THE STORY THUS FAR: A Sam Bruce, FBI aperalor. Ia* pec tor Tope and Hra. Tope met In the Maine woods. Top* found a man murdered, who waa at ftrst idealised ae Ledlorfe. head of New Ear land utilities. When a ear helteeed to hare been weed la the marder war.ratted from the quarries tt wat found to contain the hady of a murdered woman, Mrs. Ken. Her has hand committed sui cide. Joe Dane, assistant D.A., accuslnf Tape e< bant lint the cue, look complete charts. Eberly met Lcdforfe to so on a Anhlnf trip. When they sot la the caaoe, Ledlorie apeet the eaaoe. He knew that ?burly eoald act swim. When he saw that Eherty wat not ttnktnt he started Coward him hat wat stopped hy Tope. CHAPTER XIV Eberly said steadily: "He over turned the canoe, swam away. Then he looked back, expecting to see me drowning. He knew I couldn't swim. But when he saw me still afloat?Mr. Tope had made me wear a life-pre server?he. started back to finish me!" Ledforge, a bitter hurt in his tone, cried: "Nonsense! I came to help you. Carl!" "There was murder in his eyes," Eberly insisted, not speaking di rectly to the other man at all. Ledforge whirled toward Tope, fu riously. "You put this idea into his head! Of course he's shocked, doesn't know what he's saying!" "He had a blackjack on a thong on his wrist," said Eberly. Ledforge wore a strap watch on r his left wrist. He held it up. "Carl must have seen this," he insisted; and he said sympathetically: "Gen tlemen, Mr. Eberly is hysterical. He has always been afraid of the water." Tope, after a moment, spoke. "Well, you see, Mr. Ledforge," he explained, almost apologetically, "there's more to it than just this. The whole thing started with a man that left New York last Friday morning with Mr. Holdom, in Hol dom's car, and with Holdom's chauf feur driving. And the next time any body saw that man, he was dead under a bed in one of the cabins at a roadside camp up here." The others?save young Adam Bruce?were watching Tope. Adam watched Ledforge. He saw the man's pupils faintly dilate, saw his eyes become fixed in a concentrat ed attention. Tope paused, and in the instant of silence, Adam heard Mr. Eberly's teeth chattering togeth er. And he had an impression of racing thoughts behind Ledforge's outward calm. Then the man asked curtly: "What of it?. What has that to do with me?" "Why, Miss Ledforge hasn't seen him yet," Tope explained. "But? the dead man looked mightily like you." Ledforge cried, in quick horror: "Looked like me? Dead? Heavens, man, do you mean Christopher?" "Why, yes, dead," Tope assented mildly. "I didn't know his name was Christopher, but he looked enough like you to be your twin." Ledforge nodded gravely. "Gentle men," he said then, "we can't stand here. Carl is freezing, and I'm cold myself. Suppose we go down to the bouse. I must hear the whole story." Tope asked: "You know who the dead man was, then?" "Certainly," Ledforge assented. His eyes clouded with grief. "You said he looked like my twin broth er. Well, gentlemen, he was." At the house, Whitlock and Beal by Tope's direction stayed outside. Eberly disappeared with a serving man, to drink hot grog and find dry clothes. Ledforge asked for Miss Ledforge; and the servant report ed: "She had a turn, sir, and is lying down. Two ladies are with her." "Good," said Ledforge. "Don't disturb her." Tope suggested: "You'll want to get dry, yourself!" But Ledforge negatived this. "There's a good fire on the hearth," he pointed out. "I'll be all right. Come in!" So they gathered in the big living room, richly paneled like a baronial hall; and Ledforge said: "Now then: My brother dead, and some one else too, you said?" "Mrs. Kell," Tope told him. But Joe Dane could no longer en dure that Tope should dominate the scene. "And Kell too, Tope!" he cried. "Dead as a herring! And Holdom dying, so we'll never get a word out of him." Tope saw Ledforge's eyes quicken in a sort of triumph, and the old man turned to Joe almost roughly. "Joe," he said, "you've a real gift Cor talking out of turn. Mr. Led forge, here, can lie all he wants to now, knowing Kell and Holdom can't contradict him." Cumberland and Adam were si lent, strictly listening; even Joe did not for a while interrupt again. And Ledforge spoke, a little sadly. "It's hard to speak openly about he confessed. "We've kept it an absolute secret for so long that silence is a habit now." And he said earnestly: "But you know, every important man needs a double. Dk) that ever occur to you? Imagine now much easier it would be for the President, for instance, tf he were twins. With one twin to attend to the business of the office. Mm other to handle the social side. attend banquets, make speeches, display himself." He continued: "But it was more chance than anything else that led us Into it. Some years ago the heavy demands upon my time and my energy began to weary me. I had something like a nervous collapse, and I went away quietly to my boy hood home?a remote little