J RED PEPPER AN ELIXIR $ From the Kansas City Star. How To Beat Osier Theory. Fat red pepper. Eschew black pepper, tea and coffee. Do not "stuff." Drink a gallon of water every day. Breathe deeply. Keep out of doors as much as pos sible. • That Is the basis of the longevity rules of Dr. W. P. Horton, Cleveland physician, who is 60 years old, but looks 40. He says he "feels 30,” and on the old theory that "woman, poor thing, is as old as site looks, but a man's just as young as he feels," he savs he is only 30. Dr Horton is "husky," clear eyed and the glow of health is reflected In his cheeks. "I havo been making a study of peo ple for 40 years,” said Dr. Horton. "The trouble with most of them Is that they 'exist' too fast. They don't live. In these days we don't really eat. We swallow predigested foodB. We drink tea, coffee and other stimulants 1n ever increasing quantities. We ex ist In overheated, steam heated atmos phere We spend too much time In stuffy, unventilated street cars and not enough in the open air. "Our children skate In Indoor rinks, our men play pool and poker In smoke tilled rooms, our women play bridge In close drawing rooms. If there was more walking to school by children, walking at least part of the way to office by men and walking to market by the Women we would all be better off. This artificiality is telling on us. Instead of controlling our muscles and nerves, our muscles and nerves control us. 'Such stimulants as coffee and tea contain Ingredients, ' such as tannin, which close the glands which contain the fluids of life. These ingredients are tontalned In white and black pepper as t ell as In tea and coffee. Red pepper, however, has the opposite effect. It .opens the glands and keeps the life llulds racing within us. In addition, it .'rentes a thirst for water, which, by the .way. Is about as near the 'waters of jrouth' or the ‘elixir of life, as has been found. It Is almost impossible for knvone to drink too much water. The body cannot be flushed too oftan. Drink more water and eat less food, even of the right kind, and you'll see how much better off you are both physically and mentally." The Rock Island. From ths Wichita Kagle. Twenty years ago there was no flnet railroad property In the west than the Rock Island. Its equipment was first ,'lsss. Its road bed the best. Its manage ment unexcelled. Yesterday It went Into the hands of receivers. So completely llsordered Is the financial fabrlo of the property, that an examination proves that .he holding company, the head of the cor f ora to body, has vanished. The Rock sland company, which owned the Rock island Railroad company which owned the Rock Island Railway company, has disap peared By the creation of euccesslre cor porations by Inserting wheels within Wheels, by uncontrolled Issues of stock and their manipulation, the system was averloaded. The ratls, cars, engines, ter minals, right-of-way remain. They belong to the bond-holders. Potentially the roaa *.* greater physically than It was 20 years ago Its territory Is larger and more fully levcloped. With betterments In rail, road bed and equipment. It can be, In efficiency, the road It was 20 years ago. But the Jnoney which a shipping and travelling and • n investing public put Into the road for 'Its betterment Is water that has gone pver the dam forever. If the Rock Island had remained under the control of prac tical railroad men, every cent which the public gave, would have returned to It In rervlce. The road fell under the control •of speculators, who returned the public Ittle. squeezed the road dry, and threw the husks to the bondholders. The device Js not new; It is old. Precisely the same thine has occurred before: It will occur »galn 'Die public has paid the price be fore. Ir paying now, and will pay again. Tt Is the chief wonder of a wonderful age that the public continues to ahrlnk from public ownerahlp and goes on paying for a public service the toll of private exploi tation. Preventable Railroad Wrecking. From the New York World. There ought to be a way to prevent such performances ns have led to the Rock Island receivership. There Is a way. The Ftock of this great railroad prop erty’ was once gilt edged and sold around $2U0 a share. It fell Into the hands of a clique of unscrupulous speculators who used the high credit of the property to manufacture over $270,000,000 of new se curities. which have now been practical ly wiped out. Through the agency of the New York stock exchange some $160, 000,000 of wlnd-and-water stock was worked off on the public and otherwise used in one of the biggest swindling op erations ever related to that Institution. The road came to be operated primarily for th?se purposes and secondarily for transportation purposes. We have government regulation of In terstate railroads on a greut variety of points more or less essential. We have no government regulation of such roads on the particularly essential point of cap ital inflation, which means speculative control, which in turn means an exhaus tion of the property for temporary spec ulative effects. it makes no difference whether the cap ital inflation is direct or as with the Rock island, effected through holding compa nies. The one can be prevented as easily as the other. The proposition of giving to the Interstate Commerce commission this essential measure of control has been before congress for years and neglected. How many more railroads are going to be wrecked through swindling specula tive inflation before congress Is moved to action? Tno services of about 70.000 persons are required to take a census of this country. 