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( a ( Ww Ge shot or shaded effect was seen to beau-| cleverly managed, revers of velvet in- on: wie ly a No Item in the Styl. ish Woman's Wardrobe To-Day Recetves More At- tention Than the Rainy - Day Cos- fume, The Best of the Sea- son’s Silks and Satins Have Been Submitted to the Cravenetting Pro- cess, THE best of the season's silks and l satin, the smoothest and sheer est of the chiffon broadcloths, the tallored thibets and serges and eheviots (these last the very same as Our brothers are wearing), to say noth- ing of the mohairs and the sicilienn all of these, and nerhaps more, ha been submitted to the cravenetting pro- cess—for cravenette is a process, not a eloth—with the result that they take on even a finer finish than before, and @re thoroughly waterproof as well. All of the features of fashions, cur- fent and to come during the next sea- @on, have been cleverly incorporated tn | these smart raincoats, Some of the very @martest models in taffetas, the money- bak Kind Ut is guaranteed to wear out the fashion, are made in the quaint, frilly and fluffy styles that make a girl eeem like a living miniature of her erandmother. For the winter weather these are finished with a body lining Of solelaine. a silk flannel that Is the @ome of luxury for such « purpose, and a charming con-elt has {t in all of | the dainty and delicate tints. Thus, a @ark-green taffeta, shot with black, | ‘will have the solelains lining in a shell, pink; ‘the brown—for browns are ex- tremely fastionable—will favor the onion tints: while the black taffeta | wrap will hve an oyster white or lilac Or mauve, just as fancy may dictate. The new double-faced goods will ap- peal tremendously to the tallor-made girl, for they are appropriately enough made up in the sever tatlor-made styles. | Then there are the shot prunella eloths, one of the newest and best of the Inte season's novelties, and which any girl can buy at her favorite store! and fashion for herself, These are in two shades of the same color, one shot over the other In the weaving, A charming example shows a deep mauve a@hot with iliac, made up with ex- tremely full plaited skirt, the plaits not stitched down at all, but just Pressed fiat from waist to hem. The ful advantage as the wearer walked;! and the full puffed sleeve showed it, too, In quite another guise. And speaking of sieeves, the makers! of those wraps or, raincoats, or what- ever one chooses to call them, have taken time by the forelock, and are fur- A SICIMIENNE ALL AROUND WRAP. nishing the mort delightfully big, sleeves, so large and roomy that even the most friliy and fluffy chiffon walst ean be worn beneat wibhout crushing. Many are the hints and suggestions of the Directaire modes—those hines and | Yeantngs that are so fashionable for treet and formal wear. Vests and waistooats of almost every type are be seen, noredibly short one, and fastens over in double-breasted style for its short length, on down to the severely fitted | type of the masculine garment. Then there are the designs that are characteristic of this class of garment and of no other, Surplice effects are terlined with @ feather-woight princess hatroloth that makes them retain their shape without crushing or curling (this is @ secret culled from. a Parisian atelier of the mode’. and braiding in the most simple or the most intricate design used with these feature with these surplice effects, andi are often used for such, TIT TANT KN, SATURDAY FPVENING, OCTORER 1, 1914, NeW ere WAIST ane? many are the changes rung upon It.) miroir or Te) They are dressy enough for afternoon, |the wrap takes on an sir of custiiness ‘The vest ta culte @| carriage or calling wear, and indeed| and a touch of dressiness that ft tn With the | well with such surroundings; and one Connecticut’s # ww # «# Great Mystery SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | Fuy Belgarde's father, Judge Belxarde. | ‘died insolvent, his nephew and partner, Claude Caino, having stolen the Judge's for- fune,, Charles Beckwith, ety detec ind to. restore # fortune ‘ay'e death in order to check the Inventiga lon. Miles Hereward, Beckwith's nevhew anda Yale athlete, becomes engaged to Tay nd vows