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~eac the Fourth Installment of the Seventh Episode of “BEATRICE FAIRFAX,” New Film Serial, Here Tode,
“BEATRICE FAIRFAX"
T 'he Stars in Episode No. 7
2
“A Name for a Baby
Jimmy Barton— * "giier for the NY. —Harry Fox
Beatrice Fairfax— O™ X ¥ Evening __(Gace Darling
This splendid series of exciting human interest stories ig'
produced in motion pictures by Wharton Ino. Studios for the
International Film Service, Inc. s
See the motion pictures at your favorile theater nextweek ;
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX,
(Novelized From the Scenario of 8. Basil Dickey.)
(Copyright, 1916, International News Service.)
IMMY BARTON'S knowledge of
J Richard Conley, plus my Infor
mation gained from Madge and
Margaret, gave us a falrly complete
story and a very definite feeling that
we understood the young lawyer with
all his lovable weakness. But there
was just one gap in our evidenoe—one
&ap which nelther of us could bridge.
And that was later to prove a yawn
ing abyss before the feet of one or
two greatly surprised people.
As we made our return trip to Bluc
Cove Jimmy told me his part of the
story. Directly we suspected that
Conley was the man in the case. Jim
my had gone down to the law offices
of Conley & Conley and had sent in
his card requesting an interview.
Later that redoubtable yYouth per
suaded me to Involve myself in the
sftuation. Our position was desper
ate—and we fought fire with fire, as
you shall see.
“The interview”™ was readily grant
ed, but surprise swung to instant dis
may when Jimmy fairly hurled =a
question at the younger man, “Do you
know Madge Minturn?
Of course, young Conley swore he
had never heard of the girl—but as
tute Jimmy noticed that the match
with which the lawyer was striking
his cigarette had flickered out very
suddenly—but not before it burned
the trembling fingers which were
holding 1t
A tiny bit of evidence that-—but
Jimmy, the sleuth, knew it was worth
following up, and when half an hour
later Riohard Conley hurried Into the
Grand Central and embarked on a
train for Blue Cove, Jimmy was close
on his tracks.
Jimmy Follows Conley. 1
Conley took the second of the town's
supply of ramshackle cabs, and Jim
my had to purchase an even more
ramshackle blaycle. As you know, he
passed me on my return to the sta
tion—but, as you do not know, he
turned to wave a Marewell and blow
me an audactous kiss. |
“That kiss didn*t get me much, Miss “
Beatrice,” laughed Jimmy. “Nothing
but an encounter with a stone and a
tumble whioch smaeshed none of my
ribs, but all of the bioycle's vital or
sans. I had to on foot after that,
and by the fin'louu‘ht up with my
QuAarry he was coming out of the
woods, and I concluded that he had
finizhed his nterview with the girl—
but I was in time to see another in
'Onnl:% into a queer
ing chap. Bay, do you h:n he lo‘:k',:d
like some of those mental defectives
mm working over this winter.
than that, he seemed to me. I
h-‘outhl.tMtho‘n'.hovmm
character—some of them call him
mud some of them say he's a
but all the drave inhabitants
m“o Cove seem a little afraid of
J had discovered this much
:vu'm the chap's name was Harry
“And I have a Beatrice,
that Harry mfi"&amm Con.
lay went through some transaction
HEAD WAS SO SORE
i |
Could Scarcely Sleep. Began With
Little Pimples Which Turned Into
Eruptions. Could Not Comb Hair,
HEALED BY CUTICURA
SOAPAND OINTMENT
Bt :Zfl‘x?ogi :“::.3.17:3';’
et fptes
PR izl =ek
'4’ it red. n?undd.ub‘cmfl‘
4-.7.’\:;"’ l:?ldo- in .'r::‘;
‘v;fi q*fi':.am.mm
W/, Then my sister potCuticura
Soap and Ointment and
after uxing themn mdirected | washealed.
Now | h".“ M good & head of hair
e
i-(-':'t C Ja 3 6
h.: l“.o‘h‘:nc by Mall
. ad:.w' -
kE""‘i.‘. Sarcmg ot .‘:fi:i
that boded very little good for your
friend, Miss Madge Minturn!”
