Sometimes a down the city itret. Where beauty's a forgotten thing. The voice of some lone bird thrills sweet With tidings of the far-off sprint So, In my heart, when all is dark. And patience sickens to despair, Hope flutters like a prison'd lark. And pours her rapture on the air. I cannot tell why this should be. While sorrow's cup Is yet to drain. And ev'ry pleasure conies to me. Like storm-strewn roses, flaw'd with pain. But we are one, the bird and I, In suffering and yearning one; With memories that cannot die Of flow'rs, blue ocean, and the sun. THE SEQUEL. Count Corrielll's greeting was a lei surely and fine performance. There is a grace and a reserved gra ' eiousneee about a well bred foreigner which all Americans have not, even when members of that much-maligned and envied social strata, the one which leads the world In this republic of ours. Just as it doea In monarchical England and imperial Russia. The American usually presents him or herself, whether in a drawlngroom or on a platform before a crowded audi ence, with ease, and most creditably. But there Is a fine, thin line of de markatlon, very distinct, which sepa rates the ease and simplicity of manner f those accustomed, from times re mote, to that deference paid to super iority of merit and position, with the self-assertion of the individual who is forced to battle his way to the consul eration of others, and, however slight. It can be detected without difficulty. Count Corrielli, although In his six ties, was still an eminently agreeable, cultured and even a charming man. Slight and of medium height, with hair abundant and white as the driven now, whose contrast of coloring was Vivid, with eyes dark, sleepy and im penetrable, and his somewhat swarthy complexion, not altogether free from lines around the thin lips, which shut Arm arid straight, unconcealed by beard or mustache, for his was a clean haven face, made the count a distinguished-looking man, while be was a conspicuous and attractive figure wher ver he happened to be. "How delightful your solitude is," re marked the count, with a sigh of con tent, taking the seat near the fire, and her own chair, suggested by a faint gesture of Estelle's pretty hand. Looking keenly at the beautiful face , before him, the heightened color, the gray eyes, in which a mist seemed to linger sorrowfully, and the tremulous motion of the fingers, fluttering rather aimlessly among the silver of the tea service, he drew his conclusions. "A part lul," the count detested the Sight of a samovar. .. Thsra was no tea, Russian, Japanese, bgllsh, nor other, which had the Slightest attraction for this descendant f an old Neapolitan hous, whose ducal palace, somewhat abandoned for the count was a confirmed wander er, spending most of his life in Lon doa and Paris looked solitary and beautiful from the cliffs of the moun tain side, where it stood among its gardens, down on the blue waters of the bay stretching out at Its feet That grand old castle which Estelle's thoughts had pictured to her as a fine locale for a bright Christmas gathering sf American wanderers on the con tinent "With pleasure No. Neither cream Mr sugar." "If the feminine world has decreed that one must drink the abomination," til count once said privately to some Club friends, "why, let It be without any additions. They only make It worse." "No callers? Why, It seems to me this la an ideal afternoon for friends to drop tn. A little gossip, my dear young hvdy, flu admirably with the dull weather outside, and would add to your charmingly bright fireside, where no shadows would ever dare to gather, if such a thing were possible." "What a comedy of errors!" said Es telle's thoughts with a shudder. "Oh, yes; I caught a glimpse" of Miss Bennington as their carriage crossed mine," said the count slowly, while with commendable virtue be sat sipping Estelle's tea. "Oh, if he would only go! Am I never to have one quiet hour to myself?" whispered Estelle's thoughts sadily. "It Is maddening! But he stays and "Why, surely you must put an end to It Bstelle, once and for all," they com manded. "You'll be glad to get away from this country and from all these dear, hateful people. "And after all very few men can equal the count, as everyone says and thlnka You know he's devoted to you, and yon Med not stay more than a month at a time In his ducal palace on the heights. Of course there have been marriages, and birth, and deaths, and Joy, and Sorrow, and revelry, and crime, and W retched aese within its vast walla through all these centuries, and the spirits of the past must haunt its free- corridors and sigh through Its aad conservatories and wander through it myrtle and citron