i i I Li O " ' 4, mo 1 . AmJ Cia I M O Corighi,i9io by The- Aoiith me-rican Co r'7AfOP55: Joscelyn Ware, a London . journalist who is engaged in exposing the wrongs of the laboring classes, be friends Lily Childers and her baby son." Lily has been married to a worthless scamp passing as Hugh Childers. In reality . his name is Noel Palliser. As the police are on the point of arresting him for swindling he pretends 40 commit suicide, and thus escapes. Joscelyn and Lily go into the country , near London, that the woman and her baby may recover, from the hardships they have undergone. 'Near where they are staying lives the Pallistr family f which is interested in a tea' house, company which Joscelyn has been inves tigating. The head of the family has. died but recently, and a large fortune has devolved upon' the elder son, Clive, with a substantial legacy for Noel. .-.-,., Lily recognizes Noel Palliser as her sup posedly dead husband as he is bringing home another' bride. She steks an interview1 with Noel, and h murdered by him. The crime is, however, ' attributed to 'a tramp: Clive Pallher becomes much interested in Joscelyn Ware, and promises to support Lily's child. He is called to London by a strike of . the employes of Kiosks, Limited, of which he is memanagtng mrector. ; - .., (CONTINUED FROM LAST SUNDAY.) dressed 'the crowd, had been Interviewed, and was not averse to her photograph appearing in the Pally Dial. ."Kltty," too, was a pretty name. It slipped glibly and crisply from the tongue. ; Stephen Scooper, of the Dally Dial, knew the value of these things. So he had boomed "Kitty' for all oh was worth. But he was reserving his heavy Are In the shape of Joscelyn's and shoulders were' visible as he passed, and she saw his features quite distinctly. But she did not associate him with the missing letter. It was a letter of sympathy, and offered help, with mention of cut flowers dispatched at Clive PalUser's request, and only of valu to herself. ' "A pleasant-spoken gentleman," commented Mrs. CHAPTER XIII (Continued.) ' I 77s v y J is Mt- -4 MllJS fi&ittl-t N MRS. FAULDER'S return to 4he parlor, she found Joscelyn Ware,, and gav some account of the gentle, man who wished to sketch both the Hall and the cot tage, before retiring. Joscelyn had brought witb her from the room above both a letter and a telegram. The letter, that she had found awaiting her on 'her return from the funeral, was the one penned by Clive Palliser In the small hours of that morning after ha had at- Faulder, "and I shall be curious, miss, to see what Ik lis. j Ii rr-.'.' ,,, ' jl ; ,; . ,.,. ...... ,., . . - . , ,m , i ' ' c - I ....... i . - "'Don't soil her name with your tongue!'" ing of it had touched her very deeply, though Just for a moment the fact that the paper on which It was written was embossed with 'Kiosks, Ltd.," bad caused the other side of the man's nature to intrude itself un comfortably upon her thoughts. The very words, "Kiosks, Ltd.." stood in her sight for oppression and the ugly tyranny of capitalism. Yet what had been written below them " had given her a deeper Insight into the sensitive thoughtful ness and the penetrative, delicate understanding of the writer. He. was becoming more and more of an anomaly as he revealed himself to her. And tie was undonbtedly unfolding himself to her with a remark able rapidity, under the Influence of the humanity that was being quickened within hi mi Their acquaintance was but a matter of days, but big human and traglo Issues had been crowded into the brief space of time, and one stressful, hour is often sufficient for the forma tion of a close friendship or a deadly enmity. No man had hitherto made such an impression on Joscelyn as he had done, no other man had ever furnished her with so much food for thought He was compelling her deep admiration, and at the same time awakening most uncomfortable regrets by reason of the other side to his nature. And, vice versa, no woman had so far taken such a ' hold on Clive Palliser' imagination as Joscelyn Ware had done. He had never been a woman-hater, but his opinion of the sex had not been an exalted one. He was as the phrase goes a most eligible parti. . Women had. In plain terms, done their best to hook him, and his penetrative nature had seen through their efforts. He had despised them accordingly. He looked upon the women who were crowding into the labor market from another aspect, as representing a phase in modern polit ical economy. They were cheapening the price of labor, an obvious advantage to such a large employer ot human labor as himself. Now a woman had come into his life who had commanded