I"™.. 75he | I RAGGED EDGE 8 Harold MacGrath 8 KnHnKsrmnn!!nniii!B!iiiiinmiunuiiMR!nii!!aii:]iiniufHiunfHtHiiimc7ti!!iiMnnnt!HUinu!l k “So much the better. You will have a bungalow to yourself,” i continued McClintock, “and ;your morning meal will be your iown affair. But luncheon and ! dinners you will sit at my table. • I’m a stickler about clothes and dean chins. How you dress .when you’re loafing will be no concern of mine; but fresh twill or shantung, when you dine with jme, collar and tie. If you liko books and music, we’ll get along.” “Then you are taking me on!” Spurlock *s eyes grew soft liko thoae of a dog that, expecting the whij, saw only the kindly hand. “I ai*. going to give you a (try.” “When wiU you want me!”— with pitiful eagerness. “How ••hall I get'to you!” yacht is in the river. The doc to? here says he can get you •boa/d to-morrow night. But understand me thoroughly: I am •offering you this job because my 'friend wants to help you. I don’t know anything about you. -I am gambling on his intuition.” DfcQintock preferred to put it thus. f "To-morrow night 1" said Spurlock, in a wondering whis per. Out of the beaten track, far from the trails of men! He re laxed. The doctor reached over and Ikid his hand upon Spurlock’s heart. “Thumping; but that’s only excitement. You’ll do." Then he looked at Ruth. Her face expressed nothing. That was one of the mysterious quali ties of this child of the lagoon: ■he had always at instant ser vice that Oriental mask of im penetrable calm that no Occi dental trick could dislodge. He «on!d not tell by the look of her (whether she was glad or , sorry that presently she would be free. “I have good news for you. If you do not find your aunt, any people will take you under wing until you can stand ou your own." “That is very kind of you," •he acknowledged. The lips of the mask twisted upward into •mile. The doctor missed the expres sion of terror and dismay that flitted across Spurlock’s face. Once theey were below, Mc Ointock turned upon the doctor. can readily see-" he said, **why you’ll always be as poor aa a church mouse.." . 44 What ! said the doctor, whose thoughts were in some thing of a turmoil. “What b that?” “The «dd human cry of some thing for nothing; but with you it is in reverse. You are always doing something for nothing, and that is why I love you. If X offcreed you half of my posses sions you’d doubtless wallop me an the jaw. To be with you is the best moral tonic I know. You tonie my liver and you tonic my ••Mil. It is good sometimes to walk with a man who can look Ood squarely in the face, as you •an.” “But wasn’t I right! That fur!” “I’ll take tho boy; he’ll be a novelty. Amiable and good looking. That’s the kind, my friend, that always fall soft. No matter what they do, always vomeone to bolster them up, to lend them money, and to coddle them.” , t “iSut, man, this chap hasn’t fatten soft.” 44Aye, but he will. And here’s •he proof. You and the girl have made It soft for him, and I’m Qohtg to make it soft for him. But what I do is based upon the Cant Chat he is one of those in -'tlividu&ls who are conscience -*drrven. Conscience drove him to ''this aide of the world, to this bed. Hit drives him to my island, where X can Study him to my heart ’a content. He belioves that he is leaving this conscience behind; and I want to watch his disillu sion on this particular point. Oh, «dbn"t worry. I shall always be lirimd ta him; I aha’n’t bait him. dDnly, he’ll be an interesting nqpeermen for me to observe. But Ship that girl east as soon as you can.” "Why?” McClintock put a hand on the doctor’s shoulder. "Because she’s a fire-opal, and to the world at large they bring bad luck.” "Rot! Mac, what do you sup pose the natives used to call her? The Dawn Pearl!” McClintock wagged his Scotch head negatively. He knew what he knew. Spurlock possessed that extra ordinary condition of the mind which is called New England conscience. Buried under varior.s I ancestral sixteenths, smothered under modern thought, liberty of action and bewildering variety of flesh-pots, it was still alive to the extent that it needed only his present state to resuscitate it in all its peculiar force. The Protestant Flagellant, who whip ped his soul rather than his body, who made self-denial the rack and the boot, who believed that on Sunday it was sacrilegious to smile, blasphemous to laugh! Spurlock had gone back spiri tually three hundred years. In the matter of his conscience he was primitive; and for an educa ted man to become primitive is to become something of a child. From midnight until morning he was now left alone. He had sufficient strength to wait up on himself. During the previous night he had been restless; and in the lonely dragging hours his thoughts had raced in an endless circle-action without progress. He was reaching wearily for some kind of buffer to his carry ing conscience. He thought ra tionally ; that is to