A Tale. of the.. Anglo-Indian SecretService YOUNG 1 MISTLEYj By.. Henry..... Seton. Merriman. 11 CHAPTER XVII. vt~fv\£tiiiueil. With a gesture which was almost a command, he bid her resume her seat, and then in a masterful tone he spoke. “Mademoiselle,” he said. “I must ask you to leave England at once. You will return home, and im mediately send in your resignation to the Society of Patriots on account of your approaching marriage with Monsieur Meyer, which will disquali fy you as a member. Have I your promise that you will leave here— if not to-morrow, as soon os possi ble? I ask this of you, though it is in my power to command. And now 1 beg of you. for the sake of Ivan Meyer, for the sake of all you love on earth, to give up forever your connection with any political society. Politics is not for women; it is a man's work—leave it to men. Every woman who has meddled with it has brought misery to herself and sor row to those who loved her.” The girl slowly raised her eyes to his, and watched his earnest face ac he spoke. There must have been something strange in her gaze, for the voun.g fellow winced beneaHi it. It had never been his lot to look on gen win boneless misery before; hr. he instinctively n cognized what he saw in those sad blue eyes. “I will go,” said Marie, softly. Then Winyard mechanically moved toward the door. With a silent in tdina ion of the head he left them. Meyer alone returned the salutation, but did not stir from his position near to Marie Bakovitch. “Yofi see,” lie whispered, “she is going mad:" In all and through all Winya. Mistley was eminently practical. “Are you quite alone?” he asked. “Have you no friends in England.’ Idas she no maid, even, with her?” “Yes, she has a maid who is now sleeping in her room. She is young, but intelligent.” “You must rouse her. Let her persuade mademoiselle to go to bed. and she must remain by her side (■: - night. In the morning, if mademoi selle is better, you must get her away from Imre at once. If—if sh is worse, send to me, and my moth< will come to her—a woman will know' best what is to be done. 1 •can not understand-—anything; bri I am convinced that mademoiselle is not going mad; it is only temporary. I think it must he what is called hys teria. Have you no friends in Eng land?" “We have hut one— a Monsieur Jacobi, of London.” “Monsieur Jacobi, of London. M ho is he?” asked Winyard. “I know him very slightly; but he has been kind to Marie. He is a musician, and—and is connected with some society to which Marie be longs.” Winyard shook his head. “He is no good, then,” he said. “You must go to your Consul, that is all. If 1 America, as you desire. Oh, I arn so tired! My head is throbbing! ! will go to bed nowg Good-night. Ivan!” She rose and extended her hand to him. In a wondering manner he raised the delicate fingers to his lips ■—very tenderly, very lovingly—and held the door open while she passed out.. Then he dropped Into a chair, and sat staring stupidly at the paraffine lamp til] the distant chime of two o'clock aroused him, and sent him mechanically to his room CHAPTER XVIII. The Love Scene. Monday evening had been fixed for the first rehearsal o£ the great i dramatic entertainment; and, as the ' time came near, Lena discovered f thartlfd wSis'"growing* iriftt* a little ' nervous. vaicll I'-S iviRsiiuv, cia had naturally spoken much of the i lay, giving, in his good-natured, lazy manner, tentative opinions, and asking advice of Lena and his brotli ! or upon sundry situations to be de picted. Of all had lie fully treated, ; < xcepting this one most trying scene 1 between herself and Winyard, and this he appeared content to leave to | their discretion. i Instinctively slm knew, however, ; (ha' the part was within the scope ' 1 of her little-tried histrionic powers. ! t'he felt that she could endow it with life and semblance; and, above : 11, she understood the character of the girl she intended to represent. Such stage intercouse as she had with Charlie gave her no trouble. , lie was, indeed, supposed to be her j lover; but of an old standing in love, and