TOC DED CKLE ^^Alber/Pa><^on Terhun<&) O SYNOPSIS. >• I.m” Borden, who derives his ! g!- erj law fnai an angry red h;nh »i the to a of hi* right hand, is ate it ty be released frurn priseii after *er% lc* fe* third term. It 1* a matte: of hi*' O that woe member of every Ken.ra Cb«i «>f tne Borden family ha* been brand ed with the lied Circle hirtlitnarit and tlia: Be mb -r i as always been a criminal. Jim •*11 I is wayward n n. Ted Borden, are the raj, known living representatives of the Hre-- ten kin. Mat lama: a detective, hi dr taned to keep an eye on 'Vir. le Jim ' Jut- Trw. i* and l.er mother, member* of the wens''.Jr art who are tot- rest' d in the reform -A . k-eontnet*. meet Borrl- as he Is i- h jja-d “Circle Jim" catches in* son la ti act of stealing Realizing tliat his family •# a menace to society, he enters th- befrirutn where T-*d is sleep,::g aru! turn* r >tw Grant, a loan shark. Mary, krr r.an*. discovers the theft THIRD INSTALLMENT “TWENTY YEARS AGO” “The Red Circle' God help us!” It,uf err-d the nurse once more, as June looked at her. dazed, incredulous. • You know about the Red Circle? Mont you please tell me?” she en treated. “You must know, because I ean see you recognize it. Don't you •ee how terrible it is for me? Mary, won't jou tell me?” The nurse's arm tightened around Ike Sira young body. Unconsciously •he lapsed Into the soothing, automatic patting that the had used so often to put the baby June to sleep. “1 don't know, lamb I don't know anything, precious.'* she stammered. Mar. 's face took on the haggardness of on* who is awakened from what •eerne.* to be g gruesome nightmare. ' •oly to find that It is a grim truth. She turned from the kneeling figure and went quickly through the door and ! down th* stairway, one nand pressed ! to h»r throat June looked after her. stunned by 1 a awtft. certain fear. Then, slowly she roa** from her knees. walked over to he? dressing table and sank into the little chair before the mirror. In a moment she had decked Hum ming softly, sbe ran down the steps and i-to the garden Down a side path, in a little clump •f bushes was a stone bench Sitting •a this bench, swaying to and fro. with tightly clasped hands, wts Mary. Jane reached her side, breathless and kiarmed As sh« approached Mary looked up in piteous supplication. •This t ask tr.e precious! Don't ask me dear! I dont know. I couldn't toil .ftwi. blessed.” she moaned, and j raise 1 her hand* to ward off June's . embrace. The girl sat down and put a loving arm heroes her shoulders. “People who bring up children and lose them.” she began slowly, “always forgi * those children are grow n. Once "Get Yourself Together, Mumsio ! Someone Is Coming.” a baby always a baby, to loving moth ers ana dear, foolish old nurses. But I I'm not a baby any more. Mary. Es PKbBf not since the horrible thing that happened today. I am branded— j I am guilty of—guilty of—" "Hush? OU. darling, hush!" she be •ougfct. "They will hear you a* the bot.se You mustn't say a word about It any more, not even to me—you muitr't think of it ever again. Prom fee ' *T can't promise anything," per atsted Jane, fighting to regain her com posure. * unU'. you tell me. about this uit that has soiled my hand—tell me what yon know of it." “I'm afraid—I'm afraid," she repeat ad weakly. “Tell me." "Twenty years ago Mrs. Travis went Wort on a trip with Mr. Travis." said Mar>. speaking rapidly, as if forcing •soi word. "I went along—1 was the J maid. It was a terrible place, out West was. in those days. And the place we went to was a mining town where there was nothing but shacks and saloons and rough-looking men and half-dead looking women. “At the end of the trip Mrs. Travis was pretty near spent. She oughtn't to have been traveling at such a time. Hut she just would insist on coming along. I rcmimber Mr. Travis and me had to pretty near carry her into the place where we were going to stay while we were there It wasn't a regu lar hotel—the sign said 'Gem Saloon. Also Rooms.' 'Jake' was the name of the man who kept it. “Jake led the way up the stairs and Mr. Travis and me put our arms around poor Mrs. Travis and just lifted her up that rickety staircase into the bed room on the second floor.” “And than we put her to bed.” be tween us, Mr. Travis and me. He had to go down and speak to some men. on business. He had gone out West on some business about a gold mine he was interested in. you know. And the reason Mrs. Travis went along was because she was so sick and nerv ous. she said it would 'a' killed her to stay behind. And then, that after noon. Mr. Travis and most all the men in the town went into the moun tains to see a new gold claim. They were the roughest looking lot, an' there was one a big. powerful fel low. a gambler—‘Jim Borden’ they called him.” “Jim Borden!” cried June. “Why—!” "And he was rougher even than the rest of 'em; but they all minded what he said. They went off riding on horses and mules with packs and guns slung on their backs and 