Chinatown Dens Of London Vanish Under Cops' Ban Deportation Orders Drive Pro prietors From Plague Spot of City Houses Shuttered and Empty. t London. Chinatown, with its in v'duous and degrading vices, its gam blmg hells and its opium dens, has disappeared,- ' Lttnehouse-causeway ind Penny fields, once the haunts of all, the more vicious types of almond-eyed Celestials who drifted to London dockland, are, no longer the China town or iuria uction or ot one time fact. Xot long ago this little area. witfT its berreu-like tenements and its rows of smaller tumble-down houses wrs the setting for almost unbe- lievably sordid and decadent orgies. During walks through the district one se-s no. more than a dozen Chi nese. Some of the houses are shut tered and empty, the rest are simply dwelling houses and no longer "re sorts." "Chink" has stolen away, and in some cafes mysteriously, and the one-time Chinatown is now comparatively law-abiding, spot, albeit extremely unattractive. Opium Banished. 1 he police sav they now have vety little trouble, and practically none ot the old sort, Jak-a-pu, the weird eastern gambling game, is still played by some of the tew Chi nese, who remain, but only among themselves, and much as bridge is played m brixton or bloomsbury. An experienced officer, with in timate knowledge of the locality, said it was now practically impos sible to find either opium or an opium pipe in any of the houses, while gambling of the type that once was prevalent had ( practically ceased to exist. Just Disappear. The wave of deportations which followed the public outcry against the scandal, he added, had been mainly responsible for the change, When the proprietor ot an opium or gambling den was caught and fined he just paid, looked as pleas ant as a Chinaman permits himself to look, and carried on his nefarious business unperturbed. Deporation, however, had an immediate effect. Dozens of deportation orders were made by the local magistrates dur ing the few weeks over which the police "roundup" extended and then most of those who were left just disappeared. Many of them, joined ships at the docks and went to sea. Others mi grated to Liverpool, where they were closely watched by the police, so closely that they, too, went to sea. Plague Stopped. The East( End police seem confi dent that the disappearance of China town from Limehouse does not mean that a new Chinatown is springing up in some other district., They declare that, for the time. being at all events, the plague has been stopped. Opium smuggling, of course, still i?ocs on, and there are isolated cases of vice and gambling that are now and then pounced on, but a man's wife may now walk through Lime house causeway and Pennyfields without misgiving. She must not, however be fastidious. Staler Tells Variety of Hooch You Have Had If You Sway, It's Good Stuff; If You Reel or Spin Like a Top, You Have Been Drinking Moonshine. y ' Chicago, 111. Even the man ner of your stagger betrays whether you indulge in moonshine or choic bourbon. If you stagger from side to side, you wil probably havehnn dreds of helping hands and friends about, for it is proof of the fact that you have been drinking real bour bon. But if you reel or spin likea top, you probably will be passed up, for you have 'b0n drinking moonshine. ' These are among the observa tions of Dr'. W. P. Goodsmith re garding the effects of prohibition in Chicago Dr. Goodsmith has been medical director of the Washing tonian home for "drunks" for the last 25 years and has treated thou sands for intoxication. Those Old Days. "In the old days," said the physi cian, "we treated 80 to 100 patients each month for the drink habit. Now only 8 or 10 a month come under my cate. . "Men who indulge now suffer more acutely for the inebriety. The so bering up process is harder than it used to be, and it takes longer to 'come back' from the immediate ef forts of drinking. This is due to the drinking of too much moonshine. "The effects of the rank poison commonly sold as whisky are differ ent from those 'that are produced by genuine bourbon. In many cases the intoxication assumes a more violent form and men are disposed tqquar- rcl and fight. C Affects Eyesight. "Drinking has always affected the eyesight, but those who indulge in moonshine are liable to become stone blind. Contrary to expectation there has not been any increase in the use of drugs since ,the advent of pro hibition. - "The decrease in the number of women treated for drunkenness is even greater than among the men. It is much harder for women to get liquor than formerly." Police Reserve Is Formed By Citizens of Detroit Detroit, Mich. Because of the efficient work of the citizen volun teers who aided the police depart- ' ment in its two months' campaign against crime, ipremanent" organ ization to be known as the Detroit Felice reserve will be created im mediately. Dr. James W. Inches, police commissioner, announces. The organization will be a volunteer body, serving without compensation, . and assisting the police whenever unusual conditions demand it. Siamese Beautv I Carries Meet of League by Storm Representatives From All Na tions Acclaim Her Most Beautiful Girl at Geneva Assembly. Geneva. Until the league of na tions assembly met here? for the first time. Siam was known to the world" mostly as the home of the celebrated twins, bad-tempered ele phants aid rulers with large num bers of gaily decorated wives. Now Siam has upset these old ideas with a rude jolt. Firstly, she was the first nation actually to put down her contribution in cold, spot cash to relieve the Polish typhus sufferers, while England and France and all the .other big powers were stalling and