811 Road Closed? DeftOIUlir By William Hamilton Osborne THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1921. I 1 Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars, a Hero and Four Sweeping Hawks. AT I o'clock on a certain Saturday fti-rnoon a balmy day In tarly spring a young town of th ntm of Klmr Qua) stood bareheaded on the topmost step of tha city hall la River Cly. Ill ineral appear ance we that of man who had Nn thor oughly through tha mill. On arm wa bound apros hla breast lit had no eyebrows. Ilia hair had bn cropped vary cInm, revealing to th publlo gate a whit. wll-hapd poll. II waa about It yar old. of mtdlum height and weight Save fur hla broad shoulder, h waa lndr. II wtlghad. atrlpptd, not mora, perhaps, than a hundred and fifty pound. It waa a necessary part of hla profession, for h had on, that h b of athletic tendency and build. Wk before h had bn a paaaably food looking rhap. Week later ha would one mora coma Into hla own. II atood erect and straight, but painfully embarrassed, upon th topmost step. In front of him ther stretched a knock-down speakers' platform a amatl affair, with a floor aurfac ten by ten. Elmer Quayle waa not th whole ahow her by any means. Ther waa something ela that mada thla particular occasion remarkably unliiue and curloua Ther wus a tnyaterloua mla-ahapen object resting In th ml.ldi of thla platform an object hidden and concealed. Over thla object an American flair had been thrown. Small boy In th secret knew wuli what was there, perhapi). ltut they couldn't ae whst wua there. And moat of the peoplo didn't know. Th Honorable Knm Oliver, River County' cental, popular and eloquent prosecutor of tha pitas, delivered tho presentation apcech. Ho waa never tiresome. In thla cnno he wai brief and ti the point. With a final ton of hla Innky hair Ram Oliver reached hla peroration h humlcrcd out hla climax. Dramatically he mo. tinned to a dozen little boya and girl. Scram bling eagerly across the platform, they drew awny tha flog. The crowd surged forward to ratoh tha better gllmpso of what luy there re Yea led. The Honorable Hum Oliver turned to the bandaged youth bealde him. ' "Ta yt'ii, young Elmer Quaylo," ho cried. . "thla hard earned heap of coin." It waa heap of coin a heap of bills and coin, Pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters halves, silver dollars, dollar bills, twos, fives, tens, and so on up to fifties. Clean money, soiled money, thrown Into a heap. Much money twenty-flve thousand dollars by actuul count. Twenty-flvo thousand dollurs In good American currency. And all for Elmer Quayle. The silence was Intense. Then, as In a flush, three diminutive cheer loaders sprang to th platform, raised their voices in sharp, metallic! treble, and swung and swayed, and flung their bodies to th four corners of th wind. Shrill voices responded young voices. Young voices were In the majority, young eyes glistened, young bodies thousands of them pulpitated and pulsatod in that crowd. For the gift was the gift of the school children of River City to Elmer Quayle, the forlorn young hero standing there on the top step of the city hall. It waa th Idea of tho school children, this gift an Idea born and nurtured In their schools. In secret they had made their preparations for the tribute to their hero for more than a month they had busied themselves about the great drlv of their young lives. It was their own personal drive for their own personal idol. They had pestered the life out of River City . business men but with grave cautions to their contributors not to tell Elmer Quayle, nor any of his family, nor any of his friends about it. Elmer Quayle was not to know, . They had. Indeed, intended great things. At th start they had thought of buying Elmer Quayl a twenty-five thousand dollar house to Ilv in. They had thought of having built for ' him a twenty-five thousand dollar automobile. They had considered fitting up for him a twenty- , llv thousand dollar sporting goods store, where they could all rush in and spend much money all th time.