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T oT oF 8900 Tone Divide We 1% IN 200 Tonopan xt Ife lt 1290 *Tono-Jim 1 moo ow 1800 *Tonopai Midway Sak ae (0 Tonopah Min. 1k IW 1200 Tonopalr Mizpah 1 10 to 1000 *Tonopah Montana ou 1000 *Tonopeh Tes Eula 7 oot 100 United astern. hy th #2€0 *Vietory s 5 6 800 West Bnd © 14 Me 1200 *Wuite Cape ., he 200 *White Caps Me 1% 1M 1000 *W) Aes | 8 2000 *Yerrlogtow ott 8 1060 Munich 4» rn ee) Sendiaty of Pec Der Corp 48 MM | 00 Ave Gof nae Pacific Cae 4 4% — we] 190 Alssra Gold; Van Am Pet 1% BIN — WY 1990 Car Lai Alwrka Tuncas Peo RR. 1% 40% A700 General Axpuait Allis Chalmers Penn Sea Steet ” 100 Gen Awnal ot ‘Ani Agti Chemical Peoples Gas 24% BM +1 | 200 Goodyear Tire .! Am Pooch Mag Pere Maruetio .. MM 24 Ze 100 Goodyear Tire vt ‘Am Can... Pail, Co wa ah Be + $00 Grape Ole Aw Car & Pily.. | Piewe Arrow 19% ,5Te AT 1% | 1100 Grape O10 pf Am Ow & P bd + | 300 Hercule Paper : ‘ain Cotton O11 = 100 Manu DF xs eartatra : 700 Nor Aim Paper - Am Drug 8ynd . bed | 1000 Perfect Am, Hide & oe 100 Ranter Aton am we L, Supe Sa] 400 Kepanite 75 Am, ed + SN] 200 Noy de France Am, te] 10 Singer site Am cant 100 Submarine Hoat © in. ™ + 3% | 2000 He 5 “ery * “} wou ® Speed Toil ‘ ee. a . — S| won Lan An, S) 000 0 8 Steam Am, + t 4 +00 United Profit Sharing am i = ih W] 1300 Untied Metall Candy 2 1% It Aen, . Southern Railway. 27% Oh UH STANDARD OFA. i \ am “ 1m |Mouthern Ry pt... 0 90 Ho 10 Obio Olis en ae) 4 ~ Awaconda 5. by | Stramibere ae 70 o” 08% % INDEPENDENT O1LM, ‘Amo Dry Goole my [Studio 2, at OH OR 1] 900 Altes on % Aedhison RY oo yy [St Te de Ban Fran, AK BH BHM — Me | 000 Allied OW ” Atuhison Re ot re fee @ ee WH 20% A | 1100 Hoo OU 3 aAbGgaWwi.. % | Siberior Seo. tie 4M + ML 2000 Moston Wyoming ™ an ais AS OK + SMT. A ATA. OOK Me MN Nea 1s i, Matthews & mh wm | Poame Co, ‘i Th a “ Ce ee eet atea 11% 12% — 8h | Tete Aw bee 1% 8 i 8, E 5 Bah, Motor 704 704 — 1% | Tobacco Prod % 60% + WT 100 Rik Henin Per Cr ae Beh, Se! roe ee ten 6 | Trempe a Wil... 10% 10% 1800 Fngineors Petroleum... 1 11 ee ie” os ‘Twin’ City Rawid , a2 Rf DN] KO Feterat OM .. ™ Rae Be Tree. et Uoion Pacific .... 198° HT TN | 900 Glenitoek On mf “4 Botte & Superior reg peer ty Union 08 ah mh we] 900 Int Petrol .. WH BF BA Cat, Potvin «the 2% BH casted Ally 0 0 1800 Kay County 1% 1% IN rk > Canadien Pacific, 110 as ON ay | Caster Frat 00 190 © 100 700 Maracatbo WH 18H | 186 sv Cat, Leatter,,... = Ca te. In: Oe. 7 Th + | 400 Mert on 1% 12H * Cont, Lesher of... 00 - 4 2] 0% Racal Sion 62% «GB + | 180 Atawom met. M6 AS Candice Mots MKS 0.8 0,4 PB. 4 oY OH 3 Che, & Ohio... 38 OR BN 8% Th + % MM OM 46, rk Be mH , 8 . 82 %] 100 Obto Fuel a) cy OM, a BP. wh: WH HON Wy 49 — MQ] M0 Oke Nat Gass. ae tae Chi Pooum Toot .. 60 bb o + r “au 1% 600 Producer & Refiners, .. 6 om 6 OW, RL a Pe, BR BY BH te 86% — %] 500 Ted Nook Oil * % Gal. & North. Hy... 70 (0% Wh — be © — &] 200 Hyan Cons... 10M 10% Chile Copper 13% 19% — 4% — | 0 Salt Creek Prod. ae 3044 Caino Copper. ae Ay te 8% — 1%] 1500 Simme Pee, 10% vars Fuel & 4 ae oon 41% Me — wh 300 Sony OU om o% ; Gas & Elec... HN ON + ue 100 uperior OW m 0 4 f Columbia Grapho, ae pi rod hare 26 100 Tropical Of 10% 19% 19% Consol, Cig. Corp. o — 1000 Union Tex Oil... . % % Oon, Tate! M10 10 tee hie a = %| 260 Viewer Ou new, e i, a4 fr Cone, Cauds . ee 16% MIS Bs Com Products + eM 46 — 1% | 160 Alan-Br Col... a a Gremble Steal... pid BIG — % | 1000 "Aunts 5 1% 1% 1% Cuba Cane Sugar. ry \ = Ou, Cane Sugar of, Lda Gin Am, Saar +9 Con, Textile Corp. oP | Dé, Lack a | & Wo al Mine. cha lS ead + % ‘ Seer | TAYE ane weight of news developments +1 | over the week-end was against tho — ®| stock market, so security prices dis- J |] played # nenvy undertone to-day, How- c —1 | ever, recessions were limited to a i ciaae + ‘ point or Jess in most iasues and at no] 3,000 of Them Are Moved jaa time was there a prondunced pressure 3 + ly| of selling orders. ; to Tears.-by Welcome —1i%| The Polish situation came in for] * Expressed in Song. + OPTIONS oD German Marks Russian Roubles Italian Lire Tremendous Profit Possibilities aH for option en 10,000 Marks “ 100,000 $320 $47 $226 $438 $76.50 10,000 Roubles $320 i = $727.50 100,000“ Send remittances and orders to L.N. ROSENBAUM & CO., Inc. 135 Broadway New York eeeter PURDY & CO., ‘Tel. Jobu $174-5-0-7, FUNERAL DIRECTORS. 