THE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE. NEBRASKA. .Strumas jmz ELKIMTIOflSCDiaiOICS SYNOPSIS. Konneth urhwnld, nn unmicccsaful Wrltor, liceuuo of socialistic tenrionrli. holds up Andrew Galbralth, incident of iim iiuyou uinio accunurs. in tho jirusl- uuiii n vituiu umco nnu ('scapea Willi iw,- t-w in riian. ny original metnoda lie- os- oaper. ino lino ana cry anil hoos nhounl fr uellfl Julio an a tlBckhunil. Clmrlottn piirnnnm 01 wanasKtt, Minn., who had poon him cash Qalbralttra chock In tlio .,.., rucuKnisya Rim, ami opcldpfl to do puuncn nun. Hho neca the hrutul mato rwiuucu irom uromnn ny uriHWold. Him talks to Orlawold and by his advlco sendn fc tattor ot botrayal to aalbralth nnony . 0lwold In iirrentod on tho ar nral of tho boat at St. Louln. but escapes imm lllfl Aftnlnr tin .1A.I.I... ..... L--i- ---- m . uui,mi:n nil 11- qMjfv. Minn., its a hiding placu, and aftor "'""'"if. nimaeir properly, takrs tlm muui. uiarRcrr urn VULttcttrr IfirHori, flnancl daughter of OrleraOD. tho financial wohnoJoi. tarta campalKn for norlui recognlUfta by tha "old families" of the tgvjn. Orfcyold falls III on tho sleeper lTlVJ,'t.oari1 .for oml tak"" t" her homo i riiaKa ot Mirgery. who finds tho ESlSSi J?0?? sultcaso. Bronin. S 4T,' lrM Mm trail. Marcory asks EmjUt,0 1 K1l Edward Ilaymor Into Raancjai hot wnlor and thon help him " ar'woM recovers to find tlm toiea rnonoy Bono. Ho meets MaruerV EiS-S i, V"5 forms n friendship wltli. . nun iimuuiaKiurert OHAPTER XIV. Continued. "Maurico, I've got to find that young woman If I hnvo to chase her half-way round tlio nlobo, and It's tough luck to Hguro out that if you hadn't boon In such a blazing h 1 of a hurry to got your suppor that night, I might be ablo to catch up with her In the next forty-olnht hours or so. But what's done Is dono, and can't bo helpud. Chaso out and got your passengor Hat for that trip. We'll tako the worn en as thoy come, and when you've helped mo cull out tho names of the onoa you'ro nuro It wasu't, I'll screw my, nut and quit buzzing you." Tho clerk wont below and returned fclmost Immediately with tho list. To gether thoy wont over It carefully, and by dint of much momory-wringing Maurico was able to'glvo tho detec Uvo loavo to cancel ten dt tho 17 Dames In the women's Hat. tho rpmnin. Ins seven including all the might-have- uoons who could possibly bo flttod Into tho clork's recollection of tho woman ho had aeon clinging to tho ealoon dock stanchion after her Inter Plow with tho deckhand. It was while ho waB waiting for the floparturo of tho first north-bound Iraln that ho planned tho search for tho young woman, arranging tho aamoB of tho bovoii might-have-beens In tho order of accessibility as Indl- "I've Got to Find That Young Woman , Jf I Chaso Hor 'Round the Globe." catod by tho adtlrossou given In tho nollo Julie's reglstur. In this arrange, cnont MIbb Churlotto Farnham's uamo stood as No. 1. , . Landing In Wahaska tho next ove ntug, Drofllti's first request at the ho tel counter was for tho directory. Hun tilng an eagor finger down tho "F's," ho camo to tho name. It was tho only Parnham In the list, and after It ho road; "Dr. Herbert C, offlco 8 to 10 8 to 4, 201 Main St., res. 16 Lake feouloTurd." Then ho registered for a room and froparod tq draw the net wljlch he onfld would' entangle tho lost ldon tlty ot tho bank robber. Aftor a good Bight's sloop In a real bed. ho uwoke refreshed and alert, breakfasted with En open mind, and presently went bout the not drawing methodically tad wlth-oYery contingency carefully fcrovldod for. ' Tho first step wbb to assure him olf boyond question that Miss Farn ham was the writer of tho unsigned fetter. This step ho was able, by a fptoco of groat good fortune, to tako linost immediately. A bit of morn ing gossip with the obliging clerk of tlio Winnoliago houso developed tho tact that Doctor Farnham's daughtor had