RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF Ir- Bhe Mystery of Hartley House Copyrliht by Gaorga II. Darin Co. 00G0Q0CO0O0COSO00G00O00000C0000000000000000O000COetX)0CO9QOO0000CC000i9CC o ISODELI fiynopoli. Dr. Jolin Mlcliclion, Just brghtnlnc his career, becomes fcslricnt physician unJ cornpnnlon of Itottter Sidney nt Hartley house, Mr. Sidney Is an American, a semi Invalid, old nnd rich mnl very de sirous to live. Mrs. Sidney Is a Spanish woman, dlRiilflcd and reti cent. Jed, the butler, acta like a privileged member of the family Ilurtlcy house Is n fine old Isolated country plncc, with a murder utory, n "haunted pool," and many watch dogs, nnd un atmosphere of mys tery, The "haunted pool" Is where nichnrd Dobson, son of a former owner of Hartley house, had killed his brother, Arthur Dobton. Jed begins operations by locking the doctor In his room the very first night. CHAPTER It. 2 Thnt evening T liml dinner with Mrs. Kidney and her daughter Isohel. I had been In the hou.su twenty-four hours and did not know there wuh a daugh ter until dinner brought the three of m together. Mrs. Sidney was Spanish. She was n lovely woman, gracious and charm ing, hut I thought there was a great deal of steel hidden In her disposition. Hlio did not seem to ask thnt life he noft or to expect to find It so. She had a Itoman dignity of self respect which did not, I could he sure, permit 'moaning. It would not have taxed any one's perceptions to recognize In Mrs. Kidney a human being living an ex traordinary life. The fact was so ap parent that It seemed n part of her personality. t must he remembered that I had come to Hartley house prepared for nbnormnllt'lcs. There was first, the man with the wonderful will to live which had Interested Dr. Brovv-ioll. There was the alien beauty of the Iiou.su, the strange servant Jed, the haunted pool Insignificant as It was, to rational being the lovely woman who was so apparently n tragic figure. Thero was the fact of my being locked Id my room the first night. There were the forbidding defences of tho pluct. walls, dogs and keepers. I mny bo excused for taking a fanciful view fit my aew surroundings. Then there was Miss Sidney Isohel. She came Into the dining room nn un expected If not astonishing phenome non to me, who did not know thnt "there was u daughter In tho family. Mrs. Sidney presented me. "How do you do?" said Miss Sidney, nnd she seemed to find It tiresome that a. stranger bad taken n place at the table. Jed served x; nnd tho dinner was excellent. Although the ladles had only n glass of sherry each, I was of fered a variety of liquors. My habit Is abstemious except upon rare occa nlonu, but I was so embarrassed by Miss Sidney's boredom that I took two glasses o chnmpagne,.nnd they inndo 8he Seemed to Find It Tiresome That a Stranger Had Taken a Place at the Table. mo a more tolernhic dinner companion. at was some chnmpagne .stimulated re 'murk on feminism which caused Miss jfltdney to stare at me us If I were an nnlmnl which, being smooth skinned, suddenly had grown a coat of fur. Sim stared for an Instant and then jlrWghed. Sho was quite frank. Sho had been bored; sho had become In terested, I could see that sho dis tressed her mother. Mrs. Sidney, any kino coidd know, held to conventions the salvation of life; Miss Sidney 'did not. I Isohel Sidney was n very attractive tdrl. I guefsed her age to bo twenty three. I also guessed that candor and honesty were outstanding points in her .disposition. Her youth nnd her beauty ,were magnetic, and I must confess that my romanticism was touched Instantly. had seen just enough of Mr. Sidney to understand how this girl could bo 'the daughter of Mrs, Sidney. By tho time dinner was over we had found n pleasant agreement In ldens nnd ip i was In an ecstacy, full of the sensation which comes to a dlfll dent mnn, unaccustomed to women, when he dares to think for the first time thnt he has been Interesting to a young nnd beautiful girl. It Is one of the I'lyslan emotions. We grow old nnd bald, nnd women arc adventures dismissed from our lives. We know we do not Interest them. We do not think of Interesting them. We become pnutalooned lay-Hgurcs too sen red of scandal or too confirmed In propriety to break out of the narrowed way. There Is an age which comes to a mnn, n condition In which ho finds himself, to which he submits If he have any morals, and when It comes mid when he submits, the gates are closed upon fanciful, romantic adventures. If he has been fortunate, he Is content, lie sits nt the west window, and his pros pect Is the sunset. He no longer asks the great question of youth: "Could I make that girl like me?" To me, nfter thnt first dinner with Mrs. Sidney and her daughter, . tho ecstacy was a romantic folly. Isohel had captured me, my sense, my ra tionality, my