;v- i c ''' - "' l'-ft '- A'- ' i v THE FORTUNE HUNTER By RUBY M. AYRES Auther of "The Bacheler Husband," "The One Unwanted," etc. Copyright by Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. i Tim IJEOINfl TIIK fcTOItY K Voune and geed-looking, but nut ef P Wfc the Fortune Hunter runt across i, man' I dead body, .near the Thames. nMO te discover the identity, he flndi ' i letter from a etrt. who is crpectina i man (mete rem abroad, Her name it innt and She ill"' of Cnrrn Ledge. i rlSdrad man's name is Jehn fimllfi. hidimlu. rupenje 10 a cru or p, r :...,... a heti who has fallen from it 1 hoot rowed by Ms elstet. She insists in Ms coming te their home Je changf & tit clothes, Followed by her father and 7' cited Ms name, he impulsively gives the iSne of the dead man. Te his horrified iirnrtM U develop that the house is cherry loitee and the girl is Anne, lie imtsher the painful sight of the dead man ehe Is brought bu the garden ' Ki thus saves her recegnising the real Jehn Smith. Frem her brother he rflj. eavtrs that Anne and the dead man are naaecd te be married, and is embar i raised that Anne accents him in that trau. At an inn he hears a yeoman, I Yrrme aucstten- his Identity and stale 1 fro the isn iallblrd. Then Mr. liar. I Una. Anne's guardian, requests en In '; ttrvleiD tttth him. AND UEKU IT CONTINUES j fimllE pest well, we'll agree te wipe f 1 It out. Yeu made atonement, nntl ' I'm going te forget It. But I love that , .if) as If slie was my ewu daughter, ami jf I ever fee lier unhappy through you !, " Ills voice rose fiercely. L Then he laughed and went en mere I nuietly : "s,e levcs y" Te1m. and li because she loves you I'm willing te r believe you're worthy of her. A worn ' m's instinct Is wonderful, nnd there 'ra net many girls who would have : ituck' te n man as slje has te you, through all these years terrible years thev must have been for her." -. The Fortune Hunter made no answer : h tat motionless, his eyes en Mr. Harding's earnest face, listening in- rrhre ant a moment of silence, then -1 the elder man asked sharply: "Well, 1 lvhat bave you get te say?" LI' ipi, TYirtnnn TTnntpr reused him- lf with an effort. "Only that I give my word I will de my best," he said. Mr. Harding said "Ilumph!" nud added half in fun, bait serieusly: "And 7 Olir DCSt, una my uesi, win uiny ue V. j : u i.... au' nn .iei. Ulf pond enough for her. She's nn ideal m lit, you knew. Of course, you knew that all along sue nas ucucvcu in your in- necence." , The Fortune Hunter nodded ; he could net find his voice at that moment, and the old man went en : "Yeu knew, tee. that she has money Ihat she is wealthy." The Fortune Hunter opened bis lip te say, "I don't want her money," but he knew It was a He, and somehow the b words stuck. TJ. Antrlit- lite) 41ir.tir.1il n-Ar tti n rrhirl. He did net understand hlmnelf, could net analyze bis cmot!ep9; be only knew that for the first time In his life he was ashamed that he had net played the game better. Mr. Harding tilted the shade of the lamp.Fuddenly, letting Its piercing light ft. fall full en the Fortune Hunter s face. A haggard face it looked a weary young face during the brief second be ; fore he get control of himself nnd inllcd.. '"You're llred," Mr. Harding said 1 abruptly, "and I'm keeping you up bYtenlng te things that cnu easily be raid during the next few day. You'll ' te ;1ad te se te bed." He held out bis .'land.