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Evening The She SAgorin ny, No. & to 62 Park Row, New Tort Mali Matter @urtianed by the F 1¢. custom | he road's | s asset wanted to shower gifts on one | | ject? erested in} of the department.” good will was a valuable b of its officers why should b This seems to have been a prevalent view on the Pennsylvania. Cassatt himself was quoted as saying in a New York he “did not see *s brother Idn’t be f a coal com Mr, sh or son vate profit, Tha among men in positions of trust would excite astonishment if the country eee World’s Daily Magazine, Thursday, June 7, 19067 4 A Truce with the Speed Limit. | Says the HIGH-BROW: ~~ By J. Campbell Cory. By Martin Green. i Why play the Rube two mulate the wise w York to blow it want. » fresh alr in the country, on the piazza of a firet+ ick where it’s eney hear pe Inside of an hour fr: m Brookly class hotel, If a swell b t music, have a man with a white apron keep ever t him and {nhale r off the bosom of the ocean ressed anything but an ooca- v't got the price, walk out up in the air than half ge, sit on a bene you hear abou i { { { } j body drives the wind th from the Ha to a taurant ts open and not so crowded as in the winter months, and there you get the pick of the stuff that is raised on the farm. The bum percentage Is kept on the farm or sold to the country hotel. “In tho country or in the mountaine {f you want to go anywhere you have to ride tn a rig furnished by @ liveryman who regards you as a soft mark and proves his regard. In New York {f you want some quiet, inex- pensive enjoyment after dinner, when the heat has died out of the alr, it ts no trouble at all to get a seat on the back end of an open car, ght up your cigar or cigarette or pipe and ride for miles and miles enjoying a panorama of life and beauty and mag a8 the co nnot show. “You have the roof gardens, Cor s if you feel sporty or energetic, s organ- ry 1 and the other at home reso. ly had so many examples o {ze anything from a card party to a debauch and nobody pays any atten- | It is evident from the Pennsyl es that there fs need on neat Des i nails je eine arene -: “But you don’t get the beauties of nature !n town,” persisted the Lowe that railroad of moral lessons of the kind the insurance officials received Brow. If Mr, Cassatt is not able to inculcate them when he begins to “deal with “Maybe not,” agreed the High-RBrow, t we've got the country skinned the guilty,” an investigating committee should. it is a most excellent to a fake on open plumbing and {ce-boxe: method of clearing up confused moral ideas. | “ ’ ” | MY DAD'S THE ENGINEER, TRANSFERS ON DEMAND By CHARLES R. BARNES. The New York City Railway Company gives notice that it will not 1 t change its rule that transfers must be asked for when the fare is paid YOUNO gtr! sat demurely, unless compelled hy the courts The company’s general man- Her aweetheart!- wes (beside (her, ager is credited with only remedy against an illegal nd pityingly he sald a F Ship eee & . “Oh, I must wet an hetress— traffic in transfers which costs the road $200,000 a year. A girl of wealth, my dear.” That is, it is ndled out of 4,000,000 rides and a considerable At that she coyly whispered: 4 + + . a, “My dad's the engt Sed number of passengers are systematically engaged in the swindling. This : a is a somewhat extraordinary indictment of the honesty of the travelling | (The youth then recotlected public. But if the abuse exists to the extent alleged why does not the | The mortes he had read orien? + is Of ovat graft on the railroad; company abolish it by hunting down and prosecuting the persons wh: The prospect turned his head. 3 buy é nsfers? If they make a regular business of this form of He gasped in awed amazement: . buy and sell transf rs If they make a regu 4 ash mh eae, ibe taror obese graft it must be a simple matter for the road's detectives to find them. In avoshta soft #he told htmi As it is, the s regulation virtually holds its 300,000,000 “My dad's the engineer!™ of a comparatively few. | cy afore re ue F 4 , “On, be my urged nies are said to be involved in the question | Sn caw Vherll dine bad oemnes nsfers except under conditions of its own And tn @ chilly silence ‘ Ss ; vis feinetar whe ars Ghe muncbed her hunk of gum. making. But if a passenger is entitled to a transfer when car is mle Riv ikat daha ener and told chins’ y m_ thi nsfer point i not clear why he is not entitled to it “You go away from here— away from the transfer point it y Is } Tn trot with dukes end prinow— on reaching that point. | My dad's the engineer!” ANANDA AGATE ESTATE SEEN SEU EET E SENET U SF TN NTT EENS ESSERE SG PARDALAAASADAREERATAEASERSL BEGEAAASEANESONGTERESOSTES AOS USEASATSERSTDSSDERESOETERTEENENGOEOES 640800800001 oo) [e] 5 ° ( } (Copyright, 1903, 1904, by Harper & Browmera) Loder made no movement ‘You must ex ‘6'll stick to this advice business. It interests! ing only what Lillian saw, knowing only what CHAPTER XXII. he said, very quietly. @ knew, no man would have staked a definite HAF ; aa smiled “Thatseat wine 1 want tod ‘ca—atterward.” ypinton; but the other sox takes a different view. pi : saarieae be na” She also! hen T was tn my tent on the night of Blanche's now. You want to find out why this Eng-) As she stood gazing at the rings her thoughts bb CCERD? 