14 . % beri and on agptiment, LIBERTY BONDS b Ee most attention, Announcement by the Soviets that they now are within five % | Miles of Warsaw, and that bhe fall of w} that olty is imminent had an unfavor- e the various commodity markets likewise reflected the spread of bearish opinion. De- % | mand sterling dropped to $3.63 1-4, a ‘* | loss of more than a cent to the pound; cotton dropped from $2.60 to $5 per, | bale with close options showing the | largest loss, and corn and wheat re- ceded two apd three cents per bushel. Aside from the unfavorable charac- ter of the foreign news, reports from ‘industrial centres were anything but encouraging. They told of slackening in industrial activity and were accom- panied by prophecies of price reduc- Uvns Involving conttaction in the mar- sin of profit Furthermo! Saturday's bani statements held forth little promine that the money market will become appreciably easier in the immediate or near future, probably not until the crop moving season ls ended. The renewal rate for funds for purposes of stock market speculation was 7 per cent. Considering the character of the news the market made a commend- able showing, By its action it gave further convincing evidence that it is in @ liquidated positoin. Otherwise to-day's relatively, small recessions certainly would have been much larger. For the greater part of the day steel moved within @ range of-haif a point. Oils, with the exception of Texas Co,, fell off -bout a point. The | latter stock was bought on reports / that a new big gusher had been brought in In Texas, Motors wore generally lower on re- ports that sharp price reductions are comtemplated, Rubber and tire is- sues were heavy and even the rails were unable to remain at a parity with the closing prices of last week, ———s e sere * erece Kee TET * TONY'S PRICES LIBPRTY BONDS Laberty 81-2 90.28, up 10; Ist 48 50, off 10; 24 84.16, up ,04; Int 41-49 ; 8d 81.90, Victory 33-48 95.54, 4, up 02 FOREIGN EXCHANGE LAR. Belgian cables opened 0002; Swiss cabl 1667, up .0001; guilders, demand, .3310, off .0006; peseta cables, lower, at 1512; Swed- ish krona cables, higher, at 2015; Denmark krona cables, at .1522; Nor- wegian krona cables, .1)30; 8. dollars on Canadian demand, .8810; IRREGU- 0780, off uv Sterling, demand, 3631-4, cables, 3.4. Argentine pesos, demand .8730, cables, | 6760. 24 Pine Bt N.Y, Uncle. Sam, smiling benevolently, extended an all-embracing welcome yesterday afternoon at Ellis Island to his most recent nephews and nieces, 8,000 immigrants, whose first impres- sion of America was made bright*with the smiling faces of thoir future coun- trymen, kind words of welcome and Inspiriting songs of cheer that com- bined immediately to form the fires of nationality which are expected to weld into Americans al! who come into this melting pot of the world. Representatives of «il the races of Europe were crowded into the north Jawn of the Island when Commissioner of Immigration Frederick A, Wallis started the exercises, the first step in the Americanization cf the new- comers, conducted on the lines first suggested by The Evering World. All the races of Europe were there —Russian, Polish, Czecho-Slovakian, Italian, Spanish, Greek, Turk, French and the Jews who have had home- lands of a sort in each of thesp coun- tries, Each race, each nationality carried its own identity into the yard Each was sufficient unto itself, Each remained distinct from the other— until the first gtep of their Ameri- canization was begun, and then, when speakers in their own tongues told them of the opportunities in this new free land, when they had heard the singing of American and their own songs, in which they themselves took part, when the import and the spirit of the welcomé had become manifest te them, they lost for the while their race {dentity. They laughed, they cheered, they ‘applauded with their hands. Some wept with joy and as rogramme was continued all the races of Europe stood together in the lawn as one great, laughing, happy American crowd) ALL RECOGNIZE “THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER.” ‘The exercises were the third of the kind Commissioner Wallis has held. Dr. W. 