PAGE T U R E » OF'IKUJ NEWS H U R 8D A Y SEPTEM B ER 1. 1927 sack bundle» no the sagging runnin« aerloua one. Whan ba naked for food - 1 boards was within. at back doors, he offered so earnestly He guessed correctly that the oc­ to work (or It that he waa rarely re- cupant of the cabin was cooking a fused When the work was sufficiently late breakfast in the kitchen The CHAPTER XII. and eagerly performed, the grateful door of the kitchen opened to the A Fight housewife, usually gave hla a package • He began to not« ominous signs. south and there waa no window on of food for the coming meal. the west aide, from which he ap­ Ha passed through Bcottdah- at The place had a down-at-the-heel and proached The »and »tilled hla foot» night on the bumpers of a fast freight. neglected air. There whs an unslght steps- He pained the door without Il was early, but the little town ly litter by the woodshed. Papei s detection. slumbered peacefully, Ils urea Illum­ were str e sn about the sandy yard. As hla ahadow (ell aero«« It, the inating empty streets. Nostalgia an J Something was wrong. He veered aole occupant of the small room cautiously to bring the gara.gr- be­ self-pity possessed him as he clung looked up from hla task. He waa a M l o h a .l J. P h illip « to a breakbeaiu and rumbled through tween the open back door and h'm- mean-faced, narrow-eyed man with a aelf. He did this after a cry of greet­ the place where be waa born. He I l l u s t r a t i o n « b y H e n r y J*y L e a stubble of beard on bia lined cheekd. O spyH xM M U h sel V. P h lU tw s yearnpd toward It, even though It re­ ing hail died unuttered on his lips. He was in the garb of the motor- • Bstsasad th ru Publtahar« A utaoaater Bea garded him aa a criminal, an outcast This didn’t look like Patay Jane. It tramp. »oiled cotton shirt, the sleevee was as squalid as a city slum and a failure. His teeth set them selves when he rolled up; khaki breeches, stained He dropped from an empty car i t noted the composition of the heaps with greaae; worn canvas leggings; daybreak, the sixth day of hla ab­ , about the woodshed. It was his own and »tubby brown shoes. A cigarette sence, In the bong Portage yards. He ' long lines of cars paralleled (hem on motive w hs s mvstery which could be furniture and bedding, bundled out, hung from hla lip. He was in the act loft to the future for solution. Mean waa tired and hungry and dirty; but unsheltered. He applied bia eyes to sidings. be could not wait. He hurried up the a crack In the rear of the garage A Resolution overcame weakness. He time, there was satisfaction In the cement sidewalk which flanked the thought that he had opened an ac- small car, much more battered ana had to get nut! He crawled up the broad main street. Hla footsteps cllck- rusty than his own with soiled gunnv partition on hla left. There was space count In the Ming Portage Rtate bank, ■ ed hollowly in the hush that settles (or hla body between the topmost a few day-- previously, and deposited on the world Just before sunrise. He layerw of bolts and the oar roof. He nearly all his money. was well beyond the town when the wriggled forward, toward the little He carried a dollar bill for emer­ sun appeared on the winding sandy door, high up. It: the end of the car. gencies In a small pocket of hla trous­ truck ahead of him, sentineled in Ils He found It, but It. too, waa locked ers, and thia had been overlooked. arising by two stubs of what had once He could not budge It He Inched When, on the windows of a dingy been giant pines. backward to the centre of the car, store on the street beside the railroad Fatigue slowed hla footstep» In the crossed the open space, and mounted | the other partition to the plies of timber In the rear half. These tiers were not plied so high He was soon examining the rear end door It -was fastened, hut seemed weak He fuund a slender bolt which could he handled aa a battering ram Half-sitting, half-crouching. ha drovvi It against ths little door which had been cracked across In the past by shifting cargoes Koon ha had He clinched «till broken away two of the boards com­ more tightly, hla posing IL so that he could reach out, head burrowing twist off the seal and remove the SEA RCH downward and hasp The door slid back easily. foe better optical service Inevitably leads to Moody's. Inward The light of 2» years’ specialised research and knowledge acqulr-wl Ha was free But another problem SWAMP THE LEADINO CHARACTERS — Edison Forbes, a youug resldsut of Scottdale with an Inherent cravlnx for liquor. Is held for the (loath of a woman who has been killed by a boot­ legging truck. vlroumstuntlal ev i­ dence points to Forbes and rather than tall the truth of the episode which would d ear him but cast an other friend In a bad light, he stands trial and Is sentenced to a long term In prison The governor of the slate, an old friend of Eddie’s father, bo Haves him Innocent sud pardons him shortly after his arrival at the Jail Seoota Llbbsy, a worthless chsror ter, who has smashed his machine In to another car, killing Its lone occu­ pant, a woman. Forbes’ c-ompanl.