THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. a W i ifi' H f i il ; The Ambition of Mark Truitt By HENRY RUSSELL MILLER (CoCTrUkt. Wlfcj Ti SYNOPSIS. Murk Tnt iwvrfceH! r wtt- iMa VWK3 JitfcTWft. )mvm WIrtJL w "ratlvr to'wiL -upWV "n ? snwn Tn)K MlUMtrti Cliirt IntiR 5ifc ht toa h Tfltftft. M Jtl M m n vfrtfi-n Kt& imSU w K vrr trrt -wrin Mm'k ajijiWm 'o TTkhwa 33f9 . JicaJI QirtT Iron rrtc. r 3b nfl ? nt I th can trrotfeai rc H! ttowssn 1 thm work wto Iran ;ilM JfJier to Hotnan AoiitrrJaWtiL i7Ks-arth furncman. H twoeH nrdrtp In Koni.in'a htwne find asstet. rw. Rrenan'a von. In ht RtuJlrs. Kaxta, a ataptod daughter, allows her SraUtttd In weh . manner na to arouta (ark's tatwat In her. CHAPTER VII Continued. "Yes, you would, Kazla. But I guess It's more than Just tho money You see, In Dcthel there's no chance, coin ing to do; except crow old and noso Into your neighbor's business and and want tho things you can't have." "Yea," she said slowly, "I know." "You know? Do you want things, too?" "Want things!" Sho drew a long wondering breath, ns she measured de fllro. Sho did not watt for his ques tion. "To bo different." Thoy oat a little nbovo tho carriage road, along which rolled tho Sunday afternoon proceBBlon of pleasure takers. Ho pointed to an open landau In which two women sat, primly up right, hands folded In laps and faces not straight ahead, the very picture of They Sat a Little Above the Carriage Road. ti'oll-drosscd, sotf-consclous respect-ablllty-s-aB "dlfferont" from Kazla aa anything ho could ccucclvo. "Like that?" "Yes, like that, Sometimes." Sho looked wistfully after tho departing respectabilities. "But mostly, Just to belong to somebody." "Hut Roman and tho Mntka and Plotr" "Thoy'ro uahamed of mo and afraid other peoplo'll llnd out about mo. Wfcen I wont to Bchool tho other boys and girls said things and did things. I didn't caro." Her head wont up and hor volco told how passionately sho had cared. "Dut Plotr told them at homo and they wouldn't lot me go any more. They'd bo glad If I woro gone. And some day I will go." "But whoro, Knzla?" "I don't know," sho said wearily. "If I know, I'd go now. Somo placo whBje thoy won't know about me. Horo liobodj, when thoy find out, treats mo llko other people. Except," sho added, "Jim Whiting." "And mo," h(j said gently. "And you." Sho turned to look searchlngly Into his eyes. "Don't It really make any difference to you?" "I settled that question onco for all last Sunday." Her look of gratltudo disturbed him atraugely, Ho stirred uncomfortably. Sho saw, but did not uudorstaud. Sho pointed to tho-(linking sun. "See! It's getting lato, I must go homo and got your supper." Ho took her hand and helped her to rise. Hut be did not release the hand. "Have you liked It today? And will. you come again?" Ho smiled down upon her. In her eyes was still tho look, of gratltudo, of trust. "If you want to," one answered Blinply. ''And in tho weeks that followed they did repeat that holiday moro than onco. Mark did not try to anaiyzo htB pleasure In those woeks. His heart Bald: "I am young and life should bo bright. Dut this existence toll, eat, eleep and toll again Is eating my youth away, I havo a right to this llttlo pleasure," The only real shadow was that cast by Jim Whiting. Tho weekly bulletins to Uulty con tained important omissions, Ono night ho was in his room, sleep less. There had been 110 little chat with Kazla aftor supper. She had had Just ttmo to inako her simple toilet boforo Jim Whiting camo to carry hor uway. Mark lay thore, toBBlng rest lessly, vlslonlng the two In some se cluded spot where Whiting could make love to her undisturbed. Tho thought . waa not a sedative, Uo wished they .Author of "TUBMAN nir.iir.R UP." 