WH. Yellow Men Sleep

KLBEXT OOXJHTT TMBUJTE:

COPMTY BAMHXE

ot Partimmd,

ra? ra?l4

km 4m Na rar *MMr kla4who a4rM

MM Am *a M¡ª4

Tralra.

Gaira Mhm

kia ?

WH.Ora.,JOHNSON,

wfca rar?

m

?

Yellow Men

Sleep

¡ª

By JEREMY LANE

perfume

their talk In the open near her mother's grave.

Almost before he experred. he saw Andrew March, who was

searching for him.

Many were with

the elder Ainerlean. including the In-

terpreter.

¡°How far did you go?"

¡°Far enough to hear the oak leaves

blowdng outside her window.¡±

queried the Ara¡°You cross¡ªno?"

bian.

¡°Yes."

He recounted their morning meeting;

his return to the mines; the strange,

silent malice of the dwarfs who htid

allowed him to go on Into the fumes

from the devotional;

what he had

seen over the rim of the wall; the

blackness

that had fallen, and then

the events beyond the stairs.

"You have profaned the holy of

"They have no

holies.¡± said March.

higher religion.

There Is no end to

your

March

was smiling

crimes.¡±

gravely.

Oddly. It did not seem tc

They

Faced

Each

Other.

that he was talkihg to the

his princess. March seemed

forward no such parental claim.

Levlngton

father of

to

"What arrangement

have you made

here?"

today

we are secure.

After

¡°For

that, it depends upon what disposition

is made of the four who were taken

awuy this morning on our account.¡¯¡¯

"It Is a gift." said the sailor.

¡°He means

our lives." explained

March. "He cannot always influence

They

his men to think as he does.

are not inclined to make

much of

American aid.¡±

¡°Will they give us up?" asked Con.

¡°Today no," replied

the Arabian,

grinning In the torchlight.

To Con. In his present mood, today

was forever.

In his health, and the

power of new love, he could not think

of life coming to an end. ever.

He felt

Invincible. To March he said:

¡°Today we not only escaped

from

their big walls hut fooled their wise

serpent, and even returned to the palace. to the apartment of their princess.¡±

"The snhie hoy," mused March, with

something

like despair in his voice.

¡°That¡¯s the spirit that brought you up

the cut In the road when the riders

were coming down on us; and you

were going like that, one night In Cin-

cinnati."

¡°Things are Just beginning.¡± said

rather absently,

as he wnlked

abreast of his friend, while the Arabian with the torch followed, with his

The

hobbling workers.

latter were

talking softly.

"What is It they say?"

Con had

turned sharply.

The Arab ex-sailor smirked uneas¡°They want their four

ily. then said:

Con,

brothers."

¡°Where are they?"

¡°In the city, perhaps to die. because

you."

was

There

a murmur from the

background, ns If the broken-bodied

human creutures knew the meaning of

Levlngton saw

the English words.

that they could scarcely he expected

to sacrifice four of their own to save

two fugitive strangers.

¡°You have more men hen* underground than they number In the city,¡±

said Con to the foreman.

¡°Yes."

¡°Then say to your men that toinoprow we will go and get their four

brothers."

¡°No!" cried the Arab.

¡°Yes.¡± said Levlngton,

with assur-

ance.

The

seaman turned to his

the word.

¡°My God !¡± said Andrew

men

with

March.

CHAPTER

The

Prince

XIV.

Rides Out.

The ardors tf the past day and night

brought deep sleep to the two white

men. Con, who wakened but once In

night, and then merely to relax

Into deeper rest again, noted that the

spaces In the caves were seething with

little ugly men. whose twisted spines

bobbed Iri a light that wus slcklsh and

cold.

The crowd seemed

to grow as

the hours passed, ns If the innermost

giving

up their

crevices of earth were

human ants.

More hoelike weapons

were brought, to add

to the rusty

knives.

There were tubes for blowing darts, containing now a long acIn

cumulation of the dust of peace.

fact, the present generation could not

subterday

of revolt In their

recall a

history.

ranean

The Arabian sailor

rushed about nil this night like one

possessed, his old hopes Ignited.

Primitive military system prevailed.

The horde was grotiped

Into units.

There were lieutenants.

The white

men when wakened

would rank as

colonels, with no less a person than

the Arab ns their generalissimo.

The miners seemed

lost In a dull

glow of excitement.

Within their lives

nothing had occurred to Interrupt the

next day¡¯s labor.

The seizing of their

four brothers had not seemed unusual,

hut the effect promised an Infinity of

new turns.

There was no thought of

sleep. The eld humors of an uprising

seemed

at last about

to he fulfilled.

