Pi 1 1 1 iiMi ii j II ' ijMiwmiim ip i ijiiiMiMi , 1 1 ii ! Wmr Ji7H ..r rwti VI 'J7f. " G '. T -it opmiwr-Kr -t t MAY ' 3, 1920 THARON. OF LOST VALLEY By VIISGIE E, ROE Mn,or of "The Maid of the, Whispering IlilU," "The Heart m' of Ntgljt Wind," etc. . . . ,.. h nndd. ittad A Co.) THIS HTABTH TIIIJ HTOUV ' r, Li one of the toondera Thnron Lot is one o; Anfa 0 nolonoM jar ' th vaiey for V""' Mm I X" ram behind, a '" iiVn her' last loon In hoot tMt Tharon ,'Ler( 'aer hto belt o 'M.f. she teeks to, learn the .tfloU. 'f'.;"Mj WW) o "pet l"". -j ii village lorc. one reus J?"K5if fce to " mmmIii. fl.e meets Courtwy o " " ;'Ao g0.efl ct her s ,WlntK IT CONTINUE "Allrlcht." ho ' a,rI'' "Blmmo ,ny "lire S odd note In 1.1. voice. M if under the Play thero was a "rposo. For a second Tharon held "'C'yoti mean Billy?" sho asked ... .imrnlv Hint the boy Jumped. "Sn ho lauhcd. still In that light '"what I mild " ho nlllrmod dowrodly. .L mistress of LtiBt's took a ,B.ui !.h0 hT hand that was authority f utc, 0" nndh leaned down to loofc TvyD1ulyh'?he0saldiWlth a quiver in hir voice "Last's couldn't run with w Pr.-.?leii., An- what'a more.- I thought 'all th' riders of th' Holdtn' WC"a"Vbsyobtehred.,,1!;tfa.(fhtened up 5 i.M hird to that c utchlnK hand. S,. fed llBht , the sunsot lushed his 2tabui It never set the glow that Mnon't vou know vt. Tharon." he W auletly. "when I'm a-Joklh' with Sot I'd stand by Last's an' you to my Jut breath. Don't you know that? 1 For ft long moment Tharon regarded W&t!& ho said, "but somehow I don't like to have you talk that-a-way. Billy. Don't do It no more." All rkht," promised the rider. "If wuiaysS. boss. Only don't talk about AW 'me. then. I'm very sensitive." And he looked jiway with smlllnff eyes .. ...i... ih. rloi.n lilnck RhadOWH fell prone Into the valley from the forbid ding face of tho great ValI. Only tho towerjng peaks were nl Ktit with crimson and gold, which haloed tlelr bulk In majestic mystery. Night was coming fast ncrosB Lost Valley, whllo the treo-toada out by the jprlnghoujo set up their nightly chorus, "It's Kdcn." thought the man, "as gure's th' world, made an' forgot with all Its trlmmln's Innocence an' iweetnes nn' plenty, an' th' silence of perfect peace not to overlook th' last unnecessary evil, th" llvln' presence, of Ms majesty, th' devil." Then the light died wholly nn thero came the disturbing sound of boots on tha ringing stones. The rest of tho riders were coming In to claim their bar nf nlllv'rt Kripn. JAMESON. Illll and Thomas were ns good as their wcrd. During tho week that roiiowcu tne speciacuiar uenounce ment of Courtrey and Wervlce at Bn- jon's store, thoy went quietly to every miller m inc viiiioj' ujiu ueumrcu themselves. In almost cverv Instance they met with eager pledges of approval. They kneu, every man of them, that this slow banding together for resist ance against Courtrcy and his power meant onen war. For years they had tunered indignities and nnrdsmp wmi-i out protest, wniie Jim i.nst uvea tncy naa nau a sort oi leauer, an example, though they had feared to follow In Ills lead too strongly. They hod copied his methods of guarding possessions, of corralllnR.cvery cattle-brute at night, of keeping every horse under bars. Xust had looked Courtrey In the face. The rest dured not. Now with Last gone, they felt tho lack, as If a bastion had been razed, leaving them In the open. Secrecy In Lost Valley had been brought to a work of art. Tl;ey could hold their tongues. But with the new knowledge Tharon Last took