Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 81, Decatur, Adams County, 4 April 1916 — Page 2

§m AME® J A Story of Mountain Railroad Life ' W fPANKK* SPEAPHAN

AUTHOR OF “WHISPERING SMITH,” “THE MOUNTAIN DIVIDE, ,r “STRATECY OF GREAT RAILROADS,” ETC. SYNOPSIS. ldttl# Helen Holmes, daughter of General Holmes, railroad man, Is rescued from Imminent danger on a scenic railroad by George Storm, a newsboy. Grown to young womanhood. Helen saves Storm, now a fireman, her father, and his friends Amos Hhinelander, financier, and Robert » fc>. agrue, promoter, from a threatened , collision. Sufebreakers employed by Seagrue steal General Holmes’ survey plans of the cut off line for the Tidewater, fatally wound the general and escape. Her | father's estate badly involved by Me j death, Helen goes to work on the Tide- ; water. Helen recovers the survey plana from Seagrue. and though they are taken from her, finds an accidentally made ( proof of the survey blueprint. Storm it i employed by Rhinelander. Spike, be friended by Helen, in his turn saves hei and the right-of-way contracts wiien Sea* yruF khliicips- he*.—llrlen and Sianii wir for Rhinelander a race against Seagru* for right-of-way. Helen, Storm and Rhinelander rescue Spike from Seagrue men. Spike steals records to protect Rhinelander, and Storm and Helen save Spike from death in the burning court house. Vein in Superstition mine pinches nut. Seagrue salts it and sells it to Rhinelander. TWELFTH INSTALLMENT BURIED ALIVE Seagrue’s sale to Rhinelander of the i Superstition mine did not go through as smoothly as he had expected. Meeting Rhinelander at the office of an attorney in Las Vegas, the details of j the transfer were arranged without much difficulty. Rhinelander's only j care was to be sure that the conveyance should give him a clear title to i the valuable property, and having sat- j isfled himself on this point, the minor details were easily arranged. While the attorney was embodying these items in a supplementary agreement, Rhinelander wrote cut a telegram to Helen telling her that he was completing the transfer cf the mine nnd would come up on No. 8. When the final draft of the contract had been made in duplicate, and signed by the ! two parties, in due form, Rhinelander handed over a second check to Scagrue, and putting the agreement in his pocket, left the office. Seagrue watched him gc with some- j thing of relief and a great deal of j satisfaction. The whole scheme he i had so successfully compassed looked ! to him almost toe good to be true, and I he had a hearty laugh with the at- j torney before they left the office to-; gether. But, unexpectedly enough, opposi- ; tion developed in an unlooked-for quar- I ter, namely, among minority stock- | holders of the mine itself. Rumors flew thick and fast, and at Oceanside Seagrue was openly accused of underhand, d work in parting with the property. To afford a clear understanding of his position, a meeting of the stockholders cf the mine was called, and Seagrue, when the time came, addressed the gathering in explanation of the sale. "I hatfe understood,” he began, “there has been some criticism of my action in disposing of the Superstition mine to the Copper Range and Tidewater people. Some of our stockhold- i ers have been unkind enough to hint \ Helen Told of the Disaster. that there was treachery in my part of the proceedings. I have called this meeting tc explain without any mincing of words why I was forced to act as I did on my own responsibility and to act quickly.” He related in detail the story of the sudden word received from the mine foreman announcing the petering out of the vein. In more veiled language, but still making himself piain enough to be understood, he disclosed the thought that had come to him of getting the mine ready for Ale by salting it, and of his subsequent success in unloading the property on Rhinelander wigiout serious loss to any of the shareholders. In spite of his explanation, protest was heard almost at once against his summary action in selling out without authority from the directors. Seagrue met the criticisms firmly. “If I had stopped to ask the directors for au-