onco taught in tho free kinder feartcn which was one of tho cbari tahlo outrcachlngs of tho Wahaska wbllc library, Two blocks east and tone south; Droffln walked thorn jirmptly, made himself known to tbo librarian as a visitor interested in Jdn- 4 eaPY!GffraycAM.rj scewxx sons uergarten work, and was cheerfully shown tlio records. When ho turned to tlio pages signed "Chnrlotto Farn nam uie last doubt vnnished and assurance was made sure. Tho nnony nious letter writer was found. It was Just hero that Matthow Drof- lln fell under tho HmltntI6ns of his trado. Though tho detective In real llfo Is ns little as may bo like tho Inspector Uuckets and tho Javorts of fiction, cer tain characteristics persist. When ho found himself face to face with tho straightforward expedient, tho craft limitations bound him. He thought of a dozen good reasons why ho should mako has,to slowly; and ho recognized in nono of them the crnftsmnn's slant toward Indirection tho tradition of the trado which discounts the straight forward attnek and puts a premium upon tho methods of the deer-stalker. Sooner or later, of course, the at tack must be made. Hut only an ap prentice, he told himself, would bo foolish enough to mako It without mapping out all the hazards of the ground over which It must bo nmdo In a word, ho must "ulnco" MIrr Fnrn ham precisely; mako a caroful slmlv oi uie young woman nnd her environ ... - . ment. to tho end that ovcrv thrnnil of unvnniago should bo In his hnmln wlmn ho should finally force her to a con cession. For by now tho assumption that Bho know the mysterious hank robber wns no longer hypothetical In uroinn (i mind; it had grown to tho dl mensIonB of a conviction. vhii ino patient cur nsltv of IiIh trlbo he suffered no detail, however, inviai, to escapo Its Jotting down. To famlllarlzo himself with the colncs and comings of one young woman, ho mndo tho acquaintance of an entire town. Ho knew Jasper Grlerson's am- mtlon, and Its fruitage in tho practical owncrsuip of Wnhaska. Ho knew that fcuwurd Itnymer had borrowed money irom urierson's bank and was llkely iu uo unnoio to pay It when his notes foil due. Ho had heard It whlRTinrnil that there had onco been a love affair botween young Itaymor and Miss Farn- nam, and that it had been broken oft by Raymer's infatuation for Margery unurson. Also, Inst and least imnor tant of all the gossiping detnlls, as It Bccmeu at the time, ho learned that uie oetwltchlng Miss Grlerson was a croaturo of fads; that within the past monui or two she hnd returned from a Florida trip, bringing with her a sick man. a total stranger, who had picked up on tho train, taken to the great houso on tho lako shore and nursed back to life as Miss Grlerson's latest defiance of tho conventions. It should hnvo been a memorablo day for Matthow Droffln when he had this sick man pointed out to him as Miss Grlerson's compnnion In tho hlch trap. But Droflln was sufficiently hu man to boo only a very beautiful young woman sitting correctly erect on tho slanting driving-seat. To bo sure, ho saw a man, ns ono soos a vanishing fig- uro m a Kaleidoscope. But thero was nothing In the clean-shaven faco of tho gaunt, and bb yet rather haggard, con valescent to ovoko tho faintest thrill of Intorcst or of memory. CHAPTER XV. r In the Burglar-Proof. A week and a day after tho opening of now vlstns at MIbs Grlerson's "eve nlng." Grlswold Itaymor's lntorces slon with tho Widow Holcomb having pavod tho way took a favorable op portunlty of announcing his Intention or leaving Moresldo. It flgurod as a grateful disappointment to him one of tho mnny sho was constantly giving him that Margery placed no obstacles In tho way of tho Intention. On tho contrary, sho approved tho plan. "I know how you feel," sho said, nodding comploto comprehension. "You want to havo a placo that you can call your own; a plnco where you can go and como as you please