Copyright by A. C McClurg & Co. TYE IIIT Bh th hh THE STORY THUS FAR | — | SYNOPSIS.—On the Isolated Meager ranch, on the southern border, Deborah Meredith, trained nurse, is in attendance on Mra. Meager, whose husband has re- cently been killed, Immediately after the death, Bob Meager, Mrs. Meager's stepson, arrives and takes possession. He insults Deborah and she resolves to leave, but there seems no possi- bility of her getting away. Mea- ger gloats over Deborah's plight He her he has sent for a Justi of the peace, who will marry them tomorrow. Horri- fled, the girl secures a revolver, The justice, Cornelius Garrity, scoundrel and bosom friend of Meager, arrives with a party, among them the “Frisco Kid" notorious deaperado Despite Deborah's protests, the performs the marriage ceremony Sh escapes and reaches her There she stuns Meager the revolver and rushes to stables, hoping t ure a horge and escape. she neets the "Frisco Some- wow he inspires her with confi- lence and she explains the situa- The . "Kid" tells her his is Daniel Kelleen, that he 1d of Meager They ride er into the dosert, Pres- ¢ reaMzes that Kelleen Is 3 Kid,” but doasn’t fear orah hears the ry of Kid" Kelleen dis- is seized rries her to CAYe tells on justice room with the y BE at nd Deborah who ez pparently CHAPTER X-—Continued. De searching eyes, 1 objects the rock At first iily { the man seated on the vigible He was huddied for- as now with some to she could walls the vague out- rock be- such grotesque posture uncouth the the great breadth rifle, on which leaned. With this discovery came he Instant assurance also that the | fellow slept soundly, A thrill of hope | ourage, and new strength to Might it steal forward silently, sudden of vines, and gain the free the bering | even comprehend what had The horse was not a hun- Is away, and even if she had to leap boldly from off the shelf of rock, she willingly all for a escape. Yet she had not ad- | vanced three steps until she realized | Impossibility of the effort—the | sleeping body utterly blocked the pas | sage. She conld realized what the } he, could even detect + beard, and the Wf shoulders, not be possible and spring. clear the | before occurred? dred va would dare ‘hance at perceive the fellow now | with some distinctness, a giant of a | man, with long, apelike arms, bare | and hairy, an oddly formed head, al | most pear-shaped, long halr shading | the face, and a black beard sweeping | to his knees. Slowly, silently, without | actually knowing why, the girl drew back into the deeper darkness behind | her, guiding herself with one hand | against the rough wall. Into her mind | had come the faint hope of another | egress somewhere, the very purity of | the alr suggesting such a possibility, she even Imagining she felt a draft upon her cheek. Yet there was no! glimmer of light. Once her groping | foot struck against fragments of rock | left lying where they fell. She bent «down better to assure hersecif of the obstruction, and her exploring fingers touched a pick. It was a mine, then; this secret excavation had been man's | work; Nature may have pointed the | way, but this tunnel itself originated through lust of wealth. Her captors | were not outlaws but men crazed by | fear of losing what they had uncov- ered In these rocky hills. Yet this knowledge rendered. her situation no whit less dangerous, Deborah crept forward over the pile of debris, discovering that this fall of stone did not denote the ending of the passage. Snddenly her groping hands revealed a sharp curvature in the tun- nel, and she worked her way about the corner with utmost caution. Then she stopped, rooted to the spot, her heart almost ceasing to beat. Far above, up what appeared to be a sharply inclined chute through the solid rock, came streaming down a single ray of daylight, its faint reflec. tion resting directly upon the upturned fuce of a dead man, stretched on the tunnel floor, Deborah, startled, swayed back against the wall for support, staring down Into that white, upturned face, clearly revealed within the little pool of light. It was the face of a young Kn, his dark, wide-open eyes staring Uhdly up Into vacancy, his brown hale cut short, almost good-looking even In death, with cheeks freshly shaven. This last was what aroused the girl, brought her back quickly to fe and action. He had the appear- ance of having shaved that very morn- ing; the stubble of his beard was not even visible. Then she noted two other facts-—~his revolver was In the holster nt his waist, and the hand, held up- right against the side wall, grasped ea folded paper. He had just been | { killed, not more than two hours before surely, and in