say, ho thought clearly, as a child thinks clearly. The primitive supersti tion of his Puritan forbears was his; and before this the buckler of his education disintegrated. The idea of Iluth as a talisman against misfortune which h« now recognized as a sick man’s idea —faded as his appreciation of the absurd reasserted itself. But in its stead—toward morning— 1 there appeared another idea which appealed to him as sub lime, appealed to the primitive conscience, to his artistic sense of the drama, to the poet and the novelist in him. He was* and al ways would be dramatizing bis emotions; perpetually he would be confounding his actual with Ms imaginary self. To surrender Inmseli to the law, to face trial and imprison ment, was out of the question. Let the law put its hand on hi$ shoulder—if it could! But at present he was at liberty, and he purposed to remain in that state. His conscience never told him to go back and take punishment • it tortured him only in regard to the deed itself. lie had tossed an honoured n*me in the mire; he required no prison bars to ac centuate this misery. Something, then, to appease the wrath of God; something to blunt this persistent agony. It was not necessary to appease the wrath of human society; it was necessary only to appease that of God for the brokeii Command ment. To divide the agony into two spheres so that one would mitigute the other. In fine, to marry Ruth (if she would con sent) as a punishment for what he had donel To whip his soul so. long as he lived, but to let hia body go free! To provide for her, to work and dream for her, to be tender and thoughtful and loyal, to shelter and guard her, to become accountable to God for her future. It was the sing-song girl idea, magnified many diameters. In this hour its colossal selfishness nevor occurred to him. So, then, when McClintook offered the coveted haven, Spur lock became afire to dramatize the idea. “Ruth!” She had gone to the door, aim lessly, without purpose. All the sombre visions she had been pressing back, fighting out ,of her thoughts, swarmed over the barrier and crushed her. She did not want to go to the doctor’s people; however kindly that might be, they would be only curious strangers. She would never return to her father; that resolution was final. What she actually wanted was the present state of affairs to continue in definitely. That is what terrified her: the consciousness that nothing in her life would be continuous, that she would no sooner form friend ships (like the present) than ro lentless fate would thrust her in to a new cirele. All the initial confidence in herself was gone; her courage was merely a shell to hide the lack. To have the present lengthen into years i But in a few hours she would be up on her way, far lonelier than die had ever been. As Spurlock called her name, she paused and turned. “Dawn Pearl 1 . , . come here!” She moved to the side of the bed. “What is it?” “Can’t you see? Together, down there; you and 1! . , . . As my wife 1 Both of us, never to be lonely again! . . . Will you marry me, Ruth?” As many a wiser woman had (lone, Ruth mistook thrilling eagerness for love. Love and companionship. A fire enveloped her, n fire which was strangely healing, filling her heart with warmth* blotting out th» menace of the world. She forgot her vital hatred of the South Seas; she forgot that McClintock’s would not differ a jot from the old island she had for ever left behind her; she forgot all the doctor’s lessons and warnings. She would marry him. Because of the thought of love and com panionshipT No. Because here was the haven for which she had been blindly groping; the posi tive abolition of all her father’s rights in her—the right to drag her back. The annihilation of the Terror which fascinat?d her and troubled her dreams o ’nights. “You want me, thent” she said “Oh, yesl—for always I” He took her hands and pressed them upon his thrumming heart; and in this attitude they remain ed for some time. Something forbade him to draw her toward him and seal the com pact with a kiss. Down under the incalculable selfishness *f the penitent child there was tin man’s uneasy recollection of Ju das. He could not kiss Ruth. CHAPTER XVII After the Ten Commandments have been spoken, conscience be comes less something inherent than something acquired. It is now a point of view, differing widely, as the ignorant man dif fers from the educated. You and I will agree upon the Ten Com mandments ; but perhaps we will refuse to accept the other’s inter pretation of the ramifications. I step on my neighbor’s feet, re turn and apologize because my acquired conscience orders me to do so; whereas you might pass cn without caring if your neigh bour hoped about on one foot. The inherent conscience keeps most of us away from jail, from court, from the gallows; the ac quired conscience helps us to preserve the little amenities of daily life. So then, tho acquired