town in Manitoba?for a vacation. "Christopher lived there. He was a doctor?surgeon and doctor, too, as small town practitioners must be; and he took me in hand, cured me. But he reproached me for overwork ing; and he suggested that a man as busy as I ought to have a per sonal physician to watch over his health. I persuaded him to come back with me in that capacity. He suggested also that I ought to have a social secretary or an assistant, to whom I might delegate some less important activities; and the fact, which we discovered before we left home, that not even our intimate friends would distinguish one of us from the other, led naturally to the arrangement which has contin ued till now." He looked from one to another. "It was very simple," he said, "once "Bat you know, every Important man needs a doable." ' we began. A little attention to such details as clothes, haircuts, and so on. . . . Christopher, ever since, be sides taking care of my health, has lived the social side of my life, leav ing me free to attend to business without distraction." Tope wagged his head. "I declare, that's a queer one," he admitted. "1 don't suppose many people knew about this thing?" "Not a living soul," Ledforge de clared confidently, "except my sis ter Alice?and even she can't tell us apart to this day." "How about servants and all that?" "It was simply a matter of never appearing anywhere together," Led forge assured them. "One of us always stayed out of sight when the other was to be?visible. Of course, we used some simple disguises at times, to give the one who for the moment did not exist a little free dom of movement." And he said suddenly: "But now it's my turn to ask ques tions. Who told you the dead man, Christopher, looked like me?" "Mrs. Tope had seen you?or your brother?at a stockholders' meeting once." "Probably she saw Christopher," Ledforge suggested. "But tell me what happened? Where is Christo pher? How was he killed?" Tope said gravely: "Why?all right, Mr. Ledforge. I'll tell you: I found your brother under a bed in a cabin called Faraway, at a roadside camp called Dewain's Mill, up above here. He was dead when I found him. "He had on an old sweater and a pair of overalls. His hands and feet were tied with wire. He was gagged and blindfolded with tape. His hands and feet and head were muffled in pieces of blanket. "He'd been alive when he was put there. He died of a ruptured appendix. "He'd been brought there in a coupe belonging to Holdom, by a man and a woman. I found their tracks. Afterward the man killed the woman?it was Mrs. Kell? and left her in the car and ran the car into an old quarry up in the hills. We found the man's tracks there." Ledforge made an explosive ges ture. "HideousI" he cried. "Incred ible!" "Pretty bad." Tope assented; he added implacably: "And my notion is that you did it, Ledforge." Ledforge shook his head abstract edly. He seemed not to resent this accusation. "Wait a minute, please," he said. "Of coarse, I know noth ing of what happened up be re; but I can make a guess. Let me think a minute." Tope nodded, and- waited, and calmly filled and lighted hit straight black pipe; at last Ledforge lifted his head. "It's part guess and part certainty," he confessed. "But I think I see the answer." The fire had burned low. "I'll take off this wet coat," he remarked, and stood before them in flannel shirt, vest, khaki trousers and light woods shoes with rubber soles; a spare, gray, small old man. "It was Holdom," he began then. "I can see what was in his mind, what he tried to do." And he explained; "A week ago, I would have been as mystified as you, because I had always trusted Holdom. But I know now that he was a thief and a rascal. I learned last Monday that he had been using my collateral to trade in an account under my name, to sell my own stocks short. I have already report ed the matter to the Exchange au thorities." He paused, but no one spoke. So he went on: "Holdom did not know, you under stand, that there were two of us; Christopher and I. "Now gentlemen, Christopher was sick. Being a doctor, he of course knew that he had a bad appendix; but he was devoted to me. For him to go to a New York hospital would have been to risk the discovery of our duality. He was willing to take some risk to avoid that, so he de cided to come up to Holdom's home here for the operation. Mrs. Kell had been a trained nurse. Dr. Na son would come from Boston to do the operation, in the rooms above Holdom's garage. "Christopher himself, pretending to be me, made all these arrange ments with Holdom; so Holdom would naturally suppose that I was about to be incapacitated for a week or ten days. Perhaps he thought I was likely to die. Perhaps he al ready intended my death. At any rate, before leaving New York?and trading in my name?he sold my stocks short." He hesitated, then continued: "So they left New York on Friday morn ing, Christopher and Holdom, and Kell driving. I protested, but