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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH WOMB SO WOULD NOT TRADE FOR $10,000 CASH g Benefits From Tanlac in Ending His Stomach and Rheumatic Troubles, Price'ess, States Tucker. -- take $10,000 for Business. Boss, said the Editors secretary, heres a letter from a fellow who wail-eyesays you are a hatchet-face- d horse thief. Whatll I answer lilin ? Why-er- , said the Editor, languidly, did he inclose a stamp for reply? Richmond hog-eare- pig-jawe- TImes-Dispatc- DYED HER BABYS COAT, A SKIRT AND CURTAINS WITH DIAMOND DYES Diamond Dyes contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things new. Even if she has never dyed before, she can put a new, rich color into shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, coverings, draperies, hangings, everything. Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed. Just tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. 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Y, will reduce them and leave no blem- ishes. Stops lameness promptly. DOCS not blister or remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2.50 a bottle delivered. Book 6 A free. F. You&i, Ik., 310 Temple St., SprinySeli, Baa. Cuticura Soap The V el vet Touch For the Skin Soap 25c, Oiataent 25 and 50c, EYESSORET. atid Talcm 25c. EYEWATER speedy retard y since 17V6. Bay at druggist1 or John L. Thompson Bon ft Oo four Haver Bireel. T.oy. H. I. BOOKLET FKEB it A reliable Ey Copyrlaht br Little. Brown and It's occupied by bis daughter." Well take him In there, then." The four men lifted the Inert figure of Basil Santoine, carried It Into the drawing room and laid It on Its back EATON SUSPECTED Gabriel Warden. Seattle capitalist, tells his butler he is expecting a caller, to be admitted without He Informs his wife of question. danger that threatens him If he course he considers the a pursues only honorable one. Warden leaves the house In his car and meets a man whom he takes Into the machine. W'hen the car returns home, Warden is found dead, muruered, and alone. The caller, a young man, has been at Warden's house, but leaves unobserved. Rob Connery, conductor, receives orcers to hold train for a party. Five men and a girl board t lie train, the Eastern Express. The father of the girl, Mr. Dome, is the person for whom the train was held. Philip D. Eaton, a young man, also boarded the train. Dome tells his daughter and his Secretary, Don Avery, to find out what they can concerning him. The two make Eatons acquaintance. Dome Is found nearly dead from a murderous assault. A surgeon operates. Dome Is revealed as Uasil Santoine, a great corporation lawyer. CHAPTER VI upon the bed. I have my Instruments," Sinclair said, ill got them; but before I decide to do anything, I ought to see his daughter. Since she Is here, her consent is necessary before any operation on ldm. Miss Santoine Is In the observation car, Avery said. Ill get her." The tone was in some way false Eaton could not tell exactly how. Avery started down the aisle. One moment, please, Mr. Avery!" said the conductor. Ill ask you not to tell Miss Santoine before any other passenger that there has been an attack upon her father. Wait until you get her Inside the door of this car." You yourself said nothing, then, that can have made her suspect It? Eaton asked. Connery shook his head; the conductor, in doubt and anxiety over exactly what action the situation called Continued. 5 Consulted continually by men concerned in great projects, Immersed day and night in vast affairs, capable of living completely as he wished he had been, at the age of forty-six- , great but not famous, powerful but not publicly known. At that time an event had occurred which had forced the blind man out unwillingly from his obscurity. This event had been the murder of the great western financier, Matthew Latron. There had been nothing in this affair which had In any way shadowed dishonor upon Santoine. So much as in his role of a mind without personality Santoine ever fought, he had fought against Latron; but his fight had been not against the man but against methods. There had come then a time of uncertainty and unrest; public consciousness was In the process of awakening to the knowledge that strange things, approaching close to the likeness of what men call crime, had been being done under the unassuming name of Scandal financial scandal business. breathed more strongly against Latron than perhaps against any of the He had been other western men. among their biggest; he had his eneCan You Do Anything for Him Here, mies, of whom impersonally Santoine Doctor7 He Asked. he and been counted