1 remember I lifted Mrs. Travis out of bed and into a rickety, old rocking chair near the window so's she could wave her hand good-by and throw a kiss to Mr. Travis. That night her little baby was born. I was ail alone there and it went awful with her—-I thought she was dying. After a little while I called Jake and I told him about the baby. He said it was tine and he'd send one of the boys out to the mine to Mr. Travis with a note and tell him about the good news. ''Then, just as he was going down the stairs again he turned around and said he'd have to make it a double note; because J;m Borden's wife had just had a baby an hour before and Jim would want to know. too. “Jake sent the note. Oh. the night was long! Mrs. Travis was uncon scious. And every minute of the time when 1 wasn't trying to bring her to, I walked the floor with this mite of a baby of hers trying to save them both. The nest morning early, it seems outlaws outside the town heard that a big shipment of gold was in the road house waiting to go out. They knew most of the men was away at the mines, so they attacked the place. I'll never forget the minute I heard the first firing. Short and sharp— mostly revolver shots. "I could hear the women and chil dren herding in. in the barroom down stairs. I could hear 'em calling, fright ened. for their husband that wasn't there. Then I heard the doors slam ming and the bolts shot into place. And in the midst of it all the door of the bedroom dung open and Joe and Jake came in dragging a sick wom an between 'em. “ "This is Jim Borden's wife,’ says Jake to me a:id here's Mrs. Toole carrying Jims baby—you an’ her'll take care of the two sick women and the babies, won’t you? And we said ’yes.’ "Mrs. Toole put Jim’s baby down on the bed next to Mrs. Travis—it was one of them narrow, no ’count beds— and went to fussing over Mrs. Borden. And I just walked the floor with the other baby and prayed. The fight was awful: Every now and again some woman downstairs would scream and a child would cry for its father. "The shooting lasted all morning— our men were getting near the end of their bullets and their strength; and ’Slim Bob.’ the head of the outlaws, was firing at the saloon door—that near he was—when he heard a shot from a different direction and we raw ‘Slim Bob’ duck and dodge away, slink ing alongside a high wood fence; and at the same time one the three men that was carrying a big timber that they were going to use to batter in the saloon door, dropped dead in his tracks! “Away off in the road at the edge of the town we saw galloping horses, and then men scrambling off horses' backs and running toward us. They was the men back from the mines: They fired as they ran and the out laws turned tail, trying to escape— all except a few—‘Slim Bob' was one of 'em. I saw Mr. Travis make for him and then I made up my mind I'd go downstairs and call Mr. Travis to come straight up to his poor, uncon scious wife. “On the table was Mrs. Travis’ open grip, just as I’d left it when the baby was born. It had a lot of soft, white, woolly thing*’ !jj it. So I lais fist fiercely. His quarry had giveD him the slip. The girl found a wonder ful exhilaration in the fact. As she watched him his chin sud denly shot forward—his eyes strained from their sockets, and a smile, cruel yet suave, dawned around his mouth. At the rear of the house stood a gar age. Across its freshly painted, light gray door sprawled a blotch of inky black, plastered there by the wind. The breeze died. The black patch fluttered and fell, hanging in limp folds. With three bounds Lamar had reached the garage door and was pull ing at the soft cloth. He strained at the door, thinking it would give under the pressure. But it was locked. ■When Lamar turned to June great beads of sweat stood on his forehead and rolled from his temples. ‘‘At last!” he said exultantly, “1 have the veiled woman this time, and perhaps—the mystery of the Red Circle!” June stared at the edge of the black cloak that he gripped so tightly. She recognized it It was—her own! Inside the garage, flat against the door (imprisoned by the cloak edge she could not tear free) the woman in black pushed the veil back from her gray-white face and prayed: “God keep my lamb from harm!” ‘END OP THIRD INSTALLMENT.) The True Values. "You ask me what values impress me as being the true ones. I am very sure, for one thing, that it is the in ner far more than the outer resources on which one must depend for lasting happiness. Do you see that pala'1* of my neighbor’s across the river?” In the treetops beyond the Hudson loomed the roofs of a great house—i mansion copied almost whole from Italy and set down in the New Tork woods. "There are a hundred rocnw In that house," said Mr. Burroughs. “It needs a dozen maids to keep them dustless and it needs a dozen gardeners to keep the grounds. There is a ceiling in it 200 years old and a carpet 400 years old and relics and ♦'ensures from feudal Europe without number; but I would not give Slabside or Wood chuck Lodge for it all. if I had to live there.”