0} he succeeded.’ She 8/59" party, a man came to be gazed for. He came just nan from Italy was at your sister's party,/ and her conclusions sped through her mind like ly. ‘Poor Ko KO WS) jike anybody else, and laid his hands upon the and why he disappeared?” {arrows—all almed and all tending toward one stowed away under the luggage-van; and/tuble, He had strong, thin hands like—well, There are t when a malignant abstinacy| point. She remembered the day when she and after quite a lot of trouble he pulled him out.| rather like yours. But be wore two rings on the ms to affect certain people. The only answer|Chilcote talked of doubles, her scepticism and ~ i done the dog was quite unhurt, ird finger of his left hand—a heavy signet ring lian made was to pass her hand over Loder’s| hia vahement defense of the {dea; his suddem {n- Boer eee Oe eli c wat ted sane tear ;/ 2nd & plain gold one.” | valstcoat, and, feeling his clgarette-case, to draw| terest {In the book “Other Men’s Shoes,” and his and lvelle nglishe An Rae) Loder moved his hand {mperceptibly till the | 4¢ from the pocket, anathema against life and irksome round of his finger al Ko Ko was @ cushion covered {t. Lilllan’s words caused him He affected not to eee {t “Do you think he| duties. She remembered her own first convinced dear, but his teeth and were both very rprise, scarcely even any trepidatic He Tecognized you in that tent?” he insisted, des-| recognition of the eyes that had looked at her more iu soft amuse- now that he had expected them, even waited | perately. } in the door of her s! and, last ~"t | fs | | She held out the case. “Here are your cigar-| Of all, she re hilcote's unaccountable hen he too to take off his’ rings,” she’ went ettea. You know we're always more social when | ¥oldance of th nesses when then hi or a second he hesitated—I could we smoke.” j; she had ment s through laughed—Chilcote's short, & laugh. “And + F hen he seemed to make up his In the short interval while she looked up {nto the park—and curt Tes you tea up the wound, I suppose?" | 4, for he drew t off. He dr hem off, | his face several ideas passed through Lodere| Pudiation of bis former She glanced up, half displeased. “Woe were both | J#ck, and guess what ] saw! Do guess!” | n He thought of standing up suddenly and| each item, then she raised hor hend slowly and ees Peeaav anne: | For the first dme Loder inyoluntartly drew so regaining his advantage; he wondered quickly | looked at 1x BtayIneLACAMe CHO IRR Rhema s es theU back {nto his corner of the couch, ‘I never whether one hand could poastbly suffice for the| He was prey 7 the glance and met {t further explanation cowd be n ues, aid, brusque | tak out and lighting of two cigarettes. Thenj| steadily. In the long moment that her eyes - fe | E3 ghting 8 y her manner changed, She o ‘T a hands were the hands al} need for speculation was pushed suddenly | searched his face {t was she and not he who j nearer and tc dé his r of my ! The rings covered the scar asida. | changed color. She was the first to speak. “You was further away from her, was wel pee afoutoie te ne Foe wien Lilllan, looking {nto his face, saw his fresh| Were tho man whose hands I saw in the tent, ene aacgue! rested on tt the same look of ‘disturbance, and from’ long expertence| he said. She made the statement in hor usual jow of t _| that us oF au a es—that I had in changed her tactics. Laying the clgarette-| #0ft tones, but a slight tremor of excitement “Jack, paral you pea ecaroe t @ on the couch she put one hand on his| Uaderran her volce. Poodles, Persian kittens, tupld old story that I've : ana yeeaied wilder, the cther on his left arm. Hundreds) even crystal gazing balls, seemed very far away. to tell you a sort SED eM en of times this carassing touch had quieted Chilcote. | !P face of this tangible, fabulous, present Interest, Act “Tear old boy!" she sald, soothingly, her hand “You are not Jack Chilcote,” she eald, very slow- k nand ge Fy ly. “You are wearing his clothes, and speaking iy, 1 met this man a eer iy Beien De In a flash of understanding the consequences! his volce, but you are not Jack Chilcote.” Her , You underst D quar- Afterward {t was too of this position came to him. Action was 1m-| tone quickened