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1920. | | t i ee ae pale, but with no other align of emo-| Then she led him to the room. | “Not in the least,” answered Elier- e ost ‘arden fon’ except the Heid way that she| ‘The doctor apoke quiet! on | held her hands clasped ftogetiy n My nan i Ir, Wall n i lay still again, his eyes ‘ fi her lap, Something in that white, | hve Lin ¢ tion by Dr.) searching the doctor's face. At last By Amelie Rives controled face and the dark eyes! Borrt Y beer Mr. Hud: | he said slowly? ’, tT be fixed on Nis led Eilerson to say 1 isa ' "Well but I don't believe it } (Princess Troubetrkoy) I'm going to remind you before you ord [uulford. He! will have any meaning to you. Some. begin, Misa Warrenger, that Y ‘ 4 vd ¥ with a) where somehow « « « T e 7 no longer Iaughs at ‘the kind of | derisiv retive sn it his eyes| waa the of myself... yet | In the Shadows of a Haunted Garden in Old } ciinas you may have to tell me They 1 turned is head, nd tt was ter. Virginia a Man and a Maid Meet and Love. Bee 3 trom tie way thay you uni Al, quict hat’ h broke off. | “I { 7 them, we may call them b wed « our frends have co! to you I was j 3 tween Them Comes the Hand of a Ghost—a names, attribute them te fF onuses, | fded ci Pert pee Bay BS thea ell 1 é 4 y, though very great men any usd 1 and dome deeply Now J'm only a part... Beautiful Woman, Dead a Ilundred Years, but fer aw to that; but wo noauch | ff you'd nt to talk with the Td] wrapped up tn flesh,” Horrible | " : ; 7 ‘ things as ex ally real, whatever | regard it as a 5 Ke stuff!" he ended with a shudder of re- Who Still Moves and Loves To-Day. the cause may be." Radford, after ¢ opened | puision, putting hia hand away from ' : “Thank you. You are very kind to) his eyes wstin a physl- him ay’ though it were something un- \t ODS SPDLIDSD DDD SI ISSA = 9-8 age a hat to me,” answered Melany, | clan with an pr jon strangely cal-,) clean. Then he laughed. “What do THE EVENING WORLD OFFERS A NEW BOOK IN SERIAL FORM eet ene ee eee nee rocked, culatine ’ 4 | nd e notloe ha ner pte rloc ken culatin, ou make of that? he demanded EVERY TWO WEEKS. hands quivered. Then she told him,| “Do you think me mad?" he then | jronteally. it Onvrright, 1818, by Ames Trovvetahoy ag she had promised, everything, | asked curtly Do_Not_Misa_ To-Morrow's Inatallment,) | i ¥ SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | ied a biudred “years afore. The i Sevaide ine sass oar, wa ‘ | H eee . ' \ndai'ip arows into love, and feck the aot, ee shoes. S S it j ern mei se eens ine tvtus san ringer The ‘wedding day ie l l H l But, visiting “Her Wish." he meets the wt agen ond is rove by her suble power, They fu ; Biss erecched, appareutiy lifeless, oo but grave ‘ | teenth : CHAPTER XL \in his eyes, Hoe seamed at first to li mas and hear very indistinctly, | Coe . ti ng that everything was "in Ve ; after sunset. He hed no he ates ad Site | ' ! more influence with her tha! | What's happened?” he kept asking. PY ' the others, It was only when) eee nothing whc ere—only 9 | i sal | halves, par . . ' 3 | ber father, after vainly appee | "lifting his hand he lot it fall again, | sensible experience _ that it held for him a reality which life lacked. ing to ber, broke down in tears that ghe consented to withdraw for a [ow the doctor might| Radford to consciousness, This at Jeast was the mericiui way in which | {t was put to ber. Lp reality there fhad been no doubt in Borridge’s mi @rom the first glance at the white 14 on the piliow. His eves had said as | much td Bieven. Still, as he added in words when the others had loft th foom, one inust always make sure. Hi tests, however, proved his first tm- Pression to be correct. No blood) answered the lancet, there was no| ning of the mirror held before tho | foe ant nostrils, | ‘He had scarcely jaid the cold wrist @own again and closed his instrument ease when Melany re-entered, quiv- ering and defiant as if she guessed the verdict of their silence. But she said nothing, only went and knelt again Deside the ved, taking up once moze her low monotone of reassurance to the dead. ‘At Borridge’s request a great neur- t was wired for that evening. The night wore away, link by link, through its interminable length wn came, and the sun, clearing of eplendor, as if sucking up from whole ‘earth the fumes of our helpless mortality. A gruesome settled down upon him, chok- him, the dread of nameless might feel as Steven felt, the fear of by the fear of what were LFLTEEREESU Ht fi he collapse for boped. He time, not as jany from fall- Ati i (Steven could think ‘ing less) were as pain- another way as had been the that preceded it; for now it Radford’s reason that seemed in not already gone beyond behind in that underworld id from which his spirit emerged to reclaim the body that welence had pronounced dvad. The situation had changed with amazing suddenness, and the girl, now in full possession of herself once more, found that the lover for whom she had ‘wrestled with death eeemed not to Temember hér, had indeed no memory B wyeyese 355 cloudiness in his eyes which focussed on some supe: so tremendous Buch broken sentences as uttered were strange as this, look O 4 look of puzzled dismay coming e. “What's this heavi- 5 Am I wil heavy And he lay staring at his hand in a sort of horrified loath- , repeating over and over: “Why is it Weighted down? . Why n't it whole, and yet so dreadfully heavy 2” Borridge, taking a quiet, matter-of- ‘act tone, explained that he had been ery ill, ‘that it would be better for him just to lie still and not to trouble about anything, that his confusion was quite natural. Molany, who still knelt at his side, clasping his