1. Sirowich acted as Chairman of the meeting, which was opened with the singing of “The Star Spangled Banner,” led by Miss Ina- of Illinois. The immigrants recognized tune and their upturned faces lighted with understanding, Of came the hats of the men, and even old and bent women rose to their feet in their first tribute to the anthem of their new country, Tears flowed from the faces-of many, but they were tears of thanksgiving. Hundreds, though the words were unknown to them, car- hatred grandmothers near the étand, belle Lowden, a sister of the Governor | | the | fix" ried the tane, while three little, gray- |§ In which {s voiced in song the prayer of Ismel for deliverance from Its cen- turies of hardship, there .welled froin the assemblage a sob, It seamed, of thanksgiving that here ‘at last in this land of kindness and hospitalit: their deliverance would be complete: Maurice Schwarz, the director of Ir- ving Place Theatre, addressed the 1ni- migrants and sang to them in Yid- dish, and Mrs, Rachel Blumaner sang ‘La Paloma” in Spanish, but the most effective, the most telling part of the programme was the singing of the Immigrants themselves, for in that they had an opportunjty to voice in the only language they know their feelings of joy and hope for the bless- ings of their new homeland. VERSATILE BOY SINGS IN MANY TONGUES. ‘There was a scarcity of persons who could sing in languages other than Russian and Yiddish, but Com- missioner Wallis overcame that by calling wpon volunteer soloists from the crowd. One, a Greek Jewish boy whose name is Ruben Shklar and whose father lives In Newark, won over every one by leading the immi- grants in the singing of five national anthems. He speaks fluently Greek, Russian, Italian, French and Spanish, and he sang so well that Joseph Rum- shinsky, of the Second Avenue Thea- tre, who was at the plano, asked the boy to call on him after he Is ad- mitted into the country. Many visitors were present to wit- ness the exercises,-and Commissioner Wallis announced that cards will be sent out for the meeting next Sunday, when he sald he @xpects to have a 200-piece band from the Hebrew Orphans’* Home to give a concert The expenses of yesterday's pro- gramme were defrayed by Harry Ro- sen, a Vice President of the Harri- man National Bank, COAL OPERATORS DENY WAGE RAISE Refuse Workers’ Demand for $2 a Day Increase; Offer 35 to_ 72 Cents: CLEVELAND, O., Aug, 16.—The bitu- minous coal operators of the central competitive fleld in refusing the miners’ demands for a $2 a day increase for day and monthly men and 10 cents a ton for pick and machine mining tals morning offered the miners a proposl- tion agrovlng to correct the seeming inequality of the present contract py advancing the wages of the day and monthly men ‘the equivalent of the Coal Commission's award to the pick miners giving the ety and monthly men an in- Grease eatimated at from 35 to 72 cente a day. Z ‘The operators will consider no other demands made by the miners, including the 10 cents per ton asked for pick and machine mining. The miners received the operators’ reply In a joint conferen committee “and unanimously the propouition, FORT ERIE ENTRIES. FIRST KACD—$1,500) maidens two yeu oud: ix funomee— taille Bow 1h: Joe wile bie, Too; Wetter Giel, 10H, t 108; “Poe Vita, 112; Golden” Autumn, 112; " MoGoodain, SECOND RACK—€1.500, clilaing: thiee.year olde; six. Seiguge~ Mal ihe ‘Times 100) Kew, i finden sat, 1st Dany, 100; Jokey Jane 03.” Wid Salwar, 100 ‘thyrre-y ear. 1) Roorinive, 1 MM. 18 Kawa a Ai, eae Pi a i Sane: eet, im: Kr) » pony Jemen Powter, 10) 5 Yy Higplond Lad! 112; Nake Me Sheer FIFTH RACE Puree $1,500 three year-olds andy ‘awartion W Ridgeway Handdio mile porkiat MAS ast. Paul. i, Tees ia Hear U, Giddings eatry’: b-0' as anxious as any to become Amer- jcans, in emulation of older Amer- leans there, lifted their hands to their Franos, demand, 727, cables .0728. Lire, demand, .0496, cables .0497. Guilders, demand, 8310, cables, .3320, DIVIDENDS, The Standard Oll Company of ‘New Jersey declared the regular quarterly dividend of $ a share on the common and $1.75 a share on the preferred, both bayable Sept, 15 to stockholders of record Aug. 26, foreheads In salute to the Stars and Stnipes that waved above them, It was