C opyright by CHAPTER XIII—Continued ee] Dee Pablocito cried out in surprise, “But he told me, Senor, that he was, and he—" Lopez swore softly. “What trick is this, Senor: if the prisoner is not the Lieutenant Polito, who is he?” “Lieutenant Lamartina is safe In Puerto Cabello ere this; his sister, the Senorita Dulce, stands before you." “Ah, Loren, Loren, I would have saved thee!” “But not thyself.” Lopez took off his cap. *What mo- tive, Senorita, would you have thus to masquerade as your brother?” “Ah, my captain,” I laughed, “may one question the motive of a lady whose heart Is full of dreams, one who has looked, perchance, upon the moon?" . The captain bowed to the Senorita. “My task is not so simple, neither are my duties to my liking; yet my or- ders—" “Are to be obeyed,” I sald. “May 1 request, my captain, that you offer es- cort to the Senorita so she may return in safety to the home of Senora Ybarra? This will be my only re quest.” “Assuredly.” “No, Loren, no! thee—" “Ah, Dulce mia!” “Yes, Loren, I am trying. Can you not see me smile? I am smiling— smiling bravely—as you would have me do. I want you to know that I am brave; you will remember me so— will you not, Loren—that 1 am b-brave? “Ave, my own” “Then kiss me—and hold me to your heart again—and I will go. “Adios, my—my moon-wraith., I-—] have never believed that you are real Just something fine and noble that was in my dreams.” I would not leave CHAPTER XIV Dawn the melancholy prison, the horror of the dragging hours, the deep darkness, for the Senorita, having left, had taken with her all the light of the world had taken my soul, my love, my life, and there was left to me only an empty husk. This I cast upon the rude couch and tried vainly to speed the meas ured minutes, courting sleep unavail- ingly. I had given to the cause of Liberty and Venezuela all I had, had striven as desperately in her behalf as the most earnest patriot had striven, had been—so I belleved—a potent force in the winning of freedom for her, and I had come to this, The dead hand of Colonel Pinl could hold in check any one of my friends who might have offered assistance to me, Dead, he stood between me and liberty—which would have meant also love and hap- piness—and the shadow of his spirit dimmed my little world. In my despair the face of Dulce came to me again. I heard In fancy the music of her voice, and my prison was filled with the glory of her pres. ence, for at last I slept. And, sleep- ing. 1 saw the straight sturdy figure of my father with his fair hair and his clear resolute eyes; I saw the gra- cious lady who was my mother, and the slim, swaying figure of that ex. quisite little sister of mine, who, at fifteen, had given promise of great beauty. They would miss me, for they loved me, and they had given me very much indeed, Three years had passed since I had seen them, three years that I had spent in Europe while the study of the rise and fall of races had held me, for it had been my desire to become a writer of history. I would write no history now, yet I had lived it. I had taken part In what would doubtless prove to be the last battle between my own people and their Anglo-Saxon brothers across the sea, and I had also taken part In that battle which had broken for ever the hold of Spain upon the western hemisphere, Aye, in a few short years I had lived a deal of history, So, with the face of Dulce, smiling bravely, coming to me out of the gloom, and fading again, and the vivid fetures of my youth and my young Rustiood passing before me in swift panorama, [ spent the night in fitful slumber; to awaken at last to the familiar tapping of Pablocito upon the door of my cell, “You sleep, Senor,” he sald, “as one sleeps whose conscience is as clear" “Why not, my little Pablo?" [ said, with forced galety, “Sleep has never been a problein to me” i “1 eannot understand, Senor; I fear that my last night—and my last hour ~might be filled with lamentations, Perhaps you would even care to eat i 7’ “Of course; should one miss a break- fast?" Ah, silence of my WAMU SERVICE “Ah Senor.” “Has the sun, Pablo—" “It has just come up, Senor, and a sergeant and a file of soldiers await your pleasure.” “My pleasure, Pablocito; did the ser- geant say my pleasure? My pleasure, then, shall tax his patience, for, first, I shall eat, then, with the ald of soap and water and a razor that you may bring, I shall make myself as present- able as possible. May one do less at such a time?” “1 do not know, Senor,” he sald In a daze: “is life so droll a thing that you should laugh it away?" “Life is a glorious thing, my little Pablo, and I hope you shall have as much of it as you desire; I hope you may view this beautiful world until your eyes are dim with the years, that you may listen to the sweet sounds of nature and to the sweeter sounds of the voices of those who love you until your ears—" “Gracias, Senor—1 will hasten” He brushed my clothes and polished my boots