lEeGh and the ru oilif Y Bannister Vlf II II Dill RAYWALTrm The car halted Just below the celling of the first floor. "What's the matter with you?" called a voice the voice of the starter. "Man robbed," said tb elevator boy. "Bring the car down." "No!" Bhouted Alcatrante. "The thief is in the car. He must not es cape." "I won't let him out Drlng the car down." The boy let the car descend to the Boor level. The starter placed himself against the gate. "Now then, who was robbed?" he demanded, Alcatrante crowded forward. "It was I. My purse is gone. I had it just before I got in." "Oh, It was you, was It?" The start er remembered the trouble Alcatrante had made a few minutes before, "Sure you didn't drop it?" "I am certain that I did not." The passengers were shuffling theli feet about, in a vain effort to touch the lost property. A young girl was gig gling hysterically. "Perhaps you put It In the wrong pocket, and didn't look careful enough." "I looked, I looked," exclaimed Al catrante. "Do you think I would not know. Seel I put it in this pocket, which is now empty." , He thrust his hand into the pockei which he had indicated. Suddenly hit expression changed to astonishment "Find it?" grinned the starter. With the blankest of looks Alca trante pulled the purse from bis pock et "It was not there two minutes ago," he muttered. "You've been dreamin'," remarked the starter, opening the gate with a hang. 'All out!" Orme chuckled to himself. In a mo ment Alcatrante would realize how the purse had been replaced in his pocket and he would be furious. Meantime Orme entered another elevator, to go back to the eighth floor, and, as he had expected, the minister followed him. When they were outside the office of the Wallingham company Orme paused, his hand on the door. "Senor Alca trante," he said, "this business must end. I shall simply have to call the police." "At your own risk." said Alcatrante. Then an ugly light flashed in his eyes and his upper lip lifted above his yel low teeth. "You got the better of me there In the elevator," he snarled. "You won't get the better again." . Orme opened the office door. He glanced about the reception room, to eee whether the girl had hidden her Iself. She was not in view; indeed, there was even no one at the Inquiry window. Orme reasoned that at this hour some of the clerks might be leav ingwhich would mean, perhaps, that they were first putting away their books. At least they would not be ex pecting business callers. The door of the great sample re frigerator was ajar only two or three He Received a Violent Push. feet. When Orme was there a few minutes before it had been wide open. He wondered whether the girl had chosen It as her hiding place. If she had, his plan of action would be sim plified, for he would slip the papers in to her, then get Alcatrante from the room. In a casual way he folded his arms. He could now put his hand into his in side coat pocket and the motion would hardly be noticed. For a moment he stood as though waiting for some one to appear at the Inquiry window. Though Alcatrante was watching him closely, Orme con tinued to act as If he were the only person In the room. And now the dial of the big ther mometer in the outer wall of the re frigerator appeared to catch his eye, and be strolled over to It This placed him almost In the open doorway. Ap parently his eyes were on the dial, but In reality be was glancing sldewlse Into the chamber of the refrigerator. He glimpsed a moving figure In there- A ft kAw heard a fa tut rustling. Thrusting his hand into the Inside of his coat, be was about to take out the precious papers to pass them In to her. Then he received a violent push from behind. He plunged forward, tripped with one foot on the sill of the refrigerator doorway, and went In headlong, sprawling on the tiled floor. His clutching hand caught the fold of a woman's skirt Then, though he re mained conscious, everything suddenly turned black. Bewildered as he was, several sec onds passed before he realized that the massive door had been closed that he and the girl were prisoners. CHAPTER IV. Prisoner In the Dark. Orme's hand still held her skirt "Girl!" he whispered. "Yes. Are you hurt?" -Her voice came to him softly with all its solicitude and symra?,". Qh knelt, to help him if rf" fctr warm, supple hand rested gently on his forehead. He could have remained for a long time as he was, content with her touch, but his good sense told him that their safety demanded action. "Not hurt at all," he said, and as she withdrew her hand, he arose. "Al catrante caught me off guard," he ex plained. "Yes, I saw him. There wasn't time to warn you." "He has been dogging me for an hour," Orme continued. "I felt as though he were sitting on my shoul ders, like an Old Man of the Sea." "I knnw him nf old." aha renllpd "But you how did you happen to be here, in the Rookery?" "In the hope of finding you." "Finding me?" ) "I called up the Pere Marquette about five minutes ago, and the clerk . said that you had Just been talking to him on the wire, but that he didn't ' know where you were. Then I remem bered that you knew the Wallinghams, I and I came to Tom's office to see if be ! bad any idea where you were. I was on my way when I passed you in the elevator." ! "Tom and Bessie are at Glenvlew," explained Orme. "Yes, the girl at the inquiry desk told me. She went to get her hat to