The hour 'was near, their lot cast.

Every tortured heart was eased somewhat of Its burden of hnte in the prospect of action. They had never before

attempted to express their loathing of

the city, of their masters.

They laid been horn to puln. toil, siHome, shop, anti gruve were

lence.

one to them. There were no families.

From some warrior¡¯s house In the city,

pits

each man-child returned

to the

crippled forever. Its spine an arch of

any

way

was

of

horror. There

seldom

Identifying the broken creature of ten

or twelve.

All thought of parentage

was lost.

When, by chance, kinship

was re-established,

such meeting was

hut a renewal of bitterness.

always

And

in the city cellars the

precious store of roots grew and grew.

On the fur edges

of the state

the

essence

of tho~o roots was bartered

exchanged

Always

for

or

silver.

the

yellow bowl In the apartment

of the

kept filled with

wus

future queen

potency.

dreum

The state religion

was perpetuuted

In the lower room,

which was so situated as to he symbolic

of its connection

with the source of

all dreams,

the

mines

themselves.

Thus Chee Ming wrought upon

the

whole world the substance pf his medleyelids

tutlons ¡ªthe vizir, whose thin

had never been touched and soothed

and damned by one taint of koresh.

His weh was spreading beyond the

sen.

lie chose the blood of princes

and of queens, to blend at his leisure.

In his own interpretation of right. The

old monzoul had become no more than

a warm silken hag of clay under the

skinny hands of his vizir. Chee Ming

w¡¯as ready to rule the planet entire.

Now In the caverns, the miners were

eating, wherever they

sticks

stood,

flicking in and out of brown Jars, the

slinking

women

about In mortal fear.

It was long after midnight. March

dropped down beside Levlngton.

¡°Surprising the riders do not come."

"They¡¯ll wait for daylight.

They

have the four. They fee! sure of us.¡±

The two friends sat a little way off

from the swarm, and looked Idly Into

drowsy with

(¡¯on grew

the gas-fire,

the warmth in his face. After a while

green

he said. "The

hair of

¡°You mean the gas?¡±

"Yes, the way It comes up and floats,

like something drowned In air. That¡¯s

the flowing green hair¡ªrather fiendish.

I can¡¯t say whnt I mean."

"If the fire happened to go out.¡± said

March, ¡°we should all go out with It.¡±

"From what depth do you suppose It

the

comes?"

March looked quickly at his comrade,

and smiled.

"You are sleepy."

¡°Yes. I¡¯ll take n nap here.

But do

you think the gas has anything to do

the

seeds

they

dig

with

crusted

out of

the pits here?"

"I don¡¯t know. Nor can I tell you

how the koresh seeds, millions of them,

ever got down so deep In the earth, to

begin with.

The Arab says that there

are shafts as deep as wells, and from

these chasms the worker with a torch

brings up seeds

that must have laid

In the day ever since the plnnet condensed and cooled : and the same seeds

will sprout In a month¡¯s time when

planted nn the surface and watered.¡±

¡°Something

preserved,

left over,

from the days of the giants and the

mastodons." said Con.

¡°I thought you were going to say

¡ª-¡ª¡¯¡¯

seeds

from

"How do they extract the oil and

the Incense?"

"The oil Is simply pressed out of the

full-grown root, and the Incense Is that

oil vaporized."

¡°It got me." said Levlngton.

¡°And there Is a poison they make

from the seed Itself; hut that Is death,

no dreams with It." added March.

A curious kind of notoriety came tr>

Levlngton while he dozed and rested.

The story of his buttle with the Nubian

was spread

about the caverns, and

many were the glances cast upon him,

not so unfriendly.

The monkey¡¯s

choice In that struggle was taken here

good

strengthened

as a

omen ; It

these

people¡¯s faith In the white man.

BE

CONTINUED.)

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than fifty years, due to McllvnlneKothe post continuing the custom of

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originally wus on

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board a Confederate

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The cannon has been in the hands of

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POPULATION

Recent

IS

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All-Russian Census

Shows

Low

in Population.

*

The recent nll-Russlan census under

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considerably

Russia

has

decreased

since the beginning of the revolution.

(

according

an

in

the Kras

to

article

Although

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to their homes.

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that the mortality rate

has grown

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during the years of war and

decreased

Bolshevist

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Is

Many a man¡¯s early training

kep* him from making good.

haa

*

of the procession

that had

passed.

Con Imagined the borne hammocks with the silken sleeping burHe moved into

dens, especially one.

the hull, keeping close to the Inner

wall.

He came to the familiar door.

There was no time to knock.