1****++*+***+******+++*++* 4 “LITTLE GRAFTERS" AND 4 THE "HIGHER UPS” ♦ 4 From the Indianapolis News. 4 y There Is, as far as we know, not 4 4 a case on record In which the ‘ big 4 4 men," the men who Inspired crime 4 4 and profited by It, ever made a serl- 4 4 ous attempt to protect their cor- 4 4 rupt and criminal tools. That -4 4 would, Indeed, be In violation of 4 4 the rules of the game. The little 4 4 men do the work, assume all the 4 4 responsibility, and take whatever 4 4 punishment comes—and keep si- 4 4 lent as to the complicity of other 4 4 higher-ups. That, we say. Is the 4 4 rule of the game. It Is the same as 4 4 In the old days when the king re- 4 4 pudiated the act of an agent, even 4 4 if he had ordered It. when It was 4 4 found that the monarch would auf- 4 4 fer because of It. And the agent 4 4 expected nothing else. 4 4 In cases of politloal crime, the 4 4 bosses, so far from protecting their 4 4- agents, invariably expect to be pro- 4 4 tcoted by them. And they are not 4 4 often disappointed. Nothing U 4 4 more astounding than this self-aae- 4 4 rlflclng loyalty. In "days of old” 4 4 the barons used to give a full equlv- 4 4- a lent for the services performed by 4 4 their retainers. But things have 4 4 changed. The modern barone de- 4 4 numd that their retainers shall not 4 4 only work and steal for them, un- 4 4 der their orders, but also bear the 4 4 penalty for the crimes committed 4 4 at the command of the barons. It 4 tie expected that the retainer shall 4 not only do the dirty work of his 4 •4 overlord, but suffer In his stead— 4 4 and in abject alienee. 4 4 Surely by this time the little peo- 4 4 pie must realize that there Is no 4 4- (oislble protection for them. When 4 t exposure comes they are Immediate- 4 ly dumped. 4 -4 4 er-44’444-4’44 A^-e-444-44 44-444’4-*’4-r THE THREE SISTERS. tvonyrigin, iHia, oy me .ucciuro j^ewa l>ai>er Syndicate.) Hans and Gretchen were sitting be side the fireplace one very cold night watching their last stick of wood burn. ‘‘What shall we do but freeze?” asked Hans; “now that our last stick is al most gone; there Is no one to help us and we are too old to go out to work?” “We shall be cared for,” replied Gretchen; “X feel sure of that. Some ono Is knocking at the door,” she said. “Good evening!” said a cheery voice, and a girl dressed in white came into the room. Her dress looked like the enow, all sparkling with little crystals and her hair fell over her shoulders like spun gold. She hurried to the fireplace and touched the dying fire with a bright staff she carried in her hand. The fire blazed and warmed the room. Then with the same staff she touched the woodbox that stood beside the fire place and It was filled with wood. Next she went to the closet and filled all the shelves with food, and when she started toward the door the house was comfortable, and there was food enough to last some time. "Who are you?” asked Hans, who had been watching this shining crea ture with wondering eyes. “I am the Fairy of Faith,” was the reply. "You will do well to profit by the example Gretchen set you, and have a little more faith,” and with theqe words she went and closed the door. “This Is all very well,” said Hans, the next day, when he and Gretchen were Bitting by the fire after a good dinner, “but where shall we get more when this Is gone?” Oh! I hope the winter will soon be over now,” said Gretchen, “and the summer will not be so hard for poor folks.” Hans planted his garden when the spring came, but the rain came also, and one day he sat grumbling In the kitchen. "Where Is your sunshine you hoped for?” he asked. “All the vege tables will be spoiled, and we shall starve this winter.” “Do try to look on the bright side,” replied Gretchen. “I hope the sun will come out soon, and then you will see we shall have plenty and to spare this winter.” But Hans would not see anything but disaster ahead, and that night he ate his supper In silence, with a very black Innklmr fat's* “Some one Is knocking at the doer,” said Gretchen. "It Is the wind,” replied Hans, “who would be out In this rain?" But the knocking came again and Hans opened the door. A girl entered, dressed In garments like the sun, so