Judgment, my mind, fancy nnd emotions. Iteauty and youth alone are enough to do this for an Imagina tive young man, and when nttractlve aspects of character are back of beauty and youth, and when the young man looks forward to n probability of that conquering clrcumstnnce, propinquity, he may be excused If his feet lightly touch the floor. I was captured and knew It after thnt first dinner knew It, and both loved and dreaded It. I was about to make a fool of myself and bo at once a happy and n miser able fool. In tho exalted state of egoistic emo tions which I have outlined, I went to Mr. Sidney's room after dinner and snt with him for two hours. I began to appreciate how charmingly his life was decorated. A really rare subtlety of art was used to bring n wnnn color Into this Indomitable but feeble man's winter of life. I did not fully appre ciate until later what thought nnd caro lay behind the unstudied comforts' and sensations Hartley house offered. Mr. Sidney wus whlto haired nnd very gracious. Ills manner was a warm cordiality. It was not precise. It was robust, but It was benignant. Later I saw how bis prcseuce pervaded tho place. Wo had a cheerful tnlk. What he said suggested to mo that my world could not hnvo been more than n hun dred years old at the most, nnd that his Included the period of Inorganic evolution In which the period of or ganic evolution Is but a pin prick. Youth Is startled by such conceptions of life, but I had nn Interesting even ing. Before I said good night, Jed enmo In with two bottles of wine. He stood and looked at me unplensnntly. I arose to go, and Mr. Sidney said : "I think wo shall llko each other. At least, I hope you will be comfort able, even happy. And don't bo dis tressed about tho wine. I don't think It any more. Jed drinks It, ami I en Joy seeing him do It." A whlppoorvvlll wus relterant In the woods at night, and Its call came from dnrk recesses odorous and myste riously veiled. Having snld good night to Mr. Sidney, I bad gone to my room with a book from the library. The night was fresh, sweet-smelling and cool. I hnd read for several hours when I heard tho cut holt In my door thrown against tho piece of metal which had been left In the socket. There wus no trnusoni above tho door, and evidently the threshold kept light from appearing beneath It. I had been reading, as I said, for three hours at least, and whoever tried to bolt mo In had good reason to think I was nsleeti. I knew who tho person wns. It wns Jed. Knowing I was not locked In, I was undisturbed nnd continued read ing. Shortly afterward I heard a woman's volco In expostulation far down tho hall. It aroso nhruptly to a sharp cry, and I hnd to lay aside my book and expose the fact that my door was not locked, a thing I had not wanted to do until tho secret of its being locked could bo discovered by rovenllng that It was not. I hurried out and down the hall. Jed had a woman by the wrist. Both of them saw me coming. Sho relensed herself from his relaxing grip bv a quick jerk and ran. He stood until I came up. "What Is tho matter?" I nsked. "What makes you think unythlng Is tho matter?" he asked. "Don't take me for n fool," I said. "That was Mrs. Sidney who screamed. You were holding her. It seems to mo. It needs un explanation." "Who nro you that you need nn ex planation?" said Jed. "You uro drunk again." "I know I am. If that's satisfactory to my employer, why should It bother you?" "I doubt that It Is satisfactory to your employer that you should be mak ing his wife scream nt midnight. Look hero: you're n servant In this house. What have you to say for yourself? I'm going to have an explanation of this." Jed had been surly and angry, but now he grinned. . 'By CLIFFORD S. RAYMOND Illustrated by IRWIN MYERS "All right," he said, "but If yon wnnt to be decent about It, ask Mrs. Sidney first whether "she wants your help nnd your asking. That's my advice, young fellow. And while we're asking, how did yon get out of your room? You're not supposed to be out. We don't want people In this limine running around the halls at this time of night." "I opened the door and came out. Why shouldn't I come out. I heard n scream and came." He looked at me ns If he were doubt ing himself. I think ho was uncertain whether ho hnd thrown the bolt or not. It transpired later that I was right, but for the time I wns worried. When I went bnck to my room, I wns restless, ns one naturally would be, u stranger In so strange a house. It was Impossible to steep and dilllcult to rend. 1 sat by the window and alter nately dozen and rend until day broko and the woodthrush began to slug. Then, quieted, I went to bed and had two hours' sleep. I thought It wise to speak to Mrs. Sidney about the Incident of the night. She had seen me, she knew I had talked to Jed, she might or