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Take No Chance withFLUand GRIP opYour lis^Colds witk FOLEY'S TAR Thousands of Mothers hare found «n curs sweet rtmos am excellent remedy for children complaining of Headaches, Colds, Constipation, Keverlshness, Stomach Troubles and Bowel Irregnlarltiea. These jiowders are easy and pleasant to take and excellent results are accompliabed by their use. MtrMkn To N I C hT Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets atop sick 1 telieve bilious attack*, lo-- • regulate die etimlnaHv asake you (eel fine. "Bettor Tfcsa Pills ftr Uivli' Gabriel Warden. Seattle c*P«£*- Jst, taUa his butler he 1» ."Wfct n« a caller, to ..*» .admitted without question. He Mama Ms wife of danger that threatens hi"1 'f pureaes a course he considers the only honorable, ona. leaves the hoMbe In ha oar and meets a man Whom ha takes into the machin*. Whan the car returns home, Warti* J* found -dead* murdered, and ami*! - The trnner, a v0""* man, has been at W#fdea s.h^?' but lotviNiinobBerv^L Bob Connery, conductor, receive# oraers to hold train for a party.' Five idm and a girl board the titta. the Eastern Express. . .. William MacHarg -I Ed win Balmer mas ©olor your balx •Wy» quick I j »nd safely by CHAPTER II--Continued. , The remaining man, carrying his own grips, set them down in the gate and felt in his pocket for his transportation. This person had appeared suddenly after the line of four had Jprmed In front of old Sammy at the gate; he had taken his place with them only after scrutiny of them. His ticket was a strip which originally had held coupons for the Pacific voyage and some Indefinite Journey In Asia before; unlike the Englishman's--and his baggage did not bear the. pasters of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha--the ticket was, close to the date when it would have expired. It bore upon the line where the purchaser signed, the name "Philip D. Eaton" In plain, vigorous characters without shading or flourish. As a sudden eddy of the gale about the shed blew the ticket from old Sammy's cold fingers, the young man stooped to recover It. The wind blew off his cloth cap as he did so, and as he bent and straightened before old Sammy, the old man suddenly gasped; and while the traveler pulled on his cap, recovered his ticket and hurried down the platform to the train, the gateman stood staring after him as though trying to recall who the man presenting himself as Philip IX Eaton was. Connery stepped beside the old man. "Who is It, Sammy?" he demanded. "Who?" Sammy repeated. His eyes were still fixed on the retreating figure. "Who? I don't know." The gateman mumbled, repeating to himself the names of the famous, the great, the notorious, In his effort to fit one to the man who had just passed. No one else belated and bound for the Eastern Express was In sight. The president's order to the conductor and to the dispr.tcher simply had directed that Number Five would run one hour late; It must leave In five minutes; and Connery, guided by the impression the man last through the gate had made upon him and old 8amm; both, had no doubt that the man for whom the train had been held was now on board. Connery went out to the train. The passengers who had been parading the platform had got aboard; the last five to arrive also had disappeared Into the Pullmans, and their luggage had been thrown into the baggage car. Connery Jumped aboard. The three who had passed the gate first--the girl, the man with the glasses and the young man In the cutaway-- it had now become clear were one party. They had had reservations made, apparently, in the name of Dome'; the girl's address to the spectacled man made plain that he was her father; her name, apparently, was Harriet; the young man In the cutaway coat was "Don" to her and "Avery" to her father. His relation, while intimate enough to permit him to address the girl as "Harry," was unfailingly respectful to Mr. Dorne; and against them both Dorne won his way; his daughter was -to occupy the drawing room; he and Avery were to have sections In the open car. "You have Sections One and Three, sir," the Pullman conductor told him. And Dorne directed the porter to put Avery's luggage In Section One, his own In Section Three. , The Englishman was sent to Section Four In Car Three--the next car forward-- and departed at