-n and Ubbey quit the scene hurrtdly. leaving the former alone to (see a constable who reasons that Eddie, with ths «cent of whiskey about him must ba connected In some way with ths accident. Accordingly, Forbes Is , arrested. Fstsy Jans, Eddie's pretty wife. M kees (hat public sentiment runs too high against him Accordingly they migrate up north to some land that presented Itself. Ths train puffed has been In ths family for years steadily ooward. The wheels mads Settled In their log cabin evil aoUea on the many curves, and faalah Sealman. a neighbor, pays ths cars leaned sharply to ths new the Forbes a visit and Intimates that direction. How could he. In hla there are some back taxes for the weakened condtlon, crawl nut the nar­ young couple to pay Heakasan offers row doorway. And the grab-irons and to give Eddie a Job after he goaa down descend them to sa fety ♦ He was sure to I-ong I'orUhBs. a nearby town, and to fall between the cars and lx- 0-ound learns about the taxes, to pieces The next day while walking »bout Fortune Inclined to him In friendly their properly they discover a n g |s - ( fashion There was a long whlstls— grade he was invited to "Bat Here," waist ’ of the long tramp. He saw tsrlous mound that conlslns out (rope | tralu slowed, stopped He could bear be descended He spent seventy cents no one; there was no friendly motor­ »toiler to salt At the tax office blast from the locomotive, and the for coarse filling food. car to offer a lif t He scanned the Forbes leuruk that the buck taxes horlxon ahead with Increasing eager­ It revived him wonderfully. When men. calling to one another. The amount to over sight hundred dollars ness as the sun mounted, and signs , train wan stalndlng by a long freight he took to the grade again his ache* and that the certificates are held by I told him he was approaching the end and pains had (Brown more subdued «bed. whose platform was Illumined a Chicago capitalist who Is eao-r to Ills head was clearer; he was no of his Journey. There, at last, was the by many srcllghta. Reals were being obtain the property. Eddie has five | ridge marking the western boundary broken; there was a rattling of hand longer so terrlflylngly dlxxy Fortun­ months to pay A few days later ha ately the night was warm for April. of their land, from which he conld helps a booxe truck out of the mud ' trucks. The stop was a permanent After two hours of walking a lumber- see the cabin. i * one. snd Is presented with a bottle of He hurried until he was almost run­ yard Invited him. He crawled through whiskey which he hides before walk­ ' He crawled out of the little end strands of bartted wire and laid down ning. A sigh of thankfulness swelled door dlsslly, he found the grab Irons, ing over to Interview Realman. up; Patsy Jane had not carried out Not finding him In. Eddie Imbibes and descended In the darkness on the on some sheltered planks, odorous her threat. Smoke was rising from with the scent of the north. He slept side opposite the platform. He was too freely of bis liquor and aa a result the chimney of the cabin. All ■was P a t s v warns him that the next occur-' Patsy occur­ In a narrow lale between two lines of soundly. right with the world. With Pat beside Winning his way home was not cars. He turned In the direction rence of a similar nature will result easy. He was Inexperienced In steal­ from whence he had come. In her departure. Realman hears of The terminal was Chicago. This ing rides. He walked many miles. the trip to the tax nfllcs and makes s generous offer for their place, but Ed­ he learned from electric signs when Eating was a problem, though not a ole. scenting something In the air, de­ the yards broadened out beyond ths , clines. Realman refuses him work end of the train. He was several and several weak» pass