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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Sure Relief FOR Blind The Mans Eyes Aspirin INDIGESTION 109 By 1 INDIGESTION, 23 CENTS JJ 6 Say Bayer and Insist! Bell-an- s Sure Copyright by Little, Brown and Company Bellans AND 75$ CHAPTER XIX ALLENS FOOT EASE Fbr Corns. Unless you see the name Bayer on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-twyears and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept Bayer Tablets of Aspirin only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Ilandy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldester of Salicylicacld. Advertisement. Bunions. o 1,111 lockage and a KootEase VValklne Poll sent Free. Address ALLENS EOOT y. N. VICTIMS RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles are most dangerous because of their insidious attacks. 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However, if you wish first to test this great preparartion send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Advertisement. Veil; Remove Swamp-Roo- It treatment of freckles is usually so successful In removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold under guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Dont hide your freckles under a veil; .get an ounce of Othlne and remove them. Even the first few applications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for tbs Othlne; it is this that is vaold on the money-bacguarantee. double-strengt- t should do. Double Strength for the preparation is a Swamp-Roo- CKI Dont Hide Them With a t is sold by all druggists on h k Agreed With Her Aspirations. Im crazy to ride in an airplane. Yes, you certainly are. 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In Use For Over 30 Years Too Signature of 98 OUT Continued. 16 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE wv. WILLIAM MacHARG EDWIN BALMER Hot water 25$ OF EVERY 100 WOMEN BENEFITED She told him, beginning with her discovery of Eaton In the garage and ending with his leaving her and with Donald Averys finding her in the motor; and now she held back one word only his name which he had told her, Hugh. Her father listened intently. You and Mr. Eaton appear to have become rather well acquainted, Harriet, he said. Has he told you nothing about himself which you have not told me? You have seen nothing concerning him, which you have not An Absolutely Reliable Statement Important to Every Woman For some time a circular has been enclosed with each bottle of our medHava icine bearing this question: you received benefit from taking Lvdia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound? Replies, to date, have been received from over 50,000 women answering that question. 1)8 per cent of which say Of course we know that our medicine does benefit the large majority But that only of women who take two out of 100 received no benefit ia most astonishing. It only goes to prove, however, it t YES. That means that 9S out of every lOO women who take Die medicine for the ailments ior which it is recommended .are bonclited by it This is a most remarkable record of efficiency. We doubt if any other medicine in the world equals it. Think of it only two women out cf 100 received no benefit 08 successes out of a possible 100. Did you ever hear anything like it? We must admit that we, ourselves, Ere astonished. that a medicine specialized for certain definite ailments not a cure all one that is made by the most scientific process; not from drugs, but from a combination of natures roots and herbs, can and does do more good than hastily prepared prescrip-don- s. You see, we have been making, improving and refining this medicine for over 50 years until it is so perfect and so well adapted to womens needs that it actually has the virtue to benefit 98 out of every 100 women who take it reliability and recognized has gained for it a sale in almost every country in the world ilts leading all others. Siicli evidence should induce every woman suffering fromle 13. Pinkhams anv ailment peculiar to her sex to try Lydiaone of tlio 08. Tho Compound and see If she cant he Lydia D. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. it a: ssssmasKXTsm. ege-tab- TIPATIKDM Take a good dose of Carters Little Liver Pills then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after.They CARTER'S cleanse your system of all waste matter and IITTLE Regulate Your Bowels. Mild as easy to , u I take as sugar. Genuine bear signature 4 VER Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. toines trust. unat-taeke- Then d La-tro- s. I sound-proo- f n Dr and S. T. . I narkable Results Shown by a Nation ide Canvass of Women Purchasers of Lydia E. Pinkhara,4 Vegetable Com- pound. 50,000 Vomen Answer of the other two agnlnst the third? It appeared probable to Santolne that Eaton had been alone, or had come alone, to the study and had met his enemies there. Santolne felt that the probabilities were that Eatons enemies had opened llie safe and had been surprised by Eaton. But If they had opened the safe, they were not only Eaton's enemies; they were also Santolne's; they were the men who threatened San- Warden had been killed. Wardens death had caused Santolne to go to Seattle and take charge or many of Wardens affairs; Eaton had thought that the Information which had been In Wardens possession might now be In Santoines; Eaton, therefore, had followed Santolne onto the train. The Inference was plain that something which would have given Santolne the Information Warden had had and which Eaton now required had been brought Into Santolne's house and put In Santoines safe. It was to get possession of this something before it had reached Santolne that the safe had been forced. Suntolne put out his hand and