Diamonds of Malopo a By VICTOR ROUSSEAU $0090000000000000000000000000000000 Copyright by W. G. Chapman (Concluded.) It was seconds before the distant thud of the body upon the rocks be- neath the gorge told Winton that De Witt would trouble Sheila no more. Winton reached the cave, stood up, and caught Sheila in bis arms. She was fainting, her lips sought his own feebly; then her head dropped on his shoulder. By the next flash of lightning Win- ton measured the gap. He could al- most straddle it; could he, bearing Sheila, make the leap? He hesitated. Then, with wild yells, the Hotten- tots, who had heard De Witt’'s cry, came swarming up toward the en- trance of the cave, Winton measured the distance with his eyes and leaped. It was a terrific jump for a man carrying an uncon- selous woman in his arms. He tot- tered upon the opposite edge, but did not fall. The Hottentots were just entering the cave. ‘Wiaton, crouching behind the ledge, saw them stare about them in amazement. He saw that the narrow orifice wid. ened behind him into a larger cavern. An enormous boulder, hanging from the roof, poised like a rocking-stone upon a smaller one, partly concealed the approach. At once an idea. horn of his desperate situation, came tG Winton. If he could dislodge the stone he could effectively bar the Ilot- tentots from following him. He set Sheila down and put his shoulder against the boulder. It stirred, it rocked, it resumed its posi- tion. Another flash—and he was seenc Yelling, the Hottentots rushed forward The foremost saw the chasm and hesi- tated. Then Winton, putting forth : strength, shifted the stone, his It fell, bringing down a shower of debris from the roof of the cave. Win- ton stumbled among the rartiing stones, and, catching up Sheila, stag gered along the passage. But he turned as the succession of thun-ler- ous crashes ceased, and waited for the next flash. None came, and he heard not the least sound from the Hotten- tots behind him. After a full minute Winton struck a match. To his amazement he saw, by the little light, that the passage belind him was completely obliterated. The fall of the stone had brought down a miniature landslide. All traces of the entrance beneath the mountain had vanished. No light, no sound could penetrate. Winton tried to strike another match. But the box was damp, and the slight flame fizzled out immedi- ately. He tried another and another with like result. He sat down quietly at Sheila's side. Later, he thought wearily, he would feel his way onward in the darkness. Now. worn out by the day and by his struggle, he had an intense desire to sleep, Ie heard Sheila sigh and put his arms about her. “We are safe, dearest!” he said. ard tried to make his tone as hopeful “We are safe, dearest!” he said as one could who was trapped in the bowels of the earth. She put her arms about him in a manner indicative of complete confi dence. And, with Sheila beside him, Winton felt that nothing mattered. He must have slept, for some time later, opening his eyes in incredulous self-distrust, he discovered a gleam of daylight far beneath him. “Sheila!” he whispered. He felt her stir beside him. ton!” she murmured. “Look!” he said pointing, Against the tiny patch of light he saw her face, and the look on it told him that, what he had hidden from her, “Win second wrong guess that she had concealed from him. “Sheila, you have slept?” “Not very much, Winton, dear!” “You knew our danger?’ “YT had you, Winton,” she answered with supreme confidence. He raised her hands to his lips. awed by her courage and faith, They began following the track down toward the patch of light. It was hardly more than an earth-hole in the mountain, but freedom was not far away. And at last they emerged upon the steep hillside and understood the nature of thelr location. The whole of the mountain was honeycombed ‘with fissures. In the course of ages, as these crumbled away, and the boulders above fell un: der the pressure of the whole mass, tunnels had been formed. The road which they had traversed had been ac- tually a continuation of the pass at the end of the valley of bones, and had once been open to the sky. But what gave Winton the greatest confidence was the discovery that this was the only pass through the solid mountain wall, which extended for sev eral miles in either direction. To at: tack them the Hottentots would have to make almost a day's detour. And there was not the l2ast likelihood that they would do this. They had nothing to gain by pursuing them, now that De Witt was dead. The sun was rising when they reached the plains. The stony desert lay all about them, but they quenched their thirst at a pool formed by the