I remember my glimpse of the
man's sullen, evil face, with its loose
lipped animal outh and its furtive
€yes. I remembered, too, how weak
Richard Conley's good-looking face
had seemed to me as I glimpsed it in
passing ——, and sudden fear took
hold of my heart. :
Mrs. Woods had not seen Madge
for all the long hours during which 1
had gone to New York, interviewed
Margaret Payne, and made the trip
back to The Journal office. |
Again my terrified fancy leaped to
the portentous question, “Where was
Madge Minturn?” Ana hard upon it
followed a second question of equal
portent, “What affairs could Richard
Cenley and Harry Wilkins, the village
ne'er-do-well, be discussing 7"
“Do you remember just where Con
ley and Wilkins went?” I asked.
“Yes, and that's where we're bound.
You're going to see a tumble-down
little cabin which houses an absolute
renegade. And I think therel be a
rather startling denouement and a
crusher for the plans of Wilkins, Con
ley and Company” And more than
that, Jimmy refused to say, though
I begged him to tell me exactly what
ihc did expect to discover when we got
to Wilkinsg' cabin.
In a lcnely nook of the woods we
Came upon the cabin. It had a brood
ing, sullen look strangely like the ex.
pression on the face of its master.
Jimmy hid me behind a clump of
bushes and hurrieq forward alone.
For a minute I permitted him to man
age the situation to suit himself.
Suddenly a sound came to my ears.
It was a woman's shriek—a call for
help in a wvolce which sounded defi
nitely familiar,
Automatically I rushed out from
hiding and hurrfed toward the cabin.
As Jimmy turned the knob of the door
there was one wild, agonized scream,
which became suddenly muffled and
was followed by a thick pall of silence
—=silence unbroken and sinister—gi
lence suggesting tragedy of the most
evil sort,
One moment the woods had been
allve and thriiling with agonized
sound; the next moment they were
stil—and dead
I stumbled forwarq with hot tears
Smarting in my eyes and my heart.
1 felt that terrible harm had come to
the girl who had written to me with
such pathetic pleading tnat | help
her get a name for a baby.
A Fearful Struggle.
While Jimmy and I were going
about things in a methodical, plodding
Way, forces of which we knew nothing
might have been at work, and Madge
Minturn had perhaps suffered greater
evil than that from which he had
begged me to free her.
As these thoughts raced across my
N'lhlmtonm.mybodytonco.
too, and a second later | followed Jim
my across the threshoid of the cabin,
Amdnouudlmmowu
ness of a wild nru?lo. Wilkins was
ltlmng with the physical strength a
man w mmmmzh!ubelow‘
par often displays. It all Jimmy's
sclence to master him. But at last he
onquered, and Wilkins became utter.
ly cowed—subdued and frightened—
and entirely respectful in his attitude
towu:h the man vbolhu: :'.'l able to
gain physical control o m.
In a oomrb : otv"t?o uubl:.muc:e:’ll
Madge, sobbing violen ¥y that we ha
come just In time, and that if we M‘
been & minute htor there would have
‘bnn tmm sos her to de but kin
eruel
“But my Ml!{ Miss Fatrfax--make
him find my baby. If anything's hap
‘rned to little luehl-rd\‘l:\ going to
11l myself. I couldn't ft—noth
ing matters but qut baby. If he's
:r‘!y alive and well, everything will be
right,
“Don't you know where your baby
Is, Madge ™ | anked a little severoly,
“No-—he stole my baby—Williams
Ald. Oh, Miss Fairfax, do you think
he's dome him any harm?™
“Wilkine,” said Jimmy sternly, “it
will be just as well for you If noth-
Ing onpleasant has happened to Mttle
Richard—Aret, we')' find him, and u'nenl
you'll give a Mttde expinnation of. your
rflommnn this afternoon. I think
CAn guess Just about what 1t has
been, but | won't do any guessing.
You'll talk and ' take down tn writ.
ing every word You say. Now, march
and be quick about t.*
The frightened oreature obeyed al
most lt:Mmu'l;mHy. Eheer terror had
posseasion of him.
*1 left the kid 'n the barn.” sald he
- he's all Mght
mnm ""“? out 'nf the door he
out vind'etively and kicked a
Oo&m ‘ame fawning across his
“AM 88 Madge watched him the
ized fOAr on her face showed that
.go wondered « g sufferings this avi)
creature might have made her Inno.
cent little baby endure
(To Be Continued Tomorrow.)
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B A AR At
TAR DS A N
Jimmy Barton (Harry Fox) seizes Wilkins in the barn after Beatrice Fairfax (Grace Dar
ling) and Madge Minturn recover the baby.
