THE T R IM NE. Tl'RNER, OREGON An Adventure of the Scarlet Pimpernel V V V By the BARONESS ORCZY Copyright htronpfa drug WNU Service CHAPTER V II— Continued — 12— “ Malediction I" But Raffet got no further. Astonishment not unmixed with terror rendered him speechless The Scarlet Pim pernel' T e Godsl And the chief o f section and his friend at the mercy o f that Bend I Even now hie straining ears seemed to perceive through those calls for help a triumph •nt battle cry In a barbaric tongue. "H ere I" he cried to the trooper*. “T w o o f you are sufficient to bring these rascals along; and you corporal, and tw o men come with me. CHI ten I.a met and bit friends are being mur dered even now.“ He harried down the road followed by the corporal and two men o f the gendarmerie, while those that were left behind saw to It that the perpe tratora o f all this additional outrage and o f all this pother were duly start­ ed on their way. T o them RalTet shouted a Anal: T h r e e o f you remain to guard the prisoners and make ready for an Im­ mediate start when we return." Then he disappeared round the bend In the road. T b e shouting had ceased as Raffel snd his troopers hurried along. In- leed. at first he might have thought that hla ears bad deceived him, had not that agonised call for help still rta- *n Insistently through the gloom, tie searched the darkness, and suddenly a sight greeted him by the roadside which caused the hair to stand up >n his head. At first this seemed sothlng but a bundle lying half In and salf ont o f the ditch tn the mud. with tbe drip-drip from the trees making t slimy puddle around it. It was from this bundle that the calls for help and die curses proceeded. It was appalling I Almost unbeliev­ able for there were the chief of sec­ tion in the rural division of the de­ partment of Seine et Oise. C itlien Lauzet, and his friend from Paris irbom Captain BafTet knew as Citizen Chauvelln, a man who stood high In the estimation o f the government, and they were lying In a muddy puddle tn the ditch like a pair o f calves tied together for market. RalTet might nave dls6elleved his eyes, had It not oeen for the language which Citizen Lauzet used all the while that tbe rope which bound him was being cut oy the corporal. “ Thank the Lord." Raffet exclaimed fervently, "that you are s a f e r T i l have 'em flayed alive, the ras­ cals!“ Lauzet exclaimed In a voice rendered feeble and hoarse with much shouting, as well a* with rage. T h e guillotine is too mild a death for such miscreants. They attacked me. citi­ zen captain, would yon believe It? M el Chief o f section In the rural gendarmerie I Have you ever beard of such an ou trage! They shouted at oa from behind. My friend and i were riding along quite slowly, and we bad just turned Into the bridle path from tbe road. We beard the cart and all the shouting, but we thought that they were just a pack of drunken oafs returning fmm mar­ k e t So we paid no heed; not even when anon we heard that on the road the cart had drawn up and. chancing to glance back at tbe moment I saw those louts jumping helter skelter out o f tbe c a rt And the next moment they were on ns. the lot o f them. Ten or a dozen o f them they were, the rogues I” T h e miserable scoundrels I” Raffet ejaculated fervently. T h e y dragged us out o f our sad­ dles," Lauzet continued, “ they beat us ■bout the head." “ Name o f a nam e!" "And all the while they kept od shouting. T r a ito r ! T ra ito r! Give up the English spy to us.' [ d vain did we cry and protest They would not bear us, and what could we do against * dozen o f them? Then Anally they bound us with ropes, wound our cra­ vats about our mouths so that we could scarcely breathe, and lifted us Into that jolting cart, where we lay more dead than alive while it was driven by a lout at breakneck speed." "H a v e no fear, citizen," Raffet put In forcefully, "th eir punishment shall be exemplary.