pressed a bell. A servant came to the door. Will you find Miss Santolne," the blind man directed, and ask her to Those whom Eaton had fought In the room had had perfect opportunity for killing Santolne, If they wished. But Santolne felt certain no one had made any attack upon him at any come here? The servant withdrew. moment In the room; he had had no Santolne waited. Presently the door of at that any feeling, any Instant, the shots fired had been directed at again opened, and he heard his daugtold? hters step. him. Blatchford, too, had been Her mind went quickly back to the Have you listed what was taken made It plain that he had until the safe, Harriet?" Santolne polo game; she felt a flush, which his he had from Intruone of the recognized blind eyes could not see, dyeing her Blatchford could asked. before then, ders; cheeks and forehead. Not yet, Father. call the name, he had been shot down. The blind man waited for a moblind man thought an Instant. The It was clear, then, that what had ment ; he put out his hand and pressed Harriet, something has been brought his was Santolne blindness; the bell which called the steward. protected he had no doubt that. If he had been Into the house or the manner of Neither spoke until the steward came. able to see and In the house has recognize the men In keeping something been within a very few days Santolne, said then, quiFairley, changed the room after the lights were turned since the time, I think, when the etly, Miss Santolne and I have just on, he would have been shot down agreed that for the present all reports also. But Santolne recognized that attempt to run Eaton down with the regarding the pursuit of the men who this did not fully account for his Im- motor car was made. What was that entered the study last night are to munity. Two weeki before, an atsomething?" be made direct to me, not through tack which had been meant for Eaton His daughter reflected. "The draft Miss Santolne or Mr. Avery. had struck down Santolne Instead ; of the new agreement about the Very well, sir. properties and the lists of stockand no further attempt against Eaton She still sat silent after the steward had been made until It had become holders In the properties which came had gone; she thought for an Instant known that Santolne was not through Mr. Wardens office, she reher father had forgotten her presence ; publicly If Santolne's death plied. going to die. then he moved slightly. "Those were In the safe? would have served for Eatons death That Is all, dear, he said quietly. two weeks before, why was Santolne Yes ; you had not given me any1 inShe got up and left him, and went Immune now? Did about them, so I had put structions of the possession to her own rooms ; she did not pretend contents of Santoines safe accomplish them Iff the other safe; but when I to herself that she could rest. She the same thing as Santolne's death? went to get the correspondence I saw bathed and dressed and went down- Or more than his death for these men? them there and put them with the stairs. The library had windows fac- For what men? correspondence in my own safe. Santolne lay still. ing to the west; she went in there It was not, Santolne was certain, and stood looking out. Who besides Donald knew that you Eatons presence In the study which Her mind was upon only one thing had so astounded Blatchford, Wallace did that, Daughter? he asked. even of that she could not think con- and Eaton had passed days together, No one." Thank you." nectedly. Some years ago, something and Blatchford was accustomed to Eashe did not know what had hap- tons presence In the house. Someone Harriet recognized this as dismissal pened ta Hugh; tonight, In some whom Blatchford knew and whope and went out The blind man felt the strange way unknown to her, It had name Santolne also would know and blood beating fiercely In his temples culminated In her fathers study. He whose presence In the room was so and at his finger-tipIt amazed, as- had fought someone; he had rushed strange and astonishing that Blatchaway to follow someone. Whom ? ford had tried to prepare Santolne for Had he heard that someone In the the announcement, had been there. study and gone down? Had he tieen The man whose name was on Blatch-ford- s fighting their battle her fathers and tongue, or the companion of hers? She knew that was not so. that man, had shot Blatchford rather Hugh had been fully dressed. What than let Santolne hear the name. did It mean that he had said to her He was beginning to find events fit that these events would either de- themselves together; but they fitted stroy him or would send him back to Imperfectly as yet. her as as something different? Her Santolne knew that he lacked the thought supplied no answer. key. Many men could profit by posBut whatever he had done, whatever sessing the contents of Santoines safe he might be, she knew his fate was and might have shot Blatchford rather hers now; for she had given herself than let Santolne know their presence to him utterly. She had told that to there; It was Impossible for Santolne herself as she fled and pursued with to tell which among these many the him that night ; she had told It to him ; man who had been In the study she later had told It though she had might be. Who Eatons enemies were not meant to yet to her father. She was equally unknown to Santolne. could only pray now that out of the But there could be but one man or events of this night might not come at most one small group of men who a grief to her too great for her to could be at the same time Eatons bear. To have enemy and Santoines. She went to the rooms that had known who Eaton was would have been Eatons. The police, in stripping pointed this man to Santolne. Gabriel Warden had had an apthem of his possessions, had