'HIS RISC TO rOWER, r.tc Bc4AMen4n Company) wpuld como home; ho did not llko to think of her out In tho languorous alght with Whiting. In tlmo thoy did return. Tho mur mur of their voices on tho little front porch came to him through his open window. Whiting seemed In no hnsto to leavo. Mark wondered imnntlently what they found to talk so long about. At length, sleep as far away ns over, ho nroso, dressed and went quietly down stairs with what Intent ho hardly knew. .On tho bottom stair he stopped, facing tho door. Whiting was on tho point of leaving. Mnrk saw him coolly put an arm around Kazla; sho suffered It. Hot nnger and some thing far sharper boiled within tho eavesdropper. Nor was It perceptibly coolt-J when ho saw her deftly avoid tho Wbb Whiting would have taken; sho laughed ns sho rroko away. Whit ing went down tho steps, whistling gaily. Mark was still standing on tho stair when sho wont In. Sho stnrted. "Oh! Is that you?" "I think it la." "That'B a funny thing to say," she laughed. "Your volco sounds funny, too." He had Just been condemning Whit ing for tho Indecent length of his stay. Now ho said: "Lot'8 go out on. the porch n while." Thoy wont out Into tho moonlight. He sat upon the railing and stared grimly In tho direction of Whiting's departure It was past midnight; the street slopt. From tho valley below thorn camo the rumblo of tho mills that woro teaching him fenr and self control. He was Bllent for a few mln uttfs, whllo he tried to master the ugly thing within him. "What is it?" sho asked wonder ingly. "Kazla," ho blurted out, "you shouldn't lot him do that." "Oh! You saw?" "I didn't mean to." "Why do you say I shouldn't?" "Ho Iio'h not fit tq touch you." . "Ho'b very Jolly and nlco to mo," sho said qulotly, "And and ho wants to tako mo away." "But you're not going, nro you?" ho cried. Sho sighed. "I don't know yet." "Kazla!" Ho did not know how his volco was shaking. "Promise mo you won't go away with him." "Why not?" Sho turned to him. "Why not?" "Because" ho began unsteadily, "bo causo I want tho best for you. Be causa becauso this I" With a sudden rough rocklosB movement ho caught hor closo to him. She Buffered him as 'sho had Jim Whiting. "Don't you know I want only the boat for you?" "I think I do." Sho put a hand to his cheok and turned bis faco out of tho shadow, looking long and search lngly rlnto his oyes. Then she gavo a llttlo sigh. "I prom lao now." Her lips' waited for his kiss. Gradually his senses cleared. He4 bogah to oeo tho ugly troachery of what ho had dono. Hla strong clasp slackened. Sho scorned to feel, with tho sixth senso that was hers, the change In him. "What 1b It?" Sho looked up in quick alarm. "Nothing." To avoid her oyes ho caught her closo again, burying his faco In her hair, nud yielded to tho Intoxication of hor. "Oh! Kazla, Kazla!" . . . CHAPTER VIII. Afire. July camo, Buch a month aa the city could not rcmombor, humid and .slckenlngly hot, Children played lan guidly, always in tho shade, and Hocked around Ice wagouB, quarrellug over tho division of tho fast melting, cool fragments. In tho mills the men tolled on, "spooling up" as always to feed a world hunger for ateol. They drank vnst quantities of water; ttioy salted It that they might drink the more, be hoving that In much sweating ulono lay aatoty. Thero woro giants In those days. But somotlmos thoy fell. A sud den drying up of sweat, a violent nau Bea, a sharp blinding pressure upon tho brain In a few minutes or fewer hours thoy were dead; tholr namoB did not- always appear In tho dally lists. Somo that did not ulo found their strength forever broken. The ilorco heat blistered Mark's naked Bwoatlng skin. Tho water ho drank carrlod out through his pores tho food that Bhould havo nourished him. The boavy labor put upon him a wcnrlucsB sloop could not dispel. Tho incessant roar, tearing at qulvorlng nerves, Impeding thought, bocame In hla overwrought stnto oxqutBlto tor ture. Hato, for tho mills, for thoao above who drove bo pitilessly, even for the men boaldo him, tilled him; and fenr. Onco, when Henloy, passing, gave his careless nod, ho was an sworcd only with a venomous glare that summoned the mastor's sardonic grin. Mark could havo killed him then. Ho envied Roman, often almost bit terly. Tho big Polo felt and showed tho offects of tho lntenso heat, but he wns tho same untturrled philosoph ical workman as ever, always with a cheerful word; no tear of collapse dis turbed htm. Through watching him Mark was bescl by a now temptation. When their turns wero ended Roman and tho men invariably flocked to tho nenr est saloon and there drank repeatedly whisky and brandy mostlyuntil vigor returned to their wornout bodies. It was a falso vigor, Mark know, and short-lived. But thero wero times when the thought of the hour of sur-ccase-from fatigue, of spirited outlook, lured him almost Irresistibly. And ono evening ho followed Roman and his companions to tho bar. "Whisky," ho ordered. Roman put out a restraining hand. "You bettor not