These Models Are Repreduced on This Page by Special Arrangement with “Good
Housekeeping,” the Nation’s Greatest Home Magazine.
PRI T T e & R T
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7 \ - - : ‘ ‘ A
i e
| The Humble Shaw!
The working women ana girls of Lan
cashire and Yorkshire regard the shawl
A 8 & necessity, and especially is this
the case In the colllery districts. A
writer In The Miligate Monthly says:
“Domestio duties, performed in varying
temperatures, on washing days and
cleaning days, in the house or about the
yard, are rendered safe under the pro
tection of a shawl The mill girl could
scurcely get on without it. It shields
her between the mill and home, winter
and summer, in snow or rain, It is eas
ily donned and doffed. It is the handi
ert of all articles of wearing apparel,
and, as made in England today, is mod.
erate In cost. A warm, soft shaw!
would save many a racking cough and
stave off Inciplent pulmonary troubles.
It Is a tried and proved sanitarium, and
is growing In patronage and popularity
with ladies of the upper middle classes.”
- The Monk's Wit.
An excellent story is recorded of a
monk named Mainus, who, in the relgn
of Francis I of France, owed his first
advancement to a olever retort. The
King was very fond of the game of ten
nis, and was playing a match one day
with Mainus. The monk finally ended
the hard-fought game with a brilllant
wtroke. -
The king was somewhat out of humor
on account of his defeat.
“Remarkable!” he exclaimed sarcas
tieally! “To think that such a stroke
should be made by 4 mere monk!"
“But, sire.” replied the monk, who
Was as quick with his wit as he was
with his racquet. “it is your Majesty's
own fault that the stroke was not made
.”'A‘:h:::w:i;o afterward M '
nus re
celv h
.a“.h appointment as flm of
¥
A Primitive Community,
Described as “very near being an
earthly paradise for the poor,” the Mex
fcan Island of Cozumel, off Yucatan, is
inhabited mainly by the poor, satisfied
to lead a hand-to-mouth existence. To
galn a livelihood requires the minimum
of effort. The natives pay no rent be
cause they are able to squat on a build.
ing site with all necessary material at
hand from which to construct a cot tage;
they have free fuel, free fodder for cows,
food for hogs and fowls; small game and
wild fruits are plentiful, fish for the
trouble of throwing in a line, turtles for
the taking, to say nothing of turtles’
eEEs. And to provide such things as
‘tho island does not produce—clothing,
for instance—a day's work is sufficient,
Development of Steamships.
In 1543 Blasco de Garay, & sea cap
fain of Spain, exhibited in the harbor of
Barcelona, In the presence of Charles
the Fifth and his court, a steamboat ca
pable of a speed of three miles an hour.
For nearly two hundred years Blasco de
Garay's invention was lost sight of, and
not till the end of the eightesnth cen
tury was the subject taken up llll!.“
European sclentists became Interested,
and the result was the construction of
& steamboat on the River Baone by
Marquis de Jouffrey in 1750. In 1788
Patrick Miller, of Scotland, bullt a
steamboat. It succeedea so well that a
larger one was bullt in 1789, when seven
miles an hour were made. Eventually
Robert Fulton bullt the Clermont, which
made its trial trip in 1808,
Too Late.
“Hello, Tommy. Wihat & nice lttle
“’"X-’“" "o';. It's noe use talking to
Mh:, Ral” aia Sot & sweetheart al-
Introducing the Autumn Blouse
A well-made, taste
fully designed waist
from Pars, of whits
French batiste, with
corded seams and du
rable linen-covered
buttons. Tothe right,
a striped tafieta waist
with collar and cuffs
of white Georgette
rrepe.
Charm of Manner
I“G OOD manners are the pleas
ant way of doing things"™
| says an aphorism well worth
noting.
In the rugged democracy on ‘wWhich
& good many people pride themselves,
charm of manner has lost its anclent
prestige. Weé have a Bohemian way of
announcing that conventionality doesn’t
count with us, that we act as we feel,
that we belleve in simplicity and nat
uralness That all sounds rather fine
and Independent. But it won't do.
We have all to adapt ourselves to
an ever-varying stream of circum
stances. And If we learn to adapt our
selves gracefully we shall at once save
ourselves friction, annovance and an un
necessarily awkward appearance.
