' . RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF m tWMtywTOKWfOTCWWHWmMjJ !( 1 It, I- I I t i Mr KPG-i KfflBED A Romance of Adventure TALBOT MUNEY CHAPTER XIX Continued. 12 Ring nodded ngnln, for a nod Is less committal tlinn a word; and the nod was enough to stnrt tho mullnh off again. "I snw tho Sleeper nnd his brldo be fore she knew cf either I It was I who let her Into KhlnJntU It was I who told the men alio Is tho 'Heart of tho Hills come to life Sho tricked me! But this Is no hour for bearing grudges. She has a plan und I am tnluded to help." King lay still and looked up nt-hlm, sure that treachery was tho ultimate end of nny plan the mullah Muham mad Anlm had. India has been saved by the treachery of her enemies more often tlinn ruined by false friends. So has the world, for that matter. "A Jihad when tho right hour comes will raise tho tribes," tho mullah growled. "Sho and thou, as tho Sleep er nnd his mate, could work wonders. But who can trust her? Sho stole that head I Sho stole all tho ammunition I Does she surely love thee?" King nodded again, for modesty could not help him at that Juncture. Love and boastfulncss go together In tho "Hills." "She shall have theo back, then, at a price 1" King did cat answer. His brown eyes watched the. mullah's, and he drew his brenth !n llttlo Jerks, lest by breath tag aloud ho should miss one word of what was coming. "Sho shall have thee back against Khlnjan and the ammunition 1 She and thou shall havo India, but I shall be tho power behind you 1 I havo men In Khlnjan I I havo as many as she! On the day I march thero will be a re volt within. She would better agree to terms 1" King lay looking nt him, like a pris oner on the rack undergoing examina tion. Ho did not answer. "Write thou n letter. Slnco she loves thee, state thine own caso to her. Tell her that I hold thee hostage, and that Khlnjan Is mine already for a little fighting. In a month she cannot pick out my men from among her own. Her position Is undermined. Tell her thnt. Toll her that If she obeys she shall have India and bo queen. If she dis obeys, Rhe shall die In the Cavern of Earth's Drink I" "She is n proud woman, mullah," an swered King. -Threats to such as he 7" The mullah mumbled and strode back and forth three times between King's bed und tho tire, with his lists knotted together behind him and his head bent, as Napoleon used to walk. When ho stood beside the bed again at last it was with his mind made up, as his clenched lists and his eyes Indi cated. "Make thino own terms with hcrl" he growled. "Write tho k-tter und send It I I hold theo; she holds Khln jan und the ammunition. I am between her nnd India. So bo It. She shall starve In there I Sho shall lie In thero until tho war Is over and take what terms nro offered her in tho end I Wrlto thino own letter I Stato tho case, nnd bid her answer I" "Very well," said King, ne began to see now definitely how India was to be saved. It wus nono of his business to plan yet, but to help others' plans destroy themselves and to sow such seed In tho broken ground us might bear fruit In time. Tho tuulluh left him, to squnt nnd gaze Into tho Are, nnd mutter, ami King lay still. After a while the mullah went to tho mouth of tho cave, to stand nnd sturo out at the camp where tho thou sand fires were dying fitfully and wood smoke purged the air of human misti ness. The stars looked down on htm, and he seemed to try to read thorn, standing with fists knotted together nt his back. And ai ho stood so, sis other mul lahs camo to him und begun to nrguo with him In low tones, ho browbeating them ull with furious words hissed be tween half-closed teeth. They wero whispering still when King fell asleep. It was courage, not carelessness, that lot him sleep courage and a great bopo born of the mullah's perplexity. CHAPTER XX. Next morning tho Orakzal Pathan sat and sunned himself In tho cave south, emitting wordly wisdom un adulterated with divinity. As King went toward him to see to whom he spoke ho grinned end pointed with his thumb, and King looked down on somo sick and wounded men who sat In a crowd together on the ramp, ten feet or so below the cave. They seemed stout soldierly fellows. lien of another type wero being kept at a distance by dint of argument und threats. Away in the distance was Mu hammad Anlm with his broad back turned to the cave, In altercation with a dozen other mullahs. For tho time fee was out of the reckoning. "Some of these are wounded," the Pathan --(plained. "Some have sores. Some have the bellyache. Then again, some are sick of words, hot and cold by iajr and night All have served In tho army. All have medals. All