SAVED FRW DAIKMB OfOU, IWI-KMIINJUmSEDWMT TOMFOIILADDERTINILE GIRL y r r v 'I 1 l If II i: N! in ! i I! n ,' , i f; '-.I IS r! P U Hi - i i j" "BILL SYNOPSIS. At the expense of a soiled hat Herbert Orme saves from arrest a Klrl in a black touring car who has caused a traffic Jam on State street- He buys a new hat and Is given a five dollar bill with: "Remem ber the person you pay this to." written on It. A second time he helps the girl in the black car and learns that In Tom and Bessie WalUngham they have mutual friends, but gets no further hint of her Identity. He discovers another inscrip tion on the marked bill, which in a futile attempt to decipher it, he copies and places the copy in a drawer in his apart ment. Senor Poritol. South American, calls and claims the marked bill. Orme refuses, and a fight ensues in which Pori tol is overcome. He calls In Senor Al catrante, minister from his country, to vouch for him. Orme still refuses to Rive up the bill. He learns that a Jap has called for him. Orme goes for a walk and sees two Japs attack Alcatrante. He rescues him. The minister tries diplo macy, but falls to get the marked bill. Returning to his rooms Orme is attacked by two Japs who effect a forcible ex change of the marked bill for another. Orme finds the girl of the black car wait ing for him. She also wants the bill. Orme tells his story. She recognizes one of the Japs as her father's butler. Maku. The second Inscription on the bill Is the key to the hiding place of Important papers stolen from her father. Both Japs and South Americans want the papers. .Orme and the "Girl" tart out in the black car In quest of the papers. In the uni versity grounds in Evanston the hiding place Is located. Maku and another Jap are there. Orme fells Maku and the other Jap escapes. CHAPTER V. Continued. So he Jumped to his feet and ran northward, then turned to the west. Circling about, he made for the gate at which he had entered. His pur suer either took the wrong lead in the darkness or stopped to examine Maku, for when Orme went through the" gate and doubled back, outside the fence, to the car, there was no sound Df steps behind him. He Jumped to the chauffeur's seat. "Well?" inquired the girl, eagerly. "Too late," said Orme. "I'm sorry. I caught Maku, but the man with the envelope got away." She laid a hand on his arm. "Are you hurt?" There was unconcealed anxiety in her voice. To say the things he yearned to say! To be tender to her! But he controlled his feelings and explained briefly what had happened, at the same time throwing on the power and driving the car slowly northward. "I only know that the fellow ran northward," he said. "He may have worked back or he may have gone en. He may have climbed another tree and waited." By this time they had come to the northern limits of the grounds, but he had seen no one. Suddenly the girl exclaimed: "Listen!" Orme stopped the car. Somewhere from the distance came a faint hum. "Another car!" he muttered. "Yes," she said. "Oh. but I can do no more. I am tired, Mr. Orme. We cannot catch that car, even if it does hold the man we want and there Is no way of being sure that it does." "If there is any place to leave you, I will go after him alone." He had turned the car as he spoke and was sending it slowly southward. "No," she said wearily. "We you must do no more tonight. Tou have been so good, Mr. Orme to help me In a matter of which I could tell you almost nothing. I won't even try to thank you except by saying that you have understood." He knew what she meant. He had met her need, because he had shown Its greatness without her telling him. His recognition of her plight had been unaccompanied by any suggestion of Ignored conventions. No gushing thanks would have pleased him half so much. He smiled at her wistfully. "Does It all end here?" "No," she said, "I will not let It end here. We are friends already; in fact, Mr. Orme, as soon as I can do so, I will see that we are friends In name. Can you accept as little a promise as that?" "I can accept any promise from you," he said gravely. "And now shall I take you home?" "Not home. It is too far. But I have some friends a few blocks away -who will take me in. Turn here, please." Under her guidance he took the car through several streets, drawing up at last before a large, comfortable looking place, set back from the street, with a wide, shrub-dotted lawn before It. Several windows were still lighted. He descended to help her out. She hesitated. "I hate to ask It, Mr. Orme," she finally said, "but you can catch the trolley back to Chi cago. They will take care of the car here." He nodded. "But one thing, Girl," he said. "I am going to find that other Japanese tomorrow. I shall get the envelope. Will you call me ur at the apartment tomorrow noon? If 1 am not there, leave word where I can find you." "I will do that. But don't get yourself ' hurt." She let him help her to the "ground. "At noon," he said. "At noon. Good-nisht, my friend." Shi- offered her hand. (Tcc'I-oifiht. Girl," he said, and then he lent over and kissed her f.sers gently. lie stood by the car until she had crossed the lawn and ascended the steps until the door opened and ad pv - -tl lior INDULGE IN QUEER ANTICS Dance of the Whydah