s r, nn; omaiia scxdav mkiv. oTor,i-;R n. ion. LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE PhY V 0 11TH INSTALLMENT Tne photo-drama corresponding to the installment t of The Trey 0' Hearts " may now be seen at the leading moving picture theaters. By this unique Arrangement vxih the Universal Film Mfg. Co. ft fs therefore nc4 onlt possible to read " the Trey 0' Hearts " tn this paper, but also to see each Installment of ft at the moving pkture theaters. (Cepyrlfat, 1(14. t7 Inli Joavpk Vanaa.; . THE PAINTED HILLS STWOPSI" Tha I af llaarta It th "dath-alsn" m l0Td br Sfaar Trlaa In tha prlvaia war of vanfaanaa which, thrnnih III ttmrf of bit daufhtrr Jadllh, a warn an af rtol.nt paaalona Ilka hia own. ha wf.a atainat Alaa Law, on of tka man. now d'ad. who waa Innocantly raaponalkla for tha arciarnt whlrn rndr4 Trlna a halplaaa orlppl. Alaa l)Ta Una. Jadlth'a twin and douhla. but In all atbar raapeta hr prarlaa appoatt. Judith promlaa har fatbtr ' to compaaa Alaa'a dwath, bat nndr dramatic rlreumataneaa ka aavaa hr Ufa and ao, unwIIMaair. wlna hr lava. Thro- aftr Judith la by turna anlmatad by tka aid ha trad, tha a Iot. aad Jaalaiiar of Itoaa. I DETAIL. Across the plain purple shadows were sweeping, close-ranked. Ilka torn vsst dark army Invading the land, pouring on OTr the rampart of moun tains li tha east ' Within tha rim of hills that ringed the plain like tha chipped and broken flange of a tltanlo saucer, silence brooded and solitude held sway dwarfing the town of Detail that occupied the approilmate middle of the sagebrush waste, to proportions even lets significant than night be Inferred from the candor of Its christening. platform, a siding, a water tank, a WellsFargo office and a telegraph and ticket office, hacked by three rough frame buildings; that Is Detsll Item ised completely. Shortly after nightfall a freight train paused at Detail. Its crew alighted and engaged In animated argument Detail gathered that the excitement was due to the unaccountable disappearance of the caboose: none seemed to have any notion as ' to bow it could hare broken loose; yet missing It conspicuously was. In the pause thst followed, while a report was telegraphed to headquarters and Instructions re turned to proceed without delay, one of the trnln men spied a boyish figure lurking In the open door of an empty box car. Cunningly boarding this car from the opposite side, the trainman caught the skulker unawares and booted him valngloiioualy Into the Bight. As the figure alighted and took to Us heels, los ing Itself In the darknesn, It uttered a cry of pained surprise and protest which -drew a wrinkle of as tonishment between the brows of the trainman. "Bounded like a woman'a voice," be mused; than dismissed the suggestion as obviously absurd. It was not. ... Shortly after the freight train had gone on Ita way before, indeed, the glimmer of Its rear lights had been lost among the western hills a second headlight appeared in the east, awept swiftly across the plain and in turn stopped at Detail. The second blrd-of passage i-roved to be a loco notiTe drawing a single car-!- Pullman. Hardly had It run past the switch, however, when the brakeman dropped down, ran quickly back to the switch, threw It open and dropped the Pullman on a siding. ' . . By the time that the Pullman had come to a full stop pa the siding, th locomotive wss swinging westward like a scared rtbblt though no such" mtlk-and-wstery , chnracN : .zrtlon of the traitor passed the Hps of any ono of three men who pres ently appeared on the Pullman's platform and . shook impotent flats In the direction taken by the ' fa si tire engine. ( , When the last of these bad run temporarily out of breath and blasphemy, a brief silence fell, punc tuated by groans from each, and concluded by the sound of a rolce calling from the Interior of tha ear a voice as strangely sonorous of tone as It was curiously querulous of accent. The three men immediately ran back Into the ear and presented themselves with countenances variously apologetio, to one who occupied a corner of the drawing room: a man wrapped In a steamer rug and a cloud of fury. Now when he had drafned the muddy froth of profanity from his temper it left a clear and ef fervescent well of virulent humor: the wrath of the valetudinarian began to vent itself upon the hapless heads of the trio who stood before htm. Now while this waa in process, the person of boy ish appearance, who hsd been keeping religiously aloof and inconspicuous In the background of De tail ever since that unhappy affair with the train nan, stole quietly up to the rear of the stalled ' Pullman, climbed aboard, and creeping down the aisle unceremoniously Interrupted the conference Just as the invalid was polishing off a rude hut honest opinion of the Intellectual caliber of one ot the three named Marrophat "Amen to that!" the boyish person ejaculated with candid fervor, lounging gracelessly in the doorway. "There'a many a true word spoken In wrath, Mr. Marrophat. Father forgot only one thing your masterly way with a revolver. From what I've seen of that, this dsy, I'll go ball that the only safe place for a man you pull a gun on la right in front of the muzzle. There'a something downright uncanny In the way you can hit any thing but what you aim at!" "Judlth!".exclalraed the invalid. "Where did you drop from?" "From that freight." Judith explained carelessly, neglecting to elucidate the exact fashion of her drop. I Judged you'd be along presently, and thought rd like to learn the news.