A NOVEL
BY DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS
| I. | —MR. CRAIG ARRAYS HIMSELF |
| II. | —IN THE BEST SOCIETY |
| III. | —A DESPERATE YOUNG WOMAN |
| IV. | —"HE ISN'T LIKE US" |
| V. | —ALMOST HOOKED |
| VI. | —MR. CRAIG IN SWEET DANGER |
| VII. | —MRS. SEVERENCE IS ROUSED |
| VIII. | —MR. CRAIG CONFIDES |
| IX. | —SOMEWHAT CYCLONIC |
| X. | —A BELATED PROPOSAL |
| XI. | —MADAM BOWKER HEARS THE NEWS |
| XII. | —PUTTING DOWN A MUTINY |
| XIII. | —A MEMORABLE MEETING |
| XIV. | —MAGGIE AND JOSH |
| XV. | —THE EMBASSY GARDEN PARTY |
| XVI. | —A FIGHT AND A FINISH |
| XVII. | —A NIGHT MARCH |
| XVIII. | —PEACE AT ANY PRICE |
| XIX. | —MADAM BOWKER'S BLESSING |
| XX. | —MR. CRAIG KISSES THE IDOL'S FOOT |
| XXI. | —A SWOOP AND A SCRATCH |
| XXII. | —GETTING ACQUAINTED |
| XXIII. | —WHAT THE MOON SAW AND DID |
| XXIV. | —"OUR HOUSE IS AFIRE" |
| XXV. | —MRS. JOSHUA CRAIG |
It was one of the top-floor-rear flats in the Wyandotte, not merelybiggest of Washington's apartment hotels, but also "mostexclusive"—which is the elegant way of saying most expensive. TheWyandotte had gone up before landlords grasped the obvious truth that ina fire-proof structure locations farthest from noise and dust should andcould command highest prices; so Josh