IW v IS- r V 4 w I JOHN B Author of Tho Kidnapped Millionaires Colonel Monroes Doctrine Gtc r CSl HI mm OoryniGHT 1002 ur FilEDEUrCK UlIIAM ADAMS URT All rights reserved 1 3j FREDERICK Ij UPHAM ADAMS Jj COPTIUGUT 103 BT A- J DBCXUL BlDDLB HI HI II I II I Bill I IIIHIIWIIIIIHmiMl mU I llHlMnWTTl ilf T1 Wh iliir 1 CHAPTER XXI Continued General Carden applauded vigor ously and demanded an encore The trio sang several songs and the old soldier lay back in his arm chair and let his mind drift back to the hours when the one of whom Jessie was the linage lifted her sweet voice in tho ballads he loved to hear At his re quest they sang Douglas Tender and True Robin Adair The Blue Bells of Scotland Annie Laurie and several old war songs Then Jessie proposed a rubber of whist and in the cut she became the partner of James Blake Jessie played well and they defeated the general and Edith You dont know what a victory we have won declared Jessie her eyes sparkling with pleasure Papa and Edith- think themselves invincible and this is their first defeat Lets go to the conservatory I want to show Mr Blake those lovely bulbs I sent you from Holland and leaving Edith and the general to follow she escorted Blake to the great glass liouse with its arched roof and wilder ness of palms ferns and flowers I know this is not much of a treat to you ventured Jessie I had for gotten that you have spent all of your life in California But I have not spent all of my life in California Blake said I lived in California only seven or eight years and had little chance to study flowers What little knowledge I have of flowers dates back to my boyhood days in New England New England What part of New England Mr Blake Massachusetts he answered proudly I was born in Boston less than half a mile from where the tea was thrown overboard My mothers name was Smith so Im a Yankee all over time the deceit was his own and not a sacrifice for another Of course I knew John Burt said Blake reflectively Dear old John I owe him thirty five dollars When I ran away from home he gave me every dollar he had and Ive not seen him since Did you say he had gone to California Is that so Nd I never saw him there And you knew him Really Miss Carden I almost feel as if we were old acquaintances Ah here comes Mr and Mrs Bishop I had no idea It was so late Mr Thomas Bishop was Introduced and after a brief conversation in which Jessie acquainted her uncle with the fact that their guest was formerly from Rocky Woods Blake excused himself He accepted an In vitation to call again Then we will continue our recol lections of Rocky Woods Miss Car den he said on leaving Instructing his coachman to drive to his apartments James Blake closed his eyes and attempted to calmly re view what had happened He found it impossible One emotion held mas tery over him he was in love madly and defiantly in love with Jessie Car den He thought of Arthur Morris and hated him He thought of John Burt and pitied him Neither should stand in his way Could she be engaged to Arthur Morris Now that he had met Jessie Carden he found himself unconscious ly repeating John Burts indignant declaration It is a lie an infamous lie If an engagement did exist it should be as a barrier of mist to his ardent progress But she did not she could not love Arthur Morris Did John Burt love her Did she love John Burt These were the stinging burning questions which seared his brain but the clamor of his conscience was Pi Hi iff T So am I laughed Jessie NJohn Hancock once lived in the house where I was born and Samuel Adams vas there many many times Im as much of a Hancock as Edith though she wont admit it Dont you like Boston better than San Francisco vJIr Blake Really I remember very little of Boston replied Blake When I was a small boy we moved to Quincy and from there to a farm near Hingham That part of my New England life most vivid in my memory clusters round the old farm in Rocky Woods - Did you live in Rocky Woods The dark eyes opened wide and Jes sie looked wondering into Blakes face Why yes I lived there for several years Do you mean to tell me that you ever heard of that desolate patch ot rocks pines stone fences huckle berry swamps and cranberry marshes Certainly I have Uncle Tom Mr Bishop lived there for a genera tion and spends the summers there now I have often been there Isnt it strange Mr Blake that both of us are familiar with that out-of-the-way country Where was your fathers farm It was then known as the old Leon ard farm Do you know where Peter Burt lived Peter Burt the old crazy man who used to pray at night from the top of the big rock Yes said Jessie softly