bright and warm that they filled the room with a feeling of gladness, which even Hans, with his doubting spirit, felt. "Who are you?" he asked. " PAPER IN THE KITCHEN. ~ paper Syndicate.) The kitchen might well be literally crowded with paper of various sorts. If all its uses are taken Into count when the wise housekeeper Is thinking of economies. To begin with, a lining of newspaper to the dust box Is good. This lining can be destroyed dally when the contents of the box are burned. The garbage can, too, can be lined with newspaper, and all bits of refuse that are put Into It can be wrapped In newspaper for the sake of further prevention of odors. When grease is spilled on the. kitchen stove, the best way to get It oft Is to ruh It quickly with some bundled up newspaper. So a supply of papers cut In quarters should be neatly placed in a cupboard. Old magazines are used by some laun dresses for Iron stands, although It Is a /very good plan to stand the Iron on some metal contrivance, as the scorch ing paper smells. Moreover, old maga zines ought to be sent to hospitals or to friends, where they can be further enjoyed. A roll of paper toweling In the kitch en Is always useful. These towels, if they are liked, can be used for hand towels. Moreover, they can be used to spread on a taDle to hold fresh bread or cake, they can be used to dry fruit and vegetables that have been washed, lettuce and celery can be wrapped In them when they are put In the refrig erator to chill and a dozen uses will occur to every housekeeper who tries them. There are on the market paper dish cloths that are also very sanitary. They are cheap, and after they have been used a few times they should be de stroyed. Of course, plenty of waxed paper should be on hand, for on It candles and various other confections can be drained, and It can be used under cakes and for linings for cake tins. For a cake that requires very long cooking, like a fruit cake, three or four layers of the paper should be used. Some of the shops sell waxed paper discs already cut for lining layer cake pans, but It is not difficult to cut these If you have time. Always have some brown paper for draining croquets and other dried food. This should be fresh brown paper, bought for the purpose, as that which comes around bundles may not always be clean. A few small sheets of blot ting paper, too, can be used for drain ing fried foods. ♦T-t ♦♦ ♦ WORD GEMS SCRATCHED ♦ ♦ ON WINDOWS OF INNS ♦ ♦ ♦ From the London Tlt»BIts. Throughout the country, particularly In the smaller towns and villages, there still remain many Inns and old taverns on whose wlndowpanes have been scratched rhymes, verses, and epigrams by people who afterwards became, or who were at the time, moro or less famous. The poet Burns was what might be termed a great "offender" In this respect one wonders where he procurred the necessary diamond—and several of his glass-borne rhymes have been preserved to this day. It was on a window of the old Globe Inn, Dumfries—a favorite re sort of Ills—that he Inscribed the well known tribute to the beauty of the young daughter of the factor of Closeburn es tate, near Elllsland: O lovely Polly Stewart, O charming Polly Stewart. There's not a flower that blooms In Bny That's half so fair as thou art. On another occasion the t>oct was dining at the Inn at Moffat, when "the charm ing lovely Davies" of one of his songs rode by, accompanied by a lady tall and portly. A friend who was with him asked why God made the one lady so large and the other so little. Whereupon Burns scratched the following on the pane at his elbow: Ask why God made the gem so small. And why so huge the granite? Because God meant mankind should set The higher value on It. No one has apologized more prettily fo: those of "scrimplt stature." On an Inn parlour window at Mold. Ir Flintshire, are the following lines, which are attributed to Sheridan: Were I to curse the man I hate From youth till 1 grow old. Oh, might he be condemned by Fate To live his life In Mold; while on a pane of glass In the parloui window of the Red Idon at Henley, Shen stone, the English poet, scratched th« following: I fly from pomp, I fly from plate! I fly from Falsehood's specious grin! Freedom I love, and form I hate. And choose my lodgings at an Inn. (Vhoe'er has travelled life's dull round, Whate'er his stages may have been. May sigh to think he still has found The warmest welcome at an Inn. A verselet, which Is both amusing ant true, may be seen on a wlndowpane In i hostelry In the Lake district. In the neigh bourhood of the I.angdale Pikes. It run: as follows: Little bits of Langdales, Little bits of Pikes. Make the little tourists Walk their little bikes. Advertisement not Infrequently finds i place among the jingling periods of i pithy chyme, as Is evident from the prac tlcal advice given below. The landlori himself claims te the authorship of th lines, which are