drink," ho counseled gravely. "Or only beer." Mark laughed recklessly and re peated his order. Thrice ho drank. Tho weight dragging at his llmba lifted, the misery rankling in his heart dissolved. Ho was cheerful, talkative, soon maudHn. Boforo ho reached homo tho whisky had possessed his unac customed brain; he was staggering, drunk. Roman undressed him and put him to bed without supper. But ho had had his period of forgettulness. Tho next day ho paid and tho crav ing gnawed moro sharply. That eve ning "Roman, understanding, avoided the saloon and led Mark by a straight course homeward. Thereafter It was his custom, until Mark saw tho care and forbade. "You needn't bo afraid. It costs too much. Everything," ho added with a bitterness for which Roman had not the key, "costs too much." "Zo? But you aro tlredt. Unt you are not strong. Vy do you not leaf tho vork?" "Give up now, after holding on this far! I guess you don't mean that. But somo day I'll get where I want I'll havo llfo by the throat." It did not Beem melodramatic to him. "Then I'll mnko It pay for thison Its knees." Roman shook htB head gravely, ns at a blasphemy. "You shouldt not say zo. Alvays llfo iss tho master. But you aro tlredt." And In tho midst of the ordeal by fire ho fought his first battle. At times he was almost grateful for tho physi cal weariness that distracted him from the Innor struggle. Ho learned then how Insensibly Unity had receded Into tho back ground. Sho had become vague, of llttlo substanco; she was a story he had read a long tlmo ago. But she was real, too, In that sho was a habit. There was n momory that accused a girl, for onco warm and yielding, in tho last glory of the sunset, cling ing to him with tho tremulous cry; "You won't forget mo out thore?" Ho had made a vow. . . .' Within a twelvemonth he had clasped another. That other was both real, intensely real and near. Ho tried to avoid her; It was not easy. Kazia went about) quieter than ever, what sho felt too doep for words, too solemn for laughter. She did not again break into song. But no one seeing Iyer ryes could have doubted what had como Into her heart. And she 'gave to her lover with both hands, knowing no thrift 'in love. Her happiness awed, Bometlmea al most frightened hor, but she would not question It. When her sixth sense stirred, sho shamed It into silence. Sho saw In her lover's eyes a trouble that deepened us the days went by, heard it In his voice, felt it when he clasped her. One evening the last boforo tho hot wave broke; but he did not know that he dragged himself homeward, be lieving he had como to tho end of his enduranco. "But I suppose I havon't," he sighed. "Probably I'll Just go on and on but somo "day I'll droj.. .1 wonder why I do it! I wish the end would 00 mo soon now." Ho thought ho meant that. Even the bath brought no rellof. He sat down to a supper against the very He Saw tha Figure Crouching on the Floor at tha Bedside. thought of which his stomach rovolted. After a few mouthtuls he left tho tablo and -wont to his room. Ho throw him self, still dressed, oa tho bed, tossing roBtleuily In tho vain search for an easy position. Ills body was one dull ache. The overheated blood pounded through his veins, each throb a knife that hacked his brain. Hla skin was hot and dry, hla mouth parched; fever roBo. Tho lato darkness fell, dispelled a llttlo by tho faint glow from a nearby street lamp; it found him lying iuert but awake. Ills mind was beginning .to behave queorly, seeing strange shadowy objecta that moved stealthily about. Ho caught himself muttering - M 111! Avv.... a-T:ftBlJrWUrBBLEy 'Cv Ei I Ml to them. Ho wondered If he were growing delirious, but ho could not summon energy to call out or arise. It must havo been 10 o'clock when ho thought ho heard a light tnp on tho door. Ho made an effort to speak. "Come." Tho door opened. Somo ono tip toed softly to the bedsldo and leaned over him. "Aro you sick?" camo tho broken anxious whisper. "You looked bo tired and you camo up without speaking to mo. Thoy said, let you sleep. But l'vo been so afraid." Ho caught her hand and clung to It. "Would -you mind staying a whllo?" ho whlspored back. "My head does funny tricks in tho dark." Sho put her ireo hand to his hot forehead. Then sho gavo a low pity ing cry. "You nro sick! Walt!" Sho left tho room qulotly. Soon sho returned with tdwels and a basin of