“ “ I have no fear,” Lauzet retorted dryly, “ for I’ll see to their punish­ ment myself. The scamps, the limbs of Satan I Rut I’ll teach them I There we lay, citizen captain, at the bottom of tbe cart, my friend Citizen Chauve tin, who wore tbe tricolor scarf o f o f­ fice around bis middle, and I, chief commissary o f the district, and those ruffians actually dared to wipe their shoes on us! So we drove for a kilo­ meter and a half through the forest. Then presently the cart drew op and all these louts Jumped down like a pack o f puppies and ran away up the hill with shouts that would wake the dead. The last I remember, for In the Jolting and my cramped poslton I had partly lost consciousness, was tbut my friend and I were lifted out o f the cart as unceremoniously as we had been thrust Into IL W e were then thruwn Into the ditch by the roadside, tn the mud. Just whore you ultimately found na. and our cravata were loosened from round our month*. Immediately we started screaming for help, but there was such a din going on up the road that we felt the sound o f our voices could not posslhlv reach you. Fortunately In the end. you did hear os, or maybe we should have per­ ished o f cold and Inanition." “ Malediction r Itaffot swore vl dously. “ And you might have been at tacked by those cursed English spies while you lay helpless here. We thought we heard them, and their bat­ tle cry, and hurried to your assist­ ance." Chauvetln showed no emotion. Aa soon as the rope that held him had been severed he had sat up on a brok­ en tree stump, staring straight out be­ fore him Into the mist, and m editative­ ly stroking his sore wrists and arm*. When first those abominable lout* had thrust him and Lauzet tn the bot­ tom o f the earl and he lay there bound and gagged, nursing hts stupen­ dous wrath and hopes o f revenge, he had become aware that the driver, who still sat aloft Just above him, had suddenly turned and, leaning over, had peered Into bit face. It had only been a brief glacce; the next moment the man was sitting up quite straight again, snd all that CbauveMn saw o f him wa* hla back, with the great breadth o f shoulders and a general look o f power and tenacity. Rut It was the brief vision o f that glanc* that Ohauvelln now was striving to recapture. The blue-gray eyes with their heavy lids that could not be dis­ guised. and the mocking glance which had seemed to him like rasping metal against his exacerbated nerves. And suddenly he called to Raffet. T h e driver and the cart, where are they?“ CHAPTER V III B eef Cattle Feeding Plant That Cuts Down Cost o f Labor OLD DOCTOR'S IDEA IS BIG HELP TO ELDERLY PEOPLE 5 e C T I0 N \M ay R ack 1 T F e ^W in d o w S V e r t ic a l S e c t io n h r u In 1885 , Dr. Caldwell made a dis­ covery fo r which elderly people the w orld over praise him today I e d in g Y ears o f practice convinced him that many people w ere endangering their health by a careless choice of laxatives. S o he began a search fo r a harmless prescription which would be thoroughly effective, yet would neither gripe nor form any habit. A t last he found it. e c t io n G a lv I r o n a n is e d V en tilato r - • lAvCaaoiia - £ x I0 C O L L A R B E A '■ V * - — ^ - 2 .- 2 * lC fB R A C E 3 C h o r d 2 x 6 . *.»*■ M '\ . a y O v e r and over he w rote it, when he found people bilious, headachy, out o f sorts, weak o r feverish; w ith coated tongue, bad breath, no appetite or energy. It relieved the most obstinate cases, and yet was gentle with women, children and elderly people. . A M ow \ Charles-Marie T h e captain's sharp eyes searched the mist that was rising in the valley. “ The driver seems to be on the box," he said. “ 1 shall want him to drive these rascals back to Mantes." ‘Send him to me at once." Chao- velin broke in curtly. Raffet gave tbe necessary orders, al­ though inwardly be chafed at this new delay. T h e prisoners slowly contin­ ued their way, and Chauvelin waited, expectanL For what? He could not have told you. He certainly did not expect to be brought face to face with bis old enemy. And yet. . . . But whatever vague hopes he might have entertained were dissipated soon enough by an exclamation from R af­ fet. “ Charles-Marie I What In a dog’s name are you doing here?" And a weak, querulous voice rosa In reply. “ He told me I was to run along and drive the cart back to Mantes for him. He— ” “ He?” queried Raffet sharply. "W h o?" “ I don’t know, Citizen Captain," re­ plied Charles-Marie. “ Who ordered you to leave the dili­ gence and your horses?” “ I don't know. Citizen Captain.” pro­ tested the unfortunate Charles-Marie. “ It s God’s truth. I don't know.” "Y ou must know why you are not sitting on the box of the diligence.” “ Yes. I know thet, for I scrambled down as soon as I saw Gaspard