both original and amus< lng In stylo: Should you start with your clothes A size or two large, You will find when you've dined at this Inn Your buttons fly off like a cavalry charge, And you'll have to make fast with a pin: Don’t grin! But be sure lay a pin or two In. The following Inscribed on the coffee room window of a Thames-side tavern was promptly removed by the landlord, who, however, still preserves the cut-out pane as u curiosity behind the bar: I told the waiter James To fetch mo for my pickin’ Some Beaune of '87 And a tender little chicken. He took my order In a trice; But as I hope for heaven, The wine was bottled In the spring, The bird was 87. A Drunken Stock. Prom the New York World. The common stock capitalization of the Bethlehem Steel company is $15,000,000 par value. At one time In yesterday’s market this body of stock was valued at $19,200,000; at another time it was val ued at $2,550,000 more. In the live hours of trading on Tuesday it was worth at one time $1,800,000 more than, it was at another time. It has fluctuated nearly $1,000,000 between sales. It has fluctu ated millions of dollars between hours of trading. And It pays no dividends. This is about the worst case of Intox ication ever known to affect a security j in the experience of the New York stock I exchange. The celebrated debauch of Northern raeiflc In the corner of 1901 was over In a few hours. The 30-polnt manipulation In Rock Island lasted for little more than as many minutes. But Bethlehem Steel goes reeling from curb to curb and bouncing from floor to celling and through the roof day after day. It Is selling at the highest prices ever quoted for a stock yielding no Income, and estimates of its value as a future sober and industrious citizen are as wide apart as its stretches of leg to keep right side up In the mean time. Ah an incident of the present specu lative revival, Bethlehem Steel will be long remembered. Mr. Schwab has given the Wall street market the most exciting gamble of Its life. But, If this drunken stock does not sober up soon. It will be In order for the exchange, on behalf of the public safety thereabouts, to see that It Is “run in'' and put to bed for a sober ing up. 4 THE THING THAT LASTS- 4 4 By Edmund Burke. 4 4 It has pleased Providence to 4 4 place us In such a state that we 4 4 appear at every moment to be 4 4 upon the verge of some great 4 4 mutations. 4 4 There Is one thing, and one 4 4 thing only, which defies all muta- 4 4 tlon; that which existed before 4 4 the world, and will survive the 4 1 4 fabric of the world itself; l mean 4 4 Justice; that Justice which, cm- 4 4 anatlng from the divinity, has a 4 4 place In the breast of every one of 4 4 us. given us for a guide with re- 4 4 gard to ourselves, and with re- 4 4 gard to others, and which will 4 4 stand after this globe is burned 4 l 4 to ashes—-our advocate, our ac- 4 L 4 cuser before the great Judge, 4 4 when He comes to call upon us 4 ! 4 tor the tenor of a well spent life. 4 1 4 4 > ♦•♦4444444 ♦♦ ♦»♦»♦♦»♦♦♦ ♦♦»»T i am me * airy or nope, come ro neip you, although you do not deserve It, for poor Gretchen has to bear your grumbling, and still she looks on the bright side, and hopes for better times. Your garden will please you in the morning, but it Is really for Gretch en that I came. Be of good cheer,” she said to Gretchen, as she went out. The next morning Hans found the sun shining when he awoke, and the vegetables grew in abundance, so that when winter came they had more than enough for their need and plenty of wood to keep warm. One day. when the snow was on the ground, and it was very cold, Gretchen said: “Don’t you think we ought to nrK 1 It • give some of our wood and vegetables to the poor family at the end of the lead?” “No,” replied Hans. “Why should we give away that which we have worked to get? Besides that, that lazy fellow should have worked and got enough ahead for the winter. He Is a lazy, good for nothing. Now let him starve.” When they were at supper that night, a knock came upon the door. Hans went to the door and opened It. “Good evening,” said a quiet voice, and a girl dressed In gray entered and closed the door, for Hans had backed Into a corner of the room, her eyes were looking at him In such a mournful way. "Who are you?” he asked at last. “I am the Fairy of Charity,” the girl replied, “and I have corpe to ask you way you refuse to help the poor man who Is your neighbor and less fortu nate than yourself. You have n > chur Ity In your hear. Gretchen Is the one who has brought all your good fortune to you. Be charitable to those who do not know how to help themselves, anil give from out your plentiful store to thoso who have less. "I am the last of the three sisters, and If y< u do not profit from our visits, you will live a sorrowful and unloved old age. Be warned In time, and re member the fairy sisters who have vis ited you—Faith, Hope and