NOVELIZED FROM THE MOVING PICTURE PLAY OF THE SAME NAME. PRODUCED BY THE SIGNAL FILM CORPORA- * TION. COfrmOHT. ISO. tv FRANK h ifurman. I thority as to what to do, the news of the failure of our principal vela would have been all over Nevada. It would have been too late to c; It ue property j at any price U) anybody." “If the vein could be recovered ' what difference would that make?’ asked one of the disaffected share holders. "It would make the difference that you would be holding the sack instead of the other fellow,” retorted Seagrue bluntly. The chairman, one of the larger mi nority stockholders, proved one of the least tractable of the dissatisfied. He rose to reniT lu Seugrue's address. - “You are telling us,” he said coldly “that you disposed of one of the best quartz properties in the Superstition mountains for a song because your foreman told you the vein had pinched . cut. And you say your expert cortoborated his statement. By what right did you go ahead in this fashion with out calling us together to decide whether we did not want further ex pert advice on the possibility of lo eating the vein?” “That part of the matter has been threshed out already,” said Seagrue , angrily. , “No, it hasn't," retorted the chair man. “Not to our satisfaction. Where , the investment is so large, our interests should have been given the most careful consideration before you dis posed of them.” “You wouldn't have got ten cents out of your interests " exclaimed Sea grue, “if you had tried what you now propose.” “Even that wouldn’t have been a se rious matter,” persisted the chairman “as compared to what you have done. None of us herd are dependent cn dividends from the Superstition mines for our bread and butter. We feel, as business men, that we are entitled to consideration. You haven’t given us that. By your own confession, you have disposed of this property under false pretenses. You have, by your conduct toward your competitors, jus tilled the suspicion that has arisen among your own associates, Mr. Sea grue.” “I don’t wish to make any unfair in sinuations or to assert what I cannot prove, but,” interposed a second share- ! holder from the foot of the table, “1 want to call forth your attention and I the attention of every man in this meeting to the fact that the moment it is discovered by the Tidewater people that this mine was salted, we shall be called on to refund every dollar of the money paid to us.” "If that is the case,” SDeered Sea grue, “I should say you fellows had bet ter stop talking. Your greatest safety,” he added, without much display, of sympathy for the uneasy ones, “lies in keeping your mouths shut.” “It is a matter of no moment what ever,” declared the stubborn chair man, “hew much the thing is discussed. You know the men in this , room, Mr. Seagrue, well enough to - know that we should all take the same j position concerning what you confess ( you, yourself, have done in this mat- , ter. No matter what happened, we j should never approve such proceed- , ings.” » j “As things stand, I don’t know what else you can do,” said Seagrue, sui- t lenly. “You talk here as if you owned j thi3 mine, I want you to understand £ that I hold the control of it, and you j will do as I say.” “No,” declared one stockholder. r jumping up, “I won’t do any such th*ng.” “Then you may do as you wish,” re- f plied Seagrue, loftily, “but I am r through with the Superstition mine.” The heated discussion continued, j Almost everyone in the room took j sides against Seagrue. Final)., at bay a himself, and realizing the trouble the ■■ minority stockholders eculd put btra j to, he made a further conciliatory proposal. "As We cannot agree,” he said, t "1 am willing to buy your shares in t the mine at their par value.’This seemed to pour a little oil upon 1 the troubled waters. After some fv.r- i ther wrangling, details were actually c arranged then and there for the trails- t fer of the minority shares, and the meeting closed in a better feeling than . it had opened. , At the mine, . Helen and George ' Storm were talking together when the I fpreman joined them. Helen asked him about the work. “If you’ll come this way,’ ho suggested, “I'll show you exactly “'litre we’re going to drill today.” A messenger handed Helen a dlspa*ch. It was from Rhinelander announcing the completion of the transfer and advising her Jie would arrive on No. 8. ’’First, we’ll go down and meet Mr. Rhinelander,” said Storm to the foreman. “When we come back we’ll see where you’re working.” Rhinelander returned well pleased j