leave for the night, and I slipped Into j this chamber to wait for you." "And here we are," Orme laughed I "papers and all. But I wish it weren't ! so dark." j Orme hunted his pockets for "a match. He found Just one. "I don't suppose, Girl, that you hap pen to have such a thing as a match?" She laughed lightly. "I'm sorry no." "I have only one," he ' said. "I'm going to strike It, so that we can get our bearings." He scratched the match on his sole. The first precious moment of light he permitted himself to look at her, fixing her face in his mind as though he were never to see It again. It re joiced him to find that ii that Instant her eyes also turned to his. The interchange of looks was hard for him to break. Only half the match was gone before he turned from her, but In that time he had asked and an swered so many unspoken questions questions which at the moment were still little more than hopes and yearn ings. His heart was beating rapidly. If she had doubted him, she did not doubt him now. If she had not under stood his feeling for her, she must un derstand It now. And the look In her own eyes could he question that it was more than friendly? But the ne cessity of making the most of the light forced him to forget for the moment the tender presence of the girl who filled his heart. He therefore employed himself with a quick study of their sur roundings. I The chamber was about ten feet squafe, and lined smoothly with white tiling. It was designed to show the sanitary construction of the Walling ham refrigerator. Orme remembered how Tom had explained it all to him on a previous visit to Chicago. I This was merely a storage chamber. There was no connection with an ice chamber, and there were none of the hooks and shelves which would make It complete for Its purpose. The only appliance was the thermometer, the colls of which were fitted In flush with the tiling, near the door, and protected by a close metal grating. As for the door itself, Its outline was a fine seam. There was a handle. As the match burned close to his fingers, Orme pulled out his watch. It was twenty-nine minutes past five. Darkness again. Orme groped his way to the door and tugged at the handle. The door would not open; built with air-tight nicety, It did not budge In the least ' I Tbla was what Orme had expected. He knew that Alcatrante would have shot the bolt He knew, too, that Al catrante would be waiting In the cor ridor, to assure himself that the last clerk left the office without freelug the prisoner that all the lights were out and the office locked for the night Then he would depart, exulting that the papers could not be delivered; and In the morning Orme would be re leased. But had Alcatrante realized that the chamber was air-tight? Surely be had not known that the girl was already there. The air that might barely suf fice fo keep one alive until relief came would not suffice for two. i There was not the least opening to admit of ventilation. Even the places where, in a practical refrigerator, con nection would be made with the ice chamber, were blocked up; for that matter, they were on that side of the chamber which was built close into the corner of the office. Orme drove his heel against the wall. The tiles did not break. Then he stepped back toward the middle of the chamber. J "Where are you. Girl?" he asked, i "Here," she answered, very near him. i He reached out and found her hand, and she did not withdraw It from his clasp. t "The rascal has locked us In," he said. "I'm afraid we shall have a long wait." , "Will It do any good to shout?" ' "No one could hear us through these walls. No, there's nothing to do but remain quiet. But you needn't stand, Ctrl." He led her to the wall. Removing his coat, he folded it and placed it on the floor for a cushion, and she seated herself upon It He remained etandlng near by. "The papers," he said, "are In that coat you are sitting on." He laughed, with a consciousness of the grim and terrible humor of their situation which he hoped she had not realized. Here they were, the hard sought papers In their possession, yet they were helpless even to save their own lives. "I wish you would shout," she said. "Very well," he said, and going over to the door, he called out several times with the full power of his lungs. The sound, pent In that narrow room, fairly crashed In their ears, but there was no answer from without. "Don't do It again," she said at last. Then she sighed. "Oh, the Irony of it!" she exclaimed. "1 know." He laughed. "But don't give up, Girl. We'll deliver those pa pers yet." "I will not give up," she said, grave v ".