S71 wey | § Ny... - gratefully. - enough, Mr. Kennedy,” she said fer- = ROLLED LLlllenlLsLsLs Loo 00008 008 00 Er So i A rr SRT a me FE TE = AS I a RUNNING IN THE AUDITORIUM, MEYERSDALE, OLDE LES oe I. iat, The Exploits of Elaine A Detective Novel and a Motion Picture Drama di i a a Zh i a dh A 2 ale gl PPIPIIPIPVITIIIITIIIITITIIIIV The Well-Known Novelist and the Creator of the **Craig Kennedy’’ Stories =< | By ARTHUR B. REEVE Presented in Collgboration With the Pathe Players and the Eclectic Film Company [ = Sold RAR ill sobostiitotodsbldinddisttolt MITT TT TOTOUTTTTTYIE PPOVOOOIW TOV IIIIIITIvVIITIPPIYIIPIPY VP VY YY VIVIPVIPITIIVIPIVIYIIIIVIIIYIIYY Copyright, 1914, by the Star Company. All Foreign Rights Reserved SYNOPSIS. The New York police are mystified by & series of miurders of Srominent men. e cipal clue to the murderer is the warn- g letter Which is sent the victims signed with a “clutching hand.” The latest vic- tim of the ED assassin is Taylor Dodge, the insurance president. His daughter, Elaine, employs Craig Jennody, the famous scientific detective, to try to unravel the mystery. What Kennedy ac- complishes is told by his friend, Jameson, & newspaper man. nnedy frustrates a daring attempt to on a jewelry store and rescues Elaine from a boiler where she had been imprisoned by the thugs FOURTH EPISODE The Frozen Safe. . Kennedy swung open the door of our taxicab as we pulled up, safe at last, before the Dodge mansion, after the rescue of Elaine from the brutal machinations of the Clutching Hand. Bennett was on the step of the cab in a moment, and together, one on each side of Elaine, they assisted her out of the car and up the steps to the house. Elaine's Aunt Josephine was walt: ing for us in the drawing-room, very, much worried. The dear old lady was quite scandalized as Elaine excitedly told of the thrilling events that had Just taken place. “And to think they—actually—car- ried you!” she exclaimed, horrified adding, “And I not—" “But Mr. Kennedy came along and. saved me just in time,” Elaine with a smile. chaperoned!” Aunt Josephine turned to Craig, “How can I ever thank you interrupted “l was well vently. Kennedy was quite embarrassed. With a smile, Elaine perceived his discomfiture, not at all displeased by it. “Come into the library!” she cried gayly, taking his arm. “I’ve something to show you.” Where the old safe, which had been burnt through, had stood, was now a brand-new safe of the very latest construction and design—one of globular safes that look and are so formidable. “Here is the new silo" she pointed out brightly. “It i8 not only proof against explosives, but between the plates is a lining that is proof’ Ty tigrs and even that oxyacetylene pipe by which you rescued me oe the, old boil It clock, too, prevent. its being opened at "nfght, even if any one should lgarn the combination.” They ok before the safe a mo ment, snd Kennedy. examined it close I¥ il much interest. “Wonderful!” he admired. “I knew you'd approve of it,” cried Hiatse; much pleased. “Now I have sgmething else to show you.” She paused at the desk, and from a wer took ouf a pertfolio of large Bhoioraps They were: very hand: me photographs of herself. “Much more wonderful than the safe,” remarked Craig earnestly. Then, hesitating and a trifle embarrassed, he added, “May l—may I have one?” “If you care for it,” she said, drop: ping her eyes, then glancing up at him quickly. “Care for it?” he repeated. “It wil} be one of the greatest treasures—" She slipped the picture quickly into an envelope. “Come,” she interrupted. “Aunt Josephine will be wondering Wheto we are: She—she’s a demon chaperon.” Bennett, Aunt Josephine and my- self were talking earnestly as Elaine and Craig returned. That morning I had noticed Ken- nedy fussing some time at the door of our apartment before we went over to the laboratory. As nearly as I could make out he had placed some- thing under ‘the rug at the door out into the hallway. : “Well,” said Benrett, glancing at his watch and rising as he turned to Elaine, “I'm afraid I must go now.” He crossed over to where she stood and shook hands. There was no doubt that Bennett was very much smitten by his fair client. “Good-by, Mr. Bennett,” she mur- mured, “and I thank you so much for what you have done for me today.” But there was something lifeless about the words. She turned quickly to Craig, who had remained standing. “Must you go too, Mr. Kennedy?” she