CHAPTER XV-—Continued. Be “Seems he wasn't doing anything any more, just hiding out; none of his gang with him. It had got so hot for the old devil he was afraid to show his nose above ground; fifty thousand for him, dead or alive, you know-— that last raid had got the U. 8. aftgr him as well as Mexico, and he was smart enough to lle out here until It blew over. Maybe we never would have got on to him If Sanchez hadn't struck his trail one day by accident over beyond Silver springs. That led him into this valley, and then he got lost again. After that we kept a watch, It didn't do no good for some time, the old fox was too sly. So finally Garrity put up a meeting with him—they had some secret signal ar ranged between 'em—and In that way we traced out this cave and got him cornered.” “Cave! It's a tunnel, ain't It? “I don’t know what it Is. I've only been here once before—in the dark. What's your idea?” “That Manuel found ‘Alvara’s Lost Mine'—it's got all the earmarks.” “The—the ‘Lost Mine! Then— it's worth millions! You—yeu can't mean it." “It's only a guess; let's chuck that now, and finish up with Gomez." “Yes, but walt!” exclaimed Meager himself. “There ain't no use of you making any gunplay with me, ‘Kid’ What's the matter with us being pard- ners? about this—you, Garrity an’ me. there must be money enough here to make us all rich; Gomez has got a devil of a lot and, good G—d! if this is the ‘Lost Mine'—" Kelleen hesitated, not doubt as to his own purpose, from but in Meager's plan opened new ties: the man must know more he had revealed, while Garrity apparently even deeper versed in the mystery. Just now hoth men would be more valuable alive than dead. “That sounds fair enough, Bob,” he replied quietly. is In on it, too?” “Sure; he got the dope, and you can't play any tricks on Garrity. coming here this morning.” “Here?” “That's what. We had a nice little surprise party all made up for Manuel, ly you cooked the goose" A low, peculiar whistle echoed through the passage, and Meager stopped suddenly. Again the whistle founded, evidently from the entrance to the tunnel. “I'll Play the Game” He Answered Shortly. Iy. “Now ‘what Is it between ua, ‘Kid’ —=peace or war?’ Kelleen thrust bis revolver back into his belt. “I'll play the game,” he answered CHAPTER XVI a. The Spoils of Crime. With eyes long accustomed to the darkness the two men could perceive shadowy objects In the outer passage, where little shafts of daylight pene trated through the tangle of conceal fog follage. The walls of the tunnel were gray-tinged and darker objects one perhaps the dead body of Manuel Gomez—~shapeless and grotesque, Mt. tered the floor, Meager, evidently feeling full confidence in this new alliance, moved forward, while Kelleen followed, still suspicious, and alert for any treachery. If Garrity came there alone he would take the chance; if not, then he would fight the battle out there in the tunnel, asking no guarter, and giving nope. Meager stopped, his huge bulk almost blot- ting out the light, “That you, Con?’ he asked anx- fously. “Who the h—1 else would it be?” ex- claimed an exasperated voice. “What's going on here? Nobody on wateh; I didn't want to come poking In, linble to get shbt. Where the devil Is Manuel 7” “Come Inside and I'll explain; just drop over that ledge; it's only a foot or two to the floor. You came dlone?” The fellow did not answer, but no one followed as he clambered across the barrier of reck. Apparently he could perceive nothing when once within, except the dim, shapeless fig- ures awaiting him, “Two of you, eh! D-—n, but It's dark in here! That you, Manuel?” “Manuel is dead.” explained Meager briefly. “He's been killed” “Dead! Killed!” The judge pressed his body back against the rock. “What do you mean, Bob? Then who is this other fellow-—San- chez? Kelleen took own hands, “I'm the ‘Frisco Kid.” he announced enlmly, yet with one hand resting on his gun. “You know and that It I'm in on the deal, that's " the matter Into his me, the only difference “Now, see here, Garrity” broke In there was anything else The ‘Kid’ got onto this him- We hoth know he's all right, and these ought to as if could do. conditions he we won't any of us get Besides, there's only left—Manuel and Sanchez And say, ‘o you know says he this any what believes dn “This tunnel? the cave, you mean?” “Sure: he says it's ‘Alvara’s Lost Mine'—and, by G—d! man, If It Is maybe It's worth millions of Garrity made no response. Kelleen could not discern the expression of the mhn's face, but was suspicious that his hand rested threateningly on the butt of a revolver. The fellow was treacherous. unscrupulous, miserly even in crime, capable of any act to assure his gain. There was only one safe way of dealing with him-—the way of force, the heavy hand Yet he would make one more endeavor, “Well, Judge, “Kelleen sald quietly, “I'm d—d if 1 see why I should di- vide up with you" “You are rather dull this morning. Garrity. 