—John Burroughs. May Nationalize Coal Mines. Lord Rhondda, whose coal interests in Wales are very large, has taken over the Gwaun Cae Gurwin colliery, the largest in the Swansea district and said to be the largest in the world. It has a capacity of 300,000 tons a year. Farther mergers are expected and the nationalization of the coal In dustry of Great Britain is expected. Heavy. “They say a lot of the bread you get now is underweight” “That so? Well, my wife helps to mate up the average.”—Boston Eve ning Transcript __— IWhy That Lame Back?, Morning lameness, sharp twinges when bending, or an ull-daj imck ache; each is cause enough to sus pect kidney trouble. Gel after th-j cause. Help the kidneys. 'V*| Americans go it too hard. 'V j overdo, overeat and ncglet•• our! sleep and exercise and so « j I fast becoming a nation of ki t’ sufferers. 72% more deaths ih.ui. in 1890 is the 1910 census story. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thou sands recommend them. An Iowa Case ••Ii« r-" often extending into ‘ my shoulder. I felt nervous and had little ambition. 1 Knew my 1 kidneys weren't acting properly and I t.. ■pan using Doan’s Kidney Fills. They soon cur J me and toned up my sit’iii. x am iu JHBBBBfiliiUr say that the cure has b* * : nent." Get Doan’« at Any Sto-.-s. K: * Box DOAN’S R,,,DI"JVr FOSTER-MILEURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. Too Much to Ask. “Is this train on time?” u.-» impatient passenger. “My friend,” replied the condo* impressively, “with all we’ve think about in connection with «■•*» gress, the Supreme court and tit*- in terstate commerce commission. yon surely aren't going to ask us to '.orders our minds with a minor detail like j that, are you?” !10 CENT "CASCARETS" IF BILIOUS OR COSTIVE F<* Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, oluggish Liver and Bowels—They work while you sleep. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste. Indie -• tion. Sallow Skin and Miserable H* id aches come from a torpid liver and | clogged bowels, which cause your | stomach to become filled with undi gested food, which sours anil ferments like garbage in u swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery—tndi gestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. A Cascard to-night will give your constip st>-d bowels a thorough cleansing and straighten you out by morning. They wprk while you sleep—a ld-iv-r I >>v from your druggist will kee; . - i ing good for months.—Adv. No Delay. “Old Father Noah had the richr s lei When lie became convinced that pr pax-edness was the thing, lie d**tax • stand around talking about it. lb* went to work.” “True enough. But you ,nits’ her that old Father Noah didn't h iv to wait weary weeks and month- !i appropriation bills were being put through congress.” DANDRUFF AND ITCHING Disappear With Use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment—Trial Free. The first thing in restoring dry. fall ing liair is to get rid of dandruf: a ; itching. Itub Cuticura Oimmeut m * scalp, nest morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap anti hot water. Prevent skin and scalp troubles by making « u i cura your everyday toilet prepar..’ • Free sample each by mail with Boot Address postcard, Cuticura, I*<’pt. L Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. When a Feller Needs a Fiberd She—Tell me about your early .-;ru_* gles. He—There's not much to tell. T! more I struggled the more the old ma:s laid it on.—Boston Evening Trans* -i;.i GIVE “SYRUP OF FIGS" TO CONSTIPATED CHILD Delicious “Fruit Laxative” ;an’t harm tender little Stomach, liver and bowels. Look at the tongue, mother! It coated, your little one’s stomach, i.ver and bowels need cleansing at on When peevish, cross, listless, doesn sleep, eat or act naturally, or is lev. - ish, stomach sour, breath bad. lias sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foot, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of Its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which con tains full directions for babies, chil dren of all ages and for grown-ups.— Adv. Gentle Thrust. Miss Oldgirl—I remember when the girls married much younger than they do now. Miss Pert—Yes, so grandma tell* me. Many a picture of health is colored —by hand. Grippy weather this. Better get a box of— CASCAMgOIJININE The old family remedy- in tablet lonn—safe. sure, easy to take. No opiates—no unpleasant after effects. Cures colds m 24 hours—Grip in 3 «tays. Money back if it fails. Get w gf°!iine box with Red Top and Mr. Hill's picture on it—25 cents. At A as Drug Store I DITCIIT0 WsUonE.Col.man.Wut' KB I PR I X Ington.li.C. Hi..** rr»,. li'.ot ! ■ M ■ hll IWeu references. Best raaolia ! “BOUfiHonRATS’Te^Jo"^^ riww ■ ■ n | ▲▼old operations. Positive Liver St Stomach remedy CNo OU)—Res alts sure; home remedy. Write Today lMu4TC.-D.pt. W-l. IDS.D.ofenSL.CW W.~n7u., OMAHA, NO. 1-1917.