The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 April 1924 — Page 2
Rejuvenated Prominent retired merchant •ay* he feels like new mdp «inee Teniae relieved Um of his trooblea. Can now outwalk men 20 years younger. % / 1 Jr / */ I ’ '■> ' Vrs R i A”BJ Boyd 1 IL E. Boyd, 5000 Fourteenth Bt, N. W., Washington. D. (,’.. for forty? eight years prominent hardware met* chant in the national capital, but now retired. lends his name to further th* • cause of Taniac. "Indigestion and stomach weakness of a very pronounced type had troubled me for several months prior to last October fifteenth." said Mr. Boyd, recently. “but since that date the Taniac treatment has made a new man of me. Now I eat heartily, never have a sign of Indigestion, sleep like a log, and get up mornings feeling like an athlete. I Today I can outwalk men twenty years i younger. Taniac alone put me In my present fine physical condition, enabling me to get more real pleasure than ever before out of meeting and mingling with friends. Taniac has rejuvenated me completely, so to apeak. [ It’s .the finest medicine I ever ran across/ Taniac is'for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute -Over 40 million bottles sold. Take Taniac Vegetable Pills. BRj will reduce las lamed, sweile* i Iz il Joint*. Sprains, Bruises. I£< <1 cCNRHMI So,t Banchva; Beal* Bl A ■vM.Ommwr. W . W Vic/Vw Fix’d* as* In;Cited K Jwß/ f W sores gwldkty *• it is a M* W -99 • # W positive aatiaeptte and 1 ■ germk-ids. Pleasant to ■ ut-c doeß ihh or H| _ A rsmovs the hair, and "|Sf JS ■&' JIM rouctn w~rk the horse. delivered Book? Ata*. | WF.TOCTC.ht, SID b— Su SwwfeU. Wms. relieves children and adult*. AHaaea-w trrufk. Nocrfasa*. ffeav/ Stuff Pal—Mbs X«k cun hardly carry a tune. Uq -Well. she always sings very heavy stuff—Chaparral. Kernan gva Balaam. applied at ntrht «eo» tetirina. win frvshrit ant »tr»n«lhen eyea Sy maVnln* ITJ Pearl st N Y Ad*. The most difficult part of a drinking I tons Is the refmin Hairs Catarrh Medicine Treatment, both local and internal, and has been successful ta the treatment of Catarrh fat ova forty year*. Sold by all druggist*. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. Ohio 7s>r ■ •* r ;ven r ®“ t lief to ihouf sands of sufferers from indigestion, biliousnee* end constipation for twenty [ years. Do not suffer. Take one or two Jaques’ Capsules when distressed. Proamt relief follow* this efficient first aid Mr stomach disorders. Quicker and surer than mils or tablets. Keep them always at hand ready for instant use. Only «0 cents at druggists of from J Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, It. Y. ’ BOSCHETS SYRUP I Allay* irritation. soothes acd heals threat and I sag taflaaMKMMM*. The coeilint tanritatioa of .* cough keeps the delicate umki* UK sihrwiic of the throat and tong* taacongested coaditiea. which Bust His 3 Sravr gently and quickly heah. For thia reason it has been a favatile household remedy for colds, tkiegha, broachrtts sad taZSfIX’U seven years, enabling the patient to obtain a good night's rest, free from coeghing with easy expectoration in the muraing Yoe can buy BOSCKBKT SYRVP wherever mdhtoe* are sold. i i ii niil ' KEMP’S
§ , J Diamonds of Malopo | By VICTOR ROUSSEAU Csmnfoht WW.C. Ohmmimni
CHAPTER Vlll—Continued. 1 —ll— < Winton communicated the decision to I Sam. and it was arranged that be was to enter upon bis duties at the end of < the week, relieving Ned, who still occupied the brick shanty, but was plan- ; ning to board at a cottage on the Malopo road. 1 Winton had now reached the point : where the immediate sale of the big , 1 stone bad become Inevitable. He hud I hud a quantity of the blue clay—which i is simply the yellow clay before decomposition—crushea with mallets, an (i unsatisfactory prece-w. but useful when j l the slow process of recomposition can- < not be undergone. This had been 11 passed through the washing trougi|s 1 und picked over. Not a single diamond j I had been discovered. Ned could not unde-stand it. if only j | a few small stones had been found thia < would have been an augury for the J future, tiyil, little could be gauged as 1 to the resources claim from this. < The diamonds might lie compactly at a lower level. But his need of