asked, noticing his position. “I'm afraid Mr. Jameson and I must get back on the job before this Clutch- ing Hand gets busy again,” he replied relyctantly. “Oh; ¥ hope you~~we get them soon” she exelaimed, and there was nothing lifeless about the way she gave Craig her hand, as Bennett, he and I left a moment later. When we approached our door, now, Craig pausec. By pressing a little concealed button he caused a panel in the wall outside to loosen, disclos- ing a small, boxlike plate in the wall underneate. It was about a foot long and perhaps four inches wide. Through it ran a plece of paper which unrolled from one coll end wound up on another, actu _— a time | Craig? ated Dy clockwork Across the bl white paper ran an ink line ny a stylographic pen, used as I had seen in mechanical pencils used in offices, hotels, banks and such places. Kennedy examined the thing with interest. “What is it? 1 asked. “A new kinograph,” he replied, still gazing carefully at the rolled- up part of the paper: “I have in. stelled it because it registers every footstep on the floor of our apartment. We can't be too careful with this Clutching - Hand. 1 want to know whether we have, had any, visitors or not in our absence. This straight line indicates tha we have not ait a moment.” Craig hastily unlocked the door and entered Inside I could see him pac- ing up and down our modest quarters. “Do you see anything, Walter?” he called 1 looked a: the kinograph. The pen had started to trace its lime, no ‘unger even aud straight, but zigzag. at different heights, across the paper He came to the coor. “What do you think of it?” ' e inquired. “Some {dea,” 1 answered enthusi- «stically. We entered and 1 fell to work on a special Sunday story that 1 had been forced to neglect. | was not so busy, however, that I did not notice out of 9009290900000 [35 the corner of my eye that Kennedy had ‘taken from its cover Klaine Dodge’s picture and was gazing at it ravenously. 1 had finished as much of the article as I could do then and was smoking and reading it over. - Kennedy was still gazing at the picture Miss Dodge had given him, then moving from place to place about the room, evidently wondering where it would look best. 1 doubt whether he had done another blessed thing since we returned. He tried it on the mantel. That wouldn't do. At last he held it up be- side a picture of Galton, I think, of finger print and eugenics fame, who hung on the wall. directly opposite the fireplace. Hastily he compared the two. Elaine's picture was precisely the same size. Next he tore out the picture of the scientist and threw it carelessly into against | the fireplace. Then he placed Elaine's picture in its place and h again, standing off to admire EK watcl him gleefully, Was this FROse I moved. my elbow suddenly and is a book with a bang on the floor. Kennedy actually jum I picked up the book with a Buttofd apology. No, this was not e same old Craig. 3 Rerhaps half an kour later I wag stil) reading. Kennedy was now pacing up it Wp and down the room, apparently unable | to concentrate his mind om any but one subject. He stopped a moment before the photograph, looked at it fixedly. Then he started his methodical walk again, hesitated, and went over to the tele phone, calling a number which 1 rec- ognized. “She must have been pretty well done up by he: experience,” he said apologetically, catching my eye. “1 was wondering if—hello!—oh, Miss Dodge—I—er—I—er—just called up to |- see if you were all right.” Craig was very much embarrassed, but also very much in earnest. A musical laugh rippled over the telephone. “Yes, I'm all right, thank you, Mr. Kennedy—and I put the pack- age you sent me into the safs, but—" “Package?” frowned Craig. “Why, 1 sent you no package, Miss Dodge. In the safe?” “Why, yes, and the safe is all cov- ered with meisture—and so cold.” “Moisture—cold ?” he repeated hastily. “Yes. I have been wondering if it is all right. In fact, I was going to call you up, only I was afraid you'd think 1 was foolish.” “I shall be right over,” he answered hastily, clapping the receiver back on its hook. “Walter,” he added, seizing his hat and coat, “come on—hurry!” A few minutes later we drove up in a taxi before the Dodge house and rang the bell. Jennings admitted us sleepily. 