while I ate the breakfast of baked chiva and tortilla and coffee “Then Kiss Me—and Hold Me to Your Heart Again, and | Will Go.” and papaya that he prepared; then | bathed, dressed, shaved, combed my hair and placed my cap upon my head with the greatest care, teady at last I walked with him along the narrow darkened hallway and out into the bright sunlight to a wide iron gate that swung open at our approach, where a sergeant and a squad of a dozen soldiers took me in charge. I searched my pockets and poured Into Pablocito’'s cupped hands all the silver that I found there and, with a word of thanks for his atten- tions, marched away beside the geant, with six soldiers flanking right and left, It was a beautiful morning, with air so clear that trees upon the crest of distant mountain ranges stood out with cameo distinctness, A breeze from the lake tempered what might ave been a hot day, “Do you usually take a morning constitutional before an execution?" 1 questioned the sergeant, after we had traversed a full third of the city. “lI am directed to bring you here” said he, as we turned into an arched gateway and bent our steps toward the massive mansion that has been the home of many governors, A guard at the great wooden door with its ex. quisite carving stood aside, and four abreast, we marched through it into a spacious chamber, which, at first, be. cause of the brilliant sunlight that had filled our eyes, seemed a place of shadows, The sergeant voiced a sharp command, the soldiers about faced and went out, leaving me standing in the middle of the room, In front of me stood the straight stalwart figure of a man with fair hair and the clear blue of northern skies in his eyes, A wild surge of joy went over me, I reached out my hands to him, “Father!” | cried. “Oh, my father!” “loren,” he scamp I” I felt his strong arms around me, | felt his muscular body shake with silent laughter, and hot tears of happl- ness blinded me, for 1 knew that 1 wins saved, because my father never failed. “When your letter came, Loren, we knew that you were again in search of trouble, for Venezuela-—-" I laughed through my tears. “And found it; more of it, my father, than I have dreamed might come to one man . « and happiness, too" Now another figure appeared-—-the slim tiny figure of a man in brilliant uniform, with plercing black eyes, bushy brows, and a high forehead curiously seamed. Whereupon | fash. toned a stiff salute, for this was South America's greatest. “I have erred grievously, my general” ser us sald gently, “you He showed white teeth in a smile of welcome, then he put one arm across my shoulders, “And you have striven greatly, major; I think Venezuela shall not forget.” “You are kind, my general,” He spoke to my father: “This young glant has helped us win an empire, He is an omen of good fortune, for, since his arrival, success has come to us.” “I fear,” sald my father soberly, “he will never lay down the sword.” “A pity when he does,” Bolivar sald, “because he is a born soldier. With three hundred native troops he held the Spanish army.” “I am forgiven, then? I asked. Jolivar laughed. “When you mitted the Spanish lieutenant to cape you committed a crime against us.” “I knew it very well, my general" “But almost within this hour,” the Liberator continued, “the Fran cisco has brought to me the Senorita Lamartina, who seems to think are a greater than a soldier, From her I have learned many thi per of wise lover sadly for his misdemeanors.” “Ave, my general” he denied. He takes what he wants. surely make your country great. man may prevail against him, there fore you are But the Is await you—and one may not lady walting.” Ladies? one, I wondered-—vet I might known that he would bring I faced her with joy and contrition had hurt her, free, other my m that my rashness Yet her her eves her, and and kissed were trembling, filled with tears, “Ah, my sweet and wonderful moth. er, I have offended thee!” close, of the tears, offended me, never done me.” “Never again, “It is not that you have my for you that; have son, you my mother” Felice is the other half, One could not be happy In half a world” “Unless my country calls me, mother, never again!” “Then I am glad, Loren there is Felice, my boy." indeed—yet 1 would have known her. She had reached the fullness of the beauty that had “My little eried, “how lovely fou A woman a eighteen, Is it not? age!” 1 lifted her off held her against my heart Felice nardly fifteen promised sister” 1 own to . . fet me It Is a golder the fl have gr fe reas sigt or 1" “You woul - al I would- very soon I shall 4d soe ROT and If “She is In your eyes, ove for her.™ heart, and my I eves are full of 1 “And my well" “If 1 find a man who shall love me like that—" “Never fear,” 1 sald, there will be too many.” Holding my arm she around until the Senorita -a vision In purple and before me, “Dulce mia” “ah, Senorita !