rains in a hollow of the rocks, and set their faces resolutetly in the direction of Malopo. It was a fearful, thirsty journey that lay before thems There were five anc thirty miles to cover, and their oniy hope of surviving it lay in the prob. ability of rains that afternoon. The seasonal downpour now seemed wel established. And because there was no alternative, they dismissed thei: fears and started. There would be nothing to fear frou the natives In the desert. However the rebellion might be faring, all the available warriors would either be mustered outside the town or, at tn’ worst. would be in possession of nt As for the Hottentots. Winton Sheila agreed that they would prob ably remain in the mountains, by the water, for an indefinite time, since all their instincts would lie in keepin: ow of the fighting. “We shall meet nobody,” said Win ton as they started. “until we reach the river. Once there, we cian recon noiter snd see how things are faring I am confident that the tribesmen wil have foand a warm recention.” ane Yer this, his first prophecy, wie wrong. or. where the last toothill faded into the blue, in a little dey | gully, face down in the dry pit that he had scooped with his tingers, they found the skeleton of a man beside that of a horse. The fingers clutched a pocketbook. Winton detached it from the dead man's grasp and opened it. Inside was a single envelope with a name on it Within the envelope was a small stone, The man had been Van Vorst. The | pebble was the big diamond. Winton sat down beside the skele- ton, and his shattered nerves gave way at last. He burst into helpless laugh. ter. The irony of the situation was too much for him, The outburst calmed him. When he arose he felt as if the return of the stone obliterated all the past, ending the cycle of misfortune that had begun i with the theft. He caught Sheila to him, “We are going to begin now—hegin | | | to live,” he said. He read happy eyes. “And I am going to have this cut! and set for your engagement ring, even i if it isn't ready before the wedding ring,” added Winton. After that they went on more brisk: ly. Their hunger only made them more buoyant and resolved to reach their destination before their strength failed them. But as the day grew hotter and the sky remained cloudless their speed slackened. A natural re- action and depression came on them. They rested at noon and resumed their journey silently. There was no hope of getting near Malopo that day, even if they were keeping a fairly accurate course. Sheila, indeed, was the guide; Winton alone would have been help- lessly lost in trying to follow the sun, It was middle afternoon, and their thirst had grown almost unendurable, Still, they hoped. Rain would come, must come, by nightfall. The sun was half-way down in the west when sud- denly Winton, lifting up his aves, per ceived a horseman approaching them. He uttered a glad cry. For the rider was indubitably a white man, and he was riding in the white man’s fashion, with toes turned in and a tight snaffle and loose curb. That was where Winton made his day. The man was not white but coal-black; he seemed to blacken the air around him within the distance of an aureole. It was Sam. He leaped from his saddle with a vell that would have done credit to any savage upon the fields, and, grasp ing Winton’s hand, pumped it up and down violently. “They're all out searching for you and Miss Sheila!” he cried. “Ned Burns and half Malopo. I took an idea that I'd strike off this way. I pre sume that was an inference from intui. tive premises, Mr. Garrett? But, thank God, you are both safe!” “How ahout Malopo?’ shouted Win: fon. her acquiescence in her! wR Ss 2 Vryburg before the row began. The | The drop is ascribed to a lack of funds government had been wider awake than we gave them credit for being And those nig—colored aboriginal Ban- tus—ran right into them. They didn’t have much heart for fighting after they got a few rounds at five hundred yards. Malopo only lost seven men, and not 8 child or woman hurt. And the hall that isn’t out looking for you is put ting the debris underground. And Mr. Garrett, Malopo’s going to give you and Miss Sheila a triumphal pro | cession, especially her—" Winton’s face grew grave. glance at Sheila made swiftly. “We won't bear malice against Ma- lopo—we can’t now,” he said softly; and Sheila agreed. Then he grew very serious. “We're about finished, Sam,” he said “How far is Malopo?” “Right over yonder,” answered Sam. “Not ten miles away. Miss Sheila can make it on my horse in an hour.” “Sam, I see you haven't a water bottle.” “Why, Mr. Garrett, we've got @ packhorse with a water skin. If only I hadn’t left the crowd! We might sight them on the way back, though and Miss Sheila is sure to come upon some of them—" “If only we had something moist Sam,” groaned Winton. “Why, Mr, Garrett,” exclaimed Sam, “I never thought of it, but here's some thing I found growing in the desert. 