8 The Exploits of Elaine A Detective Novel and a Motion Picture Drama By ARTHUR B. REEVE TheWeU-Known N ovelut and the Creator of the "Gaig Kennedy" Stories Presented in Collaboration With the Pa the Player* and the Eclectic Film Company CopTfifbC. 1914. by tbe star Coca pin? All Poragn Riffctt Rrtrrrm COJNTUTUtD SYNOPSIS. The New Tork police are mystified by a •erles of murders and other crimes. The wrlnclpnl clue io the criminal Is the warn ing letter which Is sent the victims, signed with a "clutching hand " The latest vic tim of the mysterious assassin is Taylor Dodge, the insurance president. His daughter. Elaine, employs Craig Kennedy. .j-»... and armed camps. They exceed _ , _ . . in number, ill beauty and graphic ureatly Reduced Illustration of the $3 Book. Size 8 * 10'/2 mche»; ———————^ portrayal of actual war scenes 364 pages; 483 illustrations MAIL ORDERS—By par any collection of pictures ever cef post include EXTRA 8 gathered for such a work. The ___ B _ T _ _ T -rrw+m, a w eenU within 'SO mil,,; 12 book contains magnificent color R j-| §4 fj ]\ | If WTIII MA4 I - eent ' 150 to 300 mile,; for plates produced by the latest and ■*• AW/ M. greater distance, ask your most expensive processes—ver- \I7 A D ¥-¥ ¥ "O "V postmaster amount to include itable works of art. V* i*. JLV ITI. Xv 3JL V-/ Xv. fi for 4 pounds. room. There Mary looked at the mo tionless body on the floor and recoiled, horrified. Elaine noticed some spots on her hands, and, seeing that they were stained by the blood of Long Sin, wiped the spots off on her handker chief, dropping it to the floor. "I'gh!" exclaimed a guttural voice behind them. It was the servant who had come In. "You—kill him —with knife?" insin uated the Chinese. Elaine was dumb. The servant did not wait for an answer, but hastily opened the hall door. To Elaine it seemed that something must be done quickly. A moment and all the house would be in uproar. Instead, he placed his finger on his lips. "Quick —no word," he said, lead ing the way to the hall door, "and —oh, you must not leave that —it will be a clue," he added, picking up the bloody handkerchief and pressing it into Elaine's hand. They quickly ran out into the hall. "Go —quick!" he urged again, "and hide the handkerchief in the bag. Let no one see it!" He shut the door. As they hurried away Elaine breathed a sigh of relief. They had reached the street. Afraid to run, they hurried as fast as they could until they turned the first cor ner. To Be Continued FINDS GEMS IN SHOE Shoemaker Returns Jewels When Own er Returns to Shop Lancaster, May s.—When examin ing a pair of shoes a woman brought to his shop for repairs, Ralph Cicone found in one of them a chamois bag in which was S6O in cash, two diamond rings and a diamond tbrooeh worth S4OO. An hour later the owner of the shoes returned for them and was start led when the contents of the shoes were handed to her. She said she must have dropped the baig, which, curiously enough, fell into the shoe. She refused to give her name. STEAMSHIPS BERMUDA Tkcae Ckurmlmc Ulaailn Are Now •1 Their Brat S. S. "BERMUDIAN" bold* the record—4o hours—U the newest and only twin-screw steam ship sailing to Bermuda, and the only one landing passengers at the dock at Hamilton without transfer by ter.fler. Kound Trip with meale (C 1 and and stateroom berth ▼ * up For full particulars apply to A. & OITKBBRIDI.K * CO., Agrata Ho*, kee S. 8. York | P. LOHNE HVMMEL, 10* Mar ket St.. Harrtabaru, Ps, or W Tick* , ot Ages*. ACQUITTED OF MOVIE RIOT Editor and Minister, Negroes, Go Free In a Boston Court Boston. May s.—William M. Trot- i ter, editor of a weekly newspaper, and the Rev. Aaron Fuller yesterday in • Municipal court, were adjudged not j guilty of inciting a riot on April 17 in 1 connection with a display of moving i pictures dealing with the Southern re construction period. Both are negroes. The judge expressed the opinion that j the ticket seller at the theatre was j partly responsible for the disturbance, ! because of alleged discrimination in j the sale of tickets. Trotter was fined I S2O for an assault on a policeman. Insane Man Attacks Wife Sharaokin, M iv s.