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15 SYNOPSIS. Elam Harnlsh, known all through Alas ka as "Burring Daylight." celebrates his 80th birthday with a crowd of miners at the Cirr-le City Tlvoll. The dance leads to heavy gambling:. In which over $100,000 1s staked. Harnlsh loses his money and his mine but wins the mail contract. He starts on his mail trip with dogs and sledge, telling his friends that he will be in the big Yukon gold strike at the start. Burning Daylight makes a sensationally rapid run across country with the mall, appears at the Tlvoll and is now ready to Join his friends In a dash to the new gold fields. Deciding that gold will be i? nn.rlvor rtlQtrirt Harnish buys two tons of flour, which he declares will be worth its weight In gold, but when he arrives with his flour he finds the big flat desolate. A comrade discov ers gold and Daylight reaps a rich har vest. He goes to Dawson, becomes the most prominent figure in the Klondike and defeats a combination of capitalists In a vast mining deal. He returns to civilization, and. amid the bewildering complications of high finance. Daylight finds that he has been led to Invest his eleven millions in a manipulated scheme He goes to New York, and confronti.ig his disloyal partners with a revolver, he threatens to kill them If his money is not returned. They are cowed, return their stealings and Harnlsh goes back to San Francisco where he meets his fate In Dede Mason, a pretty stenographer. He makes large Investments and gets Into the political ring. For a rest he goes to the country. Daylight gets deeper Into high finance In San Francisco, but often the longing for the simple life nearly over come? him. Dede Mason buys a horse and Daylight meets her In her saddle trips. One day he asks Dede to go with him on one more ride, his purpose being to ask her to marry him and they canter awftv. she trvinc to analyze her feelings. Dede tells Daylight that her happiness could not lie with a money manipulator. Daylight undertakes to build up a great Industrial community. CHAPTER XVII.?Continued. She led the way through the door opening out of the hall to the right, and, once Inside, he stood awkwardly rooted to the floor, gazing about hira and at her and ail the time trying not to gaze. In his perturbation he failed to hear and see her invitation to a eca l. "Won't you sit down?" she repeated. "Look here." he said, In a voice that shook with passion, "there's one thing I won't do, and that's propose to you In t*ie office. That's why I'm here. Dede Mason, I want you, I just want you." So precipitate was he, that she had barely time to cry out her Involun tary alarm and to step back, at the same time catching one of his hands as he attempted to gather her Into his arms. l,rkV T T? ? ?"fnnl " WLI, i AUUVV i ill a ouic cuvsu&u ivwi, he said. "I-M guess I'll sit down. Don't be scalrt. Miss Mason. I'm not real dangerous." "I'm not afraid." she answered, with a smile, slipping down herself into a chair. "It's funny," Daylight sighed, almost with regret; "here 1 am, 6trong ?*ioiigb to bend you around and tie knots in you. Here I am. used to hav ing my will with man, beast or any thing. And here I am sitting in this chair, as weak and helpless as a little lamb. You sure take the starch out of me." "I?I wish you hadn't asked," she said softly. "Mebbe it's best you should know a few things before you give me an an swer," he went on, ignoring the fact that the answer had already been Her Closely. contrary notwithstanding. The stuff you read about me in the papers and hooks, about me being a lady-killer, is nil wrong. There's not an iota of truth in it. I guess I've done more than ray share of card-playing and whisky-drinking, but women I've let alone. There was a woman that killed herself, but I didn't know she wanted me that bad or else I'd have married her?not for love, but to keep her from killing herself. She was the best of the boiling, but I never gave her any encouragement I'm telling you all this because you've read about It, and I want you to get it straight from me." "1 can't marry you," she said. "1 like you a great deal, but?" He waited a moment for her to com plete the sentence, failing which, he went on himself. "I haven t an exaggerated opinion of myself, so I know I ain't bragging when I say I'll make a pretty good husband. You could follow your own sweet will, and nothing would be 'oo good for you. I'd give you everytntng your heart desired?" "Except yourself." she Interrupted suddenly, almost sharply. "Don't you see?" she hurried on. "I could have far easier married the Elam Harnish fresh from Klondike when I first laid yes on him long ago, than marry you sitting before me now." He shook his head slowly. "That's one too many for me. The more you know and like a man the less you want to marry him. Famili arity breeds contempt?I guess that's what you mean." "No, no," she cried, but before she could continue, a knock came on the door. His eyes, quick with observation like an Indian's, darted about the room while she was out. The Impres sion of warmth and comfort and beau ty predominated, though he was un able to analyze it; while the simplici ty delighted him?expensive simplici ty. he decided, and most of it left overs from the time her father went broke and died. She re-entered the room, and as she crossed it to her chair, he admired the way she walked, while the bronze slippers were maddening. "I'd like to ask you several ques tions." he began immediately. "Are you thinking of marrying somebody else?" "There isn't anybody else. I don't know anybody I like well enough to marry. For that matter, I don't think I am a marrying woman. Office work seems to spoil me for that." "It strikes me that you're the most marryingest woman that ever made, a man sit up and take notice. And now another question. You see. I've just got to locate the lay of the land. Is there anybody you like as much as you like me?"