3?T THE CAROLINA WATCIAN, SALISBUBY, R. Cl I The Real Man By FRANCIS LYNDE (Copyright by Chas. J. MONTAGUE SMITH, LATE OF LAWRENCEVILLE, DISCOV ERS THAT AS "JOHN SMITH," A CONSTRUCTION CAMP WORKER, HE CAN T CONCEAL HIS PAST LIFE " Synopsis J. Montague Smith, cashier of the Lawrenceville Bank and Trust company, bachelor society leader engaged to marry Verda Richlander, heiress, is wrongfully accused of dishonesty by Watrous Dunham, his employer, and urged to be a scapegoat for the crooked accuser. Smith strikes Dunham, leaves him for dead and flees the state. Het turns up a tramp some time later at anirrigation dam con struction camp in the Rocky mountains and as John Smith gets a rough job. - CHAPTER IV Continued. "I'm afraid he'd have to loosen up on his record a little before we could bring him In here. Badly as we're needing a money man, we can hardly afford to put a 'John Smith' into the saddle at least not without knowing what his other name used to be." "No ; of course not. I guess, after all, he's only a 'lame duck,' like a good many, of the rest of them. Day before yesterday, Burdell, the deputy sheriff, was out at the camp looking the gangs over for the fellow who broke into Lannigan's place last Saturday night. When he came into the office Smith was busy with an estimate, and Bur dell went up and touched him on the shoulder, just to let him know that it was time to wake up. Suffering cats! It took three of us to keep him from breaking Burdell in two and throwing him out of the window I" "That looks rather bad." was the president's comment. Col. Dexter Bald win had been the first regularly elect ed sheriff of Timanyoni county in the early days and he knew the symptoms. "Was Burdell wearing his star where it could be seen?" The engineer nodded. "What explanation did Smith make?" "Oh, he apologized like a gentleman, and said he was subject to little nerv ous attacks like that when anybody touched him unexpectedly. He took Burdell over to Pete .SImm's shack sa loon and bought him a drink. Perkins, the timekeeper, says he's going to get a megaphone so he can give due notice in advance when he wants to call Smith's attention". The colonel pulled out a drawer in the desk, found his box of diplomatic cigars and passed it to the engineer, saying: "Light up a sure-enough good one, and tell me what you think Smith has been doing back yonder in the other country." Williams toolP the cigar but he shied at the conundrum. "Ask me something easy," he said, "I've stacked up a few guesses. He's from the middle West as the Bible says, his 'speech betrayeth' him and he's had a good job of some kind; the kind that required himo keep abreast of things. If there's anything in looks, you'd say he wasn't a thief or an em bezzler,, and yet it's pretty apparent that he's been used to handling money In chunks and making it work for Its living. I've put it up that there's a woman in It. Perhaps the other fel low got In his way, or came up behind him and touched him unexpectedly, or something of that sort. Anyway, I'm not going to believe he's a crooked crook until I have to." Colonel Baldwin helped himself to one of his own cigars, and the talk went back to -business. In the. irri gation project, Williams was a stock holder as well as chief of construction, and Baldwin had more than once found' him a safe adviser. There was need for counsel The Timanyoni Ditch company was in a rather hazard ous condition financially, and the presi dent and Williams rarely met without coming sooner or later to a threshing out of the situation. The difficulties were those which are apt to confront a small and local enter prise when It is so unfortunate as to get In the way of larger undertakings. Colonel Baldwin, and a group of his neighbors on the north side of the river, were reformed cattlemen and horse breeders. Instead of drifting farther west In advance of the incom ing tide of population following the coming oi he railroad, they had availed thomselves of their homestead rights and had taken up much of the grass land in the favorable valleys, Ir rigating it at first with water taken out of the river In private or neighbor hood ditches. , Later on came the sheep-feeding period, and after that the utilization of larger crop-raising areas. The small Her "Boy" Was Not Lost. - The last good-by kiss and the home coming embrace must be given on the upper platform Of the Pennsylvania station In New