n A i K v v R Bi - 4 MMEStHilMiM0Hfrtt4ftKSa SUBJ THE FATAL REQUEST Q R F O U N D OUT By A L Harris Author of Mine Own Familiar Friend etc Copyright 1891 by O a e t ell Publishing Oompany vVfUtmUlLt 1 H 11 II r3J 9 JV a mr 4 t n - - w w - vyjvGPIr U J CHAPTER XIV Continued All though still legible were more or less injurod by tho fiery ordeal to which they had been in some degree subjected Tho fire which had stopped before reaching the upper part of tho body had been sufficient for this He ran his eye over them again What was that Something which crackled as he laid his hand upon one of tho papers nearest to him It was a sheet of foreign note paper much singed and written only upon one side He pushed all the other papers to gether in a heap Then with the burnt letter before him with an elbow planted on each side and his head supported between his hands he bent himself to the task of deciphering what still remained At last after at least an hour spent In this way he made a gesture of despair I suppose I must give it up The task Is beyond me at least this por tion of it He cast his eye again over the words They tell me nothing as they are They even serve to cast some implica tion upon my fathers honor and He broke off abruptly and the color forsook his face What was it the doctor had hinted at Something dis creditable in the past He glanced at the paper again But this speaks of something worse He gave a hasty look round as though he half feared the possibility of the presence of a listener as he whispered the words Something criminal He took up his pen again and once more concentrated his whole attention upon the burnt letter The paper before him contained a number of broken phrases the be ginnings and fragments of sentences The upper part of the letter had been vcaling another compartment behind the first This at first seemed to contain noth ing but a packet of old letters tied round with a faded blue ribbon They were his mothers letters written be fore her marriage and treasured ever since A bundle of old love letters Was that all No there was something else A photograph faded and yellow like the letters A photograph of a young man in the dress that now seemed old fashioned and ridiculous of twen ty or thirty years ago The features were hardly distinguishable but on the back was written a name and a date James Ferrers taken June 1S58 CHAPTER XV Something I can do for you burned away and the first word which was decipherable was his fathers name Silas Below this might be read with some difficulty the following inco herent scraps of sentences in which after all there was a good deal of guess work Hrve not forgotten of twenty years on receiving this letter at once for Dover expect to reach - There is that between us which not allow you to deny I ask and many you alone can If you refuse I shall that you as the criminal of your youth Beneath this last sentence he could make out what he took to be the letter J which apparently stood for the initial letter of the Christian name but the rest of the signature was burned and obliterated At this moment something again re called to him the mysterious words which he had heard the night before the funeral and he looked round for a possible interpretation of them His eye roamed from one object to another and his tongue repeated the words The spring at the back of the recess What recess Where He rose from his chair and took a sharp turn round the room The recess What was meant by the re cess Father he said as though ad dressing some one present Show me what you mean He drew up his chai nd resumed his seat but there was cnat in his behavior which sug gested one under the control of some mesmeric influence or who walked in his sleep Immediately in front of him his eye rested upon a small door To his surprise he now observed for the first time that the key was in the lock He turned it and saw papers within tied up in bundles and en dorsed Some were quite yellow with age and some were more modern He went to work deliberately until he had quite cleared the spact It large but now that it was not very was empty it formed a sort of He did not fimsh the word even in his own mil 1 but began to pass his at the back fingers over the panel lowly backwards and forwards an Inch at a time t last something seemed to catch His nail something which projected ever so slightly He pressed It the spring at the taclc ol the recess firmly There sound and the was a little jarring back of the Dartition fell forward re- The New Client Mr John Sharps offices were situ ated off the Strand And at 11 oclock one morning Mr John Sharp was seated in his private room expecting a visitor or as Mr Sharp would have expressed it himself a client While waiting for the latter to put in an appearance he whiled away the time with the morning paper At the particular moment to which we refer his attention was engaged by something in the top right hand corner of the outside sheet which seemed to afford him a considerable amount of satisfaction It certainly does read well he re marked to himself complacently I cant deny that though I did draw it up myself I wonder he continued rasping his chin with his forefinger whether the gent whos made the appointment for 11 oclock came from the advertisement or whether he was recommended The advertisement referred to was as follows Sharps Detective Agency Swift sure and secret All inquiries con ducted with the greatest skill and dis cretion Evidence obtained on any subject All communications regard ed as strictly private and confidential Mr John Sharp promises to all those who honor him by seeking his aid the experience of twenty years and the secrecy of the confessional Mr John Sharp as regarded his outward appearance was somewhat of the weasel order As he himself often said Sharp was his name and sharp was his nature My new clients late he con tinued looking at his watch He opened a door of communication and put his head through Jennings Yessir When the gentleman comes dont forget to tell him that Im engaged for the moment but shall be at lib erty shortly and mind you come in when you hear me bang the door and ask if I am disengaged and can see the gentleman now The faithful Jennings