promising. - Secondly, she has made herself known as the home of feminine beauty. , Reigning Queen. A Siamese girl was the reigning queen of every soiree or ball given by the various delegations during the assembly s sessions here. Mr. Kowell of Canada and Mr. Van Karacbeck of Holland, and Sir Ali I man of India, may not admit it when they get back home to Mrs. Rowell and Mrs. Van K. and Lady Ali, nor will any of the, other delegates, except the bach elors. But here at ueneva, when three delegates got together in their evening duds to watch the dancers, there was no doubt about it. The un animity rule in the league covenant that sometimes tied up assembly proceedings didn't bother anvone. Korty-one nations were represented, and all their delegates, secretaries and clerks were for Siam in the beauty competition. Center of Attraction. The Siamese belle made her first appearance at the grand soiree given by the French delegation at the Ho tel des Bcrgues. Slight, oh've-com-plexioned with just a touch of color in her cheeks, she wore a rose-colored evening gown direct from a great Paris dressmaker's. ,A Siamese secretary escorted her to the hall and danced the first dance. Thereafter she became the prize in a maddening scramble for dances by young delegates and secretaries from about all the nations of the world. Paul Hymans of Belgium, president of the assembly; ex-Premier Pader ewski of Poland; Leon Bourgeois and a host of other big ones cast ap proving eyes as she shimmied and one-stepped around the big hotel hall room. It was the same old story at every dance, except that she wore a different and seemingly more rav ishing costume every time. Now, not a single delegate believes the story that the king of Siam is going to leave his own dominions to tour Europe and the United States in search of a bride. Women's Fashions Are Attacked by English Woman Viscountess Gnmston Says Styles Are Arbitrary Change able, Inartistic, Un healthy. London, England. A titled Eng lishwoman has taken up the cudgels for a standardized dress for women in order to help the sex escape tne tern dictates of fashion. Fashion, the most autocratic ruler in the world, has been attacked by Viscountess Grimston. Lftdv .Gnmston urges that women hould adopt an independent line on the ground that the present fashr ions are: ' Arbitrary, Changeable, Inartistic, Extravagant, Unhealthy. A standardized dress is advocated in nrdr to force fashion to abdicate, and it is desirable that it should be smart, serviceable, beautiful and in ccordance with healthy ideals. Women Decree. T.aitv Grimston reckons, however, without the inherent changeability of woman and her love of expressing her personality in clothes. "Women themselves decree that fashion shall change," said the man ager. "They would grow tired of one standard dress and refuse to conform to it generally. A woman, unless she is inspired by the mili tary spirit and adopts a uniform, will not wear a dress like that o an other member of her sex. Supports Fashions. "I aeree with Ladv Grimston when she points out that -English women must not copy tne rrencn woman s styles too slavishly,, but we can modify the French ideas to suit English figures. - A doctor is a strong supporter of modern fashions, and contends that they are the most healthful that have been in vogue for hundreds of years. "Consider the dusty trains ot early Victorian days," he said; "the steel corsets ot Elizabeths tune ano tne tight lacing of -nil periods. This country may well be thankful for the san dressing of the modern woman." "Hic"-Means Same In French As In Our Own Language Paris, France. The curious epi demic of hiccoughs is still raging throughout France. Persons have been known to have hiccoughs for five days and nights consecutively. Doctors are divided as to the causes of this strange illness. Some say it is a mild form of sleeping sick ness, others attribute it to a com plication of flu, of which there has been a recurrence of late. So far hiccoughs presents no danger, though medical authorities say it might easi ly -develop into something more dan gerous unless it is carefully treated and Attempts made to stop it. Anemia might be one of the causes of hiccoughs. The sickness is to be discussed at the next meeting of the French Academy of Medicine and some remedy found for it. Harriet Krone was 20 and just out of business college when she became stenographer for Kendall P. Wilks. 23. and just graduated from his state university. And Harriet Krone fell in love with her em ployer on the first morning of the first day that they worked together. It was not merely a matter of Mr. Wilks broad, straight shoulders, his thick black hair, and kindly, handsome gray eyes though, as Har riet was a very normally human young person, it is not to be doubted that thfse things all helped. But lie treated her as courteously as though he had met her in a ball room or his mother's home, not at all1 an unusual attitude in employ ers, though she thought it was, hav ing been thoroughly warned against all business men by a sour old maid aunt and a frightened, ignorant, lov ing little mother. Also, when she made a mistake, which might have had serious con sequences for him as well as for her, he smiled as he corrected it, and said that they were both of them new to his father's business, and they'd have to stick together and help each other over Jhe rough spots. Harriet began adoring him from that very" moment, though nobody, least of all Kendall P. Wilks him self, suspected the fact. For Har riet was that thing deadly to all romance a perfectly sensible girl. It would have taken a very gay and very daring-employer to threat- j en her reputation