vengeance against Caine. The ‘ster confronts him. CHAPTER V. The One Armed Man Again—| A Night Encounter in Stam- ford Station—Miles Here- wara’s Wild Chase by Moonlight — An Unfore- seen Mishap and a Cul de Sac. a leaping toward the newcomer, who still stood tn the door. | way, @ half-amused, half-contemptuous | @mile on his thick lips, and making no @ffort to defend himself against the impending attack, Beckwith laid a restraining hand on | Hereward'’s shoulder. the long, slender fingers tightening on the young athlete | with an Iron grip, | Don't make @ fool of yourself, Miles!" he commanded, sternly; then, turning to Caine, he continued: “May I ask, Mr, Caine, why you have intruded on us?” “I was passing through the corridor,” Peplied Caine, etill looking amusediy at the furious Miles, as @ big mastift mieht eye @ yelping puppy, “when, us I passed this door 1 heard my name Dellowed, and heard this young giant express & most earnest desire to meet me. That Js why I took the liberty of entering. I always like to gratify the Innocent desires of the young,” “Mr. Hereward and Miss Belgarde are bY gucsts,” returned Beckwith, “aA. the former's host 1 beg to apologiae for his warmth of language and to ask you | to withdraw,” Caine bowed and stepped back. Fay had rison to her feet and seemed about to put @ question of some sort to him, but @ gesturo from Beckwith silenced her, Miles, however, checked. “Walt a moment, Mr, Caine!” he cried. “What I said behind your back I repeat to your face. I believe you to be & low swindler asd at deart a mur" LAUDE CAINE!” cried Miles, waa not so easily dorer, I"— “Be quiet!" ordered Beckwith “I suppose you realize,” said Caine, f “that your language (in the presence of Witnenses, too) in distinctly Ibellous, 1 should chastise a grown man for speak- Ing 80 to me. But no one except a fool pays any attention to the gabbie of a hot-headed boy, Besides, you've prob- ably been lunching a bit indiscreetly ang" — “Mr, Hereward's perfectly sober,”” broke In Fay Belgarde, her soft eyes flashing with honest indignation, “and it Is only fair to tell you that I share in his views of your character, and so does” — Beckwith once hastily; “Mr. Calne, this ts a private rece; tion room. May I once more request you to withdraw or must I ring for porter to put you out?” Caine laughed good-naturedly. “It {s unnecessary to ring, thanks,” he anawered pleasantly, “I was about to obey your request when your somewhat | excitable young frien¢- detained me, | Good afternoon. Good-by, Cousin Fay, | ['m sorry you have been incited to think | so Il] of me. By the way, you aren't looking well. I hope your health (s not failing. It would be a misfortune it your life were imperilied by any cause. Good-by.” Another impetuous movement by Miles, which Beckwith again restrained, and Caine was gone. | “Why did you stop me?" panted Here- ward. "Why didn't you let me give him the thrashing he deserved? more interrupted “For two reasons,” said Beckwith; “first, because a scene of that sort would have been unpardonable in Miss Belgarde's presence. And, besides,” ne} added, a cold, deadly light creeping | ta® & moment into his quiet blue eyes, “the time is pot ripe. When the time is ripe his punishment belongs to me| and to me alone A hush of wonder fell on hts tw hearers, Beckwith spoke again, and in a lighter tone. “Come,” he sald, “let us have dinner Afterward we will all go back to Briag your time so. And “Lot's go to dinner,” Interrupted Heck. with laughingly The evening was still fairly young when the trio buarded the Bridgeport train, “After we have seen Miss Belgarie eafely home,” sald Beckwith, "T shuil hg ome Brid, pert Agtel He the night. You go on ew Haven, [ s Miles? bod penny. no. If you're at, idgenory Til stay TL cond © selegrem 40 ear iad at Yale, telling him I join first atop telegram from the station and join you both In here before the train starts Accordingly, as Stamford was reach- some of the sayings of the chiffon velvet accessories for carriage ~ear. But perha can't him in the tramp we'd planned or to-morrow morning. Stamford's the T'll_get off there. send the ed, Miles had bblec Hereward down to the platform before the train come to A full stop, and hurried to the