- "Geed night, Jehn!" But new the Fortune Hunter could '.net meet his eyes, nnd his reply was almost inaudible ns be turned nnd 'walked out of the room. 1, He went upMnlrs te his room, fecl t;lng llks a thief. He was deg-tired, ,l:ut he never closed his ejes nil night. .Centciencc. which had for se len lain viimuui licit uu uua ufjiuveu u ueuu. attetc and tortured bim. NVbn it begah te set light he get r and sat down by the window, watch ing the gray mist slowly lifting from the garden and river and the firetMrcnk of sunshine creeping wanly through. "I will go away." lie told himself. "The thiug is impossible. I will net day." And jet when be was dressed and out in ths garden, wnlklm; nbeut among the flowers, bis resolution wiverjd. It una Fate that had threvwi bim awe, and he believed in Fate. mHc ueuld stay yet n little awhile nnd jMTiik what happened. It was Heaven i'i ee treated once mere as a gentleman and te we love in a woman's eyes. If he went new it would hurt thews people far mero than If he stayed. Se hO arirued with blmsMP. l;nrnvinir Swf he argument te be fabc. ii'l .Aml then, from one of the upper winnows of tue house, Anne herself coiled te him, mnllins down with the Miuhinc in her ecs nnd upon her hair, and the heart of tlm Fortune Hunter heat fnvt ns he called up te her rather unttendliy: "Come down you're se fnr away up there ceme down." She Joined him in the garden nlnwst ft once, slipping n hand ehyly through ihia arm. , "Yiu're still here then ! You're real ! When I weke this morning I was half afraid that I should find it all a dream, "'u mac you uau gene The Fortune Hunter smiled wryly, cmembcring his resolution of the night. ieu slept well, then," be said. She laughed and flushed "I nTer weke up once. And yeuV" I never closed my eyes.," laid the rertnne Hunter grimly. "My guiltv conscience, I suppose." ner finger's tightened about bis arm. "J will net let you say that. Yeu .rremlsed me that there waa te he no past no looking back." It's net be cusyte-ltlll the past as tome of ua wish," be anpnered rather etearJly. 8be interrupted swlftlv. But it is klllcH it la dead! The Wat cannot come back ; deu't think of inn- ,n l; r,n sol"C t( loeli forward 1 !..Th.e Fortune Hunter made no rcnlv. man r'V,UBl)t,et th? fe?5' of the nbhflcln,ie wlem he h"'1 wen last bnV ,?"fl 'f ,b,rcatl1 of i'PPrehensien went through him. a in nine fi breakfast." Anne baid ns belt rang through tlm house. "Are Temmy "nSr5''' n,,l-"(1 Zere's Jemmr wnitej for them at the. house wr; he looked at the Fortune Hunter ' chagrined eyec. aftpi n n","'1 hove te go te Londen lin frCl be.?nr';1't t0 f?lfh W ba6 a in V1" Il tuniei1 Jnd indicated n Plle of boxes In the hall. "Ifa all fecSs,;cpdiy,:etn ,Ue Btatlen'" be t0lrhenM0rtu."0 .""nter flushed orim erim th?.'i Ut'!' I,0,1,a(1 ,irst cntcred upon Hnuua,jv,cnt",r0 u '"" bn mero in the fnr .i J,"'e wuu" W0ll,cl 'nt only uUa ""pwent than the manifold fvX 7 , wiilcli it was blewly jiening. He looked at the rather hat- ' and much-lnl.le,i ii.f,., ,. 1,1.1 utsnerate m Thn lhllil. tfw .... . 4f ?nni? tc,urish ,tt,re ,ett 0 the side 1 58?h ,V.X. a"d bere beside the label In ,....: ,"?,.?' P. ,vcl' Pln'e.