Not that she was homely, exactly. Her figure wasn't bad, and she dressed it neatly if not stylishly. Her hair was of an ord inary nondescript sort of brown, but there was a good deal of it., and it was always well brushed and trim. Her complexion was colorless, but she did not cheapen it with splotches of rouge, and her brown eyes and her teeth were really very good, while she hadn't one homely fea ture though certainly not one of them was beautiful either 1 With a little coquetry Harriet might have become fairly good looking but she thought a coquette was indecent. She was a sensible girl. And so Kendall P. Wilks con sidered her very highly as a steno grapher and as a woman, con sdiered her not at all! She realized it, but at that time gave very little heed to ways in which she might attract his personal attention. He was a sort of demi god too high above her to be reached by even a flight of fancy. As allur ing but unreachable as the moon had been to her when she was a baby. So, sensibly realiznig her limitations, she set her heart and soul as well as her brain and body to her work, soon became indispensable to him, and wouldn't allow, even to herself, that she cared when a year later, he married Muriel Marvin, . She had minded, however, the little slurs she heard about the courtship. Muriel was pretty well known as a "beau chaser" and the other young men in the office were censorious. Ken hadn'f done the courting, he'd let himself be caught by art artful little minx that was the masculine opinion. Harriet resented the criticisms on her idol's strength of character, but she did noj approve of the match herself. Muriel was extremely, de liriously pretty, but Harriet, who had been in her class at school, knew that she -also was selfish, whining, and the greatest little liar who ever talked. She felt Kendall did not de serve such a wife, but as he had her, she set herself to work to do her share toward making the marriage as successful as possible. She helped a good deal, too. Muriel was horribly jealous, but never of "good sensible old Hat." And so it was that "good sensible old Hat" was able to deflect many a jealous tirade from the de voted head of her innocent employer, and to explain and excuse many a petty action or slily lie, which had caused his honest heart to quail with in him. Also, Harriet took it upon herself to see that never, m the stress of business; did he forget the frequent gifts of flowers and candy, gloves, and even jewelry, which Muriel de manded. Muriel was one of those women whose affections are bought on the installment plan, and the last payment never reached by the most generous of husbands. Kendall would have to continue to buy her till he died, and Harriet sometimes grimly wondered if the payments wouldn't have to be continued up in heaven if Muriel was allowed to reach that abode of the blessed, which Harriet greatly doubted. , But her task of keeping a good man in love with a bad woman was. not of long duration. Muriel had a baby. And having hated the idea from the first, Muriel fought it so successfully that the baby never livedj and Muriel herself died. "A3 clear a case of murder and suicide as you'd be able to find," the crusty old doctor asserted. It was hard to see the hurt look in Kendall's eyes those days. Har riet realized, though nobody else did, that it wasn't so much the death of his wife, as the death of his ideals, which cut so deeply. Muriel had shown onjy her worst traits, and those very plainly, toward the last. If anybody in the office had cared to notice, they might have seen that during the next few months quiet Miss Krone wore better and more becoming clothes than usual. Ia fact, a fa-.nt hope was stirring in her. breast. Even, her sensible soul was beginning to ask, "why not?" Her deen modesty beginning to whisper, "you might at least have a chance." ' But she had established a reputa tion for good, hard sense that even herself dared not assail. Passionate ly she wished to do something to at tract his attention as a man and ob stinately, she couldn't. She found it a physical impossibility , to flirt. Little Bessie Jones, in the outer of fice, was about to be discharged for her capabilities in that line, but Miss Krone saved her official head a whole month just to be able to ob serve her methods. , It did no good. Sfnsihlv. Harriet realized thai what was kittenish in Bessie would bel foolish in her, and, letting office dis cipline run its course, breathed a sigh of relief when Bessie was gone. So Harriet was not disappointed, though she was surprised, when rumor once more bestirred itself with the love affair of her employer. Muriel had been dead nearly a year. Kendall's sisterk who had gone to keep house for him and now wished to get married-hersclf, was fixing up a match betweea him and Rhoda Barnes. Harriet was quite certain PROPINQUITYPLUS By Mary Dicktrson Donahey that the sister would succeed. She knew her divinity well enoughto realize that he was one of the type of men who need a home, and a wife not only to pet them but to be petted by them. Harriet merely countermanded the order for a tailor-made suit, put the difference between' that and a sensible ready-to-wear one into the bank and schooled herself to offer her congratulations when they were due. They were due the next week and Harriet gave them honestly. He remarried not quite two years after Muriel's death,, and Harriet felt' he really might be happy this time. Rhoda was a very nice girl in every way. . And Kendall seemed happy enough during the next few years, though many said it could only b: a very brave and successful pose. For on the way home from their wedding triD there had been an