- Many of them had thought of many meritorious things. The inevitable result waa clamor, internecine strife. And then from tbe Very midst of these warrlmj tlemnts there rose a great genius, a spendthrift, a very human -spendthrift, ' He opined that if he were Elmer Quayle he'd rather have the nioiu His chance remark was recognised as a flash of inspiration. . Every youthful donor, every collector and dls- penser of small coin, searched li is own con science and found there the naked truth. He would rather have the money, too. And then a young High School idealist her soul ' attune . with poesy undertook to ennoble this idea. Sho , capped th climax. ' "The money Just as it comes in," she said. And ther it was. It lay in front of Elmer Quayl, warm with the pressure of their youth ful hands. Elmer Quayl glanced nervously about him. The crowd was not all composed of children. Ther wer adults a-plenty. His own friends were there; others. Idlers, enthusiasts, hero Worshiper A School teachers, of course. There : waa ons school teacher in particular in whose direction Elmer Quayle glanced from time to time glanced as a man in deep trouble glances toward hia friend. A wisp of a girl, this, young er than he -a girl with wistful, winsome eyes. She was a 'marked figure, too. For all about her, clinging to her, clutching at her skirts, using her slender figure as a pleasing prop and comfortable support, were many kids Just kids. This girl returned Elmer Quayle'a glance With interest; she waa flushed and worried Just as he waa flushed and worried. She wanted to help him if she could. In the midst of the hubbub Elmer Quayl tore his glance from hers and looked th other way. Elmer Quayle knew Just wher to look. , i Leaning gracefully against a column, warm, rich furs about her neck, stood Zeida Lindquist. She waa a woman, a grown woman, fair and young and stipple, with th creamy complexion of th whit peaoh, and with hair as fair aa Any viking's daughter. Mayhap she waa a vik ing's daughter at any rate, she looked the part. Sho waa unusually aelf-possessed, serene, un troubled. . Eh was ther to see and to be seen. And ah waa seen; it was in her to attract atten tion. One she had stepped out from behind that column, the male spectators of adult or even adolescent age shifted their glance from Elmer Quayle; shifted their glances from that pit of money on th platform. They looked at her. Boys from th high school looked at her. Prosecutor Bam Oliver, slumping into his plat (form cat, fixed his steady, curious, appraising ' yea upon her; the fact that h didn't know hor and had never seen her at any time before lent aest and spice to his curious regard. This Zelda Llndqulst had com to see. She aw. 8h held her glance fixed upon on thing and one thing only twenty-five thousand dol - lars' worth of good American money that was piled upon the little platform. As Sam Oliver watched her, he saw that sha was not alone. She had a male companion with her a big man, . stupid looking. This man was no viking, but he might well qualify aa th vasa! of a vlklnr. Thla man's eyea wer small, furtive Greed ahon from them. He, too, kept hia eyea upun tho money. . Zelda Llndqulst looked up at this companion. "Twenty-five thousand dollars," Sam Oliver heard her say to her companion, "it doesn't look liko much." "If money, chuckled her companion. He did something mors than chuckle. Playfully he flipped her chin with a huge forefinger did it with an air of Intimacy that th woman seemed to resent She reddened angtti?. Then, conscious, mayhap, that she was a center of attraction, she glanced upward one agftin, with saucy f nil upon her lips. Tired of restinc ("I -Ol'O V ft, I 7 8 I i H , M luC! J 4 (I f m Th honurtbU Sam Olivtr turn ya, young Omar Quayl;" A her fine shoulders against the stone pillar, she leaned openly, gracefully, sigainst this man. The men watched her the woman watched her, too. -Bam Oliver, a grim smile upon his lips, watched the people that were watching her, th ijeflex influence of a Woman of this type was to him more interesting than the woman was herself. Then, as he looked about him, for the first time that afternoon Prosecutor Sam Oliver caught Sight of Rossiter F. Jones. Rossiter F. Jones was one of the handsomest, and, in the estimation of Sam Oliver, one of tho most dan gerous gentlemen in town. Just why he was dangerous-will soon appear,- He, too, was a big man bigger and far finer than the woman's es cort. He was well dressed, well groomed, was Rossiter F. Jones. One of tho remarkable char acteristics of this man was that he looked like a million dollars at all times. He, too, was Standing near a oolumn, but at the moment he was not looking at the woman. Sam Oliver, however, saw her twice cast a woman's glance at -Rossiter F, Jones. But for tho moment Sam Oliver lost .Interest in the woman and her by play. He concentrated, willingly and eagerly, upon this Rossiter F. Jones, And he perceived, as in a flash, that of all the people in that crowd Rossiter F. Jones was eyeing that luscious pile or currency with more genuine affection and retard, giving It. more intensive thought and considerate meditation, than was anybody ls. Prosecutor Bam Oliver began to sniff the air. Silence was finally restored. The crowd gased with expectation at their young hero, Elmer Quayl. He spoke. "From now on," stammered Elmer Quayle, aa though talking to himself, or per haps, aa though taking into