water In which Ice tinkled. Sho lighted tho gas Jet and turned It very low. "Close your oyea now," sho said softly, "and try to sloop. I didn't tell any one, bocauae I wanted to help you myself." Ho lay passive, whllo sho placed cold wet towels over hla eyes, bathed his hands and wrists In tho ley water and stroked his throbbing temples. He wondered dully that hands which worked so hard could bo so gentle. For many minutes thoy did not speak. . . . Tho stealthy shapes wero laid. Tho sharp pounding In his brain be gan to subside. Drowslnoss was steal ing over him. Ills hands gropod until they found hers. "Kazla, Kazla!" ho breathed. "Hush!" sho said. "It's such, a pretty name," he mur mured sleepily. Ho felt her lips on his forehead. After that ho Blept. When hd awoke tho room was dark. A cool moist wind swept strongly in upon him. Ho heard tho rumble of far away retreating thunder. And with tho heat tho headache and overpow ering fatigue had gone. Ho drew a long sighing breath. Something stirred in his hand. Then In tho faint reflection of the street lamp ho saw tho figure crouch ing on tho floor at tho bedside, her cheek pillowed In hla outstretched hand. It took him a moment to real ize what had brought her thero. "Aro you awake?" Bho whispered. "Yes." "And better?" "All right now, thankB to you. Why, you're aft wet!" "Yes." Sho rose stiffly to her knees. "It's been storming and it rained In on me a llttlo. But It's coolor now." "And you What tlmo is It?" "A clock Just struck four," "And you've been here all tho time?" "I was afraid you'd wako up and need Bomo ono. And I wanted to." "Kazln, why do you do-these things for mo?" "It Is my place." Her place! What place, then, had ho given her? "Kncla " he began. But moro than cowardice sealed hla lips. She might have been consciously lighting for her love. Sho bent over and kissed him. "Hush! You need to Bleep." CHAPTER IX. Liquid Iron. The hot spoil was over. For fifty-seven years Roman had tolled as few men can toil on the tiny farm that had been his father's, to satisfy the greedy tax gatherer; in Essen, learning another craft under the master Krupp; In the now land whose promise had lured him. Not once had his superb strength and en duranco failed him; therefore he had never known fear, had not belloved that tha fate that overtook others must somo day be his. Ho had been very prodigal of that strength. But ono day such a one as In that season tho steel-workera called cool he staggered and fell. It was three days before ho could go back to his Job. During that tlmo MarkTrultt was In cbargo of tho furnace. Ho who returned waa not the care ful, preclee, unflurrled workman. Ho know fear. Ho tired easily and was uncertain of temper. The heat-fretted him and ho worried over 11b work.. Ho lost in efficiency; several times he tapped tho furnaco either too boou or too lato and waa sharply repri manded. To .koep up arid to forget tho now weaknesa he drank more whisky than ever. Within two weeka he collapsed again. It waa during Roman'a third lay-off that Gracey, tho foreman, said to Mark: "It looka like Roman's done for." "It looks that way," Mark aBsented. "It's como pretty sudden with him. It does that sometimes." "Ycb." Mark Btarod sadly through tho furnaco mouth at the boiling flame swept slag. Tho drama had become a tragedy. Thero was an element In Bteol of which chemists took no ac count tho Uvea and souls of men. "Ho can't expect to keep his Job," he heard the foreman continue, "away half tho time llko this. And last week ho spoiled two heats. I'm afraid we'll havo to let him go." "Yes!" Mark's mouth twisted in an" ugly sneer. "He's given you tho best he had. And now he's breaking down. So scrap him, of courso!" "That's funny talk," grunted tho foreman. "Especially alnco tho super intendent and I've been talking it over and wo think of you for the Job. That makes It look different, don't It?" ho laughed. "No, It doesn't. Do you suppose 1 haven't boen thinking of that count ing on It ever since he broko flrat?" Mark turned hot eyea on tho foreman. "Why, that's tho worat of you. You drivo ua to tho limit and when we break you kick us oft llko an old ahoo. And that Isn't enough. You've got to mako bcDBta of ua, cvory man dogging the fellow ahead, glad when ho drops and lets go hla Job. Damn you all, anyhow!" "Then I'm to tell tho superintendent you don't want the