™ “Have you no kisses Loren?" I took her In my arms. “A full and one's heart may a deal” “May we go back to your beautiful land, Loren?” “Ave.” “And will there not be some peace ful pursuit for thee?” “Yes: I shall not take up the sword again” “Now | am happy, dear , lost you so many times. a dream, Loren, are you; this ust something in my mind? “No, my angel™ She sighed. “never fear; turned Lamartina stood I gasped, 3 ince left for me, heart hold I have You are not sleeve, and the volce of Felice came from a misty distance: "Awaken, you two. The whole crowd is watching you. Come over and talk to us, bles a bird of prey and who fashions his conversation there is Manuel, belies the golden heart and yonder the gay and grizzled Cap- tain Monahan” “My sister, yourself greater import.” [THE END.) go and talk we fo First White Woman in West Arrived in 1806 The first white woman In the West of whom there is any record, came out from the Orkney islands in 1800 in a Hudson's Bay company's ship, out to Join her sweetheart. journal of Alexander Henry, it Is re corded without mention of her name, that on December 20, 1807, she gave birth to a child at his trafing post at the mouth of the Pembina river, Of the life of the child born that day, the first child born in the West of white parents, nothing is known but that his mother took him with her when she returned to Scotland the summer after his birth, Marie Lagi: modiere, who became the grandmoth. er of Louls Riel, was the second white woman to come to the West of whom there is any record She arrived In 1807, It was 1812 before there were any other white women in the West, In that year, the second party of Sel kirk settlers arrived at York Factory. They included 18 women.—Montreal Herald, | V J ELL, well, who comes here prom. snading along fashion's highway with all the poise and assurance of a sophisticated grown-up who glories in a feeling of being well-dressed? "Tis other than the younger genera- tion ranging from tiny tot to seif-im. portant Miss Junior, and you can tell at a glance that, like their elder sis ters and their cousins and their aunts not to forget to mention mothers dear, they, too, have become decidedly vel- vet-consclious this season, none There is no doubt! about it, that to the very young, fashion is broadcast. ing the velvet with as much emphasis as to those older. The favor for velvet In the juvenile world has reached such a high point of en thuslasm designers are not only ex- ploiting it for coats and frocks but in imming well as for ning accessory items it Is regarded as a mediun message of way as cun 1 of outstanding importance, For instance, with their costumes of gay wool weaves, little girls are wear i { ing darling muff, t made of velvel, often shirred as fanct ful up w as you please or perhaps ith a bit of fur. deft with the needle and who are gift. imagination will not doubt f fashion for iy surprising what ed with a sense of it comes to designing be intrigued with the iden ing these “sets” littie a yard inted i chic, girl's costume, it's rea so do in and ONew, or velvet thus manipu way of adding to a little the can charm “class” Even newer than the scarf effects are the clever little velvet shoulder capes which are detachable and which { usually are accompanied with a dimin- | utive matching maf, Sometimes the order Is reversed in that the capelet and the muff or the scarf and the | beret. us the case may be, are made of dainty fabriclike fur, with velvet for the coat. in the picture, little Miss Seven Year-Old is wearing a caped coat made of black silk lyons velvet, topped | with a hat of the same White fur for { the collar, of course, for have not | thelr elders set the example this sea. John’s Mother There isn't a moth. er iiving who won't agree that no half- gick child should be the subject for an experiment with medicines of uncer- tain merit. When your child is bilious, | headachy, half-sick, feverish, rest- less, with coated tongue, bad breath, no appetite or energy, you know that nine times out of ten it's a sign his son, by having their black velvet wraps collared with handsome white ermine? You will notice that this smart little coat Luttons snug ur to the neck which it should according to latest style dictates, As to the charming two-plece velvet dress or suit, if you please to call It so, for it may be worn as either, which chic Miss Sub-Deb, to the left in the illustration, has chosen for her “last word” as tn color jetails and outfit, it (rich r styling the velvet of which it is fashioned The scalloped panel fastening a the front of the blouse is especially attrac- The w belt of self-velvet is Qo is the slight flare given to the skirt below the knee, wine trl olling. The some times entire yokes, pockets and cuffs are formed of folds or cording which are fagotted together, This ornamental stitchery offers an opportunity to introduce bright color touches. The silk floss need not neces sarily be the same color as (he velvel By using several shades of