is the livelier phase, being drive i into action daily; whereas the inherent may lie dormant f jr months, even years. To Spurlock, in this hour, his conscience »tood over against the Ten Commandments, one of which he had broken. He became primitive* literal in his concep tion; the ramifieatons were, for the once, fairly relegated to lim bo. He could not kiss Until be cause the acquired conscience— struggling on its way to limbo made the idea repellent. Analysis would come later, when the primi tive conscience, satisfied would cease to dominate his thought and action. Singe morning he had become fanatical; the atoms of common sense no longer functioned in the accustomed groove. And yet he knew clearly and definitely what he purposed to do, what the fu ture would be.. This spedtas of madness cannot properly be at tributed to his illness, though its accent might be. For a time he would be the grim Protestant Flagellant, pursuing the idea of self-castigation. That he was im molating Ruth on the altai* of hip conscience never broke in upon his thought for consideration. The fanatic has no such word in his vocabulary. Ruth had not expected to be kissed; so the omission passed unnoted. For her it was suf ficient to know that somebody wanted her, that never again would she be alone, that always this boy with the dreams would be der'nding upon her. A strange betrothal !~the pri mal idea of which wajs escape 1 The girl, intent upon abrogating forever all legal rights of the father in the daughter- of render ing innocuous the thing she had now" named the Terror: the boy, seeking self-crucifixion in expi ation of his transgression, chang ing a peccadillo into damnation! It was easy for Ruth to sur render to the idea, for she be lieved she was loved; and in gratitude it was already her de termination to give this boy her heart’s blod, drop by drop, if he wanted it. To her, marriage would be a buckler against the two evils which pursued her. There was nothing on the Tab lets of Moses that forebade Spur lock marrying Ruth; there were no previous contracts. And yet, Spurlock was afraid of the doc tor; so was Ruth. They agreed that they must marry at once, this morning, before the doctor could suspect what was toward. The doctor would naturally offer a hundred objections; he might seriously interfere; so he must be forestalled. What marriage really meant (aside from the idea of escape), Ruth had not the least conception no more than a child. If she had any idea at all, it was something she dimly reclled fromJier books: something celestially beautiful, with a happy ending. But the clearly definite thing was the ul timate escape, therein she dif fered but little from her young sisters. That is what marriage is to most young women: the ultimate escape from the family, from the unwritten laws that govern child ren. Whether they are loved or unloved has no bearing upon this desire to test their wings, to try this new adventure, to take this leap into the dark. Spurlock possessed a vigorous intellect, critical, disquisitional, creative; and yet he saw nothing remarkable in the girl’s readiness to marry himl An obsession is a blind spot. “We must marry at once 1 The doctor may put me on the boat and force you to remain behind, otherwise. ’' “And you want me to find a minister 1 ’ ’ she asked, with ready comprehension. “That’s it!”—eagerly. 'Bring him back with you. Some of the hotel guests can act as witnesses. Make haste!” Ruth hurried off to her own room. Before she put on her sun lielmet, she paused before the mirror. Her wedding gown! She wondered if the spirit of the un known mother looked down upon her. ' (TO BE} CONTINUED) PARIS FASHIONS BY ALICE LANGELIER, Paris.—The little black patch of court plaster, or "mouche" (fly), as the French call It, has wandered back Into fashion. But it has changed position and now has the place of honor between the eyebrows. One famous lady, so they say, used to wear her "mouche” at the left corner of her mouth; and Mrs. Pepys wore several patches, in all manner Of shapes, clustered about one cheek, near the corner of the eye. Now It Is on the forehead that the patch must go, high up or low down, as your choice may be. The Empire vogue, which undoubt edly had a little to do with bringing back the fly patch, has had a marked effect on Summer jewelry. Earrings, made of small cameos as well as large ones, are seen at all the smart gatherings. Brilliant red and blue earrings are being shown at a fash ionable bijoutier In the Place Ven dome. Pearshaped drops of coral and lapis lazuli are hung froimslend er links of platinum. Empire bracelets, wlds-link affairs finished off by a large clasp made of which fit the arm closely and are OJU pUTS 1JUIUS AMA OBJV OJB ‘O3U1B0 V worn with the earrings to match. And, by the way, cameos are quite the newest fdb garter-clasps. Beige shell cameos are used to match the new tones of the stockings. A very modern