1 haven't much of a repu tation for wasting words, have I? No doubt you have heard the ‘Frisco Kid" knows how to shoot when needed? What more explanation do you want? I'm in on this deal, or you are a dead one—that's all. Now say which it is” No man could have doubted the deadliness of Kelleen's meaning. Gar rity knew the border code far too well to hesitate, “Of course you're In, wanted to understand.” “You've got it clear enough now, but we'll play safe, Your friend Men. ger here is unarmed, and you will be far better off without a gun-—throw it over into that corner.” “And leave you free to murder as both—" . “Sure, If I decide It's best. Only 1 don’t usually do business that way. You have heard plenty of mories about me, hut no one ever sald 1 shot a man treacherously. If you twe play square there is ne danger; but this is a case of two pitted Aantnst one ; either one of you would cut a throat for a fivedollar bill. I'll give you a minnte—throw away that gun!” He stood fronting them both, the two between him and the stronger light. His face was emotionless, but the voice speaking was crisp and hard. The two knew him only as a desper- ado, a border renegade, a man whose willingness to Kill had been proven. There remained no choice. Garrity, growling forth an oath, flung his re volver into the dark corner savagely. “Frisk him, Bob; I'm taking no chances this time-—a knife, hey! Rather an ugly tool, Garrity—do ali Judges carry them? Yes, throw It over there along with the gun. Are you sure that is all? Now, Garrity, turn about is falr play; try your hand on Meager—stripped clean, is he? Better feel inside his shirt; imagine he Is a prisoner in your court, Good! Now, 1 reckon, we are in falr shape to dis. cuss business together. First, gents, let me say this-] haven't the slight. owt objection in the world to killing both of you en general principles. 1 know your style, and I'm going to make the present situation perfectly I--1 only clear. Both of you are d--n rascals, capable of any dirty deylitry. You'd kili me in a minute If you only had a chance. | don't propose to give you that chance, for I know what my life is worth, and mean to protect it, I happen to need you just now alive, and, If you obey my orders, and an- swer my questions, you'll go away from here alive, If you don't, you'll be buried here—do you get that?” “You mean to kill us anyhow after you find the loot.” “No doubt that's your idea. That is what you would do, and you have me ticketed In the same class. Well, that doesn't happen to be my plan at all. In the first place, you've got me labeled wrong. I'm not really after the loot; I'm after you. Do you get that, Garrity? Meager here Is just a common thief: he's a brute, and there fore dangerous, but a d-n, sneaking coward. All I care particularly about him is to save a woman—" “What woman?’ The surprised question burst from the other fellow's lips before he could restrain it. “Deborah Meredith, the woman you forced into marriage with you But Garrity here has been the evil genius of this border for the last ten years. There i8 no crime he hasn't had a finger in. But ne one could catch him red-handed. Now [I've got you both—got you good and hard. I'm going to bring you in, dead or alive— but alive If possible™ “Who the h—1 are you?" burst forth Garrity, his face beaded with perspi- ration, “My name Is Kelleen, a eaptaln of 8 wl “After killed?” “Sure; that gave us a chance” “1 sea; the papers were all In your possession; not above doctoring them, were yout" . “What the hI ig that to yon?" “Not a great deal to me, perhaps, but of some Importance to a couple of women | know-—one of them a friend of mine. Old Tom Menger left an Invalid widow, whom you fellows bave, I believe, robbed systemstically, and then there is the girl Bob forced into marriage. You didn’t suppose I knew about all this, | Jmagine—well, I'm going to get to thé very bottom of It before we are through. But just now I want to use the two of you, We'll find out between us just what Manuel did have hidden away In this hole, Line up there against the wall; face about the other way! Now listen: I've got both guns, my own, and the one Garrity threw away; they are cocked and within three feet of your backs. I can't possibly miss you, and If you make ope move, except as I tell you, I'm going to let drive. Are you ready” “Ready for what? “To do as | order. All right, then; light that lantern, Meager, Now there is plenty of light for me to see you by at this distance. Move for. ward slowly-—Garrity, you keep your hand on the wall, and you, Meager, take hold of Garrity’'s sleeve; now don't forget; if you do it's sure