York. The company refuses to allow people without a ticket to pass the entrance and exit gates to the train platform. The war Is the excuse given for the new rule. Until recently anyone who wanted to see a friend off or meet one was not refused. Now ho one is given permis sion. The new rule Is all right, but the particular exits from the incoming Scribner's Sons) ditches proving inadequate for these, Colonel Baldwin had formed a stock company among his neighbors In the grass lands and his friends In Brewster for the building of a substantial dam in the eastern hills. The project had seemed simple enough In the beginning. The stock was sold for cash and each stockholder would be a participating user of the water. Williams, who had been a United States reclamation man before he came to the Timanyoni, had made careful estimates, and the stock subscription provided money enough to cover the cost of the dam and the main ditch. After some little bargaining, the dam site and the overflow land for the reservoir lake had been secured, and the work was begun. Out of a clear sky, however, came trouble and harass ment. Alien holders of mining claims in the reservoir areaturned up and demanded damages. Some few home steaders who had -premised to sign quitclaims chanced their minds and sued for relief, and after the work was well under way it appeared that there was a cloud on the "title of the dam site itself. All of these clashings were car ried into court, and the rancher pro moters found themselves confronting invisible" enemies and obstacle-raisers at every turn. "We've got to go in deeper, colonel ; there is nothing else to do." was the engineer's summing up of the matter al the close of' the conference. "The snow is melting pretty rapidly on the range now, and when we get the June rise well stand to lose everything we have if we can't keep every wheel turning to get ready for the high water." Baldwin was holding his cigar be tween his fingers and scowling at It as if It had mortally offended him. "Assessments on the stock, you mean?" he said. "I'm afraid our crowd won't stand for that. A good part of it 1st ready to lie down in the harness right now." "How about a bond Issue?" asked the engineer. "What do we, or any of us, know about bond Issues? Why. we knew barely enough about the business at the start to chip In together and buy us a charter and go to work on a plan a little bit bigger than the neighborhood ditch idea. You couldn't float bonds in Timanyoni Park, and we're none of us foxy enough to go East and float 'em." "T guess that's right, too," admitted Williams. "Besides, with the stock gone off the way It has, It would take a mighty fine-haired financial sharp to sell bonds." "What's that?" demanded the presi dent. "Who's been selling any stock?" "Buck Gardner, for one; and that man Boiling, up at the head of Little creek, for another. Maxwell, the rail road superintendent, told me about it, and he says that the price offered, and accepted, was thirty-nine." "Dad burn a cuss with a yellow streak in him!" rasped the Missouri colonel. "We had a fair and square agreement among ourselves that If any body got scared he was to give the rest of us a chance to buy him out. Who bought from these "welshers?" "Maxwell didn't know that. He said it was done through Klnzle's bank. From what I've heard on the outside, I'm inclined to suspect that Crawford Stanton was the buyer." "Stanton, the real-estate man?" "The same." Again the president stared thought fully at the glowing end of his cigar. "There's another of the confounded mysteries," he growled. "Who is Craw ford Stanton, and what Is he here for? I know what he advertises, but every body in Brewster 'knows that he hasn't made a living dollar in real estate since he came here last summer. Wil liams, do you know, I'm beginning to suspect that there Is a mighty big nigger In our little wood pile?" "You mean that all these stubborn holdups have been bought and paid trains are so arranged that unless one wears a reflector the persons they are to meet will escape them. There are two stairs from each track and an elevator between. Yesterday a little old lady who had been waiting to meet her boy, was horror-stricken be cause he had been swallowed up In the arriving throng without seeing her. A policeman and several guards began a search for the lost one. He was found on the outside of the station. The "boy," however, could