rv-F nm omaiia sri)AV p.ke: October 4. 1914. LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE TOO 10TH INSTALLMENT 77. phcto-drtmA cert spending to the tntttUrrtnU of "The Trey CHetrt" mv now ( n At the letting tnovmg picture thttim. By thit untqvt tmngemtnl ntfh the Vnrwttl FOm Mfg. Co. it u therefere not only penile to rttd " Tht Trey CT He Arts" tn thu ptper. M lo to tee etch MtOment of ot the moving rerre- theAtert, (Copyright, 114. br Lxwi Joaeph Vmci.) STEEL RIBBONS TMOPIltll Th of Hran la tha "dath-1a-n" m alevrad br Saaata Trtaa In tb privet war of vnaanc whloh. threvab. tha aaanry of hla daughtor Jodlth, a wo man ef vtolal paaalona Ilk hla , ha wag afalnat Alaa Uw, nn of (h man (now daad) who waa Innooantlr r aponalbl for tb aooldnt which maria Trio a halplaa rrtppla. Alaa la In lav with BVoo. Jndltha twin and doubl but In all othar raapacta hr prtelaa oppoalta. Jarilth vow tn oa-ip Alaa'a daathi but vndar dramatlo elr uraiUnoti ka htm hr llf and o, unwllllnflf. wlna har lova. Thr aMr Jadlth I br turn anlmatad by th old hat. th rw Inr, and Jaalouay of hr alatar. Sh arna bar fathar'a dla trt and la lft bhlnd br him whan h 1ourny Wt. takl-if Roaa with him. In ordr to lur Alaa away from Kaw Toik. Alaa purau. Jadllh arompanrlnt" him aaalnat hla wlah. and urrda In rractilnc II from Trlna'a aptolal train. I LIGHT ENGINE. Toward the close of that summer's day It waa the whim of that arch-manager of theatricals whom tn en call Tate to stage an anticlimax In the midst of a rant and hilly expanse of denotata middle west ern country a rude and rugged disk of earth which . boasted no human tenancy within the circle of Its far-flung horizon and waa bisected, not neatly, rath er Irregularly," by the flowing double line of steel ribbons which marked the railroad's right of way over the old Santa Fe trail. So much for the stage: the light effects were prorlded exclusively by the crimson and purple and gold of a portentous sunset; the properties em ployed were simply a special train and what Is known as a light engine. It was the engineer of the light engine who start ed the trouble. After bringing Ms monster to a full pause, be turned upon his passengers and not without plausible excuse violently indicted Mr. Alan Law for abuse of his and his fireman's trust fulness. This the said fireman (climbing forward over the tender) vigorously applauded. They had been engaged, both gentlemen assert ed vigorously, for nothing more dangerous than a quick run across the prairies. In furtherance of the unspecified plans of Mr. Alan Law and bis compan- ' Ion. Miss Judith Trine. After starting out, they had wickedly and maliciously been bribed by the aid Law to put on speed and catch up with the pedal, In order that he might rescue from the latter a young woman, hla bride-to-be and the sis ter of Miss Trine. Hut and here was tha grievance they hadn't bargained to be shot at with pistols. And pre cisely that outrage had been put upon them during and subsequent to the moment of rescue. It was unhappy Mr. Barcus who precipitated the affair. This gentleman was suffering from a severe sprain to his sense of decent prid In the service of Miss Rose Trine and her betrothed, Mr. Law, Barcus had blackened his face and hands to the hue of ebony and had garmented himself In the garb of a Pullman porter, surrendering himself to humiliating service to those aboard the special, suffering their Insolence and scorn without a mur mur, but with the tides of wrath mounting ever higher In his bosom. And now, when at length he had won his free dom from that Ignominious servitude. It was only to be sworn at and vilified, as a common nigger, by railroad hands! It was the fireman (to he Just) who brought the row to a focus by a slighting reference to that "shiftless and misbegotten dlnge." He repented quite promptly. Mr. Barcus jumped for his throat with a bellow of rage. The fireman lipped on the cab platform, trod on nothing, and went over backwards, taking Mr. Barcui with him to the ballast . . At almost the same moment Mr. Law, attempt ing to restrain the engineer from going to the as sistance ot his fellow-worker, ducked in under a vicious swing for his chin, grappled with his foe, tripped him up and went with him to the ground en the opposite side of the locomotive from that tccupled by Mr. Barcus and the fireman. For the next several seconds ha was very busy Indeed keeping his face out of the ballast. The en gineer was a heavy man, but active and Infuriated. He fought Ilka a demon unchained. It was all very exciting. Mr. Law was even beginning to enjoy It when he heard a woman shriek. At the same in stant revolver! began to pop. Mr. Law released his foe almost as quickly as he was released. Both rose as one man, to find Judith Trine beside tbem, a little smile of excitement