no duel—perhaps he had fallen to where ne lay while climbing But the She must learn the On her knees, exerting all her —the man had been shot in the back. She seemed to comprehend It all in He must have one the deed-—that older man with beard—shooting treacherously It had been deliberate her feet. from behind. murder, clear. To all appearances the nseassin after he fell. Confident of the deadly be some reason behind {t all. It was too celd, eruel, deliberative not to have definite cause. No speculation pow could sclve the mystery, but the murderer still lived; he was back vonder In the darkness she had left. He no more than he had shown merey to this If he her other must take £1 7H — would gpare still slept she for es the one chance up that long Mm Hght at the across the ng her skirts tightly hesitated for an sessed by a new thought paper might explain all, rove the very key to all this mystery She bent, and wrested It from out the stiffened fingers, to learn what it contained. thick, tough the folds yellow and dirty as though earried a long while, and writing inside, In fine penmanship, b 80 indistinct her « single word She thrust it her blouse, her searching the only possible way toward the gleam of i top te] pea In one then instance, endeavoris hastily & It was a tf sheet, there yes were in into eyes It scarcely promised eve revealed by that single ray ing the passage. irregular sized hole, worn and, while wide enough at the extremity to permit the entrance uligrown man, the upper opening so as to make very doubtful If an ordinary dlr beyond. chance of deliverance, She could remain there with the dead man, nor murderer remained Her belt was still the guard asleep on stuck It into her own. the light from above glimmered a pearl-stodded handle, and a barred of blue steel], sufficiently wide apart to afford com- paratively easy passage. in the darkness below almost Inch by inch, soon creeping over a narrotv shelf, able, finally, to one side, where the stone had been hollowed out for a few Inches. She wns breathless from the hard climb, her heart beating rapidly. She could see nothing, hear nothing, yet her mind pictured agnin the dead face of that boy staring up at her—she could not go back to that! Nor to that other living horror beyond! She must go on; better to die there, caught help lessly In that rocky hole, than ever to fall again Into the power of that beast. She listened intently, hearing nothing: then lifted her hands to feel upward. She lifted one foot, seeking a fragment of rock to rest upon. Then a flare of red lit the Inferno, a dull, muffled report echoed along the im prisoning walls, and a bullet brushed her halr, flattening itself on the reck beyond. She shrank back into the little niche, scarcely certain of her escape, and rested these on her knees, not ventur- Ing to move. The shot had come from below ; of that there could be no doubt, but there was no other report, no movement to reveal any presence, Deborah had no question as to who had fired-it must be the man she had fled from In the outer cave. He must have seen her outlined against that round opening above, It was na miracle she had escaped; but to have seen her the fellow must have stood directly beneath, beside the body of the dead man. ' Perhaps he would be there still, peering wp to learn the result of his shot, wondering where she had disappeared so quickly, She was, safe enough where she was, be hind that barrier of rock, and she drew the revolver out of its holster, and listened eagerly for any sound of guidance from below. If he made any efrort to climb up, she meant to shoot to kill She dare not venture to advance her face around the rock edge, for fear the movement might bring her into view against that vista of light. The fellow was evidently waiting and by her strange disappearance. Ne doubt he half belleved his bullet found its mark, that she had fallen either wounded or dead, Into some that narrow tur lL could not remain there indefinitely walting for him to gain the ascent, Her weapon in it, reached out beyond the edge of the rock, pointed downward. A rattled ture up hand, the noiselessly stone the and into olen, body, elplessly, the rocks, the red flush of dis- “harge faded into pungent blew bnek face: but there was nothing cry, no crunch of a falling She listened hb darkness, smoke No weapon into that below, of tense expectation g through that opening w ing its power, as though the going down. If she must go while way would she could Desperate as the cl She d down, or permit herself the 1 danger with lips closely d not look to wssible pressed together, beating rapidly, inch by Inch, body against the side walls as thoug! heart