other hand, echoed the doctor's words, beg- ging him to rest, that she would stay with him, that she wouldn't leave him till he ed her to. He lay as if eyes wearily closed, then asked for water. But when the glass was held to his lips and he had swallowed once or twice with appar- ent difficulty, he turned away his head muttering: “No. «It isn’t real water - it's heavy... olid...” The girl, not knowing how to answer, trying to humor him asked what he meant by real water. And he an- swered: “It satisfies wholly bad ¥ Bt ODOO: « it floats to you like music . . ." Then he corrected himself with petulance: “No. That's nonsense. Speaking makes me for= get. Words are too heavy. You can't talk of these in terms of solids. Ob, it's monstrous! . . «+ + Words, . Blocks of lead! lor ages. . . cquntless ages. They break through my faults tear them to shreds, . . . You can’t hold luraps of lead in woven rainbows. The sixth color, . . . There it ts in words! Do you understand? Of course you don't. - The sixth color, . .*. There's no word been made for it. . . . Its name is hid- den. It’s the secret of apace + « timeless space. . . . Now you know "he laughed weakly, opening his eyes an instant, “what you'll never know!" he ended with faint derision, and closed them again, lying motionless. | Borridge persuaded him, with Me- lany’s aid, to take some nourishment! and told him that he must not talk any more for the present if he wished to recover quickly. He then went into the next room to speak with Steven and Mr. Warrenger. The girl, left alone with her lover, knelt gazing down at him, until one of the tears that she had so long re- pressed crept down from under her lashes and fell upon his hand. Ho started, opening his eyes and fixing them on the fallen tear, “How heavy it is! . . he muttered. “Like everything . here.” ‘Then with a sigh, half of weariness, half of exasperation at the gross inexplic- ableneas of all about him, he closed his eyes and turned away his face again. The girl took care that no second tear should fall, and he lay without speaki.g for some hours, CHAPTER XII R. HLLERSON, neurologist for whom they | had telographed three days ago, arrived \that evening at| seven, | After an interview with Dr. Bor- ridge, and before going to sce Rad- ford, he asked Melany if he might speak with her alone, She led hin to her own room and, closing the door, turned to him, saying as if in answer to a question: Tam going to tell you everything. That's what you want, isn’t it?” ‘Yes, I want that vary much,” re- plied Ellerson. The girl nat down facing him, very distinct the great the Carburetor ‘You can’t expect to get utmost gasoline economy and engine efficiency if you constantly fill up with various fuels of different qualities—that require different car- buretor adjustments. That is why many a motor is operated on a wasteful mixture that neither gives adequate power nor burns up cleanly—that gives low mileage per gallon and quickly, carbonizes valves, spark plugs and pistons. There’s one sure way to avoid fuel extravagance and engine trouble. Standardize on carefully refined, def- initely uniform, clean-burning SOCONY Motor Gas- oline—sold everywhere. At filling time look for the red, white and blue SOCONY Sign. Every gallon the same. STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK NY REGISTERED US PAT OFF GASOLINE and the at the’ Brooklyn Branch Newark Branch 37-39 William New Rochelle Branch 0... Newest Model. in the Show are to be found Reo Booth Reo Motor Car Co. of New York, Inc. Manhattan Branch Broadway at 54th St. 1380 Bedford Avenue 184 Main St. Factory—Lansing, Michigan Street GRANDMA NEVER LET |STOPS BACKACHE HER HAIR GET GRAY) Th FEW MINUTES She Kept Her Locks Dark and Glossy, with Sage Tea and Sulphur. Rub Lumbago, Pain, Soreness, Stiffness Kight Out With “St. Jacobs Liniment.” When your back is sore and lam or lumbago, sciatica or neuritis ha you stiffened up, don’t suffer! Get I trial bottle of old, honest “S jacobs Liniment” at any drug stor pour a little in your hand and rub it git into the pain oe acne, wud by When you darken your hair wit Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one ca tell, because it's done so evenly, Pri | paring this mixture, though, at hon ‘js mussy and troublesome. At litt cost you can buy at any drug stor the ‘ready-to-use preparation, in Pepto-Mangan for Pale School Children Pepto-Mangan Gives the Help the Body Needs to Make Rich, Red Blood. Jame ‘Gude’s” on Every Package Sold by Druggists in Both Liquid and Tablet Form—Me- roved by the addition of oth i ime you count fifty the soreness an au i eit alted aAWyethis Peay lameness is gone ca ; dicinal Virtues Are the Same. 4 Sulphur Compound.” You just dan Don't stay crinpled! This soothing po : es of new es iy Cimon Wow ut a, | Bae a) oa ht ie ’ = Fe ea pease wih Pand pain right out and ends the} ‘The lessons are hard and the chil- of “ and draw this through your til misery. It is magical, yet absolute | ren are growing.. Watch their tang one an etree ctecnnenn [harmless ahd doesn’t burn or discol fashionable motor cars are on disp ‘ow iv HE range of Lines of Business ntability of the Oldsmobile Economy By morning all gray hair disappear and, after another application or tw your hair becomes beautifully dark ened, glossy and luxuriant. y, faded hair, though no dis grace, is a sign of old age, and as w all desire a youthful and attractir the skin Nothing els and lame bac and surely. Advt stops lumbago, sciatic ery so. prompt! r disappoints! ealth and if they become pale and less and don't want to work or y, consult a good physician at once you suspect any serious ailment. 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