might not know thnt I recognized her. I might add to her perplexities by speaking to her, hut I might obtain an Insight Into mut ters which would enable mo to act discreetly and usefully. If I remained Ignorant of motives prevailing In the house, I might nt tiny time blunder Into n serious mistake. It seemed best to speak to Mrs. Sidney. I could seo when I spoke to her. she had been greatly disturbed, but she was Itomnn. "It was nothing serious or Importnnt, doctor," she said. "I'll not sny that It was pleasant or that I liked It, but It had no significance. Jed Is n faithful and Invaluable servant. He has a vice for which he Is not responsible. He wns n perfectly sober man when he came to us, and If he (sn't now, It Is our own fnult. My husband corrupted him without Intending to do so. My husband, when he wns well nnd strong, loved to drink wltfe. He drank It In great quantities and without any dis turbance of bis sobriety or good na ture. It mellowed and nt tho time In tensified life for liitn. He cannot use It now, on nccount of his health, but he enjoys seeing tho use of It, nnd Jed hns been made the victim of Mr. Sidney's vlcnrlous enjoyment. Jed is not alwnys conslderuto of his position when he Is not sober, but he never is dangerous, not even when, llko lust night, he Is exceedingly annoying." I admired the lady's resolution nnd fortitude, but I did not think sho was telling the truth not nil of It. Hint wus the first time unythlng of the kind ever occurred," she said. "I am sorry It disturbed you. I met Jed In tho hall. He wns not sober, and he had n preposterous request to make. When ho has spent such nn evening with Mr. Sidney, he resents being a servant In tho family. He wants to ho accepted as a member of the-family." "I have had something to do with thnt," I suggested. "No douot It has Inflamed his ego tism to hnvo you enter the family. The situation with him Is dilllcult. Ills pride was hurting him Inst night. He had lost all sense of proportion. Ho was like n child. He remonstrated with me: he was too Importnnt ns Mr. Sid ney's crony to be merely our servunt! It was only a drunken mood, but he forgot himself and grasped mo by the wrist. I had been trying to control him and restore his common sense. Then I became Indignant, nnd you heard my voice. I am afraid It was shrill, but I was not alarmed. I was merely Indignant." "You spenk of Jed, Mrs. Sidney," I snld, "as If ho were merely nn iinuoy Ing alcoholic, tolerated when he Is an noying, because of his general useful ness but that does not explain why he tries to lock me In my room while he Is sober and before these disturbances begin. That ishows design and Intent to have a free hand when he mnke.s tho disturbance. I do not like being locked In my room." "It Is outrageous," said the lady ner vously. "I did not know that It was done. I shall see that It Is not re peated." "I am not so sure you can," I Mild, "and I wish you would not try. 1 have protected myself against It, nnd I'd rather Jed did not give me any more thought than ho thinks Is necessary now." "I urn sure, doctor," said Mrs. Sid ney, "that y;u will understand Jed and the situation better when you have been here longer. It may be annoying fo you now, but wo itll here live for tho pleasure and comfort of Mr. Sid ney, who Is worthy of all we can do for him. Ho did everything bo could for us while ho wns active, and If thoughts would benefit us, he would be working for us now." Mrs. Sidney was determined to pro tect the secret of the situation, nnd I had no right to cross examine her. Tho next tlmo I went tojovvn I bought my wolf n forty-flvo caliber pistol. Although I was prepared for recur rent disturbances, there were none. Within n week I had found my way Into a pleosant routine. Jed seemed to be conscious that he had over stepped his bounds. ITe was not ap parently contrite, but he wus cautious. A week was without Incident. Then Miss Sidney went away to make n visit. Hor absence wus a spiritual disaster. Kcstatlc and morose youth ! The beau ty of Hartley house became a hollow and dark melancholy, making sad sounds. Vibrant life hud gone from It Its perfume was lost. I cannot now tell quite what It was that made Hartley house, u place so comforlahle and genial, nt the same time a place so threatened. The threat could not be Ignored : It wns there. The story of the ghost nt the haunted pool could bave nothing to do with it. The threat bad tangible aspects. Mrs. Sid ney's worry, unspoken but graven In her resolutely Itoman face, was one evidence. The extraordinary behavior of Jed was another. The atmosphere of the place was one of mystery. Dining the pleasant, peaceful, odor ous summer months, when our life wns one of undisturbed routine, I never es caped the sense of dread. I hoped the Intangible would lake shape: stirelj