one, might have had Ills friends, both In high places; for unable, too, to communicate any he was a world figure. Then, all of hint of it to his superiors to the west a sudden, the man had been struck because of the wires being down down killed, because of some private clearly had resolved to keep the atquarrel, men whispered, by an obscure tack upon Santoine secret for some man. and till then unheard-o- f I said nothing definite even time. The trembling wires and cables, to the trainmen, he replied; and I which should have carried to the wait- want you gentlemen to promise me before you leave this car that you will ing world the expected news of conviction, carried Instead the say nothing until I give you leave. news of Latrons death ; and disorder His eyes shifted from the face of followed. The first public concern one to another, until he had assured had been, of course, for the stocks and himself that all agreed. As Avery bonds of the great Latron properties; left the car, Eaton found a seat In and Latrons bigness had seemed only one of the end sections near the drawfurther evidenced by the stanchness ing room. He did not know whether with which the Latron banks, the La- to ask to leave the car, or whether he tron railroads and mines and public ought to remain; and he would have utilities stood firm even against the gone except for recollection of Harshock of their builders death. As- riet Santoine. Then the curtain at sured of this, public interest had shift- the end of the car was pushed further ed to the trial, conviction and sen- aside, and she came In. tence of Latrons murderer; and It She was very pale, but quite conwas during this trial that Santoines trolled, as Eaton knew she would be. name had become more publicly She looked at Eaton, but did not known. Not that the blind man was speak as she passed; she went disuspected of any knowledge much rectly to the door of the drawing less of any complicity In the crime; room, opened It and went in, followed the murder had been because of a by Avery. The door closed, and for purely private matter; but In the ea- a moment Eaton could hear voices Inger questioning Into Latron's circumside the room Harriet Santoines, stances and surroundings previous to Sinclairs, Connerys. The conductor the crime, Santoine was summoned then came to the door of the drawing Into court as a witness. room and sent the porter for water The blind man, led Into the court, and clean linen ; Eaton heard the rip sitting sightless In the witness chair, of linen being torn, and the car berevealing himself by his spoken, and came filled with the smell of antieven more by his withheld, replies as septics. Donald Avery came out of the drawone of the unknown guiders of the destiny of the Continent and as coun- ing room and dropped Into the seat selor to the most powerful himself across from Eaton. He seemed deeptill then hardly heard of but plainly ly thoughtful so deeply, Indeed, as to one of the nations uncrowned rulers be almost unaware of Eatons presAnd Eaton, had caught the public sense. The ence. observing him, fate of the murderer, the crime, even again had the sense that Averys abLatron himself, lost temporarily their sorption was completely In conseInterest In the public curiosity over quences to himself of what was going the personality of Santoine. on behind the door In how Basil It had been reported for some days Santoine's death or continued existthat Santoine had come to Seattle di- ence would affect the fortunes of Donrectly after AYarden's death; but ald Avery. how long, EaA hmg time passed when this was admitted, his associates had always been careful to add ton could not have told; he noted that Santoine, having been a close only that during it the shadows on personal friend of Gabriel Warden, the snowbank outside the window aphad come purely In a personal capacpreciably changed their position. Fiwas and the ity, given that nally the door opened, and Harriet Impression Santoine. had returned quietly, some Santoine came out, paler than before, days before. The mere prolonging of and now not quite so steady. Eaton rose as she approached his stay In the West was more than suggestive that affairs among the them; and Avery leaped up, all conpowerful were truly In such state as cern and sympathy for her ImmediWarden had proclaimed; this attack ately she appeared. He met her In upon Santoine, so similar to that the aisle and took her hand. Was It successful, dear?" Avery which had slain Warden, and delivered within eleven days of Wardens asked. She shut her eyes before she andeath, must be of the gravest significance. swered, and stood holding to the hack Connery stood overwhelmed for