The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 13, 1910, Image 3

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- i — A a-t * the
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C <tl Jar- mb--.. tT mi! m,
s a rir adej v-d by c. a aUo lor tboii
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B aca anc <* -i.te Eton.
The- he* —on **;u m
by The Pam drenuaafeen u, ^
t»*e<l rrewh-roiomd nxire sut* »j;j,
•**■** black sa r collar* of moos**.
.*e de me. ari also bia.-k satin suj.s
«lth »sute ckjrfc sailor collar*. fin, .a
*-d «1’t a double row at t button*
dc-»n the front of the short Jacket
It black sac nfc te fatrtc contbina
Tiacs »tfe silk • -n a black rciret
stride has bre-n seen
'■ '» and e*nr.iue 'ouTinue to
be tb* iftdlBf -te-ntnk furs
\ Jhte lad * the au. 4 a tcadov
• 'aakt.lij under »bit« . btCon
H
n
By MARY ♦>
^ ROBERTS
<• RINEHART
7 -J 6Y
cjer*. .«• £,» Kcmauecm •
SYNOPSIS.
—
Ir.ro-- sj.;r ’• r ..ni guardian of
* '1 «'; * Hals. > established sum- |
• • • - Sv-! Arnold
‘ - '• mg u , found s11■ »t to death in
ill «**rtn:.d* and ii» r fiance. Jack (
h i • h.Ml . .»nv.'m*d in the billiard
r • - or:;y before t: • T iurdet I«-h-< -
• :r • Si-r it a-.-d Mi<s Innes *>f hoid
* • o ►. e . id. *i. - v'ashier Bailey of Paul
*.r-•.strong - h.**.k dt f un t. was arrested
•r -n;...x2i Paul Armstrong’s
was uf •• mel Halseys fian> »-e.
•- '• \r?:*.-tr«-ng t«*iH liaise} ’bat while
>* • - l-o.-: s:.• wa. to marry an
I: * i * - \j*. * that It Walker was
’ • n an Loa--. v t- found urn »:is; ions J
• • t: • hoontr f - . , * alar staircase i
> * -iU - •?? . na .ad l*ruslied b\ her j
’ ' • ♦ da if, * Tie stairway and site <
■ • Ha * is suspected of Arm- ;
-
* ' -S •• d* a.i with a note in his ,
• • : • - ^ f aani. la, on Wal- j
A 1.1 !• T f". rid • iut of I»':»ce de+ I>
• • - • ■ ■ rv T: • s* aides w • re
” • - - - . . darn .V In ties shot
• • . Halsev m\st. riouslv disap
1- - I - - auto was fo .ad wrecked by .
*- . • •*,.-. 1- d- io|. «i Hals*} bad
i - • •*- ii!»rar> w •»! a woman i
“ .> u:sup|* .r■. N» w ook dis
11 - Innesi b an I Halsey was
1 - W. b • • - 1.0 *• hr on»e« livid
* r .!•<■ .• N.a.t C.trnnc- :
i. r w.,- s«-*".!••<! from a tramp i
PI-! > Ila.sey bad he*j.
CHgg*-d .end throwt :rito .ii:
* . • ‘of'“ l*r I
CHAPTER XXIX —Cont -jed.
i ali.-d the hospital, w hile we crowded
around him. And when there was no
longer any doubt that it was Halsey,
and that he would probably recover,
we all laughed and cried together. 1
ini sure I kissed Liddy, and 1 have
had terrible moments since when
1 seem to remember kissing Mr.
Jamieson, too. in the excitement.
Anyhow, by 11 o'clock that night
Gertrude was on her way to Johns
ville. 3St> miles away, accompanied by
Rosie The domestic force was now
down to Mary Anne and Liddy, with
the under-gardeners wife coming
every day to help out. Fortunately,
Warner and the detectives were keep
ing bachelor hall in the lodge. Out
of deference to Liddy they washed
their dishes once a day. and they con
cocted queer messes, according to
their several abilities They had one
triumph that they ate regularly lor
breakfast, and that clung to their
clothes and their hair the rest of the
day it was bacon, hardtack and
onions, fried together They were al
mos- pathetically gratt ful. however. 1
noticed for an occasional broiled ten
d< rloin.
It was not until Gertrude and Rosie
had gone and Sunnyside had settled
down for the night, with Winters at
the loot of the staircase, that Mr.
Jamieson broached a subject he had
evidently planned before he came.
ness past, a cemetery at night is much
the same as any mother country place,
filled with vague shadows and unex
pected noises. Once, indeed—but Mr.
Jamieson said it was an owl, and 1
tried to believe him.
In the shadow of the Armstrong
granite shaft we stopped I think the
doctor wanted to send me back
'll s no place tor a woman. I beard
him protesting angrily. But the de
tective said something about wit
nesses, and the doctor only came over
and felt my pulse.
"Anyhow. 1 don't believe you're any
worse off here than you would be in
that nightmare of a house," he said
finally, and put his coat on the steps
of the shaft for me to sit on.