something intangible that would be om bodied, bung over the house. I may not be nblc to make this cer tainty appear so vhid'y to you as It did to me. It permeated; It was In the atmosphere; It hung over the woods; It filled the house. It came with the odors of blossoms; It was expressed In the summer winds; It was threatened She Had Been Greatly Disturbed, but She Wat Roman. In the lightning which Hashed over tho river. I could not reconcile this elTect to such n cause as that feeble ghost story of the pool. I could not dread tlmt ghost or feel Its presence. It was a benevolent ghost needed for decoration. I usked the people of the house, the servants, and found that for them it was largely u superstition. They all hud' been brought from the city, nnd only n few, such as Jed, a gardener, the housekeeper nnd the cook had been long enough In the house really to be associated with It. Jed was tho only one that willingly would be in the vicinity of the pool nt night. The others might laugh at the suggestion of terror, but they would not willingly test their superiority to superstition. If they bad been really frightened, they could not have been kept In service. They were not. Tho place was large, comfortably Inhabited and genial. There was u touch of dread at one spot. They avol'led the 'pot, and It was negligible so long as they did nvold It. In the small town of Hartley thero wns more of the legend than there was at Hartley house. To the people who lived at a distance anil came In con tact with the place only on occasions, it had no alien, exotic air. Mr. nnd Mrs. Sidney had come from South America, from Montevideo, where they bad lived many years. The clreutn stnnces of their selection and purchase of the plnce were normal, but the vil lagers spiced a great deal of goslp with notions of the ullcnlsm, wealth, aloofness nnd odd habits, concerning which gossip ran from our servants to the Hartley householders. I have mentioned that my first morn ing nt Hartley house n gardener asked me to see one of his children, which hnd .a had cough. The muii hud a good deal of sickness In his family In the next few months, and I was of considerable service. "I shall not hesitate to kill you . t'to hi-: co.vi i.m, f.u.j Varnish to Imitate Ground Glass. To uiTike a varnish to Imitate ground glass dissolve DO grains of sandarac and 20 grains of mastic In two ounces washed methylated other, and add, In small quantities, sullkient benzine to mukc It dry with n suitable grain, too Utile making the viirnlsh too transpar ent and an excess) making It crapy. I The quantity of benzine required tie- I .......lo in. nn tint nnnlttv from (ino.llillf to one and ono-hnlf ounces, or even more. The best results are obtained from a medium quality. It Is Impor tant to use pure washed ether, free from uplrlt. Safeguarding the Goat. In Switzerland the goat Is placed ahead of all other animals. If a boy plagues a goal ho can be fined und sent to prison. If a person meets a goat on a path and drives him nstde ho can be arrested. If n goal' enter the yard of a person' not his owner, and Is hit, the person guilty must pay a fine. IMP10VED UNirOlM INTERNATIONAL SllaWSflWOl Lesson (Djr nEV. i-j. FITZWATfc.lt. D. D Teacher or Kngllsh Illblo In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (Copyright. 192X Westtrn Nwtipr Union ) LESSON FOR AUGUST 15 THE SINS AND SORROWS OF DAVID. LESSON TKXT-II Sntn. 12:3-10; 18:1-23. GOLDEN TEXT-Whatsoever u man flovveth, that ahull ho aluo reap.-Oul. U:7. ADDITIONAL MATEUIAL-U Sam, 11-20. I'iMMAHY TOPIC-Duvld's Grief Over Absalom. JUNIOR TOI'lC-DavId and Absalom. INTERMEDIATE AND SEMOlt TOPIC -Absalom's Solllsh Life and How 11 Ended. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC hleinents of Weakness In David's Cliur acter. I. Davld'o Sins (112:0, 10). 1. Adultery (v. II; cf. 11:1-1). David Instead of going forth nt the head of tho army us was the duty of the king (11:1), sent Jotib nnd his servants, and he himself lounged urouud ut homo hi Idleness. It was while In Idleness that ho fell u victim to his lust and committed adultery with Bathsheba. "An Idle brain Is tile Devil's workshop." The crimes of the world are committed for the most part by Idle men and women. 2. Murder (12:0; cf. 11:15-21). Having committed adultery with Uriah's wife, David tried to cover up bis sin by killing Uriah. He -ordered Joab to place Uriah at the forefront of the battle wheie he would surely be killed. When men sin they en deavor to cover up their sin by com mitting other sins, and usually It re quires the doing of greater wickedness to cover up wrong that 'has been done. II. David's Sorrow (18:1-33). 