overlooked his cap; she found the bit of pointment with a young man who had gray cloth and hugged it to her. She come from Asia and who Warden had told his wife he had discovered his name to herself Have You Listed What Wat Taken whispered From the Safe, Harriet? Santoine Hugh that secret of his name which lately had been greatly wronged. she had kept ; she gloried that she had Eaton, under Conductor Connerys Asked. that secret with him which she could questioning, had admitted himself to tounded him to realize that Wardens keep from them all. What wouldnt be that young man ; Santolne had verimurder and all that had followed It fied had learned to with this and her share that that Eaton they give Just was, at least, the young man who had had sprung from the Latron case. lie his name, Hugh I She started suddenly, looking gone to Wardens house that night. recollected that he had been vaguely ever since Latrons murder through the window. The east, above But Gabriel Warden had not been al- conscious of something strained, something not to so to ; lowed E.ton far from was grow beginning help the lake, gray. that, It was be- he had not even been allowed to meet wholly open, In his relations with The dawn was coming and talk with Eaton; he had been those men whose Interests had been ginning to be day It She hurried to the other side of called out, plainly, to prevent his most closely allied with Latrons. been had open, and nothing killed. palwest. the toward nothing Eaton, meeting the house, looking Eaton disappeared and concealed pable; It was only that he had felt How could she have left him, hurt and She in himself alone the at once after Wardens mur- at times In them a knowledge of and night bleeding condition governing could not have done that but that his der, apparently fearing that he would some general was which not wholly known to them was It told Eaton be attacked. to had that But was also not her go asking for his safety as well as hers; she a man whom this personal fear would himself. Whoever Blatchford had seen could not help him any more then ; have restrained from coming forward was someone well known to him, she would only have been In the way. later to tell. why Warden had been whose presence had been so amazing But now she started to rush out, but killed. lie had been urged to come that speech had failed Blatchford for controlled herself ; she had to stay forward and promised that others the moment and he had feared the in the house ; that was where the first would give him help , In Wardens effect of the announcement on Sanword would come If they caught him ; place; still, he had concealed himself. tolne. This could have been only the and then he would need her, how This must mean that others than War- principal himself. Some circumstance which Santolne much more! The reporters on the den could not help Eaton; Eaton evilawn below her, seeing her at the windently did not know, or else could not comprehended only Imperfectly as yet had forced this man to come out from dow, called up to her to know fur- hope to prove, what Warden had disbehind his agents and to act even at ther particulars of what had hap- covered. Santolne held this thought In abey- the risk of revealing himself. It was pened and what the murder meant; she could see them plainly In the In- ance; he would see later how It probably he who, finding Blatchfords presence made revealment inevitable, creasing light. She could see the checked with the facts. Eaton had remained In Seattle or had killed Blatchford. But these cirlawn and the road before the house. near Seattle eleven days; apparently cumstances gave Santoine no clew ns Day had come. And with the coming of day, the un- and to escape attack during that time, to who the man might be. The blind certainty and disorder within and he had been able to conceal himself man tried vainly to guess. The only about the house seemed to Increase. He had been obliged, however, to re- circumstance regarding the man of veal himself when he took the train ; which Santoine now felt sure was . . But In the south wing, with . doors and Its windows and as soon as possible a desperate that he was one of the ninny conits closed against the noises from the attempt had been made against him, cerned In the Latron case or with the lawn, there was silence; and In this which, through mistake, had struck Latron properties. What time Is It? the blind man silence, an exact, compelling, methodic down Santolne Instead of Eaton. Eaton had taken the train at Se- suddenly asked the nurse. machine was working; the mind ot It Is nearly noon, Mr. Santolne. Basil Santolne was striving, vuinly as attle because Santolne was on It; he suchimWill you leave me alone for a few to had risk of done at this chances with but great growing yet, moments? he directed. cess, to fit together Into the order In self. The possibilities were that EaHe listened till he heard the door which they belonged and make dear ton had taken the train to Inform Santhe events of the night and all that tolne of something or to learn some- close behind the nurse; then he seized had gone before arranging, ordering, thing from him. But Eaton had had the private 'phone beside his bed and testing, discarding, picking up again ample opportunity since to Inform called his broker. How Is the market? he Inquired. and reordering all that had happened Santolne of anything he wished; and There was something approaching since that other murder, of Gabriel he had not only not Informed him of to a panic on the stock exchange. It Warden. anything, but had refused consistently Some movement, arising and determinedly to answer any of appeared. Santoines questions. It was to learn from onuses not yet clear, had dropped CHAPTER XX something from Santolne, then, that the