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g. V . ' 'ipwylWfiiiipp'iMWP m ped into his friend Jim Benton's office for a chat, and the sight of the trim looking young woman, industriously pounding away upon the typewriting machine, put a new idea into his head. " "Miss Brown," he asked, "have you time to address an envelope for me?" ' "Certaiply," replied Miss Brown, finishing the letter she was at work upon, -and inserting an envelope in her machine. Ashton walked over to her side and told her the "address in a low ' tone. , After thanking Miss Brown, Ashton hurried from the office, with the envelope safe in his pocket, and back to the seclusion of his own room, where he gave himself up to the pleasant task " of packing the opal up, prepara tory to losing it once more. He did the ring up in a small box, upon which he pasted the address which he cut from the en 1 velope. ' J 'Til have to guess at the post- age," he remarked, as he stuck : several stamps upon the little T package. "It would never do for ' me to go to the postoffice and ' have the thing weighed; that is, .not if I want to lose it." When Ashton had shoved his - box through the slit labeled "par- 7 eels" at the postofficeT he felt i more 'liW himself than he had done for some time. "There," he thought complac ently,' "I've disposed of that opal for all time now, and I don't be lieve even a twin brother to Sher lock Holmes could restore it to me. They will get it at Pack ard's jewelry store either tonight or tomorrow morning, and I sup pose they will try to find out where it came from, but they won't be able to do so. They can sell it if they want to, for all I care." The next morning, drawn by that irresistible influence which is supposed to draw murderers to the scenes of their former crimes, often to their own undoing, Ash ton was sauntering past Pack-) ard's jewelry store, when one of the clerkshailed him with: "Mr. Packarcj wishes to see you a mo ment." With sinkiner heart Ashton meekly followed the clerk into the store. Mr. Packard lookecf at Ashton sharply through his spectacles, as he inquired ; "This is your ring, isn't it?" Ashton's face grew very red under the keen scrutiny of the old man. "Yes," he stammered, pretend ing to examine the too familiar rjng which Mr. Packard held out to him. "I I lost it." "Huh !" ejaculated the jeweler. "Looks more like theft. It came to us by mail. I knew in a min ute it was yours, for we never made another one like it," and he pointed to the peculiar-setting. Ashton groaned inwardly at the poor memory which had caus ed nim to forget that he had had the ring made to order from a special design of his own, at this very place. Outwardly, however, he made fcttdfciitfTVp-: iHMrilirflfcfc