groves. But what do we care? "Anything to gut away. Anything to sat the ocean between you. And oontl asata, too, If possible, so that you will lever again bear hM name or leant of Ita successes and of who wtmagtr make up hla dally ad hauriv Mfd." Aa afi the while her thought as) tha f the aceuea at tft latent opera, and 4 Oa furuhW wedding of the forenoon, while the keen scrutiny of the count's veiled eyes read deeper Into the young girl's soul than she was at ail aware of. "A very suitable marriage," he com mented, rising leisurely to put his half empty cup on the tabouret. Estelle's eyes flashed and her Hp curled. "For those two," he supple mented, reseating himself. "What Is folly for one may be wisdom for another. We are all on distinct patterns, my dear young lady, although In different degrees. We possess with in us the same irrational bundle of contradictory emotions which are apt to play us queer tricks at odd times. and whose vagaries we none of us are ever sure we can circumvent or con trol." "Don't you know, weally, sometimes I wondeh if life Is life, or is only a blundeh? A twlck of that devilish fellah down yondeh, who's fooling us all, don't you know?" quoted Estelle, with a light laugh, while her thoughts ran on in bewildering riot, picturing scenes and forecasting events until, with a start, she came back in Count Corrielll's last words. Would she be content? Would a life of luxurious wandering suit her? Would liberty and freedom and the kaleidoscope of fashions, facts and fancies, and the whirl of social life In the great capitals, please her fancy and amuse and delight and ever keep a bright smile on her beautiful lips, and a gladness In the depths of her glorious eyes? And would she honor the home of his forbears, the castle on the cliffs, with her divine presence, and see beauty In the deep blue skies of Italy and bear music In the beat and mur mur of the waves on the crags and rocks of the shore? "Tes! Yes Yes!" said Estelle, faintly and desperately, with white Hps and a despairing heart, while he stood before her, holding wrth compassionate tenderness held cold and trembling hands. Then a long pause fell between them. The wood fire burned cheerily, the fretted brass work of the fireplace gleamed and glistened as the. fitful flames rose and fell. That of the hand some room, familiar to Estelle from her bonny childhood to this culminating hour of her young womanhood, looked with sorrowful reproach at her mad sacrifice, and her thoughts, tumultuous and wild, worried her with clamorous appeal, reproaches and surging, unde fined fears, until to still the pain and tumult, she sank back on the amber cushions of her chair and closed her eyes. The white bear on whose long fur your feet are resting was driven, and hunted, and finally tropped by a decep tive cry, In the black wilderness of the night, when, wailed her thoughts, "the wild winds of the steppes caught up and whirled the snow In eddies and blinding mists, while baffled and wounded, he fell Into the trammels of hiB captor! Estelle's thoughts sobbed and wrung their hands The stillness of the library grew op pressive, and Estelle, drawing a long breath, looked up. The dark eyes were gaslng down compassionately and sorrowfully at her lovely upturned face, whose varying color and troubled look told a tale of tentimes read by Count Corrielli in his wanderings through the world. Car mio," he said gently, drawing a chair close to hers and resuming pos session of her hands. "I am better than you deem me. "Do you believe I would selfishly tie your exquisite and reluctant youth to my gray hairs and sober years, and mprlson your loveliness within the limits of a life, gilded and gaudy, but after all a prison life, little one, in which your heart would cry out and beat its wings until it lay dead, all bruised for struggling so ineffectually against the walls of its living tomb? "No! No! Yours Is the happiness I hold the most precious thing in all this world, sweetheart; so not to me shall you sacrifice one second of your price less liberty or give one unwilling thought In obedience to a dictate which comes not from the heart" Estelle sat and listened, while a wave of color swept over ber face. "See here, little one," continued the count, with a faint, half-sad smile, which sat well on his careworn and thoughtful face, "I came with a mission this afternoon," "A mission!" repeated Estelle vague ly, while a sigh of unconscious relief escaped her. "Mine is a longer acquaintance with the world and its incongruous Inhabi tants than yours. Will you not believe, child, that my knowledge of others, and love for you. will give me a greater In sight Into intent and