_ But Dede had herself well in hand. "That's unfair." she said. "And if you stop and consider, you will find that you are doing the very thing you disclaimed?namely, nagging. I refuse j to answer any more of your questions. I Let us talk about other things. How I is Bob?" v Half an hour later, whirling along through the rain on Telegraph Ave nue toward Oakland. Daylight smoked one of his brown-paper cigarettes and reviewed what had taken place. It was not at all bad, was his summing up. though there was much about it that was baffling. There was that liking him the more she knew him and at the same time wanting to marry him less. That was a puzzler. Once again, on a rainy Sunday, weeks afterward. Daylight proposed to Dede. As on the first time, he re strained himself until his hunger for K4m q?/1 et?ont him UtJI UVCI wuciliicu aiui I away in his red automobile to Berke ley. He left the machine several blocks away and proceeded to the house on foot But Dede was out, the landlady's daughter told him, and added, on second thought, that she was walking in the hills. Further more. the young lady directed him where Dede's walk was most likely to extend. Daylight obeyed the girKs in structions, and soon the street he fol lowed passed the last house and itself ceased where began the first steep slopes of the open hills. The air was damp with the on-coming of rain, for the storm had not yet burst, though the rising wind proclaimed its im minence. As far as he could see, there was no sign of Dede on the smooth, grassy hills. To the right, dipping down into a hollow and rising again, was a large, full-grown eucalyp tus grove. Here all was noise and movement, the lofty, slender-trunked trees swaying back and forth in the wind and clashing their branches to j gether. In the squalls, above all the I minor noises of creaking and groan I ing. arose a deep thrumming note as j of a mighty harp. Knowing Dede as ! he did, Daylight was confident that he ! would find her somewhere in this l grove where the storm effects were so I pronounced. And find her he did, I across the hollow and on the exposed 1 crest of the opposing slope where the gale smote its fiercest blows. "It's the same old thing," he said. "1 want you and I've come for you. You've just got to have me. Dede, for the more I think about it the more certain I am that you've got a sneak ing liking for me that's something more than just ordinary liking. And j you don't dast say that It isn't; now i dast you?" "Please, please." she begged. "We can never marry, so don't let us dis cuss It." Daylight decided that action was more efficient than speech. So be stepped between her and the wind and drew her so that she stood close in the shelter of him. An unusually stiff squall blew about them and Tim Suilivan Big Politician Has Scheme to Reduce Congestion in New York Tene ment Districts. Big Tim Sullivan has been looking about a bit in his Bowery kingdom, and as a consequence the brainiest man in Tammany has hammered out a land tax system, which be be lieves will reduce the congestion in the tenement districts, a New York correspondent of the Cincinnati j Times-Star writes. "People in my j district sleep three and four to the j room," said he, "and many of the ; rnnnis have never had a ray of sun- I light in them. They have to live J that way because the rent is so high. The tenement owner who is willing to j tear down his old building and put up a new one, with sunlight in every j window and a bath in every flat, is afraid to do so, because he knows that his taxeB would go skallyhooting up. The poor devils who rent his flats would in the end pay for that higher rate of taxation. Every eighth child born in New York city dies be "Dede Mason, I Want ^ thrummed overhead In the tree-tops, and both paused to listen. A shower of flying leaves enveloped them, and hard on the heel of the wind came driving drops of rain. He looked down on her and on her hair, wind-blown about her face; and because of her closeness to him and of a fresher and more poignant realization of what she meant to him, he trembled bo that she was aware 01 it in tne nana ioai ueiu hers. She suddenly leaned against him, bowing her head until It rested lightly upon his breast. And so Lhey stood while another squall, with flying leaves and scattered drops of rain, rattled past. With equal suddenness she lifted her head and looked at him. "Do you know," she said, "I prayed last night about you. I prayed that you would fall, that you would lose everything?everything." Daylight stared