Charity—I am the last, and the greatest to be desired.", And she disappeared into the night as her sisters hid done. Hans came out of his corner when she had gone. “You'd better fill a bas ket,” he said, “and I will take It In the morning to the poor family at the end of the road.” N CHAPTER VI—(Continued). Mr. Presbrey took the liberty of In terrupting him. This was an lnstanco when Horace was not only likely to ex cuse an Interruption but might even welcome It. So Mr. Presbrey rose to the occasion. He put In a tempering protest. “My dear sir, put that thought from you, once and for all. Chetwynd was certainly as eligible as anyone. All Is fair In—er—love, and war. Ha, ha! Quite so, quite so! Ha, ha! You heard what Mr. Borden, of the com mittee, said. "Amazingly clever and brilliant Idea for a college boy, and well thought out.’ Those were his very words. I made it a point to remember them so that I might repeat them to Mrs. Blagden." Horace smiled benignly, and then permitted a cloud to cross his face. He squeezed Eric’s shoulder in consoling grip and said: “It’s hard on you, Eric. If it hadn't been for Chetwynd, I am sure you would have carried off the honor. I can’t help thinking that I should have kept your cousin out of the contest." “It wouldn’t have been right sir," said Eric simply. He had swallowed hard before opening his mouth. “I am sorry, Eric," went on his uncle, kindly. Eric could hardly believe his senses. It was the first time he had heard that expression come from his uncle’s lips. Somehow, it had never entered his head that Chetwynd’s father could be sorry for anybody. There were tears In Mary's eyes as they followed Mr. Blagden and his guests into the house. She pressed Eric’s arm. “I Just know his design wasn’t as good as yours, Eric," she whispered. “Oh, I don’t mind a bit, girlie," he said bravely, despite the sore, disappointment In his heart. “It’s all in a lifetime.” A moment later, he muttered, more to himself than to her: “I wonder when he worked at the de sign. He read novels all the time, so far ns I could tell.” “I suppose it will be on exhibition at the public library,” said Mary, in grudging tones. “I’ll see it tomorrow.” Mrs. Blagden came down the stair way, dry eyed and eager. Even as she shook hands with the Presbreys, she flashed a questioning glance at her husband. “Did Chetwynd get it?” she asked. “Certainly,” replied Horace. She beamed. “You must telegraph the news to him. Horace.” He playfully tapped her on the cheek with his slim, cool fingers. “I already have done so, my dear." CHAPTER VII. THE BENDING OP HORACE BLAGDEN. Late the next afternoon Horace re ceived a telegram that puzzled him not a little. It was from Chetwynd. “Who won the prize? Wire me at the Hol land as usual.’’ What puzzled Horace was this: what had become of the telegram addressed to his son at the Holland half an hour after the awarding of the prize the day before? But what would have puzzled anyone who knew Mr. Blagden at all well, was his action In sending a sec ond telegram without inquiring at the telegraph office why the first had not been delivered. The thin line between the banker’s eyes seemed to have deep ened perceptibly after the receipt of his son’s query. Somehow, he had the ugly notion that his first telegram was ly ing unclaimed at the hotel in New York. Mr. Blagden usually left the hank at 4 In the afternoon. It was his prac tice. not to say habit, to walk up tne street to his club—the only one in town that a gentleman could enter without glancing over his shoulder In all direc tions—there to read the Boston papers and engage in a subsequent game of cribbage with Colonel Harkweather. who also read the papers before doing anything else. On this particular af ternoon, however, the colonel not only read the Boston papers, but scanned the New York dallies and then took up the magazines. Finally he went home in fine disgust. It was the first time In months that Blagden had failed to appear. He was half way home before It occurred to him that the banker might be 111 So he entered a drug store and telephoned to the house on the hill. He was not at all relieved to hear from Mrs. Blagden herself that Horace had never been in better health. If anything, the colonel was more fu rious than before, considering himself a much abused man. He kept saying over and over again to himself that he was sorry Blagden was not 111: there was now no excuse at all for him that he could see. But Horace sat at his desk much later than usual on this day, a trou bled frown on his brow. He was not thinking of Chetwynd, as you might suppose—at least, he was not devoting all of his thoughts to the boy. It seems there was a very grave cause for sus pecting a former employe of dishonest practices during the last days of his employment In the bank. Within the past week, auditors, in going over the books anticipatory to the appearance of the bank