and settle down to work. You uro going to work, aren't you? on the book, I mean?" Grlswold roplaced in Its proper niche tho volumo ho had been reading. It wan Adam Smith's "Wealth of Na tlons," nnd ho had boen wondering by what Ironical chanco It had found a place In tho banker's library. "Yes; that Is what I mean to do," ho roturnod. "Hut it will have to bo dono in such scraps and parings of tlmo as I can savo from soma bread-and-butter occupation. Ono must cut to llvo, you know." Sho was sitting on tho nrm of ono of tho big library lounglng-chalrs and looking up at him with a smllo that was suspiciously innocent and child like. "You moan that you will have to w.ork for your living?" sho asked "Exactly." "What wero you thinking of doing?" "I don't know," ho confessed. Again ho surprised tho lurking smllo in tho velvety eyes, but this tlmo It was half-mlschlovous. "Wo havo a collogo horo In Wnhns ka, and you might got a placo on tho faculty," Bho suggested; adding: "Ac an Instructor in philosophy, for exam pie. "Philosophy? that is tho ono thing In tho world that 1 know least about. "Oh, hut I do mean It, honestly." sho averred. "You aro a philosopher, rcnny and truly, and I can provo It uo you reel equal to another littlo drive downtown?" "Uolng a philosopher. I oucht to n equal to any tiling." he noatulntod: and he went upstairs to get a Btrcot coat ana ins Hat. Sho had disappeared when ho camo down again, and ho wont out to Bit on tlio sun-warmed vornndn while ho wnlt- i'u. ne nnd already forcotton what sue had said about tho object of tho drlvo tho provint: of tho nhlloRonhlo ohnrgo against him and wns looking iorwnro with keenly pleasurable nri tlclpntlons to another outing with her, tlio Bccond for that day. It had como to this, now; to admitting frankly tho ennrni which ho waB still calling sensu ous, and which, in tho moments of in night recurring, as often ns they can bo borne to tho imaginative, and vouchsafed now and then even to tho wayfaring, ho was Btlll disposed to characterize as an appeal to that which wan leaBt worthy In him. Passing easlly(to Miss Farnham tho ideal from Miss Grlerson tho fiosh-and blood reality, ho was moved to won der mildly why tho fato which had brought him twice Into critically Inti mate relations with her was now deny ing him oven n chanco meeting. For a week or more he had been going out dally; sometimes with Miss Grlerson In tho trap, but oftener afoot and "Open 'I nat Box on the Table, Please." alone. The walking excursions had led him most frequently up aud down the lakeside drive, but the doctor's house stood well back in its enclosure, and thero was much shrubbery. Once he henrd her voice: she was reading aioud to someono on the vine-screened porch. And onco again in passing, ho hnd caught a glimpse of a shapely arm with tho loose Bleovo falling away from It as It was thrust unward through tho porch greenery to pluck a bud from tho crimson rambler, add- Ins its gracoful mass to tho clamber ing vinos. It was rather disappoint ing, but he was not Impatient. In tho fullness of tlmo tho destiny which had twice intervened would intervene again. Ho wns ns cortain of It as he was of tho day-to-day ronowal of his strength and vitality; and ho could af ford to wait. For, whatever else mlcht happen In a mutablo world, neither an ideal nor Its embodiment may suffer change As If to ndd the touch of dnflnlrennRR to tho presumptive conclusion, a voice broko in upon his rovorlo; tho voice of tho young woman whoso most alluring charm was her many-sided changeful- ncss, as If sho had marked his preoc cupied gazo and divined its object: "You must have a little moro patience, Mr. Grlswold. All things como to him who waits. Whon you havo left More sldo finally, Doctor Bertlo will some tlmo tako you homo-to dinner with him." For his own peace of mind, Grls wold hastily assured himself that It was only tho