the of a seat; then she opened her eyes, moment with this fuller icogItlon saw Eaton and recognized him and of the seriousness of thi disaster sat down In the seat where Avery had whtch hnd come upon this man In- been sitting. Doctor Sinclair says we will know trusted to his charge; then tie turned In four or five days, she replied to (o the surgeon. Can you do anything for him here. Avery; she turned then directly to He thought there probably Eaton. Doctor? he asked. The Rurgeoc glanced down tl car. was a clot under the skull, and he is it occupied operated to find It and relieve It. La-tro- W. -- 8 8 hotstaho Says Lydia E.Pinkham, Veg etable Compound Made Her Well and Strong V v v Cmnm. jSl. ------ Glaas Falls, N. Y.-- For Btha 1 was ao tick I waa not aw we have done all he saw that the bag was no longci now we may only wait. Doc- there. It stood now between the two tor Sinclair has appointed himself Seats on the floor, and picking It up nurse; he says I can help him, but and looking at It, he found it unfasnot Just yet. I thought you would tened and with marks about the lock which told plainly that It had been like to know." Thank you; I did want to know," forced. He set It on the floor between his Eaton acknowledged, lie moved away from them, and sat down In one of knees and checked over Its contents. the seats further down the car. Nothing had been taken, so far as Soon he left for his own car, and he could tell; for the bag had conas the door was closing behind hhn, tained only clothing, the Chinese dica sound came to his ears from the car tionary and the box of cigars, and these all apparently were still there. he Just had left a young girl sudHe had laid out the things on the in abandon. Harriet denly crying Santoine, he understood, must have seat across from him while checking broken down for the moment, after them up, and now he began to put the strain of the operation; and Ea- them back in the bag. Suddenly he ton halted as though to turn back, noticed that one of his socks was feeling the blood drive suddenly upon missing; what had been eleven pairs his heart. Then, recollecting that he was now only ten pairs and one odd had no right to go to her, he went on. sock. This disappearance of a single sock was so strange, so bizarre, so perCHAPTER Vll plexing that unless It was accidental he could not account for It at all. Suspicion Fastens on Eaton. Eaton found his car better filled No one opens a man's bag and steals than It had been before, for the people one sock, and he was quite sure there shifted from the car behind had been had been eleven complete pairs there scattered through the train. Keeping earlier In the day. Certainly then, It himself to his section, he watched the had been accidental: the ling had car and outside the windows for been opened, Its contents taken out signs of what Investigation Connery and examined, and In putting them and Avery were making. Whoever back, one sock had been dropped unThe absence of the sock, had attacked Santoine must still be noticed. upon the train, for no one could have then, meant no more than that the escaped through the snow. No one contents of the hag had been thorBy whom? By could now escape. Avery and Connery oughly Investigated. and whoever else was making Invest- the man against whom the telegram igation with them evidently were not directed to Lawrence Illllward had letting anyone know that an Investi- warned Eaton? Ever since his receipt of the telegation was being made. Eaton went to lunch ; on his way hack from the gram, Eaton as he passed through diner, he saw the conductors with pa- the train In going to and from the pers in their hands questioning a pas- diner or for other reasons had been senger. They evidently were starting trying covertly to determine which, systematically through the cars, exam- If anyone, among the pnsspngers, was one who, the telegram hnd ining each person; they were making the him. was warned a following him, to of the plea report necessity of the railroad offices of names and ad- For at first he had Interpreted It to dresses of all held up by the stoppage lnpan that one of them" whom he had to fear must be on the train. of the train. on toward the rear Enter he had felt certain that this Eaton started could not be the case, for otherwise of the train. any one of them who knew him "A moment, sir!" Connery called. Eaton halted. The conductor con- would have spoken by this time. Now his suspicions that one of them must fronted him. be aboard the train returned. Tour name, sir?" Connery asked. The bag certainly hnd not been carPhilip D. Eaton. out the forward door of the car, ried answer. wrote down the Connery or he would