telegraph office, : the silver quarter through the oper- window and turned to board the swung himself; train. way through the s Herewari's first apologize, This inv as he noted that t of a cripple. A # telegram, shoved It with a man who he ‘man tation crowd. impulse was does not at all suspect it of belng aj th aincoat and not a wrap exclusively | 0% t he most swagger thing over the of them all is the new Napoleon wrap. \poleon fa As he did so he almost ovllided was pushing his to ulse was increased ad the air nd glance revealed | The Three Prize-Winners in the Bright-Child Male E, Van Nostra - By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. HE judges of the children's coa- | test, for there were three of them, er looking over the port together. I have business there thousands ters received arrived "In other words you are going there|at the con that there were none to guard me,” said Fay with quick in-|but bright babies in Greater ew jtuldon, “I have no right to take up| york, so exceedingly olever have been folk prige-winning contribu ttle Here are the 18; | First $10 Prize. Best Arfecdote of Child Life. ALKING along @ country road the other day with my two Ilt- the boys, we saw a dead locust. First Prize—$10 for the best aneo dote of child life, awarded to Archie C., the five-year-old son of M, Dixon, No, 823 Park avenue, New York City, Second Prize—$10 for the best child story told In the child’s own language, awarded to Male Van Nostrand, seven years old, of No. 221 Main street, Nyack, N. Y. Third Prize—$5 for the best list of baby words, awarded to Merle Bennett, three years old, orandson of Mrs. Fortune, No 92 \V~-- >t, Jersey City, ind, Archie C. Dixon, T take t¢ home to look at under my | houge and she knocked at the door, but symetros: tT eald, “Yes; certatn-| nobody came, ao she walked in and she iy, tut I kk ft is much + large. | went fast asleep, and she dr d that) Suppose we dis one of its wings?’ | she saw a nice diuebird, ar bine | arrying the Wing bird had golden wings, and it left her ally for some dis. ! some of his gold, and she ¢ 4 buy as @ remarked: “Oh, mother! I many dolls as she wanted; and there am 60 worrled about that ke When Was a little pony, and the pony took | ail | ie 4 she went out In the wooda,tand she got lost, and she saw a little to make a new wing or with only one win ‘cn Mo. 3 Park avenue Second $10 Prize. Best Story by a Child. Tim: was once a little girl and| dreamed It, her to the store w r t being an angel M. DIXON, ing, and then bed, rot MAIE © went here she out riding B. VAN NOSTRAND, No, 221 Main street, Nyack, N. ¥, Just even Years old could get all the tce cream she wanted for noth and |she bought @ gold plano, and then the pony took her home, and then ahe woke and she found herself in her own Uttle , and she asked her mother how she home, and her mother sald you only The Cravenette Girl Will Figure Strikingly in the Winter and the smart girl who with things fashionable will lose no time in Securing one of these, Tali dark or fair, this will will select for an theatre or gen- eral eveningswrap, It ls merely an ¢x- tremely full age an exact copy of that rn by the first Napoleon, and down to yng tA in the many f the “Little The the size of the wearer, and are so cut at they may be worn in the ordinary cape style, or with one corner dra: re shoulder In the true lon. ja- A. WALE BOYW’S DARILI the fact that the arm, that on the right hand flashed ran; had but one int finger of his ree diamond ring and that a slouch hat shaded his eyes. pi. F A wee had so nearly caused ‘ay's t With a yell of brute fury Miles Here- ren Contest. | ‘ Merle Bennett, The $5 Prize. jth The Illustrations Rainy Day Golfers. lot. fyll ctroular skirts. ward flung himself on the stranger. Ble Ino Poe sera ghey je in om: ! rani to one side and lunged into the crow and across the station. Miles ‘outatretehed. hands clutched empty alr and his Impetus carried him straight into the arms of « station po- half way station In garews of hie enemy, 6 station, like many of its slong the New York, fen mm each ald one oI e tracks, Miles had crossed to the bulld~ ing Pa, the upper aide of the tracks to Miles paused an instant on the thresh- old, glancing with keen eyes to right