his respect and admiration.' She was a woman worker, but he had detached "her from his general views. Directness was one of his character istics. He never shirked an issue, nor flinched from an admission where he himself was concerned. And after the penning of the letter, which at this moment Joscelyn was reading a second time, he had looked dlrectlSJ into his own heart in his searching way, and (recognized that she had installed herself In a place there. It had taken him aback, as a man is taken aback when he suddenly discovers an Intruder, whether It be In his heart or hiding under his bed. Joscelyn laid aside the letter, and turned to- the tele gram, delivered what time Mr. Chart? Bowater accord ing to cards was on the premises. It was from Stephen Scooper, the editpr of the Daily Dial. "Article appears tomorrow," It ran. "Must have more articles on the same subject. See me some time today, if . possible. Wire reply.!' ... In the word of one of Ute sub-editors, "Scooper was going for Kiosks, Limited, bald-headed." joscelyn article had whetted bis appetite for more. It had sur passed his expectations. That was the kind of hot, live, ; convincing stuff that he wanted. It had arrived at the psychological, Journalistic moment, a most admirable follow-on to the disturbances In the Tottenham Court road and the Euston road. Joscelyn' reply had been laconic: "Sorry. Impossible' - Who shall say what inspired that answer? At the moment of penciling it she had told herself that she had written all she had to write on the matter, and the need of the child under her care claimed her im mediate attention, There was o much to be done. But she had also experienced that pricking so -suggestive of an uneasy conscience. Waa he compro mising, also, with her principle, under the Influence of Clive Palliser'' very Jiuman, delicate letter?1 It was a kind of double pricking on the part et tier con science. .Under the circumstances, considering" Clive Pat. User's attitude toward her and Lily's child, had she done well and fairly In the- writing of the one article? But, well or riot, the situation was beyond repair now. And her face Hushed. Her principles and her cham- . plonship of her own sex were intense things. She was no banner-wagging, hysterical, self-advertising crea ture of the kind that does a cause more harm than good. The respect and the sympathy of the public must be aroused, not converted Jnto disgust and rldt- , cule by unsexlike buffoonery. ; Her conscience was again stabbing, In twin-fashion. Was she a traitor to her principle in not going on? Had he treated th ,man fairly; who was 'chemlng with such delicate understanding for Lily' ch d? . ' " ' a-lanced at it. It was a copy of the Daily Dial. . The first thing, after the big headlines, that attracted Joscklyn's attention ws an Inset photograph, with "Miss Kitty LaBcelles" printed below it. "Kitty," Whose personal charm, and enthusiasm had so appealed to the man in the Street whee she climbed to the top of the four-wheeler on the previous evening and ad- article for themorrow. In this issue all that had been written on the subject of Kiosks' disturbances was In the reporting and interview style. The meth ods of the company were not actually Indicted, except by Kitty In her interview. The welght-of the paper was not behind the matter. Scooper wa reserving a leading article on the subject for the morrow. In hi big campaign against -Kiosk he wa not relying solely on joscelyn's one article. His Journalistic hawk were out in quest of anything in evidence against the company. - Employe were being Interrlewed. There ended -to the ffaira---of wotrtd-ha no . heed, in thfs case, to stimulate corre- Klosks, Limited. The read- spondence by writing the first letter in the office. According to Kitty's Interview, the' trouble had. originated, as follows: One of the girls employed aty the Tottenham Court road branch of Kiosk had writ ten to Mr. Dietrich Schneiderkopf, the company's man ager, complaining of the bad and Insufficient ' food supplied the employes of that particular branch, al leging that in many cases It consisted of the scraps from the customers' plates of the previous day hashed' up. .She had also complained that, apart, from, the food being bad, there was no time to attempt to eat It, granted one had the (courage. The answer to her letter had been instant dismissal. The food question and her allegations, true or untrue, had not been Investigated. Joscelyn had a sensitive face, quick to flush. It was hot to the eye now as she read. She had had ex perience of the food supplied to Kiosks' employe. Had the depots been properly