impossible, of course, to speak und sing in the language of every Kroup present, but members of the Police Reserves, men and women, interspersed ‘throughout the crowd, did their best go Interpret everything that was sald. Miss Fannie Sershon, a Yiddish ac- tress, delighted the immigrants with end itio' Hobrew and Russ ngs. When she sang “El bli, 500; + ; art) eho waren tithe dsan Tat of och na! ‘ a! i jo a. J00: i Fe Hose, Ou Ca Hes RTE ' é lr, 18 | Koay, 108; Soli Howk, 10): Handful, 108; Bab- Wing tare” 10 Lay La, tm SEVESTH IAUe St 00s tsimiog: fies and maine; Sine yeat-onie ati up. lle ands weve) ecu) Te yarde ay { Sayona, Soprentlon a Mow ance Weather ehowery.” “Track i ~ Crashed Between Freight Cars, | John 6, mp morning ow morning as Caught betwe id Bleventh Ave! D, MONDAY, AUUTST 16, (192 sores ‘Revive Old Epitaphs And Adapt Them for | Cox-- Harding Slogans ‘~~ Miss Florence T. Logan Uses One From Gov. «6 Bradford’s Monument at Plymouth in Con- | Many contestants for The | the Fathers with difficulty attained’” | Burial Hili, Plymouth, Mass. | Colony, from 1621 to 1667." COX SLOGANS “Cox and Roosevelt, they top list, Oh! Boy! Who can resist? Anna Frank, No, 47% West 158th Street. | “I€ you believe tn personal liberty and sound government vote for Cox.” David Goldowitz, No. 22 King Street, Port Chester, N.Y. “Cox when President will emulate Washington, Monroe and Roosevelt— America for Americans."—Andrew J. Hussey, No. 309 West 35th Street “We don't want an oligarchy or racy.""—Sosthanes N. Wood, No, 173 St. Nicholas Avenue. “The rooster will crow, Cox sure we know, with patriotism, peace, plenty.” Waldron Bally, No. 67 Mo- wer Avenue, Mount Kisco, N. Y. our country’s fate; vote for him!" Avenue, Brooklyn. “Practical Cabinet,’ more action, less red tape, sound principles and just laws."—Mrs. H. P. Pond, No. 2462 Valentine Avenue, Bronx. “Gox will solve the League of Na- tions, and save the country’s reput tion."—Miss Vera Quinn, No. 175 Summit “Avenue, West " Hoboken, tox for President, Vice, Democratic Congresk—is the best advice."—W. H. Walling, Light- erage Division, Marine Department, D. L. & W. K.'R., Hoboken. “Think of the horors of war; for Cox} save our sons.”—Mrs. B Smith, Fort Salonga, N. Y. Make Cox and Roosevelt winners and defeat the corrupt political money power."—T. A. Beveridge, No. 6337 McCallum Street, Philadelphia. “Cox and Roosevelt, master and mate, to guide America’s ship of State.""—Frank J, Masterson, No, 315 Grier Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. “Elect Cox and get a‘ President; Harding a big variety of Presidents.” —Katherine MacLean, No. 204 West 109th Street. “L for League, 0 for of, N for” tions, € for Co: ex Forman, No. 215 East 106th Street. Roosevelt for tons “The foregoing inscription ts taken from Gov. He was the second Governor of Plymouth | Other slogans received to-day follow: plutocracy; give us Cox and democ- | “The next four years ‘will decide | Aaron Haberman, No. 117 Greenpoint | test for The Evening World Awards. j ening World awards are turning back “ive history's pages or visiting Colonial and Revolutionary shrines in quest of ™| famous sayings or epitapls to embody in their slogans and adapt to the 4 | Present political campaigit Miss Florence T. Logan of No. 120 West 86th | A she bad suc- * | Street sends as a slogan “Elect Harding! ‘Do not basely relinquish what al! the detestation whic! and she adds this historical informa- HARDING SLOGANS. “Mr. Cox, the League, of Nations, has hut split the whole’ creation.” Miss Anna Meyer, No. Palisade Avenue, West Hoboken, “Harding will put plain: Shall this Government a re- public remain?" West 36th Street. | “November voters, be wary and wise; don't perpetuate a Czar in dis- guise.”—-W, 9K. Sam, No, 229 East Thth Street. “Harding-Coolidge, they will di you and I will put them ‘through. Mabel McLean, No, 957 Cauldwell Avenue, Bronx. i “Harding says: ‘Washington, we, are here! Avoiding entangling alli- ances, unafraid, not unfriendly.’ enry L. Phillips, Falis Village, Conn, ! “A great Nation needs as great a man for President—elect Hardin, Abraham Gelbfish, No, 110 Rodney Street, Brooklyn. “Harding elected, Wilsonism reject- ed, war tax corrected, and our pros- perity not affected."