wildest of chance shots. Since tho day whon ho had admitted that ho knew Miss Farnham's namo without knowing Miss Farnham In per son, tho doctor's daughter had never been montloncd between them. "How did you happen to guess that I waB thinking of tho good doctor?" ho asked, curiously. "You wero not thinking of Doctor Bertlo; you were thinking of Doctor Bortlo's 'only,' " wns tho laughing con tradiction; nnd Grlswold wns glad that tho coming of the man with tho trap saved him from tlio necessity of fall ing any farther Into what might easily provo to bo a dangerous pitfall. It was not tho first tlmo that Miss Grlerson hnd seemed ablo to read his Inmost thoughts. Tho short afternoon drlvo paused at tho curb In front of Jaspor Grler son's bank nnd a moment later ho found himself bringing up tho roar of a procession ot three, led by n young woman with a bunch of keys at her girdle. "Number thrco-forty-ftvo-A, please." his companion was saying to tho young woman custodian, and ho stood aside and admired tho workmanship of tho complicated time-locks while tho two entered tho electric-lighted snfety de posit vault nnd Jointly opened ono of tho multltudo of small safes. Whon Miss Grlerson camo out, sho was car rying a small, Japanned document box under her nrm, nnd hor oyos wero shining with a soft light that wnB now to tho man who was waiting In tho corridor, "Como with mo to one of the coupon rooms," sho said; and then to the custodian: "You needn't stay; 1,1 ring when wo want to bo let Grlswold followed In ml.,1 hoWlMr. ment when she turned nsldo to ono tho littlo mnho.rnnv.ilnn,! onita annrt nr ,1 '1., o"i-iiiutiii, u , , 0 UUUOn wmcn ........... eill.0 u, UI1U muciuuii .Innr Wl?.. M.l. "Mtu inuu uumpiuiu privauy "ouitu, oiiu uui uiu jaiiuuncu uux on tho tiny table nnd motioned him to ono of tho two chairs. 0nnn !S J'0 i8, , , , , Do you know why I havo brought 1ZL??J ,Wh?n..b0 Wa,8 Bitting within arm's-reach of tho small black box. "tr. !,.. II .OM , ... .... . . ..w.t siiuuiuu 110 BIHU. I OU lUKO , who yo ,,leUo. and whon you care very much about tho whys and vw ...n, juu iv wncrctores." "Oh, how nicely you sav it!" .hn commended with tho frank little laugn wnlch ho had coma to know nnd 10 SCOK to nrnvnkn film wna cifnnllncr against tho opposlto cell wall with her Bhoulders squared and her hands be 1 - . " uvMiutu 1 hind her: tho poso, whether Intention al or natural, was dramatically perfect and altogether bewltchlne. "I wnq born to bo your fairy godmother. I think." sho went on Joyously. "Tell mo; when you bought your ticket to Wahaska that night In St. Louis, wero you meaning to como hero to find work?" AO, no numitted ; I had money. then. "What became of it?" 4IT .1 A . 1 uon 1 Know. 1 suppose It wns stolen from mo on. tho train. It was in n package in ono of .my suitcases; and Doctor I- aruham said-" I know; nlso he told you that wo didn't find nny money?" 'ies; ho told mo that, too. Wo agreed that somebody must havo gone through tho grips on tho train." "So you Just lot tho money go?" "So I Just lot It go." Sho wns laughing again and tho bo dazzling eyes were dancing with do- light. "I told you I was going to provo that you are a philosopher!" sho exulted hour old Diogenes himself couldn't havo been moro superbly indifferent to the goods tho gods provldo. Open that box on tho table, pleaso. Ho did It half-absently; at the first sight of tho brown-paper packet with 11 1 . 1 1 1 . hi, uiu uiecinc duid suspended over the table seemed to grow black and tho mahogany walls of tho tiny room to spin dizzily. Then, with a click that ho fancied ho could hear, tho buz zing mental machinery stopped and reversed Itself. A cold sweat, clammy nnd sickening, started out on him when ho realized that tho reversal had made him onco again tho crafty, cor nered criminal, rendy to light or fly or to slay, If a life Btood In tho way of escapo. Without knowing what ho did, ho closed tho box and got upon his feet, eyeing her with a growing feroc uy mai no couiu neitner Danisn nor control. 