1 picked two of them, and I think I'll take the seeds back and plant them I'm glad I didn't eat both.” And from the other side of his saddle he detached a huge wild watermelon which he divided with his knife. He handed half to Sheiza and the othe: half to Winton. The fruit was insipid in flavor, but it tasted to the travelers like nectar But a it change Winton discarded the gnawed-out shell. “Sam,” he said. “Sr?” “T hate to be personal, Sam, but really—" “Pray don’t mention it,” answered Sam politely, “How about stincts, Sam?” ITHE E.ID) those primeval in ———Subscribe for the “Watchman.” $90,000,000 Spent in Seven Years for Roads. Since 1916 second-class townships of Pennsylvania have spent more than $90,000,000 on highway improvement, and it is estimated, they will spend more this year than in any previous year. Highway Department officials estimate the expenditure for 1924 at $18,500,000. Expenditures by second-class town- | ships last year on road improvement totaled approximately $17,125,000. In 1917 the total was $6,122,812, showing that road improvement last year al- most tripled that of 1917. In 1922 the expenditure was $14,871,573, a falling off of about $3,000,000 under the preceding year and the same amount under the succeeding year. with which to pay off township re- wards. This year the State will pay $1,304,- 000 in township rewards, which is al- most $500,000 more than it paid in 1923, and approximately $800,000 more than it paid in 1922. In 1921 the township rewards totaled $85,122, and in 1920 $76,886. He Fell for Three Stories. “Now it’s jist like I was a-tellin’ ye,” said a grizzled old Irishman to a group of workmen. “Onct when my gang was helpin’ put up a sky- scraper, I fell fer three stories an’ it dodn’t hurt me nary a bit.” Here the stranger who had paused to listen remonstarted. - TIRRARR, “But how could a person fall for three stories and not be hurt?” he sternly inquired. “Well,” replied the veteran, a twin- kle creeping into his eye, “you’ve al- ready fallen fer one, an’ I guess fall- in’ fer two more won’t hurt ye.”— Everybody’s Magazine. eee —Get your job work done here. y QurContinuous Obligation pair of wires all the way to the central office. That’s why we are adding more than half a million miles of new wire each year to our plant in this State. Last vear we put in 158,000 new telephones in Pennsylvania. This vear we will put in 168,000. During the five years beginning January 1, 1924, the total will be 925,000. These are gross figures. Our net gain will be about half that gid number. Here is an interesting fact: Dur- ing the coming five years we will actually put in a hundred Every telephone line means central office equipment and building space. That's why we are adding a million and a quar- thousand more new telephones in Pennsylvania than there are in service in the State today. Every telephone line requires a All this in a tremendous hurry—why? ter dollars’ worth of telephone apparatus every month inside our buildings. And that, too, is why it is neces- sary to enlarge our buildings and to build so many new ones. Because it’s our job to meet the demands for service—not at our convenience, but at the time when the teiephones are asked for. And, too, everyadded telephone gives your telephone more power. THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. OF PENNSYLVANIA L. H. KINNARD, President Third of a series of adver tisements regarding the present telephone service program in Pennsylvania. = “Safe and sonnd, sir. It seems there was a detachment of police with a couple vf Maxims on the way up from Guiding Thoughts ATER CTL he First, National Bank cordially invites the Checking Accounts of firms, corporations, organizations and individuals who wish to make a strong banking connection—a bank where the guiding thoughts are Ser- vice, Courtesy, Efficiency, Safety. Whether your account is of large or moderate size, remember it is welcome. Le | THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ren I: aa | promises will be kept. cealed. 81-46 J Credit x E business of the world is done on credit. Credit is based on faith—on the belief that Hence the most important thing a business man can have is CHARACTER. : The first question asked about him is, ‘*What is his reputation for honesty, for reliability ?’’ The lack of these qualities is not long con- Ones neighbors know. 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