— Wesley H. Beckwith. “Harding and Coolidge agree land or sea we must be free. George Gray, No, 304 Palmetto Street. Brooklyn. “Ohlo is the State, Marion is the town, Harding is the man,”"—George Skleno, No. 4 West 25th Street. “Republicans! Democrats! Act on the square: put Harding in the Presi- dential chair."—Isaac C. Jacobs, No. 54 West 10th Street, Harding, Coolidge and common exploitation, we league for Arthur Hunter, No. 2762) hth Avenue. Harding, the man of might, surely fight for the people's rights. Frank J. Dettling, No. 1301 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn. “Young and old, first and last, our man Harding is winning fast."—Fred Ross, No. 254 West 146th Street. “A better country and a_ better world demand a better President— Harding."—Andrew T. McKee, No. 57 on Dubois Street, Newburgh, N. Y. The Cox manage’ divided as follows: Hirst prize Harding slogan, $25. Three other prizes, $10 each. First prize Cox slogan, $26. Three other prises, $10 each. Remember this is neither a guessing contest nor « lottery Skill alone will count in the The slogan muet contain exactly 12 words. F Send in your slogan to Slogan Bditor, Evening World. The contest will end Thursday, Aug. 19, and announcement of awards will be made Monday, Aug. 23. NY, ARPLANESIN 3500 MILE FLGHT ‘EACH ALASKA Four Army Machines Land at Wrangel After First Voyage of Kind in History. KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Aug. 16.— The four army airplanes which left Mitchel Field, Mineola, Long Island, on July 15, on a flight to Alaska have landed at Wrangel, Alaska, They came to ground on the flats of the Stikine River, seven miles from the town, They are the first heavler-than-air machines from the outside to land in the Territory of Alaska, Theh only other plane ever seen here was & small exhibition machine, carried oy beat to Fairbanks, in the interior, in July, 1913. ‘This gave only play hops. The four army De Havilands madv a successful landing in highly favora- ble weather. The sky was clear and there was no wind. Normal coo- ditions at ngel made it the most feared stopping place in the Territory. It ls predicced that fair weather wil be with the flyers at Dawson, Faw- banks, Ruby and Nome, whither brief dis. t thi will My from Wrangel. At vlaces the weather js superb at this Season, with a rainfall as low os Arizona's. apmesl ROB NEW YORKER IN WEST, LOS ANGELES, Aug, 16.—Thieves day entered’ the apartments of ir, and Mrs. T, ¥. Crafts In the Hotel Alexandria and’ stole tewels valued at $5,000 belonging to Miss Crafts, Bour rings and two pins were taken. One of the rings was given to Miss Crafts on her graduation from Brooklyn Heights minary, Bethe Crafts are touring California_and had planned on returning to New York thin week. Mr. Crafts {#4 retired news- per man, havin with The New ‘ork World for thirty-four years, Have You a 12-Word Campaign Slogan For Harding or Cox? 4H Harding managers are already proposing to blazon euch a slogan from every dead wall i the cities and towns in the country from coast to coast. will follow suit, The Evening World has thousands of readers who can write ¢lever slogans. We invite‘thom all to try their hand. ° The Evening World will pay $110 in prises for the best efforts, lection of winners. GIRL TELLS JUDGE OF JEWEL ROBBERY Says One of Accused Carried Safe With Gems of Mrs, Stevens Down Fire Magistrate Douras in Yorkville Police Court to-day held for the Grand Jury action George Rubino, No, 242 East 90th Street; Walter McKeon, No, 174 East S5th Street, and Anna Westervelt, No. 1412 Second Avenue, charged with bur- lary at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth W. Stevens, No. 927 Fifth Avenue, ‘The girl insisted on testifying, despite her counsel's protests, She said that six men accompanied her last Wednesday night to the Stevens house, where Mc- Keon carried Mra, Stevens's Jewel safe down the fire escape and away in a taxi- cab to her flat, where the strongbox was opened und $7,000 worth of antique Jewelry removed MoKeon and George Rubino, with the latter's brother, Frank, were arrested Thursday at a pawnshop, where, it was alleged, they tried to sell the” Jewelry. Frank Rubino was shot while trying to escape. He is in Harlem Hospital. Two other men are sougit ONE DAY