1. The buttle between Absnlom and David (vv. 1-18). Following Absalom's revolt, David fled from Jerusalem. After counsel with Ahithophel and Ilushnl, Absalom with his men went In pursuit. Absalom plnnued well, but mnde one grout mistake he left God out of the question. Being dissuaded by tho jieople, David foregoes his purpose of going forth with the tinny. He sent the urmy forth under three commanders. Ills one special request as they went to battle was that they deal gently with Absnlom. The victory of David's army was overwhelming. The Inter ference of Providence Is mnrked lu that more died in the entanglement of tho woods than by the sword. In the lllght, Absalom was caught In the bough of a tree by the head, nnd wus left hanging ns the mule went forth from under him. Perhaps his long hnlr which hod been his pride was tho Instrument of his destruction. While thus hanging, Joab thrust him through tho heurt with three darts. This awful end wus deservedly met (Deut. 27:10. 20; 21:23). They dis gracefully disposed of his body (vv. 17, 18). They cast It into a pit und piled stones upon It ns a. fitting monument of his villainy. How different from what he planned (v. IS). Ills one am bition was to be remembered. A heap of stones idled upon him lu con tempt is quite different from u tomb In the king's vnle. 2. The victorious tidings announced -toDavld (vv. 10-32).. He wus anxious ly waiting for news from the battle Held. So anxious wns he thnt he stn tloncsl u vvatehiuun upon tho walls to look for some messenger to uppear. Ills first question to the messenger shows what was uppermost In his heart. It was the welfare of his boy. 3. David mourns for Absalom (v. 33). He received the news of his re bellious son's death with much regret. The good news of the victory was en tirely lost sight of through excessive grief. The sobs of hfs poor heart must have been awful. Perhaps it Is Impossible to analyze his sorrow, but most likely tho following elements were prcbout : (1) The loss of a son. The ties of nature bind together the hearts of parents and children In such a way tlmt separation by death Is very try ing; (2) the denth of u son lu re bellion against' hU father and God. Could he but bave had the assurance that -this course was regretted, or could ho have heard a cry of forgive ness, Ills grief, no doubt, would have been greatly lessened ; (3) he knew that his rebellious son hnd now gone to answer to God for his crimes ho knew their pnrtlng wns forever; (-1) ho knew- that this wns but the bitter fruit of his own sin. In a sense ho was tho destroyer of his own child. May this example deeply Impress nil parents as to their responsibility! Away" from this dnrk picture we turn to contem plate the depths of p. futlier's love. Death effaces all faults; all wrongs nro forgotten and oat; the memory of hnppy days Is kept. Tho father Is willing to die, oven for a rebellious son. Tills Illustrates God's iovo to us In Christ which made him willing to dlo for his children. The Greatest. The greatest man Is ho who chooes the right with Invincible resolution; who resists the sorest temptations from within nnd without; who bears the heaviest burdens cheerfully; who Is the calmest In storms, mid whoso reliance on truth, on virtue, on God, Is the most unfaltering. Channlng, Profit by Mistakes. To mnko no mistake Is not In tho ppwer of man; but from their errors" and mistakes the vvlso and good learn wisdom for tho future. Plutarch. After Ton Years Eatonic Proves the Best "I say, God bless ectonlc," write Mrs. Delia M. Doyen. "I can truth fully say, after suffering with stomach troubte for ten long yenrs, that I huvtj never had anything do me o much good ns thin one box of cntonlc." Wo print these grateful words from this dear lady, so thnt sufferers every where mny hnvo hope nnd a little fnhh Just enough to give eatonic a trial. Why, folks, last year over half a million t peoplo used eatonic and found relief." This Is the secret: Eatonic sim ply tnkes up the excess adds, polsoni nnd gases, and carries them right out of the body. Of course, when the cause Is removed, tho sufferer gets well. Stomach trouble causes about ceventy non-organic diseases, so, II I you are suffering any kind of misery, not feeling well, go right to your drug I gist today nnd obtnln n big box of entonlc; cost Is it trifle. Uso It and . find quick, sure relief. I Muke this test you wlfi nee, and I then, If you nro not satisfied, your druggist will hand your money back. Ho docs not want one penny unless , entonlc pleases you. Adv. J Chlckena and Chickens. I "Do your neighbor's chickens both ( er you any?" asked un Knst Side gen tlemnn of his neighbor, who lived near u large family. "No," replied tho other, thinking j- that reference wns made to the neigh ( bor's three comely daughters. "They go down town every day, so wo don't tee much of them. Columbus Dis patch. Let us fight evil thoughts with pood nctlonti. 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