Chris topher assured me the drive would do him no harm. Before starting, he took a sedative in order to sleep, to escape the pain." Tope prompted him. "And you say you can figure what happened?" "I can guess," Ledforge agreed. "When Christopher fell asleep in the car?Kell was Holdom's man, of course?they laid Christopher on the floor, and Holdom too got down out of sight, so no one saw them as Kell drove past the house to the garage. "Holdom was completely unscru pulous. He dressed Christopher in that old gray sweater and overalls, gagged him, swaddled his hands and feet and head in pieces of the dog blanket so that he could make no noise, and stuffed him into the rum ble of the coupe. "He sent Kell away with orders to meet him later at some agreed spot; then Holdom put on a pair of Kell's shoes. Their prints would be easily recognized because at the heel-plates. He knew that when Christopher's body was identified as me, Vade?because of his threat ening letters to me, and because he liwsi there at the Mill?would be at flm suspected; but if Vade were exonerated and Kell's footprints found, then Kell would be the next suspect. "So then Holdom and Mrs. Kell? she was his mistress?drove to De wain's Mill, in the coupe, with Christopher hidden in the rumble." He looked at them all, challtnglng ly. "Doesn't that fit the facts?" he demanded. "Well, so far," Tope agreed. "But ?go on!" "They took a cabin for the night, and Holdom hid Christopher where you found him. But Mrs. Kell must have protested at the inhumanity of leaving him there alive, till Holdom, in rage or desperation, strangled her!" He hesitated, and the color for an instant left his cheeks as though that word had shocked and fright ened him. "It's sickening!" he ex claimed then, hurriedly. "But?aft er that, Holdom would go on to dis pose of the car, and of Mrs. Kell's body, and meet Kell, and make Kell give him a rap on the bead and leave him to be found beside the road. As an alibi!" And he said in a low furious tone: "It is incredible; and yet something like that must be the truth!" He finished, and Joe Dane started to speak, but Adam touched his arm and hushed him. Tope rapped his pipe on his heel, chucked the ashes on the hearth. "We showed Kell the dead man," he remarked. "He said it wasn't you!" "Kell would lie, of course. To save himself." "Yes, I figured that," Tope as sented ; but he said then in a sort of irritation: "Shucks, Mr. Ledforge, all that's too complicated for me. Holdom was in it, sure; but my idea has been, right along, that what ever Holdom did, he did because you told him tO." "I?" Ledforge cried angrily. "Why should I tell Holdom?" (TO BK CONTINUED) t.l.. k. '|MPROVedli?lm"" UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday i chool Lesson By HAROLD L LUNDQU1ST. D. D. Of Tbm Moody B1U* Institute of Chicago* BckMrif by Woatorn Newspaper Union. Lesson for March 3 Unoo wbltcU and Scrtptura text* m lceted and copyrighted by lnWrnaUanal Council of Reuglom education; ujod by parmlaalon. A PEOPLE FINDING A HOMELAND LESSON TEXT: Joahua 1:1-4: 0:1-11. MEMORY SELECTION: Thou ahalt bless the Lord thy God lor the good land which ha hath given thee.?Deuteronomy 1:10. God is the Lord of nations as well as of homes, and he is concerned that those who honor him in their homes have opportunity to serve him in their national life. This was true in a special way with Israel, but it is also true of us today. Ready to enter the Promised . Land, the people had to part with their greit leader, Moses, who was : not permitted to enter. The time comes when even the mightiest of men fall, but life must go on and new leadarship must be found. I. The Changed Leader (Josh. 1: 1-4). 1. Workers Die?God's Work Goes On (vv. 1, 2). God buries his workmen at the end of their day of labor, but God's work goes on. The people had be come attached to Moses and had learned to trust his leadership, even though they often murmured. With his death we might have assumed that there would be a letdown, but that was not in God's plan. The Lord works through men. He gives them abilities and uses them for his glory, often in a way which astonishes them and others. But let them not become proud, for God has someone to take their place when they are gone. They are not indispensable. 2. The Need Is the Same, So Is the Blessing (w. 8, 4). The promise given to Moses was still good. God's promises are al ways goo. Between our first scripture and this selection will be found the his tory of the conquest of the land (at least, of the larger part of it), and the division of the territory between the tribes. Years have passed quickly, and the new leader, Joshua, is now an old man, soon to go to his reward. He gathers the elders who repre sented the people and gave them good counsel for the days ahead, even as he recalls the blessings of the past. 1. God Did Help (w. 1-3). Israel had been in many hard bat tles. They had gone through the tri als of pioneer days in a new and unfamiliar land. Now they were established and at peace. Perhaps they were recalling their mighty ex ploits anil their own sacrificial ef forts. Joshua reminds them that it was God who fought for them (v. 3). We need just such a reminder in our land today. 