and left, As he did so he saw. the one- med man re em) from & h of, moonlight ‘neatly ‘tale way ie the ee. ed in pursuit, us! th tha ned Here Teng’ le @ figure on @ hundred But the one-armed man had @ long wed. and he ran with marvellous quick- ness, Hereward had scarcely deci distance between them when the fugi uve whirled sharply to the left Into Atlantle street. Atlantic Street, running uphill from railroad bridge into the heart of mford, Is a wide highway lined for ¢ firet part of its by by pretty residences and lawns, brary the residenc: succession of stores and som: ness blocks begin. The thoroughfare rises mently from the bridge to Street; a second and larger dis residence streets fills the second plateau, and behind this rises Strawberry Hil! the most fashionable quarter of thal whole beautiful city on the Sound, Up Atlantic street rushed the one. armed man, Hereward {n hot pursuit Past the Ferguson Library, past big Fred Oefinger’s and on toward the cen- tre of the town the race continued Even as his footsteps re-echoed be- tween the rows of and stlent houses, Miles could se At thi ?, the sustained effort and th. is! round were beginning to tell on hi foe's aveed. Hereward himself, being in rerfect condition, felt that he could kee un the race for hours, and he increased his stride as he saw the other beginning NCLOSED find list of eome words) used by our boy until he was five Milk was humma; water, | Best List of Baby Words, years old vaggs; shoes, hages; fat. haffa; knife, hoft; fork, hong; smart, farnt; eeif, | ho’ behave, begahaga; cup, cook; faucer, sissy: plate, patty: dirt. guck; smoke, fonk; turtle, corkle; strawberry, hawbiddy twelve, cholp; scholar, | cholly; etove, kobe; drink, ninga. | Mrs, FORTUNE. No, % Vroom street, Jersey City, Sanaa SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WONDERS. to lag, And through the elusive moon- Heht. the two dashed on, causing a few belated wanderers to pause and stare amagediy after them, One moment In the dense shadow cast by some bilidine the next In the white ‘¢ of the full moon they thundered on Miles was a bare ten yards behind his opponent as they reached Atlantle uare. Saliarew mors strides and Miles must have caught his quarry; but as, for- getting caution and heedless of the dan- That Appear To-Day RAINY DAY no longer has ter. rors for the well-dressed girl, for the new rain coats are tha dresmest things imaginable, The multi- tude of designs in these garments i¢ decidedly attractive and the three de- picted are perhaps the plalnest of the The central figure carries a coat of cravenetted covert with three smart coachman's capes, a belted blouse and The girl with the golf bag has one bual- h in |? trict of Waterproof Materiat Maae Up in Sm est Patterns Th Give No Hint Suggestiong Their Utiitatta Purposes, f: The Ratny-Day G Has Plain Ta Made and D Designs Which She Choose From. of the reversible waterproof dark brown on the right side neat plaid on the reverse, Yoke” sleeve are cut In one, and the ; forms a collar, single revers all the front, and a smart pocket well, © The third figure, slightly in the } ground, has a dark red pace cloth with deep cape piped with black patent leather, and collar, and pockets similarly trimmed, For Girl Who Travels. There is a wealth of style combined in this wrap of toned prunella cloth with a jshed surface that shows up effect to perfection. To « jmaped yoke the coat ts broad box plaits, these stl ef to below the waistline and flat from there. Front and similarly arranged, stitched | taffeta defining the yoxe and the standing collar has @ em shaped turnover at the back trely covered with the folds, th e- a “ee pre umph. Relay Face, isa pretty street o} Jat a pleket fence on which runs tho Rippa) By choosing this little flight the one-armed man cu in a hole, “ ehout of blended] victory Hereward sped on vengeance. (To Be Co a. Weal Firs, Welk Weak Nerves: RELIEF IN 80 D Dr. Agnow’s Cure for the heart s to cure the heart and i ie sar) ger of running carelessly by moonlight, he sprang forward in a final spurt his toe touched a horseblock standing in the shadow of a wall, The Impact flung Miles Hereward to the hard pavement with a force that drove breath and consciousness from