Copyright by Bobbs-Merrill Ce, CHAPTER XIII Ee A Night of Madness In the ancient calabozo of Valencia I stood upon the edge of a rough-hewn bunk and, holding to the iron bars of the window, watched a red sun go down behind the hills of Barquisimeto, Alone and facing my last night of life, I lived, in fancy, through the swift passage of events that had filled the few short weeks since that night of moonlight madness in New Orleans, In actions, in emotions, in love and hate and fear, IT had lived a long life in that brief space. I had met brave and honorable men whose friendship had proved a blessing to me; I had made enemies who had filled my soul with a passion for killing: I had seen patriotism In its highest form, had watched a man win an empire: aye, had assisted, even, in the winning of it, and I had spent my life In the service of a lovely lady. And I was carrying away with me to another— and surely more beautiful—world the blessing of her love, Dulce herself had called my love a madness, Well if madness might glorify one's life with such emo- tional bliss, then madness was Indeed a blessing, and sanity a futile thing. It had been born, I remembered, all at once—that love for the Senorita. She had come, like an angel, out of the mellow moonlight, and love had over- whelmed me in an instant, My worship had brought me here, here to a gloomy house of horrors which I would leave at dawn to face the rising sun and a file of armed sol- diers. Yet I was glad of my service to the Senorita, Her brother was safe, and free of the menace of Colonel Pini, she was doubtless safe. Pini I had vanquished, yet Pini's dead hand reached out to erush me, How strangely doth fate direct our destiny, for, between two suns, the Senorita Lamartina should lose three suitors for her hand, I laughed aloud at the sheer absurd- fty of the thing, and turning back to the {ron door, found the guard stand- ing there, tapping upon it. “Can you laugh at such a time, Senor? “Why not? “I do not know—yet a man seldom laughs at death” “Is not a laugh easier to fashion? He considered it. “Who knows?" He brightened up. “I have news. News of interest and profit to the Senor Americano. [ would tell you, Senor, of a thing that shall give you freedom. He has returned, Senor.” “He,” I questioned; “not Pini, Pablo, he could never—? “Mother of G—d!" Pablocito gasped, crossing himself again. “I hope he may never return!” “Then-—7 “The young Spanish leutenant, he whom you alded to escape.” “No, Pablo,” I cried, “no: he could not have done a thing so foolish!” “A glorious thing, Senor.” “Aye, Pablo,” I said hambly, “a glorious thing indeed.” So the brave Polito, to save me, had made the great sacrifice. Ah a miserable time for Dulce, for she loved that handsome brother. “What does he say, Pablo™ “After the darkness had settled” the guard explained, “this young lien- tenant appeared at the iron gate and demanded admittance. He told us that the Americano, Major Garde, had taken his personal bond until ten o'clock, so that, under cover of the night, he might make his way safely to the calabozo, for the streets of Valencia are filled with Venezuelans celebrating our great victory at Cara- bobo, “S80, If the Senor has not aided in the escape of the Lieutenant Lamar tina, but has merely put him on parole for a few hours, he will surely not be shot tomorrow morning. If the pris- oner has returned, how may they shoot you? “How indeed, Pablo? “You do not seem glad, Senor” “No, Pablo, for the boy has thrown his life away.” “A brave man” sald Pablo, who seemed less sympatheiic than ‘happy. “1 have locked him up and [ am going now to report the occurrence to Cap- tain Lopez, commandant of the prison. He will see to your release—is it not so, Senor?” “1 suspect that he will, my little Pablo. Can you not bring the lieu tenzst here and put him in this cell with me?” “Assuredly ; a little moment, Senor.” 1 waited, horror in my heart, for his rerum I knew that this would give me back the Benorita, yet, if she lost her brother . . . Ah, the glory, and the pity, of the thing! They stood in the narrow hallway, vague figures in the ineffectual light. Pablo unlocked the door, thrust into my cell a uniformed figure and slammed the door shut again. “1 will return, Senor,” he sald, I waited until the sound of his de parting footsteps died away in the gloom, then | took the counterfeit lieu tenant in my arma. “Always, Senorita, you find me In a prison.” “Loren, ah, Loren, 1 love thee , , . I canrot live without thee!” I removed the futile bandage from her right arm and she put it, with the other, around my neck; so, holding each other close, we lived the swift sweet minutes, oblivious to storms, or wars, or prisons, “You thought to trick me, eh?” She laughed lightly, “That clever subterfuge could never have been repeated, for there is a glory in the air where you abide, 1 can feel it, my love for you—" “Your love was ever a madness, Loren; it is such a thing that makes a saint” “Yet no greater joy could ever come to me.” She sighed. “It is so dark, dear heart,” she whispered; “I want to see your hair, I want to see the love-light in your eyes—the light of worship that makes a woman happy—and I want