have seen It from the Tour address?" I have no address. I was going compartment at that end of the car to a hotel In Chicago which one I where he had snt smoking. The bag, therefore, had been carried out the hadnt decided yet." rear door, and the man who had Where are you coming from? opened it, If a passenger, must still From Asia." "Thats hardly an address, Mr. Ea- be In the rear part of the train. to Eaton, refilling his cigar-cas- e ton!" I can give you no address abroad. give his action a look of casualness, I had no fixed address there. I was got up and went toward the rear of traveling most of the time. I arrived the train. A porter was still posted In Seattle by the Asiatic steamer and at the door of the Santoine car, who warned him to be quiet In passing took this train." through. The car, he found, was enon came "Ah Tamba the you Maru. tirely empty; the door to the drawing Connery made note of this, as he room where Santoine lay was closed. He went on Into ths observation had made note of all the other quesThen he said car. A few men and women passentions and answers. something to the Pullman conductor, gers here were reading or talking. who replied In the same low tone; Glancing on past them through the what they said was not audible to glass door at the end of the car, he saw Harriet Santoine standing alone Eaton. The "Tou can tell us at least where on the observation platform. your family Is, Mr. Eaton," Connery girl did not see him ; her back was toward the car. As he went out onto suggested. the platform and the sound of the I have no family." closing door came to her, she turned Friends, then?" to meet him. I I have no friends." She looked white and tired, and Nowhere?" faint gray shadows underneath her Nowhere." Connery pondered for several moments. The Mr. Illllward Lawrence Hlllward, to whom the telegram was addressed which you claimed this morning, your associate who was to have taken this train with you will you give me his address? I dont know Hlllwards address. Give me the address, then, of the man who sent the telegram." I am unable to do that, either. Connery spoke again to the Pullman conductor, and they conversed lnau-dibl- y for a minute. That Is all, then, Connery said finally. He signed his name to the sheet on which he had written Eatons answers, and handed It to the Pullman conductor, who also signed it and returned It to him ; then they went on to the passenger now occupying Section Four, without making any further comment. Eaton told himself that there should be no danger to himself from this Inquiry, directed against no one, but Including comprehensively everyone on the train. When the conductors had left the car, he put his magazine away and went Into the men's comYour Name, Sir?" Connery Asked. partment to smoke and calm his nerves. Ills return to America had eyes showed where dark circles were passed the bounds of recklessness; beginning to form. and what a situation he would now be she I am supposed to be resting, In if his actions brought even serious explained quietly, accepting him as suspicions against him! He finished one who had the right to ask. his first cigar and was debating How Is your father? whether to light another, when he Just the same; there may be no heard voices outside the car, and change. Doctor Sinclair says, for days. opening the window and looking out, It spems all so sudden and so terhe saw Connery and the brakeman rible, Mr. Eaton. struggling through the snow and makPresing, apparently, some search. You dog! he mouthed. 'Harently Connery passed the door of the something compartment carrying ry, this Is the man that did It. loosely wrapped In a newspaper In his hands. Eaton finished his cigar (TO HD CONTINUED.) and went back to his seat In the car. As he glanced at the seat when Tru h needs no flowers of speech. be had left his locked traveling hag. There was one, and we can to stand on my foot and my husband did my housework. Tn the good I wouldnt Thnlac has done me, declared W. B. Tucker, 1120 North 28th St., Richmond, Va., a boxmaker for the Allegheny Box Co., recently. I thought I would have to give up the job I had been on seventeen years, but. Tanlac has built me up eighteen pounds, and I never felt better In my ife. I was so weak and run down and had lost so much weight and strength i just felt broken down all the time. i got up mornings awfully nervous, with no appetite, feeling like I hadnt slept a wink, and while on the job my nerves were so unstrung that the noise In the factory just tortured me. My liver wasnt acting right, and I suffered so much from rheumatism I could hardly use my arms. 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