-t tell me, how did you get the Dapers?" Orme began the story of the after non's adventures. "Why don't you sit down?" she asked. "Why" he stammered "I" He had been so conscious of his feeling toward her, so conscious of the fact that the one woman in all the world was locked in here alone with him, that since he arranged her seat he had not trusted himself to be near her. And she did not seem to under stand. ' She wished him to sit beside her, not knowing that he felt the almost over powering impulse to take her in his arms and crush her close to him. That desire would have been more easily controlled, had he not begun to believe that she in some degree returned his feeling for her. If they escaped from this black prison, he would rest happy In the faith that her affection for him, now, as he supposed so largely friend ly, would ripen into a glorious and compelling love. But It would not be right for him to presume to take ad vantage of a moment in which she might think that she cared for him more than she actually did. Then, too, he already foresaw vaguely the possible necessity for an act which would make it best that she should not hold him too dear. So long he stood silent that she spoke again. i 'Do sit down," she said. "I will give you part of your coat." There was a tremulous note in her laugh, but as he seated himself, she spoke with great seriousness. "When two persons understand each other as well as you and I," she said, "and are is near death as you and I, they need not be embarrassed by conventions." "We never have been very con ventional with each other," he replied, ahaklly. Her shoulder was against his. He could hear her breathing. "Now tell me the rest of the story." ! "First I must change your notion that we are near death." ' He could feel that she was looking at him in the blackness. "Don't you think I know?" she whispered. "They will not And us until tomorrow. There isn't air enough to last I have known U from the first" "Some one will open the door," he replied. "We may have to stay here lulte a while, but" "No, my friend. There Is no likeli hood that it will be opened. The clerks are leaving for tho night." He was silent "So finish the story," she went on. "Finish the story I" That was all that he could do. "Finish the story!" His story and hers only Just begun, and now to end there In tbe dark. But with a calmness as great as her own, he proceeded to tell all that had happened to him since he boarded the electric car at Evanston and saw Maku sitting within. She pressed his hand gently when be described the trick by which the Japanese had brought the pursuit to an end.. She laughed when be came to the meeting with the de tective In his apartment The episode with Madam Alia he passed over lightly, for part of It rankled now. Not that he blamed himself foolishly; but he wished that it bad not happened. That woman did a fine thing," said the girl. He went on to describe his efforts to get free from Alcatrante. "And you ere under the table In Arlma's room," she exclaimed, when he had finished. "I was there; but I couldn't see you, Girl. And you seemed to doubt me." "To doubt you?" "Don't you remember? You said that no American had the papers; but you added, 'unless ' " "Unless Walsh, the burglar, had played a trick on Porltol and held the true papers back. I went straight from Arlma's to the Jail and had an other talk with Walsh. He convinced me that he knew nothing at all about the papers. He seemed to think that they were letters which Porltol wanted for his own purposes." "Then you did not doubt me." Glad relief was in his voice. "I have never doubted you," she said, simply. There was silence. Only their breath ing and the ticking of Orme's watch broke the stillness. "I don't believe that Alcatrante knew that this place was unvent'lated," she remarked at last. "No; and he didn't know that you were here." "He thinks that you will be released in the morning, and that you will think It wiser to make no charges. What do you suppoBr his conscience will say when he learr.s " "Girl, I slnply can't believe that there Is no hope for us." "What possible chance Is there?" IPer voice was steady. "The clerks must all have gone by this time. We can't make ourselves heard." "Still, I feel as though I should be fighting with the door." "You can't open It." "But some one of the clerks going out may have seen that It was bolted. Wouldn't he have pushed the bolt tack? I'm going to see." He groped to the door and tugged at the handle. The door, for all the ef fect his effort had on It, might have been a section of solid wall. "Come back," she called. He felt his way until his foot touched the coat. As he let himself down be side her, his an3 brushed over her hair, and unconsciously she leaned toward him. He felt the pressure of her shoulder against his side, and the touch sent a thrill through him. He leaned back against the wall and stared Into the blackness with eyes that taw only visions of the happiness that might have been. "We mustn't make any effort to break out." Fhe said. "It Is useless, and every tlma we move about and tug at the door, It makes us breathe that much faster." "Yes," he sighed, "I suppose we can only sit here and wait." "Do you know," hhe said softly "I am wonderlug why our situation does not seem-more terrible to me. It should, shouldn't It?" "I hardly think so," he replied. . "The relative importance of cur worldly arfalrs," she went on dream ily, "appears to change when one sees that they are all to stop at once. They recede Into the background of the mind. What counts then is, oh, I don't want to think of it! My father he " Her shoulders shook for a moment un der the stress of sudden grief, but she quickly regained her control. "There, now," she whispered, "I won't do that." For a time they sat In silence. Ills own whirling thoughts were of a sort that he could not fathom; they pos sessed him completely, they destroyed, seemingly, all power of analysis, they made him dumb; and they were tan "Try to Take a Different View, Girl." gled Inextricably in the blended im pressions of possession and Iobs. "But you," she said at last, "is your