funds i compelled Winton to enter into negotiations for the sale of the big stone. I He showed it to one of the jobbers, ' who was in Malopo. The man agreed ’ <> advance him fifteen thousand pouuds 1 on it. pending its valuation. The trans- 1 ,e -con was to take place on the following morning. ’ Winton had had a day of Intense la- 1 bor in tlie compound, looking over the i washings. He tiung himself down on 1 his bed without undressing, and fell 1 asleep almost as soon as his bead fouehed the pillow. Once be awakened I with a start, und, half dreaming still, imagined that he heard a horse earner 1 up to the compound. Then he fell 1 uiaieep again. But after a while he began to be ‘ aware of a sense of oppression, and to struggled in that dim Itorderland betweeji sleep and waking, where dnaim and reality are inextricably blended. He felt us If invisible fingers were i tawing ut his throat, so that each breath became an effort. For a long lime he wu» unable to shake himself free from the bonds of sleep. At last he found that bis eyes were open. It was quite dark, but he fancied that there was a figure In the' n«>m, and lie became aware of an intolerable, sweet, sickly odor that tilled his nostrils. He must have stirred, for be felt the hands at his throat again, and was certain that it was not hallucination; he felt them between periods of uncon-'-i iom.ncss that might have been years. Something damp was against his lips. Winton recognized the odor as that of chloroform; and by the faint light of the moon that came through the little w indow he perceived a man’s face bent over his. , He iriod to cry for h«i», but only a htftunte whisper came from his throat, and the saturated handkerchief was '•lapped over his - Then followed absolute uneonsciousness, broken by the distant sound of a tevolver shot, and a faint cry of twin. Both sounds passed through Winton’s • mind as meaningless i but suddenly he : teit a hand upon his shoulder, shaking him. ’ ’ With a supremo effort he sat up in bed, Tla- fumes were suffocating, but he managed to spring to his feet and Magner toward the window, which had la'en ojjened. Then he saw Sam's agitated black face before him. The man was speaking and frying to make him understand. Winton could not gather the Import of what be was saying. He shook himself free impatiently and leaned out of the window, breathing In the desert air. Gradually his situation dawned upon Him. - What is it. Sam?” he mumbled. "Mr. Garrett. Mr. come to the next room! They’ve stolen the diamond! I was watching, though my job doesn’t •»egtn till tomorrow. Comq, sir!" Winton stood up. The tWm had ceased to revolve about Mm, but stilt swung dtexily before his eyes. The mwm was still low; It could not have been much past midnight. Bon* seeded to have passed since Winton bad gone to bed at nine. He made his way toward the door. supi>orted by Sam’* arm. He passed through the open doorway. The outer door was eiaeed. Two men lay upon the floor against it. One was Kash. the Armenian, stone dead. ; with a bullet through his forehead. The other was Ned Burns, breathing noisily, hut unconscious, and his head covered with blood frum a blow of the hurt of the revolver which lay beside him. Mum caught at Winton’s arm. “1 heard the shot." be cried. "I was rear Ing to watch the claim. I rim. and saw the two of them attacking Mr. Burns. He killed one; the other shot him und dragged tils body inside and locked the door. I climbed through your window and found you uaconscimis from chloroform.” Winton began to take In the situation. Sam mutt have alarmed the robber, who had taken flight without waiting to finish Ned Burns. Evidently mnnler, a very dangerous game on i British territory, had formed no part of tlwlr Naas otherwise he would have been killed In his sleep. Sam was tugging at Winton’s arm again. “Look!” he cried, pointing : across the rooua Then Winton perceived that the safe ead been blown open. But there was more than that: It had been displaced from the position which it occupied, and beside and half under It was a yawning hole in the ground. “That* the way they camel" cried Saui. Winton ran to the safe. The diamond waa. of course, gone. He stooped ami began hastily to march Ned’s pecknth SS rv? x