Birds, as Seen and Described by Mr. Roosevelt But the most interesting birds we saw were the black whydah finches, writes Mr. Roosevelt in Scribner's Monthly. The female Is a dull-col-tred, ordinary-looking bird, somewhat like a female bobolink. The male in his courtship dress is clad in a uni CHAPTER VI. A Chance Lead. To follow the girl's suggestion and return at once to Chicago was Orxne's intention when he said good-night to her. The hour was close to midnight, and the evening had been crowded so full with bewildering adventure that he was tired. Moreover, he looked forward to a morning that might well test his endurance even more strenu ously. He had now committed himself definitely to continue In the field against the Japanese. Except for his desire to serve this wonderful girl who had come so suddenly into his life, he doubtless would have permit ted the mystery of the marked bill to remain unsolved. But since the recovery of the stolen papers was so important to her, he was prepared to run. any risk In the struggle. Who was she? But no. that was a question she did not wish him to ask. She was simply "Girl" beautiful, ten der, comprehending his ideal In carnate. As he stood there, hesitant, before the house into which she had disappeared, he pictured her again even to the strand of rebellious hair which had blown across her cheek. He could discover no fault In her perfection. A man came Into view on the drive at the side of the house; a servant to care for the car, of course; and Orme, with the uneasy feeling of one who has been trespassing, moved away toward the corner of the block. He looked back, however, and saw the newcomer clamber into the car and send it slowly up the drive. At the same time a light illumined one of the upper windows of the house. A shadow was thrown on the curtain. Perhaps it was the girl her self. What explanation had she given her friends for appearing so late at their door? Probably she had told them no more than that she was tired and belated.. She was not the kind of girl from whom an elaborate ex planation would be asked or ex pected. Then a thought startled him. Was this, perhaps, her home? No, she had spoken of the people who lived here as her friends, and she would not have tried to keep the truth from him by subterfuge. If this were her home and she had not wished him to know it, she would have requested him to leave her before they bad come so far. It dawned upon him that It would not be hard for him to learn who lived in this house, and possibly through that knowledge to get a clue to her Identity. His heart warmed as he realized how completely she had trusted him. His assurance that he would not try to find out who she was had satisfied her. And Orme knew that. If she had been so readily assured, it was because she had rec ognized the truth and devotion in him. With a happy sigh, he turned his back once and for all and walked rapidly away. But he did not go toward the electric-car line, which he knew must lie a few blocks to the west. Instead, he retraced the course they had come, for he had de cided to visit the university campus once more and try to discover what had become of Maku, and more espe cially of the other Japanese, who bad secured the papers. That he would be recognized and connected with the attack on Maku, was unlikely. When he came to the corner of Sheridan road and Chicago avenue, he hesitated for a moment Should he go north through the campus and seek a trace of the Japanese who had escaped? Nearly half an hour had gone since the adventure among the trees, and the man must have got completely away by this time. Hav ing the papers, he surely would not linger to learn the fate of Maku. Orme found himself wondering how the Japanese had got to Evanston. Granting that it had not taken them long to solve the abbreviated direc tions on the five-dollar bill, they could hardly have come by motor-car, for they had had a good half-hour start, and yet Orme had discovered them before their work was completed. Only on the assumption that their car had broken down on the way could Orme admit that they had used a motor-car. Moreover, how were two Japanese, whose appearance did not indicate the possesion of much ready money how .were they likely to have a car, or even to rent one? And had they believed that they might be pursued? Would they not have come to Evanston by an obvious route of train or trolley? These considerations led Orme to think that the car which he and the girl had heard in the distance could not have been occupied by the es caping Japanese. The fellow, then, had probably made for the electric-car line, and in that event he would be well oa his way to Chicago by this time. The car he had caught must have gone southward from Evanston about 10:45. The con ductor would be likely to remember having had a Japanese on board; per- haps he would e-en remember where the Oriental had got off. The natural course for Orme. therefore, was to take a car himself and. if he did not fh form dark glossy suit, and his tall feathers are almost like some of those of a barnyard rooster, being even twice as long as the rest of the bird, with a downward curve at the tips. The females were generally found In flocks. In which there would often