staffed, there would have been sufficient time for meals; but, as it waa, despite regulations about meals and hour, it was a case of snatching food when opportunity occurred. And food good, wholesome food with time to eat It. was a worker's right. It was 'iniquitous, In Joscelyn's eyes, that this company, vhich paid S3 per cent should deduct from the women's slender wage for the launder ing -of their cuffs and caps six to twelve shillings for a week's ,labor that frequently ran Into over seventy hours. Joscelyn read on. The staff of the Tottlngham Court road branch had demanded an Investigation and the reinstallation of the dismissed employe, to be dis missed themselves in a body. They had, however, enlisted the sympathy of the public and persuaded those employes who had been brought up to take their places to refrain from doing so. The branch had been closed temporarily. Kitty, evidently a firebrand girl, but not nfuch of an organiser, had taken upon herself , in her Interview the responsibility of the later dis turbance in the Euston road. She had, as she told the reporter, suddenly boiled over, sprung upon one of the marble-topped tables and, amid the cheers of sev eral ardent male admirers, called upon her fellow employes to show their sympathy by following her from the shop. How she subsequently climbed atop a cab. was arrested and balled out; how an admirer of hers struck a constablo and went, proud a a hero, to the station, has been narrated.' When the Interviewer asked Kitty what the likely outcome would be, she had shaken her "pretty" head Dally' Dial readers liked little touches of that kind, and were consequently supplied with them and replied that the "Didn't quite know," and then added, with a charm ing twinkle of violet eyes, "Perhaps I shall start a tea shop of my own." . Joscelyn smiled faintly, and looked again at the charm lng photograph. Very fascinating. Then her thoughts traveled to the plain, anemlc-faced girls, who were not attractive, who did not work for pocket money, who had not male admirers, for whom no capital would be forthcoming to start teashops for themselves, to whom a weekly wage of something between six to twelve shillings represented clothes, lodging and partial board. The employes of Kiosks were responsible tor their own breakfasts.' ' " . . And the flush on, her face deepened, and her mouth grew tight, She wondered how matters had progressed on this day! Had the closed branches been restarted and opened as usual? Would the employes have the courage and the self-sacrifice to combine In a body? She did not think so. Capital would probably triumph. Clive Palliser was In London. She pictured' that strong f aca of his, -with those very keen relentless blue eyes. She had beheld tenderness in them, sympathy and great pity." But at this moment she pictured them very blue and determined.,, ... , , Then she found herself wishing that she had known him more Intimately. She wai singularly free from self conceit, but had she known aim more intimately, she would have approached the subject. It occurred to her that she might have done better by setting before him the fact embodied in her article than by publishing 'them. : '."''''X -fk- . ': '" ' ; What had happened? It would be possible to obtain an evening paper from the village shop, though not till late. She laid aside the paper, and crossed to the table remembering that she left .Noel Palliser' letter upon lu The envelope was there, but not the letter; she searched the room, and presently touched the bell But Mrs. Faulder could pot remember having noticed th letter. But had it been lying on the table, it should be lying there now. Mrs. Faulder had touched nothlna "I'm sure T left it on the table!" said Joscelyn - "Well, miss," replied Jdrs. Faulder, perplexed, "there's no on but you and me and that gentleman that 1 wa sort ot a' picture he'll make, of the cottage, and I'm wondering If he'd care for me and Tom to be standing In the porch, just natural-like?" Then ahe looked about ' her again. "Well, well, he's the only person who's been In this room, except you and me, miss, and he. couldn't have took the letter." "I suppose I must have put It somewhere and for gotten," said Joscelyn. Then she listened. The child was awake, and she went upstairs to him quickly. Her thoughts wth In ariother-eh annel as she gath -ered him up in her arms. What a wonderful thing a mall baby was! What must It be like to possess one of one' own? Then a churchyard scene played itself .very vividly before her eyes, and something splashed down on the mite'' face. ' - Presently Joscelyn told herself that she must