(l sMn .' .1W,U frefs-Atlnntlc hteam hteam weft.i0" whlcb ,, 1,imscf ''! 0ep uierly 1 1 the irony of it nil. sllenn.5, fJh(' '"' "fi'U Handing by the xIa; r1!'1 .'!ewwl!" ,urm''l nni1 lp'' !i;i .r1''1,',118 Wttt already seated, He "Yfti, . 1,en",,p Huiiw cheerily. i- '-? v"i 1 .iiiuin my uc cinnlne I'm JWry tUIa mernlnc about that noer ici iriT ,. r. i i r - . -. . - '7J," twn in iiirwne.j n. night, I wonder who the peer man In the weed will turn out te be," Anne said thoughtfully. "Yeu don't think any one killed him. uncle?" "Killed him I" The words broke from the Fortune Hunter in sharp dis inny. Mr. Harding lnughed lightly. 'Dear me. no, He died of heart failure, se I hear. The peer fellow was In n very had stnte from all ac ac ceuntB. The odd part of It In that there arc no papers of uny sort, or marking en hid clothes." "A wanderer, perhaps," said the Fortune Hunter grimly, "with everv reason for wishing te hide bis Identity." Anne blushed, the teara springing te her eyes, nnd the Fortune Hunter realized hew painful bin words must have been te her. His cyiffyiiet her u remorseful apology, nnd she stmlled. Mr. Hnrdlnir necnipd net In hnrn noticed; he hurriedly finished his coffee J uuu rose. "You'll excuse me if I run away." he bnid. "See you at lunch; and, by the way, Anne, if Fe?tcr calls this morning tell -him I want te see him, will you?" Anne looked quickly nt the Fortune Hunter. "Yes, I'll tell htm," she said. Later, when they were alone, she slipped 11 hand through his arm. "Geof frey Fester won't come here any mere new he knows you arc borne." she said. Tbe Fortune Hunter glanced down at her. , "Geoffrey Fester," he echoed vaguely. His thoughts bad been far enough away, and It was only when he saw the color rise in her cheeks nnd the hurt expres sion of her eyes that he hastened te add: "I should hope he won't!" Dut for the moment lie bad qulte for gotten that Fester was the name men tioned by the landlord at the Inn as the man who had wished te marry Anne. "It's impossible te go en," he told himself angrily. "Seener or later I shall glve the game away, nnd It's net worth the risk. Why the devil can't I clear out new, before I get deeper into Mirt Jillrn V tbe mlre? But when Temmy proposed calling the gardener In te lend n hand In moving the boxes upstairs the Fortune Hunter agreed readily nnd binifelf unstrapped the knotted cords that bound them. "Which box is the bear skin In?" Temmy asked, nnd the Fortune Hunter frowned and rumpled his hulr in per plexity. "Dashed if I knew." he said. He had net the least intention of opening the boxes, and would net have done se if be could, but for the moment it bad teemed easier te yield than te argue with this boy's eagerness. "And new where are the keys?" Temmy urged. The Fortune Hunter nlnntrerl n hnnH into his pocket ; he tried crcry pocket In ' ms coat, "i must nave lest mom, he tald. The excuse was mere than wel come, though te satisfy Temmy he took off his coat and turned every pocket in bide out. "They're gene, right enough," he said. "Yeu prebahly dropped them yester day when you went Inte the river," Anne said. "Don't leek ee tragic, Temmy, dear ; we can tee-' get some mero that will fit." Hut the boy's face had fallen again into Its fretful, peevish