with a lit tle catch at her breath as the blood mounted to her cheeks - James Blake watched her face in tently Both were thinking of John Burt but with what different emo tions Since the sun had set a gulf had opened between John Burt and James Blake And Jessie Carden Intuitively she felt that James Blake knew John Burt In a flash it occurred to her that Blakes business with her father was a subterfuge Was he the bear er of tidings from John Burt P2r haps John was dead If alive why did he not come himself And you knew John Burt I re member now that he often spoke of you He always called you -Jim and rarely mentioned your last name And you ran away from home Did you ever meet John Burt in California Mr Blake James Blake was not deceived by tne careless tone in which she asked this question With grim joy he re flected that Johns injunction for se crecy was still in force He must either mislead Jessie Carden or prove false to his friend but for the first 777 OLD ttiOQLJXGM7y S7BZ TM if GigCKV JVJJZ cZcO S j4 drowned in the louder din of his pas sion He had not yet reached a point where with calm selfishness he could voice the brutal aphorism of moral and physical desperadoes All is fair in love and war He was eager to clear himself of self accused dis loyalty to John Burt and he clutched at any defense which would serve as possible justification or extenuation John Burt was his friend the found er of his fortunes the loyal trustful comrade to whom he owed all he was or could hope to be Elake knew this and yet with the truth confronting him and pleading for justice the so phistic arguments and evasions of a vaulting passion came readily to his lips How do I know John loves her he pleaded He has not told me so He has sent her no word He could have done so easy enough She does not know if he be dead or alive Is that the way for a lover to act If John has lost her it is his own fault Perhaps he gave her up long ago Honestly I believe his hate for Mor ris is more to him than his affection for Jessie Carden Thus quibbled James Blake Awak ened love loosens a million eloquent tongues to plead for self and palsies the voice which should speak for oth ers The love of a man for a woman is the sublimation of his egoism his unconscious exaltation of desire CHAPTER XXII Unreasoning Passion In all the vast world only two per sons knew that such a man as John Burt lived James Blake and Peter Burt John Burt owned stock in thou sands of miles of railroads He was an investor in other great enterprises and activities An army of men worked under his direction and the stofk market rose and fell at the pres sure of his unseen hand For years he had rebelled at the fate which had made him a recluse which denied him the fellowship and confidence of his peers He felt a keen joy over the knowledge that the day was ap proaching when he could assume his true place in the world of vast affairs But of earths countless millions there was one above all others to whom he wished to toll his secret He impatiently awaited the time when he could look into Jessie Cardens race and read the verdict in her eyes Were years of patient waiting and working to- be rewarded or unrequit ed w e 0 Blake arrived at his cfllce at an un usually early hour on the morning following his Introduction to Jessie Carden He had spent a miserablo night No sleep came to his blood shot eyes and for hours he restlessly paced the floor I love her my God how I love her but I also love John he ex claimed again and again as the night hours crawled slowly away What shall I do what can I do I cannot give her up By God Ill not give her up for any man not even for John Burt Would John surrender the woman he loved for me What am I to do I must decide before 1 see him If I tell John she is in New York he will see her inside of twenty tour hours That will be the end of my hopes She shall love me She must love me I cannot live without her Oh why did I ever see her In this unequal contest between loyalty and passion in a weak and self indulgent nature passion won the battle but at a frightful sacrifice His judgment warned him that he was doomed to defeat but with the frenzied desperation of a gambler he staked everything honor friendship loyalty his business career all on the turn of a card and dared to meet John Burt with treachery in his heart and a lie on his lips Blake knew that John Burt was in his private office but for the first time in his life he hesitated to enter it Prosperity had erected no wall of formality between these two From the day they fought their boy ish battle on the edge of the fishing pool they had called each