IN PRISON FOR 18 SPEEDERS Others Are Fined From $25 to $50 4 and Two Chauffeurs Are Held, ‘About sixty speeders were arraigned before Acting Chitf City Magistrate Mc- Geehan in TraMe Court to-day. About | two-thirds of the number were fined from $25 to $50 and elghteen were given sentences of one day in the city prison, In addition to the speeders two chauf- fours were arraigned for driving while intoxicated, Joseph Daniels, a laborer, ot No. 248 East Third Street, arrested yesterday on Avenue C, near Eighth Street, waived examination held in $500 bail for Speciat Se: John Bu of No. 34 Grand & Inwood, arrested Saturday Central Park West near Eighth Street, | pleaded not guilty.and was held in $500 bail for examination Aug. 1 @on!” | Bradford's monument, come of it, she flung the words of }and presence. criminal lunatic! Pelham, ‘No. 317 The punishment (Copyright, CHAPTER XI. Coutinred,) EVER! Never! Never!" she repeated, with in- creasing vehemence. “You bate me tore than everything?” “I hare you more than I love my “You “You lie! lie, you lie!" he snarled, Nothing comes above, your Yes, my hatred for you.” All Veronique’s passion of revolt, eded in restraining now burst forth; and, indifferent to what might red full in his face: I hate you! & bate you! have my son die before my eyes, I would witness his agony, anything rather than the horrogof your sight T hate YOu! You killed my father! You are an unclean mur- derer, a half«witted, savage idiot, a I hate you!" He lifted her with an effort, car- ‘ried ber to the window and threw her this question on the ground, spluttering: “On your knees! On your knees! beg@ning. You would scoff at me, you hussy, would you? Weill, you shall see! He forced her to her knees and then, pushing her against the lower wall amd opening the window, he astened her head to the rail of the balcony by means of a cord round her neck and under her arms. He ended by gagging her with a scart, “And now look!" he cried. “The curtain's going wp! Boy Francois) doing his exé@rcises! . . Oh, you hate me, do you? Oh, you would rathér have hell than a kiss from Vorski? Well, my darling, you shall have hell; and I'm arranging @ lit- te performance for you, one of my own cémposigg and a highly original one at that! . Also, | may tell you, it's too now to change your mind. The thing’s irrevocable. You may beg and entreat* for mercy as muoh as you like; it's too late! duel, followed by the cross, the .programme. Say your prayer: Veronique, and call on Heaven. Shout fer assistance if it amuses you. . . Listen, { know that your brat is ex- pecting a rescuer, a professor of olap-trap, a Don Quixote of adven- ture. Let him come! [he more the merrier! We shall 6ee some fun! . . And, if the very gods join in the game and @ake up your defense, I shan't care! It's no longer their business, it's my business. it’s no! longer 4 question of Sarek and the treasure and thegreat secret and all| the humbug of the God-Stone! Its a question of yourself! You have spa in Vorski's face and Vorski is takin, his revenge. He 1s taking his re- venge! It is the gtorious hour, What exquisite joy! . . . To do evil as others do good, lavishly and pro- fusely! To do evil! To kill, torture, i ruin and destroy! . 2 Oh, the fierce delight of being a Vorski! © stamped across the room, stri ing the floor at each step and hus- tling the furniture. His haggard eyes roumed in all directions. He would have liked to begin“his work of de- struction at once, strangling eome victim, giving work to his greedy fingers, executing the Incoherent orders of his insane Imagination, Suddenly, he drew a revolver and, brutishly, stupidly, flired bullets into the mirrors, the pictures, and win- dow-panes. ‘And, still gesticulating, still caper- ing about, an ominous and sinister figure, he opened the door, bellowing: “Vorsk having his revenge! Vorsi's haying mis revenge!” Twenty or thirty minutes elapsed. Vgronique was sti alone. = Th cords cut into her flesh, and the rails of the bulcony bruised her fore- head. The gag choked her, Her knees, bent in two and doubied up beneath her, carted the whole weight of .her body. It was an intolerable position, an unceasing torture i Suil, though she suffered, she was not very clearly aware of.it. She was unconscious