3 ® * ® s se ® It could not have been long after we left Miss Dodge, late in the afternoon, that Susie Martin, who had been quite worried over our long absence after the attempt to rob her father, dropped in on Elaine. Wide-eyed, she had lis- tened to Elaine's story of what had happened. “And you think this Cluteching Hand has never recovered the incriminating papers that caused him to murder your father?” asked Susie. Elaine shook her head. “No. Let me show you the new safe I've bought. Mr. Kennedy thinks it wonderful” “I should think you'd be proud of it,” admired Susie. “I must tell father to get one, too.” At that very moment, if they had known it, the Clutching Hand, with his sinister, masked face, was peeri.z at the two girls from the other side of the portieres. (ETAT i Susie rose to go and Elaine followed her to the door. No sooner had she gone than the Clutching Hand came out from behind the curtains. He gazed about a moment, then, moving over to the safe about which the two girls had been talking, stealthily examined it He must have heard someone com- ing, for with a gesture of hate at the safe itself, as though he personified it, he sl skipped back of the curtains again. had returned, and as she sat a at the desk to go over some pa- pers which Bennett had left relative to seftling: up the estate the masked intruder stealthily and silently with- drew. “A package fcr you, Miss Dodge.” announced Michael later in the eve ning, as Elaine, in her dainty evening gown, wag still engaged in going over the papers. He ded it in his hands rather gingerly. “Mr. Kennedy semt it, ma'am. He says it contains clues, and will you please put it in the new safe for him.” aine took the package ¢-gerly an. examined it. Then she pulled open - the little round door of the globular safe. “It must be getting cold out, Mi- chael,” she remarked. “This package is as cold as ice.” “It is, ma'am,” answered Michael. She closed the safe, and, with a glance at her watch, set the time lock and went upstairs to her room. No sooner had Elaine disappeared than Michael appeared again, catlike, through the curtains from the drawing- room, and, after a glance about the dimly lighted library, discovering that the coast was clear, motioned to a fig- ure hiding behind the portieres. A moment and Clutching Hand him- self came cut. He moved over to the safe and looked it over. Then he put out his hand and touched it. “Listen!” cautioned Michael. Someone was coming, and they hastily slunk behind the protecting portieres. It was Marie, Elaine’s maid. She turned up the lights and went over to the desk for a book for which Elaine had evidently sent her. She paused and appeared to be listening, Then she went to the door. “Jennings!” she beckoned. “What is it, Marie?” he replied. She said nothing, but as he came up the hall led him to the center of the room. “Listen! I heard sighs and groans!" Jennings looked at her a moment, puzzled, then laughed. “You girls!” he exclaimed. “I suppose you'll always think the library haunted now.” “But, Jennings, listen,” she per- sisted. Jennings did listen. Sure enough, there were sounds, weird, uncanny. He gazed about the room. It was eerie. Then he took a few steps toward the safe. Marie put out her hand to it and | . started back. “Why, that safe is all covered with cold sweat!” ghe cried with bated breath. Sure enough, the face of the safe was beaded with dampness. Jennings put his hand on it and quickly drew it hyping leaving a mark on the damp what do you think of that?” he €85ped. “I'm going to tell Miss Dodge,” cried Marle, genuinely frightened. A moment later she burst fato Hale's. room. Elad 38 She cis h hook. ne, er. look as if you had seen a ghost.” “Ah, but mademoiselle—it ees just like that. The safe—if mademoiselle Marie?” asked “A Package for You, tdiss Dodge.” will come down stairs, I will show it you.” Puzzled, but interested, Elaine fol lowed her. In the library Jennings pointed mutely at the new safe. Elaine approached it. As they stood about, new beads of perspiration, as it were, formed on it. Elaine touched it and also quickly withdrew her hand. “I can’t imagine what's the matter," she said. “But—well—Jennings, you may go—and Marie, also.” When the servants had gone she stil) regarded the safe with the same won dering look, then turning out the light, she followed. She had scarcely disappeared when, from the portiered doorway near by, the Clutching Hand appeared, and, after gazing out at them, took & quick lock at the safe. “Good!” he muttered. Noiselessly Michael of the siniste: wr EACH THURSDAY EVENING. “You, face