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ROBERT W CHAMRBERS ©102Q GECRGE H DORAN COMRANY | the BEGIN Tragedy, which trail of the Flaming had first beer jewel casket of the COUNTESS O t camp | HERE TODAY talked on the ince it stole rom the royal |l HONIA | QUINTANA, now appeared aw- | fin hunting ke Here MIKE pwe iron- | the ived rough and CLINCH, who } om ntana hoarded it for tl his beantiful step EVE STRAYEZI to se One was JAMES DARRAGH, w to restore the mt counte rther less Bot Clinch's the d, of {Ler stoler | {no 11 bil DYE STQCKINGS OR SWEATER IN “DIAMOND DYES" Diamond fade sts, stochings, sweaters, coverings, hang- | ings, draperies, everything, Every package containsg directions so simple iy woman can put new, rich, fade- less colors into her worn garments or | peries even if she has never dyed before, Just buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind——then your material will come out right, bhecause Diamond Dyes are guarantee? not to streak, spot, fade, or run. Tell your drug- gist whether the materiul you wish to dye 15 wool or eilk, or whether it {s anen, cotton or mixed goods. T —— eared, buzzing about the dead “notler zig through shine, lacing it with streaks of green- sh fire, Others appeared, whirling, gyrating, filling the silence with their lumming. And gtill Leverett dared not budge, dared not search the dead and take from it that for which the cead had died to worn, coats, g bille=—more'n a bil- likely." silence ry lips. nd-¢ n mi v dollars, Kloon's dogged veret licked his n his Knees mosed AT continued His rifie Almost imper. i, moved again, s Kloon spat, then, by in- legrees, continued to edge towurd Kloon, bly he V26 st 1l itesi ] Jake " Aw ut yor on disd y lirty rat Enot head,” grumbled You allus was sneakin' trap rob- enough. 1 ain't got no billion *million dollar Ten thousand'll buy me all ate to need till I'm planted like a hawg; you ain't never 1 enough o' nothin' and vou won't neither-—not if you 1 a'mig you wouldn't." th doliars tn a billion million, on nse man, But the sun- er git enou God ty MITH I who ca nam escapes ragh HAL Quintana threatens return to t pac 1 it is Clinch’'s men who have to Qui na JAKE KLOON EARL LEVERET cl out to wipe out Qu and with them, Kloon from and | with t re. On irops by two of gone over starts gang and Leverett, tana's GO ON WITH THE STORY EPISODE FIVE. Drowned Valley CHAPTER 1 luish forest shadow the barred sun-ray filtering through, were tinged with a rosy hue hefore Jake Kloon, the hootch runner, and Leverett, trap thief, came to lley. They 1 a mile from the most southern e vast desolation, but already tar ap- beauty of their burnt glimmered here and there; patches of anth sphagnum and crimson pitcher-plants became frequent; and once or twice Kloon's big boots broke through the crust of fallen soaking him to the ankles wi black silt Leverett, always a coward. had pur- sued his devious and larcenous through the world, alwars in deadl fear of sink holes. His movements those of a weasel The soft lengthened Drowned distan that leaves cu ucc rifi and paths were preferring always |* solid ground it he lacked the courage of that sinuous little beast, though he possessed all of its ferocity and far more cunning. He looked at the back of Kloon's| ° massive head One shot would blow that skull into fragments, he thought, shivering. better deal, the thousand dollar: or, it better deael, the contents of packet For, if Quintana's bribery had dazzled them, what effect might the contents of that secret have if\revealed? There might easily be mil- lion in bills pressed togethier in that Leavy, flat packet Rills were abso- lutely safe plunder. DBut Kloon had turned a deaf ear to his suggestions —Kloon, who never entertained am- bitions beyond hootch rake-off— whose miserable imagination stopped ¢ &t a wretched percentage satisfied Tamaracks. sphagnum. crimson pitcher-plants grew thicker; wet woods set with little black pools stretched av on every side It was still nearly mile Drowned Valley when Jake Xio balted in