accident. No one in the train was killed, but Rhoda was seriously injured. It was said that she might recover, but she never did. She was not in great pam. rslie was not in any way disfigured. But she never walked again, and her doc tor bills and bills for nursing and massage and so on were said to be enormous. At any rate, though the business was doing well, Kendall wore shabbv coats for the first time and when" Rhoda was unable to use the car any more he sold, it. Then, when Harriet was 31, and more sensible than ever, though look ing no older than she had for the last JO years, Rhoda, who had been fading gradually so long, faded quite away, Harriet was one qi me ,iew who knew that Kendall's grief for her was twice what it had been for lovelv voune Muriel. Khocia was a loving and honest soul, who had fought her hard battle bravely and smiled at her husband to the end. The night of Rhoda's funeral Har riet, though wearied to the very soul with the responsibilities she had borne through the last few days, faced herself in her looking glass, prepared for a serious talk with the woman reflected in it. "Harriet Krone," she remarked, "it is given to very few girls to nave three chances to win the heart of the man they love. You have had two and lost them. You were scared out. You were too modest, iou are no beauty, and you have no super-woman charm, and you have n HrpuHful reputation for sense to h HvetUdown. But this time you can really try. If you don't win out it will be because you don't know j10w because you're a fool. He'll marrv aeain. and soon. He's only 35, and you couldmake him happier than he's ever had a chance to be vet. You could be the love of his life. He would love you if he knew the real you, and not the business substitute he sees every day. ce a woman 1 Harriet Krone you go to it'" So during the next few months the office force gasped and won dered who had died and left Miss Krone a fortune. For the dollars sensibly hoarded by her business self came out of the bank to deck nnt her wnmanlv self for conquest. Even Kendall P. Wilks noticed and gave her ff clumsy, kindly compli ment or two which set her heart a-flutter, it nunerea again c tcld her how terribly he missed Rhoda. How empty thebig house seemed, and how the maids, whom Rhoda had always directed, were ne!'Ipctino evervthinar. If he mar ried again before long, did she 'think people would talk.' "No." said Harriet shortly, with downcast eyes eyes she dared not raise to his for fear that he might see the'glory that lay in them for him. When a woman like Harriet Krone falls in love, it is a very deep and serious and beautiful thing, and the man honored with such an af fection should be counted among the particularly blessed. ' This time she felt she had won she was almost certain of her happi ness. He might not be really in love with her iust marrying her for companionship. But the love would come it couldn't help itl And happy how happy they both would bel As soon as he felt it was decent, he would surely speak to her. Then came one of the- greatest blessings of her life. She fell ill with the grip a few weeks later and was forced to stay at home, in a darkened room. And it was there, in the merciful darkness of that room, when her voice was expected to be husky and her eyes weak and watery, that her sour old maid aunt, coming in to "amuse her," an nounced acidly: "I hear that mushy boss of yours is going to get married again. After two .such experiences I should think he'd be a little careful the way he let women chase him up. But there a scheming woman ain't any match for a soft hearted man like he is. He mav be ever so smart in business, but in ordinary life pooh! He's just so much mush! Who is it? You may well ask I t-ttie ttott mant Four years older'n him, and plain as a pike staff. Guess she knew it was her last chance. They say ever ..since his wife died she's been running across from that little old broken down house of hers to his, telling him she's always been so lonely she knows just how he feels now, and taking him pies and cakes and puddings. "They do say she was pretty near at the end of her rone. House mortgaged to the top of the light ning rod, relatives all sick of sup porting her. They say she sold that autograph letter of Washington's that came down to her in her moth er's family, to get the stuff to make the baking that caught him! Lived on bread and tea herself for months. But you know Ef fie can cook, and the cooking and the sympathy rack et did the trick. "I don't see, Hat, why'you never took, a chance at the man right there with him all day as you are. He'd make you a good husband he'll make Effie one. It's his spe cialty. But there you're so plaguey sensible. You ain't even interested in gossip like you ought to be. I'm going." she went, and Harriet Krone was so ill that nieht that her mother and physician were alarmed and her employer, frantic to think of the condition things would be in at the office if her illness were a long one, telephoned about her, and then fin ally came himself, flower laden, but accompanied by the long, lank form of Miss Hoffman, to inquire in per son. , , "She said she was sorry for you, but of course Kendall came first with her now, and it was dreadful to contemplate all the extra work your being away would put on hi shoulders and at such a time too. stormed the sour old aunt "She wasn't scarcely decent, with Rhoda not dead 10 mouths and nothing an nounced yet I She made vme sick. She made Harriet sicker. But she was able once more to offer con gratulations with a steady face if not an honest heart, when the engage ment was announced, rather sheep ishly, on her return to the office. Faie