she her self drew " up, bracing She Listened Eagerly for Any Sound From Below, in a chimney, making use of every projection as a support to either hand the opening overhead, Her courage had returned; there had been no at- tack from beneath, no evidence of life, Deborah reached the end of her climb hreathless, her limbs aching from exertion, her Reart sinking with dismay. It never could be accom plished, the passage of her body through that narrow opening to the world without. How sweet the fresh alr felt; how beautiful the blue arch of sky, yet It was hopeless of attain- ment. The very madness of the thought proved her salvation. Crazed for the moment, she began to dig fiercely with her fingers at the ob struction, tearing at a projecting point of rock, which suddenly yielded to the farious attack, a stream of loospned sand pouring after. Little by little, madly tearing at the sides of the ork fice, she managed to wear away every fragment back to the sold rim of rock. She unbelted the revolver and flung it through the opening; then drew her self upward, fearful every instant of being irretrievably caught, yet find. ing purchase below for her feet suffi elent to thrust her slender body stead: ily forward. At last, her shoulders emerged Into the outer day, and she was enabled fo drag the rest of her body over the rim of rock. Utterly exhausted, Deborah lay on the sand, gasping for breath, conscious only that she bad found refuge In a shallow ravine, She lay there outstretched in the shadow of a steep bank, with: out strength even to lift her head, CHAPTER XI More Complications. Deborah felt that she never would regain power to rise, yet this total exhaustion passed away, as she began to breathe more easily, and finally she sat upon the sand, gazing about her strange surroundGings, eager to dis cover whet she could attempt next, She had escaped from that hell under- ground, yet was but little better off than before. Bhe was upon the edge of the desert stretching outward toward the Meager ranch, It wonld be lmpossible to c¢rosc this on foot, with neither food nor water to sus tein her; nor could she for a moment contemplate seeking refuge there, even if it were possible. Her only hope was to circle that hidden chasm, and then endeavor to find her way north until she reached some buman habita- tion. The hope of accomplishing this was the merest mirage; the attempt probably meant death. She had no horse, no food, yet somehow, In the exhilaration of that first moment release, she could not wholly despair. courageously, and trust Him. She arose to her knees, and looked about. It was a lonely, contracted scene, amid which she was concealed Some rift In the rocks led down opening through which she had ust crept. Perhaps It had formed a vatercourse In other ages, but now mantle 100 50 and covered all with a yellow desolation. The sides we foot, the le t. 80 she was of the For the tha of #1 5 of re » Yen on attemy the course defile in seeking a way out yards of advance ihe gusniiede Buspicion patch of sagebrush and she was threading he when the caused her to crouch sud- idst of the thicket daring to 3 which speaking lie motionless, scarcely It was the voice [tself her every a volce recognized, never be for- gotten—the volee of Bob Menger He not the blow ne ! and \ fingers dug volition, 10 Was dead, then; had and wrah’s than more she man, I edie OF Pred ected that fen away together ike spok © the vole “ye i won te you to yt It? 1 wone when 1 nly. : only y also You before. your game tried Bol, Very same once has never worked the brains t told haven't got Caseheor never nor Garrity. All me any- in your life, and when “What mean?” “This ranch inheritance fixed up so nicely for you. haven't all the dope—not yet. deal, ‘Kid’? What do you No, 1 ut I'm deel I ever heard about, and It will blow up lke a punctured balloon just enough to see a good lawyer. That's true, ain't it, Bob? “The old man left it to me" “Yes, he didnot. 1 old Mex when I first heard what was going on up here, Young Clair got hold of one end of the story somehow, and told it to me. You remember Clair?" “He worked here on the ranch” “Yes: that's what made him talk He's square, that kid, and you fired him, and every other American on the place; then put on Mexicans. That made him sore. When he told me that I came pretty near knowing what was up.” “You aid, hey! the game?” “Why shouldn't I, Bob? 1 held you up when you was flat, didn’t I? There js no reason why you should forget me now, Den you! I mean to see that you don’t. That's what I'm here for, Now listen—I'm on to what is going to be pulled off tonight-—this Casebeer business, You sent Sanchez and his helper over here to take care of the Casebeer outfit-~that's right, jsn't £7 Meager growled something indis- tinetly, bis eyes angrily watchful, but Kelleen remained on guard, (TO BE CONTINUED) Wanted a hand In The Addict. Among Jimmie Maiden's favorite stories 1s the one concerning the two men who were getting acquainted through the medium of casual conver. sation. “Do you play golf?" inquired one of them. “No,” sald the other, “but I can't give It up."