playing round her Hps as she looked up the track and watched the special slow down to a stop several persons on the back platform plying busy trigger-fingers all the while. As these last threw open the platform gates and dropped to the ballast, still perforating the air with many bullets, Mr. Law, Miss Judith Trine, and that lata belligerent, the engineer, turned simultaneous ly and sought the rear of the tender. On the opposite side they found Rosa Trine and Mr. Barcus standing uncertainly above the body of the fireman, who. It appeared, had stunned himself In falling and remained insensible. The appearance of Law and Judith from behind the tender, closely pursued by the engineer, who was In turn closely pursued by gentlemen with revolvers, stirred Bairns and Rose to action. Alan passed htm at a round pace, pausing only long enough to selie Rose and drag her with him toward the special. Judith flung him a phrase of well meant advice In passing: "Come along, you simpleton unless you want to be shot down where you stand!" Mr. Barcus acted on that advice, as Immediately as resentfully. Judith Trine was little before him at the steps of the Pullman: Mr. Law had already assisted Rose aboard. Mr. Barcus ungraciously gave place to the lady: his Ingrained chivalry sore ly (trained by bullets that kicked among the bal last round his feet. Mr. Barcus heaved a heartfelt sigh, tat down heavily on a camp chair, and mopped his heated brow, watching the lights of the locomotive droj swiftly back into the gloaming. "If any of those guys," ha assured Mr. Law pres ently, "could hit a barn door with gatllng gun at twenty paces well, I wouldn't ha proving myself the giddy ass I am by sticking to your ill-starred fortunes. There wouldn't be any to stick to, be cause you'd have been snuffed out long, long ago with all the chances they've had to blow your fool head off, point blank!" II PLXLMAN. "Come inside," Law suggested, "and Introduce me to the brakeman. I presume I've got to fix things Up with him" "If there's really any doubt In your mind as to that," Barcus said, rising, "I don't mind telling you you're right." He paused as Alan entered the oar before him and was greeted by a storm of vituperation that fairly blistered the panels of the Pullman. Mr. Seneca Trine, helpless in his Invalid chair, thus celebrated his Introduction to the young man whom he had never before seen but whose life he had schemed to take these many years. Alan made no effort to respond, but listened with his head critically to one side and an exasperating, expression of deep interest Informing his counte nance until Mr. Trine was out of breath and vitriol; when the younrer man bowed with the slightest p, .. ... , shade of mockery In his manner and waved a toler ant hand to Barcuv "He has, no doubt," Alnn Inquired, "his own pri vate cell aboard thlt car?" , "Yes, sun!" Barcus agreed, apelng well the man ner of his apparent caste and color. "Ain't dat da troof?" he chuckled. "Take hlra away, then," Alan requested wearily "if you please." "Yas, suh!" Barcus replied, with nimble alacrity selling the back of the wheeled chair and swing ing It round for a spin up the length of the car. Before Trine had recovered enough to curse him properly, tha door to his drawing room was closed and Barcus was ambling back down tha aisle. Hla grin of relish at this turning ot the tables on tha monomanlao proved, however, short-lived. It erased Itself In a twinkling when Judith shouldered roughly past him, wearing a sullen and forbidding countenance, and flung herself Into tha drawing room with her father. "Storm signals," mused Mr. Barcus. "What pos sessed our dear friend to bring that tigress along, I'd Ilka to know? He might as well have loaded himself down with a five-gallon can of nitro glycerin. M Tha causa of her temper was not far to seek: at tha far end of the car Alan was bending solicitously over the chair In which Rose was resting. One ot his arms was round her shoulder. Her face was lifted confidently to his. Barcus mused morosely on his apprehension ot trouble a brew, simmering over the waxing fire of that strange woman's Jealousy. If only there had not been that light engine in pursuit as Barcus firmly believed It must be loaded to the guards with Trlne'a unscrupulous hirelings! No telling when they might catch up! Tha fear of this last catastrophe worked together with his fears of Judith to render that night a sleepless one for Barcus. He spent It in a chair whence he could watch both the door to the com partment Judith had chosen tor her own (formerly Marropbat's quarters) and the endless ribbons ot steel that swept beneath the trucks. But nothing happened. He napped uneasily from ttma to time, waking with a start of fright, but al ways to find nothing amiss. Ever Judith stopped behind that