motive than you can possess?" "I suppose so," acquiesced Estelle, still too bewildered by the singular out come of the court's proposal to draw any special conclusion, while a curious hopefulness began to stir and assert Itself within her breast. "Then accept my advice and attach no Importance to gossip rumor. "And again, caro mlo, let no false barrier stand between you and that happiness which will surely crown a glorious young life If you only will," "But, monsieur le comte " began Estelle, while her thoughts, now riot, lag In gladness, sang curious and ex hilarating songs In her ears. "I hardly know "Ton will later," aald the count, ris ing to go. "Ton win realise, in looking back to thai hour, the wisdom of the advioe roar old Mead aow gives you, and you win partly understand the Immensity of his sacrifice aad of Ins undying de votion to the sweetest woman la all the world." Raising her hand to hla lips, Couir CorTlelll turned to leave the room where Estelle stood uncertain and be wlldered. while the heavy curtain li the doorway was again drawn ant someone paused in the doorway. "Mr. Carrington will complete th tale. Adieu, mignonne," said Count Corrielli, as be passed out slowly, win a courteous greeting to Eetelle's latesl visitor. He came forward with a quick strldi and Nothing was said PITIFUL STORY OF A HUNTED MAN Automobile Cannon. Dr. Maxib discovered that a machine gun could be made to act automatically That Is, that the recoil of the weapoo could be' used to repeat the Are Indefi nitely. Some Frenchmen then went to work and designed a device bj means of which a carriage could b made to progress with speed and smoothness without horses. Major Roy al P. Davidson of the Illinois National Guard, commandant at Northwestern military academy, has put two and two together and decided that a cannon could be mounted on an automobile carriage and made to do effective ser vice. Major Davidson has progressed so fai with his idea, says the New York Jour nal, that he has mentally fashioned two armored gun carriages which may in time revolutionise methods in hand ling small machine guns and heavier field artillery. That the Idea will work satisfactorily over smooth streets in cKles and be a vauable adjunct In sup pressing riots is beyond doubt; whethei it will work as well across country and taking In all kinds of ground remalnt to be demonstrated. So many things must be thought of in designing such a carriage that Major Davidson frankly says he Is by no means out of the woods. The car riage must be light, so that with th piece mounted and four men aboard th motive power can be generated In th machine. Electricity as a motor was abandoned by Mijor Davidson almost as soon as suggested. The motor to b used will be gasoline, compressed alt or naphtha. The success of the lattei with water craft has recently Inspired the young Inventor with the belief that It is suitable to his purposes. The main difficulty will be to securt a power strong enough to move the heavy armored vehicle over all kindf of bad ground. The automobile car riages in use operated by eleetric!t have power only sufficient to run th carriages with from four to eight per sons as a load. Compressed air bai almost no limit In power but is some what limited in speed. Speed Is ar essential in handling a battery. It is the purpose of MaJ. Davidson tc go overland to New York In case ht receives a gun properly mounted ir time. He expects to train a companj of his cadets from the Northwesterr military academy to handle the gun anif carriage. He says he will need least two such guns before he can g1v the matter a fair test. These he wir take across the country to New York. Possibilities of Celery. E, J. Holllster, the agricultural experi who is working down here among thi Irrigated settlements instructing th( farmers how to use water to the best advantage, told me the other day thai with proper cultivation he was oonfl dent $&00 worth of celery could be raised on a single acre of this arid land. write William E. Curtis, in the Chicago Rec ord. He says the alkali In the soil is ex actly what is needed to produce th crispiness that is the first essential o! this popular plant The Colorado celerj he considers the best in the world, anc he predicts that It will soon be raised ir sufficient quantities to monopolize th pastern markets. Fifty thousand celery roots can b planted on ten acres of Irrigated land and will require the constant attentior of two men with the modern tools thai have been Invented to cultivate, har vest, trim, wash and bind the planl into bunches. He says there Is a ma chine drawn by horses, with knlvei that run through the soil and cut ofl the plant at