on a Hjht. a halo. Men spoke In whispers about her daring. They felt It themselves. orn or ner I'gmmng auicxness with her daddy's eunl. of her npeurnnv. wnnr loftly nil about and about, carbled and accentuated. They Bald she could shoot me stuas rrom tno sides of a man's belt ana never toucn nun. Tiiey Bald she could drive a nail farther than tho ordinary man could sec. They said she couia draw so swiftly that tho motion of the hands was lost. a slow excitement took tho faction of the settlers. nut out at Last's Holding a grav6 JMIety sat upon Tharon's riders. Con- ford knmv nml milt. Iinmu n.i r....i.. Knew more about Courtrey'B Intont than some of tho others. Young Paula, half aSleeD III thA rifn ntHMl.a nf tt.A hnltuA had witnessed that furious encounter by ... ..oieui uoor on me sort spring uay wnep Jim Last had como home to dlo t dust. She knew that tho look In tOUTtrey S even hart hpn rnvAtnnanAaa and he had told Jose. Jose, lonal ia sensible, had told the boys. So now there was always one or more of " "n auty near tno mistress or I Tharon, who knew more than all of Mem put together, this was funny. ." ira;u mo smau mirtn tnero "was in her theSA llnVO nnrl nfldn aim bah . - ...;, u..u VI.VII DUO OUlIb them away, to have them turn up at tn most unexpected times and places. ou boys!" sho would say whim sically, "jou think Courtrey's goln' to art mo off llvln'?" 'That's Just what we nro afraid of, Tharon,' answered Conford gravely once "we know it'd not be llvln'." And Thnron had looked away toward JOses cross and frowned. 'i' .l,h sala' "an" lt wn't bo any wy, llvln' or dead." One night toward tho end of that Ttil a jurange cavalcade wound up K hfl, levels past the head of i .n v-uulce lorueu tne uroKen Bend n i eo 8?vo for tho stroke of hoof Z,.r' "noo on stono, ana wont r?d 'a'lt "' Tllero wore O'lrty men. riding close, ami thav i.,..i ni.i.. . y In the .iurkness. " '" thm ."olalnB Tharon Last waited them on her western doorstep. boV'JIi lff ro i11 nlonK th Bounding seenrt,.hn0.mi"ed rlnBlnB f tho hoors H,1!1! B'rl as the call of clarions. If KJ fllh"1.' a "'a11"118- Hho felt as waiting .hern" ?plrlt Bt00d behlnd her ntim.n? tl.,e, nrst BtcP toward tho ful ailment of her promts. ne?s " Blonl,eu ln the soft dark- There was no moon and tho very whitr"redn.t0.h..hushed their rfSS?."- chon,eTt,ler" "d J .waiting.8. n.J!' -A .BlmnIe "leclaratlon. heaJ rd' not half approving his For i re,B8B Moulder and waited, too. ound Iav hmomenl .Uiero was ,no their concert hT.,.0T.!al ,fe-toads 'at " seemed i en tn "?lrl SDolc' ""d thatKheardhHr.,n8h,',ul0Wy, ""tenera UttrnJ. ;, HBa,'.n the volso of Jim ?.c5?fettoS!,lnand,I,,f' ful1 of """w ti-t'." K'au. said Tharn.i ul.i i.. ' S?J """J Sn Lost Valley has cot yMln .1." u" torover. CourtrnvH s an' r e,Yi? daV. more cafo- 1141 --- 11UN IIRntt nni(Hui. i affi'reT'aher rtnl y th' herd, iii, t i "2.B '"Rin lat month He'I '3?, Jo,')n Demon fa wh I'"e always hplni W,e'. nn' ,rom l good fer him t f,arid' Hho " a 8Bht j1 ts me iifi-riy16 anlB more Insult an' nJ t. 0B .offered mo th' last "-pin- to eveifun V' "M?r I'm witviSfr Vv.eJLun "v score with hi SF th' hordB." Yffl. 'XZ "?" 'n.h '.' p- a-galnst iTlnTJi"18' Vou'v all Jot "'a&wSp? Wer" mUrmurs Ulroh the & Wuul'a" 'fpm .court;, on "Th' Kvery ,' SX- Are you 7" . 'Then- "' ..?"