other John and Jim In tacitly accept ing John Burts leadership Blake rec ognized in his companion those traits which attract allegiance and which hold it by unseen but powerful bands By a display of tact which amounted to genius John Burt had aided James Blake without patronizing him and had forgiven his repeated mistakes without offending him Blake strolled slowly through the connecting offices and entered the large room reserved for customers Those who knew the famous oper ator bowed respectfully Blake gazed absent mindedly at a bulletin board containing tho early London and Paris quotations He read them but they had no meaning He was thoroughly abjectly miserable Who is that gentleman asked a smooth cheeked and dapper young man who had embarked on his first speculative venture by rising the major part of his quarterly allow ance Why dont you know exclaimed his companion I should have intro duced you Thats Jame3 Blake the famous and only James Blake Five years ago he didnt have a dollar Twenty millions in five years is his record And it hasnt enlarged his hat in the least He tells a good story sings a good song and no man in the club can drink him under the table To be continued NEVER SEE HEARSE AT NIGHT New York Undertaker Explains Why They Are Not Sent Out Nobody gives us fe16ws credit for having a largo bump of sensitiveness said a west side undertaker but the fact is wo go to a good deal of trou ble to safeguard the feelings of the general public For one thing we try never to keep our hearses in the street after dark Of course in the cape of afternoon funerals and long distances we can not avoid getting home late but even so we make it a point to get under cover as coon as possible after night fall And we do that absolutely out of consideration for the public By nine people out of ten the sight of a hearse on the street at night is taken as a sure sign of impending death and disaster Even in tho daytime a hearse is a gloomy affair but to run up against one at night is pretty sure to give the most jovial fellow alive a depressing turn I know how it is myself Ac customed as I am to handling hearses I dont like to bump into one unex pectedly at a dark corner Most men in the business feel the same way therefore we strive to be considerate That we succeed re markably well is apparent to anybody who will take the trouble to count the hearses he has seen out at night These are so few that Ill wager the most confirmed gadabout cannot re call more than three or four of them New York Times John Wesleys Ideas on Ailing It is pretty generally known that John Wesley during his unparalleled apostolate of half a century traveled 250000 miles and preached 40000 ser mons but comparatively few are aware of the prodigious amount of lit erary work he managed to accomplish His most curious and eccentric book was entitled Primitive Physic or An Easy and Natural Method of Curing Most Diseases It was published in London by Barr Co in the year 1743 The preface is characteristic of the author When man came first out of the hands of the Creator there was no place for physic or the art of heal ing But when man rebelled against the Sovereign of heaven and earth the incorruptible frame put on corruption and the immortal put on immortality Turks Tax the Greeks The Porte having issued orders for the collection of license taxes from Greeks in the Turkish dominions it is feared at Athens that there will be fresh trouble especially at Smyrna Irish Parliamentary Fund The Irish parliamentary fund for the year 190o amounted to 63045 s vl - Girls Suspender Costume That the simpler the frock the more smartly the child is dressed has become an established fact but no one of the manycharming designs its recognition has called forth is more attractive than this suspender model worn with a spencer waist As illustrated the dress is made of checked linen blue and white with trimming of cotton braid and the waist of white batiste the collar and cuffs embroidered by hand but there are many other materials equally suitable For play time washable labrics are best of all but for occa sions of less danger to the dress pongee challie and the like are much used The costume consists of waist and dress The waist is made with front and backs and is simply lull with MmBm ttssj raj wide bishop sleeves The dress com bines a straight gathered skirt with snaped suspenders both being at tached to a shaped belt The quantity of material required for the medium size 10 years is 3 yards 21 inches wide 2 yards 32 inches wide or 1 yards 44 inches wide with 1 yards 3G inches wide for guimpe and 10 yarns of braid to trim