closed door, and ever tha track behind was Innocent of tha glare of a pursuing headlight Nor did anything untoward mark the progress of tha morning unless. Indeed, Judith's protracted sessions with her father behind tl a rloaed door ot the drawing room were to be counted ominous. Ever since lunch-time tha girl had been closeted with her father; Barcus had been getting some well earned and sorely-needed rest In his quarters; Alan standing his watch on the observation platform. In company with Roae; and the train booming along through an uncouth wilderness ot arid moun tains, barren mesas, and sun-smitten flats given over to the desolate genius ot sagehruah. Whatever had been the tenor of the communi cation between father and daughter, Judith event ually emerged from tha drawing room la an omi nous temper, Barcus, coming drowsily away from his compartment st tha same time, waa Jarred wide awake by sight ot tha foreboding couatenanoa aha ' ft iV . w if '. . . wore; and after a moment of doubt followed her back to the lounge at the rear of the car. He got there in time to see her at rigid stand still, staring steadfastly at the two figures so close together on the observation platform. But on his appearance Judith shook herself together, snatched up a magailne, and plumped wrathfully Into an easy chair. Mr. Barcus, however, had learned the lesson of bitter experience to the effect that the outward bearing of Miss Judith Trine was no sura Index to her Inward humor unless, that Is. It might be taken to indicate the direct contrary of Its sem blance; though even this was no reliable rule. Re minding himself of this, he therefore invented a morbid Interest tn another magaxlne. For all her exasperation, Judith contained herself longer than might have been expected. Her con tinued show of placidity, Indeed, lulled Barcus Into a dangerous feeling of security. He was roused by the sudden flight of a magailne across the car, missing his head by a bare two Inches, and the "Ml Slowly It Stirred on Grease-Hungry Axles. bang of a chair overturned by Judith as she Jumped up and flung herself furiously toward the door. Just what had happened on the observation plat form Barcus didn't know, but he could readily be- lleve that the lovers had Just Indulged la some especially provoking and long-drawn-out caress. He overhauled Judith none too soon. In another moment she would have had her sister by th throat It her purpose had not been to throw Rosa bodily overboard, as Barcus suspected. Happily, ha waa as quick on his feet as Judith on hers; and almost before he had grasped the situation, be had grasped her had seised her arms and drawn them forcibly behind her back, at tha same time swinging her round and endeavoring to propel her back through the doorway. It was a man-slza Job. For tha ensuing five min utes ha had his hands full of violently resentful and superbly ablebodled young woman. Only with the greatest difficulty did he succeed In wrestling her up the aisle and to tha door of her compart ment, where an even mora furious resistance for soma additional minutes prefaced tha ultimate clos ing of tha door upon tha maddened Judith. Waving aside Alan's proffer of assistance, ha acidly advised that gentleman to return to his post of duty and not let his Infatuation blind him to what might at any moment loom up on tha track behind them, Barcus stoutly held tha door against tha girl's attempt to pull It open and through an other period when she occupied herself with kick ing Its panels as It hopeful of breaking a way out. A long pause followed. He heard no sounds from within. And wearying, ha wondered what the devil she was up to. Then her voice penetrated the bar rier, lta accents calm and not unamlable: "Mr. Barcus!" "Hello!" ha replied, tartled. "What Is It. Miss Judith r "riease let me out." "Not much." "Oh please!" "Will you be good If I let you out?" "Perfectly." "No mora shenanigan T" "I promise." "Word of honor?" "It my word ot honor means anything to you you have it" "Well ... !" ha said dubiously. In tha same humor ha turned and released tha knob; promptly Judith opened It wide and swept out into the corridor, her mood now one ot really fetching mockery. "Thank you so much!" aha laughed Into his face of discomfiture; and dropping him an lronlo curtsy, he turned forward and swung Into tha drawing room occupied by Trine. "Wonder what ha put that on for?" ha peculat ed, with reference to tha ankle-long Pullman wrap per which Judith had seen fit to don daring her period ot captivity. "Heaven knows it's hot enough, without wearing mora clothing than decency de mands . , , But you never can tall about a woman ... I bet a dollar I've made a blithering ass of myself letting her loose at all!" He took his doubts aftv ocoa BJualcaUBj1 thaa (4 Alaa and Hot, 1 .