his confidence the souls of those youngster round about, "from now on to do the right thing at any cost. Th right thing and nothing else." - His chin quivered. His eyes filled. Then, suddenly he broke down and cried; cried like a little child; perhaps mora like a woman, "Ge," broke out a boyish voice, "that'a Just the way he blubbered when he brought 'em down." ' The crowd, relieved,, took up the cry. That waa the way that Elmer Quayle had blubbered when ha brought 'em down. Those who hadn't seen and heard him blubber when he brought 'em down, had read about it in the newspapers. For Elmer Quayle had earned this heap of money lying on th platform; by his singed hair and eyebrows, by his dislocated shoulder, by his broken riba he had earned it. In the sight of hundreds of River City school children he had earned it' H had earned it in a fire. Ther wer many witnesses to Elmer Quayle's heroic act. Elmer Quayle was physical training Instructor in . the River City schools. On th day in question, Elmer Quayle was drill ing classes on the top floor of the high school. This school backed up against th Iroquois apartments on the street behind. The Iroquois apartments formed a rectangular U whose base fronted on the other treet, whose uprights thrust themselves out toward the high school In th rear. Th flr broke out on lower floors, seemingly In many places all at once. Smoke enveloped th apartment house. Elmer Quayl waa a regular human being. He suspended drill hia pupils massed them selves against tha rear windows of the big room. They watched In interested silence. The half shriek of a girl pupil broke thia silence. , Above th heavy pall of smoke, acroes th intervening space, she had caught sight of women at an upper window, signaling frantically for assist ance Elmor Quayl followed this girl's glance he, too, saw the women. They were clustered In a fourth floor window situate at tbe deepest por: 5 . J fa tha bandog! youth batlda him. "T crfeW, "thi$ harJ-aarntJ haap of coin." tion of the V. Nobody, of course, could see them from the street owing to the heavy smoke, nobody could have seen them from the ground, .Elmer Quayle noted the wisps of white vapor that curled from that window. He saw that one of the women was about to Jump. He caught up a gymnasium shirt that wasn't working he seized a megaphone. Across two hundred feet he called to them;' called to those frantic women not, to Jump. They saw his sig nalthey heard hi reassuring voice. ' Elmer QUayle left the megaphone in the hands of a student directed him to keep up the spirits of the women. Then he darted down the stairs. Reaching: the apartment house, he found a lire escape that wasn't w6rking. Through the smoke that enveloped It he wrig gled his way upon the roof to a point above the women. He leaned far out over the edge spoke to the women, told them All was well. They lifted scared faces to him stretched out ibeseeching arms. Thin wisps of smoke curled up about those faces and those arms. These women were two floors below the roof. Elmer Quayle had brought no rope From his position on the roof ha could, offer them no help. Scurrying about he discovered a trapdoor and wrenched it open. From it he lowered himself into an unfinished low ceilinged attia He made his way to a convenifnt window and found that h had called th turn. This win dow was Just above the window where the women clustered. Tha distance between the bottom ' of his window and the top of theirs was short His window sash he opened from the bottom he directed the women to lower their window sashes from the top. Then, while tho high school megaphone cheered him on, he lpwered himself into the room where they were gathered H found flv . women there, of assorted sizes. He fojind them more than frightened he found them desperate. And with good cause. His swift investigation proved to him that they wer trapped. There was but one solution to the problem the thing was up to him. He picked out the smallest woman of the bunch; gave her and the others brief directions. Then, with some difficulty, he swung himself back to his vantage point at the attic window up above. Once inside the attic, he leaned our of the window and stretched down his arms. The four women lifted the fifth until her finger , tips touched Elmer Quayle's. Elmer grasped her firmly by the wrists and slowly drew her upward a moment later she lay quivering beside him on the flooi1. But not for long, for Elmer Quayl had work for her to do. "Hang on to my legs," commanded Elmer Quayle. And showed her how. She hung on. adding her weight and her Inslgniflant strength to his. But she furnished leverage, at any rate, and that waa what h needed. He fished an other woman'through the window stopped for a moment's