force her thoughts into a more practical groove. She must make definite arrangements for the child's future along the lines mapped out by Clive Palliser. Also, she simply could not afford to neglect her work. Again uneasiness pounced on her. For herself. It mat tered nothing. But It was conceivable that her article on the method of Kiosks, Limited, might react unfavor ably on the child's future when the author' name became known. CHAPTER XIV A CERTAIN amount of grim satisfaction was1 ex pressed on bis features a Clive Palliser prepared to quit the head offices of Kiosks, Limited, after having crammed two days' work Into one. On the following afternoon he intended returning to Eldon. He had been sarcastically amused with the Dally Dial's account of the disturbances. It had been characteristic of the paper's methods that it had thrust Kitty Lascelles' picture In a prominent place and generally gushed over her. The two branches had been restarted and opened. There had been nothing approaching a real disturbance. The dismissed employes had endeavored In a feeble kind of way to picket the two establishments and prevent cus tomers from patronizing them, but they were only a hand ful, and the police bad judiciously moved them on. The bulk, of the employes had remained unmoved. The outbreak, as he had told Sohnelderkopt had been sporadic Women lacked the power of combination, and the majority realized on which side of their bread the butter lay. Many of the papers had given humor ous descriptions of what had happened. It had been merely a flash In the pan. Clive Palliser had decided not to send the letter penned on the previous evening to press. In his abrupt sarcastic way he had told Schneider kopf that he anticipated seeing Kitty Lascelles shortly starred at the music hails at a fabulous salary. She would find that far more paying than running a tea shop of her own. The many clerks at the head offices thanked heaven silently when the managing director took his departure at a cqmparatively early hour for him. He was a man of simple habits, and his town house, one of his father's legacies, was far too big for Mm. but he kept "it up as a matter of form. Its size and loneliness Impressed him when he readied it. When, after a solitary meal, he found himself In the library, he went to the telephone and was put In communication with Eldon Hall. His brother Noel answered him. "How's William Caull?" asked Clive. t "He's still alive. They seem to think today that he might pull round. The hemorrhage has stopped." "You had those flowers sent?"' "Yes." "I shall be with you tomorrow afternoon," said Clive after a .pause. He put down the Instrument and lit a cigar. Then, looking directly into his heart, he beheld the Intruder , still there. He had been so busy, so absorbed in his many enterprises, that lie had not had time to con template matrimony. Also, no woman had so far pro vided him with an ideal. "By heavettf' he said, suddenly pacing the room furiously, as If staggered at himself, "I'm in love!" It was so, and with his usual quickness he had rec ognized the fact. It was late, when he went to bed, and then slept never a wink. He saw her, beautiful, motherly, nurs ing a dead woman's child id her arms; he pictured her bravely fighting her way through life, a woman worker. Joscelyn. Ware. He was in. love. The ideal woman had come into his life. But what place did he hold In. her thoughts? That was the question he asked as he rose, early next morning. It was not much past dawn. He went to the window and drew back the blind" A newspaper cart was rushing past, bound for sub urbia. It1 was placarded on either side.' Stephen Scooper himself was responsible for the wording It occupied the whole of the bill: ' DAILY DIAL. HE METHODS ofcf -KIOSKS, LIMITED. CUve Palliser almostperrolUti(LJilmalf he-Mtsttfy he sight. But his teeth clicked on it, telling you about been in the room.'' josceiyn. aiier a moment tnougnt. - , and his mouth . went most uncotuuromisinalv hard - Mrs, rauiaer raised the tableclotn andslooked below. So long as the Daily, Mall had been content to ln- But no letter. She crossed to the window. Innklnr pk ten-lew Klttv LasrelW tmhllith . . h n..Mi her. " . scribe the recent, disturbances is reoortinir umi-hnmn;! "There the rent eman i was teutn nhnnH" h Mr. Charles. Bowater on his card was on his way hack to the "Eldon Arms,'! after falling to find Noel Palliser at home. Joscelyn went to the window. The man's head ous style. It had not mattered so much, thmic-h mifflpiontiv annoying. But the contents-bill was sufficient In Itself to explain to him the Dally Dial's attitude and