with the result of his trip. They walked over to the mine together and entered it While they ! were talking, a man cama to Mr ! Rhinelander, saying that the foreman I had asked to see him. Accompanied j by Helen and Storm, Rhinelander i walked down tho tunnel to where the men wero working. The foreman turned from his work. '“How aro things looking?" demanded Rhinelander. "Why, to tell the truth," answered tho matt reluctantly, “they aro not looking as good this morning as they j were yesterday.” “What do you mean?” “We had trouble with tills vein once or twice before.” begets thr foreman guardedly, “but it didn’t turn out very j serious. This time It looks as If the ! vein had pinched out on us. Just J come over this way ” Rhinelander stood as If rooted to ! the ground, looking significantly tho while from Helen to Storm. "Helen,” j he said quizzically, “what does that 1 sound like to you?" Helen looked at him evenly. “It sounds,” she replied, ’’very much like ! Mr. Ear! Seagrue." Followed by his companions, Rhine i lander joined the foreman. They examined the rook in turn and held a long discussion. The foreman sug gestod calling in an expert. "No,” said Rhinelander, stubbornly; j “I just bought this mine on the recom- 1 mendation of an expert; all I want is a little hard-headed, common sense here, and lam going to have It. The b( st authorities in the mtntng world ' told General Hoftnes he had a property here that would last as long as these mountains lasted.” “But Seagrue must have known all * this,” interposed Helen. “He thought It time to unload, beyond a doubt,” answered Rhinelander. “Helen.” he exclaimed, ' I know Seagrue better than you do. I know how full his head is of schemes and all that. But I want to tell you it is a fact that Earl Seagrue is a quitter. He gives up too quick and starts a new scheme. Now, lam not going to quit on the Superstition mine until : I’ve made a thorough investigation of this trouble, 1 am not a miner,” he

i» *vw- tfmf' 1 »f > ' ht.lf TW «•• arw - 4 w, £ k xfel ’•■ .U-- ... , The Imprisoned Men Were Passed Out.

said, speaking to the foreman; “I’m Just a plain, everyday railroad man. i Bat I've heard that things can be done even when a vein pinches out. Now, ' you get busy.” he said to the listening j foreman, “and tell r*e, now and here, what's the first thing to do to try to pick this vein up again.” "Ycu might pick it up.” responded * the foreman, “for a song, if you’re j lucky. It all depends. You might | spend a million dollars and never pjck it up.” “Well, we don’t have to spend the million all at once, do we?” The foreman admitted they did not. 1 "Very well," continued Rhinelander, t sharply. “How’s the first part of that money to be s, •at’:” The foreman scratched his head and locked up and down the wall. Ho selected a place that locked to him like a possibility. Pointing, ho said: “Cross-cut through there and we might pick up the vein.” Rhinelander asked further ques- j tions; the hard-headed miner seemed J to have, he thought, some good ideas, j “All right,” said Rhinelander, at length, “cross-cut right there, just as you say. We'll see how we come out. If wo get beat, yell try something else.” Under the impetus cf new hope, the work went rapidly forward. Every man in the mine took courage. So long as there was a possibility cf doing anything they were glad to work to save their own Jobs. The crew at hand went vigorously to work under the foreman's directions. In a short : time a hole had been primed for a blast, the fuse lighted and the Lion > rusted out. The explosion followed j and they went back. Work was proceeding h, this sash- ! ion when something occurred tlsat drew Helen's attention. Sho was looking illtu LUC l Ut.llLJ n.iCli SbO noticed that one wall near tho roof seemed tc be weakening. A large piece o? rock had dropped from it. The men were called out and Helen, witb