his amazement at this cryptic utterance. "That sure beats me. I always said I got out of my depth with women, and you've got me out of my depth now. Well, you've just got to ex plain, thaVs all." His arms went around her and held her closely, and this time she did not resist Her head was bowed, and he could not see her face, yet he had a premonition that she was crying. He had learned the virtue of silence, and he waited her will in the matter. Things had come to such a pass that she was bound to tell him something now. Of that he was confident "I would dearly like to marry you." she faltered, "but 1 am afraid. I am proud and humble at the same time that a man like you should care for me. But you have too much money. There's where my abominable com mon sense steps in. Even ff we did marry, you could never be my man? my lover and my husband.' You would be your money's man. I know I am a foolish woman, but I want my man for myself. And your money destroys you; It makes you less and less nice. I am not ashamed to say that I love you, because 1 shall never marry you. And I loved you much when I did not know you at all. when you first came down from Alas ka and 1 first went into the office. You were my hero. You were the Burning Daylight of the gold-diggings, the dar ing traveler and miner. And you looked it I don't see how any wom an could have looked at you without loving you?then. But you don't look it now. You, a man of the open, have been cooping yourself up in the cities 's Land Tax cause its mother has to go to work or starve. At the same time there are 40.000 acres of good land lying idle within the city limits." Therefore Sullivan has a plan to cut the taxes on improved real estate, and increase the taxes on vacant prop erty. He figures that owners would have either to build on their land? which would relieve t?*e downtown congestion?or ro to farming it, which would indirectly have the same effect. "A watch dog on a farm lives better than many of my constitu ents," he declares, "and yet, after an experience of a lifetime down there, I have yet to find the equal of the families on the streets near the Bowery for industry and economy and courage. Maybe my land tax plan is Bowery political economy, as has been charged. I like it all the better for that fact. The Bowery has had to put up witn tnrin avenue pomicni economy for a good while." Forget the Borrows of yesterday and go after the Joys of today. _PNDON r//f C/ILL Of r//?WLD; r "MA/?r/M?Dm"?TC. J Company.) ompany v\w^ I y fou, I Just Want You." with all that that means. You are becoming something different, some thing not so healthy, not so clean, not so nice. Your money and your way of life are doing It. You know it. You haven't the same body now that you i had then. You are putting on flesh, : and it * is not healthy flesh. You are kind and genial with me. I know, but you are not kind and genial to all the 1 J - - U V/>,. wunu a.s juu wcic iucu. i uu uato become harsh and cruel. I do love i you, but I cannot marry you and de stroy love. You are growing Into a thing that I must in the end despise. 1 You can't help it More than you i can possibly love me. do you love this business game. This business?and It's all perfectly useless, so far as you are concerned?claims all of you. 1 sometimes think it would be easier to share you equitably with another woman than to share you with this business. I might have half of you. at any rate. But this business would ; claim, not half of you, but nine-tenths of you. or ninety-nine hundredths. You hold back nothing; you put all you've got into whatever you are doing?" "Limit is the sky," he grunted grim affirmation. "But if you would only play the ncVianrl thnt tt'flV And DOW 1 won't say another word." she added. "I've delivered a whole sermon." She rested now, frankly and fairly, in the shelter of his arms, and both were oblivious to the gale that rushed past them in quicker and stronger ; blasts The big downpour of rain had i not yet come, but the mist-like squalls were more frequent. Daylight was j openly perplexed, and he was still per plexed when he began to speak. "You've left me no argument. I j know I'm not the same man that came from Alaska. I couldn't hit the trail with the dogs as I did in them days. I'm soft in my muscles, and my mind's gone hard. I used to respect men. 1 despise them now You see. I spent all I my life in the open, and 1 reckon I'm an open-air man. Why, I've got the prettiest little ranch you ever laid eyes on up in Glen Ellen. That's where I got stuck for the brick-yard. You recollect handling the correspon dence. I only laid eyes on the ranch that one time, and 1 so fell in love with it that I bought it there and then. I just rode aronnd the hills, and was happy as a kid out of school. I'd be a better man living in the coun try. The city doesn't make me better. You're plumb right there. I know it. But suppose your prayer should be answered and I'd go clean broke and j have to work for day's wages? Sup pose I had nothing left but that little ranch, arid was satisfied to grow a few i chickens and scratch a living some how?would you marry me then. Dede?" "Why, we'd be together all the time!" she cried. Then was the moment, among the trees, ere they began