the root as neatly and at exactly as can be done by hand. Then are other machines that do the rest 01 the work, especially the back-breaklnf part, and reduce the labor of cultlva tlon to a minimum. An entire outfr costs about tl.OOO, but with It and let acres of strong alkali land a man cat make a profit of from 12,000 to 12,50) with less than five months' labor. It Is' another Interesting fact thai these arid lands, which were formerl considered worthless, have produced the highest degree of saccharine mat ter in the sugar beet Primitive Lighting In Scotia. These torches bad many kinds oi holders, which were made of Iron ol wood. In some cases the wood formed a stout staff sunk in a stone base. Tlx top of the staff was cleft, and In this was put the burning pine. Iron holden were made as stands and brackets; Uu latter often fixed to a bar in the fire place, from which the kindled wood, oi "caanel wood" in the Aberdeenshln dialect, could easily be renewed. It Aberdeenshire these torch stands an often called "peermen," probably Iron the fact that the burning branch wai frequently held by the poor, but evei welcome, wayfarer. These wandereri were always the most acceptable ol guests to the lonely crofter. He li turn felt himself amply repaid for Uu food and shelter he supplied by Um news and gossip brought by such travelers. Before a man la twenty-five hi spends most of his time trying to rnakt the girls think ha la the devil of a f el low. After that he spends most of hk time trying to bum them think hi laa'U If a writer of fiction had evolved out of his brain the story of George B Howard, the pension fraud convict, be :ould not have unfolded a more Inter eetln tale. It is the story of a fellow creature that appeals to the reader in manifold ways. The unrelenting vigor with which the government pursues its of fenders is to the ordinary mind al moBt appalling. That Is the first Im presslon obtained from the perusal of the facts, that made of the most re rpected citizen of Arkansas City a pen Itenttary inmate. It is the story of "Men and Women' ever again. Belasco and DeMllle told In ttage version the history of George B, Howard. He is the Governor Rodman 5f the drama. Only playwrights must tppeal to human hearts, if they want to be successful, and they softened and :heered their tale with a happy ending Rodman was not disturbed In his "Uv ng Ufe over again," poor Howard of real life was. True, he had not borne the punish ment imposed by the authorities he had offended, but who will gainsay that, as a fugitive from Justice, he had not tuffered tortures a thousand times worse than temporary Incarceration in a government prison? A man who decorates his walls with lynamlte, who lays sticks of the fate- lul explosive about his home, where he nay at a moment's notice blow himself and his lived ones Into eternity, could ot have had a very cheerful existence, so say the least. He dallied with life's sweetest Joys jnder the very shadow of the Damocles iword. He lived on the brink of a cra- ler more dreadful In its destruction than the gunpowder about his house. 1Mb years of liberty, passed with a ved and loving wife and a tender 9abe, were in reality years of hellish torment His cup of bliss was ever embittered by the wormwood of fear. The honors leaped upon him by admiring fellow J lownsmen ever made stinging by the fhastly presence of a dishonorable past. Jeorge Howard's life was his atone- nent, and the presence of the deadly lynamlte in his pretty Kansas home Is the best evidence thereof. OFFENSE AND PUNISHMENT. A little more than twelve years ago there came to the- little place of Mound 2Hy, 111., a tall, handsome stranger. He as young, besides being handsome, and he said that he came from the outb and Intended to locate in the pret- ,y little town. The polish of his man- ters marked him the true southerner tf gentle birth, and the townfolks took co him in a Jiffy. Mound City has a population of 3,000 inhabitants, and ihere was not one of them who was lot glad to count such a distinguished poking gentleman as Mr. Howard a fellow cKlzen. Howard had money and opened up a real estate office, the first that had rver been known to exist In the small tommunlty on the Kentucky and 1111- ols border. His Insinuating ways and harming personality won for him the steem and liking of the town, and he lid some business In a place where Seretofore property holders needed no middleman to barter away their realty belongings. Some of his deals were irofitable, both to himself and the town. '.or on a large tract of land, the sale of which he engineered, a factory was rected that gives employment to sev eral hundred persons. As prosperity came