I ” " ! | Rhinelander. Storm and the lorcman. i went over to examine the break. All I waited on tho old miner far a verdict 'as to the condition of the roof. He 1 made a pretty cartful examination and | seemed satisfied there was no danger. “That roof,” he declared, "will it ever cave In.” “If that Is so,” said Rhinelander, ” —and you ought to know, if anybody knows —send the men back to work." Blasting their way into the wall i where tho foreman hail Indicated, the 1 | men, busied with their work, failed to j notice a gradual weakening oi the j tunnel ’•oof. Helen, outside th« mine ; and occupied with other matters. heard the blasting within, bin gave ; tho subject no further thought. It was | not until a moment following one of i the heavy explosions that she heard ' 1 a great crash behind her,-and, look- 1 I lug hack, was horrified to see <t mass of rock crashing through the roof of I the tunnel. She ran forward in dis--1 may. The disaster was complete.; Where the tunnel had opened, a groat cave-in now raised a solid barrier. Men on the outside ran up, white- ! faced, to where she stood. Questions flew back and forth. A round-up was hastily made to determine wbo had been caught on the Inside. Rhinelander and Storm were nowhere to be j found —they had almost certainly been i caught with the crew in the tunnel. Spasmodic efforts were made to clear the opening. Men, losing their heads, rushed hither and thither, accomplishing nothing and adding to the paiiic that possessed everyone at the ■ thought of the tragedy within the closed tunnel. Bidding a man to stop ; i his useless efforts to tear away the. i fallen rock, she gave him directions I as to what to do. “Telephone for doctors.” she said hurriedly, “while I goj over to the Neighbor mine for help.” Both hastened away. Helen reaching 1 the edge of the cliff, where the aeri *! railway ran from the mountainside j down to the valley below, stopped. It would take her fifteen precious minute? ; to run down the trail. Could she. by I any possibility, rido down the aerial cable? She grasped the hook of the frail aerial carriage and clinging to it with; both hands, pulled the release. Like,

a bird on wing, Helen shot far out | from the mountainside and dropping ! at a sharp angle down the line, sped suspended between heaven and earth At a distance on the desert, the, , Shay engine of the Neighbor "mine was ! toiling slowly along when the engineer ; ! saw the figure of a woman clinging to 1 J the aerial carriage of the Superstition ' I mine as it shot through the air down i I to the valley. Breathless, ho watched j the wild flight, expecting every instant j i to see the slender creature let go, to j fall, crushed, to the rock below her. j But Helen did not let go. Hanging I ‘ on with a desperation born of the re-; | aliwuion that she must save the imprisoned men. she shot across the dangerous declivity from top to bottom ar.d without mishap, jumped in safety to the toot of the aerial and dashed' away for help. She ran toward the little railroad, flagged the engine, go? into the cab. and struggling for breath, : apprised the crow of the accident. The j engineer hurriedly started the engine back to their own mine. Farcing ?!! I the speed that he could get. and with Helen urging him to spare no effort, he made tha engine bump along over the joints as it never bad done before. A dozen times, before they reached their destination, it seemed as if the sturdy little machine must turn turtle. Jumping from the cab the moment the Shay stopped, Helen told of the ! disaster. Men ran in from ail quar- : ters, end their foreman—an active ; fellow—gave directions about getting the stuff they should need to work , with at the cave-in. With the least , . possible loss or time, those neees- , j saries were assembled and the train i loaded with men started back. ! in the interval, the news telephoned , to I.*; Vggti had stirred the town, . At the hospital a motor car was placed in waiting, una doctors answering tr,a , hurry up call Jumped into the machine with their emergency bags and head- , ed :or the mine One of the surgeons ! •recalled that Earl Seagrue was the . i