—Peter Laouska i grew violently insane at his home in I Hickory Ridge yesterday and attacked ! his wife. Neighbors overpowered him. j He was removed to the Danville insane I asylum. His wife is in a serious con dition. / v J. Harry Stroup Insurance Agent 1617 North Second St * George A. Gorgas Quick Relief for Coughs, »'iolds ana Hoarseness. Clear the Vaice—Fine for Speakers and Singers. 25c. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. Penna. Station Cut Down Your Coa! Bill Coal prices are at their lowest now and will not change until July 1. Pea coal is only $4.95 a ton now, the lowest it has been for a number of years. Wise housekeepers are cutting down their coal bills by fill ing their bins with range and furnace coal while the saving prices are in effect. H. M.KELLEY&CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets PUTS BAN ON HAND R MAKES j Decision, If Upheld, May Mean Heavy Loss to Railroads Rirfimond, Va., May s.—The Fed-1 oral Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday j unanimously atlinned a decision of the! Federal District court construing t'he j safety appliance act so as to make it j unlawful for a railroad to require l brakemen to use common hand brakes j to control the speed of trains. Washington,' May 5. — Exports of the Interstate Commerce Commission say the decision of the Circuit Court at! Richmond yesterday is one of the most J important in many years. If supported | bv the United States Supreme Court it ] will result in cutting down accidents j now laid to the hand brake, which last ( year killed 556 men and injured IH, - j 053. It may force the railroads, es pecially on high grades, to cut down the length of their trains. BIiAKKLEY WANTS DIVORCE Pittsburgh Graft Case Prosecutor Al- j leges He Has Been Deserted Pittsburgh, May s.—The law office | I romance of ex-District Attorney Wil-1 •liain A. Blakeley, who gained a country- ! wide refutation for his prosecution of the councilman's graft cases several years ago, has 'been shattered. Blakeley yesterday filed suit for di vorce, accusing his wife, formerly Mrs. George Whitney Stephenson, dr., beau tiful society leader, with desertion. In the winter of 1913 Blakeley, as I counsel for Mrs. Stephenson, got a di vorce for her and then assumed the management of her financial affairs. In ! July, 1913, word came from New York | t'hat Blakeley and the former Mrs. Stephenson had t>ecn married in the Little f'hurch Around ,the Corner, only a few witnesses being present at the cereimony. There have been rumors re cently of trou'ble and Mrs. Blakeley has been traveling abroad. Mte. Blakeley before her marriage to 'Stephenson, member of the now defunct brokerage firm of Whitney & Stephen } son, was Mi>s Marguerite Botsford, whose father, now dead, was one of the best known steel men in this section of I ' t'ho country. He was secretary-treasurer I for years of the Pittsburgh '.Malleable j Iron Company. Blakeley is 4 8 and his j wife 30 years younger. ' JOHN D. NOW OWNS TWO LAKES Buys 105 Acres and Water Rights, Paying SIOO,OOO Tarrytown, X. Y., 'May s.—John D. "Rockefeller added 105 acres to his es tate 'by acquiring t'he John Webber property at Tarrytown Heights. Mr. "Rockefeller owns the watershed to the north of Tarrytown lakes, and by pur chasing the Webber land he owns the south sid,e, so that in effect the two lakes are a part of his estate. His plans for the property have no't been disclosed. It contains valuable timber and quarries. The price paid is said to have been more than SIOO,- 000. Mr. Rockefeller walked over and carefully surveyed the lakes before closing the deal. GIVEN $20,000 FOR SCALP | Sixteen-year-old Girl Wins Jury's Sym pathy in Her Suit New York, May 5. —Mary Havnes, | 16 years old, of Brooklyn, yesterday ! was awarded $20,000 before Supreme j Court Justice Kolby for the loss of j her entire scalp and four feet of beau- I liful brown hair, in her $50,000 dam ! age suit against Cook & Cob, dyemak- > crs. Some of the jurors wept when . | t he girl removed her wig, and showed the bare, scarred scalp from which her ! hair had been torn by a shaft. The jury also gave the girl's father j SI,OOO for loss of her services. The ] accident occurred August 14, 1913, in i We Recommend That You Use "93"HairTonic ; George A. 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