moved in .nd took a position in the center of the room, as if on guard, while Clutching. Hand sat before the safe watching it intently. “Someone at the door—Jenpings is answering the bell,” Michael whis- pered hoarsely. “Confound it!” muttered Clutching Hand, as both moved again behind the beavy velour surtaina. ® ® &® * ® Tm so oiod to see you, Mr. Ken- nedy,” greeted Elaine unaffectedly as Jennings admitted us. She had heard the bell and was com- Ing Jownstairs as we entered. We three moved toward the library and someone switched on the lighta Craig strode over to the safe. The cold sweat on it had now turned to icicles. Craig's face clouded with thought as he examined it more close: ly. There was actually a groaning sound from within. “It can’t be opened,” he said to him- self. “The time lock is set for tomor- row morning.” Outside, if we had not been so ab- sorbed in the present mystery, we might have seen Michael and the Clutching Hand listening to us Clutching Hand iooked hastily at his watch. “The deuce!” he muttered unde: his breath, stifling his suppressed fury. We stood looking at the safe. Ken- nedy was deeply interested, Elaine standing close beside him. Suddenly he seemed to make up his mind. “Quick—Elaine!” he cried, taking her arm. “Stand back!” We all retreated. The safe door, powerful as it was, had actually begun to warp and bend. The plates were bulging. A moment later, with a loud report and concussion, the door blew off. A: blast of cold. air and. flakes like snow flew out. Papers were scattered on every side. We #860d gazing, aghast, « seconc, ther ran forward. Kennedy quickly sxamiped the safe. He bent down and wreck took up a package, now covered with white. As quickly he dropped it. ha 18 1 the package that was sent,” ne. . cried Taking it in a table cover, he laid, it on Tone table and opened; it. Inside was a peculiar shape flask, open at the top, but like a vacuum bottle. “A Dewar flask!" ejaculated Craig. “What 1s it?" asked Elaine, appeal- ing to him. “Liquid air!” he answered. “As it evaporated, the terrific pressure of expanding alr in the safe increased until # blew out the door. That is what caused the cold sweating and the groans.” We watched him, startled. On the other side of the portieres Michael and Clutching Hand waited. . Then, in the general confusion, Clutch- ine, Hand slowly * Bespin, oe “Get Michael, ** ordered Kenne A moment Tater he ‘returned. i found him, going upstairs,” reported Jennings, loadin. Michael in. “Where di % vou ph package?” shot out ig you : “It, was left at the door, sir, by. a boy, sir.” Question after question could not shake that simple, stolid; sentence. Kennedy frowned.’ . “You may £0," he said finally, as 1 reserving something for Michael later. A sudden exclamation followed. from Elaine as Michael passed down the Hall again, She had moved over to gl | the desk, during the questioning, and was leaning against it. Inadvertently she had touched an envelope. It was addressed, “Craig Kennedy.” Craig tore it open, Elaine bending anxiously over his shoulder, frightened. We read: “YOU HAVE INTERFERED FOR THE LAST TIME. IT IS THE END.” Beneath it stood the fearsome sign of the Clutching Hand! ®- * ® * ¢ Le ® The warning of the Clutching Hand had no other effect on Kennedy than the redoubling of his precautions for safety. Nothing further happened that night, however, and the next morning found us early at the laboratory. It was the late forenoon, when, aft. er a hurried trip down to the office, 1 rejoined Kennedy at his scientific workshop. We walked down the street when a big limousine shot past. Kennedy stopped in the middle of a remark. He had recognized the car, with a sort of instinct. At the same moment I saw a smi} ing face at the window of the car. It was Elaine Dodge. The car stopped in something less than twice its length and then backed toward us. Kennedy, hat off, was at the window in a moment. There were Aunt Jose phine and Susie Martin, also. “Where are you boys going?” asked Elaine, with interest, then added with a gayety that ill concealed her real anxiety, “I'm so gl&d to see you—to see that—er—nothing has happened from the dreadful Clutching Hand.” “Why, we were just going up to our rooms,” replied Kennedy. “Can’t we drive you around?” We climbed in and a moment later were off. The ride was only too short for Kennedy. We stepped out in front of our apartment and stood chatting for a