lines. "Something always happens te spoil my fun." he complained. "Are you iurc they're net downstairs In your room?" "Quite sure." Temmy grunted semethlug Inaudible nnd slipped away, and the Fortune Hunter looked at Anne. "And new what de we de?" he asked, trying te sneak naturally, no had n painful feeling that no matter who else he was' successful in deceiving, before long Anne would find him out. "Let's go out." she taid. "I want te talk te jeu, and there arc lets nrfd lets of things I want you te tell me." Then went dewu together iute the garden. "Net here I'm going te take you ever te the IslQiid." she told him. She looked at him shyly. "Yeu knew the island where I often used te write my letters te you. Somehow I never thought I should ever show it te you. Jehn, though you were 60, sure." - Tbey untied the punt from the moor ing at the bottom of the garden and pushed out into the stream. "ue you Knew, ' tue girl said sud denly. "I've never seen Temmy se friendly with any oue ae he has been with j 011?" The Fortune Hunter mude a little grimace. "Ileally! I should net have thought that he 1ms shown me uuy great mark of favor." "Oh, but he has," she urged. "As a rule, he won't 6pek te 11 ny one. He used te hate all my any men who came here." "our weuld-be levers, you mean," he interposed ruthlessly. She leaned ever and laid her hand en bis. "Yeu need net. be jealeus: there was never nny one them never has been except jeu." He caught her lingers nnd held them. "Heme day eu'll realize that I'm net worth loving," he said tteadlly. She laughed. "Shall T? I haven't realized it during the last tcu years, anyway." "And I suppose every one did their bett te set jeu against me," he said bitterly. "They all tald I was a rotter net lit te breathe the same air with you." ' ' ' "Indeed they did uet! They never dared eay one single word net that it veuld have mattjred whatever they had suid." "I dare fay they thought the mere." She moved, remlng te sit beside bim at the end of the punt, letting it drift with the stream. "Yeu knew, Jehn," she raid quietly, "I think I mutt be 11 ery painfully faithful tort eC woman, becaupe even right from the very firt-t there hnu never been a iingie moment, wucii wucn you " " " "Yes," he prompted gently as she She laughed rather bhakily, turning her face away. "It's you who ought te be saying these things te me," she said, with a little harsh note in her voice. He put bis .arm round bcr, drawing her dose te him. "If I den t say them, if I cau't put what I feel into words." he said des perately, "It'b' because I because I feel l,ew hew unworthy I am. It's because f " He let her go abruptly. "Sonie dnt.Y lie cl,i'1, "veU "'" r(,u"ze tlmt 1 i I'm net worth levlug. ihcre was a I llllt rllAtliin "Why de you uiy that?" she abked slew!. "You've said it several times blnce' fiuce you came back." "Have I? llecauec it s always in my thoughts perhaps, Anne. Supposing I'd ncvPr we'd never met again after all? Supposing something had happened. I might have died like that peer devil they found ill the weeds last night. She shivered. "lieu't. I hnte te hear you say things like that. I was ulwnjs think iu tlieni iiiytlf dreading them when . ., unn were unii) I UfrCU IU III' nwake ut night and imagine nil pmnni'i. nf fr ellttul tiling!,. ii