Job?" Mark looked ngnln into tho boiling furnace, felt lte consuming breath, lis tened to tho mills' strident voice. Through every senso ho caught their monaco; his spirit cowered before It. But ho who had como so near to fall ing could know tho bitterness of him through whose fall advancement would come. "No!" ho snarled In Bavago con tempt for himself and his hollow high indignation. "You can tell him I'm n beast llko all tho rest." Ho was on tho night turn then. In tho morning ho went reluctantly to Roman's house. At breakfast ho was alone with Kazla. But thero was no love-making that morning. Nor did ho explain that ho was to supersede hor undo at tho furnaco. "How'b Roman?" ho aBked with an added Inward twinge. "He's not much better," sho sighed. 'JWo'ro worried about him. Ho frets becauso ho thinks he might lose his Job." Ho said nothing. "Do you think ho will?" "Ycb." Ho mado shift to raise hla oyes to hersr "I think ho will." "Just becauso he's sick. Oh, surely riot!" "Becauso no's used up. And when you'ro used up, you've got to get out to mako room for hotter for thoso that can still bo useful." "Oh, that would break his heart. How I hato those mills !" she cried. "But don't tell him you think that." "No." Hla eyea fell. "I won't tell him. Ho'll find out Boon enough." Roman did not go back to work until his shift waa on day turn again. Somo presentiment of the Impending calamity must havo como to him, for aa ho and Mark set out for the mills that morning the Irritability that had marked him since I1I3 first cbllnpse gavo way to a deep dejection. It was not until thoy wero entering tho mill shed that Mark said: "Roman, I think Gracey wants to see you." Ho tried to make it very gentle. "Za?" Roman halted, looked In tently at Mark. Ho draw a long whis tling breath. "Zo!" He understood. But his presentiment had not told him how deep the hurt would be. ' He tried to look tho man ho had been. But his tired lack-luster eyes belled the stiffly martial shoulders and firm step. Ho went straight to the foreman. "Mlno chop?" ho asked steadily. "You vlll take It avay?' "I'm afraid we'll have to let you go, Roman." "Unt vy?" Thero waa no complaint. "You'ro laying off too much," tho foreman answered bluntly. "And you'ro getting careless In your work. You've lost your grip." "I haf been zlck. Monpy," Roman made an effort to speak tho confidence hedid not feel, "meppy I'll get belter." "I hope so. You've been a good man In your time. But I don't think so. You're getting too old for tho work." Gracey waa still ygung; he could speak carelessly of growing old. "In my tlmo! Oldt," Roman re peated slowly. "I haf not bellefedt zo." He did not wince. But the shoul ders he had been holding so- bravely or'oct sagged. "Oldt! It iss zo." He started to move away, but the foreman called him back. "See here, Roman," he said with rough ItindneBS. "You've always drawn good pay. And you've quite a bit laid by, I hear.- Why don't you go back to your own country and take It easy the rest of your llfo?" Roman eyed him listlessly. "Here Iss mine country. But I do not vant to tako It eaay. Alvays haf I vorkedt the vork of strong men." He left tho foreman and walked slowly, heavily before tho furnaces un til he camo to hla old station. There ho stopped, watching the crew at work; In particular watching tho fig ure so slight for that labor of tho young man who had endured where stronger men fell. How neatly ho fit ted into bis new niche! "Unt ho iss not oldt. Oldt!" Roman shivered. Mark Trultt ate or pretended to eat his supper In tho saloon that night. Ho could not bring himself to tnco tho ordeal of sitting at tablo with Roman's family. Thero was no senso of triumph in his promotion, honestly earned though It was as hla world measured such things. Ho walked to Roman's house, with a firm tread that was the outward ex pression of his mood. Ho knew just what was coming. He dreaded it, the moment when ho muBt again face the man by whoso fall he profited, must again break the sweet ties this life formed only to aover. Yet ho did not flinch. Ho might rail against tho Is sues presented to him, but at least he had always the courago of his choice. There was none of ttie trappings of tragedy in tho moment he had dreaded. Tho family was gathered aa usual In tho dining room. Roman had himself In liand onco more. Mark stopped in tho doorway. For tho life of