to him the good sill of the townsfolks increased. He a as received In the best society of the little town, attended the churches and was altogether an acquisition to the place in every way even the most in- jredulous might look at It Being young and attractive, he be- ame a beau among the younger set, and a sweet girl became his bride. She was Abble Clawson, daughter of Mrs. P. C. Earle, one of the richest women In Pulaski county. The courtship was ihort and the wedding bells rang Joy ously on the day that made the pretti Bt girl of Mound City the bride of 3eorge B. Howard. This union with so decided a matri monial catch as Abble Clawson, rather ttrengthened the young real estate man's position le the town. If it needed any further prop after people had be- ;un to know and like him. 3ROWTH OF A PENSION AGENCY. Meanwhile, In connection with his real estate business, Howard had estab lished himself as a pension agent. While he had no white clients, negroes who had fought In the civil war seemed to be plentiful In old Pulaski, around Cairo, or "Egypt," as that part of Southern Illinois is called. His business as pension agent Increased so rapidly that he hired men to solicit fur him, and established many subagencles, lie seemed to be floating on the top wave of prosperity, when the government at Washington made notice of the fact that "Egypt" was rather full of pen sion claimants, all of whom established their right to draw upon Uncle Sam's treasury. A government officer was sent to Mound City and vicinity to Investi gate, and apparently found everything all right The officer returned to Wash ington and the pension claims came in stronger than before. The officials of the Pension depart ment talked about it among themselves, and one day one of them discovered that the signature on a receipt, purport ing to have come from the widow of a dead hero, was uncommonly like How ard's own writing on the pension appli cation. Experts were called In to ex amine the writing, and they decided that both the voucher and the receipt were signed by the same person. An other Investigation followed, and some of the most startling facts came light. Howard was discovered to hav carried on wholesale pension frounds He was arrested, indicted by the grand Jury on twenty-flve different counts and put in Jail. Greatly astonished were the good folks of Mound City. Sorry, too, were they, Just as the Kansans are' sorry over the plight of their shattered IdoL His family stood valiantly by him Mrs. Earle, his mother-in-law, who had wealthy and Influential friends In the east came to the fore to work for the release of her daughter's husband. The government, however, was unrelenting and as soon as he was freed on one In dictment he was arrested on another. Forgery, pension fraud, obtaining mon ey under false pretenses, and other sim ilar charges were brought against him, and in the end the sentences passed upon him piled up to fourteen years in the penitentiary. Howard was taken to the Chester (111.) penitentiary, where government convicts are cared for. It was on Oe tober 17, 1891, that the prison gates closed upon him. Soon after his In carceratlon he bean to show signs of Insanity. Some say It was real, others held that he was shamming. The In fiuence of his mother-in-law and her money again came to his rescue. Prom inent persons In Washington Interested themselves in the case.and Howard was removed to the government hospital In Washington, D. C. Still feigning mild Insanity, Howard, it Is said, laid his plans and iaid them well. In the very month In which he had been Imprisoned the previous year he escaped. A sum of money sent to him was used to bribe a guard. It seemed as If the earth had swallowed him. The government sleuths, who started Immediately on his trad could not locate him. They were never called off. The case was one of those which would forever be prosecuted, and the purpose of which only the death of the victim could thwart. TURNS UP IN KANSAS. The story of the escape from the ov- ernment bloodhounds could only be told by Howard himself. He outlined It briefly without Implicating anybody How he escaped from Washington un observed, though of striking personal ity, he does not say. He admits of go ing to Mound City shortly after he had eluded the guards of the asylum and entered upon his freedom. In Mound City he remained only two days. He would be easier lost sight of in a large community, and so he came to St Iuls. There he met his wife, whom he had not seen since his arrival In the Washington hospital, and was shown for the first time his baby daughter, who hod been born during his prison term. The presence of the Infant, the possession