The vlctrola was still there. With a

little cry of dismay the servant of the

princess arched his hack and ran forward. quite hideous !u haste and hnte.

Levlngton stopped him and picked up

the knife that fell from the yellow

hand. There was further brief business of wadding the mouth of old Fu

Ah and securing his enraged members.

Then the white man, his heart pounding, ran to the raised couch.

She was

there. He closed his eyes a moment,

because of her loveliness, his own relief and the strange hurt.

Her face

held the calm of that shadow of salde

wings. Con knew the satiny black beneath her eyes.

In fact,, the yellow

bowl had been left here within her

she

reach when

wakened. He bent over

and stared Into her face.

"Helen,

"Helen." he whispered.

wake up! They are giving you death.

I do not mean to make you unhappy.

Do not sleep. It Is poison, you must

not! I want you to live. Oh, princess,

¡ª¡±

there Is America

He did not know whut he was saying to her.

Her arms and shoul/lers

were limp ns he touched her, lifted her

little,

a

from the colored cushions.

Without opening her eyes, she smiled

faintly, ami It maddened

him to think

that she was pleased with some phantasm in a subtler world, perhaps entirely unaware of his own presence.

The deep

shadows about her eyes

seemed to stab him. He raised her

closer to him. He was pleading. He

smoothed

her

His hands

temples.

shook, as he breathed the full story of

Ids heart.

The universe was only this

¡ªthat she lay faint In his arms, that

her white beauty possessed him, that

he could not reach her. a web always

between, dellcritc yet unbreakable. She

sighed, as a child who enters a new

depth of rest, and It punished him.

She had not opened her eyes.

The leaves rustled outside the easement. From a silver vase on a tohoret

white rose petals drifted down to the

rug. Curtains swayed gently In the

movement of the air. Afternoon sunlight crossed golden through the oaks.

Out of the age-old secrets of the heart

Levlngton knew tile mystery of high

desire, as If a race of men, stalwart,

tender, true, hud gone before him, lived

and loved and perished, that he might

breathe the same air with Ills princess

In this hour, might-feel the softly rushing storm within himself, and pledge

his all to the bounty of one who ?fld

not speak.

Again he leaned over her, and whispered rapidly¡ªonly tin? great hazards

mattered now ¡ª"Tell me, tell ine ¡ª¡¯¡¯

Helen¡¯s throat trembled, lienenth the

smooth skin a ripple of effort, hut she

did not unseal her lips. Con covered

Ills eyes with his arm.

Out of this moment of intense quiet

he heard footsteps. greHt leaping falls.

A Nubian, a

He turned, crouching.

giant, passed,

steady

his dagger

as

He rushed, and

bronze, his eyes red.

Levlngton

stepped

fray

aside.

The

must he lt?d away from Helen.

The

negro also reckoned on this. Con made

sure of the knife lie had taken from

the servant.

Fu Ah, who was Mflll

tightly bandaged, lying neur the door.

They faced each other.

The great

Levlngton grapblack rushed again.

pled. parried, and they swung around.

He could do nothing with his knife.

Another wild down thrust from the

Nubian, a lunge with lion power In it.

(Jray foam stood out upon the negro¡¯s

Ups. A mighty hinge of ebony was closing upon Levlngton, who felt his legs

giving way, and the borrowed

knife

pried steadily out of his hand.

His

gradually

being

was

head

forced backCatlike, he writhed loose his

ward.

right arm, and flashed a blow to the

black neck, but It wae like hitting n

rug.

The African was mouthing hotly. For all thut life meant, Con clung

to the dagger-arm.

He was lifted cleo*¡¯

of the floor, to enable the black to adjust him at his leisure for the final

stroke.

All the agony of life¡¯s untasted cup came to Levlngton os

he

thought of Helen.

He could see her.

Suddenly the Nubian cried out ami

He dropped

seemed

to lose control.

Levlngton, who snatched

the weapon

from him.

He was screaming and

stamping.

Upon his shoulders clung

Whispered.

He

"Helen,"

"Helen, a small white-faced monkey, his teeth

holding deep, eyes staring out at nothWake Up! They Are Giving You

ing. The Infuriated black would sumDeath."

mon the entire palace with his howls.

felt secret exultation because

of the

Con drove the dagger twice below the

possibilconfession.

It measured the

ribs, and the giant toppled Into silence,

ity of power for him. It meant he

while the little beast bit and hit, doubtcould make a difference.

From that

less repaying black cruelty and white

vantage his fate had quickly led him friendship at the same time.