moment. “Some day I want to show you thn laboratory,” Craig was saying. “It must be so—interesting!” ex. claimed Elaine very enthusiastically. “Think of all the bad men you must have caught!” Elaine hesitated. “Would vou tka | of the expresamen, descending with a, he bane out.” ] a0. bad—we’ve got Sis large cab- ) SEE THE PICTURES. to see it?” she wheedled of Aunt Jose phine. Aunt Josephine nodded acquiescence, and a moment later we all entered the ‘buflding. “You—you are very careful since that last warning?” asked Flaine as we approached our door. “More than ever—now,” replied Orais “lI have made up my mind ‘o win.” Kennedy had started to unlock the door, when he stopped short. “See,” he said. “this is a precaution 1 have just installed. [I most forgot in the excitement.” He pressed a panel and disclosed the boxlike apparatus. “This is my kinograph, which tells me whether I have had any visitors in my absence. If the pen traces a straight line, it is all right; but ift— hello—Walter, the Mine is wavy.” We exchanged a significant glance. “Would you mind—er—standing down the hall just a bit while I en- ter?” asked Craig. “Be careful,” cautioned Elaine. He unlocked the door, standing off to. one side. Then he extended his hand across the doorway Still noth- It Was the Clutching Hand. ing happened. There was not a sound. He looked cautiously into the room. Apparently there was nothing. ® $ ® ® ® ® ® It had been about the middle of the morning that an express wagon had pulled up sharply before our apart- | e | ent. “Mr, Kennedy. live here?” asked one his helper and approaching our janitor, Jens: Jensen; a typical Swede, who was coming up out'of the basement. Jens growléd a surly, “Yes—but Mr. inet he ordered from Grand Rapids. Wea, can't cart it around. IT doy, Can't You let ug In so We can Isave it?” Jemsen muttered: “Well—I guess it bane sll right.” Fhey took the cabinet off the wagon and Jarried it upstairs. Jensen Voi door, still Eo they sacnd the heavy cabinet in a Hving Sign here.” oy fallers bape a nuisance,” pro- tested: Jens, signing nevertheless. Scarcely had the sound of their footfalls died away in the outside hall way when the door of the cabinet slowly opened and a masked face pro- truded, gazing about the room. It was the Clutching Hand! From the cabinet he took a large package wrapped in newspapers. As Das held it, looking keenly about, his eye rested on Elaine's picture. A mo- ment he looked at it, then quickly at the fireplace opposite. An idea seemed to occur to him. He took the package to the fireplace, removed the screen and laid the pack- age over the andirons with one end pointing out into the room. Next he took from the cabinet a couple of storage batteries and a coil of wire. Deftly and quickly he fixed them on the package. Meanwhile, before an alleyway across the street and further down the long block the express wagon had stopped. Having completed fixing the bat: teries and wires, Clutching Hand ran the wires along the molding on the wall overhead, from the fireplace un- til he was directly over Elaine's pic ture. Skillfully he managed to fix the wires, using them in place of the ple- ture wires to support the framed pho- tograph until it hung very noticeably askew on the wall; The last wire joined, he looked about the room, then noisel.ssiy moved to the window and raised the shade, Quickly he raised his hand and brought the fingers slowly together. It was the sign. Off in the alley, the express driver and his helper jumped into the wagon and sway it rattled. Jensen was smoking placidly as the wagon pulled up the second time. “Sorry,” said the driver sheepishly, “but we delivered the cabinet to the wrong Mr. Kennedy.” He pulled out the inevitable book to prove it. “Wall, you bane flne fallers,” growled Jensen, puffing like a furnace, in his fury. “You cannot go up agane.” “We'll get fired for the mistake,” pleaded the helper. “Just this ance.” urged the driver. as ERIN SIT ner EE he rattled some loose change in hig pocket. ‘“Here—there goes a whole day's tips.” He handed Jens a dollar in smal} change. Still grumpy, but mollified by the silver, Jens let them go up and opened tue door to our rooms again. There stood the cabinet, as outwardly inno cent ag when ft came in. Lugging and tugging they mrnaged. to get the heavy piece of furniture out and downstairs again, loading it om the wagon. Then they drove off with it, accompanied by a parting volley from Jensen