the heels of the porter. Connery watched more closely, as now it came the turn of the young man whose ticket bore the name of Eaton. Eaton had no reservation In the sleepers; he appeared, however, to have some preference as to where be slept. "Give me a t, Dorne, S da ugh r's help was settling himself In his section, turned ap<] looked that way and said something 1 In a low tone to the girl. Harriet Dorne also looked, and with her eyes on Eaton, Connery saw her reply inaudlbly, rapidly and at sojue length. "I can give you Three in Car Three! opposite the gentleman I Just a» signed," the Pullman conductor offered. That'll do very well," Baton answered In the same pleasant voice. As the porter now took his bags. Eaton followed him out of the car! Connery went after them Into the next car. He expected, rather, that Eaton would at once Identify himself to him as the passenger to whom President Jarvls* short note had referred. Eaton, however, paid no attention to him, but was busy taking off bis coat and settling himself ha his section as Connery passed. The conductor, willing that Eaton should choose his own time for Identifying himself, passed slowly on. looking over the passengers as he went. He stood for a fev moments In conversation with the dining-car Conductor; then be retraced his way through the train. He again passed Eator. slowing so that the young man couht speak to him If he wished, and even halting an instant to exchange a word with the Englishman; but Eaton allowed him to pass on without speak' tag to him. Connery's step quickened as he entered the next car on his way tickets. As he entered tfels car, however, Avery stopped him. "Mr. Dorne would like to speak to you," Avery said. Connery stopped beside the section, where the man with the spectacles sat tHfli his daughter. Dorne looked op at tiift Ton, are the train conductor?" he asked. "Yes, air," Connery replied. Dorne fumbled la bis Inner Docket and brought out a card-case, which he opened, and produced a card. Connery, glancing at the card while the other still held it, saw that it was President Jarvls' visiting card, with the president's name in engraved block letters; across Its top was writ-' ten briefly in Jarvls' familiar hand, "This Is the passenger"; and, below. It was signed with the same ncrawl of initials which had been on the note Connery had received that morning-- "H. R. J." Connery's hand shook as, while trying to recover himself, he took the card and looked at It more closely, and he felt within him the sinking sensation which follows an escape from danger. He saw that his too ready and too assured assumption that Eaton was the man to whom Jarvls' note had referred, had almost led him into the sort of mistake which Is unpardonable In a "trusted" man; he had come within an ace, he realized, of speaking to Eaton and so betraying the presence on the train of a traveler whose Journey his superiors were trying to keep secret. "You need, of course, hold the train no longer," Dorne tald to Connery. "Yes, sir; I received word from Mr. Jarvls about you, Mr. Dorne. I shall follow his Instructions fully." As he went forward Again after the train was under way, Connery tried to recollect how it was that he had been led Into such a mistake, and defending himself, he laid It all to old Sammy. But old Sammy was not often mistaken In his Identifications. If Eaton was not the person for whom the train was held, might he be someone else of importance? Now as he studied Eaton, he could not Imagine what bad made him accept this passenger as a person of great position. It was only when he passed Eaton a third time, half an hour later, when the train had long left Seattle, that the half-shaped hazards and guesses about the passenger sudden'y sprang into form. Allowing for a change of clothes and a different way of brushing his hair, Eaton was exactly the man whom Warden had expected at his bouse and who had come there and waited while Warden, away la his car, was killed. Connery was walking back through the train, absent-minded in trying to decide whether he could be at all sure of this; and trying to decide what he should do if he felt sure, when Mr. Dorne stopped him. "Conductor, do yon happen to know," he questioned, "who the young man Is who took Section Three in the car forward?" Connery gasped; but the question put to him the