not have lost himself very well, for he was for? Tooll remember that is whaf oiujr oiuruucs tneu to ten us when the first of the missing mining-claim owners began to shout at us." "Starbuck has a long headr and what he doesn't know about ininlng.clalms in this part of the country wouldn't fill a very big book. I remember he said there had never been any prospecting ! done in the upper Timanyoni gulches and nowyou'd think half the people in the United States- had been noting arouna up mere with a pick and shovel at one time or another. But it was a thing that Starbuck told me no longer ago than yesterday that set me - to thinking," Baldwin went on. "As you know, the old Escal ante Spanish. grant corners over in the western part of this park. When the old grants were made. they were ruled off on the map with out reference to mountain ranges or other natural barriers. Williams nodded. ' "Well, as I say, one corner of the Es calante reaches over the Hophras and out into the park, covering about eight or ten - square miles of the territory just beyond us on our side of the river. Starbuck told me yesterday that a big TT - A 1 A. eastern colonization company had got a bill through congress alienating that tract." . , The chief of construction- bounded out of his chair and began to walk the floor. "By George!" he said; and again: "By George! That's what we're. up against, colonel! Where will those fellows get the wafer for. their land? There Is no site for a dam lower down than ours, and, anyway, that land lies too high to be watered by any thing but a high-line ditch !" , "Nice little brace game, isn't it?" growled Baldwin. "If we hadn't been a lot of hayseed amateurs, we might have found out long ago that someone was running in a cold deck on us. What's your notion? Are we done up, world without end?" Williams laugh was grim. "What we need, colonel, is to go out on the street and yell for a doctor," he said. "It's beginning to look as if we had acquired a pretty bad case of ma lignant strangle-itis." x Baldwin ran his fingers through his hair and admitted that he had lost, his sense of humor. "This Eastern crowd Is trying to freeze us out, to ge'our dam and reser-f voir and ditch rights for their Esca lante scheme. When they do, they'll turn around and sell us water at fifty dollars an inch, or something like that!" "What breaks my heart is that we haven't been able to surround the sure enough fact while there was still time to do something." lamented the ex reclamation man. "The first thing we know, Stanton will own a majority of the stock and be voting us all out 'of a job. You'll have to come around to. my suggestion, after all, and advertise for a doctor." .It was said of the chief of construction that he would have joked on his death-bed, and, as a fol lower for the joke, he added: "Why don't you call Smith in and give him the Job?" "You don't really mean that. Wil liams, do you?" growled the colonel. "No. I didn't mean it when I .said It," was the engineer's admission ; "I. was only trying to get a rise out of you. But really, colonel, on second thought I J don't know but It Is .worth considering. As I say, Smith seems to know the money game from start to finish. What is better still, he is a fighter from the word go what you might call a joyous fighter. Suppose you drive out tomor row or nextv day and pry into him a little." The rancher-president had relapsed once more into the slough of discour agement. "You are merely gmhbing for hand holds, Bartley as I was a minute a'go. We are in a bad row of stumps when we can sit here and talk seriously about roping down a young hobo and putting him into the financial harness. Let's go around to Frascati's and eat before you go back to camp. It's bread time, anywayt" The chief of construction said no more about his joking. suggestion at the moment, but when they wTere walking around the square to the Brewster Dei monlco's he went back to the dropped subject in all seriousness, saying : "Just the same, I wish you could know Smith and size him up as I have. I can't help believing, some way, that he's all to the good." CHAPTER V. The Specialist. Though the matter of calling in an expert doctor of finance to diagnose the alarming symptoms in Timanyoni ! ditch had been left indeterminate In the f talk between Colonel Baldwin and him self, Williams did not let it go entirely by default. On the day following the Brewster