Ing him. He ran toward the hole. He' could Just see the line of the tunnel below. He swung himself into the hole and | entered ’he tunnel. Sam following him. It was hardly wider than a man’s body, and not three feet in height, so that It ’ was necessary to scramble along it *>n bis hands and knees. Once Winton fancied that he neatid sounds ahead of him and stopped, but then he eould hear nothing except the indefinite murmurs ttiat are audible underground. He went on like u mole, outdistancing the negro. Now and; again he bumped Into stakes that had been driven into the hard clay to hold up the roof. The robbers had laid their plans with cure, and they must Imve been weeks uM»ul their execution. At last a faiut ray of moonlight appeared in the distance. It grew clearer, and the tunnel began to widen, ending suddenly in a circular pit. of "the kind that marks the beginning of excavations along the diamond fields. Winton scrambled up the side and stood under the stars. He then saw with bewilderment that he was standing in the compound, of the adjacent claim, just where he had emergetl on tife prior occasion -when ! he entered a branch of the tunnel be- ; neath the Armenian’s store. It was clear that the diamond thieves had utilized for their work tlte Hot-, tentot’s predilection, teamed from the Bushmen, for subterranean t excava-, tlons. The plan,had been a clever one. i and It appeared to have succeeded. j Nobody was stirring in the com- j pound, nobody was anywhere in sight, i Forgetting Sam, who had not yet made his appearance. • Winton ran i through the comiwund. clambered over j the gate, and made his way toward Seaton's cottage, to call him to go to . Burns. But when he drew near it he iiJRSfc ’s'j He entered ec^ooai saw with dismay that the door was wide ami the interior a litter of rubbish. He ran on. passed the Jhres- ! and entered the bedroom. It was empty, the bed had not ln-en occupied, and the old man had evidently de- ; parted. For the first time the Idea of treachery occurred to Winton _ He staggered out of the cottage. A blind rage took possession of him. He glared about him, and kjbv Sam in the distance, within the com.'tound of the < next cl atm. looking about him. He saw him pomt. Fellowing the direction Indicated. Winton perceived a little native boy holding « horse behind Kash’s store. At tbe same moment be saw a man slinking toward il against the edge of the compound. And. he ran at full speed along the road to head him ott. As he ran he saw that Sam. too. was in pursuit of him. It seemed unlikely that the negro to cateh him. however, and Winton himself wee fifty paces away. 4 The boy. apparently terrified at the turn of events, let the horse go anti run. The animal’reared, but tbe runner reached It and seized It by the bridle. The momentary oelay enabled Sam to cover the ground between them. He leaped at him us he was climbing quickly into the saddle. Winton recognized the man now as Van Vorst, the diamond thief. Van Verst lost his balance, blit man aged to pull a revolver from an open bolster and fired at Sam pointblank. By a miracle of good lack Sam dodged
VAVAVAVAvAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVttVakVMvms ew • * V* V*. QUEER REPTILIAN BIRD IS FOUND
Resembles the Pheasant—Yeung Have Claws instead of Wings—Chmbs Trees and Swims. Just as some remote ape is supposed to connect nu»a with the quad raped, a newly discovered reptilian bird links denixens Tis the air with some animal that crawled on four legs. , In Its native habitat certain waters of Colombia and Bolivia. Its Spanish name, when broadly Interpreted la “stinking pheasant.” Uke the Araertcan skunk, explorers have little difficulty of being aware of Its proximity. It to described as a beautiful bird with brown, white and olive markings. There Is a tuft back of the head which makes it resemble the pheasant quite markedly. The voung birds have cla’ws instead of wings. At the'tip and at the -elbow" in the wing are two large, firm, toger-llke hooks. making the wing as useful as a hand. With thia they are able to climb trees and go from limb to limb for all the world like a quadruped. They are able to swim with anmring agility and can submerge for remarkably long periods.