-TT And his long conference with Alan and Rose on the observation platform afforded Judith ample op portunity in which undetected to suborn the train crew to treachery. Whether she did or no, this Is what happened In the course of tha next hour: the special was forced to take a siding to make way for the California limited, east bound; and when this had passed, the engine of the special coughed apologetically and pulled swiftly out, leaving the Pullman stalled on the aiding. m HAND CAR. "Well!" Mr. Barcus broke a silence whose elo quence may not be translated In print "can you beat ltr "Not with this outfit," Alan admitted gloomily. "All tha same, we can't stop here like bumps on a log, waiting for that gang of. thugs to sail up in the light engine and cut our blessed throats." Mr. Law answered this unanswerable contention -w,"r ? - av - 11 Ir lain !.' v yn-;'?v :J in Vt J jw.".1. J I: a I only with a shrug. Then, stepping out on the for ward platform of the Pullman, he cast a hopeless eye over the landscape.- ...'.. He lowered his gaze to tha tracks and siding and started sharply. .-. "Eh what now?" Barcus inquired with Interest "Some thoughtful body has left an old hand car over there in the ditch." Alan replied. "Maybe It isn't beyond service. Coma along and lend ma a hand." . , , "Half a minute," Barcus answered, dodging sud denly back Into tha car. When ha reappeared, after soma five minutes, Rose accompanied Elm, and Barcus was smiling as brilliantly as though nothing whatever was wrong with his world. 1 - "Sorry, to keep you waiting, old top," he ex plained; "but I was smitten with an Inspiration. There didn't seem to be any sense In letting the amiable Judith loose upon this fair land, so I found a coll of wire In tha porter's closet and wired the handle of tha drawing room door fast to the bars across tha aisle. Itll take her some time to get out, now, without assistance." Ten minutes more had passed before the two grimy and perspiring gentlemen succeeded in plac ing the hand car upon the tracks. "It's a swell little hand car," Barcus observed grimly: "no wonder they threw it away." . "What's tha difference how It looks, as long as It will go?" "But will It?" Barcus doubted. Somewhere far back along the Una a locomotive hooted mournfully. "Its got to!" Alan replied, helping Rose aboard. "Dont worry," Barcus advised: "that's a freight whistle." ''Maybe you can distinguish tha whistle of a freight from that of a passenger train I don't say you can't; but I'll take no chances on your Judg ment being good. Hop aboard here If you're com ing with ua!" Slowly the hand car stirred on Its grease hungry and complaining axles; slowly It gathered momentum and surged noisily up the track as Alan and Barcus, on opposite stdea of the handlebar, alternately rose and fell back. Behind it tha thunder of r.n approaching train grew momentarily In volume, lending color to the theory of Mr. Barcus that what they had heard bad been tha whistle of a freighter rather than of the light engine. But Just as Alan was about to advocate leaving the tracks and taking the hand car with them, to clear tha way for tha train, lta rumble htgan to diminish, grew less and beautifully less, and waa stilled. "What do you make of that?" Alan panted across tha racking bar. The obvious." Barcus returned. "The freight has taken tha siding to wait for some other through train to pass. Well have to look sharp and ba ready to Jump." Tha grade became a trace more steep; tha ear moved with less reluetanea. "Let go." Alaa adviaed; "Itll coast down tha bal ance of this tncllca an. we'd bettor aavt our trenittV Rut they had barely regained their breath and mopped the streaming sweat away from their eyes when a second whistle, of a different tone, startled both back to their task. Catching the aye of Barcus Alan nodded despair Ingly. "Afraid It's all up with us now," he groaned; "that sounded precisely like the whistle of the light engine." A little grace was granted them, however, through the circumstance (as they afterward dis covered) that the light engine had stopped at tha siding long enough to couple up Trlne's Pullman. It was fully a quarter of an hour before tha growing rumble of the latter warned the trio on the hand car, Just as It gained the end of tha grade and addressed Itself to a level though tortuous 6tretch of track. And at this point discovery of the switch of a spur line that shot oft southward into the hills fur nished Alan with his independent Inspiration. Stopping the hand car after it had Jolted over tha frogs, he Jumped down, set the switch to shunt tha pursuit off the spur, and leaped back upon the car. Hardly had they succeeded In working the hand car up round the shoulder of the next bend when the special took the ffwitch without pause and th roar of its progress, shut