to see you smile again” “And I, dear heart, would look again upon the beauty of your eyes, would see into the purple depths of your eyes, would watch—and envy-——tiny shining curls that caress—" “Ah, my moon-wraith, how sweet a satisfaction is your love!” She laughed happily. “Love has never come to you before?” “No, my own, and when it came It filled the world with glory.” She was silent a moment, and I knew she visualized that night of mad- ness before the Cabildo, “You seemed a wild thing in the silver moonlight, Loren.” “And you were a queen” “Your eyes were full of dreams— you seemed only half real” “And your eyes turned the silver light to purple” “You-—you loved me then, Loren? “Aye, that Instant. [think some gentle Providence put me there—to walt for you to come.” “You brought something, Loren, out of a chivalrous world, to lay before me: the gift of courage, my fine Amer. icano—a thing so rare in this world.” “A poor thing, my own" “We notice courage, Loren, we—we worship it, and the man who possesses it requires little else.” 1 laughed ruefully, “I have little else—I1f, indeed, that, and that which you consider courage may be only recklessness ™ “Yet you met Adolfo” “An Indifferent swordsmen ™ “And you came to our ald on the Santa Lucrecia™ “A little thing.” “And you saved me from the storm and brought me to my brother.™ “Humph." “And you braved the perlls of Cara. cas to see me” “Where a lady offered herself In sacrifice to save a man, who, though professing love, could not penetrate a simple masquerade.” “It is forgiven,” she sald softly, “all of that is forgiven ™ “Yet 1 should have known you.” “At Maracay you saved me from Colonel Pini, who held a pistol that was pointed at you heart™ “Pini was ever a coward.” “With three hundred natives you held in check a thousand trained sol diers of Spain. Was that not cour age?™ “My bravos had been trained to fight” “To save me again you offered chal. lenge to Colonel Pinl, knowing that your arm—" “Pini was never a swordsman.” Now she was sobbing softly in my arms. “And you took Polito to a place of safety, returning to offer yourself" “Oh, my sweet, don't ery; we should be happy, for we have this hour, and" “Ah, dear G—d, Loren, Is It any wonder that IT love you? “It is a wonder to me—and a cause (WNU Service.) for gratitude, Tell me how you played this trick upon the guards” This brought another quick transl. tion, for she laughed gaily and, drop- ping her wolce Into a burring huski- ness that was almost masculine, sald, “l am Lieut, Polito Lamartina, of his majesty’'s service, a prisoner in charge of Major Garde, who placed me on parole until ten o'clock tonight, when I am to report myself to the calabazo. I am here.*™ “Now that you are,” sald I, laughing at her masquerade, “what?” “It is all too simple, Loren; the guard has gone to seek Captain Lopez, who, because of the return of the release you." “Of course, Dulce—and then?” " “After that, dear heart, there Is no more, for the morning sun should find you near the coast—and safety.” “And you?" I questioned, deep hu- mility in my soul that this beautiful lady should offer so great a sacrifice, “I shall be happy, Loren, because you are safe.” “Yet tomorrow's sun would find you here.” “Assuredly. A small matter indeed” 1 knew the matter was not so small, and I was sure, too, that she knew It, “Will you disappear, then, night—or will they find you here?” “l shall be here, Loren. Tomorrow morning when they come to shoot the tall handsome Americano they will dis cover only a woman weeping because her lover is far away.” Now I kissed her again, and held the trembling form close to me, and | offered up a prayer of gratitude for such a love as the Senorita had be stowed upon me. “There is not an- other, my own, in all the world like you; none so beadtiful, none so gra- cious, none with a love so willing to sacrifice, This hour with you Is worth" “WHat do you mean, Loren?” cried, clinging to me desperately. it that you will not—7" “I cannot.™ “Yet you Polite.” “Of course.” “If Polito had known, Loren, he would never have gone; If he knew now he would come back.” “Assuredly, my own, for Polito Is your brother—and a brother of the Senorita Lamartina could not be aught but & brave and gallant gentleman.” “Ah, Loren, 1 am so happy . My moon-wraith! I had hoped that this nightmare of murder might miss us, I had hoped that I might go with you to the peace of your beautiful land and there we might find our heart's desire, there live out our lMves to gether, there fulfill this love that God has given us" At this I was silent, for nothing 1 could say would help. And as we waited In close embrace the clatter of shod feet and the voice of the garry lous Pablocito came out of the gloom: “l have put them in the one cell, eap- tain: it was the wish of Major Garde” “Courage, my sweet” I whispered, as she fell to trembling; “we must she “Is offered your life for to us.” “Bless straight stopped beside my cell, in the lock, the heavy door swung open and Captain Lopez entered, “I would get the straight of this, Major Garde” “A simple task, my captain” “If this Lieutenant Lamartina was placed on parole by yourself, and he has returned voluntarily, you have not aided in his escape, for there has been no escape; therefore, the charge" “The charge against me, my captain, should remain unchanged, for this Is not Lieutenant Lamartina.