father living"' "No," he replied. "And your mother?" she faltered. "She has been dead many years. And I have no brothers or sisters." "My mother died when I was a lit tle child," she niusod. "Death seemed to me much more awful then than It does now." "It is always more awful to those who are left than to those who go," be said. "But don't think of that yet." "We must think of It," she Insisted. He did not answer. "You don't with to die, do you?" she demanded. . "No; and I don't wish you to dlo. Try to take a different view, Girl. We really bave a chance of getting out" "How?" "Some one may come." "Not at all llkoly," she sighed. "But a chance is a chance, Girl, flear." "Oh!" she cried, suddenly. "To think that I have brought you to this I That what you thought would be a little fa vor to me has brought you to death." She began to sob convulsively, U wa aa Lhouch for the Drat tux she realized ber responsibility for his life; as though her confidence In her complete understanding of him had disappeared and be was again a stran ger to her a stranger whom she had coolly led to the edge of life with her. "Don't, Girl dont!" he commanded. Her self-blame was terrible to him. But she could not check her grief, and finally, hardly knowing what he did, he put his arm around her and drew her closer to him. Her tear-wet cheek touched his. She removed her hat, and her hair brushed his forehead. "Girl, Girl!" he whispered, "don't you know? Don't you understand? If chance bad not kept us together, I would have followed you until i won you. From the moment I saw you, I have had no thought that was not bound up with you." "But think what I have done to you!" she sobbed. "I never realized that there was this danger. And you you have your own friends, your In terests. Oh, I" "My interests are all here with you," he answered. "It Is I who am to blame. I should have known what Al catrante would do." "You couldn't know. There was no way"' "I s?nt you up here to wait for me. Then, when he and I came In, I turned my back on him, like a blind fool." "No, no," she protested. "After all." he said, "It was, per haps, something that neither you nor I could foresee. No one is to blame. Isn't that the best view to take of It?" Her cheek moved against his as sho Inclined her hoad. "It may be selfish In me," ho went on, "but I can't feel unhappy now." Her sobs had ceased, and she burled ber face In his shoulder. "I love you, Girl," he said, brokenly. "I don't expect you to care so much for me yet But I must tell you what 1 feel. There Isn't thero Isn't any thing I wouldn't do for you, Girl and bo happy doing It." She did not speak, and for a long time they sat in silence. Many emo tions were racing through him. His .happiness was almost a pain, for It came to him In this extremity when there was no hope ahead. She had not yielded herself, but she had not re sisted his embrace; even now her head was on his shoulder. Indeed, he had given her no chance to confess what she might feel for him. Nor would he give her that chance. No, It was better that her love for him he knew now that In her heart she must love him It was better that It should not be crystallized by definite expression. For he had thought of a way by which she, at least, might be laved. With the faint possibility of rescue for them both, be hesitated to take the step. And yet every moment he was using that much more of the air that might keep her alive through the night " ' It would be only right to wait until he was reasonably sure that all the clerks in the office had gone. That time could not be long now. But al ready the air was beginning to seem close; ltwaa not so easy to breathe as It had been. Gently putting her from him, he said: "The air will last longer If we He down. The heart does not need much blood, then." She did not answer, but moved from her seat on his folded coat, and be took it and arranged It as a pillow, and, finding her hand, showed ber where It was. He heard the rustle of her clothing as she adjusted herself on the floor. She clung to his hand, while he still eat beside her. "Now," he said, cheerfully, "I am going to And out what time It Is, by breaking the crystal of my watch. I've seen blind men tell tho time by feeling tbe dial." Ills watch was an old hunting-cane which had belonged to his father. He opened It and cracked the crystal with his pocketknlfe. As nearly as he could determine by the sense of touch It was seven o'clock. Bessie Wallingham would be wondering by this time why he had broken an engagement with her for the second time that day. "There Is one thing more to do," he said. "It is seven o'clock; I don't know how much longer we shall be able to breathe easily, and I am going to write a note which will explain matters to the persons who find us If we should not happen to be able to toll them." Laboriously he penciled on the back of an old envelope the explanation of their presence there, making a com plete and careful chargo against Alca trante. He laid the message on the floor. On second thought, he picked It up again and put it In his pocket for If by any chance they should be rescued, he might forget It In that event Its discovery would possibly bring an ex posure or facts which the girl and her fatbor would not care to bave dis closed. A faint whisper from the girl. "What is It?" he asked, bending tenderly for her answer. "You must lie