There is a sense of desecration, of
a reversal of the everlasting fitness of
things, in resurrecting a body from its
mother clay. And yet that night, in
the Casanova churchyard, i sat quiet- I
ly by. and watched Alex and Mr. i
Jamieson steaming over their work
withoui a single qualm, except the
fear of detection.
The doctor kept a keen lookout, but
no one appeared Once in a while
he came over to me. and gave me a
reassuring pat on the shoulder.
"I never expected to come this.” he
said once "There's one thing sure— !
I ll not be suspected of compile! a
doctor is generally suppe. J 10 be
... ~ *
■ 5* - str • k m« as 1. ::ig an ugly
s' : • r ant: wh-n she b i t. about 11
• k *>.i w-n' a"ri s to the Arm
- rent ' ..i-• 1 i as not far beh.tid her.
if • d .-.11 aro..nd Th-‘ boas- first.
•*. :« a tie windows Tin n she
• ‘ • t» !l. and the minute the their ■
.<. was through it anu
lEto the hall ■■
' H' u ior.g did -he stay*"
■ ••• ;:a-' ;t.‘ Uigas
• 1 - > She - in't eo:m out
• ...a- : "lit a: ail 1 wtm to bed at
and that wit- the last 1
■ a' . ;ti- . U:- r V tl »b-n
1 -aw !h r •> a tr.a k the station.
S - bet n
i. by th- eis'-ss and you would
ill; ..v- known her—dead, of
I r. -1 • night
n It::- Arti.-troug lious'* and the
- t 1 - was t ns the trat k
lin t
, \-.r . ... , t her "
Ar:<- r circle’" I exclaimed i
" :i. * - ar< v -» w h- w s'arteu
A • » t ad . - lira* Miss inn--.'
its., -a | eagerly ‘Nina Carrington
an- i.m the :own -n California
whei- V: Ann: trims died Why was]
’: * d*« -o afraid of 1. r" The Car
mr n » tt.an knew something 1
-: - —a w In Walker seven years. •
cd J kt •» hitu well There are few
' i-gs :- - afraid of 1 thick he killed
V- ’•rn.st-ms nit in the west sane
wh- - at - what 1 think What else .
■ ■ u c 1 d n t know—but he dismissed 1
n * an j pretty nearly throttled mi—.
~ *• .'.nc Mr Jamieson here about)
Mr ir.c-s hat i.c been at his u5or:
T - : . 'Is di: jj>;*ared and about
n.> :• aring them quarreling ” |
v us i; Warner overheard the [
v - -ay to Mr inne.- in the li
braxy* the detective asked me
>' s iid I ku- w there was some
• be v r- : e from the s»ar A man
' We. -Be day and dead the next
v tli<*ut -onie reason
Hi i- per:* ily u all s-» tiled to fit ’
CHAPTER XXX.
When Churchyards Yawn.
i wa- n Wednesday Itisss told us'
' • ! - tin-11 n with some
i - ■ :'s : a1 i» i! previously un
1 > had be- n gone
- t • Ft i.. : sht before, and
■ tt:* pit— s- of each dry I felt
r.ii- i> artn-d thousands
“Eut tee Face That Shewed in the
L ght—"
■ n. ;• - :n tli* \-tar. locked in. per
1—ps. without water or food. 1 had;
r- ad ol cases where bodies had been
u;<*i kicked m cars on isolated sid
nt- :c the west, and my spirits went
down with every hour.
li.s recovery was destined to be ai
n.".~t as sudden his disapp* arance.
a: was dm directly to the tramp
A!» i had brought to Sunnyside It
-- ms -he man was crateful for his
release and when he learned some
of Halsey's whereabouts from
nn 'her ns-aVr of his fraternry—
r t is a fraternity—he was prompt
.n lettinc us know
Oe Wednesday evening Mr. Jamie
-'■L who had been down at the Arm
strong bouse trying to see Louise—
and fa : ing—was met near the gate at
Ss :nay>ide by an individual precisely
as repulsive and unkempt as the one
Alex had captured The man knew |
the detective and he gave him a
piece of dirty paper, on which was
s: raw led the w ords: “He's at City
hospttaL Johnsville " The tramp who
brought the paper pretended to know
nothmc except this The paper had
been pass'd along from a hobo" in
Johnsville. who seemed to know the
in'omation would be valuable to us.
Again the long-distance telephone
tame into requisition. Mr Jamieson >
“Sne Walked All Around the House First. Looking Up at the Windows."
-Miss Innes. he said, stopping me |
a* 1 »as about to go to my room up- :
sia:e> "how are your nerves to
night
1 have none." 1 said happily. With
Halsey found, my troubles have gone." |
1 mean,* he persisted, "do you feel j
a> though you could go through with
something rather unusual?"
"The most unusual thing 1 can think
of would be a peaceful night. Hut if
anything is going to oo •. don’t dare
to l*'t u:e miss it."
"Something is going to occur." he
said And you're* 11-- ua'y woman 1
* an think ot that i < ,n ..f.u* along."