Impossibility of his being sure of any recognition from the description. "He gaye his name on his ticket as Philip D. Eaton, air," Connery replied. "Is that all you know about him?" "Yes, sir." "If you find out anything about htm, let me know," Dorne bade. "Yes, sir." Connery determined to let nothing Interfere with learning more of Eaton; Dome's request only gave him added responsibility. Dorne, however, was not depending npeu Connery alone for further" Infora handful of dMgttwIth which he flUod a plsln, tt|jMp>ied ctgar case, and went towaif ft^club and ofcser Color Re Makes you look jouog 7& cents, or tllrecl Kemp hta, Tsna vatlon car through last on at him nnd nodded bat As iMtfaised next to tint*--the Dorne glanced, up fe to her father; Dorne -not look up. The observation rootai was nearly empty. The only occupants were a young woman who. was reading" a magazine, and an elderly man. Eaton chose a seat as far from these two as possible. He had been there only a few minutes, however, when, looking up, he »w Harriet Dome and Avery enter tne room. They passed him, engaged n conversation, and stood by the rear door looking out Into the storm. It was evident to Eaton, although he did not watch them, that they were arguing something; the girl seemed insistent, Avery irritated and unwilling. Her manner showed that she won her point finally. She seated herself in one of the chairs, and Avery left her. He wandered, as 11 aimlessly, to the reading table, turning over the magazines there; abandoning them, he gazed about as if bored; then, with a wholly casual manner, he came toward Eaton and took the seat beside him. "Rotten weather, lsdt It?" Avery observed somewhat ungraciously. Eaton could not well avoid a reply. "It's been getting worse," he commented, "ever since we left Seattle." "We're running Into It, appnrently." Again Avery looked toward Eaton and waited. "Yes--'ncky if we get through." The conversation on Avery's part was patently forced; and It was equally forced on Eaton's; nevertheless It continued. Avery Introduced the war and other subjects upon which men, thrown together for a time, are accustomed to exchange opinions. But Avery did not do It easily or naW rally; he plainly "Vas of the caste whose pose It Is to repel, not seek, overtures toward a chance acquaintance. His lack of practice Vas perfectly obvious when at last he asked directly: "Beg pardon, but I don't think I know your name." Eaton was obliged to give it. "Mine's Avery," the other offered; "perhaps you heard It when wd were getting our berths assigned." And again the conversation, enjoyed by neither of them, went on. Finally the girl at the end of the car rose and passed them, as though leaving the car. Avery looked up. "Where are you going, Harry?" "I think someone ought to be with Father." "I'll go In Just a minute." U 8he bad halted almost In front of them. Avery, hesitating as though he did not know what he ought to do, finally arose; and as Eaton observed that Avery, having introduced himself, appeared now to consider It his duty to present Eaton to Harriet Dorne, Eaton also arose. Avery murmured the names. Harriet Dorne, resting her hand on the back of Avery's chair, Joined In the conversation. As he replied easily and Interestedly to a comment of Eaton's, Avery suddenly reminded her of her father. After a minute, when Avery --still ungracious and still Irritated over something which Eaton could not guess--rather abruptly left them, she took Avery's seat; and Eaton dropped Into his chair beside her. Now, this whole proceeding--though within the convention which, forbidding a girl to make a man's acquaintance directly, says nothing against her making it through the medium of another man--had been so unnatu rally done that Eaton understood that Harriet Dome deliberately had arranged to make bis acquaintance, and that Avery, angry and objecting, bad been overruled. She seemed to Eaton less alertly boyish now than she had looked an hour before when they had boarded the train. Her cheeks were smoothly rounded, her lips rather full, her lashes very long. He could not look up without looking directly at her, for her chair, which had not been moved since Avery left It, was at an angle with his own. To avoid the appearance of studying her too openly, he turned slightly, " ~ ' a: I It* Height." ,/ • * • "Ob--so that is the way yon wens thinking of it?" "You mean," Eaton challenged directly, "am I an engineer?" "Are you?