the descent of the hill, .'hat Daylight might have drawn her closely to him and kissed her once. But he was too perplexed with the new thoughts she had put ; into his head to take advantage of the situation. merely caught her by the arm and helped her over the j rougher footing. At the edge of the ; ho ciiirirnctert that if miirht he ! better Tor tbem to part there, but she insisted that he accompany her as !ar as the house. "Do you know," be said, "taking It by and large, it's the happiest day of my life. Dede, Dede, we've just got to get married. It's the only way. and trust to luck for It's coming out all right." But the tears were threatening to rise in her eyes again, as she shook her head ana turned and went up tbr steps. (TO BE CONTINUED.) - nit - -V ; '" FLOYD ALIEN IS GUILTY OF MURDER JUDGE STAPLES WILL SENTENCE THE CONVICTED OUTLAW TO ELECTRIC CHAIR. WAS NO SIGN OF DISORDER Everyone Searched Upon Entering the Court Room By an Armed Detective ?Floyd Alien May Be Called As Wit ness in Trial of Kinsman. Wytheville, Va.?Floyd Allen, first of the Hillsville mountaineers tried for the Carroll county court house I murders was adjudged guilty and will pay the penalty of his crime in the electric chair at Richmond. The jury was cut all night. When court opened the jury was called in and the foreman questioned by Judge Staples. The jurors declar ed there were a number of points of i difference existing and it was doubtful whether a verdict could be reached Judge Staples declared the ease was of such magnitude that he felt he must send the jury back with caution and advice. The jurors again retired, and it was only a short time before they an nounced they had agreed. Court re assembled and the foreman read the T?>rdict of "guilty as charged, in the indictment." Judge Staples held that was not the proper form. The fore man then explained that the verdict was one of guilty in the first degree, the jenalty being electrocution. Floyd Allen was charged specifically at this time with the murder of Com monwealth's Attorney William M. Fos ter, prosecutor in the Carroll county court at Hlllsville last March when the penalty being electrocution. killing of five persons?presiding judge Thornton L. Massie: Prosecutor For ter, Sheriff L. F. Webb, Miss Elizabeth Ayres, and Juror Augustus Fowler. Change the Date of Report. Washington.?The Senate passed, without debate, the House bill chang ing the date of issuance of the cotton acreage report by the Department of Agriculture to the first Monday in July of each year. Heretofore the law required that it be issued in June. A secticn relating to condition reports was eliminated in Senate committee and the bill must be agreed to in con ference and signed by the President before it becomes a law. Direct Election of Senators. Washington.?The proposed amend ments to the constitution providing for dirtct election of senators will be sent to the governors of the states by Secretary Knox. The resolution urill ho cont thrnnfh tho mails wifh a letter addressed to each governor, certifying that it has been duly adop ted by a two-thirds vote in each branch of congress. As all the legis latures are not now in session and some meet only hi-ennially. it seems reasonable to suppose that at least two years must elapse before the amendment can be acted upon. Are Searching For Train Robbers. New Orleans. ? Two posses are scouring the country along the Gulf & Ship Island Railroad between Gulf port and Ralston, Miss., in search of. the two bandits who robbed the ex press car on the New Orleans <fi? Northeastern train near Hattiesburg early Wednesday morning. The rob tiers were iraceo 10 h poim oeiow Ralston and detectives believe they planned to make their "get away" in a gasoline launch hidden in some of the .small streams in that section. Favorable Report on Sugar Bill. Washington. ? The senate finance committee authorized a favorable re port on the Lodge substitute free sugar bill and an unfavorable report on the so-called hous* excise income tax bill which proposed a tax on in comes in excess of $5,00 a year. The Lodge bill on sugar would eliminate the differential and Dutch standard from the tariff. Richeson Hears Death News Calmly. Boston?News that he must be elec trocuted for the murder of Avis Lin nell was received calmly by Clarence V. T. Richeson. He was informed that Governor Foss had declined the peti tiun for a commutation of sentence before the executive council. The former Baptist clergyman expressed keen disappointment at the outcome of his appeal to be allowed to spend the remainder of his life in prison rather than to forfeit it in the electric chair for the murder of his sweet heart. County Judge Owens Fined $500. Chicago.? County Judge Owens was fine'l ff.tiD by Superior Court Judge for contempt of court in violating the superior court injunction restraining the county judge and his aides from interfering with the Cook county Democratic convention. Fines of the same amount were ordered for Chief of Police McWeeney, Assistant Chief Sehuettler, Sheriff Michael Zimmer and Election Commissioner Czarm-cki Seve.ral days before the convention Judge Owens gave directions lor its organization. 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