'I soo: you wero a littlo beforehand with the doctor," ho said, and ho strove' to say it naturally; to keep tho malignant devil that waB whispering In his car from dictating tho tone as well as tho words "I wns, Indeed; several dayB beforo hnnd," sho boasted, still JoyouBly ex ultant "You you opened the package?" ho wont on, onco moro pushing the lm portunate devil aside. "Naturally. How else would I havo known that It was worth locking up?" Her coolness astounded him. If sho know tho whole truth and tho demon at his ear was assuring him that sho must know It she must nlso know that sho was confronting a great peril; tho peril of one who voluntarily shuts himself Into a trap with the fear maddened wild thing for which tho trap was baited and sot. He waB steadying himself with a hand on tho table when he said: "Well, you opened the packnge; what did you find out?" "What did I find out?" Ho heard hor half-hesitant repetition of his query, and for ono flitting Instant ho made sure that ho saw the fear ot death In tho wldo-open oyes that wore lifted to his. But tho next Instant tho oyes wero laughing at him, and Bho was going on confidently. "Of course, ns soon as I untlod tho string I saw It was money a lot of monoy; and you can Imagine that 1 tlod It up again, quickly, and didn't loso any more time than I could help In putting It away In tho safest placo I could think of. Rvory day slnco you began to get well, 1'vo been expecting you to say some thing nbout it; but as long as you wouldn't, I wouldn't." Slowly tho blood camo hack Into tho saner channels, and tho whispering demon at his ear grow less articulate. Ho took the necessary forward stop and stood beforo her. And his nnawor wns no answer at all. MIbb Grlerson Mnrgery--aro you telling mo tho truth? all of It?" ho de manded, Booking to pinion tho bouI which Iny boyond tho deepest depth of tho limpid eyes. Her laugh was as cheerful as a bird song. "Telling you tho truth? How could you suspect me of such a thing! No, my good frlond; no woman over tells a man tho whole truth when she can help It. I didn't find your money, and I didn't lock It up In poppa's vault: 1 am merely playing a part In a deop and diabolical plot to" Grlnwold forgot that he was her poor bonollclary; forgot that she had taken him In na her guest; forgot. In tho mad Joy of tho reactionary moment. everything that ho should havo remem- bored saw nothing, thought ot noth-1 lug savo tho flushed fnco with Its glo rious eyes and tempting Upa: tho eyes and lips ot tho daughter ot inon, I I Sho broko away from him hotly after ho had taken the fiushed fac rZ:,: . ?r "?r; oro.Ke of othnr .,! nV . M ,,ar0D 1,110 ino clla,r tho n..i ... .7 ". "T 1 uiiiui niiiif hi inn Tfi iwn cim T B 8 "nd 5 10 burln8 cheeks mm uiu iiuiverinc linn in tlio omnk nf tt round ann wh,ch made room for It. - sou on tno narrow tab o by pushing " J """v l" ui',u bug edge it una in nnpmnl n-io,..t.i picked up tho box nnd put It on tho other rii flit fvrnt-ril.. n .1 ...... 1. . .1 1 II.. llCr Chalr' Eravo,y and 'methodically, Thon ho stood before hor again with ,,,S bflCk ,0 th0 Wtl11' siting 'or whaf ovcry gentie arop or blood In his veins ... " ..w..., uov.u, hub icinnc nun nn riniiiv .ino.irfo.i HIS nUn Shmpnt unn lnnr- In nnmlncr. o ls ,, wl,o ho .J ' . Jo needn't spare me at all. Tho only ex oa it, iih BUCCfiRiPii ppniiv. "vnn CUro I nffr 4i. offm,B 1 tZ ' She looked up quickly nnd the dark nvnn Wfir A a tulmtnlti r Tint ..l.All.n. it.. n- 0 . . ... it; iii a tiL'iu 111 11 11 r nr nn v nr n iTrnrrnr I , " w wuC3i.u generosity ho could not toll. men tuero was nn excuse?" she flashed up at him. 