** "Oh, no; I was only talking In pure generalities, Just as you were." "Let tut go on, then," she said gayiy. "I see I can't conceal from you that I am doing you the honor to wonder what you are. A lawyer would think of It in the light of damage It might create and the subsequent possibilities of litigation." She made a little pause. "A business man would take 't into account, as he has to take into account all things In nature or human; It would delay transportation, or harm or aid the winter wheat." "Or stop competition somewhere,** he observed, more Interested. The flash of satisfaction which came to her face and as quickly was checked and faded showed him she thought she was on the right track. "Business," she said, still lightly, "will--how is It the newspapers put ftT--will marshal its cohorts; it will send out its generals in command of brigadef. of snowplowa, Its colonels in command at regiments of enow abor- 8h* find Halted Almost b» Front Thorn. elers and Its spies t discover itnd to bring back word of the effect upon tho crops." "You talk," he said, "as If business were a war." "Isn't it?--like war, but war In «fetfgher terms." "In higher termsl" he questioned, attempting to make his tone like hers, but a sudden bitterness now was betrayed by it. "Or In lower?" "Why, In higher," she declared, "demanding greater courage, greater devotion, greater determination, greater self-sacrifice. Recruiting officers .can pick any man off the streets and make a good soldier of him, but no one could be so sure of finding a satisfactory employee In that way. Doesn't that show that dally life, the everyday business of earning a living and bearing one's share in the workaday world, demands greater qualities than war?" Her face had flushed eagerly as ate spoke; a darker, livid flush answered her words on his. "But the opportunities for evil are greater, too," he asserted almost fiercely. "How many of those men yoj speak of on the streets have been deliberately, mercilessly, even savagely sacriflcd to some business expediency, their future destroyed, their hope killed!" Some storm of* passion, whose meaning she could not divine, was ^weeping him. "You mean," she asked after an Infant's silence, "that yon, Mr. Baton, have been sacrificed in such a way?" "I am still talking in generalities," he denied ineffectively. He saw that she sensed the untruthfulness of these last words. Her smooth young forehead and her eyes were shadowy with thought. Eaton was uneasily silent. Finally Harriet Dorne seemed to have made her decision. "I think yon should meet my father. Mr. Eaton," j»he said. "Would you Afmoet Universal Type tern With a R« ef Romantic Tr t-Wfrfr • new light is shed on the so-call fascinating sheiks as described by merous authors in recent novel*, Datrymple Belgrave, a former ber of the frontier districts tration of Egypt, in an interesting article written in the London Daily Mall. "I have Just returned to England after spending seven years In Egyflifc Palestine and the Sudan, where sheila are frequently found,""he writes. "Dm\ lng that time I met and was well acquainted with more sheiks than I caa easily remember, but not one amonf them all was like the typical 'shear Of the modern novel. "Certainly some of them were handsome enough. I remember one In particular who ruled ft district ftn the borders of Egypt and the Sudan. He was as fine a man as I ever have seen, but he was practically black, and the •sheiks' of fiction are usually faintly tanned' and 'scarcely darker than an Italian.' "Perhaps Mahdi Abdul Nebl, whose home was an oasis In the Libyan desert, was In appearance more the required type, but then his manners left much to be desired, and his behavior at a meal, which would consist probably of the larger half of a sheep, was neither romantic nor attractive. "In my experience the usual Arab sheik was elderly, a pronounced 'beaver' and only moderately clean. "His surroundings, too, would appear very disappointing to the reader of the 'sheik' type of story. One would expect wonderful camps in the desert, huge silken-hung tents furnished with priceless rugs and sumptuous divans heaped with futurist colored cushions. "I have capped in- the desert with real sheiks from whose wealth one would expect