performed his duty to the letter I think said Mr Sharp rising and referring to a memorandum as the gentleman was ushered in that I have the pleasure of addressing Mr Burritt Will you be good enough to be seated The visitor admitted that was his name and took the seat indicated Something I can do for you in quired Mr Sharp placing the tips of his fingers together interrogatively The new client who had with him a small leather bag opened it and produced three articles which he placed upon the table before him They consisted of a square flat pack age a photograph and a ball from a revolver Suppose you begin from the begin ning and tell me all about it I shall not interrupt you said Mr Sharp as he opened the note book and mois tened a stump of lead pencil with his tongue He kept his word though he made copious notes and for some moments there was only the monotonous sound of the one voice as the new client re capitulated all the circumstances which had led to his seeking Mr Sharps assistance and which have already been fully gone into When he had finished I thought the name seemed familiar to me said the other To be sure I remember all the circumstances connected with the sad affair And so you think you have hit upon the guilty party I am certain of it was the deter mined answer I believe I knoT his name and have proof in my own mind that ho committed tho deed What Iwantyou todois totracahim for me or rather put mo on hla track and let me run him down Phow whistled Mr Sharp softly under his breath This i3 something quite out of the common this is Sup pooe he said addressing tho young man that wo examine the evidence i This is the bullet you say and this a photograph you found among tne deceased gentlemans papers Might I inquire what this is laying his hand upon the other article That is the letter I spoke of which made the appointment which my father kept and was thus indirectly the cause of his death It is partly destroyed but enough remains to show that there was here he hesi tated for the first time something of the nature of a secret between them Mr Sharp ran his eye down the page Humph he remarked something vague and unsatisfactory It certainly seems to hint at some thing of a suspicious nature between the two Dont make any mistake put in Toxl Burritt at this point whatever there may be of that nature does not cannot apply to my father Probably not Probably not But you must allow a certain amount of ambiguity of cutting both ways If we could prove the knowledge of some nefarious some here he referred to a sentence in the copy of the letter some criminal proceedings con cerning the writer on the part of the er the unfortunate gentleman who was shot something which lay be tween those two alone Why then we should be able to see our way Suppose there was a strong provoca tion Suppose those two to be alone in a first class carriage Suppose that a sudden quarrel arises between them that the deceased as I have just said is provoked to utter threats as to what he may or may not do Suppose the one threatened who car ries a revolver makes up his mind to silence him once for all by tfc means of a bullet through his brain His client nodded Now continued Mr Sharp be fore proceeding farther just let us come to an understanding as to what you want me to do I want you was the answer to trace this other from the time that he was last seen Very good from Mr Sharp And to trace his history back wards from that time And the partys name Ted handed him the photograph ant showed him what was written on the back Very good sir I think we each other And you would wish me to begin my investiga tions At once There was a little discussion here about terms expenses etc which be ing satisfactorily arranged the client rose and prepared to take his depar ture You will leave me this the de tective indicated the photograph and your copy of the letter Ted Burritt assented and replace the other articles I shall make a point said Mi Sharp of going through the report of the inquest again to refresh my memory and in case there should be any little fact that may have escaped yours You have to prove checking the items off on his fingers First that the man we want wrote that let ter secondly that he was the other passenger and thirdly that he fired that shot The answer was firm and concise I dont require you to prove the murder so much as to trace the man and when you have done so leave him to me To be continued A Yankee Trade The old Yankee skill at driving a bargain is not being lost A woman visitor at a fashionable resort on th Maine coast last summer went to ths Universalist church in the place the first Sunday morning of her stay and was politely shown to a -seat TherS was no hymn book however but the occupant of the pew behind her reached over and placed one in her hands At the close of the service the visitor turned and thanked the person saying as she was to attend that church all summer she would like to buy a hymn book Well said the other woman I guess you can have that book if youll give me a pair of black gloves No 7- Very well said the visitor The next day she went to Portsmouth purchased the No 7 black gloves for 150 and duly re ceived the use of the hymnal in ex change for them on the following Sun day Boston Herald One Thing to Avoid Yes said the great man I ant going to write a book of personal rei olicctions I think I am prominent enough to do that dont you Oh yes youre prominent enough but Id like to caution you about on thing Whats that For the purposes of publication dont recollect anything about promi nent men now living But theyre just the people I wanz to write about Those arc the kind of reminiscences that will make the book sell Oh well suit yourself but remem ber that I warned you Whats the danger Why just as soon as you begin to recollect things about them they will begin to recollect things about you I hadnt thought of that remarked the great man Cincinnati Post- Women Inventors The United States has granted 2500 patents to women THE FATAL REQUEST O R F O U N D OUT By A L Harris Author of Mine Own Familiar Friond etc Copyright 18 9 1 by G a s a e I I Publishing Oompany Copyright l 9 o 3 bystreet A Smith CHAPTER XVI To Be Left