examiner, had unearthed discrepancies in the balances. There was a clearly defined shortage of near ly {5,000, carried over for several months before coming to light. Careful Investigation revealed the fact that the shortage was created about the time the assistant teller left the bank In order to make room for the president's son. The young man himself, one John Payson, after losing his position, se cured work In the offices of a build ing and loan society, upon the unqual ified recommendation of Horace Blag den. He remained In the bank for a week after Chetwynd was Installed, in structing him In the duties of office. Ab near as could be reckoned, the embez zlement occurred Immediately before or during his week of Instruction. Nothing of the kind had happened be fore In the history of Blagden & Co. Not so much as a penny had been fel oniously taken from Its coffers, not in all the 60 years of the bank’s existence. No wonder, then, that Horace was dis turbed. To think that he had employed a man who could stoop to theft! And to think that subsequently he had recommended him to a position of trust! It was most upsetting. With a promptness that suggested panic Mr. Blagden hired a New York detective and put him on the case. For a week or more, that worthy had been devoting his time and intelligence to a study of the past and present habits of the suspected young man. with the surprising result that, so far, he was unable to report to Mr. Blagden that they were anything but good. This, of course, convinced Horace that the tel 11 low was an uncommonly clever rascal. Tlie detective was Adam Carr. On this particular day, Mr. Blagden sat in his private office long after the hour for closing, aimlessly fingering the telegram he had received from his son, but intently considering the day’s report from Adam Carr. It was begin ning to enter his mind that Carr was not competent to handle a case so baf fling as this appeared to be. He was wondering if It would not be a wise move to dismiss him and employ a Boston man who, it appears, had caught a very clever defaulter after chasing him for three years. But as Horace was a prompt man In everything, he was bound to admit that he was averse to hiring a man who was so slow as all that. He had talked It over with the cashier and three of the directors, and they had advised hiring the Boston man. That was another reason why he hesitated. Carr’s report for the day brought nothing new to his impatient mind. The ex-teller was behaving in a most circumspect manner. There was no evi dence that he gambled, speculated, or kept a woman in New York. Payson had not visited New York In two years so far as Adam Carr could learn, and Horace was forced to admit that if he had a paramour at all, she must be in New York. She couldn’t be In Cor inth. The telephone on his desk rang. He put the receiver to his ear with me chanical precision and said: “Yes.” The voice that came out of the little black tube was so loud and vibrant that his eyelids twitched with pain; he held the receiver a little farther away. It al ways annoyed him to have anyone Bhout in his ear. A look of surprise followed immediately. Erie Midthorne was speaking. “Yes. I am still here,’’ replied Mr. Blagden. “What is it?" He listened for a moment to the strident, excited voice and then cut in with the curt re mark: “It Isn’t necessary to shout. I ran hear you. . . . Yes, I will wait here if it is important. But don't be long about it. Come up if you must see me." Three minutes later Erie burst Into the room without so much as a tap on the mahogany door. “Dear me, Eric, Is this the way to enter a room?” demanded Horace, In that mild tone of reproof that never failed to hurt more than a sharp repri mand. n lave oo wiutc ao Guam, lie came directly to the desk, but many seconds elapsed before he could force words through his twisted lips. Horace stared at the boy's convulsed face In actual surprise. “Uncle Horace,” began Eric hoarse ly, “it was my drawing that took the prize. Do you know that? It was my drawing. I have Just seen it.” Mr. Blagden’s brow darkened; his grey eyes narrowed and seemed to turn black as coal. “What are you saying?” he demand ed. Eric struck the desk a violent blow with his clenched fist. His eyes shot fire. “It was my drawing! Chetwynd stole It!” Horace opened his eyes very wide. A look that no one had ever seen in them before grew as he stared, with parted lips, at him who uttered those awful words. He closed his lips sudden ly to hold back the gush of tee water that seemed to fill his motith. He swal lowed. and the chill spread through out his body. He did not realize it at the moment, but afterwards he was to recall that he was experiencing the first touch of a blighting fear from which he was never afterwards to be free; the fear of Chetwynd. In an instant, he was himself again, a bit greyer than before perhaps, but quite as austere. “What do