'No," ho denied, as ono who finds tho second thought tho worthier; tnero was no excuse." Sho hid found a filmy bit of lace- 1. .1 . . ... uuiuurcu iincn at ncr ocit and was furtively wiping her lips with It. i thought perhaps you might bo ablo to to Invent ono of somo sort." sho said, and her tone was as colorless as tho gray skies of an autumn night- fall. And then, with a childlike appeal in tho wonderful eyes: "I think you will havo to help me a little out ot 0ur broader exporlcn What ought I to do?" ce, you know. His reply camo hot from tho rcflnlnir uro of self-abasement. 'You should writo mo down as one who .wasn't worthy of your lovlng-klnd ncss' nnd compassion. Miss Grlerson men you should call the custodian and turn me out." nut afterward," she perslstod pathetically. "There must be an after ward." 1 am leaving Aiereside tins eve ning,' he reminded her. "It will bo for you to say whether Its doors shall over open to mo again." She took the thin safety-deposit key from her glove and laid It on tho ta ble. xou havo mado me wish thero hadn't boen any money," sho lamented, with a sorrowful little catch In her voice that stabbed him llko a knlfo. "I hnven't so many friends that I can af ford to loso them recklessly, Mr. Grls wold." Damn the money!" ho exploded; and tho mnledlctlon camo out of a full heart. Her fingers had found the bell-push and wore pressing it. When the- cus todlan opened the door, Miss Grlerson was her poiseful self again. "Number throe-forty-five-A Is Mr. Kenneth Griswold's box, now," sho an nounccd briefly. "PieaBO register it In his name, nnd thon help him to put It away and lock it up." Grlswold went through tho motions with tho koy-bearlng young woman half-absently. Man-like, ho was ready to bo forgiven and comforted; and thero was at least oblivion In her charming little shudder as tho custo dlan shot tho bolts of the gato to let them out. Br-r-r!" sho shivered, "1 can never stand here and look at tho free people out there without fancying myself In a prison. It must be a dreadful thing to bo shut away behind bolts and bars, forgotten by everybody, nnd yet your sen unaoio to forgot. Do you ever havo such foolish thoughts, Mr. Grls wold?" For one poignant second fear leaped alive again and ho called himself no bettor than a lost man. But the eyes that wero lifted to his wore the oyes of a questioning child, bo guilelessly In nocent that he Immediately suffered another relapse Into tho pit of self-de splslngs. "You havo made mo your prisoner, MIbs Grlerson," he said, speaking to his own thought rather than to her question. And when thoy reached the sldowalk and the trap: "May 1 bid you good-by horo and go to my own place?" Of courso not!" sho protested. "Mr, Raymcr Is coming to dinner tonight and ho will drive you over to Mrs. Hoi- comb's afterward, If you really think you must go." And for the first time In their com ings and goings sho let him lift her to tho high driving-seat. CHAPTER XVI. Converging Roads. Matthow Brofiln hnd been two weeks nnd half ot a third an unobtrusive spy upon the collective activities of the Wahaskan social group which Includ ed the Fnrnhams beforo ho decided that nothing could be gained by fur ther delay. Having his own private superstition about Friday, Brofiln choso a Wednes day afternoon for his call at tho house on tho lako front. It was n resplen dent day of tho early summer, which, In tho Minnesota latitudes, springs, Mlnervallkc, full grown from tho nod ding head ot tho wintry Jovo of tho North. In tho doctor's front yard tho grass was vividly groen, gladioli and Jonquils bordered ho path with a bravery of color, and tho buds ot the clambering roso on the porch trellis wero swelling to burst their calyxes. Brofiln turned In from tho sldownlk and closed tho gato noiselessly behind him. Whllo ho had been three doors away In tho lako-fro'nting street, a small pocket blnoculnr had assured him that tho young woman he was going to call upon was Bitting n a porch rocker behind tho clamberlns rose, reading a book. Sho had risen to meet him time' he' 'had "SuSed 2.f anS no .Knew l'!nl ,lor nt &anc0 was ap- ."'