as illustrated The Up-to-Date Bathing Costume The bathing costume has in these days of extravagance achieved rare attractiveness It is no longer the un sightly garment of heavy blue flannel with several rows of white braid as its only trimming but is fashioned from mohair that is almost as lustrous and fine as silk or of fine serge and cheviot Even the bathing costume of silk or satin is no longer a novelty These silky bathing dresses with braid trimmings or bands of contrasting color are very attractive and points in their favor are that they readily shed the water and dry quickly Black or dark blue is the choice of the conservative taste but brown and dark red are seen and the white bath ing costume trimmed with either white or a color is fashionable Bath ing shoes and stockings the latter matching the color of the costume are included in the outfit and the oil silk cap with its covering of bright hued silk or even a cotton bandana is not only an attractive conceit but a thor oughly practical one as well From an article on Outing Styles in the July Delineator Effective White Costume Nothing after all looks so pretty and fresh on a young girl as a white frock even though white is not favor ed by Dame Fashion for grown ups White belongs to youth and sets it off as no color can The simple little frock in our sketch is of dotted bwiss trimmed with Val enciennes insertion and lace A deep flounce with a heading an inch and a half deep finishes the skirt and a similar ruffle encircles the blouse waist forming a bertha Alternate rows of gathering and in sertion fit the shoulders snugly giving the long shouldered effect so much used nowadays Figured lawn is prettily made up into a gown for the little girl of 5 or 6 years Hemstitched white linen is used for the deep collar cuffs and belt My Ladys China In Holland the good old custom still obtains among housewives of wash ing the china and silver after break fast and tea with their own fair hands This they do in the presence of the family and any guests who may be there and the fashion has lately been revived in some American houses partly because it gives a touch of homely simplicity and partly because a ladys gentle handling is needed if the delicate china and glass are to be preserved for any length of time New Pique and Linen Collar The girl who clings to tailored ef fects even in summer will be pleased with some new pique and linen turn over collars fresh from English shops They are as deep as the ordinary lin en collar and open in front At in tervals around the entire collar and about midway between its two edges are slits or broad eyelets finished in buttonhole stitching Through these slits a Windsor tie to matclt the cos tume or for wear with white linen gowns a black or red tie is run and fastened In a big bow in the front Shirtwaist Hats A favorite millinery shape for shirt waist wear is still the big circular hat somewhat on the exaggerated sailor shape with flat brim and round crown of average height For wear with the shirtwaist suit of taffeta a hat of this shape in fine white chip braid with a broad ruche or box plait ing of taffeta to match the gown around the crown is distinctly mod ish Indeed no matter what the dress a pleated ruche of its fabric makes the smartest adornment just now lor the shirtwaist hat Fashionable Collars The very newest turn over collar shows the tenondcy of all things in dress to be dainty and feminine this season In place of a linen turnover the bewitching summer girl wears a turn over collar of accordion plaited white mull edged with a narrow band of butter color lace Narrow accordion-plaited cuffs of the same material give the finishing soft touch to the sleeves of her frock The frills turn back over the sleeve not falling over the hand July Womans Home Com panion Coffc6 Ice Cream A novel coffee cream is much enjoy ed by those who like tho flavor To make it scald one cup of strong cof fee with one and one half cups of sugar Add the beaten yolks of four eggs and when slightly thickened remove from the fire and cool Add one pint of cream one half teaspocn ful of vanilla and freeze Serve with an orange syrup for a sauce with- can died orange peel shredded in it The orange syrup maj be procured at a good soda fountain Fried Cucumbers Peel three good sized cucumbers slice them half an inch thick and lay in cold salted Avater for an hour then remove and dry on a towel Place a large frying pan containing lard drippings half an inch deep over the fire When the fat begins to smoke put in the cucumber slices just enough of them to cover the bottom of the pan dust with pepper and fry