In an unfrequented street, perhaps half a mile away, the wagon stopped. With a keen glance around, the driver ‘and his helper made sure that no one was about. “Such a shaking up as you've given me!” growled a voice as the cabinet door opened. “But I've got him this time!” It was the Clutching Hand. ® ® : or ® ® *® eo Craig gazed into our living room cau- tiously “I can’t see anything wrong,” he said to m. as I stood just beside aim. “Miss Dodge,” he added, “will you and the rest excuse me if | agk you to walt just a moment longer?” Elaine watched him, fascinated. He crossed the room, then went ifito each of our other rooms. Apparently noth- ing was wrong and a miniite liter he réappeared at the doorway. “I guess it's all right,” he sale. “Per haps it was only Jensen, the janitor.” Elaine, Aunt Josephine and Susie Martin entered. Craig placed chairs: for them, but still I could See that he was uneasy. From time to time, while they were admiring one of our treas- ures after another, he glaneed about suspicious. y “What is the trouble; de you think?” asked Elaine wonderingly, noticing his manner. “I—I can’t just say,” answered Craig tryin, to appear easy. She had risen and with keen inter- est was looking at the books, the pic~ tures. the queer eéllection of weapons and odds and ends from the under world that Craig had amasse: ir hig adventures At las! her eye wandered across the room. She caught sight of her own pictu-e. occupying a place of honor— but hanging askew. “Isn’t that just like a man?!” she ex- claimed. “Such housekeepers as you are—such carelessness!” She had taken a stop or two across the room to straighten the picture. ‘Miss Dodge!" almost shouted Ken: nedy, his face fairly blanched. “Stop!” She turned, her stunning eyes filled with amazement at his suddenness. Nevertheless she moved quickly to one : side, as he waved his arms, unable to ! speak quickly enough. Kennedy stood quite still, gazing at the picture, askew, with suspicion. “That wasn’t that way when we left, was it, Walter?” he asked. “It certainly was not,” 1 answered positively. “There was more time spent in getting that picture just right than I ever saw you spend on the Cn frowned. os myself 1 dud not know what ake of ft. “I'm afraid I shall have to ask you $0 step into this baok room,” sald Craig at length to the ladies. “I'm 80 but we can’t be too careful with fits {ritruder, whoever he was.” Elaine, however, stopped at the door. For a moment Kennedy appeared to be considering. Then his eye fell om a fishing rod that stood in a corner. He took it and moved toward the pic ture. On his hands and knees, to one side, down as close as he could get to the floor, with the rod extended at arin’s length, he motioned to me to do the same, behind him. Carefully Kennedy reached out with the pole and straightened the picture. As he did so there was a flash, a loud, deafening report, and a great puff of smoke from the fireplace. The fire screen was riddled and over turned. A charge of buckshot shat- tered the precious photograph of Elaine. We had dropped flat on the floor at the report. I looked about. Kennedy was unharmed and so were the rest. With a bound he was at the fire- place, followed by Elaine and the rest of us. There, in what remained of a package done up roughly in newspa- per, was a shotgun with its barrel sawed off about six inches from the lock, fastened to a block of wood, and connected to a series of springs om the trigger, released by a little electro- magnetic arrangement actuated by two batteries and leading by wires up along the molding to the picture where the slightest touch would complete the circuit. A startled cry from Klaine caused us to turn. : She was standing directly before her shattered picture where it hung awry on the wall. The heavy charge of buckshot had knocked away large pieces of paper and plaster under it. “Craig!” she gasped. He was at her side in a second. She laid one hand on his arm, as she faced him. With the other she traced an imaginary line in the air from the level of the buckshot to his head and then straight to the infernal thing that had lain in the fireplace. “And to think,” she shuddered, “that it was through me that he tried to kill you!” “Never mind,” laughed Craig easily, as they gazed into each other's eyes, drawn together by their mutual peril, “Clutching Hand will have to be cleverer than this to get either of us —Hlainel” fFfO BE CONTINUED.) -~ nm