be a goodly number of males also, and when the flocks put on speed the males tended to drop behind. The flocks were feeding in Heatley's grain I III I ill I il III I ill 111 111 I If III IflU IllkW I II U bmIIsH II Ml f J II II If I II II II I 1 1 IILisbbPIBbsbbbbbbbbbbbbH I Ji Vllf Inllf 111 ilii II il Inn HMiiHiIiIvbIHbH llHI Iffl sail f iDnnl I ill III I II J ! HUH ifflWl ft111 "" flijH a vl K T aBalaW!la2ll III II MW BbBbbYbbB -5 "SaST A flBsflkBBBBVflh 111 KbYsTSbI I I aVsTSal "There's a Rule Against meet the other car returning, to get off at the car-barns and make In quiries. The possibility that the Jap anese had changed to the elevated road on the North side was great, but the conductor might remember If the change had been made. Rut Orme did not turn at once toward the car-line. Though his logic pointed In that direction, he was ir resistibly Influenced by a desire to walk eastward along the drive where It skirted the southern end of the campus. A half-hour might go by, and still he would not be too late to meet, on Its return, the car which the Japanese would have taken. He started, therefore, eastward, toward the lake, throwing frequent glances through the Iron fence at his left and Into the dark shadows of the oaks. He came to the lake without en countering anyone. The road here swept to the southward, and on the beach near the turn sqaatted the low brick building which the girl had told him was the life-saving station. A man was standing on the little veran da. His suit of duck was dimly white In the light from the near-by street lamps. "One of the crew." Orme surmised, and he sauntered slowly down the lit tle path. The beach sloped grayly to the edge of the lake, where a breakwater thrust its blunt nose out like a stranded hulk. The water was calm, lapping the sand so gently that it was hard to believe that so gentle a murmur could ever swell into the roar of a northeaster. A launch that was moored at the outer end of the break water lay quiet on the tideleas sur face. "Good-evening," said Orme, as the man turned his head. "Are you on watch?" The life-saver slowly 6tretched. "Till 12." he answered. "Not much longer, then?" "No. thank heaven!" Orme laughed. "I suppose you do get more than you want of It," he said. "But on a fine night like this I should think it would be mighty peas ant." "Not If you have to put In several hours of study after you get through." "Study?" "Yes. You see, I have a special ex amination tomorrow." "A service examination?" "Oh, no college." "Are you a student?" "All the crew are students. It helps a good deal. If you are working your way through college." "Oh, I see. But surely the univer sity hasn't opened for the fall?" "No, but there are preliminary exams, for those who have conditions to work off." Orme nodded. "It's a fine campus you have with the groves of oaks." "Yes." "Just the place for a quiet evening stroll. I thought I'd walk up the shore." "There's a rule against going In there after dark." "Is there? That's too bad." "Something funny happened there Just a little while ago." "So? What was it?" Orme was getting close to the subject he most desired to hear explained. "Why. one of the cops was walking along the shore and he found a Jap anese, stunned." "A Japanese!" "He evidently had wandered In there and somebody had hit him over the head with a club." "After money?" "Probably. There've been a good many hold-ups lately. But the slug ger didn't have a chance to get any thing this time." "How so?" "He was bending over the Jap when the cop came up. He got away." fields, and he was threatening ven geance upon them. I was sorry, for the male birds certainly have habits of peculiar interest They were not shy. although if we approached too near them in their favorite haunts, the grassland adjoining the papyrus beds, they would fly off and perch on the tops of the papyrus stems. The long tall hampers the bird in its flight and it is often held at rather an angle downward, giving the bird a peculiar and almost insect like ap pearance. But the marked and ex Going In There After Dark." "Didn't the cop chase him?" "No, the fellow had a good start, so the cop stayed by the Jap." "And what became of the Jap?" The life-saVer Jerked his head toward the door beside him. "He'a in there, getting over his headache." "Is he?" This was a contingency which Orme had not foreseen. Nor had he any desire to come face to face with Maku. But If he betrayed his surprise, the life-saver did not notice It. "The cop Is taking another look through the campus," he continued. "What does the Jap say about it?" asked Orme. "He doesn't say anything. It looks as though he couldn't speak English. The cop is going to get Asuki." "Asukir "A Jap student who lives in the dormitory.' "Oh," said Orme. The fact that Maku would not talk was in a measure reassuring. His ap parent Inability to understand Eng lish was, of course, assumed, unless, indeed, he was still too completely dazed by the blow which Orme had given him, to use a tongue which was more or less strange to him. But what would he say if he saw Orme? Would he not 'accuse his assailant, hoping thus to delay the pursuit of his companion? , The danger was by no means slight. Orme decided quickly to get away from this