you mean, sir, by striking my table in that manner? Try to gov ern yoursel. sir, or leave the room.” He chose to resent the boy’s actions, rath er than his words. Afterwards, in an alysing his emotions, he came to ac knowledge a shameful weakness In shrinking from the real attack. “I swear. Uncle Horace, so help me God, that the drawing sent in by Chet wynd is the one I made. I have never seen the one that bears iny name. I never drew it. Oh. It was a dirty trick! It was fiendish! Uncle, you’ve just got to straighten It out. He took my draw ing. I don’t know how or when, but it is mine that has his name on it over at the library.” Tears of rage and despair filled his eyes. Mr. Blagden had himself well in hand by this time. "You are making a very serious charge against your cousin, Eric,” he said levelly. “I cannot permit you to go on in this way. You—” _ “But it is true!” cried Eric wildly. “I swear it’s true!” “Do not interrupt me. Why should I believe what you say? How could Chetwynd have come into possession of your drawing? You kept it under lock and key; you presented it to the committee with your own hands, did you not? You would hardly go so far as to jiccuse the honorable Judges of substituting one drawing for the other, of placing my son’s name on your work or allowing him to do so, if it could have gone that far.” “But it is my drawing and it has his name on it. It wasn't there when I submitted the design to Mr. Porter, the librarian.” lfo you cousioer ims a sportsman like manner in which to take defeat?” demanded Horace sneeringiy. "I don't consider it a defeat, I'ncle Horace.” said Eric deliberately. "My drawing won the prize.” Mr. Blagden's stern gaze wavered ever so slightly. "If you placed your drawing in Mr. Porter’s hands, then what, may I ask. Inspires you to make this deliberate charge against my son? It isn’t likely he could have wished his name to ap pear upon it, to have it appear there as if by magic. This is not the age of Aladdin." "I can't understand It any more than you. sir, but it is true. Just the same,” cried Eric doggedly. “Mr. Porter says that no one touched the drawings." “Then, will you be good enough to tell me how Chetwynd could have done this thing you accuse him of doing?" demanded Mr. Blagden sternly. "I think it was done before I submit ted the drawing,” said Eric. “Oh." was his uncle's expressive comment. “I wrapped it up carefully and put It In my drawer the day before I present ed It. It was not unwrapped after that. Chetwynd was In my room that eve ning alone. Mary saw him there and he said he was looking for a scarf pin I had taken from his room without per mission. He—he told her I had no ■business going Into his room that h«M [ missed several things, and—and—well, lie as much as said I’d taken thing® that didn't belong to me.” Horace smiled with grim derisiveness. “It is possible he had as much right to accuse you as you have to accuse him It seems to me his case is as godd as yours.” “T am not a thief!” “He might say the same. Did he find the scarf pin?” Eric flushed. “He told her he found it. But he lied.” “Eric!” “He lied!" Mr. Biagden's face grew deathly white and then turned purple. Ha sprang to his feet and advanced upon the boy. a furious glare in his eyes. “You scoundrel! You vilifier! You unhung rascal! How dare you come to me with such a story as this?” Ha choked, he appeared to be strangling Eric shrank back aghast. No one had ever heard a blasphemous word on tha lips of Horace Blagden, but now Eric was to listen to a torrent of wild1 pro fanity that would have shocked even the walls of a ship's forecastle. He was seized with the fear that his uncle had gone mad, utterly mad. “Uncle!” he cried, putting up hi® hands as if to shield himself from a blow. “I could kill you where you stand, curse you,” hissed the man. A great light broke In upon him. "Ah! Now I understand! Now T can see how a man Justifies himself for taking another’s life. By heavens, I know how sweet it would be to kill.” In his frenzy, he looked about for a deadly weapon. Then, as suddenly, his whole man ner changed. He fell back against th® table, his Jaw dropping, an expression of great horror crossing his face. “Good God, help me,” he groaned, shaking as with the ague. “What is it I have said? What is it that is in my heart? Murder? Oh, my God.” He would have fallen had not th® boy leaped forward to catch him by the arm. Mr. Blagden shook him off. Eric fell away, moving toward the door, ready to flee from this amazing figure, this unknown being. His uncle turned his sodden eye® upon him, and motioned with a trem bling hand for him to stay. “Stop! Don’t run away. Walt, Eric. I—I ask you to wait here until—until I—” Whatever it was that he meant to say, the words were not uttered. Somehow Eric understood. He stood in the middle of the floor and watched his uncle stagger to the couch over near the wall, upon which