?.wreu on the ln.fr. bits, a creak of loalher as thirty men swung off their horBes, Tharon Btcpped back In the lighted room. Her men stood thero against the walls. The nettlers came dlmdently In across the sill, lean, poor men .r the most part, their strained evea and fur rowed faces showing the effect of hard ships. Not a man there but had seen himself despoiled, had swallowed the bitter dose In helplessness. . Most of them were married, and had fnmlllcn. Stomo of them had killings to their record. Many of them were nono too upright, Jameson was a good man and so was Dan Hill. Thomas was merely weak. Huford was a gunman who had .protected his own much better than the rest. Mclntyre ivas llko him. One by one they came forward as Tharon called them bv name, and leaning down. put their names or their marks to a snoot or paper winch bore tueso tew slinn'e lines: "We. thn nlenerft nnmed below, do solemnly promise and pledge, ourselves to Btnnu togetner, tnrougn an con Bcauencea of this net. for the protection of our lives and property. For .every piece or.propcrty taken from any one of us, we flhall go together nnd talte hack It. or Its worth, from whoever took It. For every person killed In any way, but falr-nnd-opcn, we promiso to hang the murderer." Billy had drafted tho Uooument. Tharon, whom Jim Last had taught her letters, read it aloud. The names of Last's Holding headed It. The thirty nnmes and marks nnd of the latter there were many stretched to the bot tom of the sheet. When It was done the girl folded It solemnly and put It awny In tho depths of tho big desk. Old Anita, watching from the shadows of tho eating room beyond, put hor roboso over her head and rocked in silent grief. Sho had seen tragic things before. Then theso lean and quiet men fllell out, mounted the waiting horses and went awny In tho darkness, mysterious figures ngalnst the stars. That night Tharon Last sat lato by the deep window In her own room at the south of the ranch hpuse. It waa a huge old room high walled and somber. Thero were bright blankets hung like pictures on the walls, baskets ' mar vclously woven of grass and rushes, thick mats on the floor made In like manner and of a rough, long-llbcrcd era ph that crow down In a swale hevond tho Black Coulee, while In ono corner mere snono palo In tho darkness tho one great treasUro of that unknown mother, an almost llfe-slzo statue of the Holv Virgin. On this beautiful thing Tharon had stood In awe from babyhood. A half fearful reverenco bowed her before It on those rare times when Anita, throwing back to her Mexico an cestors, worshiped vlth vague rites at Its feet. Always Its waxen hands bore offer ings, Bllent tribute from, tho girl's still nature. Sometimes theso were tho prnlrle flowers, llttlo wild things, sweet and fragile. Sometimes they were sprays of tho water vines that grew by tho wonderful spring of tho Holding. Again they were strings of bright beads, looped nnd falling In glistening cascades over tho tarnished gilt robes of tho Virgin. Under the flAn wlnrinw fhrA nrna n wide couch, piled .high with a narrow """,v " tvnu kuubo icainers ana Covered with n crimson blanket. Hero tho girl sat with hor nrms on tho sill nnd looked out Into the darkness that covered the valley. She thought or tho thirty men who had signed her paper, riding far nnd by In tho sound ing basin, returning to their uncertain homes. Sho thought of her father asleep under his peaceful cross, of young Hnrkness besldo him. , She thought of Courtrey nnd Service and Wylackle Tiob, of Black Bart and the stranger from Arizona. They were n hard bunch to tncklp. They had the valley under . their thumbs to lo with as they pleased, llko the veriest Romnn potentate of old. Her daddy had told