therefore lees embarrassing; while the difih ill i ios that lay in Win yard’s path, of a cross and under current stream of passion, flowing into and discoloring with its villainy Lie purer and colder river of mild affection, required a tact and dra ! mafic delicacy which Lena knew him to possess. The first rehearsal bid fair to real ise the misgivings of the elder ladies, so intensely ridiculous was it after j the preliminary nervousness had quite worn off. This was the result of a deliberate plan on the part of j ihe stage-manager, whose experience j taught him that rehearsals beginning j with laughter usually finish up with ; successful acting. Winyard and i '•Mia were not in the first scene, and ; Charles idisrley's part was too unim portant to have effect on it; and i Mrs. Wright, who was prompting, cad but lb tie work to do. The sec ond scene began in the same manner. "Win. this will never do,” whis pered Charlie. "It is more like a ; | board-school examination than any- j | thing else. We must wake them up ! | somehow.” Winyard obeyed ITs brother’s in- ' | structions, and on receiving bis cue, I ; introduced two new elements into the performance—merriment and ! earnest acting, which can be com bined with meat facility. i In the midst ol all the laughter, he id a sudd* < e to Wi . d | that it would he a worthy triumph to quell the merriment, suppP :uent iug it with the opposite erne, ion, which is so near at hand. In a whisper he said to Lena; Now we will show them what we can do! ’ leaving her to understand H as she could. But soon she did understand, and aided him beyond his expectations. The difficult scene appeared to pass away as if it were a portion of their real and earnest lives—for life is as I real and earnest to the merriest of us I as it is to those who pull long faces j and suffer from dyspepsia. By the sheer force of his dramatic power he carried her away, and brought for ward the talent of expressing pathos which lie had detected when she had sung unwittingly to him. For the moment she was no longer happy | Lena W right—for assuredly nothing I could whisper of sorrow in her young • life—hut the heart-broken girl, part | nbg from her lover forever; and he, j Winyard Mist ley, acted the part as |ii he know too well the pain and j anguish he depicted so cleverly. First the laughter died away, then vanished the last smile, as these two searched deeper and deeper into every human heart for the emotions which cannot fail to be hidden some where there. It was almost an in spiration, and quite a passing stroke of genius. No word of forethought oad passed between them, and vet. no "istake could be detected—the art, M there were, was so well hidden, > craftily covered, that none could determine where it lay. The spectators were hushed into silent wonder. With the majority of | them, however, it v.as merely a piece j °f clever acting — an exhibition of I dramatic talent, such as lies in the j power of most of us, though the de • mand for it may never come. But ! to two of them it was something more. The prompter drew in a long ’ deep brra'b, and glanced nervously [ ’ >v,s d the stag -manager. Of course ;i was acting—mere acting—but Mrs. Wright did not like it. Such acting. ; sucli rehearsals were dangerous, and ! why had that gray, drawn look come ! over Charles Mistley's calm face? V hen it was over there was a mo ! rnr-.tary silence, as if each person | pr -sent were waiting, for some one ! else to speak. \\ inyard dusted some imaginary specks of carpet from his ; knees, as if family prayers had just been offered up, and proceeded to move the furniture and rearrange the improvised stage. This he did quietly and mechanically, which served very well to ease the breaking of that silence, and to allow Lena : time to come back to workaday ! speech and thought. “Well done?” said the colonel softly; and Charlie suddenly clapped his strong hands together, and spoke a little rapidly. “Splendid!” he said. “Splendid! Everybody is all that a manager could desire. We will bring down the house with applause, I am cer tain. I am very much