every luxury, but their camps were very like those of the ordinary Bedouin, and one met Just as many objectionable Insects as in the tents of the common Arabs. "I think the nearest approach to the sheik of fiction among my acquaintance was a certain Hassan, a very splendid individual who called himself 'Shelk Hassan,' and lived in the neighborhood of Shepherd's hotel, in Cairo. He spoke English perfectly, wore wonderful Eastern robes, and I really believe he took as his model the hero of one of the stories I read. "But, unfortunately, Hassan had no experience of the desert; he was born and bred in Cairo, and his occupation was that of a guide who showed tourists round the pyramids and took them out to see the Sphinx by moonlight !H It hast every respect Hattie Ely's Death Recalled. . The much more romantic career of Hattie Ely is recalled by the death tak France of that other American beauty of half a century ago, Mrs. Hughes Hallett, "Girard" writes in the Philadelphia Inquirer. In her day and prime, Hattie Ely, daughter of a Philadelphia clergyman, outshone as a dazzler of men this other Philadelphia «irl whose grandfather was a. Hessian officer in- the Revolution. " • ' f " Hattie Ely not only won the casual admiration of ~ grand dukes and princes, but her intrigues, recounted by herself in her autobiography, reached right up to the throne* As a Philadelphia school girl, Hattie was a wonder. I know men' who as boys knew her, and they describe ber Is the most beautiful woman ever seen in this city. Her extraordinary beauty made life one succession of adventures. Eloping at an early age with a big, handsome railroad conductor, Hattie quickly discovered that her "fatal face" was a fortune. She was the sensation of Paris and became the particular favorite of a Russian grand -dukfe. Her book, written In French, was once loaned to me by Samuel Bancroft of Wilmington. The late "Lou" Megargee left on record a fine pen picture of Hattie Ely, whose dt""'-llnff career was waning when he began his as a newspaper man. * .. . system, It effectually Normalcy. Movie Director (to ingenue)--Dont look so stupid, please, Mies Blank. You aren't supposed to be ia love any more.--Washington Star. I v :J|* A MAN WHO BECAME FAMOUS Doctor R. V. Pierce, whose picture appears above, was not only a successful physician, but also a profound student of the medicinal qualities of Nature's remedies, roots and herbs, and by close observation of the methods used by the lndlsns, he discovered their great remedial qualities, especially for weaknesses of women, and after careful prepaifetton succeeded in giving to the world a remedy which has been used by.worn en with the best results for half < century. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is still In great demand, while nHmy other so called "cure-alls" have come and gone. The reason for Its phenomenal success Is because of its absolute purity, and Dr. Pierce's higt> standing as an honored citizen of Buffalo is a guarantee of all that Is <2almed for the Favorite Prescription lis a regulator for the Ills pecullar to women. Send 10c for trial pkg. to Dr. Plercefe Invalids Hotel, Buffalo. N. Y. | , Pr^ "'••• "Cttve Me a Three, if You Have One," He Requested of the Pullman Conductor. mation.. As soon as the conductor had gone, he turned back ~-to his daughter and Avery upon the seat opposite. "Avery," he said In a tone of direction, "I wish you to get In conversation w)|h this Philip Eaton. It will proMi>Iy be useful If you let Harriet talk with him too. She would get Impressions helpful' to me which you can't." The girl started with surprise but recovered at once. "Yes, Father." she said. , » "|h«, drr Avery ventured ^? pro- "It would be more Interesting If it allowed a little more to be Seen. At present there is nothing visible but snow." "Is that the only way It affects you? An artist would think of It as a background for contrasts--a thing to sketch or paint; a writer as something to be written down In words." Eaton understood. She could not more plainly have asked him what be was. said, "but"--he hesitated, tried .to avoid answer without 'offending her, but already he had affronted ber-- "but not now. Miss Dorne." She stared at lilm, rebuffed and chilled. "They know you. One is following. Leave train inatantly." (TO BE CONTINUED.) *11*11 UHII HlllHliUHIil ftiMtHltH