bottom out of a score of Important stocks. Eaton had taken the train. What One Can Do Without Eyes. How Is Pacific Midlands? SanThe blind man turned upon his bed ; Three men at least three men had fought In the study In Santoines he was finding that events fitted to- tolne asked. "It led the decline. presence. Eaton, It was certain, had gether perfectly. He felt certain now Santoine felt the blood In his tembeen the only one from the house pres- that Eaton had gone to Gabriel War"M. and N. Smelters? he ent when the first shots were fired. den expecting to get from Warden ples. Had Eaton been alone against the some information that he needed, and asked. Down seven points. ether two? Hid Eaton been with one that to prevent Wardens giving him 1 HPIU-- S thl, Eight points offi." Santoines hand, holding the telephone, shook In Its agitation; his head was hot from the blood rushing through It, his body was chilled. An Idea so strange, so astounding, so Incredible ns it first had come to him that his feelings refused It though his reason told him It was the only possible condition which could account for all the facts, now was being made all but certain. He named stock after stock; all were1 down Seriously depressed or had been supported only by a desperate effort of their chief holders. The blind man could write as well as any other by following the position of the lines with the fingers of his left hand. He wrote a short note swiftly now, folded, sealed and addressed It and handed It to the servant Have that delivered by a messenThera ger at once, he directed. will be no written answer, I think; only something sent back a photograph. See that It Is brought to me at once. He heard the servants footsteps going rapidly away. He was shaking with anger, horror, resentment; he was almost not quite sure now of all that had taken place ; of why Warden had been murdered, of what vague shape had moved behind and guided all that had happened since. He recalled Eatons voice as he had heard It first on the train at Seattle; and now he was almost sure not quite that he could place that voice, that he knew where he had heard i before. He lay with clenched hands, shaking with rage; then by effort of his will he put these thoughts away. The nurse reminded him again of his need for food. I want nothing now," he said. Have It ready when I wake up. When the doctor comes, tell him I am going to get up today and dress. He turned and stretched himself upon his bed ; so, finally, he slept CHAPTER XXI The Man Hunt land rolling, where Harriet had left Eaton was wooded thickly with oaks, maples and ash ; the glare from the burning bridge lighted the ravine for only little way ; Eaton had gained the of the ravine beyond the point where this light would have made him visible and had made the best speed he could along It away from the lights and voices on the road. This speed was not very great; his stockinged feet sank to their ankles In the soft mud of the ravine; and when, realizing that he was leaving a trace easily followed even by lantern-light- , he clambered to the steep side and tried to travel along Its slope, he found his progress slower still. In the darkness he crashed sometimes full against the ; bushes which he could not see seized and held him, ripping and tearing at bis clothes; invisible, fallen saplings tripped him, and he Into unseen holes which stepped threw him headlong, ao that twice he rolled clear to the bottom of the ravine with fierce, hot pains which nearly deprived him of his senses shooting through his wounded shoulThe ravlne-gullle- d bottom tree-trun- ( der. When he had made, as he thought, of a mile and fully three-quartemust be, allowing for the winding of the ravine, at least half a mile from his pursuers, he climbed to the brink of the bank and looked bapk. He was not, as he had thought, half a mile from the road; he was not a quarter of a mile; he could still see plainly the lights of the three motorcars upon the road and men moving In the flare of these lights. He was certain that he had recognized the figure of Avery among these men. Pursuit of him, however, appeared to have been checked for the moment ; he heard neither voices nor any movement In the woods. Eaton, panting, threw himself down to recover breath and rs strength to think. There was no question In Eatons mind what his fate would be If he surrendered to, or was captured by, his pursuers. What he had seen In Santoines study an hour before was so unbelievable, so completely unde-monstrab- unless he himself could prove his story that he felt that he would receive no credence. Blatchford, who had seen It in the light in the study, was dead; Santolne, who would have seen It If he had had eyes, was blind. Eaton, still almost stunned and yet wildly excited by that sight, felt only. In the mad confusion of his senses, the futility of telling what he had seen unless he were in a position to prove It. Those opposed to him would put his statement aside with the mere answer that he was lying; the most charitably Inclined would think only that what he had been through had driven him Insane. Eaton understood that his possibility of escape was very small, even If escape had been his only object ; but Eatons problem was not one of escape It was to find those he pup-sue- d and make certain that they were captured at the same time he was; and, as he crouched panting on the damp earth, he was thinking only of that. (TO BE CONTINUED.) The Best Ever. She was a little girl, and as they made their way In and out among the other couples she allowed her cheek to rest against his manly chest. Oh, Bill! called out an Irreverent youth ns he sailed by. "What? Thats a nice face yon have on your watch." Judge. Nature must love a Joke Judf from the funny people we me- - |