and grim, Harriet went back to work. Again she helped him with cetatls of a wedding. Again she ran things while he was upon a wed ding trip. And now she threw her self into her business so whole heartedly that she became office manager, with the salary of a man anil the respect xt the whole lorce. atul, however, she carried on to a iarge extent the work of private sec retary to Kendall Wilks, now presi cent of the works. They had grown up in the business together, and she was indispensible Jo him. The girls whispered that "Krone's clothes were worse than ever, by which they meant morsensible, and wondered why she had given up the prettier ones she had worn for a while. But in time they forgot. Everybody forgot but Harriet her self that sfle had ever been anything but a machine. She honestly tried to forget, and set herself to helping her employer through the intricacies of this matri monial venture, as she had helped him through the other two. They vere different, ofcourse. With such different women, different difficulties were bound to arise. Some bf these were rather funny! Effie, as a neighbor, had known of the simple little ceremony with which Kendall and Rhoda had re membered the date of Muriel's death. Effie, being extremely sentimental, and afraid of being thougght jealous of the dead wives, arranged a regular orgie of anniversaries. The year fairly bristled with them. They became a horror to Kendall, kindly, generous and slightly sentimental himself though he was. There was the anniversary of the day when Effie had brought him over the first pie, "baked for him with her own hands." The day he had first really taken notice of her, and the day when they had finally "understood each other." The day of their engagement and of their wedding; her birthday; nis oirtnaay. These were legitimate enough. But to them she added, with great pomp and ceremony, the anniversary of his engagement to Muriel, her birthday, the date of her marriage, and death. Rhoda's birthday engagement and marriage and death, with the date of her injufy added on. Effie had de spised Muriel, and her acquaintance with Rhoda had been slight, but she talked of them continually. Their possessions were undisturbed in the house. Their portraits were prominent-Tin the walls and in photo graph albums. Their ideas and preferences were discussed and sometimes followed, v.iriair. hrothers declared that Trn ball's house had become indecenH it was as iuu vi a The fact that two of the wives ,.,.. HmH made matters rather worse than better. Kendall himself began to look harried. , He kept lus iiirtiii anniversaries inuiicu iy Harriet often found lnm studying it wun a ki frieht. Shamefacedly, he consuiieu her now and then. i As, ' it's Muriel's birthday tomor row. Effie is so thoughtful, she says we ought to-nave a Douquci v Muriel's favorite flowers beneath her picture. Lan you rememper iviuncis favorite flowers? I can't." Or, "it's the third anniversary ot Khnda'a death next Sunday. Elsie. suggests that I ask Dr. Smithson to have her favorite hymns sung in church. Will you ah telephone him ahnnt it?" T4. Hid not add that lie would feel extremely foolish doing it himselt. But again Harriet understood. Her lips, which were setting in straighten trimmer lines each vear. smiiea a dh sarcastically, maybe, but she kept nqje of the flowers. She arranged about the hymns. For the first time . . .. ar f in her Hie sne neo lor ner employer Effie's affection bidding her call up on the telephone for a "word of love" so frequently that business showed signs of being resenttul at tne inter ferences. Harriet even smiled calmly into Effie's simpering, elderly face and withstood with cool contempt the first unkindness she had ever suffered from her emolovers wives. Efhe miehtinot be jealous of dead women but -she was worse than Muriel had ever been about livmsf ones, and to her Harriet was not a plainer, older, distinctly "safe," girl, but a woman who was younger than she, better looking than she'and longer an inti mate of her husband s. s ' Effie dreaded and resented Harriet with all her might and showed it. Kendall tried awkwardly to excuse her once, and met a look from the straightforward brown eyes of fjis capable assistant wmcn maae nun writhe inwardly for days thereafter. Harriet's love had never lessened her pndel But Kendall was good to Erne. It wasn't in his make up to be unkind to any woman mutch less one who had married him! And Efhe was pathetcially, ridicu lously happy. Her plain face shone, her lean body grew comfortably plump. She hung upon Kendall's words, figuratively speaking, and literally upon his neck. Ihe spooniest couple in town. Harriet heard them called sneering ly. But nobody sneered very openly, for Kendall's business was becoming the biggest m the city. lie was wax ing rich and influential. They had two cars now, and four servants, and Effie spent a great deal of money in beauty parlors and brought laugh ably youhtful clothes. And then one Sunday morning, as Harriet was washing her heavy brown hair her sour old aunt arrived upon the scene, breathless. If that boss of yours isn t the un luckiest with wives," she gasped, "or maybe I'd better say luckiest! Regular modern Blue Beard, lie is I What do you think's happened inow? Why, that Effie had acute indiges tion last night and died of it, not three hours ago. Crepe's up already. Well, Kendall Wilks ain't near 45 and as marrying a man as he ever was. He'll have courage to try aeain but it'll be a brave girl who takes him! There's a fatality among his wives that ain't assuring!" "Oh, I don t know," said Harriet, with a lightness her aunt thought rather ill placed. "Three times and out, you