neighborhood. But Just as he was about to bid the life-saver a casual good-night, two men came around the corner of the building. One was a policeman, the other a young Japanese. Orme unobtrusive ly seated himself on the edge of the little veranda. "How is he?" asked the policeman. "AU right, I guess." replied the life saver. "I looked In a few minutes ago, and he was sitting up. Hello. Asuki." "Hello, there." responded the little Japanese. "Come," said the policeman, after an unsuspicious glance at Orme, and, mounting the steps, he led his inter preter into the station. Now, indeed, it was time for Orme to slip away. Maku might be brought out at any moment. But Orme lingered. He was nearer to the solu tion of the secret if he kept close to Maku, and he realized, for that mat ter, that by watching Maku closely and. perhaps, following him home, he might be led straight to the other man. If Maku accused him, it should not, after all, be hard to laugh the charge away. A murmur of voices came from within the station, the policeman'a words alone being distinguishable. "Ask him," the policeman said, "if he knows who hit him." The undertones of a foreign Jargon followed. "Well, then," continued the police man, "find out where he came from and what he was doing on the campus." Again the undertones, and after ward an interval of silence. Then the policeman spoke in an undecided voice. "If he don't know anything, I can't do anything. But we might as well get a few more facts. Something might turn up. Ask him whether he saw anybody following him when he went into the campus." Orme had been straining his ears in a vain endeavor to catch the words of Asuki. But suddenly his attention was diverted by a sound from the lake. It was the "puh-puh-puh-puh" of a motor-boat, apparently a little distance to the northward. The ex plosions followed one another in rapid succession. He turned to the life-saver. "What boat is that?" he asked. "I don't know. Some party from traordinary peculiarity was the cus tom of the cocks had of dancing in artificially made dancing rings. For a mile and a half beyond our camp, down the course of the Kamiti, the grassland at the edge of the papyrus was thickly strewn with these dancing rings. Each was about two feet in di ameter, sometimes more, sometimes less. A tuft of growing grass per haps a foot high was left in the cen ter. Over the rest of the ring the grass was cut off close by the roots, and the blades strewn evenly over : TzzVJTtRAttO'Mf' RAY corrWONT o & ooamvad 9 Oonmuca Chicago, probably. She came up an hour or so ago at least, I suppose she's the same one." The explosions were now so rapid as to make almost! one continuous roar. "She's a fast one, all right," com mented the life-saver. "Hear her go!" "Are there many fast boats on the lake?" ' "Quite a number. They run ont from Chicago harbor now and then. Orme was meditating. "Exactly how long ago did this boat pass?" "Oh, an hour or more. Why?" "She seems to have been beached up north here a little way." "She may have been. Or they've been lying to out there." In Orme's mind arose a surmise that in this motor-boat Maku and his companion had come from Chicago. The surmise was so strong as to de velop quickly into a certainty. And if the Japanese had come by this boat. It stood to reason that the one who had the papers was escaping in it He must have waited some time for Maku and, at last, had pushed off to return alone. Were these Japanese acting for themselves? That did not seem pos sible. Then who was their em ployer? Orme did not puzzle long over these questions, for he had deter mined on a course of action. He spoke to the life-saver, who appeared to be listening to the droning con versation which continued within the station. "The hold-up men may be In that boat." remarked Orme. "Hardly." A laugh accompanied the answer. "Well, why not? She came north an hour or so ago and either was beached or lay to until Just now." "You may be right." Then, before Orme knew what was happening, the young man opened the door and called into the station: "Hey, there! Your robber Is escaping on that motor-boat out there." "What's that?" The policeman strode to the door. "Don't you hear that boat out there?" asked the life-saver. "Sure. I hear it" "Well, she came up from the south an hour or more ago and stopped a little north of here. Now she's go ing back. Mr. Holmes, here" he grinned as he said It "Mr. Holmes suggests that the hold-up man la aboard." The reference to the famous detect ive of fiction was lost upon the po liceman. "I guess that's about it, Mr. Holmes," he said excitedly; and Orme was much relieved to note that the life-saver's humorous reference had passed for an Introduction. The po liceman would have no suspicion of him now unless Maku There was an exclamation from within the room. "What's the mat ter?" asked the policeman, turning in the doorway. The voice of Asuki replied: "He say the robber came in a bicycle not in a boat." "But I thought he didn't see the fellow coming." "He remember now." The policeman started. "How did he know what we were talking about out here?" he demanded. "He understand English, but not speak It, replied Asuki readily. To the policeman this explanation was satisfactory. Orme, of