TliE SYRACUSE JOURXAfr
I the shot, and a moment later was racing at the top of his speed toward tbe ! shelter of Kush's store. Van Vorst saw Winton and, standing beside his horse, aimed deliberately , and fired. The bullet whipped W’nt ton’s cheek. Next moment Winton was grappling with the thief. Van Vorst raised the revolver and dmpught it. | butt downward, smashing " - n ' t tin’s head. J Winton dropped, but staggered to his feet in time to see Van Vorst leap into the saddle and ride away like.the wind toward the desert. Then Sam’s shout was heard. The negro appeared again, leading a horse by the baiter, tbe saddle and bridle across his arm. Hq had remembered that Kash kept j a Ijprse in his stable, a racer which he bad acquired cheap as the result of a bet, and owing to an injury to the animal's fetlock. It was one of the best horses in Malopo. and the sight of it between th® shafts of Kash’s cart had created a good deal of feeling against ■ the Armenian. Sam begun to slip on the bridle hastily, while Winton, snatching the from him, adjusted it and began to pull in the girth. !' “I’ll catch him’.” said Sam. Winton would at any other time have been astonished at the transformation in the man. The negro who bad am yelling from the Chronicle office off the day before now seemed devoid of fear. . “You get help for Ned Burns.” said Wintog. and mounted. J The horse needed no urging. It had been kept for days together in Kash’s ’stable, its only execcise the pulling of ' the storekeeper’s cart on the slow rounds of Mal«qK>. The sense of a i rider brought back the memories of the old days. It dashed off in pursuit ; of Van Vorst as if Winton's mind communicated to Its own the urgency of capture. ' 4 Winton stuck to his seat doggedly and 'tried to keep his senses. The blow had reopened his old wound, and the blood was pouring Into his eyes In a blinding torrent. But he concentrated nil his will upon the chase. Unless he could regain the diamond the syndicate would oust him from his control of the Big Malopo. hnd make him the jest of the community which he bad come to hate.' And somehow he felt that he was. In an, unknown way. fighting for Sheila as well as for his otyn. Van Vorst came into sight, a little speck far out upon the plains. • He had left the road and whs striking across the desert in the direction of the native territories, ten miles away. Malopo was a protectorate, the criminal law of the colony ran there. In the tribal lands, however, Van Vorst could laugh at pursuit until he tiwnd his opportunity to slip across the border into (he Transvaal or Damaraland. Winton knew this. The horse, sighting the fugitive, threw all Its efforts into »he chase and began to gain swiftly. It waa an eery ride across the sand under the moonlight. Winton, rick from the chloroform and the blow. • knew- that he could not last long, but . how he was going to return he tlhl not stop to think. He felt In one of the | holsters and found a revolver there, i And, holding the weapon tn hl* Sand. I he waited grimly while bls horse overi hauled the other. They had Facet! past an outlying i farm, which showed in the distance, the , j>oplnrs standing up like ghostly sentli nels across the flat.. Now nothing *m . visible anywhere except the desert. ‘ Malopo was far behind. Winton gained stea lily.. He could distinguish # th«t ' Van Vorst Uirned to tl atcb him. and the I action slowed his hofse for a few moments. Winton gained more and more. Now only two hundred yards separated the fugitive and the pursuer. Wlten they were a hundred paces apart Van Vorst swung round In the saddle and fired. The_j>ullet flew into 'the sand twelve Now only fifty paces tnttn Van Vorst I pulled In sudd Aly and flrhd once more. He bad only two more shots, and there ! would be no time re reload Winton •calculated thatbut tbe ball whistled | uncomfortably cfose, and this time be • answered twice, without effect. • Van Vorst sat <»n Ms beast like a J statue, aiming enreftdly at Winton’s | body. Winton spurred his horse, meaning to ride him down. At the same ; time he half swung Idtnself out of the j saddle crouching against the animal * neck, so as to avoid presenting a mark. I Van Vorst fired his fifth shot. ’ it * - A ■
| The adult bird-h»r none of these qualities. It Js not web-footed and cannot swim. The daws gradually disappear and In their place wings In no way abbreviated, hut entirely simi , lar to the wings of the average game bird, develop. The bird Is believed to be the lone survivor of a great group of reptilian birds that once inhabited-the globe.— London Tit-Bits. The Right Spirit When I am in the dentist’s chair I do not raise a fuss, but thank my lucky stars Pm not a hippopotamus. When baggagemen destroy my trunk I do not rave and rant, but mentally declare Fm glad I'm not an elephant. And wearing new shoes, stiff and tight, which painfully impede, I smile and think how nice It is I'm not a centipede.—Boston Transcript Scold Letter*. , Indignation la more powegfru than gratification. You can see JK to the great predominance at letters to the newspaper*,- ~
