12 v»m Mj 7 W Kf^ ifeeDetectlve Moods —' CCp>ri * ht 'M«keth Pn chard Continued "What can that bo?" cried Linda. As if in answer came the sullen far off sound throe times repented, ui;d then, after au interval, n fourth. "Shooting!" cried Linda again. very white, her blue eyes wide with terror. "And it's from the direction of Sen!is lake.'" "Ben! Ben Puttiek"' roared Peter sham. Bt-t loud as was his voice. Linda's call rose higher. "Ilere 1 am!" We heard Puttiek's voice from inside the bouse, and he ran out a minute later. "We heard live sliois front Seulis lake." I said. "We must start at once, you and 1. Mr. Petersham will stay with Miss Linda." Puttiek look til me in the eyes. "Are you tired of your life?" he ask ed grimly. "We have no time to think of that. (!pt ready!" "There was five shots." l'nttick said deliberately. "1 heard em myself. That uieans Joe's dead, if it was hiui they shot at. If we go we'll soon be dead too." "Oh. you coward!" eried Linda. Puttiek turned a dull red. "I'm no coward. Mis-- l.inda. !".:t I'm no fool. I'm a wooas:;:aii. I know." "There is a good ueaj of sense in what Ueu says." 1 put in. "I think his best place is here with you. lie shall stay to help you in ease of need. I'll go and tin! Joe. After all, it's as likely as not that he was tiring or per haps some one else was firing at a bear." 1 has.'eue I forward at t!:e best ;«"• I could attain until fro'j a ris ing Ut:<> I 1 cuui!;! giiiapse «.f Sell lis lake. s« > :t:li here rose an.l 'ell ill a >rr,.'s ..f Short st-ep incline*. ' la!»)j.-: tlicse little hil!:» ami ran down tht- Suddenly I came to a t"rn ,-:i . v :>s about to rush down a -i "it a vol c. seemingly a: civ sJ'Jc. s "Tint you. >jr. tjuariteh?" "Joe! Wltere are you?" "Here!" 1 followed the voice and. parting Fou-.e branches, saw Joe lying on the I ;*j*Lif \ \ v£% J / N A Ti I /V i 1 wi, t / J \ /V A 1): V mi ffum \ MW'k t- : * ' Joe Leaned Againat the Maple Tree and Looked Down on Him. grouud. His face was gray under Its tan. and a smear of blood had dried upon his forehead and cheek. "You're wounded!" I cried. "Ilis second passed through e top of my shoulder." "His? Whose?" "Him that shot at me." "Did you shoot back?" "He lies about ten paces west o' that small tuaple." "You saw him?" "Hardly. He had a black hat. I saw it move after he fired his fourth, and I shot back. If you'll give me your arm. Mr Qcaritch. we'll go up and take a look at him." With difficulty and with many .>auses we reached the top of the little ridge. The dead man lay as Joe had said quite near the small maple. The bullet had entered his throat. He was a fong haired, black bearded man of medium size. Joe leaned against the msple tree and looked down at him. "I seem to know the fellow's face." I said. "Yes: you seen him the day we come. cutting wood by the shack." "Now. Joe. lean on me. and we'll try to make for home." for 1 saw he was ' very weak. 1 "Must just look around. Mr. Qua ritcb. See here! He was smoking his pipe. Look at the ashes—a regular handful of them. He must 'a' lain for me all of a hour before I come along. Here's his rifle —a 30-.TO. Wonder who be is?" Joe lay back, panting. "You're not able to walk." said I. "I'll go back to Kalmucks and get a rig to bring you hjme." "No. Mr. Quaritch. It would uever be right to do that. It would give the other fellas warning." "The others?" "This dead fella's partners." "You know he has some, then?" "Due anyway. But let's be moving. Cut me a pole so as I can use it as a crutch." I did as he asked, and we commenced our long and, for him. painful walk back. CHAPTER XVI. The Capture. AS we walked Joe gave me in little jetks the story ot his adven- tures. "1 started out, Mr. Quaritch," he began, "and crossed the lake to the camp where Bill Worke was fired at—you uiind Miss Linda dropped a tiroocb there? 