- Well what luck?" Her father shrugged with his one movable shoul er. Mr. Marrophat grunted indignantly. "None?" Judith Interpreted. "You don't mean to tell me that after I had takea all that trouble cast the caboose loose in the middle of that trestle at the risk of my life you didn't have the nerve to go through with the business!" "We went through with it all right," replied Mar rophat defensively; "but s usual, tbey were too quick tor us. They Jumped out and dropped off the trestle before our engine hit the caboose." The girl started to speak, but merely dropped Wrap hands at her sides and rolled her eyes help lessly. "We do our best." observed Marrophat "We can't be blamed if something somehow always happens to tip the others off." The girl swung to face him with biasing eyes. "Jutt what does that mean?" she demanded In a dangerous voice. alarroDbat lifted his shoulders. "Nothing much," he allowed. "I am only thinking how strange it Is that Mr. Law can't be oaught by any sort of stratagem when you are on the Job, Mlsa Judith!" The girl's hands were clenched Into fists, white knuckles showing through the flesh. "Tou con temptible puppy!" she snapped. . . . Put on this her voice failed; for her eyes trav eled past the person of Mr. Marrophat to the door way of the drawing room and found tt framing a stranger. "Excuae me, friends," he offered in a lazy, semi humorous drawl. "It pains me considerable to butt in on this happy family gathering, but business Is business, same as usual, and I got to ast you all to please put up your hands!" "What do you want?" Trine demanded. "Why." drawled the bandit, "nothing In partlcu-lar-only your cash. 8hfll out. If you please gents all and the lady, too." He ran an apprecia tive glance down the figure which Judith's disguise revested rather than concealed. "t youU pardon my takln' notice," he amended.. "Perhaps I would't If the lady's clothes didn't fit her so all-flred quick!" "Keep a civil tongue in your hesd. my man!" .. Judith counseled, without any show of fear. At the same time her father'a vorre brought her -to her senses. ' "Judith! Be quiet. Let me deal with this gen tleroan. I am, sure we can come to some arrange- ment." "Tou bet your life," agreed the gentleman as the girl mutinously stepped back. "I know what I put op for the night. I kindly directed them, oa to Mesa, dowa In the Painted hills yonder." II FIREPLAT. Contented with the promise of a thousand dol lars advance on his contract, proving he returned with horses within a stipulated time, Mr. Hop! James Blade drifted quietly away Into the desert night. It was Msrrorbst and not his daughter, whom Trine designated to load the expedition, cun ningly counting on Judith's chagrin to work upon her passions and excite her to one last, mad, blind attempt that should prove successful. Smiling his secret smile. Trine announoed his decision at the last moment, while Hopi Jim waited with his horses and an assistant one Texas for whose otter innocence of scruples Mr. Slade un hesitatingly vouched. Sullenly submissive, at least in outward seem ing, Judith bowed to this declnlon, marched out of the ear, and suffered Marrophat to help her mount her horse. Now, deliberately, as the little cavalcade rode through the moonlit desert night, the girl maneu vered her horse to the side of Hopi Jim. As deliberately she set herself to work upon the bandit's susceptibility to her 'charms. Within an hour she had him ready to do anything to win her smile. In that first rush of golden day athwart the land, the party came quietly Into the town of Mesa. It waa to be termed a town only in courtoay, this Mesa: a straggling street of shacks, ram- Judlth second, Hopi Jim and Texas but little in the rear. And In the first rush they seemed to gain; moment by moment they drew up on the flying cloud of dust Judith heard an oath muttered beside her and saw Marrophat Jerking a revolver from Its holster. The weapon swept up and to a level; but as the hammer fell, Judith's horse csrromed heavily against the other; swinging it half a dozen feet aside, and deflecting the bullet hopelessly. Simultaneously, as If taking the ahot as the sig nal for a fusillade, Judith saw Alan lean back over his horse's rump and open fire. An Instant later his companion, Barcus, imitated h's example. In Immediate consequence, Texas dropped reins, slumped forward over the pommel, wabbled weak ly in his saddle for a moment, then