are de Mrtara, aosxs for one reason, some for HIE MFLE5 J coy tornntmer mtpeeoi-" Mttta ctnmirr another and somo for no reason at ull. Hull-wlth-n-bcard looks tho other way. Speak thou to them about ttio pardon that Is offered t" So King went down among them, taking some of tho tools of his (.up posed trndo with him and trying to crowd down the triumph thnt would well up. The seed ho had sown hud multiplied by fifty In n night. He want ed to shout, as men once did before the walls of Jericho, Possibility of par don nnd reinstatement, though only heard of at second hand, had brought unity Into being. And unity brought eagerness. "Let us start tonight 1" urged one man. - "Nay I" tho Pathnn objected nt once. "Many of you can hnrdly march. Best yc here and let the hakim treat your bellyaches. Bull-wlth-a-bcard bado me wait hero for a letter that must go to Khlnjan today. Good. I will take his letter. And In Khlnjan 1 will spread news about pardons. It Is likely thero are fifty there who will daro follow me back, and then we shall march down the Khyber like a full company of the old duys i" King got busy with his lancet, but the mullah canu back and called htm off nnd drove the crowd away to a dis tance; then ho drove King Into the enve In front of him, his mouth work ing as If ho' wero biting bits of ven geance off for future use. "Write thy letter, thou I Write thy letter 1 Here is paper. There is a pen TiAVTOA VfilMillMb 8o King Began to Write In Urdu. take It l Sit I Yonder Is Ink ttutt ttutt ! write, now, write I" King sat nt a box nnd waited, as If to take dictation, but the mullah, tug ging at his beard, grew furious. "Wrlto thine own letter I Invent thine own argument I Persuade her, or die In a new way I I will Invent n now way for thee I" SoJKIng began to write, In Urdu, for reasons of his own. Ho had spoken once or twice In Urdu to the mullah und had received no answer. It was a fair guess that Muhammad was Ignor ant of tho scholars' language. "Qrcetlntr." h urnn 'tn tti mnt ,.. tlful ana very wise Princess Ynsmlnl, In ner palace In tho caves In Khlnjan. from nor servant Kiirram Khan tho lialcim, In tho camp of tho mullah Muhammad Anlm In tho "Hills." "Tho mullah Muhammad Anlm demands surrender of Khlnjan Caves nnd of nil Ills ammunition. Further, ho demands full control of you and of mo and of all your men. "He threatens as a preliminary to btoclr ndo Khlnjan caves, unless the answer to !.,.. rm.vo favorMo. lotting1 nono enter, Ti.ta"" '""F, bis own men out to Join him. This would suit tho Indian government, &uAu.wh,.,. th0 ',I,,ta' flBht nmonK Ji.mac.lvci!.tllcy cannot raid India, and w lo ho blockades Khlnjan caves thero win bo time to movo against him. Knowing that ho dares begin nnd can accomplish what ho threatens, I am sor rj . becnuso I know It Is said how many sen-lets you have rendered of old to tho government I servo. Wo who servo one raj nro one ono to romember ono to for-Eof-ono to holp each other In good time. It may bO that vcmrimncn nsrnlnmf m would seem sw color to you than return to your former allegiance. In that caso, Princess, you only need betiay mo to the mulluli, and bo sure my death would leave nothing to be desired by the spectators. nuireannt no uoes not suspect mo. Uo assured, however, that not to bo tray me to him la to leave mo f reo to serve my government and well able to do so. I Invito you to return to India with me, bearing news that tho mullah Mu hammad Anlm and his men are bottled In Khlnjan caves, und to plan with me to that end. "If you will, then wrlto an answer to Muhammad Anlm, not In Urdu, but In a language he can .understand; seem to sur render to him. But to mo cend a verbal message, either by the bearer of this or by some trustier messenger. India win profit yet by your service If you will. And In that case I pledge my word to direct the government's attention only to your good service In the matter. It Is not yet too late to choose. It la not Impertinent In me to urge you. "Nor can I say how gladly I wouU subscribe tnyaolf your grateful and loyal servant." Tho mullah pounced on the finished letter, pretended to read It, and watched him seal It up, smudging the hot wax with his own great guarded thumb. Then he shouted for the Oruk zal Pathan, who camo striding In, all grins nnd swagger, "Thore take It I Make speed 1" he flittered, and with his rllio at tno "ready" and the letter tucked Inside his shirt, the Pathan favored King with a farewell grin and obeyed. "Oct out I" the mullah snarled then Immediately. "Seo to the sick. Tell them I sent thee. Bid them bo grate ful 1" King went. Ho recognized the al most mndncss that constituted the mul