his tracks and seated him- self on a narrow ridge hard ground And Leverett came lightly up and, after nosing the whole vi- cinity, sat down cautious where Kloon would have to turn partly| around to look at him. {4n ““Where the hell do we with Quintana?’” growled Kloon, tear- ing a mouthful from a gnawed to-i tacco plug and shoving the remainder deep into his trousers pock “We gotta travel a piece, vet, Say, Jake, be you a man or he you a poor dumb critter what ain't) got no spunk Kloon, chewing on I and glanced at him us answer. “Tf you got the spunk chip- munk you and me'll take a peek that there packet I bet you ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! contents Ivo packet | | half a | Ipu fin b spi sk hir a tfro 0 th meet up gr su th turned spat, | | 1d, T he of a it's | Unless you see the name ‘‘Bayer” | on package or on tablets you are not | getting the genuine. Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty- two years and provided safe by mil- lions for Colds Toothache Earache Neuralgia Accept “Bayer only. Each unbroken tains proper directions. Handy box- es of twelve tablets cost few Drugglsts also sell bottles of 24 and | 100, Aspirin is the trade mar! of | Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- cidester of Salieylicacid. | | | Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Pain, Pain Tablets of Aspirin” | package con- cents —————— Theron Wolcott Hart || Instruction in PIANO, ORGAN THEORY SONG COACH Studio: 14 Prospect Street Tel. 2531, 2 HE OWN Lacco at a pitcher-plant and filled the ered, moved No notice. them bills." The place, vinted i3 his |trom th stood A little breeze came by and stirred the bushy hair on Kloon's head and fluttered e ferns around him where be lay. Then, near in the ferns, ering fronds twitched, and a red squirrel sprung his startling alarm, squeaking, squealing, chattering his opinion of murder; and Leverett, shaking with the shock, wiped fcy sweat from his face, laid aside his rifle, and took his first step toward the dead man But as he the with. bent over he changed Lis mind, turned, reeling a little, then crept slowly out among the pitcher- plants, searching about him as though snifiing. In at a few minutes he he was looking for; took his bearings; carefully picked his way nack over a leafy crust that trembled under his cautious tread He left insde packet and flannel 't Then, turning his back to the dead, he squatted down and clutched Kloon's burly ankles, as a man grasps the handles of a wheelbarrow to draw it after him. Drageing. rolling, bumping over roots, Jake Kloon took his last trail through the wilderness, leaving a redder path than was left by the wetting sun through fern and moss und wastes of pitcher-plants. Always, as Leverett crept on, pull- ing the dead behind him, the floor of the wooids trembled slightly, and a black ooze wet the crust of withered leaves. At the quaking edge of a little pool water, Leverett halited. The bent over Kloon and, from the coat pocket, he drew the M piaced it inside his own PLAC FLAND IT INSIDE SHIRT. HIS Kloon squirted a stream of to- fied by took other p. Diverted and gra uracy of his aim, nts at intervals. Leverett moved the hair's width to it again. -tanned skin ckiy gray. muzzle of his the left, shiv- Under his a pallor made e a ‘Jake, I wanta take a peek at of Merely another stream of tobacco crimson piteher 1 gotta take a 1 gotta—gotta—" Something in Leverett's unsteady ice made Kloon turn his head i I rammed fool,” he hat you doin' with yo loud detonation of Kloon's inquiry The bisg, full in brains and part his bac and though he said, he e soft the face, of his knocking had been rifle | al sed | notuated period uck him al llet s ling h Al m flat cat mo- | rifle staring ng the from the delicate stain of r floated and dizappeared lhm'z';H: Leverett, stunned chin Dont let baby 'be tortured by ecZerna Teething rash, prickly heat, ecze chafing, and other skin disorders to which babies are subject can be quickly sibdued by Resinol. Apply this pure, soothing, healing