fatal, Go on slow, a step at a time” They advanced some ten or twelve steps down an opening scarcely wide the older Meuger wis Kelleen's gaze wandering from the backs of his prisoners to the gray walls on either side. The light flick. ered, yet revealed no opening, until they came to the very end, and fronted the solid rock. Even then, for an in. stant, Kelleen failed te perceive the narrow cleft to the left beside Meager, but the latter, excited by the .discov. a rough stone slab which half barred “H-—1's fire! men so wild at the sudden discovery thought pushed Men- but breathing climb motionless, started to stood over, “I've Been After You Thres Montha™ cavalry; I've been after you for three | “Good Gd! the ‘Frisco Kid ?”’ “I'm all the ‘Kid’ there ever was” Kelleen admitted carelessly. “That party was simply manufactured to order; here is where he ends his des peraté career. [| would have kept the | secret awhile longer If I could, but per | haps it is just as well. Now we un- | derstand each other, Garrity, and the very best thing you can do will be to answer my questions” Kelleen paused, turning quickly over in his mind what he had better | attempt. He felt a profound con- tempt for his prisoners. Meager, while | a physical giant, war mentally ne more than a mere cowardly brute; Garrity might be truly dangerous—a sly, treacherous villain, but physically | unable to cope with him for a moment, and now utterly cowed. While he re- | mained armed, and they were weapon- | less, he certainly had nothing to fear. | His first intention had been to hold | the fellows as prisoners, until the squad of troopers appearsd; turn them over to the leutenant in com- mand, searching the cave later at his own lelsare. But why watt? It might be an hour, two hours yet, before the soldiers arrived-—and then there was Deborah. His thought leaped swiftly to the girl; what had happened to her during those long, dark hours? Where | had she disappeared after he had been dashed from the rock? She bad evidently escaped discovery; be knew that; had wandered off into the desert doubtiess, might be there still, lost in these leagues of sand, struggling for fife. The vision called te him, yet he ould not seek her until after his men came. These prisoners were far too Important to be left unguarded His duty as aa officer held him as In a vise, But he realized at that moment a deelsion that his heart was with Debo- rah Meredith. He must find her, res. cue her, and-—thank God !-—there was time enough to accomplish this, “When did you first learn that Ge mez was hiding out A this neighbor hood, Garrity? he questioned sud denly, “Six months ago. 1 saw him In Ne gules” : “Privately ™ “Yes: we had seme deals together hefore.” “Paid you for protection, did he? What did he want this time? “Provisions. I was to get him out grub at night: leave It at a certain That was all” “He didn't tell you where he was Mang out? “No, but he had plenty of money. 1 dldn’t get much Information out of him; he never 4i4 trast anybody. The authorities had run him pretty close, 1 reckon; anyhow, he was all alone, not one of his gang left. When | couldn't lod ont anything more, 1 xot then you're not Meager to come up here” | - his eyes the shaped glaring about room, probably The measured of men. have efforts fif- to stand erect in, uplifted lantern. At tremity lay a pile of debris, scattered resting just as they fell after an ex- plosion, the entire end almost totally covered. Protrading from this plie, found footing inside, blazing wick higher, and held still covered with Lits of ragged cloth, Caught by a falling rock, he had been pinned there helpless until he died The three men scarcely saw all this, or gave it a thought, for tifere, imme diately In front, and all about them, where they had been thrown thousand robberies, the booty of crime from was unbelievable, staggering. What suffering, what death, what cruelty and torture did these things picture! And wenith—wealth! Whe cuvtld even cal culate its value? Bloodstained, crime gotten, the fruits of fifty years of out lawry, here was gathered, In one vast heap, wealth to make the mind of man helpless to grasp its valve Garrity, digging his fingers feanti- cally into the stone, unconscious of what he did, his eyes blazing with sudden, uncontrollable madness, dragged himself over the barrier. He had lost all reason, all fear: with a mad cry he gathered up into his arms all that he could grasp--golden eruck fix, challced goblet, a great silver link glittering with pearis, a jeweled bodice blazing In the light-—laughed like a fiend as be hugged them close, then staggered on in wild ecstasy, a string of ouths breaking from his lips Something tripped him and he fell, his args flung blindly out; a gripping Band struck the lantern from Meager's