off by an Intervening mountain, was suddenly stilled to a murmur. But even so, there was neither rest for the wear; nor much excuse for self-congratulation: the rum ble of the special was not altogether lost to hearing when the thunder of the freight replaced and drowned It out. Of a sudden, releasing the handlebar, Alan stool up and signed to Barcus to Imitate his example. "Well?" this last panted, when he had obeyed. "Jump eff leave the hand car where It Is theyT have to stop to clear It off the track." "And then?" "I'll buy a lift from them if it takes my last dol lar in the world," Alan promised. "It's our onl; hope. We can't keep up this heartbreaking busl ness forever and it can't be long before Trine an Marrophat discover their mistake!" IV CABOOSE. For once. In a way. It fell out precisely as Mr. Law had planned and prayed. Constrained to pull up in order to remove the obstruction from the track, the train crew of th freight choked down its collective wrath on beini presented with a Bum of money. In the hopes ol further largesse It lent its common ear to Alan's well-worn tale, which had so frequently proved use ful in similar emergencies, of an eloping couple pur sued by an unreasoningly vindictive parent; and had its hopes rewarded by the price Alan bargained to pay in exchange for exclusive use of the cabooss as far as the next town. So that it was not more than ten minutes befors Rose was settled to rest In such comfort as the caboose afforded, while Alan and Barcus sat within Its doorway and smoked. Neither he nor any other aboard the freight sus pected for an instant that, in the box car next for ward of the caboose, a woman In man's clothing lay purdu, now and again chuckling impishly to herself in anticipation of the time and the evenl she was biding with such patience as she could muster. The whistle of a locomotive overtaking thi freight sounded the Bignal for her to take action on her cherished plan. Rising, she glanced out of the open door. A curve in the track below the freight, laboring ui a steep grade, enabled her to catch a glimpse of a headlight, followed by a string of lighted windows, Indicating a single car: the special, beyond a doubt Without hesitation, since the train was not run ning at speed, she dropped out to the ballast, wheeled smartly about, caught the handbar at tha end of the box car as It passed and swung herself up between it and the caboose. Climbing to the top of the box car aha peered keenly through the gloaming, which was not yet eo dense that she might not discern two beads pro truding from the window of the special's engine. She turned and peered ahead. Tha freight waa approaching a trestle that spanned a wide and shal low gully. So much the better! Dropping down again between tha care, aha set herself to solve the problem of uncoupling tha caboose. In this she was successful Just as tha last car rolled out on the trestle. ... Its own Impetus carried the caboose to the mid dle of the trestle before it stopped. As this happened. Alan and Barcus, already warned of an emergency by the slowing down of the car, and for some time alive to the fact that the special was again In pursuit, leaped out upon the ties and helped Rose to alight There was no time to execute their plan of tha first desperate instant to run along the ties to safety on the solid earth: the distance was too great; they could not possibly make It With common impulse the two men glanced down to the bottom of the gully, then looked at each other with eyes informed by common Inspiration. Barcus announced In a breath: "Thirty feet not more." Alan replied: "Can you hold the weight of tha two of us for half a minute." Barcus shrugged: "I can try. We might as well even if I can't." While speaking, he was lowering himself between the ties. "All right," be announced briefly. With a word to Rose, Alan slipped down beside Barcus. shifted his hold to the body of tha latter, and climbed down over him until he was supported solely by the grasp of his two hands on Barcus' ankles. Instantly Rose followed him, slipping like a snake down over the two men till she In turn hung by her grasp on Alan's ankles, then released her hold and dropped the balance of the distance to tha ground, a scant ten feet, landing without injury. A thought later Alan dropped lightly to her side, followed by Barcus. Overhead the special engine, hurtling onward like some titanic bolt, struck the caboose with a crash like the explosion of a cannon. It collapsed upon itself like a thing of pasteboard. That it had been constructed of mora solid atuff was abundantly proved by the showed Of timbers, splinters and broken Iron that rained about tha beads of the fugitives. For all that the gods smiled upon them for their courage: they escaped without a acratCaW ITo ba contlnuedj.