li® dropped as If every vestige of strength had deserted him. The minutes passed slowly. The pic ture remnined the same. The wondering, half stupefied boy in the middle of the room; the motionless figure on the couch, from whose lips ever and anon came two hoarsely whispered words: “My God!” rne shadows or dusk crept into the room through the high windows; the waning light of the summer day looked In upon the strange tableau, and vague sounds from the street came, but with out the power to disturb. Somewhere, off In the deserted banking room, a watchman was shuffling and whistling. Eric waited for him to open the door and break the spell that had fallen over the president's office. Nothing else, it seemed, could shake the fet ters from his feet, or drive the warm blood back into his empty veins. Would the heavy breathing figure on the couch never change Its limp position? Would the hand never be drawn away from the eyes it covered? At last, when the room had grown quite dark, Horace Blagden moved. The boy’s tense figure relaxed so sud denly that his legs almost gave way. "Answer the telephone, please,’’ said Mr. Blagden, his voice clam once more but weak. The telephone had been buzzing for a minute or longer. Eric grabbed up the receiver. "It Is Aunt Rena," he said lazily. “She wants to know If you are 111 why you are so late coming home, uncle." "Tell her I am all right and will be there at once.” He arose from the couch, taller, more gaunt than ever It seemed to Eric as he saw him through the gath ering darkness. “Eric,” he said from his position near the couch, “we will go home at once. Will you get my hat and cane from the closet?” The boy hesitated. ”1 can’t go homo with you now. Uncle Horace. Not after what I’ve said to you.’’ There was another long period of silence. The man's eyes were half closed. (Continued next week.) A Vote Gettinq Speech. From the Kansas City Star. It Is understood that the political speeches of Senator Weeks of Massachu setts, until recently of Hornblower & Weeks, bankers and brokers of Boston, formerly president of the Newtonville Trust company and vice president of the First National bank of Boston, have awakened the greatest enthusiasm In the highest financial circles. Mr. Weeks has assured big business that It was being abused; frightfully abused. The officers of the United States Steel corporation, the Standard Oil com pany. the Pennsylvania railroad and other similar institutions had suspected as much all along, and when they heard about It from Senator Weeks they knew It must be so. As the senator so cogently says, whither are we drifting? Here is the Interstate Commerce commission sitting on the lid for the railroads and refusing to permit them to fix what rates they please. Here le congress shaving the tariff and telling the big woolen mills monopoly that It must submit to a little foreign competi tion. Here Is the Missouri public utilities commission waiting to see what the Met ropolitan Is going to try to put over on Kansas CUy. Oh, my countrymen, says Senator Weeks to the Commercial club and similar organizations, what times are these. Only a few short years ago under the fostering guidance of that great statesman, Mark Hanna, none of these outrages was possi ble. In those shining days business got whatever It wanted. No outsiders wers permitted to muss things up. Legislation was handled by real experts. Andrew Carnegie, he points out. wrote the steel schedule of the tariff bill. So he could be sure of getting It right. No president had the temerity to ask the rail roads to subject themselves to the super vision of an Interstate Commerce commis sion. The railroads applied the principle or what the traffic would bear, and every body—except the shippers and the public —was happy. Our great utilities were per mitted to write their own franchises and millions were thereby transferred from the pockets of the nickel payers, who nev er would have used the money wisely, to the bank accounts of eminent financiers who knew Just what to do with It. "And now." he concludes, "need I tell you?—business is harassed at every turn and a government official la on hand to see that the public doesn't get the worst of It. What we need Is high tariff and a return to the golden days of that sterling patriot. Senator Hanna," This speech, wherever It has been deliv ered to chambers of commerce, bankers' conventions, associations of woolen manu facturers. conferences of railroad presl ! dents and assemblies of street railway j financiers, has been held to be a master 1 piece of political effort and a wonderful vote getter. Senator Weeks’ friends feel sure that if It could only get to what they regard as the "masses." or the “lower classes"—meaning anybody who doesn't pay a supertax on his Income—It would set the country on fire for him as presi dent. Mebbe so. Mebbo so. Anyway he would be sere ot the solid cautaln-uMnduatry vote.