down,' too." Ho began to move away, as If to obey her. "No," she whispered "hero. I want you near me." Slowly be reclined and laid his head on the coat. Her warm breath was on his face. He felt for her hand, and found It held tightly to his. His own mind was still torn with doubts as to the best course. Should he put himself out of the way that she might live? The sacrifice might prove unnecessary. Rescue might come when it was too late for him, yet not too late, if he did not hurry his own end. And If she truly loved him and knew that she loved him, such an act on his part would leave her a terrible grief which time would harly cur. He tried to analyze their situation more clearly, to throw new light on hla duty. Tbe clerks must all have gone by now. There would be a visit or two from a night watchman, perhaps, but there was scarcely one chance la s hundred that he would unbolt the door. The air was vitiating rapidly; they could not both live through the night But If she loved him as he loved her, she would be happier to die with hint than to live at tbe cost of his life. He pictured for himself again thai last look of her face; Its beauty, tta strength, Its sweet sympathy. Ha seemed to see the stray wisp of hair that had found Its way down upon ber cheek. Her perfect Hps how well he remembered! were tbe unopened buds of pure womanly passion. After all, whether she loved him er not, there would still be much In Ufa for her. . Time would cure her sorrow. There would be many claims upon her, and she would sooner or later resume ber normal activities. Slowly he disengaged his hand from her clinging fingers. In his other band he still held his pocketknlfe. To open a vein in his wrist would take but a moment His life would well away, there on the tiles. She would think he was asleep; and then she herself would drift away Into unconsciousness which would be bro ken only after tbe door was opened la the morning. Bah! His mind cleared In a flash. What a fool he was! Need he doubt her for an Instant? Need he question what she would do hen she found that he was dead? And she would know It quickly. This living pulsing girl beside him loved him! She had told him In every way except in words.; In life and In death they belonged to each other. They were one forever. They a till lived, and whllo they lived tbey must hope. And It hope failed, there still would be love. Ills pent-up emotions broke restraint. With unthinking swiftness, he threw his arm over her and drew her tight to him. His lips found hers In a long kias clung In ecstasy for another, and another. Hor arms went about his neck. He felt as though her soul had passed from, her lips to his own. "My lover!" she whispered. "I think I bave always cared." "Oh, Girl, Girl!" He could utter no more. With a faint sigh she said: "I ant glad It la to be together." She eat up, still holding his hand. "If It need bet at all,", she addod, a new firmness la ber voice. "If It need be at all!" Orme searched his mind again for some promise of es-j cape from this prison which had been so suddenly glorified for them. The smooth, unbreakable wans; the una seam of the door; the thermometer. Why had he not thought of It before t The thermometerl With an exclamation, he leaped te his feet "What Is it?" she cried. "A chancel A small chance but still a chance!" He found his way to the4 handle el the door, which bis first attempt at escape bad taught him was not eon nested with the outer knob. Thon h located the covering which protected the colls of the thermometer. Striking with his heel, he tried to break the metal grating. It would net yield. Again and again he threw his) weight into, the blows, but without ef feet At last he remembered his pocket knife. Thrusting one end of It through the grating, he prodded at the glasa colls within. There was a tinkling sound. He had succeeded. He groped his way back to the gtrl and seated himself beside ber. With, the confession of their love, a new hope had sprung up In them. They might still be freed, and, though thai air was becoming stifling, neither of them believed that a Joy as great as) theirs could be born to live but a few hours. For the hundredth time he was say Ing: "I can't believe that we haveV known each other only one day." "And even now," she mused, "you don't know my nnmo. Do you want mo to toll you?" "Not until you are ready." "Then wait It will come In dua form. Some one will say, 'Mr. Orme, MIhb " "The name doesn't matter," said Orme. "To me you will always be Jual To te- continued. i:Aiiiiiiatkiii of Tone hern. County Superintendent Miss Mary Foster Is engaged today In holding the regular monthly examination of teachers for the county Bchools. Thos In attendance today were: Mis Leota McDonald of Murdork, Miss May Durbln, Miss Hazel Lanphere. Mr. Karl Slothower of Elmwood, Miss Dovle Barkhurst of Union, and MIbs AgneB O'Brien of Weeping Water. Curd of Thanks, To the kind neighbors and friends who have tendered sympathy and as sistance during the Illness and death of our beloved son, little Guy, v hereby express our slncerest thanks, especially do we thank those who sent (lowers for his casket. William Illncr and Wife. Jesse Hlner and Wife. W. R. Goodrich, who has been em ployed In the Burlington shops at this place, departed for Alliance this morning, where he has accepted a. position as engine hostler with tha Burlington company.