losing the stir rups, pitched headlong to the ground; while Hopi Jim's horse stopped short, precipitating his rider overhead, and dropped dead. in THE UPPER TRAIL. In the ten minutes' .delay necessitated by this reverse, a number of more or less Innocent by standers picked up the man Texas and carried him off to breathe his last beneath a roof; Hopi Jim picked himself up, brushed his person tolerably clear of clouds of dust and profanity, and departed in search of a mount Incidentally the fugitives disappeared round a bend In the road that led directly into the wild . and barred heart of the Painted hills. In. the brief Interval that elapsed before his re- a f frm i i iiiin hi i mi i i "in n imiiaiii.iw i iiuy, ww I k &? ; . IK J A JC : -A aawwaaBrw ,9 rv t tt "Excuse Me Friends, but I Cot te Ask You to Hold Up Your Hande." want.'und j mi nil know you got it: so the name of the said arrangement Is Just 'shall out'." "One minute," the invalid interpoaed. "Don't misunderstand me: I guarantee you shall be amply satisfied. I give you my word the word of Seneca Trine." The eyes of the bandit widened. "No? Is that so? 8eneca Trine, the railroad king? Sure's you're born you're him." "I'll pay you far more handsomely than you dream of if you'll do as I wish," Trine Interrupted quickly. "Do mo the service I wish and name your price: whatever it is, you shall have it!" "Nothing could be falrer'n that!" the two-gun man admitted suspiciously. "But what's the num ber of this here service like you call" It?" "Listen to me." Trine bent his head forward and Jabbed the air with an emphatio forefinger. "What's the life of a man worth la this neck ot the woods?" "How much you got?" "I'll pay you ten thousand dollars for the life of the man I will name." -The eyes of the bandit narrowed. "Hold on, my friend: is that what you call my naming my own ' price?" "Name it, then, " said Seneca Trine tersely. "Give me a thousand on account," said the other, "and a paper ssylng you'll pay me nineteen thou sand more In exchange for It and one dead man. properly identified as the one you want signed by you and your man's as good as dead this min ute, providing he's In riding distance of this here waved hts hand at hie secretary. "Jimmy: find a thousand dollars for this gentlemen. Make out the paper he Indicates for the balance, and Til slgo It." "Ain't you powerful ' .trustful, Mr. Trine? How do you know I'll do anything more'n pocket that thousand and fade delicately away." "My daughter and this gentleman. Mr. Marro phat. will accompany you " "Oh, that's the way of it. Is it?" "Name?" Interjected the secretary, writing busl 1 with the top of his attache case for a desk. "Slade,"-said the bandit "James Slade, common ly known as Hopi Jim. That's me." "Then attend closely, Mr. Slsde." Again Trine psnctured the atmosphere with his index finger. "The man whose life I want is named Alan Law. He Is running away with my daughter, Rose, ac companied by a person named Barcus, disguised as a Pullman porter " "The three ot them having recent' escaped fvosa a train wreck up yonder on the trestle?" Hopi Jlsa interposed. "You've met them?" Judith demanded. ''About an hour ago, or maybe an hour and a half." Hopi Jim replied, "a good ways down the road. They stopped and ast where they could get shackle relics of what had once been a promising community. Midway In this string of edifices the hotel stood a rough, unpainted, wooden . edifice, mainly ve randah and barroom as to its lower floor. Jealously Judith watched the windows of the sec ond floor: and she alone of the four detected the face that showed for one brief Instant well back In the shadows beyond one of the bedroom win dows. Her eyes alone, Indeed, could have recognized the features of Alan Law In that fugitive glimpse. Two sentences exchanged between Hopi Jim and a blear-eyed fellow whom he roused from sodden slumbers behind the bar sealed their confidence with conviction: the three fugitives were in fact guests of the house. In the rush that followed up the narrow stair way, Judith led with such spirit that not even Mar rophat suspected her revolver waa poised solely with Intent to shoot from his hand bis own re volver the Instant he leveled It at & human target Closed and locked doors confronted them; and their summons educed no response; while the first door, when broken in by a whole-souled kick, dis covered nothing more satisfactory than an empty room, its bed bearing the imprint ot a woman'a body, but that woman gone. So it aeemed that the three muat have had warn ing of tholr arrival, after all; and presumably were now herded together in the adjoining room, which looked out over the verandah roof, waiting in fear and trembling for the assault that must soon come and in fact Immediately did. But it met with more stubborn resistance than had been anticipated. The door had been barri caded from within re-enforced by furniture placed against it Four minutes and the united efforts of four men (Including the bleary loafer of the bar room) were required to overcome its inert resist ance. But even when ifwas down, the room was found to be as empty as the first Only the fingers of two hands gripping the edge of the verandah roof ahowed the way the fugitives had flown; and these vanished Instantly as the room was Invaded. Followed a swift rush of hoofs down the dusty street and a chorus ot blasphemy In the hotel hall way: for Judith had headed the concerted ruth, for the staircase and contrived to block it for a full half minute by pretending to stumble and twist her ankle. 