2. God Will Help (w. 4, 8). Joshua had a word of encouragement for the days ahead. There was much yet to be done. The land had not been fully taken. He reminded them of God's help in the past, so that they would depend on it in the fu ture. It is one mark of a great man that he looks beyond the end of his own short existence and plans for the future. What about the future? Joshua reminded them that every blessing they had received, every victory they had won, everything had come from the hand of God. There and there alone was their hope for the future. And it was enough! 3. Help Yourself (w. 8-11). To keep true In the land where their neighbors engaged In idol worship and all manner of immorality re quired definite action on the part of Israel. They were not to deviate in the slightest from God's way, "to the right bund or to the left" (v^i), for a little beginning in the wrong direction winds up in awful depar ture from him. They wire not even to swear by the heathen gods, not even to men tion them. They were to "cleave" to the Lord, a graphic presentation of the close relation between God and his people. There are many thoughts here which can be profitably applied to our daily lives. Faith in God ceils for stalwart action and separated living far him. News/^ Behind! the^mS By PaULMaLLoTT^"^ Released by Western Newspaper Union. STASSEN DDE TO LEAD PRESIDENTIAL POLLS WASHINGTON. ? Politic! it warming up. The young men and women are coming back from for eign fields plainly displeased at the way things are go ing. Some tell me Uncle Sam is known in many for eign nations as "Uncle Sugar." They tell of waste, inefficiency, or throwing our mon ey around, and talk of getting into poll tics. The ballot list Dewey this fall will con tain a lot of veter ans who think they can do something in congress, if they get home in time. Certainly the group displeas ure of this 12 million voting mass, now fairly well congealed in ideas, threatens a complete overturn of existing legislative personalities?if not the whole political complexion of affairs. REPUBLICANS ORGANIZE FOR CONGRESS SEATS Scenting opportunity, the Re publicans are getting bnsy. The national committee has, for the first time, assumed responsi bility in the congressional cam paign (committees of congress men usually head the effort). The staff at headquarters has been about trebled to create 11 departments, one of which has started a monthly newspaper with a circulation to date of 230,MM. A state quota system of raising money (like the Red Cross) has been started, and a small contributions mail cam paign has been launched, In or der to take financing away from the gentlemen of bulk contribu tions, known In the political trade as "fat eats." All this has been done by Gov ernor Dewey's man, Herbert Brown ell Jr., the committee chairman, who says his drive is to "elect a Republican congress." I hear, incidentally, Dewey has told friends he is not in the running for 1948. He points out to them mat Republican* have never in history re nominated a de feated candidate, which waa news to me% Dewey would like the nomination apparently, but does not expect it. Personally I expect much will rest on whether he is re elected governor this year. Last time he won against Bricker a split, and it la possible he will have more for midable opposition this time. If he wins, it trill be said no one could have beaten Roosevelt in a war year, and he will be back in the running. ' SUPPORT BEING GIVEN STASSEN CAMPAIGN The Stassen grasp for leadership la finding form, in the way of or ganization and money. A St. Paul man is on the road traveling for him. The same man was high in the Willkie entourage, and there are further indications that the New York crowd which backed Willkie already has its hand in pocket for the former Minnesota governor to be next President. They have been conspicuous at the speakers tables where Stassen spoke. A weekly magazine has published a report that the ex-Lord and Taylor execu tive, Walter Hoving, who was ac tive In the last Dewey headquar ters, will eventually play Hanna for Stassen. The Cowles brothers, pub lishers, appear to be running the in visible bandwagon so far, particu larly brother Mike in Iowa. My Re publican sources say he has been hiring people. All this inside activity has caused many who have observed it to sur mise that Staaaen will keep on his speaking tours (he has not yet tak en a Job that I have heard), the organizing will increase in tempo and when the Gallup polls start, Stassen win be on top. Many think he will remain there. My own opinion is he will have his main trouble keeping in the limelight without a political office, now that he has started so