rest Then, unfler his direction, the women hung to hia legs one leg to each. He fished a third a fourth. Then came the tug of war h knew it for th thing it was. Elmer Quayle weighed, stripped, ISO pounds. The last despairing soul remaining on the floor below weighed 109 if she weighed an ounce. Fortu nately, thia woman waa a scrub woman of th place; .her muscles wer trained muscles; she . was as brawny as she was big. And ah had a pair of powerful handa and wrists. Obeying Elmer Quayle's instruction, this woman climbed, somehow, to the window sill of the room of which, now, she was sole occupant, half seated herself upon the lowered window sashes, and stretched her long arms toward Elmer Quayle. Inside the attic four women hung, in despera tion, to th legs of Elmer Quayle two women to a leg "You hang to me," commanded Elmer ' Quayle. ' The woman hung. She was fully as : much interested in the matter a was Elmer. She gripped him tight . (Jslng ., his reserve strength,, his second wind, using every trick and artifice known to the trained athlete. Elmer Quayle fought his way backward into the attic with that dead weight clinging to him. By hook and crook he got that woman in By hook and crook he get his five women throush the trap door to the roof. By hoof and crook he got them down the Are escape safely down the flr escape. Safely, all save himself. On his last trip down flames burst from the third story windows in the rear and robbed him of his hair and. temporarily, of his good looks as well. He dropped into the midst of the five women he had rescued blubbering, un , done. . Five minutes after Elmer Quayle had snaked those women out .flames burst from the window where they had crouched. Ten minutes later flames burst through the .attics and the roof. The fire escape down which the women) clam bered became impassable the Instant they were safely dpwn. Three-quarters of an hour later , thet walls of the Iroquois fell in. The high school 5 was unsinged the wind had blown the other way. ' . i ' Elmer Quayle had accomplished the lmpos - sible he had saved five human lives. ,. - And here he was, only half mended so far; ' and there lay his reward. He still was sobbing. Nobody seemed to know Just what to do. Then a 13-year-old girl did it. - "A long life and a happy one, Prof. Elmer Quayle!" she cried,' starting from her place in the depths of the crowd. She was a song leader and her time had come. With a catch in her fine young voice She started in on one of the sentimental ditties of the day. She knew her business. In anothir instant she had swung into the melody in full, rich tones. With a long line Of singing boys and girls behind her she skirted the multitude, wound her graceful way to the place where the physical instructor sat : and kissed him. '' - The spell was broken. All was well. A few -days afterward Zelda Lfndquist waa ushered into the private office of Eleazei' Grind stone, one of the well known professional men of River City. With ZeUa.Linrtquist was her huge, escort of the city hall steps. If you wanted to accomplish the impossible and were not par ticular as to th means to be employed you went to Grindstone. He accomplished it He did it legally and got twice as much if not for you, then for himself - "I am Zelda Llndqulst," said Grindstone's new client Eleazer Grindstone looked her over care fully. Ha nodded toward the damaged gentle man. "And ybu ?" he queried. "He is my brother he is Joe Lindquist," said the lady swiftly. ' Sho leaned forward. "Counselor," she went on, "I have work for you to do." The old lawyer nodded. "A breach of prom-' ise case," he smiled. Zelda Lindquist gasped she stared at him. "How did you know?" she demanded. Grindstone smiled quizzically. "You have not lost much time, my fair young friend," he said. She kept on staring. "How do you mean much time?" she echoed. Grindstsone looked her in the eye. "It was but a day or so ago they handed him the money," he reminded her. "Since then you have made the rounds of all the lawyers In th town" "How can you know that?" demanded th woman. "Only to b turned down," smiled Grind stone; "only to find out that our smug members of th bar declined to enforce a woman's rights against our local, hero. And then you came to me." ' "You are a wisard," breathed th girL "It is my business to be a wizard," nodded Grindstone. He leaned back in his chair and placed finger tips against linger lips. "What have you got?" he queried. - "Much." responded Zelda Lindquist "I have been engaged, to Elmer Quayle for upward of a year. Now he has turned me down." , "Engaged," mused Grindstsone. "How many witnesses have you got to back you up? What kind of evidence can you present?" Zeida Lindquist shrugged her supple shoulders. "I