him ho could not speak the commonplace salutation on his lips. ITo saw Kazla steal qulotly from the room. But he knew that she stayed within hearing. It was Roman who broke the silence. "You hat eaten?" "At tho saloon." "Zo? You shouldt haf como. Vo valted." Plotr snarled: "You've got a nerve to como back here at all." "Plotr," Roman reproved nlra qulotly, "It Iss not for you," "Of courso," Mark addressed Uomau, "you want mo to go. I auppooo you blamo mo. I blamo myBelf somohow I don't know why. It It Isn't fair! It Isn't my fault you'vo been fired. You ought to 8co that. And I'd bo a fool not to tako your Job, now that yoo. can't havo It any more." "Huh!" sneered Plotr. "You'n glad enough of tho chance, too." "Plotr 1" Tho boy subsided. Roman went on: "It las not your fault I am oldt, no. But It Isn better you go. You haf mlno chop. It Iss not goot for mo to seo unt hear of tho vork of strong men ven I am not ctrong." "I will go tohight." "I haf not zaidt tonight. Von you. hat another goot placo to go." "I will go tonight." "Well goodby, then," said Plotr promptly. Mark wattod a moment longer. But thero was really nothing raoro to bo said. He went upBtatrs. His carpetbag packed a brief taste ho waited. And this was hard "Huh!" Sneered Plotr, "You're Glad Enough of the Chance." hard! Now thero was at least tho sem blance of a Btrugglp. it almost shook him becauso with that went Kazla. Instinct, brushing asldo the mist of false teachings, in terpreted anew and aright the passion ho had thought Ignoble, warned him to tako this whole lovo while yet thero was time. "Almost thou persuadest me. . . ." But not altogether. His desire to survive, to win bis place among tho masters still held the whip, kept him facing doggedly his straight road, ahead. And, as If Jealoua of any rival for supremacy over htm, It claimed the pale lesser love. Ho could not seo the unlettered Hunky girl sharing that conquest. When sho camo, sho stood for a mo ment at tho door, -a question and a great fear in ber oyes. "I I was waiting for you," he said. "I knew. But I couldn't come any sooner." Her glance fell to the bag, roso again. Sho walked Blowly toward him. He roso. Scarcely an arm's length away, she halted. Suddenly teara stood In her eyes. She put out both hands in a quick pleading gesture "Don't go!" "Thoy don't want me to stay, Kazla." "That's bocaiiBO you'vo taken his Job. Don't taku it!" He shook his head. "You don't un derstand. Thoro'a no reason why I shouldn't tako It." "He's your friend." "You don't understand," he repeated wearily. "If I could give him back, his Job by not taking it, I'd not tako It." He believed that then! He be gan again tho old reasoning. "But I couldn't. Somo ono else would got It that'B all. Ian't it better for mo to have it than a stranger? Roman," he concluded bitterly, "ought to see It that way." "I know thero isn't, any good roason. But I couldn't go with you, If you took It." Sho couldn't go with him! His eyea fell mlaerably. "Oh, no!" With ono Bwlft step sho bridged tho space between them. r throwing her armB around hla neck. "Oh, no! I didn't mean that. I'd go with you, whatever you did. I'd have to. I couldn't stay hero, when you're gone go back to tho way It was bo foro you came. I couldn't stand that." A llttlo shudder passed over her. "You can't understand," ho cried again. "I've tried " "I know. I've seen It troubling you, though I didn't know what It was. But can't you seo? l'-tn the reason. You'll never find any ono that can lovo you like I can. It's all I know to love to lovo you, I don't ask much. But I can give everything." With a forco that must have hurt her he freed himself from her clasp and sank shaking Into "tho chair, cov ering his faco with his hands. For a breath the scales quivered. Then; "Kazla," he whispered, "I haven't been square with you. Thero's thero'a another girl " "Thero 1b And you " After what seemed llko a long silence ho dared to glanco up to seo how sho had taken It. By then sho had crept to the threshold and waa looking back at him. About her lips a dazed, foolish llttlo emtio was play ing. And, ber eyes were the eyes of one who had Juat seen a great horror. When ho looked up again, sho was gone. An hour later how ho could not have told he found himself wander ing In tho streets, carrying his ancient carpetbag, (TO BE CONTm'KD ) : A.fC : Jie'Vi-c?taS!!Kr' s-r;-4ir