know." And the aunt de parted to spread her news, while Harriet proceeded methodically, care f.illy, to the drying of her hair. It wouldn't be in the least sensible to take cold and die of pneumonia, just when the Lord had mercifully, mi raculously, put a fourth chance at hanniness into her hands) But as soon as was possible she went to the home of her employer and for the third time assumed charire of burial nroccedines there, She felt grimly that burying Ken- dall Wilks' wives was one of her specialties, Uut vowed inwardly that tnis one snouiu oe t,ne lasu one was 40 vears old herself and desperate. Mr Kpnriall P. Wilks was a so desperate, when three weeks later Miss Krone handed m her resigna- tion. His sister had, by that time, got him a competent housekeeper. aged well over 60, to guard, as she told him, against any more sympa thetic marriages, and he had settled down mate comfortably, with his Ua nnptrqc YB tilt Crt f iS flf W fl- ding presents and Ins long list ot anniversaries as company. TU.M.rft a r. nr linn 'lth the anniversary of his eneaeement to Rhoda just before she'resigned She knew Effie's birthday came the next month, and she felt she was not strong enough to lace that. He ce:tainl was not strong enouzh to face her decision calmly Leave him why, they had worked taeir way up .c "- " as wen taut or leaving inc nriu una- self! What was Jhe matter? She t, . j. r , I .t- r. u: could have more money shorter hours more power anything she wished, but she must stay! She had helped double, yes, treble the busi ness. Even a partnership would not be impossible if she desired itl ..Harriet shook her head. His business partner, indeed! After 20 years of waiting, it should be more than that or nothing! She tola him she had no other oi- fer in view. She was just tired of business aim wanted to be a home voman for a time, at which she saw mm opcn,nis eyes in a surprised open, his eyes in a surprised sort of way. The look -made her furious. Had he never thought of ner awav ironi ine omcc at aiu j-mu t .1. . i -,13 n:J he think she ate carbon copies and used a letter for a bed? O, yes, she would, be comfortable. Her . fnrafntiK o U,. motner s aeain naa leu tne nunie i . I, : i .t.. i..ric ",u s"" -v:. "'.'V ci" ... - i :jj every woman was really happier at home. Tire of it? Maybe That was unlikely, but if she did she would come back when she was quite rested after a year or so. But at present her decision was quite ir revocable. And there she left him, with such a stricken look on his handsome face, that never before had she so longed to be by him and serve him. Her impulse was to rush back to ftay to tell him she would never. never leave while she could he of any use at all to him, or to bitf'in- terests. She had to steel her heart and grip her resolution tight, t5 walk out and go on with her prepara tions to leave. But she did it. More, 'S he withstood his suent pieauiiiK uuiuig inc liiilc Trims uiai mi3i.u btfore her departure, and the blun ders of-the girl she was breaking in tc take heivolace m his own othce. What the poor man would have to endure from that girl! But Harriet Krone was a determined woman, .-j tu. J... .1,. a; . a u f a I c 7u a nated. she walked out of the office orever, carrying wnn ner a m ot ".c nc " "" cowoncers, wno.nao an lucea ner and were sorry she was going, and a very frivolous and feminine wrist watch, duly engraved with the well wishes of "the firnt" in honor of "long and faithful service." Some how she hated that watch it was so impcrronal. But the hurt, lost look in the eyes of the president was not impersonal. She took heart, and said lief goodbys again, and departed. But she left her address with Mr. Kendall P. Wilks, That gentleman was suffering as he never suffered before. He had been lonely after Muriel died lone- Upr aftpr TtinHa'c Hpatli hut- ihrMarh .... ...v,.. uc was quue wining io cKiiuwieugc he had not cared near y as much for tme as ne nad tor either ot tne otn- i xt I L 14 wiuici iiui uiai incie was any cull- soiation lacking, there was not. He soon realized that ne was a most attractive man in the eyes of Mrs. Mazie Lawton, a dashing widow, who had once been young, and also in those of Irene Evans, a calculating person who really was young in years. I hen there was his own second cousin, Gertrude, a aI v "'a it" ' v" c,our"- rived .on an extended visit to his sis ter arid showed unmistakable matri monial tendencies. Gertrude meant to have her name entered on the lists at the earliest possible moment but she was not to UK- VUIUUIIV. U y Lilt UVUul-AVVt j T UV though safe hefsejf, all at once im ported the unsuspected daughter a widow with two little boys, "so in need of a father's care." They were. Kendall vearned to soank those two boys, as he had yearned for nothing else in life except the sight of Har riet Krone's neat brown head beside his desk when he went down to the office in the morning. She 'had al ways been helpful and sympathetic and clever. She had never chased him up, and smirked at him, and sent him presents he didn't want and talked to him when he was busy! She had helped him eet rid of the women who did and now she 'was gone! ' ' In her place was a self-conscious young person who was trying to per suade herself that she could forget her young lover and marry the "old man for money." In the outer office Miss Perkins and Miss Haswell, bookkeepers who had patronized him when he came home from boarding school years ago, ogled him now in a way "he could not mjstake. At home" he was under the eyes of Mrs. Maxie Lawton, who had come to board next door. At his sister's he found Cousin Gertrude. At the golf club Irene lay in wait for him at all hours, possible