fall on y6n, Citizen Captain." “ Why did you scramble down?” “ Because the horses were restive. At the first pistol shot they started rearing and I bad i mighty task to hold them Fortunately, some one came and gave me a band with them." “ What do you mean by ‘some one came'? Who was It?” "H e was a drover from Alnconrt, Citizen Captain, and so he knew all about horses; and bow could I keep four terrified horses quiet all by my­ self?" “ You miserable fool 1" "A ll very well. Citizen Captain, but I never was a fighting man. and I didn't like those pistol shots all about me. One o f them might have caught me, I say, and it was only right I should find cover somewhere, lest Indeed I be bit by mistake." "Y ou abominable coward t" Raffet rejoined savagely. “ But all that doe* not explain bow yoo got here.” "W ell, citizen. It was like this: The drover from Alnconrt saw that 1 was not altogether happy, and he said to me, T h e re 'll be a lot more fighting presently, when the English spies come to attack.' I said nothing at first. A ll 1 could do was to groan, for, as I say. I’ m not a fighting man. I went out o f the army because I was too 111 to fight, and my mother— * (T O BE CONTINUED.) Many Miracles The world is so full of miracles and all life Is so essentially mysterious that we should be slow to assert that wild creatures have no consciousness o f God.— The American Magazine. Job and His Turkey in Long Association "P o o r as Job’s turkey” waa appar- i key,’ Instead o f the common phrase ently suggested by the older phrase, | ‘as patient as Job.’ And so It must g< for this time at any r a te Tw ou ld "patient as Job.” in the epistle of James « says “ Y e have heard o f the worry out the patience o f Job’s turkey to be picked and pillaged from In this patience o f Job." This, o f course, ra fers to the patriarch whose h'-tory la way."— Pathfinder Magazine. related In the book - f Job aud whose Royal Resldooco patience la proverblaL Buckingham palace la situated In Some writers suppose that "poor as London at tbe west end o f SL Jam et Job's turkey” was originated by T h e building baa been many Thomas Hallburton In T h e Clock- park. maker." Hallburton described a tur­ times changed and the present facad« key gobbler that waa so poor that he la 860 feet In length. T h e great stat« had only one feather In bl* tall and so rooms are the throne room, 66 feet weak that he had to lean against a long; the green room, 00 feet long, 81 fence to gobble*. This condition was feet high; tbe grand salon, 110 feet attributed to the gobbler's persistent long, 00 feet broed; the picture gal lery, 180 feet long. There ere 40 acres efforts to hatch chicks from eggs that In the garden. didn’t have cblcka In them. T u r k e y ," however, wns popularly P rolific W h ite A a l associated with Job In phrases before The Insect that lays the greatest the Slick stories appeared In 1837. In 1824 the Sentinel o f Troy, N. Y „ quot­ number o f eggs at a time la the while ed the following extract from a paper ■nt o f tropical countries, which pro­ called the Microscope: "W e have seen duces 80.400 each day during the tea- fit to say tha 'patience o f Job’s tur­ son. Sigw* That Intrigued The hotel* or Inn* o f ancient daya supplemented th* oral protestation* o f “ mine boat" with sign* Hint mad* It clear why Hi* place «n a known aa tha Inn o f the Four Blatera, or the Inn o f the Elephant, or what you plena*. When you »aw palmeti on the wnll o f a wine shop at Ostia, a beautiful two tin ml led cup, and rend below It “ Bib* quoti sltlca" ( “ Drink, heenuse you may he thirsty” ) one'* d*l»t-clogged throat would want to wimple whatever wine th « keeper o f the Osila might have* ---------- 6 P l ________Xu* 6 k A F T E R C iu U DD IN (3 S E T 2 4 O.C. a t c s r-zxiz JOIST ö z r z r o . c . \\ Today, this same famous, effec­ tiv e prescription, known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is the w orld's most popular laxative. It may be obtained from any drugstore V ; - 0 H — f — T 'O jO ' ------ -T --------- 12- 0" ------- \ ______ 1 I 4 -2 x 1 0 Bui IT UP I s P io p p i * «. [ a n g e r Wishing to B * Unselfish One *if the faculty members o f In diana university entertained relativi** recently with a chicken dinner, tira. Blank explained to her children that they must let their cousin have tbe liver that day and not he selfish. Re­ turning to the kitchen after a brief absence, »he met her Ave-year-old daughter coming out o f the kitchen, latter she missed the liver and ask­ ing the child about It received the astonishing reply : "Yea, mother, I ate It ao I wouldn't be »elfish ."