early. Willkie killed himself doing it. Bricker is a food bet to come to the senate this year, the in-know ing Republicans agree. With Staa sen he is at the top of private party , polls now. His '44 difficulty was that he tried to run a campaign wit) Ohio friends who had not been ac tive in politica The Dewey people had the New York know-how. Wit! the best of publicity success In hii senate race or later fat that forum his chances will depend on whethei he can get an organization to mate! the one now quickly congealing be 1 hind Stassen?or which Dewey may set up if events this year warrant SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK Youthful Puffed Sleeve Nightgown HERE is an exquisite puffed sleeve nightgown that's de lightfully simple to make and care for?it opens out flat for ironing. Use soft all-over floral prints or delicious pastels with silk, satin Cat-stltch seams on baby's sleep ing garments and underwear to hold them flat. Helps prevent needless irritation to his sensitive skin. ?e? To darn the bole in your son's sweater sleeve, baste a square of mosquito netting over the hole on the under side. This makes a firm base on which to do your mending. ?o? Clean the nnderside of rugs fre quently, for dirt works through, and insects are likely to hide un derneath. A little salt in the bottom of the skillet will keep the fat from pop ping. ?o? Screw a book into the end of your broom handle. You'll find it . handy for reaching objects on high shelves, also the window shade pull that springs to the top. And naturally you hang the broom up by its hook in order to preserve the bristles. | ?o? For cleaning tiles in the bath room and kitchen, use a soft cloth moistened with kerosene. ?o? If salt fish are soaked and cooked in milk they become much sweeter than when soaked in water. ?a? Paint wooden knitting needles and crochet hooks with a coat of colorless nail polish the minute they begin to get rough or scratchy. Smooths them off. Make sure polish is thoroughly dry and hard before putting needles to use again. ?o? Shoes that are stiff after being worn in the rain will become quite pliable if vaseline is well rubbed in with a soft rag. ?o? Should the load ticking of a clock in the sick room bother the pa tient, place a glass bowl over the timepiece. r velvet ribbons, or lor a trous eau gift, glamorous white satin 'ith wide blue satin ribbons. ? ? ? To obtain complete pattern and flniab g instructions for the Round Necked ?ht?own (Pattern No. 9818) sixes 14. 18, I. Included, send 16 cents In coin, your ime. address and pattern number. Send your orders to: SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 1158 Sixth Are. New York, N. Y. Enclose 16 cents for Pattern. No Name Address War Pensions Besides the $312,000,000 in pen ons which the United States gov rnment now pays annually to le 587,000 veterans and depend nts of veterans of the First World ar, it still pays $155,000,000 each ear to some 225,000 pensioners [ the Mexican war. Civil war and panish-American war. SON-IN-LAW AND DAD ARE REGULAR No More Constipation Now ?They Eat Famous Cereal Constipated? Harsh laxatives got you feeling down? Then read this sincere, unsolicited letter: "I ni trabbd wttk eonetipwloa Sw year*?until 1 itartsd catinc an oobm mt K LLLOGCS ALL-BRAN ewsry day. Nmr have any trouble now. Told my father-in law about It. Now he takes ALL-BRAN and baa the same results as I do. Be As tt years youny." N. Mavaos. 18 BsreHy Street, Mctbuen. Mssa. If yonr trouble is constipation due to lack of bulk in the diet, von may never have to take another laxative?if you eat an ounce of KELLOGG *3 ALL-BRAN every day and drink plenty of water. Try it for ten days. If not completely satisfied, send the empty carton to Kellogg*! of Battle Creek and get double year money back. ALL-BRAN Is net a purgative. It's one of nature's finest sources of gentle-acting bulk, which helps promote normal taxation! Ifs a wholesome cereal made from the vital outer layers of wheat. Eat ALL-BRAN every day either as s cereal or in muffins. Get ALL-BRAN at your gro cer's. Made by Kellogg's of Battle Creek and Omaha. "666 COLD PREPARATIONS UQUtO.TAM.EIS. SALVE. NOK MIR CAUTION-USE ONLY AS UUUM? A fanoHta bo?tbold ?tieaptk dw? log and Uaat for M yeara?flaMt BALSAM OF MYRKHI It , I 1 ?oothiac f?to rcfiesra the aareaaaa and ache at o?r-?ad and Mnaad 111 Takaa the ating end itch out at bar?, acalda, in?ct bit?, oak and rry pc?on inc. wind and eon tm, * " i ad chopped (Ua. Ita aatiaeptk action laaa ahin ia cot or ti i nbaa. ^C?p^a ba^kM^iv the niaor ac. HMtfOBO Mra Co7?|i biiQL Y. SoJe ?a hare o4 I ^ |rSMfl^UlEU kilil I..WS//V Sen-Gay QBKKI , ? Whan children feel eore and ache? with a cold, rob in Ben-Gay. Watch the iniilaa aa Ben-Gay hrln^ comfort! Cortaina op to 2Vi timea mote methyl aalicytate and mantbol?famooapauwelierinf agents that every doctor H knows?than Sea other widely offered robins. MM Ben-Gay was especially developed for children.