ointment to the af- fzcted parts and note how soon biby s fretful crying stops asitscool ng tuuch relieves the iiching and burning. nshine. stilines the - dead man made a p-robber nearly bar of intense ess of enly tl und; the ¢ from and to it was only air escaping apsing pale, leaned his eves But slow verett, feet st ant a shak g stirring on the never thing oak tre spravling v Resinol Soap for baby's hair keens it soft and silky. At a. druggists, Resinoi ound It it year he have The ruddy fly ap- or a never of time. glimnered A green minute could were 4 the ckoned t ace ravs woods discovered | ' ¥ N Honeymooners Abroad BY ZOE BE CAN BUSINESS B MIXED WITH! THI HONEYMOON? | The 'stentorian blare of the Roma's departing signal and the cry of “All| Ashore!" tingled and thrilled through | Edna as she looked down on the seemingly moving dock crowded with friends of the passengers. Sudden excited tears, blurred her vision. The hand that, elytched her new husband's arm tightened convylsively, With the other she waved frantically to . the dear people come to speed her on her honeymoon, and the homeland she was leaving for the first time in her life, | Jack sensed her excitement to the point of pain. He looked down at the flushed sweet face with its oval of brunet beauty, and brown eyes wet with tears. “Too late to back out now, Kits, we're off. Got to put up with just me, old darlint!" The very effort he made to steady his voice betrayed how keyed-up he| was himself. Edna squeezed his arm apain, laying her cheek to his sleeve.| Then, not to let the world see, she straightened to tiptoe in adieu to those ashore, Faces on the you couldn’'t tell fizure from another. huge Roma swung full into mid- stream, the last slight contact of sight was gone. Hand tight in hand, Edna and Jack watched the stately procession of New York's man-made peaks glide past them. It was all so new and so big to them, coming from their homey lit- tle mid-west town. They felt awed. The great steamer, the great c seeming to watch them with its mil lion bright eyes, the ocean on whick they were venturing, the new 'world Jto which they were going. . . . | Their scanty remarks were almost whispers. The sparkling harbor changed to the gray of the open sea. A chill salt wind sent through them ia delicious, half-frightened tremor. “Come on down to the lounge, " laughed Jack suddenly. “And say—soon's we pass the three-mile limit we're going to quaff a beaker {to the greatest business and pleasure THE GREAT CITY SEEMED TO WATCH THEM WITH ITS MILLION |EYES. dock grew blurred; one wildly waving And now as the trip ever known! Edna looked up startled. ‘‘Business, Jack?" | He took her by the shoulders and | held her off so that she could admire him. “Brace yourself for one surprise, Mrs. John Edna Duryea,” he swanked. “Behold in this your honorable hus- band not the humble mid-west dis- trict sales manager yvou thought you married for the rest of your natural life, but a gent with a mission! You ,are off on a honeymoon, madam, paid for by the American: Electric Sup- plies Corp., that your husband may perform an exceedingly delicate and confidential business affair while honeymooning with his charming bride!” (To Be Continued). (Copyright, 1022, NEA Service). | made a forced landing in the sea near deep over its black bed of siit. | Pearl Harbor. The governor swam Beside this sink hole- the trap|until he was picked up by another thief dropped Kloon. Then he @rew plane. No one in tge party was in- his hunting knife and cut a tall, slim | jured. swamp maple The sapling was | ahout twenty feet in height. Lev-| erett thrust the butt of it into the pool. Without any effort he pushed the entire sapling out of sight in the depthless silt. He had to maneuver very gingerly to dump Kloon into the pool and keep | out of it himseif. Finally he man- | aged it. | To his alarm, Kloon did not sink ltar. He cut another sapling and pushed the body until only the shozs {were visible above the silt | These, however, were very slowly | sinking, now. Bubbles