of his wife, made hlrn even more determined than before to find a place where they could be together; where he might begin life anew, and j enjoy the companionship of his spouse and child as a respected citizen and not as an outlaw and fugitive from Justice. From St. Louis these three people, who are now plunged into the most dis mal gloom, traveled to a little town In Iowa. An old friend gave them shelter, and for a time they were safe. The husband had adopted his wife's maiden name, and was henceforth known as J. W. Clawson. But the Inexorable law which demands that an effense must be expiated, soon, seemingly, had Its finger again on the throat of the fleeting man. One day his friend came home and acquainted him with the fact that strangers had struck the town, who seemed to be government detec tives. Flight again became necessary to escape detection. The friend advised that the fugitive go to the Cherokee Strip, which was being opened Just then. Where now towns are laid out and new communi ties formed, now rigid questioning of antecedents is In vogue. The outlaw has as good a chance to become a householder as the most devout seeker after fortune. It's the "finish" that tells In such communities, and Claw son was right "in" at the first call. He left his wife and baby in Iowa. What money he bad he used to build up his new life, his new home, his new for tunes. He formed a townslle company and sold a number of lots, which cost him no more than the filing fees, for 100 apiece. When he had established himself In Arkansas City his wife and child came to him, and the new life began In earnest During his Incarceration In the Washington hospital Howard, or Clawson, as we must call him now, had become Interested In the study of med. Iclne. He determined to make It his new life's work, and began to write for instructions by mall. He studied night and day, and when he felt competent he went to Kansas City to pass his ex amination and receive his diploma. This was five years ago. It was hla first leap Into civilisation away from his Cherokee home, and It proved safe. He returned to his self-Imposed exile, so bravely shared by his wife and baby, and he vowed to make them happy. Having saved considerable money, Howard began the practice of medicine, and to build a home from his beloved. He was now known as Doctor Clawson and his practice grew apace. A pretty one-story cottage became the shelter of these three people, whom love bound so tightly together that crime could not break the bond. A small porch ran along the front of the house. A big window in the center admitted light and air, and large trees shaded either side. The house was well set back from the street Even the fence was twelve feet from the sidewalk, giving any one within splendid opportunity to see and study those who approached the house from day to day the doctor's habits were always the same. He was a de voted husband and the roost Indulged father. At I o'clock in the mining he wended his way to hie office, nevel leaving It until It was time to return te dinner. As he passed along the street, both morning, noon and night, he had a friendly greeting, a handshake, s smile for everybody. On fair summet evenings, or crisp, bright autumn days his little daughter went to meet him at his office and to accompany him oO his homeward way. The pair were the talk of the town, so loving and devoted were they. With the little fairy's hanj clasped in his. Doctor Clawsn strolled leisurely toward his pretty home, where the wife stood in the door to recelvd her husband with a kiss and a fond smile. The scenes of the morning re peated themselves. Scores of persons passed father and daughter, chatted for a few minutes and went on. What a good man the doctor is." thl town folks were wont to say, who re spected and loved him for his domes tic virtues as well as for his medlca skill. After 6 o'clock the doctor was rarelj seen uptown, and tf he perchance dl go back to his office it was only for at hour. Eight o'clock, or nightfall li winter, saw him safely within doors The gayeties of the frontier town had no temptation for him. He preferred his fireside, the companionship or nu wife and baby to all allurements suet as are usually offered In railroad crosi towns of new origin. On Sunday evening the doctor accom panied his wife and daughter to tbl church In which they worshiped, al though he was not himself a member ol the congregation. He was fond of tell Ing stories, and his fund seemed Inex haustible. He was always sure of an audience among the younger men, who found him a most entertaining person. ithough his hair was fast becoming gray. He knew a few card tncKs, wiid which he