course, found in It a corroboration of his guess. Maku evidently did not wish suspicion directed against the motor boat. The policeman reentered the sta tion, eager to avail himself of the In formation which Maku was now dis posed to give him. Orme turned to the life-saver. "The Jap is lying," he said. "Think so?" "Of course. If he understands Eng lish so well, he certainly knows how to make himself understood in it. His story of the bicycle Is preposter ous." "But what then?" "Doesn't it occur to you that per haps the Jap himself is the robber? His Intended victim may have got the better of him." "Yes," said the young man doubt fully, "but the fellow ran." "That would be natural. Doubt less he didn't want any notoriety. Getting Away. "Haven't you forgotten something, sir?" asked the anxious waiter, as the thrifty guest prepared to depart with out bestowing a tip. "No. I think not Here's my hat and here's my cane. I don't think I have forgotten anything." "But you've forgotten me," said the waiter in exasperation. "Not at all." answered the other. "I saw you standing ther all the time. Hon soir. garcon; bon soir." the surface of the ring. The cock bird would then alight in the ring and hop up to a height of a couple of feet wings spread and motionless, tall dropping and the head usually thrown back. The Natural Bridge. The average height of the cliffs about the Natural bridge is about 250 feet; the height of the bridge about 220. The span of the arch is 93 feet; Its average width SO feet and Its -thickness in the center 51 feet The bridge does not cross the chasm precisely at JKWBBBpipBBgM'feSUaWlRKBf- f jw.nrir.rnr i-1 it. --. ''' .,i..iwimwW. IJ1ERMEKWN It's possible that he thought he had killed his assailant, and had an un pleasant vision of being detained in the local Jail until the affair could be cleared up." The life-saver looked at, Orme searchingly. "That sounds pretty straight." he said at last "I guess you know what you are talking about" "Perhaps I do," said Orme quietly. "In any event I'd like to see who's in that boat out there." "There isn't a boat nearer than Chi cago that could catch her. They have run her several miles out into the lake before turning south, or she would have been pretty close to Chi cago already. She's going fast" The roar of the motor was Indeed becoming a far-off sound. "Why not telephone the Chicago po lice to Intercept her?" "There's no evidence against her," replied Orme; "only surmises." "I know, but " "And, as I suggested, whoever was attacked by that Jap In there may not want notoriety." Suddenly the distant explosions stopped began again stopped. Sev eral times they were renewed at short intervals "puh-puh-puh" "pun-pun" "puh-puh-puh-puh" then they ceased altogether. "Hello!" exclaimed the life-saver. "They've broken down." He picked up a pair of binoculaM which had been lying on the veranda near him, and scanned the surface of the lake. "Make her out?" queried Orme. "No, she's too small, and too far off." He handed the night-glass to Orme, who in turn searched the wa ter vainly. "Whose boat Is that moored to the breakwater?" asked Orme. lowering the glass. "Belongs to a man here In town." "Would he rent it?" "No. But he lets us run it once In awhile. We keep an eye on it for him." Orme took out his watch. "It's al most 12." he said. "You'll be relieved in a few moments. Do you suppose I could persuade you to take me out to the other boat?" The live-safer hesitated. "I'd like to," he said. "But my study" "There'll be some sport, if we get within reach of the man out there," Orme put In. "Well ni do It though the chances are that they will make their repairs and be off again before we come within a mile." "I'm much obliged to you," said Orme. "If you would let me make It right" "For taking you out In another man's boat? No, sir." "I know. Well my name is Orme, not Holmes." "And mine," grinned the life-saver. "Is Porter." A man turned In from the drive. and sauntered toward them. "There's my relief," said Porter. "Hello. Kelmsley." "Hello." replied the newcomer. "Just wait till I punch the clock." said Porter to Orme. "Punch the clock? Oh, I see; the government times you." "Yes." Porter went Into the station for a moment; then, returning, he ex changed a few words with the relief and led Orme down to the breakwa ter. The launch which was moored there proved to be a sturdy boat, built for strength rather than for' speed. Orme cast off while Porter removed the tarpaulin from the motor and made ready to turn the wheel over. "Is the policeman still busy with the Jap?" Orme questioned sud denly. "Yes." "He won't get anything out of him," said Orme "except fairy stories." Porter started the motor and stepped forward to the steering wheel. Slowly the launch pushed out into the open lake, and the lights of the shore receded. No sound had come from the dis abled boat since its motor stopped. Doubtless It was too far off for the noise of repairs to be heard on the shore. Orme peered over the dark surface of the water, but he could see nothing except the lights of a dis tant steamer. (TO BE CONTINUED) As It Impressed Him. Penuchle Editor What's the general effect of tho new "hobble skirt?" 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