office conference the engineer sent for Smith, who was checking the output of the crushers at the quarry, anil n Hfla laai V c K4-rt4- uuu n ..niv, luiw mc ucuci 111 all i presented himself at the door of the I corrugated-iron shack which served as a field offlce'for thp hif I Williams looked the cost-cutter over as he stood In the doorway. Smith was thriving and. expanding handsomely in the new environment. He had let his beard grow and it was now long enough to be trimmed to a point. The travel- fifty, and carried considerable avoir dupois tissue. Guanches. The early inhabitants of the Canary Islands, known as the Guanches, had attained some progress in civilization, as shown by remains still extant.. No doubt they were of Berber stock. The present inhabitants of the islands are mainly of Spanish blood, though it is said the dunnche element may be de frertpl Tli.i fni.-fi.K. i . " Known to I the ancients bm Hit y fell out of the ifen Uoj hes had bee 5aed ft working khaklt with lace-boots and lag gings, and the campaign hat of the en gineers. Though he had been less than a sfionth on the Job, he was already be giaiiing to tan arid toughen' under the heathy outdoor work-? to roughen, as wJ, his late fellow members of the Ljgtyrenceville Cotillon club might have sa, since he had fought three pitched battles. with as many of the camp bul: lie and had In each of them proved himself a man of his hands' who could np only take punishment, but could hammer an opponent swiftly and neat ly Jjiito any desired state of subjection. , ; fcorae in here and sit down ; I want to&ilk to you,", was the way -Williams befijan It; and after SmiLSi had, found aijhalr the chief went on; '"Say, Smith, yoji're too good a man for anything I've goffer you here. Haven't y'04 realized thWt?" - iinith pulled a memorandum book frrn his hip pocket, and ran his eye ovp the private record he had been keeping. la've shown you how to effect a lew lle savings which total up something lllf 15 per cent of your cost of produc tion afTd operation," he said. '"Don't yo-l think I'm earning, my wages?" That's all right; I've been keeping tarn too, -and I know what you're do In But you are not beginning to earn wR3t you ought to. either for vourself 01: the company," put in the chief shrewdly. And then: "Loosen up, .Sih, anil tell me something about yourself. Who are you, and where do yo come from, and what sort, of a job hae you been holding down?" .iifmlth's reply was. as surprising as It w$s seemingly Irrelevant. fIf you're not too busy, Mr. Williams, I oess ou'd better make out my tlme cjck," he said quietly. dfl suppose1 by that you mean that y9k'll 4iuit before you will consent to on up on your record ?" he assumed. I'You'v guessed it," said the man wo had sealed the book of his past. Ikgain Williams took a little time. It ws discouraging to have his own and tlfe colonel's preflgurings as to Smith's p6t?bablestate and standing so prompt lyiverifled. 'I suppose you know the plain infer-. enKe you're leaving, when you say a tiabg like that?" . - Umlth made the sign? of assent. "It lej;ves you entirely at liberty to finish o the story to suit yourself,' he ad mted, adding: "The , back numbeis -Tiny back numbers are my own, Mr. Wftliams. I've kept a file of them, as erybody does, but I don't have to pduce it on request." fOf course, there's nothing compul sory about your producing it. But un-i 1 you -are. what they call In thisj country a 'crooked' crook, you are striding in your own light. You have supi a staving good head for figures ai33 finances that it seems a pity for 3TGa to U wasting it here on an under graduate's job in cost-cutting. Any ycing fellow just out pf a technical sqgool could do what you're doing in tht way of paring down expenses." p"he cost-cutter's -smile was mildly insgredulous. Nobdy seemed to be doing it be- lye I came,'1 he offered. no," Williams allowed,' "that's the fawt. To tell the Dlaln truth, we've had blpjer things to wrestle wyIth ; and we nae tnem yer, ior tnat matter enougn ofrjhem to go all around the. job twice e In a bowknot." gFinances?' queried Smith, feeling ojgie of the back-number instincts stir- ri wi,thin hlni. jThe chief engineer nodded ; then he locked up with a twinkle in his closely, self gray eyes. "If you'll tell me why ym tried to kill Burdell the other day, mjybe I'll ,open up the record our refidrd for you." Jrhis time the cost-cutter's smile was