grasp, Moging tt, still blazing, a half dozen feet away. An instant there was silence, a mere flicker of light. which shot along the floor as though on a trail of powder—then a glare and roar, a blast of flame, a report as If a thousand cannon had exploded; and utter darkness, (TO BE CONTINUED.) Marble.” Marble Is a product of marine sedi ments and voleaniec fires. It Is laid down en the sea bottom as shell heaps, which gradually turn into chalk. If the strata should be deeply buried In the rocks, the intense heat of the earth causes chemical elements to re arrango themselves so that they crys tallize Into marble. Various impurities in the chalk give the marble its vari HOW HE KNEW HIM Captain (in elvilinn clothes)—Come on, fellow, open the gate, Sentry opens the gate; passes, Captain—Why the d—1 do you let civilians through here? . SBentry—] knew you were an officer, Captain—How the d—1 did you know that? Sentry—By your Btockholm Strix. captain manner, sir! — The Advanced Age. “Doctor 1” The modern woman approached the medical man tremblingly. “Is there no hope of my husband—" “Go on madam; . . “ “Is there no hope, doctor; is there no hope?” “That depends, madam. en what you are hoping for,” sald the doctor, reach- ing for his hat. A GOOD BTART And has that young promoter eornered your heart? No, but he Is beginning to hand out that “one of our represents tives will eall upog you” line of talk, Wants Are Comparative, At least so he observes, Comparing what he wants with what He feels that he deserves His Quarry Found. A young Swede appeared at lieense Judge license 7” “No," nye want Journal “A hunting wis the bane hunting marriage license answer, long enough. Aye "Freeman's Assigning Him His Part The Grocer—Mebbe weren't quite up to grade but I'm too busy to talk about It just now, NURSE FINDS A PERFECT REMEDY “From my long experience as a nurse I do not hesitate to say that 1 con sider Tanlac Nature's most perfect remedy,” recently declared Mrs. 1. A. Borden, 425 Pontius Ave, Seattle, Wash. Mrs, Borden Is a graduate of the National Temperance Hospital, Chicago, and her wide experience in caring for the sick lends particular emphasis to her statement, “I have used Tanlac exclusively for seven years in the treatment of my charity patients,” continued Mrs, Bor. den, “and my experience has been that, for keeping the stomach, Hver, kidneys and bowels functioning properly and for toning up the system in general, Tanlac has no equal. Recently I had & woman patient who could not even keep water on her stomach for fifteen minutes, Six bottles of Tanlac fixed her up so she could eat absolutely any- thing. Another patient, a man, seemed unable to digest any food at all. Three bottles of Tanlae put him in such fine shape he went back to work. These two cases are typieal. My confidence in Tanlac Is unlimited” Tanlac is sold by all good druggists Take no substitute, - Over 40 million bottles sold. Advertisement, Why Not? If certain spring waters benefit human beings why should they not be good for horses who have sim- flar bodily structures? So thought a well-known English horse trainer and his alling horses at Doncaster are now being supplied with water from the famous Harrowgate springs, In spite of laughter of his friends. Did pot Epsom salts originate in a spring near the famous race course at Ep som? And, is there any significance in that fact? ——— Too many speak twice before they think. ie cia Does any one know where the dead | of nigh} is hurled? Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION talk about It? You listen Natural Surprise Mr. Brown-—l had a queer iast night. man running off with you. to him? london Tit-Bits, Disqualified. The caller begged the little daugh- “Perhaps,” she replied, eall you one” A Giveaway All Around. “1 think,” she sald as she came Inte the room, “that 1 will give that parrot “Yes,” replied the young man who was calling: “it would only be tit for It has been doing as much for you. know what mil. lionaires ses In chorus girls. Paper clothing, paper bags, Paper dishes, paper tags, Paper money for your wage We live In a paper aga Vivid. “Any fish where you are going?” “So the booklet says." “Rainbow trout?” “Well, the author paints them in all the colors of the rainbow.” ——————— The Ultra Modern Woman. She~—1 sympathize fully with the suffragette movement. I wear knick- ers and 1 fence, box, smoke and play football, He (dryly)—Do you shave, too? Oh, Girls! “And so, daughter, you are mar ried?” “Yes, papn; why didn’t you come to the wedding? “Why, dear; we didn’t know" “Oh, shucks! I told my social see retary to send you and mamma aa in. sitation. Oh, well, never mind; you can send your check just the same” Can't Blame Them, Visitor What do the inmates think of the new asylum? Keeper—Thiy just rave about it