and impossible, while the mournful eyes of the house keeper's daughter gazed at him over his lanio chops at dinner time, and the whoops of her two father-needing infants disturbed his early rest. He was beseiged by the enemy at all points. He felt that there was some safety in numbers, but dreaded the time when one of them should catch him alone for at last Kendall P. Wilks knew his weakness, and hoped that never again would he be caught within the, toils of his own sympathetic nature. But it was a hard tight. He tried a short trip to New York but he hated the noise and longed for the trees and lawns and peace of his home town. He tried a winter re sort and came home flying after two weeks. He shut up his house, moved to his club, and was happy one month. Then he lonsred for his own home with onions creamed just as he liked them, and his own books, and, as spring came on, a lawn to sprinkle and a garden to fuss overt Kendall P. Wilks realized then as never be fore that he was a home man but home man without a home! He never forgot the day that it first dawned upon hin that he might go and see Harriet Krone. He was "uasin mi uicouiuny mti muniiug. Some business had come up which she would have understood offhand, hut which showed the new girl to be ohk snort oi a arivenng laiot, aiso, ne missed her advice on weddinsr present which had to be bought for a department head, who was soon to be married. He wanted her and he realized suddenly that he might see her by going to her nomei Harriet Krone as a social CC"JU possiuic V l"uu" B iC u 1 VYll UVt 1UU1UIJSI T1,e idea came to him just before noon. It grew with astonishing rapidity, wniie ne ate his lunch. The idea became more insistent as h went back to work, and finally got me oetter ot mm at j:ju exactly. Wait till evening? He simolv could not would not. The president of the wiiks Manutacturmg company rose and unset the morale of tb,.ntir. i,.. u .u i. menA the bare announce- ment that he was through for the aayi Never before had he been known to do such a thine save in the necessity ot sickness or death. But he did it now. More, he went to the garage where his car was kept at a wane which was too swift to be dig' nihed and once in his car, his identity alone saved him from arrest fore careless driving on vthe block next his tactorv. while further on the speed laws lay broken behind him! Strangely, when he had wanted vile ir;.'. - jj u uZ "J . i "5 ; V V:. -T "SffErS had to look it up. . w uut-n it ,nw jua llllliu. 11C I1AU1I I ' But he did have u i. i..- .v " Tm "?i:i Li.. . and the fact T, "r,"'".?. V '.' "f u" ictllllg lie UUgllV 1J HVct! n.. u- I l.j .i.. .." .. JJUl 'as- "c icaencu me street- he found the number. It belonged l" ii'iicy wuiic cuuage, get in aitd tfie ard boasted g , h h d d cove?edub ,i;mi;. ' ,, UJ climbing roses in full bloom, He saw a woman sittinsr framed in the pink blossoms. Her ftffure seemed softer of outline than he re membered it, but maybe that was the white dress. He had only seen her m stiffly tailored things. Her hair seemed orettier-t-there was actually a wave in it! Her mouth was sweeter, her expression gentler, Diit ner eyes those steady, clever, pleasant, brown eyes, whose real beauty he had never-realized before. were the same. The same, yet with in them an expression that was gloriously, wonderfully, different. sue rose, with a kindly, but rather f,.ii t,.ij L" t..j . prim srreetinir But Kendall P. Wilks paid no at tention to the hand. , He looked in to her eyes. Then takinar her hv both shoulders, he swept her safe into the shelter of the rose covered IT 'ciu ner as C ! I Ml ftl a f hnira n A 1,1 J 1.... though he never meant to et her go, It was she wh b . There were twinkles in her brown eyes, but her mouth was verv firm , Mr vVilL-s" ch c,w w way to make business advances to . . . ....u, tuU( Vila b S3 14V any person." Business advances." tammri Mr. Wilks, "I wasn't I I O. bus iness advances be damned!" Miss Krone had never heard him swear before she smiled as though she ftiHn't muni at an. our sne stepped away from him and shook her head. It was enough. Never before had Kendan r. Wilks been repulsed by any woman. All the spirit of th conquering male that he had within him rose to the pleasures of the chase. He proposed as he had never proposed before. He oleadedhe K.rvn-A u: . . J ... . . . . 6KCU ne msisiea, until at last Miss i.roiie said slowlv. W-e-e-1-1 T might. I might consent to marrv you. But I would never consent tk llve m Miners and Rhoda's and Ef- ne S hOUSt "Good Lord. I don't want'ln tiv there myself," cried Mr. Wjlks, real izing suddenly that he despised th place. I will not," went on this latest lady of his heart relentlessly, "have their pictures hanging all over my house. I will not consult their tastes in the purchase of one single article for my new home. I will not use their recipes. I will not be nice to their friends." I most earnestly hone vofl will not," ejaculated the model spouse of the ladies in question. Harriet Krone fixed him with de- termination in her eyes. "I will not," she swung on ruthlessly, "keep one single solitary anniversary that be longs to any one but just us!" "Thank God for that" niouslv ejaculated the man who had kept so many, fche smiled at him with sud den shyness, her eves fell, a swift becoming color flew up into her firm cheeks. Manfully almost cave manfully Kendall P. Wilks swept her into his arms. He wruni her promise from her.' He won his kisses from reluctant lips. And when, happier than he had ever been before in all his life, he went home at last he held his head high and walked1 with the air of a conqueror. I He was conscious at last of having played the