~~New York Herald The average woman has less confl dence In her husband than she has in her family physician. TRAVEL Egyptian Embroidery Bid for Favor The new stralghtline wrap-around coats with Egyptian embroidery run- in travel coats, writes a fashion cor- respondent in the N>w York Trilune, One designer makes a cape of dark blue serge that extends to the walst circle, folds down ing in a black A scarf of red and around the neck and to the hips on the side held in place by the belt of the dark blue dress beneath, There are the cape as there the A ie for travel Paris, hut it must be m practical wool material, with not mt suit in are general nat of some the cape 1 in front, The with the cape, re than his wearf, ir is seen « travel have short coats rather skirts, r trim and very untrimmed, unu braid ally a fea. , and if it in, ghort Gx unusual stitching, buttons. The pocket is us {f these i {8 incon- y the handkerchief, gometimes corative for travel Another that desir: suits of suede are smart ar 1seful 8 for the jour affairs with fur bold stripes There are long wraps h are loose 1 nese nre in inch of \ Travel Coat in Which Green and Gray Drapella Are Combined, Using Green for Pointed Sections on Cape Collar, Sleeves and Hip Band, stripe. Sach coats are usually worn over dresses, described. Coats and capes of this in Odd Loose Stitch iy AR pre # in tangerine and solid gray collar, nickel gray, with cuffs and bottom, appeal to many young women. A Many Kinds of Gloves to Please All Tastes gauntiet gloves, very short, mbroid- effect, Utility Coat Likely to Be Fall Favorite i ie a sche sent, and in the women's, a prac- al coat for all-wear. Camel's hair cloth, d group pleid-back the array mediums used for which for most part are marked by convertible collars of generous size, with large patch pock- ets, such as are indispensable in the topeoat. Others are developed on straight, semi-wrap lines, Fur collars finish many fabrics and special cloth Ld ol the of these assortments, Let in the Sun. I'm the old dass, blinds and curtains i the sun for fear its rays would fade some precious carpet or rug. Now sun and alr are welcomed gladly and peo- i know better—Milwaukee Sentinel. More and more of women's clothes simple arrangement is a decided Im- provement over old-fashioned, compli- cated fastening. any woman wanting to go back to ! is the question, “How do you manag the elastics” in bloomers? Do they always go pieces in the first washing?” A little eare and thought expended i i i ! In buying braided elastic, you can get either the flat or the tubular. The rubber threads run lengthwise in the flat elastic, and have the cotton “tov. der the elastic threads. In the round elastic the braid is tub. round called “oval elastic.” When it comes tc comparing the {tes construction, and which insures i i i i So you can readily see that the stralr and wear on bralded elastic stretched. ; The difference In the way elastics are made divides them into two types, the woven and the braided. Wide elastics, and that used for arm bands, garters and hose supporters, are usually woven. To make this woven elastic, the warp threads of yarn, and of rubber are set up on the loom to- gether, the rubber being stretched to equal the length of the yarn threads The yarns used in making elastic web- bing may be cotton, mercerized cotton, artificial slik and silk. Good yarn has a lot to do with the weanag quality o. your elastic. The "filing" or weft threads are ‘rut in In such a way that they are held ia place by being woven through the warp threads, and soy as to cover completely and protect the rubber. you woukl expect more satisfactory service from the woven elastic. But when a smaller elastic is wanted, the braided type is especially good as it gives a neater, more finished ap. pearance, Experience has proved that heat, light and grease cause rubber to de teriorate very rapidly, and a note made of that fact may be a very ma- terial factor in prolonging the life of your elastic. Poke-Bonnet Type. A veritable Victorian bonnet of green slik is one of the sort of young girls are wearing today. of the poke-bonnet type, but smaller and fits very closely head. Usually the trimming flowers and frult combined. pa ha It