I owner or the mipersmion Halting on j the way, he dashed up into Seugru” *; I room o.ml told Him what bed happened, j “Tho main tunnel of the Supeml- ! tion mine has collapsed, ha cried. "We're on the nay out in a <’ a *'-! | Rhinelander. Storm ami a crew of tho ; man are caught Inside." “Sorry to bear that." said Snagruo, i shortly. "Go on. Don't loso any time. 1 1 11 follow.” Ho called to Ms servant j for his coat and hat as Ihe dot tor ..m out. I’utdng on the coat ho h'-«t-I taiod, changed his mind, and decided I not to go. lie threw his hat and coat j ££!i!!s B*3*l sat dowu. In the tunnel the men had been I caught Hko rats In a trap. Serious a* the ir equation wan, none of them lost their h ads, and Rhine-; I lander and Storm, in particular—- ! neither of them unused to groat peril —were ralm. But what to do in clr- | curostances so strange to them, the It wo could not toll. A hurried examination of the eave-in showed their [ exit completely cut off. This misfori tune, howtever, did not paralyze their activities. With the two railroad men encouraging them, the men worked hard to get through the obstruction In front of them. They toiled unremittingly. ■ knowing how every hour within their prison would lessen their chances for life. One of the men, exhausted by | the labor, picked up a water canteen. It was broken. A canvass was made | of the situation and it was found they had no water. Gloom settled for a time on them Thereafter, questioner picked a place where the expert- j I ©need miner thought they might, with I a little work, get through and turned j ito the men. "Dvnamitq through this wall,” he said. i The men began. The moment tho \ b’ast was ready, it was set off and they were back again at their drills! ! preparing for the next. Working thus j ! with frenzied energy, they tore groat j 1 holes Into the tunnel’s side, but seem-1 ; Ingly with no hopeful result. And the ’ work wr.s beginning to tell on them. I By the time they had gotten what they i honed might be the final shot ready, l Rhinelander and the miners—all In the tunnel except Storm—were ca the verge of coilanse. Nerved to a final effort by the hype of life, tho shot was fired. No ray est daylight greeted their strahjing ayee as the smoke thinned away. The ait. now foul, had so overcome them that few could erawl forward to examine j the shattered v all. One grizzlea fel- - lorv, sturdier than his mates, stag. 1 gored to it. He looked for a moment at the rock and cried out. Animated i by fresh hope, the exhausted men re- ; sponded by dragging themselves to him. The blast had not given them the hopod-for avenue of escape. But broadly lined across the Jagged surface now dislodged, they saw staring at them as if in mockery of their state, the- lost vein.’the lead cf precious quartz again before them. Cnj told riches confronted them. Seagrue, In his room, had heard the ; > distant report of the explosion, but he had been drinking of lato and bis nerves were on edge. He strode up and down the room revolving in his mind the situation oi tho men imprisoned within the big tunnel. He knew enough of the mine tc understand perfectly the peril of iheir position and the necessity of a quick : rescue If their lives were to be saved, 1 Further than this, he charged his mind with nothing o? responsibility; indeed, | bo would hardly have walked aefoss the street to save one of the imper- j ; Red men. Yet. a strangely persistent; ; curiosity moved him to want to know more of the fate of those who were i thus struggling for their lives. A decanter stood on the buffet and ho turned to it. While he poured j brandy into a glass, he heard a strange j noise in an adjoining room—a sound as if of a miner’s doublejack. It startled him unpleasantly He called to bis servant and the man, thus abruptly summoned, came quickly, carrying an i< e pick, “What’s that noise? What are you doing?” demanded Seagrue. harshly, i The man in a half-frightened way 1 began to laugh. “Only picking a little ice. vjr,” he said, apologetically. Seagrue, without answering, snatched the ice pick from his hand. ‘Give mo my hat and coat,” he exclaimed with anger. And as the man hurried- j ly produced them, ho added curtly: “Get out.” And serving himself, he made ready to start for the mine. Attempt, after attempt on tho part of Rhinelander, Storm and the miners ta Open away of freedom was falling, and overcome by the foul air, the men •>~-a after another, Lad sunk down from exhaustion. •'Outside, the engine and little train had brought Helen and the relief and the men were running up the elope. The few men attacking tho faee of tho cave-in, now greatly re-enforced, worked with desperate energy at the fallen rock. The cool-headed foreman assumed leadership and organized tho men so that no Energy should be wasted and slowly but steadily the Willing workers ate a hole into the jnass of splintered rock before them. In thy tunnel where Rhinelander and his stupefied companions lay in varying stages of distress and despair; Storm heard at ieagih the sound of the work on tho other side of the He shouted feebly to his com “They're coming!” he cried. •• ca, boys. Get your head, i - here. There’s a little air r. - 1- . v ’ Rhinelander, In spite oi i. i that he was among the old* o of < ■ f- I caught fn the horrible irax\ v.r- - | ing the strain better Ue *u ,• I them. He, in hie turn, eatKSßrssf«§ ; Ti - i