— Indianapolis News. Traffic cop gets summons Even he can’t g et away with it “ T \ O N T try »0 put anything over • J on Nature, it the way a cop would express it. "Sooner or later •hr'II get you. G ive you a ticket and lay you up in a place where you'd rather not be. t'.vcn copa can t get away w ith it. Like everyone else, if they don't pay attention to the warnings they get a summons that lands them in the doctor's office. "W h a t the doctor advisrs is Nu|ol. Says N uiol w ill regulate you just like tea regulate traffic. Keep things from getting in a jam. And the doctor ia right Just ask the healthiest men on the Force. I f ffi*v need N u iol—w ith all the exercise /fir» get— wnat about the fellows that roll by in their can) Nature's law Ü. K. "Just take a tip from me. You may have the best intention» in (he world. But every body jrcti tied up at times. Nature can't always take care of things without help. tloning at all times aa Nature intends them to. Normally. Regularly. It not only keeps an cxccm ot body poiions from forming (w e all have them ), but aids in their rem oval." "O u r Medical Chief tells me that N uiol isn't a medicine. It contains absolutely nothing in the way o f medicine or drugs. It'a simply a pure natural substance (perfected by the N ujol Laboratories, 2 Park Avenue, N ew Y o rk ), that keeps thing» iuoc- Start N ujol today. It w on't coat you much—not more than the price o f tome smokes. Worth e try. isn't it ) Feraal Preservation Rome o f Ihe national forest districts have already set said« certain “ w ild e r neea" arena, lo be maintained free from occupancy or Industrial develop menL The preservation of research and prim itive arena ta now a part o f the forest service program on a na­ tion wide baala. Y o u 'll find N ujol at all drugstores. Sold only in sealed packages. Get some on your way home today. Sm art Youagatere One proof thet the new generatloa la smarter la Ihe fact that children know how to handle their parents without a book on Ilia auhJocL—Cap­ per's Weekly. Accidentally nn Arkansas Indy cured fits In 11 vnlunhle dog with Ituaa Ball Blue. Many others now use 1L New er falls, she says.— Adv. Tape "E v e r alncq 1018 I've been trying to W a it'll Sha Returns collect some hack pay from the gov­ "Y ou r w ife’s a blonde, Utt'l aha.“ ernment,” complalna a Sun Diego “ I'm not sure. Slie'a down at tha man. “ but It aeema I'm Juat another benuly parlor now.“ — P el* Mele, I ’nrla unknown soldier."— Exchange. Real Point Fault flnillng la easy, anyone ran do IL T o show how a thing could lie bet ter done— aye. that Is the rub V iew o f a Boat There are two kinds of men; tbe kind you can teach and the kind yon hare to break.— American Magasine. Keuci what W ill Rogers writes about LEVI STRAUSS OVERALLS vrrwiy warn loosed like Mai O War till mat bunch of Or*. ■ ? " M»“ ker» got a hole of nn this afternoon. It wat ,p*a«a for a raccoon coal athlete.. UP »«*ln»t an oM ^*.9ch°f «twat »hockerx «horn ooujge emblem i* a pair of Lert overalls. . Them old «atmon r eran ^ P ro o f o f tho Pudding Bride— My. there are a lot o f mis­ takes In the rook book. Husband— Yes, I've tasted them.— Clk. Berlin. By W. A. R AD FO RD Mr W illiam A. Radford will answer questions and givs advica FRE E OF COST on all problem! pertaining to the aubject of building work on the farm, for tha readers of this paper. On ac­ count of his wide experience as editor, author and manufacturer, be la, with out doubt, the highest authority on the subject. Addresa all inquiries to WII llam A. Radford, No. 407 South Dear- born Street. Chicago, III., and only In­ close rwo-cent stamp for reply. With fat cattle selling, when this was written, at $17.00 per hundred, the raising and feeding o f beef ani­ mals Is most profitable. However, the feeding operations on the farm will bring a greater return where there Is equipment to cut the labor cost and to house the animals so that the feed they consume be used to the best ad­ vantage. Herewith Is reproduced an exterior view of a modern beef feeding planL Also there are floor plans showing bow the