1 had a search for it, l>ut 1 didn't tiud it. though 1 come across what I'd hoped to tiud—a lot of tracks—men's tracks." "Who bad been there siuce Satur day "Huh! Yes: only about two days old. After awhile I built a bit of a rise and cooked a pinch of tea in a tin I'd fetched along. Then after lunk"—Joe always called luuch "lunk" —"1 started back. 1 was coming along easy, not-on the path, but in the wood about twenty yards to the south of it. and afore I'd gone above three or four acres a shot was tired at me from above. The bullet didn't strike me, but as I was in a wonderful poor place for cover—just three or four spruces and half a dozen sticks of wild rasp bcrry I went down, pretending I'd got the bullet, pitched over the way a man does that's got it high up, and I took care to get the biggest spruce trunk between me and where 1 think tLe shots come from. "Sometimes, if you go down like that, a man'll get rattled-like and come out. but not this one. Guess I'm not the first he's put a bit of lead into. He lay still and fired again—got me it. the shoulder that time, and I gave a kick and shoved in among the rasp berry ■'•anes in good earnest, had some of tbem whitey buds in my mouth and was chewing of them, when the fella shoots twice more—both misses. Then he kind o' paused, and I guesses he's going to move to where he can let me have it again. "1 see the black hat on him for a mo ment and then I lets drive. I tried to get tip to have a look at him." "Surely that was risky. How could you know he was dead?" "Heard the liullet strike and saw the hat go backward. A man don't nev er fall over backward when he's sham ming. I couldn't get to him—fainted, I guess. Then you come along." • •••••« Evening had fallen before we ulti mately arrived at Kalmaeks. We ap proached the house with care and en tered by a window at the back, as Joe thought it possible the front en trances might be commanded from the wood on that side. We went at once to the room where Worke was lying and Joe gave him a rapid description of the man he had shot. "That's Tomlinson," said Worke at once. "Them two brothers lives, to gether. What have they been doing?" "You'll know afore night," replied Joe. "What are their names?" "Dandy is the one with the black beard, while him they calls Muppy is a foxy colored man." "Thank you." said Joe. "Now. Bill, if you keep them names to yourself I'll come back in half an hour and tell you who it was shot you." On Joe's appearance Linda started up «nd ran to him. "You're wounded!" she cried. "It's nothin' much. Miss Linda." But as we laid him down on the conch he seemed to lose consciousness. Petersham brought brandy, and Linda, holding Joe's head upon her arm, put it to his lips. He swallowed some of 1 it and tben insisted upon sitting up. "I must bind up your shoulder. We must stop the bleeding." Linda's dis tress and anxiety were very evident. And Joe had to give way. With her capable and gentle hands Linda soon dressed the wound and afterward in sisted on sending for Puttiek to help him to his bunk. "So you've got it?" Puttiek said. "I warned you. Lucky you're not dead." j "Yes, ain't it?" returned Joe. ; Well I knew that soft drawl, which j November's voice never took except in | moments of fiercest tension. "You'd best join your hands above TTAKRTSBrRG STARINPEVENPENT, FRIDAY FATCNTNG, NOVEMBER 27. 1914. your head, Ben Puttiek. Lock the thumbs. That's right!" Joe had picked my revolver from the table and held it pointed at Puttiek's breast. "He's mad!" screamed Puttiek. "Tie his hands. Mr. Quaritch. Miss Linda, will you please to go away?" "No. Joe. Do you think I'm fright ened?" "Huh! I know you're brave, but a man acts freer without the women looking on." Without a word she turned and walk ed out of the room. "Puttiek's going to confess. Mr. Pe tersham," went on November. "I've nothing to confess, you foot!" "Not even that story you invented about the man with the red hanker across his face—the mau who wasu't never there?" "What's he ravin' about?" cried Pnt tlck. '•nave you forgot fhMrt long haired Tomlinson brothers that"— The efTect of this speech on Puttiek was Instantaneous Evidently he leap ed to the conclusion that he had been betrayed. *«r he turned and dashed for the iV**- We flung ourselves upon him and by sheer weight bore him to the ground, where we quickly overpow ered hint, snarling and writhing. Some hours later we sat round No vember Jive who was stretched upon the couch. Puttiek had been tied up and imprisoned in the strongest