of her physical suffering; and she had already undergone such mental suffering that this supreme ordeal did not awaken her drowsing k- senses. She hardly thought, Sometimes she id to herself that she was about to die; and she already felt the repose of ‘the after-life, ay one sometimes, amidst a storm, feels in advance the wide peace of the harbor, Hideous things were sure to happen between the present moment and the convlu- sicn which would set her free; but her brain refused to dwell on them; and her son's fate in particular elicited only momentary thoughts, which were immediately dispersed, ‘At heart, as there was nothing to enlighten her as to her frame of mind, she was hoping for a miracle. Would the miracle occur in Vorski? Inca- pable of generosity though he was would not the monster hesitate none the less In the presence of an utterly imnecessary crime? A father does not kill his son, or at least the act must be brought about by imperative reasons; and Vorgkt had no such rea- sons to allege against a mere child whom*he did not know and whom he could not hate except with un artin- clul hatred, Her torpor was lulled ‘by this hope . miracle, All the sounds which hoed through the house, sounds discussions, sounds of hurrying footsteps, seemed to her to {ndicate not so much the preparations for the events foretold us the sign of inter- tuptions which would ruin all Vorski's, Had not her dear Francois hat nothing could any longer separate them from each other and that, at the moment when everything might seem lost and even when every- thing would be really lost, they must keep their faith intact? My francois,” she repeated, “my darling Francois, you shall not die. + +» We shall see each other again . . you promised me!" Out of doors, a blue sky, flecked with a few menacing clouds, hung outapread above the tall oaks. In front of hef, beyond that sane win- dow at which her father had appeared to ker, In the middle of the grass which she had crossed with Honorine on the day of her arrival, a site had been recently cleared and covered with sand, like an arena. Was it here that her aon was to fight? She received the sudden intuition that it ; and her heart contracted. is) she sai, "Francois, fear... 1 shat! sav ns forgive me, F ling. forgive me! All thig is a punishment for the wrong I once déd, It is the atonement . The son is atoning for the mother Forgive me, forgive me! At that moment a door opened on the ground floor and voices ascended from the doorstep, She recognized ef have no fe) THE SECRET OF SAREK} By MAURICE LEBLANC 9, by the Macauley Company.) 1 would $y | love which she bore her son. shall each go our own way; on the left, on the right. You'l thie kid with you, I'll take the And we'll meet in t iste, You'll be — the seconds, so to speak, of yours U'il be the second of mine, so that the rules will be observed.” ’ Veronique shut her eyes, for she ht | not wish to see her son, who would no was laughing and epeechifying. ‘The groups turned and advanced im opposite directions. ‘Don't come any nearer,” Vorskd ors dered. “Let the two adversaries their places, Halt, both of you. And not a word, do you hear? either of you speaks, I shall cut him a without mercy. Are you ready? 6 So the terrible thing was co! ing. In accordance with Vorski's the duel was about to take place bes fore the mother, the son was about to fight before her face. How could she: do other than look. She opened her eyes, é She at once saw the two come to Srips and hold each other off. But! she did not at once understand she saw, or at least she failed to um derstand {ts exact meaning, She saw the we ‘bo: : was true; but which of them waa Francois and which wamy ° Ri ? “Oh,” she atammered, i! + And yet + + no Tom mistaken, + + Its not pom sible...” She was not mistaken. The two boys were dressed alike, in the same Velvet knickerbockers, the same; white-flannel shirts, the same leather belts, But each had his head ‘wrapped in a red-silk scarf, with two holes for the eyes, as in a bighway= man's mask. a + Which was Francols? Which was Raynold? Now she remembered Vorsici's inex- Piicable threas. This wns what he meant by the program drawn up by himself, this was to what he alluded when he spoke of a little play of his, composing. Not only was