her once, when she was small and lonely of winter nights, strange old tales of rulers and their helpless subjects. Jim 'Last could talk when ho needed, though he was a man of conserved speech. Yes, Courtrey was like a king In Lost Valley, absolute. She thnueht nf ti many crimes done and laid to his door oinco boo couiu rememoer. of countless Cllttle run off. of hnrnpn Btnlan nn.l shamelessly ridden In grinning defiance ui uny wno mignt iaro to Identify them, of Cap Hart killed on tho tronchoId's ran nnd tart frn rtt im the Uen skies, a warning llko those Mum ui jjrey inni are snot ana hung to scare their kind. Her soft lips drew themselves Into a hard line, very like Jim Last's, and the heart ln her ratified Us treaty with the thlrtv mn Sho had none to mourn her, she iiiuuHui a irino sauiy wen Anita and Paula, of course, and there were her riders. Billy would grieve he'd kill some one If sho woro killed and Con ford and Jack, A warm glow pervaded her being, "ies, sho had folks, even If she was the last of her blood. But sho didn't Intend to be killed. Sho was right, and she had listened enough to Anita to believe with a superstitious certainty, that right was Invulnerable For Instance, If sho and Courtrey should draw at the same second sho believed absolutely, that because she was In the light her bullet would travel a bit the swifter, her aim be truer. She felt In her heart with a profound conviction that some day sho would kill Courtrey. She thought of his wife, Kllen, a pale flowor of a woman, white as milk with hair the color of unripe maize,' and wondored If she loved the man who made her life hell, bo tho valley whispered Thnron wondered how it would seem to love a man, as women who were wives must love their men If the agony of loss to Ellon could bo ns acute and ter rifying as hers had been ever since that sofo night in spring when hor best friend, Jim Last, had come home on El Itey. Sho thought of the gray look on his face, of tho pinched line at his nostrils' base, and the, tears came miserably under her lids, sho laid her head on tho cloth mat that covered tho wide window ledgo and wept like any child for a time. Then she wiped her face with her hands, sighed, and fell again to thinking. An hour later, as she roso to make ready for bed, sho thought Bhe caught a faint sound out where tho llttlo rock bordered paths ran In what she was pleased to coll her gaiden, since a few hardy flowers grew by the spring's trickle, nnd she held her breath to listen. It was nothing, however sho thought, nnd turned Into tho deep room Only tho tree-toads, lone slnco silent know thnt a cigarette, carefully shield ed In a palm, glowed In the darkness. Two days after this a visitor came to Last's. From far down they saw him coming. In tho mid-morning while tho work of tho house went forward. Paula, bringing a pan of mlllt from the sprlnghouse, spied him first nnd stopped to satisfy her young eyes with tho un wonted appearance of him. She looked long, and hurried In to tell her mistress. "Senorltn," Bho Hald excitedly, "soe who comes! A stranger who has differ ent clotbes from any otliar. He rides not llko Lost Valley men. either, being too stiff and straight. Come see." And Tharon, busy about the kitchen In her sturched print dress, dropped everything at once to run with Paula to the western door of tho living room that they might look south. Mucliachas bom," complained old Anita, "tno mux is spiuea and the pan dulce burns In the oven I Teh. tch 1" .i ... . ... . -------- But the