1 - In spite of that alleged injury, she never limped, and wasn't a yard behind the first who broke front the hotel to the open, nor yet appreciably behind him In vaulting to saddle. Well up the road a cloud ot smoky dust half ob scured the shapes of three who rode for their very lives. The pursuit vraa off in a twinkling and well bunched Marrophat s mount leading by a nose. turn with Hopi Jim, Marrophat contrived to per suade the bandit that Judith had been, at least indi rectly, responsible for the catastrophe, with the upshot that, temporarily blinded to her fascinations by the glitter of nineteen thousand dollars in the near distance, Mr. Slade maintained his distance and a deaf ear to her blandishments. The only informa tion as to their purpose that she was able to ex tract from either man, when the pursuing party turned aside from the main trail, some distance from Mesa, was that Hopi Jim knew a' short cut through the range, via what he termed the upper trail, by which they hoped to be able to head the fugitives off before they could gain the desert on the far 6lde of the hills. Only at long Intervals did they draw rein to per mit Hopi Jim to make reconnolssance of the lower trail that threaded the valley on the far side of the ridge pole. Towsrd noon he returned in haste from the last of these surveys scrambling recklessly down the mountain-side and throwing himself upon his horse with the advice: "We've headed 'em can make it now if we ride like all get-out!" For half an hour more they pushed on at the best speed to be obtained from their weary ani mals, at length drawing rein at a point where the trail crossed the ridge and widnned out upon a long, broad ledge that overhung the valley of the lower trail, with a clear drop to the latter from the brink of a good two hundred feet One ha;ty look back and down into the valley evoked a grunt of satisfaction from Hopi Jim. "Just In time." he asseverated. "Here they come! Ten minutes more ..." "What are you going to do?" Judith demanded, reining her horse In beside Marrophat as the latter dismounted. A gesture drew her attention to a huge boulder poised Insecurely on the very Up of the chasm. "We're going to tip that over on your friends, , Miss Judith!" Marrophat replied, with a smack or relish in his voice. "Simple neat efficient eh? What more can you ask?" She answered only with an irrepressible gesture of horror. Marrophat's laugh followed her as she turned away. For some moments she strained her vision vain lyjsndeavoring to penetrate the turbulent currents of superheated air that filled the valley. Then she made out Indistinctly the faintly marked line of the lower trail; and Immediately she caught a glimpse of three small figures, mounted, tolling painfully toward the point where death awaited them like a bolt from the blue. Hastily she glanced ove.r-ehoulder: Hopi Jim and Marrophat Ignoring her, were straining themselves against the boulder without budging it an inch, for all its apparent nicety of poise. For an instant a wild hope flashed through Her mind, but tt was immediately exorcized when Hopi Jim stepped back and uttered a few words of which only two "dyna mite" and "fuse" reached her ears. Kneeling beside the boulder he dug busily for an Instant, then lodged the stick to his satisfaction and attached the fuse. But while he was so engaged and Marrophat aided him, all eager intfsmt, Judith was taking ad vantage of their disregard of her. Hurriedly unbuttoning her Jacket, she whipped a playing card from her pocket, a Trey of Hearts, and with the stub of a pencil scribbled three words on its face "Danger! Go back!" Then finding a small, flatfish bit of rock, aho bound the card to It with a bit of string; and with ono more backward glance to make sure she was not watched, approached the brink. In the canyon below the three were within two minutes of the danger point. It was no trick at all to drop the stone so that it fell within a dozen feet of the leading horseman. She saw him rein In suddenly, dismount, cast a look aloft then dismount and pick up the warning. At the same time Hopi Jim and Marrophat Jumped up and ran back, each seizing aad holding his horse by nose and bridle. Constrained to do likewise lest she lose her mount Judith waited with a lightened heart . . . The explosion smote dull echoes from the flanks of the Painted hills, all drowsing in the