thread, say red for one row o fagotting, green for the next and perhaps zellow for a third, a black or navy velve: dress is prettily enliven for the tiny tot Exquisite ombre effects may be achieved by using various shades of the same color, Per example, in mak. | ing a frock of brown velvet the yoke and sleeve detall is enhanced when the velvet cording Is joined with dark brown for the first row, using a lighter shade of floss for each succeeding row, | grading finally to pale beige. (2 1921. Western Newspaper Union.) often fagotted and wee velvet TAILORED FROCKS FOR ALL-DAY WEAR Not matter how colorful it may be, the favorite daytime dress of the winter season is simply but cleverly tailored, of wool, varying from very sheer to fairly heavy weights; or of | silk crepe, In its various weights and degrees of crepiness—flat crepe, can- | ton and roshanara, Satin and transparent velvet will, of course, be worn in the daytime but for the all-day dress—for the woman whose day Is more practical than social, the more tailored frock is a better choice. Transparent vel vet and satin, made along simple lines, are attractive for luncheon, bridge, matinees and other daytime ocensions for which there is time to dress especially. Knit woolen fabrics also put in a bid for daytime attention. Although usually considered as sports outfits, knit materials have such interest and such prestige that they make smart | daytime frocks for town wear com plete with fur Jackets, sports fur conts, or jackets of corduroy or other informal fabrics, Blue Lined Drawer Will Keep the Linen Whiter Here 18 a good suggestion for your linen closet or linen drawer. Paint the Inside of It to give It a smooth easily washed surface, and choose blue for the color. A blue lining, it Is said, will keep the linen whiter, For other drawers you may prefer to use varnish instead of paint. enn be applied quickly, and it helps to make an easier job of cleaning out drawers. A damp, soapy cloth rubbed over the surface collects the dust and leaves the drawers ready for thelr lav. ender sachets and fine linens, VOGUE FOR CONTRAST By CHERIE NICHOLAS Fashion stages startling contrasts this season both In color and in ma terials, A favorite theme is that of the sleeves in direct color contrast to the rest of the dress. The gown ple tured, which Is a Jane Regny model, interprets the mode by contrasting los trons black and dull white bemberg satin, The soft fullness of the bodice and sleeves, and the overdhe skirt blouse effect reflect a favorite whim of fashion for fall and winter. Hitle stomach and bowels need purg- ing. And when you know that for over fifty years leading physiclans have endorsed one preparation for this condition, there doesn’t seem to be any reason for “trying” things, Rich, fruity California Fig Syrup clears the little stomach and bowels gently, harmlessly and in a hurry. It regulates the bowels, gives tone and girength to them and to the stomach and helps to give your child new strength, energy and vitality, Thou- sands of Western mothers praise it, Mrs. Joseph W. Hill, 4308 Bedford Ave, Omaha, Nebraska, says: “I'll never forget the doctor who got me to give my baby boy, John, California Fig Syrup. Nothing else seemed to help his weak bowels, That was when he was just a baby. He suf- fered a good deal before I gave him Fig quick. colds since. boy.” Insist on the genuine article. that the carton bears the word *( fornia.” Over four million bottles used a year, Syrup, but it stopped his trouble I have used it with him for and little upset spells ever I consider him a Fig Syrup See “all Roads in National Parks Eight thousand mil yf bile road national forests r fiscal year. Some be constro Will Girl v, don’t Mother's next door nd they're on the out HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh Safety First rate Wilness Why suffer intense agony of bolls or rising when spplich- OIL wtaps pain, Consoling Mother Robert, you've my temper” “Never mind, mother—it isn't much of a loss.” wr Now, lose me living is generally admitted, but blest - ® : . if the economists know how to or- ganize the system. have good yours is A Other people may tastes, but, of course, shade better. and merveforce. A little of Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin will clear up trouble like that, gently, harm- lessly, in a hurry. The difference it will make in your feelings over night will prove its merit to you. Dr. Caldwell studied constipation for over forty-seven years. This long experience enabled him to make bis prescription just what men, women, old people and children need to make their bowels help themselves. Its natural, mild, thorough action and its pleasant taste commend it to everyone. That's why “Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin,” gs it is called, is the most popular laxative drugstores sell, Da. W. B. Cartoweir's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctors Family Laxative