exterior Is arranged and a cross-section giving some o f the de­ tails o f construction. The barn Is T ” shaped. The main structure is 34 feet wide and 100 feet long. The stable floor Is open and Is provided with nay racks and mangers running through the center. These racks are built up so that hay Is stored in the racks, making an abundant supply constantly available to the animals. At the front o f the barn are the feed storage and mixing rooms with twin silos, one on either side. These silos are 14 feet In diameter and 28 feet high. They are connected with P D p 17* A1 r V U r H / 1/ They Rip A s k y o u r denier for L E V I 'S H iiuU i M m L > a > •*«.« t a n »on. Columbia and AJ Smut» p d a down all in I'jccm k ia. It just looks Ilka It a thaMod •ouniry boys' par. »our* W hX RO O D «* Narrow Flooring Best to Prevent Shrinkagt As a rule, the narrower any kind o' floor Is the better It will be, provide* good workmanship Is used and mn terlals are all right In themselves. The reason for this Is that th* shrinkage acres* a narrow piece it less than It Is fo r a wide one, and tha the cupping o f the wider piece du* to drying out o f the wood la g re a tc than In the narrower piece. Storage Important I f a new house Is being built, alt care should be given the fumlamentnl* that mean comfort and stnblllty, su*'l as heating, plumbing, solid structural construction, c tc„ but the housewife's demand* for nrnple storage and closet space must not be overlooked. The entrance should be hospitable and so placed as to help the harmony o f the building—not necessarily In the exact center o f the front wall, hut In harmony with the other features of the house. One too frequently seen fault o f modem houses Is that the doorways are small. The fine, big doorway* o f *otne old-fashioned houses frequently reach well up to the *111 o f the second-story windows and seem to extend a hospitable air o f welcome to the Incoming guest Wrought Iron Used Needed More in Decorating Special for Varnish All Outside Work Wrought iron has become Increas­ ingly Important In borne decoration of late, and not only In the plan o f the modem house Itself— In lighting fix­ tures, grill doors, etc— but In the fur­ nishings o f that home. Whole pieces o f occasional furniture are now being developed In wrought Iron; among them telephone se*s, console tables, coffee tables and small chair*. " » « U » ° f the & S 2 the feed room by an enclosed chut* to which overhead carrier tracks rut* These tracks extend Into the stnbl* and are so located that silage Is car rled to the mangers on either side o the hay storage racks. The harn Is o f tight weather-pro** construction and Is equipped with t auction ventilation system. It provide a warm com fortable place for th< feeder stock to stay In the wlntei time. Combirtahle animals use thel food to put on weight and fat Instea* o f to provide heat to protect then from the cold as ia the case whei they are In the open during the sv vere winter time. Home Entrance Should Brick Laid Over Mineral Appear Hospitable Sheath “Tied” With Metal In laying brick veneer over mineral sheathing, the bricks are tied In with metal ties, which are nailed Into the sheathing with no more difficulty than the same ties are nailed Into wood. This Is made possible by the gypsum composition of the Incombustible sheathing. Mineral sheathing comes In large panels, which are tongue-and- grooved, and which. In consequence, make possible a wall that Is sealed against the wind and which cuts down the escape o f furnace heat. ^ “** had th* city »Uckara strewn from goal to coal A special grade o f varnish, which cost* a little more than the ordinary variety. Is needed for outside work around a home. This varnish I* made so that It will resist the ravage* o f the weather. The varnish must be able to withstand bent and cold In order that If will protect the wood and not turn white. Lydia E . Pinkham and Her Great Grandchildren Lydia E* Pinkham were alive today she would be 109 year« old. Her I F descendants continue to manufacture her famous Vegetable Compound and the integrity of four generations is behind the product. By accurate record, this medicine benefits 98 out of every 100 women who report after taking it. You can be almost certain that it will help you too# 10,000 Bottles Sold Every Day L tjd ia E. Pm kham 's Vegetable Compound