jthrrs not to give up and was the first t« hear a tUrs { u * * . savo-ln. B> answered it .wth .ill th rtreagth he could summon i Encouraged on the outside bf word that the Imprisoned men wore ,ttl! alive, the rescuers redoubled their efforts. The battsred foreman. he-iutT’g the Hue In the narrow hole, pßked through the shattered forma- , tion, sent back *ord he was nwly . through and » £ > h(,ut of *° y . ID/jl D /j from the anxious hearts of thos , ared outside. The doctors were already busy laying out their temporary hospital and making ready to care of the exhausted men the moment they could reach them. j To the prisoners the soon,, of tho ; pick and the dislodgmerit of rock was ' <3 ' gyK •>» .IYR "j I ■J?"' .# r a•-* • ■ - *: •?. f j ■ ,w* - *'■: % *'•,-?'■ t ~A I • l — ” -A... , Iri , sjl , • t i- . , - ■ v • fv i ; ; r' - ;m u . ;i*: v ? ~ x ' '-A-; -'•.•(•v a j Grasped tl.a Hook of the Frail Asrial i Carriage. | coming so close that Storm and Rhine- ; j lander almost felt they could see tho work. In another instant a shaft of j j light, gleaming like a star, greeted the ! staring eyes of the two men and they ; cried out together to greet the man . on the other side. A second and larger I piece of reek fell and was dragged j away and more light shot into the j prlsou house. “Water!” cried Rhinelander. “For ; God’s sake. boys, push in a canteen.’ ! Helen heard the cry. Half-dozen , willing men ran for the precious fluid.: ’ A bottle of water was pushed into j ' Storm’s hand and the next moment ! i the half-conscious men were being revived by him. Nerved, despite exhaust-on, to a' | finr.l spurt of energy, the rercuers rap j Idly enlarged the hole until Helen, eager at the foreman's elbow, s;aid she | could get through, and against his protestations of danger crawled first through the eave-in, closely followed by the chief sorgeon who, once in- 1 side, began to tram tbe most helpless ; of the suffering men. I The condition of the uncertain en ] trance called for the greatest care on the part of the rescuers. Great masses of rock, suspended by not more, il would seem, than a thread, hung : threateningly over the ragged passage. But time was too precious to wait foi further safety and the moment the men could be passed out, -they were turned over to the hospital staff. Rhinelander had refused ta leave untii the last of the miners had been taken out to safety. Storm followed him. Helen was tho last to coma i through. ! A great crowd had gathered aboul ; the mine and as the imprisoned men 1 were revived, and the chief surgeon, i covered with dust and debris, an 1 uounced that no lives would be lost, ; cheers went up again. Seagrue, elbowing his vay through the bystanders up to Rhinelander, congratulated him on his escape. Rhinelander smiled grimly. “That was a close squeak, Seagrue. Helen," he exclaimed, addressing his words to her, "we came near losing out, girl but we didn’t—quite. I'm all right hand so is George Storm, here.” He ■ laid his hand on his stalwart foreman's ch.-.-uiuer. "The rest of the men." he ; added, “will be as good as ever by tomorrow. But that isn’t all, Seagrue. We’va relocated the vein!” Seourue started. “What do you mean?” hecrit-d. j "I mean, we have found the vein again," exclaimed Rhinelander, “and that we’re going to take a million dol--1 furs in quartz out of the Superstition in tfe* next throe months.” Seagrue refused to credit his hearing. Ho suited for the tunnel and, despite the warnings of those about him, crawled through the opening and i iTiada his way to where the final bkpst had disclosed the glistening vein.. He picked uu the ore thoughtfully and I looked from it back to the rock wail, it was a vision to dhzzle tho sight of a i: iSpc-ctor. Untold wealth was symbolized in that great deposit. The stormy scene with his shareholders in the directors’ room rose in the semidarkness before his eyes. He stood a moment in deep study. At the mine entrance the men were getting on their feet and telling listen- j fug comrades their experiences. Storm was dismissing the man for- - day aud, released from further toil, ! they slowly filed away. Turning from them, he Joined Helen and Rhinelander. Together the three discussed theii great new fortune. Within the gloom of the tunnel stood Seagrue. He had taken out his con- j tract and wan looking intently at it ' Something it suggested seemed to appeal to him; some hopeful Idea, perhaps. occurred to his mind, for he stall eu. ( r rr\ np nAV'ptv?7*»r» \ JUi~i W»4iMVHUW»4 ’

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