lah's driving power. It Is contagious, that madness, until It destroys Itself. It had made several thousand men fol low him nnd believe In him, but it had once given Ynsmlnl u chunco to fool him and defeut him, and now It gave King his chance. He let the mullah think himself obeyed implicitly. He becume the busiest man In all the "Hills." While the mullah glowered over the camp from tho cave mouth or fulminated from tho Quran or fought with other mullahs with words for weapons and abuse for argument, he bandaged and lanced nnd poulticed nnd physicked until his heud swam with weariness. The sick swarmed so around him thnt ho had to havo n bodyguard to keep them at bay ; so ho chose twenty of the lenst sick from among those who had talked with the Pathan after sunrise. And because each of those men had friends, and it is only human to wish one's friend in the somo bout, especial ly when the sen, so to speak, Is rough, the progress through the camp became n current of missionary zeal -and the virtues of tho Anglo-Indian raj were better spoken of than tho "Hills" had heard for years. Not that there was any effort made to concert the camp en masse. Fur from It But the likely few wero pounced on and were told of a chance to enlist for a bounty In India. And what with winter not so far ahead, and what with experience of former fighting against the British army, the choosing wns none so difficult. From the day when tho lad first feels soft down upon his face until the old man's beard turns white and his teeth shnko outthe hlllman would rather fight than eat ; but he prefers to fight on tho winning side If he may, and bo likes good treatment Before It was dark that night thero wero thirty men sworn to hold their tongues nnd to wait for the word to hurry down the Khyber for the pur pose of enlisting in some Brltlsh-In-dlan regiment. Somo even began to urge the hakim not to wait for the Orakzal Pathan, but to start with what he had. "Shall I leave my brother In the lurch?" the hakim asked them; and though they murmured, they thought better of him for It. Well for him thnt he had plenty of Epsom salts in his kit, for In the "Hills" physic should taste evil and show very quick results to be believed In. ne found a dozen diseases of which ho did not so much as know tho nnmc, but half of tho sufferers swore they were cured after the first dose. They would havo dubbed him faquir and hnve foisted him to a'plllar of holiness had ho cared to let them. Muhammad Anlm slept most of the day, like n great nnlmnl that scorns to live by rule. But nt evening he came to tho cave mouth and fulmi nated such a sermon as set the whole camp to roaring. He showed his power then. The Jlhnd ho preached would havo tempted dead men from their graves to come nnd share tho plunder, nnd the curses ho cnlled down on cowards and laggards nnd unbe lievers were enougl. to have fright ened tho dead away again. In twenty minutes ho hnd undone nil King's missionary work. And then In ten more, feeling his power and their response, nnd being nt henrt a fool ns nil rogues arc, he built it up again. no begnn to make promises too defi nite. Ho wanted Khlnjnn caves. More, ho needed them. So he promised them they Bhould nil be free of Khlnjan caves within a day or two, to come and go and live thero nt their pleasure. He promised them they should leave their wives nnd children and belong ings safo in tho caves whilo they them selves went down to plunder India. Ho overlooked the fact that Khlnjan enves for centuries had been n secret to be spoken of In whispers, and that pros pect of Its violation camo to tlicm us a shock. nnlf of them did not believe him. Such n thing wns Impossible, and If ho wero lying ns to one point, why not as to ull the others, too? And tho nrmy veterans, who hnd been converted by King's talk of par dons, nnd almost reconverted by the sermon, shook their heads nt tho talk of taking Khlnjnn. Why waste time trying to do whnt never had been done, with her to reckon m-nlast. when n place In the sun wns waiting for them down In India, to sny nothlnc of the hope of pnrdons nnd clenn living for n while? They shook their hends nnd combed their beards and eyed ono another sidewlse In a way tho "Hills" understand. Thnt night, while tho raullnh glow ered over tho camp llko n great old owl, with leaping firelight reflected In his eyes, the thousands under tho skin tents argued, so that tho night wns alt noise. But King slept All of another dny and part of an other night ho tolled among the sick, wondering when a message would come back. It wns nearly midnight when ho bnnduged his last putlcnt nnd came out Into the starlight to bend his back