obliged to every one for the intelligence and diligence with which they have studied their respective parts!” When at length the two brothers were left alone to smoke a last pipe before going to bed, they sat for some time without speaking. They had never been so much together, these two, and perhaps it was owing to this that they were somewhat dif ferent from other brothers in their mutual love. Mutual respect had an important place in the love they toA: toward each other, and ,as,a rfm. hrotlTerlv affection is without it. Charlie knew that his younger brother was cleverer, quicker and in every way more brilliant than him self, and he was content that it should be so. Indeed, he was proud of it—proud to be the brother of Winyard Mistley. And Winyard, the observant, was fully aware that this big, grave brother of his was a better man than himself. On this particular evening Win yard felt a strange increase of affec tion toward his brother. Never be fore had they possessed so many in terests in common; never had the thought come so prominently before his mind that too little had been said between them, too much left to the imagination. Charlie sat. by the open window of the little study in a low basket-work chair, and smoked with that good natured placidity and sense of strong repose which suited so well liis fair face and splendid stature. Winyard, seated near the screened fire-place, smoked more rapidly, as if to keep pace with his quicker thoughts, con suming more tobacco, enjoying it per haps less. The calm peacefulness of his brother’s demeanor quelled the words that were within liis heart, bid him to he as self-contained and self-suppressing, drove back the rest less eagerness of his soul, and spoke of a quiet, attendance on the course of events which was beyond bis com prehension, and had no place in his character. If Winyard could only have seen beneath that calm and indifferent ex terior. lie might have put into words the unusual thrill of brotherly love that warmed his heart. But English men are not made so, and the mo ment passed, never to return; the op portunity came no more, and Silence numbered another victim to her ruth less bow and spear. It is only on the luge that men have time and oppor- j tunity to make that, little farewell j speech which is to put a graceful fin ish to our comedy, clearing up the j doubtful passages, explaining away i misunderstandings, and mingling a | prayer for charitable remembrance j with the rumble of the curtain roller. It almost seemed as if Winyard Mist- { ley knew that this was a last chance of breaking clown that invisible bar rier which stood between his broth er's heart and Ins own, a barrier which was naught else but shyness and a habit of reserve on either side. It almost seemed as if his imagin ation could span 'he 4 00 miles of si lent, night-ridden land that lay be tween him and two gray-haired, grave - faced men, who were at that moment speaking of him within a] little curtained room beneath West minster's great tower. It seemed as if he could read the message ad- j dressed to him, and containing the mandate of an almost certain doom that lay beneath the anxious states man's hand. CHAPTER XIX. On Duty. The following morning at the breakfast table, a telegram was hand ed to Winyard, with the intimation that the messenger was awaiting the reply. The young man broke open the envelope and read 1 lie flimsy pink paper. It took him scarcely a couple of seconds to glance over it, and he proceeded immediately to fill in the address in the reply form inclosed. All at the table noticed that there was no hesitation, no' indecision in his movements, and they remembered that incident later. Then he added the single word “Yes,” and handed the reply over his shoulder to the servant. “May I trouble you for the jam?” he said, with an impudent smile to ward Mrs. Wright; .and it was only after he had helped himself largely to that condiment, that lie tossed the i 'legram to his brother at the head of the table. Life had, it seemed, for him no earnest side at all. The bite of toast which Mrs. Mist