with a touch of excitement. “You telled quite and I came away. I've re- ESpi erative, at Whatever risk, With an abrupt ges-| needn't keep silent and look at me,” she sald, ; eden ncn ietasntraatilces n the rooms? ayer “I know quite well what I am saying—though bered him rather longer than 1 re 10 ™ vkward. He got to hie|! don't understand it, though I have no real he was one of those dogged | movement Aorrhy ie Se oa Tiaeq Proot’— She paused, momentarily disconcerted © stick {n cne's jut he | Caine involuntarily at his te, © her companton’s silent and steady gaze, and e for another _ alain aueitons i tu ois pause a curious and unexpected thing oo- “He has 0} asped at, then held his, He made) CUT: ey Thy alee: them, With a dogged ac-| Loder laughed suddenly—a full, confident, re- kn aye aomne nbshevadmittedihiinsstt’ worated) jassured laugh, All the web that the past halts r your mouth and told tayed {mmovable, holding his; hour had spun about him, all the intolerable - me of some, ono Lodor Found it Singularly D hand, nelther of them knew, The process of a| seise of an tmpending crash, lfted suddenly, He + nese ae in’s Instinct is so subtle, so obscure, that *aw his way clearly—and Jt was Lillian who had 1 1 he futile to apply to {t the common-) openod his eyes, il, you know 1 anything she could t t of time, She kept her hold tenaciously,| Still looking at her, he smfled—a smile of re- his_hand A oe ena ty poy fie though his fingers possessed some pecullar Mant determination, such as Chileote had never I never saw y ed to bein I efore you say another) 1 ten at last she epoke. worn in his life. And with a calm gesture he uatil "To help to thr » mystery! T've YRS arement he he arette,” Sh "pings, Jack?" she said, very slowly. And) Teleased his hand, n Blanche's | natheraitea su Araiid. Bently, tahe sa aR ea eet tthe two short words a whole world of In-| “The greatest charm in woman 4s her {magina- Ae nventartinnas nate Rey eee a and surmise made itself felt. tion,” he said, quietly. ‘Without it there would through Blanche’s ne ierccatran Riikites eeleanty Seine atid wiighed, : be no. color in life; we would come tnto and drop by Blessington, $, and a cert MCE TS aT EAa I have no wish to Ko, "| At the sound she dropped his hand and rose| out of tt with the same uninteresting tone of ame to the tent r acted with ation, and as sho matter of what you wish but of what| from her knees, What her suspicions, what hor| drab reality.” Ho paused and smiled again. : to have kept o eaned toward Lod Ga smiled, She knew that, Ghileste instincts were she could not have clearly do-| At his smile Lillian tnvoluntarily -drew back, almost {mm sure and pale hair softened by the fire! with A clearette between his ps was infinitely, fined, but her action was unhesitating, Without | the eolor denon ne in her cheeks. “Why do you ide a picture that it would have been more tracts than Chiloote sitting (dle, and|& moment's uncertainty she turned to the fire-| Say that?" she asked. to ¢ 58. she had no intention of © knowledge, place, pressed the electric button, and flooded! Ho lifted his head. With each moment he felt the person who should have appreciated Loder caught at “Before you! the room with Nght, nore cortain of himself. “Becauso that {s my ate should 1 {t stared stead {t to the fire. His mind ordered me to amoke, 1 “you told me to| There {® no force so demoralizing as unex-|titude,” he sald. “As a man I admire your fmagt- sa le big not every was absorbed one questlon—the fon of give you some advice. Your first command must | pected 11g! Loder took a step backward, hia) nation, but as a man I fall to follow your rea~ pect a man 1c b himself how he might reasonably leave tho house before have privr claim.” He grasped unhesitatingly | hand hanging unguarded by his side; and Lilian, | soning. country is y vr discovery became assured. at the lesa risky theme. | stepping forward, caught tt again before he could) The words and the tone both etung her. “De i ; her have your {dea of the affatr fan, attentively watchful of him, saw the She looked up at him. “You're always nicor| protest. Lifting {t quickly, she looked scrutin{z-j you realize the position?” she asked, sharply, | yi} 1 else's. You ure so dear and sar-| uneasy look, and her own face fell. But, as she) when you smoke," she pr caressingly, | {ngly-attke two rings. "Do you realize that, whatever your plans are, I © once in « Ieoon Chat you can't help getting straight | looked, an inspiration camo to hon—a remem-|"Light a clgarette—and give me one.” All women jump to conclusions, and it {=| ¢an spoil them? - ~ ee a idle of @ fact. 'Seence of many interviews with Ohilcote Loder’s mouth became eet, “No,” he said, extraordinary how seldom they jump short See (To Be Continued.) = on ae « 4 if