straight nnd yawn and pick his wny reeling with weariness back to tho mullah's cave. He had given his bag of medicines and Implements to n man to carry ahead of him and hnd gone perhaps ten pnecs Into the dark when n strong hand gripped him by the wrist "Hush I" snid n volco that seemed fa miliar. Ho turned swiftly and looked straight tnto tho eyes of tho Hangar Rewn Qungnl "How did you get here?" he asked In English. "Any fool could Icnrn tho password Into this cnmpl Come over here, sa hib. I bring word from her." Tho ground wns criss-crossed llko a man's pnlra by the shadows of tent ropes. The Itangnr led him to where the tents wero forty feet apart nnd none wns likely to overhear them. There he turned like a flash. "Sho sends you this I" he hissed. In thnt sarao Instant King was light ing for his life. In another second they were down together nmong the tent-pegs, King holding tho Hangar's wrist with both hands nnd struggling to break It and tho Rnngnr striving for nnother stroke. The dagger he held hhd missed King's ribs by so little that his skin yet tingled from its touch. It wns n dagger with bronze blnde nnd n gold hllt her dagger. It was her perfume In tho air. They rolled over nnd over, breathing Iinrd. King wanted to think before be gavo nn nlnrm, nnd he could not think with that Bcent In his nostrils nnd creeping Into his lungs. Even In the stress of fighting ho wondered how tho Ilnngnr's clothes nnd turban hnd come to be drenched In It Ho admit ted to himself nfterwnrd that It was nothing else tlinn Jealousy that sug gested to him to mnko the Hangar prisoner nnd hand him over to tho miillnh. That would have been a ridiculous thing to do, for It would hnve forced his own betrayal to the mullah. But as if the Rangar hnd read his mind, he suddenly redoubled his efforts nnd King, weary to the point of sickness, hnd to redouble his own or die. Per haps the Jealousy helped put venom In his effort, for his strength came back to him as a madman's docs. The Ran gar gave a moan nnd let the knife fall. And because Jealousy Is poison King did tho wrong thing then. He pounced on tho knife Instead of on the Rangar. He could have questioned him knelt on him nnd perhaps forced explana tions from him. But with a sudden swlf1 effort like a snake's the Rangar freed himself and was up and gone be fore King could struggle to his feet gone like n shadow nmong shadows. King got up and felt himself all over, for they had fought on stony ground nnd he was bruised. But bruises faded Into nothing, nnd weariness ns well, ns his mind begnn to dwell on the new complication to 1.1s problem. It wns plain that tho moment he had returned from his message to tho Khyber the Rangar had been sent on tills new murderous mission. Tnsmlnl hnd never believed her letter would bo treated seriously by the authorities, and hnd only sent It In the hope of fooling him and undermining his de termination. Perhaps she saw her own peril. Perhaps she contemplated gosh I whnt a contingency I perhaps she contemplated bolting Into Indln with a story of her own, nnd leaving tho mullah to his own devices 1 Would she dare escape Into India and leave himself alive behind her? There wns nn alternative, the very thought of which made him fearfully uneasy, nnd yet brought a thrill with It In all Eastern lands, love scorned takes to the dagger. Ho had half be lieved her when sho swore she loved him I Tho man who could Imagine himself loved by Ynsmlnl nnd not be thrilled to his core would be Inhuman, whatever reason nnd caution nnd caste nnd creed might whisper In Imagina tion's wake. Reeling from fatigue (he felt like n mnn who hnd been racked, for the Han gar's strength was neurly unbellev nblo), he started toward where tho mullah sat glowering In the cave mouth, ne found the mun who hod carried his bag asleep at tho foot of tho ramp, nnd taking the bag away from him, let him lie there. And It took him five minutes to drag his hurt, weary bones up tho rnmp, for the fight had taken more out of him than bo hud guessed at first The mullah glared at him but let him by without n word. It wns by the fire nt tlto back of the cave, where he stopped to dip water from the niul luh's enormous crock, that the next "Hmhl" Said a Voice Familiar. That Seemed disturbing factor came to light He kicked a brand Into the fire and the flame leaped. Its light shone on a yard and a half of exquisitely fine hnlr, like spun gold, that caressed his shoulder nnd descended down ono arm. One thread of hair that conjured up n million thoughts, nnd In a second upsot every argument I Tf Rewc Gungn had been near enough to her nnd Intimate enough & uw jysVBsii I BBBbbbbI with her