ley had just placed between her strong, short teeth tasted as no toast had ever tasted to her before. It was a peculiar mixture of absolutely no flavor and a nauseating bitterness. She knew that this telegram was im portant, and meant the end of these happy days; all her five senses were lost in one great throb of sad fore boding. (To be continued.) Avalanche’s Secret. An Alpine avalanche has just yielded up one of its secrets. Last January an enormous mass of snow fell from the mountains above Halle and a theological student named Becken perished in it. He was caught while making an ascept on ski. All efforts to recover the body f-'led at the time, but with the melt ing of the snow in tne valley it has at last been laid bare. It has been per fectly preserved ' refrigeration, but snows marks of terrible pressure.— 1 London Globe Wt APPOINTpIS MADE Appointment* For thb • Current Con fer enoe Y&»r Announced—Where the Preacher* Go. The annual session Of the Weeteru Sorth Carolina con^Onee of the Methodist Episcopal f$|ureh, South, for the current year, Mich was held at Salisbury, closed Monday night vvith the announcement of the ap pointments. The next? session will be aeld in Asheville. Tlih appointments follow: Char Brevard Street—Harold Turner (W. W. Bays, supernumerary). Calvary—J. F. Totten. Epworth and North Charlotte— A. It. Surratt. Dilworth and Big Spr.ngs—A. L. Coburn. Belmont Park—W. S. Hales. Chadwick and Seversville—W. 0. Rudisill. Ansonville—M. T. Steer'. Derita—J. H. Bradley. Lilcsville—E. J. Poe. Matthews—0. I. Hinson. Monroe Station—II. F. Chreitz bere;. North Monroe and Tcemorlee— Supplied by A. W. Rooten. Mount Zion—T). Atkins. Fnionville—A. J. Barms. Prospect—J. P. Hipps. Morven—J. A. Cook. Pineville—J. II. Bennett. Polkton—L. J. Cordell. Wadeshoro—J. H. West. Waxhaw—M. T). Hix. Weddington—\Y. F. Abernelhy. Missionary to Japan—S. A. Stew art. Principal Piedmont Industrial School—J. A. Baldwin; assistant; N. S. Ogburn. Asheville District* Presiding Elder—L W. Crawford, Asheville. Central—G. T. Rowe. Haywood Street—J. P. Rodgers. North Asheville—G. F. Eaves. Bethel—J. 1). Arnold. ' Biltmore and Beaverdam—G. IT. Cbrislonherry. Swannanoa—A. TI. Harrison. Weaverville Statio.p-G. W- Crutch field. - Weaverville C»‘f>-u>ty—G R Provett. ■Marshall—R. ,T. Pr 3t. Hot Springs—To V supplied. Hendersonville Station—J. W . Moore. Hendersonville Circuit—Supplied by ,T. B. Hvder. Bald Creek—SnpplW by L. H. Sri fill b. Burnsville—Suppl ed by H. C. Bal lard. Cane Crock—Supplied by E. G. Pusey. Riverside — Supplied by J. J. Brooks. Tvev—Supplied by J. T. Hickman. Trvon and Saluda—Supplied by Yd. L. Edwards. President of Weaverville College— L. B. Abernathy. Franklin District. Presiding Elder—R. M. Taylor, Frank1 in. Franklin Station—F. I,. Townsend. Fra’ klin Circuit- -W. H. Perry. Prvsoh Tty—J. J. Fades. Hillsboro and Sylva—C. IT. Neale. Glenville—A. N. Lewis. Hiawasseo—R. L Doggett. Macon—R. F. Atkinson. Murphy Station—G. G. Harlev. IMurpbv Circuit—-T. R. Fry. Robbinsville—Supplied by J. II. Hopkins. Websier—C. H. CB.de. Whittier-—W. P. McGhee. Andrews—C. S. Kirkpatrick. Hayesville—-A. G. T oflin. Greensboro District. Presiding Elder--S. B. Turrontine, Greensboro. West Market Street—G. TT. Het wiler. Centenary—A. T. Bell. Spring Garden—N. R. Richardson. Walnut Street—Lt \n Falls. ^ Carraway Memorial To *’ 'Jstip plied. Fast Greensboro—A. S. Raper. West Greensboro—J. A. Bowles. Reidsvifte—L. T. Mann. “Wentworth—Seymour Taylor. Ruffin—B. F. Fincher. Pleasant Garden—Supplied by E G. Kilgore. Liberty and Bethany—W. L. Gris som. Coleridge—V. E. Edwards. Ramseur and Franklinvd'le—J. E Woos ley. Ashboro Station—C. A. “Wood. TTwbarrie Circuit—J. W. Ingle Randleman and Naomi—C. M Campbell. Charlotte . Presiding Elder, lotto. ; \—;. . Trinity—E. E.'BainT Randolph—R. L. f)wentp\ Washington Street. High Point - J. E. Thompson (G. H. Crowell, sup ply.) South Main Street, High Point - 0. P. Ader. Asbboro Cireuit-r-R. L. Melton. Editor North Carolina Christian Advocate-—IT. M- Blair. Assistant Editor—W. L. Sherrill Secretary and Treasurer boro