Till Called For Three weeks later and the curtain rising discloses the same scene It is the second interview between Mr John Shary and his new client So you had my letter sir said the former I hope you didnt think I was wasting time But the fact is you gave me Tather a large order I do not care how much time you take over the affair so long as you bring it to a successful Issue The question is what have you been do ing What have you discovered And do you think that you are on the right track You shall see for yourself sir said the detective To begin with I had to discover at which hotel the two gentlemen put up I went first of all to the Lord Warden before trying any of the others and in the visitors book I found a couple of en tries both under the same date April 24th James Ferrers and S Burritt At this remarkable confirmation of his suspicions the young man could not restrain a violent start which Mr Sharp received as a tribute to the profession in general and himself in particular I had not expected that you would discover it so easily murmured his client It almost seems but never mind go on with eagerness That was the name of the gentle man who arrived first and secured a private sitting room mentioning at the same time that he expected a friend from London who would re main for the night and would require a bedroom Between six and seven a gentleman did arrive who inquired if anyone of the name of Ferrers were stopping there The waiter told him yes that a gentleman of that name had arrived by the boat that morn ing and directed him to the door of But have you discovered anything relating to the past anything to show why ho left England and went to America Mr Sharp referred to another of the documents before him I have been hard at work ever since my re turn to town trying to pick up the thread At last It occurred to me to try and find out the photographer the one who took this photograph selecting it from among the other ar ticles before him Somewhat to my surprise I found the same firm still carrying on business I explained matters and found them very obliging and willing to give any assistance in their power Of course it was too much to expect that they would re member anything about a customer who came to them so far back as 1858 but they referred back to some of their books and triumphantly they found the name and an address Here it is Mr John Sharp handed him another paper which had an address written on it and continued I went to this place No 23 South Street Penton ville There happened to be a card in the window announcing apartments to let for a single gentleman I saw the landlady an ancient party and led her back by degrees to the date in question and found that siie did remember a Mr Ferrers or some such name who was with her from fifty eight to sixty But after that date he left her anil went to the West End to live and she did hear What was the question short and sharp which fell from the others lips She did hear continued Mr Sharp though how she came by it she didnt know that he subsequently went abroad under a cloud - And that is all That is all at present and not so bad I think And what is to be done now was Packages and cases with the initials J F the private sitting room The waiter also informed me that they dined to gether at the table dhote and seemed to all appearances on the most ami cable terms The next morning they breakfasted together in their private room and left by the 430 train in tho afternoon The waiter mentioned a circumstance which I take to be of considerable importance which was that one of the chambermaids told him that from the appearance of the bed she believed that the gentleman in No 37 meaning the one who had crossed by that boat had slept with a pistol or something under his pil low Ah you see the importance of that bit of evidence The next thing I had to do con tinued Mr Sharp was to discover the boat by which the gentleman who gave the name cf Ferrers had ar rived This was easily done I found that he had crossed from Calais by the Black Eyed Susan that there had been a large amount of luggage which had all been sent ont to Lon don to await the owners arrival As soon as I ascertained this fact I came back here directly I obtained per mission to inspect the luggage depot anj He paused for the sake of effect Go on go on exclaimed the other I found a number of large pack ages and cases marked with the ini tials J F still waiting to be claimed From the marks and directions upon them I made out that the party they belonged to had come from America that he had visited Paris and after wards crossed to Dover via Calais Now either he will claim his luggage and by that means render detection a mere matter of A B C or he may de cide to relinquish his property what ever its value as being after all less precious than his own safety I in cline to the latter view myself His listeners face clouded Then it all depends upon his ap pearing to claim the luggage A good deal depends upon that and everything depends upon nothing occurring to excite his suspicions Above ail things we must keep quiet and if the police authorities should pay you a visit for the purpose of making inquiries into the matter you will remember to be cautious and not give them the least hint or we shall have it proclaimed in all the papers that the police have a clue and that will put our man on his guard at once Thd assented to this and asked the impatient question Well sir in my opinion there is only one thing And hat is Wait and see what happens CHAPTER XVII At Twelve of the Clock It is all very well to tell another person to wait but it is not so easy for the other person However Ted Hurritt had plenty to keep him em ployed There were all his fathers affairs to be settled and arrangements made for carrying on the business in Tim ber Lane The words unknown to him which his father had spoken such a very short time before his death as to how this event would affect his fam ily were fully realized They were at least spared any anxiety as to the future and were not destined to suf fer those pecuniary trials which often add so much to the sorrows of a be reavement A reward had been offered by the police authorities for