do not need much vidm-.H she said, "I have ihta ring." MH took It off that ring and hsnd-fd It to Urtndston. Th lawyer lifted from hi desk drawer magnifying tana, gUnred at th Inscription first, then at th diamond, "four hundred and twntyflv dollnr a It stand." said Grindstone, tiayln it, h slipped th ring Into hi waistcoat pocket. "But why?" protested th lady, "I shall retain It." smiled Urlndston. "a evidence, to be used upon tho trial" "Oh. but you r slick." cried Zelda Llnd qulst. "That's why you ar her," Mid Grindstone, "Now. tell ni this what doe this ring pro, v that you bought It and had an Inscription, cut on th Insld rim what lsT" Zelda Undqulst was ready for that question. She produced a packet of letter, tied with a highly scented pink ribbon. "The Is," ah returned Hh pawed them over. Grlndston read them over. "Well," h grinned, "look Ilk lie love you and want to marry you. Why don't you marry him?" "Because of thla!" exclaimed th girl defi antly. She produced another letter. Grlndston read It one, twice, thrlc. . -Wall." h aald at length, "thrs couldn't hav been better if you'd had 'em all forged for th purpose of your, breach of promts suit I'm obliged to tell you that your rase Is clear. You win. Th gentleman has IIS, 000 in th bank good American money. It'll split up quit con veniently, it coern to me." So muoh for Grlndston and his now. client, Zelda Llndqulst A week after their presumably satisfactory Interview two people entcrsd th office of Sam Oliver, prosecutor of th plea.. Sam Oliver had quit for th day. He was lying back In hla swivel chair, on foot cocked up, hi hat drawn rakishly oVr hi left eyebrow. H waa ready to go home, but he lolled ther, dreaming, gaslng from hi vantage point on Court House Hill over th first-class city that was hla especial pride and car. That city waa co-extensiv with th county limits. As a county Officer Sam Oliver had done hla best to solve that city' problems he had don his best to keep th city clean. Th two people that come In roused him from a revery. They did more than that they aroused his Immediate attention. II saw, as In a flash, their significance, their place In th scheme of things. To him they wers great peo ple, these two. Grtat people because they wer great lovers. On of them waa th still dam aged Elmer Quayle th other was th littte school teacher of th city hall stepa Lovers, clearly, but not at peace. Trouble brooded over them, rested its burden upon their youthful shoulders on of them a dislocated shoulder In th bargain. It helped, though, that they were bearing it together, Elmer Quayl opened negotiations forthwith, "Prosecutor Oliver," he said, "I'v com to you : because you seemed, somehow, to really feel th flne things you said about me Just the other day. Because of that and because I don't know where else to go. This is the first time I'v ever been at law." "You are at law now?" queried Sam Oliver. "Much." returned Elmer Quayl with a grim ace. "I have been sued for breach of promise by a woman." "Breach of promise!" echoed Sam Oliver, bending his glance upon the little school teach er. "And you have been served with papers In the suit?" Elmer Quayle produced them, a summon and complaint He passed them to Sam Oliver. Sam Oliver read them through in silence. Then he shook his head. . 'This complaint," he mused, "carries its sharpest sting in its tail." He placed his fore finger upon a typed named at th bottom of th paper. "Mr. Eleazer Grindstone brings this suit" ' "How does that signify?" asked Elmer Quayle. ' "It signifies." nodded Sam Oliver, "because Mr. Eleazer Grindstone doesn't bring a suit un ' less he is sure of a satisfactory settlement or sure to get a verdict He wins. He gets results." "He mustn't win thia case," said Elmer . Quayle. "He can't win this case," cried th little school teacher. 'Sam Oliver smiled to himself and looked her over. "Needless to ask," he said to Elmer Quayle, "this is not the woman in the case?" "I . should say not," returned Elmer Quayle, drawin the girl close to himself;, "she's Peggy Warner. I forogot to Introduce heft She's my fiancee. We've sort of gone together all our lives. Except " -Peggy Warner interrupted. "It was all my 'fault. Prosecutor Oliver!" sh exclaimed con tritely. "I thought a while back that Elmer was well, sowinsr too many wild oats. And so I turned him off." "Wild oats wild oats!" echoed Sam Oliver. 