purpose. The matter was going to be taken up seriously. That contents-bill spelt a leading article and a special correspondent '-.to Clive." He might belittle the power of the press, and overvalue the power of advertisement as an Influence with editors, but he was compelled to ac knowledge the power of the Dally; Dial to, boom or "damn." The editorial weight had not been behind the matter "of the previous day. But this contents-bill pro claimed It to be there now. Let the public take these so called grievances of the employes seriously, let the em ployes themselves realize that they werebelngtak seriously and had public opinion at their backs, and the strike that he had dismissed as Improbable might become reality. Shares were sensitive things. There were any number of so-called humanitarians In his sight meddling busy bodies ready to espouse any cause on mere hearsay facts, and rush into print and pamphlets and exaggerated language about white slavery and the need for combina tion of unions and so forth. In the drapery business this was already being done. An outcry had gone up against the "livlng-ln" system, a union had been formed, and em ployers were showing a tendency to trim their satis to the wind. But the cry of the jteashop girl h&i.not yet been raised loudly enough to concentrate serious attention upon her conditions of life. Clive dropped the blind. Dawn had not long broken. He was not the kind of man to be flustered. He be longed to the order of cool, hard-hitting fighters, whose brain was behind his blows. But he recognized now that he was in for a big fight Clive Palliser, chairman and managing director of Kiosks, Limited, vs. the Dally Dial. A moment before the passing of the newspaper cart he had not only admitted the presence of the Intruder who had Installed herself In his heart and recognized her effect on It, but also In his direct way be had looked beyond. He was no sentimental youth to make a mistake as to the nature of his "feelings. He was In love, and the issue of such love was marriage or not marriage, an Issue whtch rested normally, at least with the woman. He hid not slept a wink during the night, but his thoughts, had not been of a vague, philandering, goalless, sentimental kind. He was a dominating nature, spoilt by and some what self-conceited from success, but he 'had not to do him justice decided that the fact that he loved her was sufficient reason In Itself for Joscelyn to marry him. He would make love as strenuously and directly as he trans acted business, and put the matter to the Issue at the first decent opportunity. This had been the trend of his thoughts when the newspaper cart passed. And It was a tribute to Joscelyn Ware that CUve Palliser, as a rule the most certain and arrogantly confident of men, had not ventured to decide what the issue would be beforehand. He had never known such a wretched feeling of uncertainty, such vague, dismal pessimism, on any rememberable .previous occasion. But of this he was sure; The Ideal woman had come Into his life, and the meaning of the word "love" had been revealed to him. And his love wa not proved the less intenss by the fact that, hard upon Its revelation, he had immediately proceeded to look Into the future practically. But the passing of a newspaper cart and a contents bill had changed the tenor of his thoughts. One of the reasons ot his success was his power of detachment. He pulled down a thought-proof shutter on love, sentiment and Joscelyn Ware, and concentrated on Clive Palliser vs. the Dolly Dial as he went to the bathroom for his cold tub. He was considering the same conflict as he snaved himself with his usual methodic care. There was no undue rushing to obtain a copy oc the paper. He was always an early riser. When he entered thelibrary, one of his private secretaries, looking as if he would have welcomed another hour of bed, was await ing him, prepared to get through an hour and a half's work before breakfast. Almost at the same moment a manservant entered with a budget of morning papers, and proceeded to spread them out on their proper table. Clive crossed the room and selected the Dally Dial. He opened it deliberately. Haste would have been an ad mission of weakness. "THE CRY OF THE TEASIIOP GIRL" was set lii larger type and topped the wording already displayed on . the placard "The Methods of Kiosks, Limited." Clive did not immediately read what followed. His eyes, very blue and hard, traveled to the space in the paper devoted to the leading articles.