any information that might lead to the discovery of the murderer in what was now gener ally known as the affair of the Dover express Copies were posted up out side all the different police stations and presented themselves prominent ly to the view of anyone who hap pened to pass by One hundred pounds reward and but for the detectives advice this sum would have been doubled and trebled by the son of the murdered man Wait and see what happens were the words of the oracle in the person of Mr John Sharp Let nothing be done to excite the alarm of the in dividual under suspicion Ted had written to Dr Jeremiah according to promise and the doctors answer when it came contained the news of an approaching flying visit to London an expedition which was to combine business with pleasure Under these circumstances of course he must be invited to make Magnolia Lodge his headquarters The invitation was dispatched and accepted and in due time the doctor arrived gold rimmed spectacles mil itary bearing and all complete It is hardly necessary to state that he made himself quitG at home in an astonishing short space of time I like your doctor said May Bur ritt to her brother I liked him be fore I sa1 him from what you told me about him but I IIUo him better even than I thought I should now Ive met him Later on In tho retirement of tho best spare bedroom Dr Cartwrlght was communing with himself I had an idea shed be a nico girl and I wasnt far out If Id said an un commonly nico girl I should haw been nearer the mark Scorns a sensi ble girl too this one I should say her waist was quite twenty two Inches and an appetite to match And her names May Pretty namo that short and sweet At the same moment that the doc tor was pursuing theso reflections Ted Burritt was inserting tho key into the lock of the study door Dur ing all this time he had allowed nono to enter the room except himself It seemed io him to be full of mysteri ous associations which no outsldo influence should be allowed to dis turb Nothing had been moved His fath ers chair pushed back against tho wall remained just as he had left it on the last time he had entered the room The pen lay beside the blot ting pad and the dust had accumulat ed over everything Ho placed the lamp upon the table nud drew up a chair Then he unlocked that same com partment removed the bundles of pa pers as before touched the spring which opened the secret recesses and took from it the burnt letter Again he took a sheet of paper and a pen from the desk he would not use that other which lay beside him with the ink dried upon it and be gan again to write and re write the words which he knew by heart Have not forgotten of twenty years on receiving this letter at once for Dover expect to reach There is that between us which not allow you to deny I ask and many you alone can If you refuse I shall that you as the criminal of your youth After working at this for about hah an hour without being able to add so much as a single syllable to what he had already deciphered he threw down his pen I would give anything to be able to discover the missing words but it is quite beyond the bounds of possi bility And there is no hope this time of any intervention any guiding in fluence to direct me to point out tho way of any spirit voice to speak to me and toll me Taking up the sheet of paper again on which he had been employed ho saw to his surprise as ho turned it over that it was the same on which his father had written thoso words My dear The letter which had never been finished It was strango he had not observed this before Then he took up tho pen which his father must have last used with the traces of ink dried upon it Should he put it away carefully as a relic Or should it remain where it was a little longer He dropped it and gave expression to something between a yawn and a sigh Im uncommonly sleepy he said and yet I dont feel in the least inclined to go to bed I have a sort of feeling as though I had to sit up for someone He gavo a short laugh Suppose I turn in on the sofa for a bit I wonder what makes me so sleepy I didnt tako anything at dinner but a little His eyes closed and in a few minutes he was sound asleep A clock outside in the hall struck the half hour with out any change taking place in his condition Another interval of time passed and then the clock struck again One two three four five six seven eight nine ten elev en twelve As it gave the last stroke he started up To be continued OLIVE OF ANCIENT LINEAGE Trees 2000 Years Old Are Still Bear ing Fruit The olive that the bartender drops into tho popular cocktail is an old campaigner Wine drinkers thousands of years ago liked it and for centiries no banquet has been considered com plete without it The tree olea Europea is not only one of the oldest trees known to natu ralists but its longevity and produc tivity are astounding Several of these trees over twenty feet in cir cumference according to the scien tific calculation of a foot for a cen tury must have been bearing fruit bo fore the Savior walked and talked on the mount of Olives The olive has been a symbol in more than one mythology - The dove bringing the branch to the ark gave it to the imagination of the Orient as an emblem of peace or confidence re stored Among the Greeks it was the sign of peace and the placid power of wisdom Though a native of Syria and pos sibly of southern Greece the olive flourishes anywhere in a mild climato Western Asia southern Europe north ern Africa southern England South America Mexico in all these places the olive grows readily taking on an average seven years before bearing fruit Two hundred years ago it was in troduced into California by priests from Mexico and there it has thriven mightily In South Carolina it Is hardy and fruitful but unfortunatelj the crop matures there just when all labor is needed in the cotton fields The fruit is too bitter to eat unless pickled Ranging in size from an acorn to a large plum it is gathered green and placed in a strong solution of potash or lye of wood ashes When the olives change color this denotes that the potash has struck through the stone and they are placed in wat er renewed several times a for five days New York Herald