l 1111UHMH HOW "MOTHER NATURE" WORKS « y Wise Old Dame Makes No Mietakee In l^jtlng Out for Safety J;, Numerous Progeny^. back to the smoking compartment of the observation car, where, he expected to compnre sheets with the Pullman^ conductor before taking un the VJ. CHAPTtR III Dome Meets Catart? Dorne motioned Avery to the aisle, where already some of the passengers, having settled their belongings In their sections, were beginning to wander throu qualntan card game. ough the cars seeking accei or players to make up a Eaton took from a bag A sSHHftting example of the efforts Of environment and changed conditions of life upon the forms of animals Is furnished by a species of partridges living in the Canary islands. About 400 years ago the Spaniards Intro-, duced the red-legged partridge from Europe Into these Islands, but as recent examination proves, it has undergone modlficatlonc clearly brought about by the conditions under which It lives. Its back bjs turned from russet cOlor to gray. This looks Hke a case of protective coloration, since the bird passes its life amid- gray volcanic rocks. Then Its beak has become onefourth longer and thicker than that of Its ancestors and of its European relatives. and Its legs have also in length and grown stouten These changes are exactly such as were needed to suit It to the life that it Is now compelled to lead amid the irocks and on the mountain sides of the Islands, where a moj-e vigorous physical development Is required than was needed upon the plains of England and France. ^ As has been remarked. If each changes can be wrought b> nature In the animal form In 400 years, what might not have been accomplished In 400 centuries? rom German Coal. s discovered how iroduced from coal ive been successful at th a plant capable of dealing with 60 tons per day. The conversion of coal into petroleum la achieved by introducing hydrogen Into the coal, thus completely changing Its chemical character and converting about 90 per cent into a liquid similar to /uel oil. This oil Is transformed Into light oils and gasoline, the latter totaling about 40 per «ent of the volume of the fuel oil treated, there being also an equal percentage of Diesel engine olL • Had "the Goods" en Minister. ^n -old Scotswoman was told that her minister used notes, but would not believe It., Said one: "Gang tnto the gallery an' see." She did so and saw the written sermon. After the luckless preacher had concluded his reading on the last page he said: "Hut I- will not enlarge." The old woman called out from her l*>fty position: "Ye canai fa eanaa» far four paper's gt*l eutr Decay of Qtaes. It Is probable that but few persons who admire the Iridescence of ancient glassware know tnat the prismatic hues displayed are a result of the decay of the glass. When disintegration sets in the substance of the glass splits Into exceedingly thin laminae, which, as the sunlight traversee them, give rise to a splendid play of colom. As In the instance of the leaves of a forest, these, delicate glasses signalize their approaching dissolution by becoming more bfeautlfuL Wanted Up-to-Date Santa. After seeing Santa Claus, his sleigh and reindeer, at one of the large community trees. Bfetty Ann turned away and said: "Mother, why doesn't Santa Clans sell those eW reindeers *nd buy n carl" ~f:' 't * si i* • ' - v /« ». «Dancing Made Eafy, On Willie's return from M dancing lesson, his Aunt Amelia Inquired. "Well, Willie, how did you like your dancing lesson?" "Ob," he replied, "it's easy; all you have to do la turn around and keep wiping your few*.* 'tii; TOO Death only a matter of short tim* Don't wait until pains and acbe» become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking LATHROP'S HAARLKM OIL The world's standard remedy for kidney, Bver,btadderaod uric acidtroiiblee--the National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Guaranteed. T^ree slaee,an dn«gM** «r tlM bum C«M M*dal «t> mmr* 'bMI feted M# IMIIMIMI green mountain A8THMA reUevea the dtstree* UaeS torn .ftTffnf \ l\ fu. OiH^KKkniA frME. tieeUee on *«»•>, Ito| eatises, Weilemi. etc.. aeeA? Hear * woman nevfer knows what •be wants until she iinds out what he»^»:;'.'" :: tTT-h""' does not wanu fr" ^ If at the age of thirty a girt haastf^v^ met her Ideal man she tries to maa she has met. I'toMS: ^ * -"4* rfv« 4&K • f ' ...ft.. '4* .