Female College- V\ . M < .art Professor in Trinitv (’oilego—( i Wooten. Mor-anton District. Presiding Elder—C. F. Shorr.L 1 Morgant.on. Morganton statin*—W. F. Worn We. Morganton Circuit P. L. Terrell Connelly Springe- D. F. Carvei (K. S. Abernethy, supply). Marion—If. H. Jordan. Table Rock—W. F. Elliott. Rutkerfordton—T. J. Rogers. Henrietta and Caroleen—L. P. Bo gle. Forest City—-J. C. -Mock. Broad River—W. S. Cherry. Thermal City- V. L. Marsh. Bakensville—Supplied- by J. F Shelton. j Spruce Pine—E. S. Richardson. Elk Park—J. II. Robertson. McDowell—A. P. Foster. North Catawba—R. L. Fruit. Cliffsido— S. E. Richa*’son. Ole Fort—. W. <}. Mallpnee. Chaplain in United Slates Navy—■ W. E. Edmondson. Green River—J. D. Gibson. President. of Rutherford College— W. AY. Peelo. Professors in Rutherford College —W. E. Povey and 0. J. -Tones. Student in Vanderbilt University— W. 0. Goode. Mount Airy District. Presiding Elder—\Y. M. Bagby, Blount Airy. Mount Airy Station—D. Vance Price. Mount Airy Circuit—Z. E. Barn liardt. Rockford-—J. 1 louck. East Bend—P. D. Fridge Y/idkinviilc AY. T. Albright. Elkin—D. M. T .itaker*. Joncsvillc - Supplied by T. II. St impson. Wilkesboro Station- .7. B. Craven. North AYilkesboro Station—Z. Paris. Pilot Mountain—W. Strider. Boone—J. IT. Bvendell. Crest on To be supplied. Tlclton- Supplied by .!. A. Houck. Jefferson— \Y. T. Corner. Laurel Springs- J AY. Cordell. Sparta—S. B. Brown. Watauga—,J. B. Doughton. Rural Hal! J. II. Moore. Danbury—Supplied by I). A. Brink lev. Wilkes Circuit—W. L. Dawson. Salisbury, District. Presiding Elder—A. W. Plyler, Sal isbury. First Church. Salisbury—E. Tv. Mc Larty. South MCn Street. Salisbury—J. A. J. Farrington. Holmes Manorial—A. IT. Whisner (C. M. Short, supernumerary). Spencci R. D. " errilh East Spencer and North Main Street—.T. P. Banning. Lexington Station—A. L-. Stanford, We-t 1 xb'vJ m and Denton—Sup plied by J. T. Folger. T inwood— J. W. Clegg. S ’’ .burv Cl’cuit P. W. Tucker. Windleaf -C. E. TTvpes. Gob! Hill- G. A. Stamper. New London- \. T,. Ayeock. Albemarle Station- TT. (Sprinkle. AV,.| Albemarle .T. P. Davis. Albemarle Circuit J. T. Stover (C. N. Gentry, supenuirnerury). Norwood—R. AI. < mirtney. Salem—J. A. Peeler. C ttnimiilc- T. T. Salver. Ri Lick E. AT. A vent I. Mount Pleasant —R. F. Hargett. C ntral C’ urch. Concord—J. C Rowe Forest Hill AT. AF. Long. Epwcrth—J. AV. Lou; . AY- st Concord AY. Jones. C.incn-'d Circuit B. \. York Bethel- S. S. IILeaps. China Grove AY ! Nicholson. Knnnapoli- W k. Hutchinson. Principal of Ncv London High School J D. Rankin Student in Yanderhilt University — R A Shelby District. P regi d i n g LI de i R. M i 1 <»y 1 e, Shelbv. Shelby Station G. D. Herman. Shelby Circuit- B. AViison. Elbetbel- T. S. Ellington. King’s Mountain- C. F. Kirby. ATain Street. Gastonia—AY. R. Ware. AYest Tend and Franklin Avenue, Gastonia—J. C. ITarman. Bessemer Citv J. L. Armstrong. Towel)—AY. A”. Honeycutt. McAdensville and Ozark—C. V. Caviness. * Stanley Greek C. AT. Pickens. Mount* Holly—.T. B. Tabor. Lowesville— D P. Waters. Ltncolnton Station—J. A. Jay. Lincoln!on Circuit—C. R. Ross. Crouse Circuit—AT. B. Clegg. Cherrvville—A. C. Swofford. Smith Fork—F N. Crmvder. BelW(rod—L. E. Stacey. Polkville- -If. G. Gamin and AY. M Statesville District. Presiding Elder—.1. X. Tlusr_nus, Statesville First CTmreb. Statesville- .T. IT.. Weaver. Rat e Street—H. H. Bobbin*. Statesville Circuit—*.T. Jd. W a"-. Alexander Circuit—E. Myers. Catawba— M. Price. Caldwell—A. F. Wiley. Cl nrksburp— Supplied by J. 11. Brantley. Crauite Falls—A. B. Wolfe. Hickory Station—*T. 1? Sero sei hen that his eliULutMi were aununoucit. CENSUS BUREAU REPORT Figures Show 7,311,202 Bales Ginned to November 14th—The Report by States. Washington, Special.