younrf creatures In the west door cared naught for her grumbling, "Who can It be. to como so, Senorlta7" wondered Pnula. her brown check besldo her mistress, J'la he not handsomo!" "For mercy sake, Paula," chldcd Tharon laughing, "I bolleve you'd look for beauty In th oV N'lck himself If he rode up. But I've seen this man be fore." "Whero? When?" "In town that day I mot Courtrey an' Servlco. I remember sceln' him como Into line as I backed out he was standln' between th' racks an th' poroh, somewhere." And Bho narrowed her eyes and studied tho rider as lie came Jogging up across tho range. "H'm," she said presently, "he does ride funny. I bet he ain't rodo range ,THE GVMPSLct Well Enough Alone AH-HOHHVOV) CAtfT'BEAT IT A GOOD CIGAR. -THE. PAPER A OOOK AMD A-OOO STOR.V Vrt aETTINfi.ALONfi THAT 'AGE OP UFe-VWEffE THM HOME 6TV)fP IS QREATT I'LL SAV y PETEY There's a Reason The young lady across the way sftys she sees that France is going to tax all unmarried men over thirty, nml she always did npprove the principle of the single tax. ""'" ' " i ... i..iii iiwiiw i, !. i i !'' '""I, mmmmmm--mmm The Young Lady Aero., the Vay TIIETOQNERVILLETROUEY ;. -: By FONTAINE FOX 1 SCHOOL DAYS : ..- -;. -;. '"" J W- CI wmiri the skipper, s. O" x j& gosh ! l&mkJf Ib. JsWijfJzk -Wl.i' m j. . i MNW was Movirio AuMr j 5v A mffi3&m&&0WBG& (irum:- J? ' 1 U HS7R BELL M5T ' JS S ' M&K S13 Cfi CmWEtWlJa SOMEBODY'S STENOGIfs a Great Feeling' Ki'DUb And Comes Si)wrise amt another dav '. T)auai FUU Of PRow&t" " IS UNDEJ? WAY last Call For BREAKPAST ! -J "CAP" STUBBSuCap" Has an Awful Time Keeping jm WHERE'5 hV MATl 1 iw.&r.r!." ...Hi. . J4," :."' a "'"-v WHAT rviv ISN'T VKja ; ll mm -- m'1' ' '( mwv co and later 16 Borne To our EARS THE fiLAD CALL To DooTY ! AH. HEAR THE AND-TflOU6H Bottles are BfE AH' EVER 06 WIO TlLL HAPPY 7011-e.RS their way i What Poetry : OS0SHO6OSH tub full op booiso Z&Zezs' s ' WWMTSffmkm' WT -np J7 vmM'ffitWJini'mwrfX PELL OFF AMD ONE OF THE ''SWtBHmA TTr6SWWMlM HOLE 0OOK6 WAS AM ILLUSTRATED ttMWfSMX Tu 0 S HISTORY op FAMOUS BEAUTIES Of THE fUUCH COURT. , " HBlL V$6 B Mv-c Ar. i & mifj . I, ' iOriEBODyj ) (-Eft HIPIN' ) II I Mft! 1 rSNT . IIS - Mil ) . r AIMS YOU POIM6? REAOIM& ABOUT THAT PIVORCE CASE? WEU TTS WE SAME OLD STORV LEAVE. IT TO TVlESE HErt WHEN THE.Y OET. RICH. THE WOMAN WHO SCRIMPED MHP 3AVED AND HELPED THEM RAISED A rAMILV 1011 THEM unarm aup with twrte. - GOOD- ENOUGH THEr - U - SNWOb f I m r Op, e . ALL THE NEIAHBrtRS MILK m ahd wives kissed Soob 7HN6(THERe IS ONE OF SLUAABERS OMAMhOMi VME'D LKeTo DReAlA LlKEllOT Trace of Things -:-:- ' ..iiiiiiiAHwmuwiwvvtmimii HI" V" '" ' ' Jfl I '.. ' vA 1 ...fl'l.'-v ' IF WET WCfcE BOTH VOUNG AND SIN6LE AGAIN I VVOUUD YOU VAHT ME V BE. YOUR, WIPE 7 - 'X?f$ t)rA faj' ? x - ' Ji T: WWffl K J? GoUl. ,TS EAI?LY TEN I HE AlMT COMIM' IAJ H MM r " Apfffl jffifoygajll ,THfe The Third Time Today ' vHATi pJ. mm vJoW LOOKIE HEGWE. DARULING-- v I WHAT'S THE" USE OV TRYIN6 TO START 3 A QUArcR-EL. JUST AS WE HAVE J I 3ETTL.EJ OOWN TO EM JOY A 3.U4ET ) To ConirlBht. ltliO by Public Lder WHO Fooled with That Cuock? -5t- , i k. Kvtnno ' By Sidney Smith By C. A. Volght By Hay ward Co. By Edwlna HUH wetL'lDON'TSEt WHY EV HYBOTJy 3OWT LEAuP mv tminivs At nil KEVEFN HIN PIND AOfHlKf ' i m -' i 9 E an' si? " ,,,e 8lrl tensely:".;,:; much In his life, Stiff aa a ramrod, nn' - L : - Ii 1 1 - 1 1 'HIAKa - - mr-w no mintauo." - wa" rattle of Btlrruna ana (CONTINUED TOMORROW) A'. &iii,'k 1 rlAkr.! , A . ii.i liI,WHkWS 1 , it' ' ' iiflj3te4i i I'iBiBri a