not only to become scented with 'her unmistakable perfume but even to get her hair on his person, then gone was nil Imagination of her love for himself I Then she had lied from first to last I Then she had tried to make him love her that sho might use him, nnd finding she hnd failed, she had sent her true love with tho dagger to make nn end I In n moment ho Imagined a whole picture, ns It might hnvo been In n crystal, of himself trapped nnd mnde to don the Roman's armor and forced to pose to tho savage "Hills" or fooled Into posing to thctri ns her lover, while Hewn Gunga lurked be hind tho scenes and waited for the harvest In the end. And whnt kind of harvest? And what kind of man must Rewn Gungn be who could lightly let go all the prejudices of the East nnd submit to whnt only tho West hns endured hitherto with nny complncency a "tcrtlum quid?" Yet whnt n fool he, King, had been not to appreciate at once that Rewn Gunga must be her lover. Why should ho not be? Were they not alike as cousins? And the East docs not love Its contrary, but its complement, being older In love than tho West, and wiser In Its wnys In nil but the material. He had been blind. He hnd overlooked tho obvious that from first to last her plan hnd been to set herself nnd this Rewn Gungn on tho throno of Indln I Ho washed nnd went through the mummery of Muslim prayers for the watchful mullah's sake, nnd climbed on to his bed. But sleep seemed out of tho question. Ho lay nnd tossed for nn hour, his mind ns busy ns n terrier In liny. And when ho did fall asleep at last It was so to dream and mutter thnt the mullah came nnd shook him nnd prenched him a hnlf-hour sermon ngnlnst tho mortal sins that rob men of peaceful slumber by giving them a foretaste of the punishment to come. All that seemed kinder nnd more re freshing than King's own thoughts hnd been, for when the mullah had done at last nnd had gone striding back to the cave mouth, he really did fall sound asleep, and It wns after dawn when he awoke. The mullah's voice, not untuncful, wns rousing nil the val ley echoes In the call to prayer. CHAPTER XXI. And while King knelt behind the mullah nnd the whole camp faced Mec ca In forehead-ln-the-dust abasement there came a strange man down the midst not strange to tho "Hills," where such sights are common, but strange to that camp tind hour. Some body rose nnd struck htm, nnd he knelt like the rest; but when prayer was over and cooking had begun nnd the camp became n place of savory smell, he camo on ngnln a blind man. He was clean shnven, nnd he looked ns If he had not been blind long, for his physical health was good. "Oh, the hakim the good hakim I" ho walled. "Where Is tho famous ha kim? Show me tho way to him I Oh, the famous, great, good hakim who can hcnl men's eyes I" "I nm he," said King, nnd ho stepped down townrd him. Tho blind mnn's face looked strangely familiar, though It was pnrtly disguised by somo gummy stuff stuck nil about tho eyes. He stnrcd nt tho fnco again. "Ismail 1" ho said . "You?" "Aye! Father oi cleverness 1 Make play of healing my eyes J" , So King mnde a great show of rub bing on ointment In n minute Ismail, looking almost like a young man with out his great beard, was dancing like n lunatic with both fists In the air, and yelling ns If wasps hnd stung him. "Aiece-nleee-nlece I" ho yelled. "I see agnln I I seel My eyes hnve light In them I Allah I Oh, Allah heap riches on the great, wise hakim who can heal men's eyes I Allah regard him richly; for I nm a beggar nnd have no goods I" Tho whole camp begnn to surge toward him to seo tho miracle, and his Chosen bodyguard rushed up to drive them back. And ns they went a tnll Afridl came striding down tho camp with n letter for the mullnh held out In n cleft stick In front of him. "Her iinswerl" sold Ismail with a wicked grin. "What Is her word? Where is tho Orakzal Pathan?" But Ismail laughed nnd would not nnswer him. It seemed to King that ho scented climax. Also ho chose In thnt instant to forco tho mullah's hnnd, on the principle that hurried buffuloes will blunder. To Khlnjnn I" ho shouted to tho henrcst mnn. "Tho mullah will march on Khlnjnn I" They murmured nnd wondered nnd bncked away from him to glvo him room. Ismnll watched him with dropped Jaw and wild eye. "Spread it through tho camp that wo march on Khlnjan I Shout It I Bid them strike tho tents 1" Somebody behind took up the shout and It went ncross tho camp In lenps, as men toss n ball. Thero was a surge toward tho tents, but King cnlled to bis deserters nnd they clustered back to him. Ho had to cement their alle giance now or fall altogether, and he would not be able to do It by ordinary