g)d-naturedly derisive, and it ignored tia reference to Burdell. jjSYou don't have to open up your prd for me; It's the talk of the ami). You people are undercapltal tzgd t,o boil it down into one word. Isfl't that about the way jit sizes up?" That is the way it has turned out; though we had capital enough" to begin wfih. We've been bled to death by dhage. suits." mith shook his head. "Why haven't yy &Ired- a first-class . attorney," Mr. Iiams?" iWe've had the best we could find, btft'the ottier fellows have beaten us tovjt, every time. But the legal end of itfjiasri't been the whole thing or the biggest part of it. What we are need ing most is a man who knows a little something about corporation fights and hIMi finance." And at this the engi- ner forgot J:he Smith disabilities, real orjnferential, and went on to explain indetail the peculiar helplessness of th Timanyoni company as the antag dnjs'tjOf the as yeft unnamed land and lrjpgation trust. ' Irlr i Some real opportunities come o "John Smith," but the fear pf detection and capture worries rhim deeply. Some big develop jrments are given in the next in ifstallment. (TO BE CONTINUED.) knowledge qf the Europeans until the twelfth or thirteenth century. The wre claimed by the Spanish In the fourteenth centry. By the end of the fifteenth century the Spaniards had sbdued the islands entirely, and they agnost- extirpated them at a later period. ;pme-saving is the chief feature of yiew. ironing board cover that can be dSckly strapped . to clamps penna tly attached to the underside a board. - .. 1:1 jflBGNEK SHEEP PROFITABLE ON FARM More Can Well Be Maintained in Addi tion to Live Stock That Are Already Kept Thereon. (By W. F. BAIRD.) While It is not my purpose to try tn induce stockmen to abandon cattle and pork production and engage ex j clusively in sheep raising, I do claim that from ten to one hundred more sheep could be profitably maintained on a very large portion of our farms Well-Bred Specimen. in addition to the live stock that are already kept thereon. For a period of 23 years I have been engaged in gen eral farming and stockraising where I now reside. I have been raising horses, cattle and hogs , during this en tire period, and for the last 16 years I have kept from 100 to 125 breeding ewes of the mutton type. I have en deavored to produce as good stock of all kinds as I could, and to keep them in the most profitable manner. I have found no other class of live stock more profitable In dollars and cents than the sheep. Aside from this fact, I find that I can now keep as much other stock as formerly in addition to the sheep. , , Some of my fields produce twlce-'.a& much grain as formerly, and my grass lands are much more productive than they were. There Is no great mystery connected with the care of the farm flock, but there Is more to do than to purchase a flock and turn them out to shift for themselves without proper at tention' and shelter, if one expects to add to his bank account, Costly barns are not a necessity, but some sort of a shed that will keep them dry Is needed. Let your roofs be constructed of shingles, boards, iron or any mate rial that will keep off cold rains, sleet, etc. I prefer a shed extending east and west, open or partly so on the south side, so arranged that h can be Prize Mutton and Wool Sheep. closed If bad storms occur. Give plenty of pure air, a dry place to lie down, and all the sunshine possible, thereby adding to the comfort and thrift of the flock and the profits of the owner. - HARVEST CROPS WITH SWIIE Results Given of Experiment Conduct ed by Ohio Station Best Gains Made on Clover. In tests made by the Ohio station three lots of pigs were fed 30 days as follows : Lot 1, ear corn and clov er pasture ; lot 2, allowed to hog down rye, and lot 3, ear corn and rape pas ture. In addition all lots were fed approximately one-fourth pound of tankage daily per pig. The respective lots made average daily gains of 0.82, 0.57 and 0.75 pounds per pig, and con sumed, aside from pasture, 2.66, 6.34, and 2.91 pounds of feed per pound of gain. Lot 2 was then put in with lot 1 on clover and lot 3 remained on the rape, where the pigs were fed for 26 days. The pigs on clover made an av erage daily gain per pig of 0.75 pounds, consuming 3.64 pounds of feed aside from pasture per pound of gain, and the lot on clover, 0.87 pounds gain, consuming 3.16 pounds of feed per pound of gain. PEDIGREE