bracelet watch that has little connection with Empire days gives more attention to the bracelet than to (he watch. It Is made of large platinum links set with tiny diamonds, and In the center of one of these links the watch Itself nestles. This new trifle seems to be a veritable all-day affair, for It Is seen any time of the day, on the golf links or In the ball room. tTltra-modern also Is a new little pocket thermometer made In the shape of a watch and registering the temperature on Its face. It has ap peared during these last hot Summer days. Foi'r heifer calves belonging to Sam Caracn, of Hermiston, Ore., involun tarily made a record long distance ■wlm. The heifers strayed away from the herd and fell into a concrete-lined canal. The water was too deep for them to wade and the sides were too steep for them to scale, so the ani mals had to swim or perish. They were noticed by a farmer nine miles below the Carson place and removed by use of ropes, REGISTER FOR FALL ELECTION Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Bryan Residents of Ne braska 31 Years Lincoln, Neb., Sept. .—Governor and Mrs. Charles W. Bryan regis tered at the city hall Friday for the approaching presidential election. Governor Bryan declared he Is still a democrat, and Mrs. Bryan also registered as affiliated with that party. They have been residents of Lancaster county and Nebraska for •1 years, according to the records. SCHOOLS PLAN FOR GREAT DAY “Progress of Nebraska” to Be Presented in Pageant At Wayne, Sept. 27 Wayne, Neb., Sept. (Special)— Eight hundred students in 40 public schools of Wayne county will partici pate in the presentation of the pag eant “Progress of Nebraska” at the fair grounds here, Saturday, Septem ber 27. Students and teachers have been working for some time on the page ant, drilling and familiarizing them selves with the parts they are to play in the spectacle which is expected to be the very biggest thing of the kind ever produced in this part of Nebras ka. The pageant Is being presented un der the personal supervision of Miss Pearl Sewell, county superintendent of schools. INSURANCE COMPANIES ENTER LOUD PROTE8T Lincoln, Neb., Sept. (Special)— Nebraska life insurance companies have entered a protest with the gov ernor against the proposal to Issue group Insurance covering every mem ber of the national guard in a New York company. The objectors are for the proposilton, but they demand to know why the Nebraska compan ies were not first given an opportun ity to handle the business. Governor Bryan has washed his hands of the deal by saying the state is under taking no obligations relative to in surance. REPUBLICANS TO DO CAMPAIGN WORK Norfolk, Neb., Sept. —Two groups of republican candidates for state offices, one headed by Adam McMullen, nominee for governor, will begin a town to town canvass of the Third district next Monday. The first group starts in at Scribner and the other at Ames. The entire week will be consumed in making campaign talks to voters. Night meetings ar ranged are: Monday, at Columbus; Tuesday, at Central City and Madi son; Wednesday, Albion and Creigh ton; Thursday, Neligh and Wayne; Friday, Norfolk and Oakl|uad; Satur day, Fremont. The candidates will ride in auto caravans. DEPUTY TREASURER PLEADS IMMUNITY Lincoln, Neb., Sept. \—Attorneys for Elmer C. Baker, former deputy county treasurer of ydncoln county, convicted of embezzling public funds, argued to the supreme court today that a deputy treasurer is net a pub lic official, and that while ne has the right to collect taxes he Is not charg ed with that duty, and, therefore, not charged with the duty of accounting for the money received. They also said he wasn’t guilty and that he was a victim of a hue and cry that was started by a taxpayers’ league and that resulted in the prosecution of a number of county officers. Treasur er Souders is now serving time in prison. BRIDGE PIER TO GO DOWN THIRTY-FIVE FEET. | Chamberlain, S. D., Sept "i.—The second pier of the state highway bridge being built across the Missouri river here will have to be sunk 35 feet, instead of 12 feet as originally planned, according to additional soundings taken last week. The construction company antici pated bank would be built on a ledge east bank would be built on a ledge of rock which projects into the river several hundred feet and is very little deeper than where the first pier is built on the east shore. Actual con struction, however, proved that this strata is not solid enough for a pier at this point. Solid rock has been found to be 23 feet deeper. This may necessitate building the second pier with air pressure tubes the same as the other deep-water piers. It means nothing more serious than additional work and resulting expense In putting the pier on a solid rock foundation. ELK POINT PIONEER WOMAN IS DEAD Elk Point, S. D., Sept. (Spe cial.)