- Here the heading was more laconic, simply "Kiosks, Limited." On ths opposite page, amid much matter on the same subject was the portrait of Kitty Lascelles, It had proved so popular on the previous day that Stephen Scooper had uecided to repeat it. But there was nothing frivolous about the tone of the leading article, though Kitty s charming portrait might hardly suggest slavery, bad fodd, under-pay and over work. No humorous description about the leading article. It referred the reader for detail to other columns, and proceeded to a general indictment of the company and its methods. Its general tore wa9 that of a weighty judge, reviewing the evidence against a Attendant, at the same time summing up dead against htm on the strength t it. The writer called the reader's attention to the cur rent quotation of Kiosks shares In tue financial column and pointed out that the last half-yearly dividend was equivalent to thlrty-threje jer cent per annum; that this 'same company paid Its-employes wages varying from six to twelve shillings for a week of nominally slxtyw hours, but which In practice ran Into over seventy, sometimes eighty f hours. Again the-writer referred the reader to older columns, to the opinions of employes, but chiertyta the elequewti IMngi suit Is. w'tll Its apprPpmte"WleTT "The Cry of the Teashop Girl," by the Dally Dial's special-lady commissioner, whose -moving articles on "London, by Night," dealing with the .outcast women of a, great city, had made such a profound sensation. ' Clive Pslltser turned to the columns In question, and read what Jo&rclyn Ware had written and the editor of , the Daily Dial ha amended, strengthened where h thought it would stand strengthening, and added high color where high color seeTrned commendable,, to tar nothing of. Interspersing the nmttc. with big-typed captions at Interv&'s The authorship was covered by "Om Special Lady Cortimissloner," Clive Palliser read it slowlv, rei every word; read the 'description-,; a day In the life ot one of his employ) as Joscelyn had experienced it; rt&a the : restrained but throbbing appeal for . fair conditions for ths woroat worker, and happened ;! upon th phrase that the woman worker of to day was , the mother of tomorrow. Factory and workshop had been, leg islated for,, but not the woman clcrs and the teashop" girl. Economic con ditions were daily; driving more and more women Into the labor market, .but conditions. Of. labor and llvini that helped to unsex them and unfil them for1 motherhood because they worked they did - not cease to be women were a sin against God I most wonderful design of creation. Clive Palliser read on, his moutl hard and his eyes very blue, ,,' ' j Women might . work, arid wer compelled to work.'but, though a few ; perverted creatures might try to fly j in the teeth of eternal design and gtve the lie to a truth, wifehood and moth- j crhood were Included in every true j woman's aspirations. ; '; , ? C ' I And then CUve Palliser read ol I the ugliest side of underpaid woman's labor under joyless conditions, touched upon most delicately, but set down fearlessly. j He breathed more quickly. Love had not long dawned upontarn, and with the dawning of love and an Ideal woman revealed to him, the nan's thoughts had been raised to a higher plane, not only with regard to ona woman, but the sex. It Is gener ally so. '. . '..'.' ' He read on. His lips hardened suddenly. What followed was a thinly disguised personal attack on himself. He did not know that the special lady commissioner had not written it, that It had been tacked on to her article. enibodled with it, by Stephen Scooper with a 'view to uniformity and gen eral effect. ''-'''".if It roused up all the fight in his nature. It Prt of the article had given him food for furioui JoJt If love and a woman had somehow become mixed up with his thoughts and softened and weakened him, and caused htm to consider the possibl Hy of another policy, this personal attack stiffened all that was stub, born In his being. The Daily Dial had flung, down the glove, had challenged him and his methods before the eyes of the public. To climb down and accept this whipping JlkaJLachoolhoyand-whlmper that he would try to be a good boy and mend his ways in future; he. Clive Palliser, managing director, the man to whom shareholders looked and counted as an infallible god, bend the knee and do penance In public at the dictation of a paper that was trying to get even with him for transferring the bulk ot his advertisements else where! No! ' He Jerked the paper from him. But the publtc, "the great public, Is the jury in such cases, and an alert One, when once It had been well prodded In the ribs and thor oughly awakened.. It 1 the waking that takes the time and