room. "No, Mr. l'etersham." Joe was say ing. "I don't think you'll have much more trouble. There was only threo men in it. One's dead: one's locked up, and 1 dare say we'll find a way of dealiug with No. 3." "What 1 dou't understand." said Lin da. "is how you found out that Puttiek was in it. Wheu did you begin to sus pect hint?" "Last night, when Mr. Petersham didn't go to Butler's cairn. The fellas who promised to meet him never put in there either. That was queer, wasn't it? Of course it could mean one thing —that some one had told 'em that Mr. Petersham weren't coming. There was only us three, and Puttiek knew. So l'nttick must 'a' been the one to tell." "But. November." I said. "Puttiek never left the house, for you remem ber you found no tracks on the sand. How. then, could he let them know?" "1 guess he waved a lantern or made some other sign they'd agveod on." "But why didn't you tell me all this at once?" exclaimed Petersham. "Because I weren't sure. Their not going to Butler's enirn might "a* been < h:\noe. But this morniug:, when Put tick eotn»s in with his yarn about the tu«n wtih the red hanker iicross his faee t!:■ • t in:ide him luvtl-up his h:mds j u:tl threatened him when he was mending tiie anno, 1 begun to think ! we shouldn't be s:> nuieh longer iii the dark. Awl when 1 went down and ; f 1 X i «tM<«'• / / / best join your sbove your head. Ben Puttie*!"" had a look ::r<>tind by the river. I knew at once bis story was a'lie. and that he'd got an interest in scaring Mr. Pe tersham awny." To Be Continued. DYING AMID WEED FIRES Well-Knowu Farmer Collapses and Is Boasted Alive Reading, Pa., Nov. 2 7.—Overcome with vertigo while burning off weed? in a field on his big farm, Philip K. fcvhultz. 60, of Chapel, this county, one of the most widely-known farmer.-- of lower Berks, fell over unconscious Wed nesday nigbrt iu the midst of the blaz ing field, and was so terriblv burned that he is in a serious condition, lie cannot live. BUSINESS CGU.ECiEJ. / ' 11 ~ —v itGtiiNiJSS Cii. :{-!> Market Street Fall lena aep'.emuer First DAY AND - \ Stenography, Stenotypy DAY and NIGHT SESSIONS Enroll Any Monday SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. "arkot Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. Cumberland Valley Railroad In ljfleut May -■», lil4. Trains LrlVf llitrrmburc— For Winchester .iiici Maitinsbure. at 5.03, *T.S« a. m- *3.10 p. m. Kor llagerstown. Chambersburg and ihtermeaiate stations, at '5.03. *T.au ll.oi a. m.. •3.4u. i.Ji. *7.40. U.uil p. m. Additional trains tor Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at s».4fc a. m„ i.ls. 3.11 j j.i«. H.3U p. m. For Dillsburg at 3.03, *7.io and *11.63 i a. in.. 2. 1 8, C 3.4U. 5.32. tt.3o p. m. •I'ally All other trains daily except Sunday. J H. TONGC. i H. A. KibDUK. Q. V. A. SuDL I OUR PRESENTATION OF er nn TO EVERY READER nP"LJT O W ™|l ■w W9 AS the Bible. AB an EDUCA- X niO m&F —— TIONAIi work it demands » nr Tup place in every home. One Ul 1 IHL neod not hold religious boltef M ■ ■ (■ t0 "PP reciat ® the educational Illustrated eIShS Star-Independent ONE you will USE. for it T MF% . B - BEINGS OUT in PICTURES !iJ 1 & "'*""" 0,1 """'" You Simply Cut Out and Presint One Free Certificate printed daih on another page, together with the stated amount set opposite the stvle selected, that co\ers the necessary EXPENSE items of this wonderful distribution, in cluding clerk hire, cost of packing, checking, express from factory, etc., etc. ■HE EDITOR OF THE ' j ome Journal SAYS ABOUT THIS see,ns ee to have been done in the right spirit. The Book j tator with reserve and 1 BimxaN3ls*s6r<,T *»?>■»*.. " \ I «fe»a«EggfttSi!ii:ni|Hiai artists with sympathy M and knowledge. It has b v I ':) QSml book. The pictures here ."v., ' e * !&•- i imMil .. I .£?s? llraw4scfiEwN'l: Has/ serve a distinct purpose. 