would have kllteu Winton; it struck the saddle fairly and lodged under the tough pigskin. Winton was now almost upon him, bls own revolver in bls hand. “Hands np I” he cried. . . * He knew nothing of South African tricks of marksmanship, or the ,training of native mounts. For an Instant he saw Van Vorst sitting on hts horse, motionless; at the next the horse had curveted to one side, and Winton's outstretched band caught at nothing. Then Van Vorst fired his last shpL The bullet pierced the horse’s brain. It reared In Its death agony. Winton, flung over its flank, fell prostrate. As he fell, he managed to retain possession of his revolver. Van Vorst saw it; he snapped his weapon, but it was emp’y. With a curse he spurred his horse and galloped away. Winton disengaged himself from hl* dead mount and staggered to his feet. He saw Van Vorst disappearing into the Illimitable distance. All round him was the desert. He sat down wearily; when he was stronger he would have to pick Ms way back to Malopo by his horse’s tracks. He must Have dozed for a few minutes, for when he looked up again he saw two riders cantering toward him across the desert. CHAPTER IX. Sheila's Secret. As they came nearer he saw that onof them was a woman. He watched the pair with apathy; he felt too ill to be interested in anything very much. Rut in a moment he was upon his feet, staring incredulously at the girl. The blaze of moonlight upon her face revealed to him—Sheila I The other man was a Hottentot. At first he thought it was Bottlejohn. Then he perceived ft was a shorter, younger man. He was evidently Sheila’s escort. But It vas Sheila’s appearance even more than her presence there that astonished '.Vinton. She wore a ragged suit of khaki, with tail boots that reached to the edge of her knickerbockers. in her hair was a wreath ««f Ute pungent yellow flowers of the arid lands, her bare throat was encircled with a necklace of blue beads, and there were bracelets of hammered copper upon her wrists. She leaped from her horse and ran to Winton. “Did be hurt you?” she cried. Then, seeing the blood upon his face, she uttered an exclamation of fear and began to wipe it with a handkerchief that sne drew from her pocket. “You are wounded!” “A slight hit on the head —like that other,” said Winton. “I’m all right, I think. Sheila—’’ “I’ll tell you how I came here. I heard of the conspiracy. It was planned by De Witt. He meant to get the diamond so that you should not sell it and raise money. You would have to go to the syndicate.” “Well, Van Vorst has it all right,” answered Winton. He was still looking in wonder at the girl. Her whole demeanor had changed. She seemed freer, more confident. bolder, braver. “I’ll tell you how I came here.’’ the girl repeated. “I learned of the scheme. Judge Davis hatched it through De Witt. They employed .Van V«wst, promising him tlte diamond. Van Vorst wanted to get dewneottntry. He agreed. My father knew. They wished him to have a hand in it, but be was afraid. Oh. don’t think it was loyalty t. you!* she cried. “1 warned you from the beginning.” the girl went on. “You should have left us alone. It was not for me to tell you that In his fear of De Witt my father would do anything, betray auy trust rather than risk Ms life. That rnnn has hounded us. and some day he will nieet his deserts But when I heard of the plan 1 rode in to warn you. And I have met yo:A That’s all.” •’No. Sheila,” said Winion, loosing at her ami feeling the old mad infant ation for her again, mingled with.the old doubts and uncertainties. "There ig'one thing you have not told me: how you came here, or from where you have come.” "If 1 tell you, I must tell you what I do not want to’ tell you.” she an swered quietly. “I have asked you. ! tn memory of the honor you did me in the coach at Taungs to leave ma. and to let me keep the truth from yon. Isn’t that enough?" “It would be enough If I did not believe that you are the 'rtetim of a hallucination, Sheila.” winton nn swerefi. 4 “Then you shall know,” cried the girl. “In any event, you cannot ride hack to Malopo tonight, wounded as you are. It is eight milt* away, and it Is only live to my—my home.” There was a bitterness in her voice as she spoke. "If you can ride, and will ride with me tonight, you shall know everything that you wan' to know before we 4>art for the dust time." "I can ride," answered Winton. “And I wish to kndw, to prove to you that what seems «o dreadful to you is a trifle, something tlmt we can laugh al. Sheila." ’ The girl's attitude was expressive of intense excitement as she listened. She made no reply, but. turning to tlte Hottentot, addressed him in bis own tongue. »The man clicked in answer, dismounted from his horse, let! it to Winton, and. placing the reins in his bands, set off at an even j..g 'across the desert In the direction from which they had come. Winton would have helped Sheila Into the saddle, bat she vaulted in without touching tbe stirrup, and sat upright on her mount, wa'ting for him. He dambered up, and tuey set off side by side. The fresh breeze, blowing on Win ton’s >ce, drove the last traces of the chloroform away. The scalp wound bad ceased to bleed. Winton began to feel stronger. And he watched Sbeila, riding gracefully at hia side. He perceived that her saddle was erf the thinnest and most pliable leather, her feet hardly touched the stirrups; she rode like one of tbe centauresque figures upon the Elgin marbles. Who and. what was she? He could not believe that this girl was the dtild of the old thief* and drunsard who had betray ed rXM<TlxnmM *
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