“Don't be affected,” says many a
well-meaning adult to an impressionable
ehild. And the child who was probably
only trying to be gracious and pleasant
and to meet its exders with a little atf
and sweetness WOn
derwhethor Srertbody hinke 10 o
fected 1M ) + 8o It tries to
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workmanship in the %
corded seams and fine 3
tucking of this white
waist makes it excel
lent for sports wear.
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bosom effect, and the :
collar and cuffs are *
linen. 4
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By Beatrice
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Fairfax
be natural and probably succeeds in be.
Ing boisterous and ungraceful,
Charm of manners is made up of a
number of things. First there is a very
genuine desire to please people rather
than hurt or annoy them. Then there
is an agrecable perception of what is
awkward and ungraceful.
Next comes quiet poise and self-pos-
Sesslon together with a feeling that one
is & member of a soclal Eroup at the
same time that one is an individual. A
deferential attitude toward other peo
ple's opinions, a lack of intolerant haste |
in dismissing other people’s preferences
and jdeas, an amiable willlogness to it
Into the picture Instead of standing out
mmnm.umuwnu
make charm of manner,
tnotured & social sement™*h Lts Theart,
@ steady brain, a desire to m':f&{
an ability to percelve what is customary
s, et Sowdtd ‘i fadken
actual e‘:r- of Im may i: r'E
tient u:’ exert serself to
Jimmy Barton (Harry Fox) interviews the Conleys.
The leading agricultural States,
reckoned on the total value of all their
farm crops, are Illinots, lowa, Texas,
Ohlo, Georgia, Missourl, Kansas, New
York and !ndw:u. s
What the firemen shall do in thelr
Spare time, which in some cities is
most of it, has been solved by the Wi
nona, Minn,, brigade, which has fitted
Up a row of empty horse stalls into a
small, but complete motor car factory.
The last plece of apparatus added to
their equipment is thoroughly under
stood by the mu.u b:cm.no they made it.
The figure 6 appears to play an odd
part in the European conflict. The
naval battle of Jutland, the greatest
in the world's history, occurred on the
666th day of the war. Lora Kitchener
was In his 66th year, while England
recelved the news of his death on the
sixth day of the sixth month of 1916,
.. »
September of this .yeu will mrk“
the 250th anniversary of the great fire
of London. It began September 3,
1666, In a baker's shop in Pudding
Lane and destroyed, in the #pace of
our days, 88 churches, the city gates,
the Royal Exchange, Guildhall and
‘many other publle buildings, besides
13,200 dvollln:.ho.u?.
Attention has been called before in
the columns of The Hustler to the wide
employment of electric pocket lamps
by the fighting men of Europe. Ac
mmwnmmtmthn\u&y
per, It is learned that two London
E... have between
Soay. to &%
% were in the
AR AN ) X ‘ i R
g}&o« n
oo sil
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GBI At 4 o
AIHEIN A |] T R
by TN -RE e e
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NA\ f{}{ ’f b e T »}':{,," R
4(} IJ 14 % s , EoR e
!1:,‘4.#0 ok 5 & oa
Villse gl / GRe L o
Za THRE MU o / L 2 L aar i
s\ ‘i’ b i <% BT
AN TR ) | et s
Sl n bSO )
7S; [ P
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N i
Do You Know Thato o
Norway owns nearly 800 submarine ¢
telegraph cables, dut their combine!
length is considerably less than that
of one mu-Atlu:ie .eabh.
Experiments on the Philippine Is
land of Mindango seem to indicats
that the finest qualities of rubber can
be produced th-;u .‘m.h profit,
Statisticians figure that 26,000,000
bables are born into the world each
year, about 70 a minute, or more than
one every ucor:d. b
Owing to the shortage of paper, th»
Australian postal authorities have a;
pealed to the people not to use two
half-penny stamps when a penny one
will do.
g % 9
British coal production last year
fAmounted to 253,000,000 tons, of which
43,600,000 tons was exported, 23,00 -
000 going to the Allles and 17,000,000
to neutrals.
- ..
The Bug River, which has been
mentioned frequently in war d'
Patches from the eastern front, is a
tributary of the Dneiper and has »
length of oom.u: n.flu.
| The geologioal SUrvey reports mtr-:-
R S Koy Riy
erust ang :&:‘u containe, were an
swered by it . people
South and Coam-m. [ .
ing information through it ‘F% are
[z, Bt e, B, 2
Keaps in &. the "i’-‘-gf"?-'
i A
ot e :