'Ah athletio instructor in our city's schools sowinsr wild oats?" . "Well," pleaded Elmer Quayle, "It's true but it's all over now." "I should have gone out and sowed wild oats with him," went on little Peprgy Warner. "I , should have stuck to him. Then this thing never would hav happened." Sam Oliver, returned to a persusal of the papers In the case. ' "This Zelda Lindquist." nodded he, "says that you promised to marry her a year ago says you have broken your ' promise. And ah wants 125,000 from you for the breach." "How did you come to meet this woman?" he demanded of Elmer Quayle. "I met her at a public dance." "She Is attractive?" asked Sam Oliver. "Very," returned Elmer Quayle. "Oh, Elmer!" cried th girl. "I can't help it," repeated Elmer doggedly; "she's attractive h attracted me " - "Tell me about her," demanded th prosecu tor. Elmer Quayle started in to describe th Zelda Lindquist that he knew. In th midst of hla description Sam Oliver held up his hand. "I know now I have seen the woman," nodded Sam Oliver; "she waa on the steps of th city hall that day." , "Yes," said Elmer Quayl. The prosecutor tapped the papers with th back of his hand. "I take it," he proceeded, "that you stand ready to deny everything ah sets forth in her complaint" "Not so you can notioe it," said Elmer Quayl. "You asked her to marry you?" "I did, and in a letter," nodded Elmer Quayle. - "Why in a letter?" queried the prosecutor. "I met her at dances several times," went on Elmer Quayle. "She asked me my address she wrote me a letter asking mo to come and see her. She wrote me letters frequently love letters. I can see now that she wrote them for one purpose one only. She wanted me to answer them wanted m to commit myself in writing. She wanted letter to dream on, ahe told me." "It cam to a point where, it seemed to ma, both of us wer of on mind. She kept-away from me for a week or so. I had to write her. And I wrote. ' I promised to marry her and gave her a ring." went on the young athlete. "And then" persisted th prosecutor. 'Then, for the fl at time, I told her the truth about my circumstances told her that I had spent all my money on her. Told her that I had nothing but my salary aa athletic instruc tor In th schools. I wanted her to marry m on that" "With what result?" asked th prosecutor, hopefully. , "None, save that she lost all interest In me and exhibited indifference toward me. You wer quit right, sir. I see it now. She had made herself, attractive to me until she had m. She still held me. though. She did not release m. W lust drifted on I still spent money on her. Bh till wor my ring. At timet 1 ftvt tier money. Then, somehow or other, I wok up. I am to my Hmu, I thought tk mora I thought tha mor I dldot Uk It I can't tot thla over to you Just th way I want to get l& but I couldn't m thla woman aa th mother at a lot of children. I, don't know Just wbal tha wa mada for, but It wasn't for a bom I told her o, I brok with her myself." "By word of mouth?" queried Sam Ottv. "I did It la a letter," aald Elmer Quayl gat rably. . "How foolish. Elmer!" ar4 tha girl Elmr araeed himself. "Bsfor I gav ht aa ngagmnt ring." h Hla, "h waa aa fin aa silk. Thlnga changed after that I found aa moklng cigeret to beat th band. , Ml etak wf bottom dollar sh' a flend." "What !?" qurid tha p rose eu tor. Tva got that down." . "Cocktail too many of thorn," aodded BH mer Quayl; "and sh keep a lot of bottle aa tap In her apartment ta th bargain. I know sh drink too much." "What la?" demanded Sam Oliver, makta mor not. "Bh go to dances every night," aald Elmt "sh dance till th cow com horn. And what mad m aor was thla: Befor I waa en gaged to Zelda sh danced all her dant with me. Afterward sh danced not with m. but with th bt dressed chap with th blggMt roll of money In th room. If I got on danea a night Z was a lucky man. Sh Ignored in. Sh let m spend my money on her; sh let ma glv her money. Actually, ah threw roe down. Only sh didn't say so, Ilk a man. Ia her heart ah Jilted me before I vr thought of Jilting her. I couldn't ttand It I wrot that Utter to her. And then, this flr. and now" "Obviously," nodded th prosecutor, "tha . 116,000 put a new light on th matter. That'a neither her nor ther. It waa her good luck to hav fat play Into her handa Now, listen, El mer Quayle. Follow m. Th record, a you'va mad It, stand Ilk thia: You courted thi girl; you promised to marry her; you gave her a ring. You showered her with money, gift. ttentkn. Then suddenly you Jilt her. Bh may hav Jllttd you at first, but the record shows you Jilted her. On of your strong reason for so doing I that ahe dissipate, smokes clgarats, drink cocktalla now and then" j "Now and always," returned Elmer Quayl earnestly; "I'm telling you th truth." "Nobody ever drlnka cocktail mor than now and the n befor a Jury," wnt on th pros ecutor. "And beside th clgaret and drlnka sh goe to dance all th Urn. Good. She'll ad mit most of these charges, If aha' wis. Thsy are probably susceptlbl of proot Grlndston will set her straight on that What doa It . amount to, Elmer Quayl? Over In New York ther