™ (TO BE CONTINUED.) sou, loren!” She stood, and slim, as the two men — ————— I conjure you all who have any re gard for me, ghow me before I ge hence that {| have not labored In vain for half a century. Let me see, before 1 die, a Methodist congregation full as plain dressed as a Quaker congrega- tion, Only be more consistent with yourselves. Let your dress be cheap as well as plain, Otherwise you do but trifle with God and me and your own souls, I pray let there be no costly silks among you, how grave soever they may be. Let there be no Quaker linen, proverbially so-called for their exquisite fineness; no Brus. sels lace, no elephantine hats or bon. nets, those scandals of female mod esty. It Is stark staring nonsense to say, “0, 1 can afford this or that.” No man Missionnries The Missionnry Research Hbrary says that slightly more than half of the foreign missionaries are not sent from the United States and Canada, They go for most part from Great Britain, Germany, Holland, France, Switzerland, Scandinavia, South Af. rica, Australia and New Zealand, living cam afford to waste any part of what God has committed to his trust. And it is far worse than sim. ple waste to spend any part of it on gay or costly apparel—From John Wesley's Sermons, Famous Rooms Reproduced Rooms famous in lterature were a feature of the Ideal Homes exhibition held in london, They were repro. duced In detail, and were visited by large crowds. There were shown the Boar's Head tavern In Eastcheap in Shakespeare's day, with Falstaff In great form ; Little Dorrit’s bare garret in Southwark; Sherlock Holmes’ fog- gy Victorian room in Baker street; a drawing room from “Pride and Preju- dice”; Trilby's studio, with its long sloping window overlooking the ro- mantic roofs of somewhere near the “Boule Mich.” and the hut millions have so often pictured and longed to live in, the home of Robinson Crusoe, World's Christians The total number of Christians In the world is estimated at about 682. 400,000, about ounethird of the total population, HAT which fashion's followers are going to wear this fall and winter in the way of fur-trimmed velvet suits Is enough to dazzle the eye of even the There are no ad- too extravagant to describe the elegance and beauty of these lux- urious furred suits which are in prom- Ise for the coming months. In planning the new wardrobe about the most important subject to consider In the way of a street or afternoon en: semble Is the two-plece suit, the jack et of which may be either short, three-quarter or seven-eighth, and some of the smartest models even adopt the coat which is full length, As to materials which fashion these voguish suits, choice lies between the new swanky woolens or velvet made or nate with lavish fur—the more fur the better. An argument among others in favor of velvet for the suit is that It makes a smart costume for all day. and with a stunning dressy blouse of lace or a sumptuous lame weave, it carries over Into evening for Informal and dancing. Then, too, no woman needs to be re minded that there is nothing in the way of costume fabric so eminently flattering as velvet. Which Is especiai- iy true of this season's velvets in that thelr rich dark greens, radiant browns, gorgeous wine tones and purples such as enter into the scheme of things this autumn are incomparably lovely It adds to the zest of the velvet mode that fashion approves all sorts of types, ranging from quality-kind stiff Lyons velvet with upstanding FELTS SUPREME IN MILLINERY FIELD Felts are again in the supremacy with a number of hats in velvet and some in fabrics and in antelope. Tallored felts have brims with a roll which Is Inclined to go up on the lef’ and down on the right. Their trim. ming is tailored and flat, or of stiff little feathers, to give a touch of color contrast, or of grosgrain ribbon In the same shade. Most felts have notice able brims and are variations of the sallor or bowler types. It is important to note that the new- est shapes are down in back as well as down In front. They do not perch on top and land somewhere In mid and hug the back of the neck closely, #0 as not to interfere with large im portant collars of fur. Choice of Accessories Requires Consideration Accessories make or break a cos tume—~in the very beginning. It starts with choosing them. Bag and shoes match In color, for Instance, and are of the same material. But bag and shoes do strike a pert and expert con- trast with the rest of the ensemble for that alldimportant surface interest, if for nothing else. Yet the cholce of accessories for daytime wear is not complete with, say, an oblong envelope and a smartly new and graceful step-in pump. Those tip-to-toe necessities for fashion's fall costume Include a pair of slightly flared yet simple pull-on gloves—up to six-buttons length for general wear. And hose, of course, are sheer and dull, with low, square heels that scarcely peep above the shoe—always on a darkish tone to harmonize with the costume colors of the season. Dress