—Mrs. Ellen Shearon, a resi dent here for 48 years, died this week at the home of her son, Harry Shearon, after an extended illness. Burial was made at LaMars, la. She is survived by four sons and two daughters, William, Harry, Caleb and Claussed and Mrs. Elizabeth Wai ters, all of Elk Point and Mrs. Mary Leekly of Gregory, S. D. WHEELER GIVES SIZZLING REPLY TO DAUGHERTY Third Party Candidate Charges G. O. P. Control led By Bootleggers DY WILLIAM B. McCORMICK, Uni^.'raal Service Correspondent. Bloomington, 111.. Sept. 22.—Sen ator Burton K. Wheeler, running mate of Senator Robert M. LaFol lette, brought a crowd of 2,000 rail road shop employes, miners, trades men, farmers and their wives to a pitch of uproarious enthusLasm here Monday night with the statement: “A vote for Coolldge Is a vote for the republican organization which has fallen into the hands of grafters and bootleggers who now are tak ing refuge behind the constitution of the United States, the flag, and the Declaration of Independence t» hide the nakedness of their corrup tion which we have exposed to public traze.** It was a more detailed reply to the charge of former Attorney Gen eral Daugherty that, aided by tho discredited Means, Senator Wheeler had "framed” tho Brookhart-Wheel er investigation into the department oi justice. Many G. O- P. Voters Attend Perhaps 80 per cent of the audi ence comprised voters who In other elections have invariably cast re publican ballots, political observers hero declared. ‘‘If you people have read the head lines in today's papers,’’ Senator Wheeler said, "and the alleged re pudiation by Mr. Means of his testimony and the inference that some newspapers have drawn from It that the farmer-senator from Iowa, Smith W. Brookhart, serving his first term in the United States Senate, and I, a new senator from Montana, had been able to frame the attorney general of the United States, Harry M. Daugherty, as well as William J. Burns, the great In ternational detective, and the whole republican administration so suc cessfully that tho silent. cautious man In the White House was finally forced, though unwillingly, because of an aroused public opinion, to oust Daugherty from office, you will, I am sure, want to know the real facts. "Heady, Mr. Daugherty and tho republican party give Senator Brookhart and me entirely too much credit. Means One of Many “Gaston B. Means was tho trusted employe for years of William J. Burns. Burns says he is one of tho cleverest detectives in the country. Means was Daugherty’s associate, employed by him in the department of Justice to get evidence on men and women for alleged violations of tho law. Means was only one of tho manj wi nesses who testified to the in iquity and corruption in the depart ment of justice. He was unknown to mo prior to his volunteering his evidence. "Following his testimony, Means was convicted In New York on & charge of bribery and conspiracy.” Thereupon Senator Wheeler re lated his long distance conversation of Sunday with Means, in which the natter offered new documentary evi dence to the Wheeler-Brookhart eommlttee. Earlier in the day Sen ator Wheeler, in a statement In Chicago, told of Means having made a repudiation of his Senate inquiry testimony which formed tho basis of Daugherty’s statement. In Touch With Burns "Means never at any time,” con tinued Senator Wheeler, "directly imp'.rated Daugherty during tl. j hearing. It was always Jess Smith, Means has, during all our hearings been In constant communication v.'it.i the Burns Detective agency, wbh Tom Miller, alien property cus todian and Daugherty's friend, and with other leaders of the republican parly. "Means. .Terr Smith Dan-’iu-rtv, Mannington, Pall, Forbes, Kramer of the veterans bureau, Holland, Bill Orr, are prominent republicans who In conjunction with other leaders nt the republican party, have been guiding the ship of state of this re public “Dawes, Daugherty, Adams and CooMdge now see the constitution bring destroyed, the flag dragged In the mud. By whom, Mr. Coolidge? By the farmers? By the laborers^ By the merchants? Let’s be honest about. It. Mr. Coolidge Foundations Destroyed "I agree with you that the founda tions upon which this country rests are l-r*ng destroyed, the flag has been disgraced. The Declaration of Independence is being rendered mean mess, but by the representa tives of crooked business working In conjunction with its Agents, Daugherty, Fall, Forbes, Burns, Means, Jess Smith, Howard Mann ington and the rest of the leaders of the republican party. Woman Accused of Killing 4-Year Old Child With Lye Bisbee, Arlz-, Sept. 22, (I. N. 8.) — Pouring lye down the throat of her 4-day old baby, Marls Ariel Zecaya murdered the child, according to police, who placed the woman under arrest. Pedro Zecaya, the woman’s husband, was also Jailed. An autopsy performed by Dr. Haw ley, county physician, showed the child’s stomach had been eaten away with lye, a quantity of which was re moved from the baby's body.