amused his friends, but save for his stories and his cleverness with the cards, nothing Indicated that n had ever mingled with men or women of the world. Shortly before his arrest he stated to a friend that he would soon be in easy circumstances. His remedies were fast becoming known, and recently he gave up his regular physician's practice and devoted himself entirely to the study of the eye and ear. Into this life of study, devotion to family, community honors, the doctor was once urged to take the mayoralty of the town. His arrest came like a thunderbolt. It all was due to a flaw In the carefully reared structure of hlf concealment, disguise of name, profes sion and perhaps character. H prob ably longed to be able to step forth Into the public light once more a man free from the hounding fear of dlscov ery. At any rate his mother-in-law Mrs. Earle, never gave up hope of ob taining his pardon. He besieged thl attorney general at Washington will letters asking for his pardon, but thai official declined to listen to her appeali until the fugutive surrendered. H gave her to understand that be would consider the use of his Influence in tha' case. The god woman, who worked so unceasingly in his behalf, knew noi how to reply to this ultimatum on th part of the attorney general. Woman like, she wished to consult with hei son about the character of her reply and s- she mailed the letter to him asking him to read It, and if he ap proved It, to speed it on Its way. Right here is where the man who ha dodged government detectives for elghl years, not by fleeing from continent to continent, but by simply living a quiet, unostentatious and righteous life In an out-of-the-way community, made his fatal error. He sent Mrs. Earle's let ter to a friend In Washington, asking that he mall the Inclosure. Ill luck to Clawson. good luck to the detec tives, played Into their hands the en velope in which Mrs. Earle's letter wua sent. The friend, who Is a clerk In the Ebbltt house, by some strange circum stance, which may never be explained, saved the fatal envelope. The detec tives came to him and he produced It gave them the clew to the escaped It convict's whereabouts, for the postmark showed that It had been mailed In the Oklahoma district of the Santa Fe system. From now on It was easy for th sleuths. United States Marshal Trigs was put to work on the case. Severa' clews were followed, but they proved unsuccessful. Finally the marsh came to Arkansas City. Perhaps hi knew the maiden name of George B. Howard's wife Clawson and perhapf he didn't. At any rate. It Is said, he suspected the doctor. It remained td prove up his suspicion. He sent fo a photograph of Howard taken whel he was Imprisoned at Chester, nint years ago. The Image on the paste board was yet quite like the aging mas of the story. Trigg sent for Harry Sut ton, one of the best detectives in thl state of KnnKas, to help him make thl arrest, hirst they made the doctor! acquaintance through a feigned land purchase, which they said they hoped to effect. Upon their second call the, had with them the photograp. Not bus iwtlng anything untoward, the doctoi who never opened his door to any on until he had faced them, admitted them. Their errand was sion madi clear. When the photograph was hand, ed to him he admitted that he was thell man. After he had made this admission hi begged the men to allow him to shu the door opposite his desk. At first II seemed natural to the detectives tha he w ished to conceal the terrible knowl edge from his wife at least for a fee moments longer, but there was such I queer, determined expression In the ey of the fugitive that they refused to lef him close the door, and one of Inem go up and did It himself. When Trigg asked him afterwardt why he had been so anxious to closi this d'Mir he showed them were, unde a little thermometer on a paper mat was concealed a stick of dynamite. Ha he reached It, he said, he would havi blown himself, his wife and child anf his captors Into kingdom come. Doctor Clawson's life for the pas four years has been so far above re proach that the people of Ark an sal City, without a dissenting voice, demo for his pardon. T. W. Eckert, editor 9 the Traveler, and probably one of th) most Influential men wHh the author! ties In Pulaski county, has Interest himself In Doctor Clawson's behalf, and hopes to also Interest President Mo Klnley and the officers who hava con trol of the case. Steps were taken hi ail the well-to-do people of the com munlty to assist the doctor and his fain liy In their hour of trouble,aad If ever good and upright life will stand a mat hi band Doctor Clawson will Bad j trouble la proving his right ta tha claim.