of Black Satin Can Be Distinguished A black satin dress, very simply made, and with relieving touches of white or mesh or beige satin, can be infinitely distinguished. It ean be as formal or as informal as you please, depending on the occasion for which you wear it. You will like black satin with a rough wool coat, in all black, or a mixture with green. You will Hike It with dull accessories, hat of felt, bag and gloves and shoes of suede, with perhaps an echoing touch of shiny patent on the shoes. The satin frock won't be the standby In is, but it will make a splendid contri. bution, Sailor Suit Revived The “sallor suit” has been revived. Its 1931 version is made of soft wool with a square collar and fagoting for trimming. are featuring the very new corded vel- vets in thelr collections, It Is handsome corded velvet such as Is being highlighted patrician jacket-sult on the left of the trio illustrated. These hiplength jackettes are the agonally as does this one, The up-to-the-mo- elegance, matching velvet Is an than the usual little feather. the picture. shoes and gloves of suede. The striking street ensemble shown to the right velvet. Note the length of its coat, tioning of the de luxe silyer fox trim. ming bespeaks the tendency this sea- son toward novel and highly ornamen- tal treatments. The call of the pres newly exploited the velvet costume” happily In this instance. color is a feature, mented witht fox fur peach-beige tint, dyed at a glance (B 1911 Western Newspaper iInlon y By CHERIE NICHOLAS This afternoon gown of beige dull surfaced velvet declares an outstand ing style trend, namely, the trimming of light materials with dark furs. The small cape gives the required breadth to the shoulders, thus accentuating the tight waistline, and interpreting the new silhouette which calls for width above and slenderness below the hips, Long Evening Wrap of Velvet Is Newest Note The long evening wrap of velvet is the newest note of the season, Short jackets and three-quarter wraps are with us in large numbers and their ac ceptance is unquestioned. Yet we be fleve it is tc the long romantic look: ing wrap that most women will turn. It may or may not be collared In fox or ermine. R may have wide sleeves cut In one with the upper part. It conforms te the waistiine, sometimes rather high, and then it flows and flares to cover or almost cover the bottom of the evening gown, Leg-o'-Mutton Returns The lego “muiton s'eeve—glmost ex: acily like the ones grandmother wore gre shown on new fall coats, T—— SORE THROAT FUE minutes after you rub om Musterole your throat should begin 20 feel less sore] Continue the treatment once every hour for five hours and you'll be astonished at the relief. This famous blend of cil of mustard, eamphor, menthol and other ingredi ents brings relief naturally. Musterols ets action because it is a “‘counter« ritant’’ —not just a salve—it pene trates and stimulates blood circulation and helps to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. mended by doctors and nurses. To Mothers—Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Chile dren’s Musterole. NIE os wb Oy Odd Wedding Guest Gayly clad in white silk ribbon and her best purple coat, Rosie, an elephant at a private zoo In Grims- by, England, sttended the wedding of the head keeper, John Haith, to Alice Sliilis, After the ceremony Rosie posed for her photograph with the bride on one glde and the bride groom on the other. How to train BABY'S BOWELS Babies, bottle-fed or breast-fed, with any tendency to be constipated, would thrive if they received daily half a teaspoonful of this old family doctor's prescription for the bowels, That is one sure way to train tiny bowels to healthy regularity. To avoid the fretfulness, wvomiti crying, failure to gain, and other ii of constipated babies. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is good for any baby. For this, you have the word of a famous doctor. Forty seven years of practice taught him re what babies need to keep their ittle bowels active, regular; keep little bodies plump and healthy. For Dr. Caldwell specialized in the treat- ment of women and little ones. He attended over 3500 births without loss of one mother or baby. Da. W. B. CAtowewr's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctors Family Laxative Book Thief Sees the Light Employees of the Muskogee pub- lic library came to work recently to find 60 volumes, stolen in 1920 and 1830, piled at the outside return box. A letter accompanying the books sald the author had “forsaken the wars of sin,” and asked forgiveness, *I am sotry that these are all the books I have left; I burned the other three boxes before I received the Hght" the note sald.—Kansas City Star. — smn Naturally “I've just traded in my old eight for one of the new 10-cylinder cars” “Well, more power to you." Love never figures out the cost, Miserable with Backache? Heed Promptly Kidney and Bladder Irregulari A nagging backache, with bladder irregularities and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling may warn of certain disordered kidney or bladder conditions. Users everywhere rely on Doan’s Pills. This time-tested diuretic has been recommend.