.tu,,."." coni:aenuy com prnlslvo. Ho had confidently counted "u u."" "e,"B ,ni8Ken ror n strange pa i 1 . i . tlent In search of tho doctor, and ho wns not disappointed. "You nro looking for Doctor Farn ham?" sho began. Uo is at his of Hco 201 Main street.' Brollln was digging in his pocket for a card. it r i a. . father's offlco Is, but you aro tho I wanted to sec " ho said- and gave IS the ? roSnd-cSmered 'card i Know won ennujtli wliero vonr uio ono aud ho r,1 tvlMi its blnzonment of his uamo and m tiini.... ,..lV.Ul1U, Mm. 1.1 t. . .. ... .1.. K Z ,1 TSTSLS - it were ot ti ' " " 7, I nnu rim HiHr. ...i. 11... 1 . 7u. ' "s Y.r B,gna: . lu? Pre8SlnB or theoming a lllinn I. ..A. a . . "au tluat-u 1 wprn Tint or fninxH . . 1 ..wi. mruiuuit, Will you como Into tho houso. Mr." sho had to look at the card again to get tho name "Mr. Brottln?" Bho asked. "Thank you, mls3; it's plenty cood enough out hero for mo if it Is for you", ho roturned, beginning to fear that tho common civilities were eIv- ing her tlmo to get behind her de fenses. "I guess wo can tako it for granted that you know what I want. MIru Farnham," ho began abruptly, when no nnd shifted his chair to faco her rocker. "Something llko threo months ago, or thereabouts, you went Intr a bank In New Orleans to cot a draft cashed. Whllo you wero at tlio pay ing tellers window a robbery wan committed, and you saw it dono and saw tho man that did It. v Vvn rnmo to get you to tell mo tho man's name. " havo told It once, In a letter to Mr. Galbralth." Brofiln nodded. "Yes: In a letter that you didn't slcn. I've como all tho way from Now Orleans to get you to tell me his real name. Miss Farnham." "Why do you think 1 can tell you?" was tho undisturbed query. "A lot of little things," said the de tective, who was slowly coming to his own In the matter ot Belf-assuranco. "In tho first place, ho spoke to you in the bank, and you answered him. Isn't that so?" She nodded again. "You know bo much, It 1b surprising that you don't know It all, Mr. Brofiln," sho com mented, with gentle sarcasm. "The ono thing I don't know is tho thing you'ro goln' to tell mo his real name," he Insisted. "That's what I've come hero for." In spite of her inexperience, which. in Mr. Broffln's field, wns no less than total. Charlotte Farnham had Imagi nation, and with It a womanly zest for tho matching of wits with "Damn the Money!" He Exploded. whoso chlof occupation was tho meas uring of his ownwit ngalnst the subtle clovorncss of criminals. Therefore she accepted the challenge. "I did my wholo duty nt the tlmo. Mr. Brofiln," sho demurred, with a touch of coldness In her voice. "If you wero careless enough to let him escapo you at St. Louis, you shouldn't come to me. I might say very Justly that It was never any affair of mine." Matthow Broffln's gifts wero subtle only In his dealings with other men; but ho was shrewd. enough to know that his last and best chanco with a woman lay in an appeal to her fears. I don't know what mado you writo this letter, in the first placo," ho said. taking tho well-thumbed paper from his coat pocket; "but I know well enough now why you didn't sign It, nnd why you didn't put tho man's real name In It. You you and him fixed It up between you so that you could say to yourself afterwards what you've Just said to me that you'd done your duty. But you haven't finished tlnln' you duty yot. Tho law eay3 " "I know very well that tho law says," was her naming rojoinaor; "i havo taken tho trouble to find out slnco I came homo. I am not hiding your criminal." Brollln was trying to gain a little easo by tilting his chair. But tho house wall was too close behind him. 1'eonlo will say that you nro holpln to hide him as long as youf won't tell his real name what?" ho grated. 4 (TO BE CONTINUED.)