the son fighting before the mother, but she. did not know which was her son. It was an infernal refinement of cruelty; Vorski himself had sald eo. No agony could add tod Veronique’s agony, sich The miracle which she had hoped for lay chiefly in hemelf and in the Because her son was fighting before her eyes, she felt certain that her son could not die. She would protect him against the blows and against’ the ruses of the foe, She would make the dagger swerve, she would ward off death from the head which she adored. She Would inspire .her boy with dauntless energy, with the will to attack, with indefatigable strength, with the spirit that foretells and seizes the propitious moment. But now that both of them were veiled, on which waa she to exercise hy good influence, for which to pra: against which to rebel? She knew nothing. There was no clue to enlighten her. One of them was taller, slimmer and lither in his movements, Was this Francois? The other was more thick-set, stronger and stouter in appearance. Was thia Ruynold? She could not tell. Noth- ing but a gilmpse of a face, or even fleeting expression, could have re- vealed the truthto her. But how was she to pierce the impenetrable mask? And the fight continued, more ter- rible for her than if she had seen her son with his face uncovered. “Bravo!” cried Vorski, applauding an attack, He seemed to be following the duel like a connoisseur, with the affecta~ tion of impartiality displayed by af good judge of fighting who above all things wants the best man to win,, And yet it was one of his sons that he had condemned to death. ‘acing her stood the two = ices, both of them with brutal faces,~ pointed skulls and big noses with spectacles. One of them was ex~- tremely thin; the other was also thin, but with a@swollen paunch like » leather bottle. These two didnot, applaud, but remained indifferent, or perhaps even hostile. to the sight before them. ‘apital!’ cried Vorski, approve ingly. “Well parried! Oh, you're a couple of aturdy fellows and I'm won. dering to whom to award the palm.” He pranced around the adversaries, urging them on in a hoarse voice in which Veronique, remembering cer- tain scenes In the past, seamed to reoognize the effects of drink. Neve theless the poor thing made an ef- fort tg stretch out her bound hands toward him; and she moaned under her ga Merey! Mercy! I can't bear ét- Have pity!” Tt wae Impossible for her martyr. dom to last, Her heart was beating so ylolently that it shook her from head to foot; and she Was on the point of fainting when an Inaident occurred that gave her fresh life. One of the boys, after a fairly stubborn tussic, had jumped back and was swiftly bandnging hla right wrist, from which a few drops of blood were? trickling, Veronique ssemed to rap member seeing in her son's hand thi smal) blue-and-whtte handkerohiet which the boy was using. It's Francois," she murmured. Yes, yes, it's he . . . It's you, isn't it, my darling? T recognize you now, .'. . The other ts common and heavy. I's you, my darling! .. . Ong my Francois, my dearest Francota! In fact, though both were fighting with equal flerceness, this one diss played less savage fury and blind rage in his efforts. Tt was as ti he were trying not ao much to kill hia adversary as to wound him and as though his attacks were directed brath 0 preserving himself from the death that lay in walt for him, Veronique felt alarmed and stam, mere@, as though he could hear het Don't spare him, my darling! He's a monster, too! Oh, dear, if you're generous, you're Ibe + Francots, Francois, mind what you're doing Th: blade of the dagger had flashed over ihe head of the one whom she called her son; and she had eried out, rcder her gag, to warm him, Franco|* having avolded the blow, she felt norauaded that her cry had reached hls ears; and she continued instinctively to put him on bis guard and advise him: “Take a rest... Get yous | breath Whatever you do keep your eyes on him. . . . He's gete to do something... « to rush at you... @ re he comes! Oh, my darling, an: -Jother Inch and he would have stabbed you in the neck! Be {Onrting, baie: he's treacherous se no trick too mean for him t@ Vorski's volce among them, “go it's understood,” he sald. “We “tormorrow's thrilling installs ment.) '