trouble. The public would have been content to smile amusedly at Kitty Lascelles and approve of her personal charms, and have dosed off again. Kitty Lascelles had tickled, but this article was of a kind that stabbed into human feelings deeply. : ? CUve Palliser "realized that It had pierced his outer hide and got home; but to admit himself wrong at the dictation of a newspaper, change his policy and bend the knee! ,:. t He glanced at the clock; but it was too early to fc put In telephonlo communication with his solicitors. Aa extraordinary meeting of the directors must be called, but they were puppets and would take their tone from him. The question of a libel action could only be decided after legal advice, and could not be settled offhand. He stepped up to his secretary, picked up some papers dealing with another company In which he was Inter ested, sad dictated In his usually calm, coherent, businesslike manner. There was no clue to the fact that the affairs of Kiosks, Limited,, were occupying 'his thoughts. He waa blessed with a dual brain, ..; . . j He ceased, with his usual punctuaUty, as the hands i of the clock pointed to half-past 9, the breakfast i hour. He was crossing to the door, after a laconio in ', structlon to his secretary, when Mr. Dietrich Schneider kopf tumbled Into rather than entered the room. "You haf seen the Dally Dial?" be cried hoarsely, I gesticulating almost deliriously with Lis 'Splayed-out ' hands. "I know who write It I find out I waa rlgad, Mr. Clival I vas rlghdl " v , ; : j His foreign accent and his mispronunciations always I became exaggerated under stress. I "I tell you I tlnk dot I see a Miss Summsrs-raa I come to Eldon I was righd! I hat found out she Is a Dally Dial spy. She vas a Miss Summers at se Strand branch of ze Kiosks. She Is -also a Miss WareMiss Joscelyn Ware she Is the Dally Dial's lady commissioner. It was Joscelyn Ware who wrote those 'London by Night" articles. I haf trace it all I haf work It oud. Bat Mein Gott!" 0--.s. ; -Ir; And Mr. Dietrich Schneiderkopf slavered a Uttla round the corners of his loose, working lips. He was in great -terror. It might be that Kiosks, Limited, would require a scapegoat, and fix upon the manager for the part ' "What?" said CUve Palliser. i,t-''.-O' "I baf trace her, Mr. CUve. Miss Summers) of tkt Strand Joscelyn Ware of the Dally Dial and the cottage, Eldon. So! And dot Is not all. The women vlll htrlk-. shtrike me dead, but dey vlll,' onless and de publlo vltl cheer and break de windows. De depots Will open all right, because de sheeps of women will not haf d tims . beforehand to put their heads togezzer, and talk about de paper. But ven dey haf done that, dere vlll be trooble, so much trooble! Ach! Donnerwetter und blltzen!" CUve had turned his back. He was standing over against one of the windows. His face was Invisible, but his attitude somehow suggested that he was not paying" the slightest attention to Mr. Dietrich Schneiderkopf. of Polish, German, Semitic extraction. r "Ach. Mr, Clive, something must be done at once!" Schneiderkopf crossed to the figure at the window, and laid a tentative, appealing hand on the man snoulder. ' : Clive turned. "Get out-go! " v Schneiderkopf shriveled up Into himself In a remark able way that seamed to reduce his bulk gnerally. v . "Ach!" he Whimpered, clasping his hands together like a man praying. "I haf been true to de initial o( da company and you, Mr. clival You will not Jay de blame ot dis on me. - Dot cursed woman spy" He b-'oke I off into, a scrtain, Ciiv fjui.,ir 'ln,.l to have gone 'mad suddenly. He hud gripped schr-idr kopf by the throat and was shaking him., ilia privet secretary was on his feet, doubting hi eye. . , , "Don't soli her name with your tongue!" , , CUve almost spat the words luto ttokineiderkopf.'t aha face. Courage was not part of the manager's common... i. tan heritage. "Go!'' Schneiderkopf went to put ft rolloqulallyllke 'grew1 lightning and to mix metaphors with a dog's t,all tween his legs. CUve Indicated the door to hi ssioumi'-d secretary. He had himself in hand again to ths -ou;. ward eye. . l want to be alone," he ssfd. : v As the door closed, he crossed to a table sitd Ur! nt.-brt un the Dally Dial. : ill faea 'was anHe'l'iMinW!i im hn.i. humiliation, bltternoss. tru:rlnon til h!!i.lt mixed thmselves up Into a kind of whirlpool. A woman had dealt hltn the hardest blow ef hfs Jif so far. It would not have htn so hard but tit t revelation of the previous night- The actual bustnesa-at Kiosks.. L!m:tedC!lv ';t?f vs. the Dally Dtal were forgfitn. "A blow over the heart I tbwort kind nt bhw, (CONTINUED NEXT KUVI'.VY )