Then one hundred mllea from, Ixing Portage. day. Eddie's resolves weaken and he The first problem waa food; the accepts a ride aboard another liquor second to get hack to Patsv Jane as soon aa possible. Ilemorae sourced track. He drinks heavily. him as he thought of her alone In the cabin In the wllderneaa, worrying over CHAPTER XI. him. torn with suspense at hla ab­ Shanghaied sence. Fxldle lay for hours In a stupor so He thrust his hands Into his poc­ profound It was deathlike. For other kets. Suspicion became a certainty. linurs he was I n a delirium shot The rum-runners had drugged and through with the misery of real Illness shanghaied him. To make results His head ached. His flesh protested more effective, they had robbed him as though It were being lorn from his of the few dollars he had had. Their bones. The bones them selves seemed packed with pain. He was Immured In a violently-moving hell which »creeched and clattered Itenearth him. »nd tossed him unfeelingly »bout. It was early night of the second day before consciousness returned He was very weak, and hla head throbbed violently. He was ablo A WEB of cords that end in numbered holes. after many attempts to sit up, brac­ ing him self agnlnst the wall or parti­ 2 1 A hand p used ready to answer signals tion while he groped In the mate that which flash from tiny lamps. A mind, alert netted him. for prompt and accurate performance of a First, he was In darkness, clangor­ ous and complete. Rocond, he was In vital service. A devotion to duty inspired by a railway freight car In full motion. a sense of the public’s reliance on that service. How he got there he could not recall. Every section of a telephone switchboard Think as he would, his head between his hands, he could remember nothing typifies the co-ordination ot human effort and after the first drink In the rum- mechanism that makes possible America’s far- crulser, reaching telephone service. Its cords link for It waa a long time before he could stand up. His trembling flnw rs re­ instant speech those who are separated by a vealed that he was prisoned In a nar­ as a germicidal, stimulat­ continent. Its guardian operator is one of an row space running between the two ing tonic which will give army of telephone men and women vigilant to doom In the center of the car There the hair renewed life and were cross wise partitions holding In lustre. “Ninety-three" Is meet a nation’s need for communications. place a cargo that pounded and rasp­ not sticky or mussy. In plant ami personnel, the Bell System is ed with the motion o f the tmln It Is easy to apply and in effect a vast switchboard serving a nation Further explorations told him Ihe does not lesva the hair cargo was hardened bolts about four that has been transformed into a neighborhood dry or brittle. feet In length. through telephone growth and development. He tried the two doom. He was 14 ounce bottle able to slide one of them a little way In the development of scientific eye testing, is reflected In our glaesea and service. Our plant, with Its efficient organisation of skilled optometrists and opticians, 1 s a remarkable evidence of optical efficiency and persevere nee. Our glasses must please before we are satisfied. “SAVE YOUR EYES” ¿Dt SlurmanW Woody M l W IL L 4 M IT T X » T « U O S N X . O S S C O M W e W ill Have Offices in the M in e r Building a fte r Septem ber The Switchboard H e conld not open them because they were sealed It was apparent that they were now In the outskirts of a most Ideal railroad centre. Pencils light from successive streetlsm ps pierced the darkness of the prison fleetlngly. The tm ln rattled Intermln ably oyer switchpoints. The droning errand of toelr progress proved that T he P acific T elephone A nd T elegraph C ompany Flattery*»! bell system O vm Policy * O iw W om en’» Lovely New Autumn Silk Frocks T a k e a V e r y A ttr a ctiv e P ricing — Sizes For the Miss — Sizes For the Average Figure — Sizes For the Stylish Stout — Be fashionable and wear a flaring creation. If the skirt is flaring or rippling the frock is typical of the smartest fall styles. —These good-looking, splendid quality Crepe Back s a t n frocks we are showing feature side fullness, front fullness and circular skirts. ___ —Very appropriate for luncheon wear for bridge parties, for afternoon teas, daytime wear as well as school wear. Such captivating colors as Jungle Green, English Oak, Crameon Maple, and of course black.