argument or by pleading, ho hnd to nro their Imagination. And ho did. "Sho Is on our Bide I" That was a sheer guess. "She has kept our man and sent nnother as hostage for him In token of good faith I Listen I Yo saw this man's eyes healed. Let that bo a token I Bo yo the men with new eyes I Glvo It out I Claim tho title and bo true to It and see me guldo you down the Khyber In good timo like a regiment, many more than a hundred strong l" They Jumped at the Idea. The IHlls" the whole East, for that mat terare ever ready to form a new sect or Join a new band or a mw blood- feud. Witness the Nlkalseyna, whe worship a tung-slnce-dead Englishman. "Wo setl" yelled one of them. "We K-ol" they chorused, and the Idea took charge. From that minute they were n now band, with a war-cry of their own. "We seel" they howled, scattering through the enmp, and the mullnh came out to glnro at them and tug his beard and wonder whnt possessed them. "To Khlnjan 1' they roared. "Lead us to Khlnjan I" To Khlnjan, then!" ho thundered, throwing up both arms In a sort of ""'OaAkXTJH "Khlnjan la Mlnel" He Growled. "It dla Is Mlnel" double apostolic blessing, and then me tlonlng as if he threw them the reins nnd leave to gallop. They roared back at him llko the sea under the whip of a gaining wind. And Ismnll disap peared among them, leaving King alone. Then the mullnh beckoned him nnd showed him a letter he had crum pled In his fist. There wero only a few lines, written In Arabic, which all mullahs are supposed to be able to read, and they were signed with a strange scrawl that might have meant anything. But the paper smelt strong ly of her perfume. Come, then. Bring- all your men, and I will let you and them enter Khlnjan caves. We will strike a bargain In th Cavern of Earth's Drink. , Thnt was all, but the fire In the rani lah's eyes showed that he thought II was enough. He did not doubt that onco he should hnve his extra four thousand In the enves Khlnjan would be his; nnd he snld so. "Khlnjnn is mine P he growled. "In dia Is mlnel" King did not answer him. He could only be' still and be glad he had set the camp moving nnd so hnd forced the mullah's hand. "The old fatalist would have suspected her answer other wise I" he told himself, for ho knew thnt he himself suspected It While he and the mullah watched the tents begnn to fall and the women labored to roll them. Tho men began firing their rifles, nnd "within the hour enough ammunition hnd been squnn dcrcd to have fought n good-sized skir mish; but the mullah did not mind, for he hnd Khlnjan caves In view, nnd none knew better thnn he whnt vast storo of cartridges and dynamite was plied in there. He let them waste. Watching his opportunity, King slipped down the rnmp nnd Into the crowd, while the mullah wns busy with pcrsonnl belongings In the cave. King left his own belongings to the' fates, or to any thief who should care to steal them. He was safe from the mullah In tho midst of his nearly eighty men, who half believed him a sending front the skies. "Wo seel We see 1" they yelled and danced nround him. Before ever the mullnh gave an order- they got under wny and stnrted climbing the steep vnlley wall. The mullah on his brown mulo thrust for ward, trying to get In the lead, and & King nnd his men hung bnck, to keep--" nt n distance from him. Two or three miles nlong tho top of the escarpment tho mullah sent back word that he wanted the hakim to be beside him. But King's men treated the messenger to open scorn and sent him packing. "Bid tho mullah hunt himself nn other hakim I Be thou his hakim I Stay, wo will give thee n lesson In how to uso a knife I" The man ran, lest they carry out their threat, for men Joke grimly In the "Hills." Ismail camo and held King's stirrup, striding beside him with tho easy hlll man gait "Art thou my man at last?" Kins asked him, but Ismail laughed und shook his head. "I am her man." "Where is she?" King asked. "Nay, who am I thnt I should know!" "But "Bho sent thee?" "Aye, she sent me." "To what purpose?" "To her purpose I" the Afridl an swered, and King could not get another word out of him. Ho fell behind. (TO BE CONTINUED,) Superiority. "Women are queer." "Yes?" "Mrs. Twobble has Just returned from a trip to New York and merely because she stayed at a hotel with mora dining rooms than the hotel usu ally patronized by Mrs. Jlbway on her eastern trips can boast of she's In clined to look down on Mrs. Jlbway," Only when a man Is getting the best besti tUn4 of It will be admit that ha la gttt in worse oi it. vJ W J IL.'UJ. srtlWMMlW-MijftWl iiii(VMwfcNi". tpmmm m hwiiimihhi Hum 4nmH'' - j -ir"MHi"wMwiwwiiiMtowiiwwwii-ri i tiiu ihl yttffmm