quickly on both sides Serve when quite hot These are delicious with toast Modifying Electric Light Glare The old objection to electric lights in the living room because ot their injury to the eyesight has been en tirely removed by the invention of a peculiar opaque shade which throws the light down instead of radiating it in every direction These electroliers for reading purposes come in a va riety of shapes and are especially pretty when finished with bead or glass fringe Ingenious Luncheon Place Cards Some place cards at a recent lunch eon contained each a conundrum and a small pen-and-ink sketch The pic ture gave a hint of the answer to the conundrum One card for instance had on it the picture of a cake and the question Why is the letter K like flour The answer was Because you cannot make cake without it Any riddle book will furnish the ques tions and a little thinking will suggest subjects for the sketches Shirt Waist Sleeves Shirt waist sleeves vary from sea son to season as do those of waists of more elaborate sorts and often if they can be made up to date the en tire waist seems new and fresh These very excellent models include the two favorite ones of the season the bishop with full puffs at the wrists and the plain one in shirt style Both are finished with straight cuffs and both hq IMa Urn A M Sfr ft rJ mi sleeves are opened at the back Each sleeve is made in one piece and each is gathered at both upper and lower edges The opening in the bishop model is simply under faced but that in the short sleeve is finished with an overlap in regulation style The quantity of material required for the medium size is for bishop sleeves 1 yards 21 or 3G inches wide or yards 44 inches wide for plain sleeves 1 yards 21 inches wide i yards 36 inches wide or yards 44 inches wide Saving Scorched Preserves An old housekeeper who has been the victim in her day of almost every kind of accident that can happen to a housekeeper says that whenever a kettle of jam or preserves is scorched set it immediately in a pan of cold water to restore the flavor UJUW Refused to Listen Pardon me sir began tho feral nine victim of hard luck who was forced to solicit alms as she ap proached the crusty old bachelor desk but I am a poor lone widow and Youmay as well break It off right there Interrupted the heartless o b I cant use any leap year proposals In my business No He Vasnt Henpecked r f rVll 1 II WW Mr Scrapper Maria I I Mrs Scrapper Take that you brute and dont let mo ever hear you say that you are henpecked again Philadelphia Telegraph A Different Kind Johnny What does conscience mean Teacher It is something Inside of you that tells you when you have done wrong Johnny Ma said I didnt have no conscience But I know I had Only when I felt that way the other day doctor said it was green apple3 Brooklyn Life One Mans Grief Smithkins I met Enpeck down town to day He told me his wife had left him last week Mrs Smithkins Poor man I sup pose hes all broke up over it isnt he Smithkins I guess so When I con gratulated him he insisted on opening a small bottle Cause and Effect Wife John do you know that you swore in your sleep last night Husband Did I It must have been when I had that horrid dream Wife What did you dream Husband I dreamt I was smoking one of those cigars you gave me on my birthday His Method Dont you know that it doesnt do the least good to apply abusivo epithets to a political opponent Of course answered Senator Sorg hum it doesnt do any good But it assures your constituents that you aro trying to do something to earn your salary Washington Star She Was O K Si pM vim I imnft t mmmM in III I LM 1 uwpm ITTTTTT 1l 2H KKsraaeEBi M III II T mfiiiH rkS ill SWK55s HI mi Hi iHESSSEaBl WBB3UH iaiiisEi k Mr Knox 3 a m My Ive had a hard tug of it Mrs Knox--I should think it would be a hard tug to carry the load youve got Too Sanguine Edna And after our marriage I am going to keep a cook Belle You are too reckless ray dear Edna Reckless Belle Yes You should say you ara going to try to keep a cook Practice Makes Perfect Shoe Clerk Im afraid you cant get these shoes on madam Suppose you try a size larger Mrs ORiley Niver do ye moind young man OiH be able t git thim on afther Oi wear thim a toim or two Plausible Theory Slyer Who was it that originated the saying the unexpected always happens Gyer Dont know Some fellow con nected with the weather bureau I imagine Reacon Why But you Americans protested thq Englishman have no ancestors to whom you can point with pride Well that is our misfortune xatfeer than our fault replied the American jirl Most of our ancestors canio rom England ycu krov