—The census bureau issued its report on cotton ginned for the growth of 1007 to No vember 14th showing a total of 7,311, 202 bales, counting round as half bales, compared with 8,502,242 bales for 1900 and 1,501,180 for 1905. The number of round bales included is 142,609 for 1907, and 200,866 for 1906, and 200,006 for 1905. Sea Is land included 42,708 for 1907, 30,671 for 1906 and 64,103 for 1905. The number of active ginneries were 26, 571 for 1907. Following is the report by States, giving running bales counting rounds half bales and excluding linters, and [number of active ginneries: Alabama 761.13S bales and 3,370 ginneries; Arkansas 368,770 bales [and 2,042 ginneries; Florida 35,565 bales, and 237 ginneries; Georgia 1, 375,111 bales, and 4,439 ginneries; Kentucky 766 bales, and 2 ginneries; Louisiana 349,840 bales and 1,729 ginneries; Mississippi 792,127 bales and 3,398 ginneries: Missouri 15,102 bales and 70 ginneries; New Mexico 24 bales and 1 ginnery; North Caro lina 401,852 hales and 2,603 ginneries; Oklahoma 491,274 bales and 924 gin neries; South Carolina 847,455 bales, and 3,119 ginneries; Tennessee 140, 921 bales and 629 ginneries; Texas 1,709,583 bales and 3,925 ginneries; and Virginia 3,674 bales, and S3 gin neries. The distribution of the Sea Island cotton for 1907 by State is: .Florida 14.492: Georgia 22,681; South ( aroiina 5,535. There was ginned 6,128,562 bales to November 1st. 1907. The statis tics of fhis report for November 14tl. are subject to slight corrections when checked against the individual re turns of the ginners being transmit ted by mail. Attempted Bribery. Norfolk, Ya., Special.—A great sensation was created in the Ameri can Federation of Labor Wednesday afternoon by President Gompers in bis speech replying to the attacks up on him and other officers of the fed eration by the Manufacturers’ Asso ciation, when he t Id of an alleged at tempt to fribe him at the Victoria Hotel 'a >vv York, in October by ,« young newspaper man. giving his name as Charles Brandenberg, the latter President Gompers said, hav ing declared that lie represented (he National Manufacturers’ Association and was prepared to offer him immu nity from all exposure and make him financially secure the remained of bis life, if he would sign a certain paper and otherwise aid in the ‘•ex posure’’ of the other leaders in the American Federation of Labor, with the idea virtually of destroying the influence of organized labor of Lite country. The paper. President Gompers said, purported to have been signed when be (Gompers) was ill in 1895. Thi ; paper. M:. Gompms said, he bad pro I served and, bib death-like stillness, i prevailed in the convention, Presi dent Gompers drew forth the orig inal document and read it. Mr. Gompers. during his recital ol the alleged attempt ar bribery, call ed upon different delegates present who were with him at the time of interviews with Bredenburg, to verify bis statements. This the delegations did, rising in their seats. At the close of President Gompers' speech ther* was a great demonstration, even Vic tor L. Berger, of Milwaukee, the So cialist opponent of ,\i r. Gompers. ris ing and with uplifted arms declar ing that although he had at conven tion after convention, bitterly oppos ed the re-elect ion of President Gomp ers, he would be the one this year to move to make his election unani mous, with a vote of confidence not only to President < tampers but to all the efTk-er- of the American Federa tion of Labor. “There,” declared M'-. Berger, “is the answer of the Socialistic to the Mannfactuerers’ Association.” Shoots Wanton and Suicides. Tampa, Fla.-, Special. Karl Chris tian, 24 years of. age, shot and in stantly killed Mrs/Florence Williams then turned the revolver on himself, inflicting a fatal wound. R. W. Wil liams, the husband, arrived on the scene of the tragedy in a few min utes and had to be forcibly prevented from killing himself. Mrs. Villiatm was formerly Mi - Flovcm e Simmons I of Summerville. 8 < , v- i Christian has a mother living in Belatka, this State. Foraker Endorsed by Ohio Republi cans. Columbus. 0.. Special.—Senatoi Foraker was formally endorsed foi re-election to the Senate and for the Republican nomination for Presidenl at a meeting of the eveentive and pr] visors rnjri[rrjit ter of the Ohio T j gue of Republican Clubs. The meet ins was held at the Neil House anti about members from all over tlit State were present.