are mothers, grandmothers staid, respect- . abla women with large families smoking elf arets, drinking cocktails, dancing every night River City is a city it's not so far away from the Borough of Manhattan. Hundreds of River City girls get married every year a whole lot of 'em have smoked clgareta, drunk cocktalla, gone to dancea every night Ten chances ta on there'll be three men on your Jury who met their wives at a publlo dancing plac. That'a what dancing's for. These wives of their ar bringing up their children. . How ar you going to prove that Zelda Lindquist la any different from these girls 7" "I know sho is," said Elmer Quayl. "What els do you know about this?" quer- led Sam Oliver. "Nothing." said th athlete; "neither doe anybody else. She cam her from Australia ,, flv year ago, ah says sh and her brother, Joe. They lived first In Nw York then hr. That's all I over kn'ew." Sam Oliver leaned back In hi chair and 1 thought about It hard. "It'a bad enough," h said at length, "and you must understand Just how bad it la, Thia ia Elmer Quayle' town and Elmer 1 a hero. Th children of th city plac at Elmer'a feet $15,000 to do With a he . will. A sacred tribute. For him to do With aa he will This woman cornea along this Strang woman. They've never oven heard of her be- V for. Sh seta he velvet claws upon this pile and takes it for her own. Twenty-flv thou sand dollars raised for Elmer Quayle presented to him by th kid with glowing eyes, with hero worship in their hearts, i And then h handa it over to a woman of thla typ." "But ahe hasn't got th money yet!" orled Peggy Warner. "Now you're talking," said the prosecutor. ' "No more postmortems. We'll build np now la stead of tearing down. Let everybody help." "I'll help," nodded Peggy Warner. "Thlg case must be settled, and settled rignt away. "How much money have you got?" queried Sam Oliver. 'Twenty-flve thousand dollars,' responoed Elmer Quayle forlornly, "and not a dollar more."- ' "I have two thousand dollars of my own!" cried Peggy Warner eagerly. Sam Oliver thought It over carefully, Ha didn't like it, but, after all. it wa on way out "Bring in your two thousand," he said to Peggy Warner, against the protests of Elmer , Quayle, '"'and I'll go see Eleaaer Grindstone right away." ' He sat up that night till midnight preparing ' an answer that would put out th eye of any ordinary antagonist Next day he took his an- -swer in to Eleazer Grlndatone, handed him a copy.and laid two thousand dollar on Eleaser Grindstone's desk. "Two thousand dollars," nodded Sam Oliver to Grindstone, "if your woman quits right now. Destroy these papers. Squelch th whole thing strangle It in its birth. That means a thou sand to you, Grindstone and a thousand mora to her, A thousand ter a few hours' work. That' fair." . Grindstone picked up the answer and read it carefully. It was a formidable document, but Grindstone merely chuckled as ho read It "Not a farthing leas than twenty-flve." said Grindstone. ' Next day th storm broke th fight was on. Next day, too, Eleaaer Grlndston sent for Zilda Lindquist And Zelda Llndqulst came. t ,"Nowt young woman," he nodded to her, "I've sent for you to find out what you are doing with yourself." The Swedish beauty tossed her head. "I ant doing as I please," she answered. "Exactly," nodded Grindstone; "I supposed so. Ten years from now you'll look bark and wonder at your recklessness. ' You've been doing as you please too much. Your picture, lady, will be in all the evening papers. And from now on you'll do aa you don't please, "Keep under cover, don't be seen. Don't smoke in public, don't dance in public, don't drink In public. Don't be seen.- Not here, at any rate." j . Sam Oliver, pn his own part, spent two sleep- less nights in an attempt to solve a problem that somehow, in the nature of things, would not . work out His would be a superhuman task It was up to him to make a Jury see this thing : -In the same way that he saw it, that Elmer Quayle and Peggy Warner saw it The evidence was all against him as It stood he must hav superevldenc to combat It Ther waa nobody to furnish him that superevldenc, unless It waa the woman in the case. Sam concentrated on the woman In the case. ' He had her reckoned up, carefully shadowed. He had her past so far as it waa known. Investigated. And all without, result The woman had no record ah was an adventuress without a past But ah was an adventuress, and Sam Oliver knew her for th thing she waa He must trim Grindstone' In this case, and with legal evidence. The mora ha thought about it the more he felt that somehow, in the showdown, the woman In the case would yield that evidence. She must ba mada to give it up. At two o'clock In the morning of aa) .Continued on Pag five.) ,s