noon-day hush: the boulder teetered reluctantly on the brink, then disappeared with a tearing sound, followed by a rush of earth and gravel; a wide gap appeared in the brink of the trail. Leaving Marrophat to hold the two frightened horses while the girl soothed her own, the bandit rushed to the edge, threw himself flat and swore bitterly, with an accent of grievance, as he rose. From the canyon below a dull rumor of gallop ing boors advertised too plainly the failure of their attempt. And Hopi Jim turned back only to find Judith, mounted, reining her horse In between him and Marrophat, and prepared to give emphasis to what she had to say with an automatic pistol that nestled snugly In her palm. "One moment, Mr.Slade." she suggested evenly; "Just a moment before you break the sad news to Mr. Marrophat. I've something to say that needs your attention likewise, your respect It is this: I am parting company with you and Mr. Marrophat I am riding on toward the west, by this trail. If either of you care to follow me" the automatic flashed ominously in the sun glare "it will be with full knowledge of the consequences. Mr. Marro phat will enlighten you If you have any doubt of my ability to take care of myself In such affairs as this. If you are well advised, you will turn hack and report failure to my father." She nodded curtly' and swung her horse round. "And what shall I tell your father from you?" Marrophat demanded sharply. "What you please," the girl replied, flashing an impish smile over-shoulder. "But, since when I. part company with you, I part with him as well for all of me, you may tell him to go to the devil!" "Well," Mr. Marrophat almitted confidentially to Mr. Slade. "I'm damned!" "And that ain't all," Mr Slade confided In Mr. Marrophat, whipping out his own revolver: "you're being held up, too. I'll take those guns of yourn, friend, and what else you've got about you that's or vaiue. Including your hoss and when you get back to Old Man Trine you can just tell him, wltk my best compliments, that I've quit the Job and lit out after-that daughter of hls'n. She's a heap sight more attractive than nineteen thousand dollars, and not half so hard to earn!" TV BURNT FINGERS. Once she had lost touch with her father's crea tures, he girl drew rein and went on more slowly and cautiously. Below her, in the vallsy, the lower trail wound Its facile way. From time to time she could dis cern upon some naked stretch of its length a cloud of dust, or perhaps three mounted figures, scurrying madly on with fear of death snapping at their heels. It was within an hour of midnight, a night bell clear and bitter cold on the heights, and bright with moonlight, when Alan's party made its last pause and camped to rest against the dawn, uncon scious of the fact that, a quarter of a mile above them, on the upper trail, a lonely woman paused when they paused and made her own camp on the edge of a sharp declivity. -The level shafts of the rising sun awakened her. She sat up, rubbed her eyes, yawned, stretched limbs stiff with the hardship of sleeping on unyield ing, sun-baked earth and of a sudden started up, surprised by the grating of footsteps oa the earth behind her. Before she could turn, however, she waa caught and wrapped In the arms of Hopi Jlm.v She mustered all her strength and wits and will for one last struggle and in a frenzied moment managed to break his hold a trifle, enough to en able her to snatch at the pistol hanging from her belt and present It at his head. But it exploded harmlessly, spending its bullet on the blue of the morning sky. And now all hint of mercy left his eyes: remained only the glare of rage. He put forth all his strength In turn, and Judith was as a child in his hands. In half a minute he had her helpless, la as much time more her back was breaking across his knee, while he bound her with loop after loop of his rawhide lariat. Then, leaving her momentarily supine on the ground, Hopi Jim caught and unhobbled her horse, and without troubling to saddle It lifted the girl to Its back and placed her there. She panted a prayer for mercy. He laughed in her face, bent and kissed her brutally, and stepped back, still laughing, to admire bis handiwork . . . Thus he stood for an instant between the horse and the edge of the declivity, a fair mark, stark against the sky. for one who stood in the valley below, folding his rifle with esger fingers, waiting Just such opportunity with the Impatience that ho had waited It ever since the noise of debris klcksd over the edge by the struggling man and woman had drawn hta attention to what was going oa above. As Alan pressed the trigger and the shot sounded clear la the morning stillness, Judith saw a look of aggrieved amasement cross the face of Hopi Jim Slade. Then he threw his hands out. clawed blindly at the air, staggered, reeled against the horse's flank ao heavily that It shied in fright, and abruptly shot from sight over the edge of the bluff. I 'To onttned ) VI