV tressing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced of the ability of Lydit E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ton store their health by the many genuim and truthful testimonials we are con stantly publishing in the newspapers. If you have the sllerlitost dnnbt that Lydia I Pink ham's Vetreta- llei;oiii)niiii will help you, write to Lydia H.lMiikhamMetlUincCo, (coiilident lal) Lynn, Mass., for ad vice. Your letter will be opened, rend and answered by a woman, ami neiu in since commence. LIFTS FIRE OUT OF HOUSE Autolst Rescuer Also Saves Dinntr Trom Blazing Stove in New Jersey Town. A. R. Gerber, a local clothing met chant, wus the hero at a lire to wnicb he was called as he was patmnt through Hartford In his auloraooile ot bis way home from I'hiladelion Y bun a woman ran from her bow and yelled that her kitchen was ot fire Gerber didn't need any second alarm. Slamming on the emergent'; brake, he Jumped from his macnint botore it was stopped and found tie gusollno stove abla.e. Calmly moving some furniture oir. of bis way and taking the woman i dinner from the stove so It would not be ruined, he pulled the blazing ston right out the hack door and lauded K where it could do no further damage except to itself. Mount Holly t.N. J DiKputcti Philadelphia Record. Reason Enough, "Been on your vacation yet?" "No, the people next door hareo'i returned from thelr's yet." "Well, what In the world does that have to do with it?" "Oh, nothing much, only they bor rowed our trunk before they started and sent for our golf sticks and tei nls rackets afterward." Ominous. "My son's bought an auto and he's got a garage." "Good gracious! Who's the grudp against?" v Not Yet. Mrs. Talky So the turkey trot U out of favor now. Mr. llored I wish the hen gnbbl was, too! Most whito men are against mot violence if the victim is a white mm rtritlsh navnl and military forces It Hongkong usually number. 7.000 van- Makes Rapid Headway Kidnev disease often advances rapidly that many a person is firmly in ita grasp before aware of ita progre Prompt attention should be given the slightest aymptom of kidney disorder. If there is a dull pain in the tack, headaches, dizzy xpclls or tired, worn out feeling, or if the kidney secretion are offensive, irregular and attended by pain, use Donn's Kidney Pills once. Xo other kidney medicine is f well-recommended. A Pennsylvania Case Harry House 30 Bound Ave., Mil ton, Pa,, Lays: "My bark was weak and hurt me when I was working. The kidney secretions passed toe fre quently and had to get up at night on this account I gradually got worse until I hud to quit work and go to bed. My i irk grew stiff and sore and I had terrible headaches and dls sy spells. After ML- VU4 doctors' medic"" failed, Donh's Kidney Pills reaio" me to good health. Cat Dua'a at Any Slora. BOe a Bat DOAN'S "rVLlV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. T. In the Batli ing, use with I Glrnn'S warm water H ri..iliiTt and insure a BSulpIlIlr restful night. I S02p It Refreshes , (All DrujtitUtt.) Contafns 80i Pure Sulphur, HHTsHMr S WaMar Dya, Siaak artrawa,! 30 , . n ml CIH I A toll procuration Hlp o ardlct aw"T FRtoTO':olor Baaulr toGr.T oi- Fad Vf i DROPSY m,T u'ulllr and short braath, oftan laa nUr r5 h 8 to SB days. Trial treatmant '"L bDR. THOMAS t. GREEN, Siiocm" 'U. H. Ofa . goat, hot A. Call0' " '1!'!!,'!,l!1"Lll''!"!!!?!l''!'!l,,i:'"l IJM Pictur V?y Tells $Wlf M1 V V 4