rose, dully |iridiscent, floated, broke. Strngs of blood hung suspended in the clouding water. Leverett went back to the ridge and covered with dead leaves | the spoot where Kloon had lain. There were broken ferns, but he could | not straighten them. And there lay [Kioon's rifie. | | For a while he hesitated, his habits | of economy being ingrained; but he [remembered the packet in his shirt, and he carred the rifle to the little pool and shoved it, muzzie first, | ¢riving it downward, out of sight. | As he rose from the pool's edge, somebody laid a hand on his shoul- | der. That was the most real death that |1everett ever had died. (Continued in C FALLS IN HARBOR. Honolulu, Oct. 16. (By Associated Press)—Wallace R. Farrington, gov- ernor of Hawali, cheated death by a | €lim margin Sunday when a seaplane | in which he was returning from Mauy | to Honolulu caught fire and | water was dark but scarcely an inch OICES IN THE AIR | EDKA (Westingnouse, East Pittsburgh) 7 p. m.—Weekly survey of business nditions, prepared by the National rial Conference Loard. [ little xt Issue.) “igland DOINGS OF DUFFS ,jtary concert by Sixteenth Pumpkins Are Ripening Black Cats Are Prowling We Are Preparing FOR ALL HALLOWE’EN — AT — * ADKINS 66 CHURCH ST. You will find a fine line of Dennison Crepe Papers, Cut Outs and Hallowe’en novelties. 8 p. m.—Bed time story for the kiddfes. 9 p. m.—Mrs. Harry R. Hammerie, planist, will render a program of ori- ginal compositions end arrangements. H. B. Brockett, tenor; E. J. Sullivan, cornet. WBZ (Westinghouse—Springfield.) 7:30 p. m.—Uncle Wiggily bedtime story from the Springfield Union. Farmers' producs market report. 7:45 p. m.—Fourth of a serles of talks under the auspices of the demo- cratic city league. 8 p.. m.—Musical program by Wil. liam F. Hough, bass; Gladys V. Hack- ett, pianist, WJZ (Westinghouse, Newark) 7 p. m.—"Radio Boys,” by Gerald Breckenridge, author. 8:30 p. m.—Business and industrial conditions, 8:45 p. m.—U. S. Army Night: Mili- Infantry band under the personal direction of Major Harry C. Hall. 9:55 p. m.—Standard time signals from Arlington; officlal weather fore- cast. , WGI (American Radio and Research Corp. Medford Hillside, Mass.) 6:30 p. m.—Boston police reports, Boston police headquarters. Late news flashes. Early sports news. Bos- ton American. 7 p. m.—Evening program: 1. "The: Stars Tonight” William R. Ransom A. M. Professor of Mathematics, Tufts college. Eixty-second Tufts col- lege radio lecture. 2. Weekly Busi- ness report, by Roger W. Babson. 3. World Market survey. Bulletins by ~able and Radio on export conditions. U. 8. Department of Commerce. ~"and it tastes just as good as it smells!” |Amelta Lueck Frantz, soprano solo- ist of Denver, Colorado. WGY (General Electric Co. Schenectady, N. Y.) 6 p. m.—Produce market and stock market reports and quotations; news bulletins. 7:45 p. m.—An evening of music. Irish WOMA CLUB MEETING. The Woman's club will meet Tues- day afternoon, Oct. 17, at 4 o'clock. The place of meeting has been ¢hanged this year from the Camp school auditorium to the Canter church chapel. Instead of any regular |program there will be a reception from 4 until 6 o'clock. COL. DAVIDSON, K. C. B, DIES, London, Oct. 16. (By Associated Press)—Col. Sir Arthur Davidson, K. C. B. died today aged 65. He had a lengthy and varied military career serving with distinction in the Afghan jwar of 1873-80, the Boer war and in the Egyptian campaign of 1882. He was knighted in 1910. .. e ask for Horlick's The QRIGINAL Malted Milk ‘The Original Food-Drink for All Ages. QuickLunchet Home,Office&Fount RichMilk, Malted Grain Extractia Pow- der&s Tabletforms. Nourishing-Nocooking. 8" Avoid Imitations and Substitutes MAN $AM HAR-HAR-HO -HO | HEAR YOU BOUGHT A GOLD BRKK TODAY A MR. HOWDY — YOU WANTA \WATKH YOLR STEP- THESE NEW YORK SLKKERS'LL GET YOO EVERY TIME— SALES SAV! = 1| BOUGHT NO KIDDING BV | TELL _You | NEVER NEVER BOUGHT A GOLD BRICK THAT | KNOW OF - SOMEBODYS BEEN YOou NO!'! 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