part of the hunt er, not the quarry. Movies Prove Big Force In Promotion of Thrift Washington, D. C Legends urg ing sane and wise buying, flashed on movie screens throughout the United States, was perhaps the most potent single force in lowering the high cost of living, Attorney-General Palmer said, discussing his depart ment's achievements in fighting profiteering. "The movie became a powerful force to encourage thrift and cau tious buying by the public," Palmer said. "Movie picture owners used our slides continually and it had a tremendous effect in bringing home to the people the great lesson of economy." The attorney-general attributes much of his success against profiteer ing to work of local fair price com mittees who were exceptionally vigi lant wherever they functioned to keep down extortion upon the public. Working Girls Crave Romance In Stage Plays Sybil Thorndikc, English Ac tress, Explains Dream World Made Visible In Light Operas. By EARLE C. REEVES. IntarMtiooal Krrrlc Blaff Corra pondenl, London. The recent war did not upset the world after all. The working girl still wants romance. and romance pure and simple, with out too many intricate problems, ou the stage which she patronizes. Two thousand girls and women re cently, during an examination, se lected as the plavs liked best "Chu Chin Chnw" miH llio "Harden f Allah." - Sybil Thorndike, by many consid ered England's best actress, con firms this consensus of opinion, from the depth of her experience and understanding, and explains the rea sons why romance stands supreme for girls. Revues Not Popular. "I do not find that revues are so popular among women as among men. The exhibition of legs and the pretty faces of other girls can not possibly hold the attraction for them that a strong play does with a sympathetic hero, beset by fnany difficulties and surrounded by a de lightful 'atmosphere.' "My knowledge of them assures me that what the average girl en joys best is a play which appeals strongly to her feelings. Problem, unpleasant and spirit plays have no great attraction for her. Why do girls want romancer Visible Dream World. "Because it presents a phase of life which it is not given every girl to realize. It is the dream world made visible. 1 "Remember that marriage figures as the great event in most girls' lives. Naturally, every healthy- woman s thoughts turn, at some period of her life, towards the opposite sex. But all girls do not get the oppor tunity of meeting the ideal, or even the acceptable real. It is these, I think, who find the i expression of their innermost thoughts in the romance of the exotic play. "The impassioned acting of the hero thrills the lonely girl as if she had come under the delightful thrill of some real lover. The brilliance of an oriental setting holds her en chanted, as if she enjoyed the fra grance of a real eastern visit." Old Prospector UCIS lUUJLCd ell Last by Legacy Finishes Earning Jlis Winter Grubstake and Learns He Has Inherited $40,000 From Brother. Helena. Mont. Frank Lamv. one of the picturesque prospectors of Montana, who has , searched m vain for many years for gold and rich ores, has discovered a fortune in a big legacy awaiting him instead. All he has to do to collect between $30,000 and $40,000 is to go to Menominee, Mich., re new his acquaintance with old friends and relatives, prove his birthright and await the -decree of the court. He may thank news papers of this city for forging the connecting link betweea him and his legacy. Starts to Search. For years he was given up as lost by relatives. When a brother in Menominee, Mich., died he left Frank Lamy the-, greater share of the estate. Relatives then started the search. They finally resorted to ewspaner advertising. Within 24 hours after the first advertisement and news story in conjunction ap peared in Helena newspapers Lamy was found. He is living in the little and far from the railroad town of Hughes- Ule, in the newly-created county of udith Basin, near Monarch and Niehart, two famous old silver camps. C Si. Carter of No. 409 North Rodney street, Helena, read the Story and the advertisement. He notified the paper that, he knew Lamy well and had seen him only few weeks ago and that Lamy has een livinor in Huehesville. now. nearly 4 "ghost" town of the west. He's Notified. A few weeks ago Lamv finished earning his winter erubstake br working in the old "Block P." mine at Hughesville, the property of T. C. Power, Montana millionaire, res ident of Helena, who in the early days ran a steamboat line under the Block P." flair from St Louis- un - the Missouri to Fort Benton. Friends have notified Lamv of the fortune awaiting him. The es tate couldn't be distributed until Lamy was found. Trotzky Pays 3 Francs He Borrowed m Paris Pan's, France. When Trotzky lived in Paris he was invariably hard up for cash and on one occasion borrowed three francs from a woman iiend. The war and revolution came, and Trotzky disappeared. The other day the woman, now happily married, received a visit from a commissioner of police, who bore a letter stamped with the arms of Russia. "What does this mean?" he asked. "There is a considerable sum of money here. Are you a spy for the Soviets?" The woman opened the letter and found therein notes amounting to several hundred rubles. Inclosed was a letter from Trotzky apologiz ing for not having paid his debt sooner, but saying that it Jiad slipped his mind. The police were finally satisfied when, on figuring up the rubles at present exchange, it was found that their value was exactly three francs. Paul Helleu, the famous French artist, characterizes Miss Ruhr At- Remer of New York City as the most DfautituJ woman in America.