iirsi i wiuiihui of frightful tni ik. Ai. ii you would die iu In- "I'risen. the. Fortune Bilndy as, she faltered aud Hunter uddeu ana stepped lYivriV'TI Tn"-' EVENING tUBlilO'' THEMUMPSTlw Storm Aw keep mil- tMr Met? it Vr-.HE GAJJET WW AM. AUTOMOBILE DWST GIVE IT TO HER- WS MS WCLE- MXBE-OOfc YfO)U 6WE THWGB A.WW Toe m HE VJ,X rrMOMtS- 0 TrTVe .., J m 1 i J SOMEBODY'S STENOGHew Time Dees Fly 1H0VH ! I Dm'T MIND' 1 I LOVE TO SLIPOAl ICE. AHcf D0AIT r'ter'U: . . - V OM JHtire KAVfcMt 10 . r OVJCH'.. &LLTILL A1EVR BE L SAME J The Yeung Lady Acress the Way The young lady across the way says there are styles In dogs just as in everything else, and it s?cni3 ns if she heard mero about hooch heundn new than either nircdalcs or pollce dogs, though she's never seen one. PETEY A Great Life iWA-rsTntwf re is wmi Theip. WlASj-lfigRE b MORS HE1 AT" ) y'jK 1 m SW.TVi - MP M7k Cs i I if 1 TmJ M FT?e2EU -vain i VTT Lfl&T3 ajlfl " M 0 r is ai f VtHf4 --,,- tlKifikHk rf",V. GASOLINE ALLEY Time for Mether te Learn mm: J? T". LBDGHBKPHIIiADEBPHIA, THURSDAY, tuc HfcBfASM VIA SARCASM- ectch cevv eh. wet - iv uNe map HE WW SHE'D HAVE ME WALKING NOO KMflW IMaE through nevn bahks tsm!evoetet festhe est os ms upe- wait Till tmat uncle cemcs into Ttt HOV)E A TPM TWMC1 T W1ATEJ? 'BUT 1 I SLIPPED - AOTI ICE THIS fu I :Mfc.X TOO. ILL ..... 1 t f -r FOR6E.T THE 1 LOVE WILL FIND 4 WAY X Te WWtH SHE. iMestfj -- (vF J ttr . Kl 1 r r )' ' a ' 'IJHb J I tf -j- 1 j lL p Trust Neu Mp i i ww Fl?ArJl5 Ve a A Geed Kid, i'ii. M'UD Tb sem myself' Cs'oJteMJM AWDiEE. vahaTsTme MATTER -The idea!.' ; giviugIhat ham 450UAR5 Cowie ..' uv. - r-... .iU lr"j . - EVVJOR.t ..SHE" CABLES .YMtTrlER HIM I'LL TELL VUAA - al OM THE HARD, WAS IT, "VEAJOS"? MORHIHG AEVE.R 1 yr IT 1 1 TrflBP i F -4lL r "Trie YOUWG CerlSTKUCTiON HMGiMeeR who Fi6UKeD our GtT HIS 3WUCTIC OrlDfirt TMfi MlSTLBTeC CAM AeOMO Te 5Ct HtM eH THE. Jeg. DeuV Fl?AUlO ALL 11 (tht Trouble Ceed is MPS KVRr?ieD GO Toe!: r iT v v en 1 WOTftER. DEOEMBliJR 29, 1021 r TEtU UrA WVAT OV UKC BVt UET ME. ALONE- P VOVRE SO . MAT fCr HIM SEN1 WAT DIAMOND BROOCH BACKTO - OR. AREHVT TO) THAT MAP EX? T X SLIPPED AA1D FE.Ll.-AfD -A HAMDSOWE. MAN WAS PASSING OH HE WAS GLORIOUS'. SAHEM 'I SLIPPED r Bu FONTAINE FOX SCHOOL a way "X& tM.H cSAn- I MMiMM. 7AUWh TwaT vjiTh it. A .let BEELeEve: i 'SYi vm f.vsy HIS. AJJFIT PRnBARl.V 5euT him out ou tlcKAWD' WM T r 'xwt r4 1. &M siv bOliti- THAT Y40MAM CiETS MS HERVE- A THOUGH IT MA? MV A)LT- EVEN'S Time anhthinIi gees vjrehq HE HHKcV ME UP Te T SOMEHOW- UST BECAUSE THAT "POOL UHCLE OF- ANE B0U6HT THE VJVPONW A C trflfc. CHRVTMAS AMP t VUUNTEP VT N MIN'S FACE HE'B MADE A MADHOUSE O MT MiAMr. VkA (tnxtJG t)OTlN TO A BOLEfc VCTORT FO t LITTLE qUlETHere Copyright. 1921. by Public jtAt-t HE HELD 1 Bvv,tfiy mvk. (A i FULLVTWD SECOMOSl A4D OH. it was heaveajly: s' yf -""sLA T r1 Aen-if DAYS CoTTe J)e VyHOLEl Ft?auk? he :; V , a feel " v- f ) ', nrt ' ' crsjwift. - zr- (AALTeR! Veu'ce By Sidney Smitlt ON NEMiER AHP HEARER DRAWS The prekpful &n4 By Hayward Company ME IM HS ARMS L rr- - -v - w Bu DW1G 3 By C. A. Voight MEt?e We ) A v ,g,i Z?77sMsT By King I Wl A SH 1 I'i .e.J 'r-iT"" V uU. ; ,V lv-x - -4 i - . l''.....lj" 'A Kf .'. ,-wV!Z,? il). &yilnlTi-iia.fiT'-1?-Miifrl-i- ' r AL - - Ai Likii. , '. ,. .,'-'