Bestir

to the reverse side of It, her side¡ªthe

turned inquiring eyes up to Levlngton.

pain, the uncertainty, the new giddy

who had no time to express

thanks.

whirlpool of her eighteenth year. LevRetaining the Nubian¡¯s weapon, he fled

lngton plucked the second

iron ring,

past the gagged and fright-ridden Fu

and instantly knew where he was.

A. Ah. and out of the apartment, dodging

corridor before him, a window opened

down the corridor.

There were runout. and the shade of oak trees with ning shuffles behind him.

He gained

their brushing leaves.

stairway

.lie door to the

and stumbled

No one appeared in the corridor outdown.

Hnving entered the passage from a

side the apartment of the princess. He

realized with a shock that the shaft of

known direction. Con had no difficulty

the mines was a mile to eastward.

He In continuing eastward,

toward the

had groped n long while underground. location of the air shafts. Ills thoughts

lingered the

Now in the upper passage

were a riot of things, beginning with

XIII.

¡ªls¡ª

BHLAKKA9T

ALWAYS TNE

Bit >y

Ape Repays.

When he wakened some lime later,

his first link of consciousness

was that

the altar-fire was out. the air changing;

looking

and he knew

that

without

Helen was no longer on the other side

??f the wall. The same green twilight

suffused the top of the tunnel. lie recalled as from mouths ago how the

party of dwarfs had drawn Aside to

permit him to pass on into this maze

palace.

helow

the

Con wondered

vaguely

If the

whole

world

were

honeycombed.

Then he managed

to

rise, and his feet at first were like

diving weights.

Nothing less than his Intensity of

eirtotlon lifted him up the notched

harrier again. Ills arms were shaking,

his eyes dim. Again the greenish glow

in his fnee.

The chamber was empty

now, save for one drugged inundnrin,

lying full length In his blue robe, one

gnunt

arm touching the floor.

The

altar was dead, and only an oppressive

feeling

In the air remained

of the

koresh.

The

wooden

door

at the

further side was not quite closed.

She had come down to this pit of

royal iniquity because he was making

her unhappy.

Con knew this.

She

)>ad come to dream In semideath

under fingers from the yellow howl. Yet

he was not so fatuous ns to believe

that It could he her first communion

with the darker gods.

In fact, the

dais here resembled that In the throneaffair.

permanent

room¡ªa

Con was

sick at heart.

Heedless of the sleeping Chinese, he

drew himself up and across the wall.

The exertion seemed to bring hack his

strength.

The space

at the roof of

the tunnel was small. lie slid through

dropped

and

down on the other side,

near the ultar. The yellow bowl, too.

was gone.

The bowl of Jade gave an

opalescent

light, close

up. Itself a

dream, with the ceaseless

dry pouring

?'t the gas. Con glanced at the prone

figure¡ªa face

putty, no

of smooth

eyes,

a white mouth, nerveless.

It

was the symbol of all that ailed Tau

Levlngton

Kuan.

grasped

Iron

the

ring In the door, and pulled back.

Softly It swung to him, with a gush

of better air from the black passage

beyond.

The darkness was damp and

thick. He moved Into It, and the door

closed after him. He stumbled upon

the lowest step of u stairway.

The

stones were wet and worn.

A feeling

of oil was about the place: He began

to ascend, carefully, taking no reckoning. Nothing mattered hut this inner

Perdraw, the great master passion.

haps If his brain hud been clearer he

would have questioned

himself, perhaps held hack from this rashness.

But

he was burning Inside.

He lost count

of the nscending steps.

He had no

Presently another

thought of bravery.

door at the top, another Iron ring.

important

More

than uny material

surrouudings was the fact that he was

making her unhappy.

At first he had

FANCY

retail

you pay

COCOA,

$3.00.

our

price J 1.50; 5-lb. pkg. Special Aftat

Dinner Coffee others charge you $3.40

Delivered free any.

our price $1.86.

Send tor

where In the United Btates.

Weekly Price

our Wholesale

List

save from twenty to forty per cent.

Wholesale

Supply

Stock* rowers

Co.

1623 18th St.. P. O. Box 1442. Denver

HOME OFBESTTHE

IN USEO

Copyright by the Century Company

CHAPTER

PRO.

S-LJB.

revolution.

"A particularly great decrease

ha*

during

noted

the revolution

among

the city population.

In th*

twenty provinces tha

above-mentioned

number of city Inhabitants

dropped

from 7.900,000 In 1917 to 3,800,000 at

present, the decrease

thus amounting

to 3,100,000 persons, or 39.2 per cant

been

Ex-Mayor is Suicide.

N. J.¡ªJacob

Hauaallnt

four times mayor of Newark, died of ?

knife wound, self-inflicted, police aal ................
................

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