1 Tbey eurk ' h the text ' 1 lSl3£^Wi' > ii'' : mB hut they do more; they gk@y. "" "H i *HH[ intelligently explain it, »« » Altt fal and manv a hitherto ob seure passage will as- i to thousands R 8 ' new meaning through 1 A, "»t these eve-teaching pio tures - the 1 rp, . . , Bible is a risky experi ] „„i'v RE-uxy UKBm """* ®s iK I"""', ot lIWIUTKP BIBLE ST' T iV^UfS I | 1 pairii'ii achievement in this I '.i "mi- ,', 8 ™ sertcd ,. case, with I 11 It, 11 Ph. so that every llius tration corresponds with the accompany- ''EDWARD W. BOK." iug text-matter, and makes it plain. COST $50,000 TO PREPARE THE ILLUSTRATIONS ASIDE FROM THE MAGNIFICENT TISSOT COLOR PLATES Your Own Choice of These Books ' /I I 11 * 4- \• U J • *ll a ui V 1 .U Tl* VKRY one of the 600 pictures is a gem of art and the MifiNIFICEIIT (like illustration) is bound in full flexible limp leather, H , A • * . . , .. MMuninubßi original conception of a master mind—a wordless dis- II I IICTQiTCn w, tn overlapping covers and title stamped in gold, with . , - . M , . ILLUolnAltlJ /!, , , , . - course of wonderful force. These illustrations are - . . , , .. . . . . , . , . . lt &IT Edition n- . i, A , , , , introduced directly into the teit, and each has been specially A (»k. mous Tissot collection, together with six hundred superb . . ... . tt ., .. ~ „ .. . v/f of the , . • i » made to illuminate—i. e., throw light upon —the particular picture® praphicallv illustrating and making plain the . x _ , ... . .. a . , . . ... t ! S BIBLE vor.o in the light of modern Biblical kno '.-.lge and verse se,ected for """strat.on. Such raarvelously faHhful resoarch. Tho tf-tt conforms to the authorized edi- portrayal of Bible lands and scenes will prove a glorious reve tioii. is self-pronouncing, with < "pious marginal 1 lation to all readers. Modern research has thrown a flood of references, maps and help*: printed on thin pa- I ..« Amount light upon the people and places of Bible days, and this ripe per, flat opening at all pages; beautiful, readable • H,! 1 " HYP uvsy 1 1 j u ~ . , type. One Tree Coupon and the |Ljfc EXPENSE knowledge shows torth on every page, so truthfully embel- T Itema lished aB to give the text a new and personal meaning. The $3 is exactly the same Alto An Edition for Catholics * as the $5 book, ILLUSTRATED fJjcept in the style Through an delusive arrange- ABntino * 1 , 1 , x»¥ r of binding, which meut, we have been most for- JVLAILi UKJJiIiKS —Any OOOk by parcel post 1U- IdIdLL is in silk cloth; tunate in securing the Catholic j i:outains all of the Bible, Douay Version, endorsed elude EXTRA 7 Cents WltllUl lnO mileS; 10 illustratior.s nnd ' bv Cardinal Gibbons and Arch- nnn maps. One free I bishop (now Cardinal) Farley, as Cents 100 to 300 miles; for greater distances ask certificate and [ X|PKYPFNJSF we " as t ' le var ' oU9 Arch tie uI v Jtems bishops of "the country. Theii- your postmaster amount to include for 3 pounds. lustrations consist of the full page plates and maps approved by the f'hureh, without the Tissot and text pictures. It will be dis- Addl'eSS THE STAR-INDEPENDENT, tributed in the same bindings as the Protestant books and at the same —_ . , _ Amount Expense Items, with the necessary free Certiticate. xlaiTlSuUrg, Jrß>. HiiiHi 'i —iiiawaiiy■■■■iiiyiiiiwiißaiiiwn'—w— — ll—immh——l— ■ — l— RETELLING WAR STORIES Veterans From Six Committees in Thanksgiving Reunion Robesonia, Fa.. Nov. 27.—The seven teenth annual reunion of the One Hun-1 dred anil Fifty-first Regimental Asso- ' nation. Pennsylvania Volunteers, was! held here yesterday in the Lutheran 1 | chapel, and reminiscences of the Civil war were told by the few survivors in L| Pennsylvania of this regiment. Thcro w»>re veterans present from ! Berks, Lebanon, Schuylkill. Lancaster, j Montgomery and Philadelphia counties, I ' aud the welcome address was delivered j by (leorgp D. Fnhrenbach, former Sheriff of Berks county, one of the old-' I I jest members. H. H. Brownmiller, of j Orwigsburg, also delivered an address, | and 'here were a dozen impromptu i 1 speeches. ,1 Drought Stops Colliery j Shenandoah, Pa., Nov. 27.—The ■ I Girard Mammoth colliery, employing 1 'nearly- 1,04)0 men and boys, was com-|l pelled to suspend operations Wednes day on account of the drought. Othei collieries and industries are working in danger of boilers blowing up owing t< the scant supply of water. Unless rain! v'ome soon to relieve the serious situa lion a complete suspension of work will have to be ordered which will thro* thousands out of employment.