OF DIRECT VALUE Gives Record of Ancestors of Animals for Five or Six Generations "Like Produces Like.M The pedigree Qf an animal Is a rec ord of Its ancestors, or family. The ordinary pedigree usually shows the ancestors for five or six generations. The Value of the pedigree lies in the fundamental iaw of nature that "like produces like" DONT SELL BREFDING STOCK Fancy Prices Offered for Brood Sow or Cow Should Not Tmpt Farmer at This Time. Don't let the temptation of high prices now being offered for live stock or undue fear of the prices asked for many popular breed alslead yon into selling a breed'ng cow or a brood sow that will drop the golden calf or Utters. ft? WOMAN HOW IN PERFECT HEALTH What Carrie From Reading a Pinkham Adver tisement. Patereon, N. J. -"I thank you for the Lydia E. Pinkham remedies as thpv have made me weU and healthy. Some time ago I felt so run down, had pains in my back and side, was very irregular, tired, nervous, had such bad dreams, did not feel like eat ing and had short breath. I read your advertisement in the newspapers and decided to try a bottle of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. It worked from the first bottle, so I took a second and a third, also a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham 's Blood Purifier, and now I am just as well as any other woman. I ad vise every woman, single or married, who is troubled with any of the afore said ailments, to try your wonderful Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier and I am sure they will help her to get rid of her troubles as they did me." Mrs. Elsie J. Van deb Sande, 36 No.' York St, Paterson, N. J. Write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicint Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass, if you need special aJvice. GREEN MOUNTAIN TREATMENT Standard remedy for fifty years and result of many yean experience in treatment at throat and lung diseases by Dr. J. H. Guild. Tree Sample and Practical Treatise on Asthma, its caupe treatment, etc., sent upon re quest. 25c. 81 .00 at druggists. J. H. GUILD CO., Rupert, VI. iflSSTfPMUH's P (JpllTonic Sold for 47 years. For Malaria, Chills ajid Fever. Also a Fine General strengthening Tonic. Os and SI.OO X M urm MINI A New Place for Orderlies. There is evidence that life in the army has Its humorous side even in war time. In a story that- recently went the rounds of the English press, a newly appointed officer who was making his first visit to the mess, with the usual inquiry of "any complaints?" arrived at one mess somewhat earlier than he was expected, and the order ly of the day, being taken by surprise, and in his shirt sleeves, dived uuder the table to save a reprimand. "Any complaints?" asked the offi cer. The corporal, grasping the situation at once, answered for the absent or derly. "None, sir." "Who is this?" askd the officer,, sud denly catching sight of the. orderly un der the table. The corporal again rose to the situa tion. : "Orderly of the day, sir," he an swered. "Oh !" said the officer, and passed on. The next mess were quite prepared, with the orderly, spick and span, standing at attention at the head of the table. "Any complaints?" "None, sir," answered the orderly. The officer looked him well over. "And who are you?" he asked. "Orderly of the day, sir." "Then why the dickens aren't you under the table?" was the unexpected retort. Idleness Makes a Fortune. "If you sit idly you will lose money every minute," is a liberal paraphrase of a well-known Japanese proverb and serves as a protest against idleness, but the Tokyo Hochi cites the case of the great Buddha at Nara, which, despite Inaction, Is reaping a fortune. During the year ending June 25 the Buddha received 351,000 visitors, who paid admission fees aggregating $9,350. The exaction of a fee to visit the big Buddha began .In 1911, since which time $127,500 gate money has been re ceived. Horse Chestnuts as Food. An effort is being made to adapt the horse chestnuts to the human dietary. The nuts are more than half starch and sugar, with some protein and fat, and are nutritious. Their value chiefly depends on the elimination of the bit ter elements and the irritating saponi Hke glucosides. South African railways in 1918 will expend $50,815,000, It is estimated. Portugal this year produces 376,831, 577 quarts of grape wine. "No bowl is too big when it holds pst. Toasties AS TH1A t I I m H