He look**d at his »■?:, ii lion ; ack
me any questions. Miss lit’**.- i';t on
heavy shoes, and soni- old dark
clothes, and make up yi..;r :a...d n.*;
to be surprised at anything"
1-iddy was sleeping the sleep i> ;!,*
just when 1 went upstairs, end 1
hunted out my things cautiously. Th,
detective was waiting in the hall, and
was astonished to see i >»- Stewart
with him. They were miking con
lidentiallv together, but when 1 eauie ■
down they ceased. There were a few
~ partitions to be made: ’he locks to .
t>e a <m over. Winters to be instructed J
as to renewed vigilance, and then, i
aiter extinguishing the hall iight. we j
crept, in the darkness, through the j
front door, and into the night.
1 asked no questions. 1 felt that
they were doing me honor in making
me one of the party, and I would show
'hem I could be as silent as they. We
*en! across the fields, passing through
the woods that reached almost to the ,
ruins of the stable, going over stiles
now and then, and sometimes step
ping o\er low fences. Once only
-omebody sitoke. and then it was an
emphatic bit of profanity from Dr
>;• wart when he ran into a wire
fence.
We were joined at tne end of five
minutes by another man. who fell into
step w ith the doctor silently. He car
ried something over his shoulder
which I could not make out. In this
way we w alked for perhaps 20 minues
The doctor was puffing somewhat
when we finally came to a halt. I con
fess that just at that minute even
Sunny.side seemed a cheerful spot We
had paused at the edge of a level
cleared place, bordered all around
with primly trimmed evergreen trees.
Between them I caught a glimpse of
starlight shining down on rows of
white headstones and an occasional
more imposing monument or towering
shaft. In spite of myself. I drew my
breath in sharply We were on the
edge of the Casanova churchyard. i
I saw now both the man who had
joined the party and the implements
he carried. It was Alex, armed with j
two long handled spades. After the
first shock of surprise. I flatter my
self 1 was both cool and quiet. We
went in single file between the rows
of headstones, and although, when 1
found myself last, 1 had an instinctive
desire to keep looking back over my
shoulder. 1 found that, the first uneasi
handier at burying folks than at dig
ging them up."
The uncanny moment came when
Alex and Jamieson tossed the spades
on the grass, and I confess I hid m> ,
lace. There was a period of stress. 1 j
think, while the heavy coffin was be !
ing raised I felt that my composure 1
was going, and. Tor fear 1 would!
shriek, 1 tried to think of something
• ise what time Gertrude would reach
Halsey—anything but the grisly reali
ty that lay just beyond me on the
grass.
And then 1 heard a low exclamation
from the detective and 1 felt the pres
sure of the doct or s fingers on mv
••rm.
Now. Miss limes." he said gently
"Ii you will cor e over—"
1 it '.d on to him frantically, and
son >w 1 etc there and looked down
Tht li t of :i>e t site: 1\ J been raised
and a silvei p*ute on it proved we
had made no mistake. Hut the face
that showed in the light of the lantern
was a face 1 had in vt r seen before
The man who lay before us was not
Paul Armstrong!
CHAPTER XXXI.
Between Two fireplaces.
What w ith the excitement of the dis
covery. the walk home under the stars
in wet shots and draggled skirts, and
getting upstairs and undressed w ithout
rousing Liddv. 1 was completely used
up. What to do with my boots was I
the greatest puzzle of all. there being
no place in the house safe from Lid
d'\ until 1 decided to slip upstairs the
next morning and drop them into the
hole the "ghost" had made in th< '
trunkroom wall.
1 went asleep as soon as 1 reached
’.his decision, and in my dreams I
lived over again the events of the
night. Again I saw the group around
the silent figure on the grass, and
again, as had happened at the gntt
1 heard Alex's voice, tense and tri
umphant:
"Then we’ve got them." fce said
Only, in my dreams, he said it over
and over until he seemed to shriek it
in my ears.
1 wakened early, in spite of my fa
tigue, and lay there thinking Who
was Alex? 1 no longer believed that
he was a gardener Who wins the
man whose body we had resurrected?
And where was Paul Armstrong" Prob
ably living safely in some extradition
less country on the fortune he had
stolen. Did Louise and her mother
know ol the shameful and wicked de
ception? What had Thomas known
and Mrs Watson? Who was Nina
Carrington*
This last question, it seemed to me.
was answered la some way the
woman had learned of the substitu
tion. and had tried to use her knowl
edge for blackmail. N na Carrington's
own story died with her. but. however
:t happened, it was dear that she had
carried her knowledge to Halsey the
afternoon Gertrude and 1 were look
re ’or clev. s to the man 1 had shot
on the east veranda. Halsey had been
half crazed by what he heard; it was
ev dent that Louise was marrying l'r 1
Walker to keep the shameful secret,
for her mother's sake Halsey, a!
wa>s reck’ess had gone at once to
Hr Walker and denounced him There
had been a scene, and he left on his
way to the station to meet and notify
Mr. Jamieson of what ne had learned !
The doctor was active mentally and '
physically. Accompanied perhaps by
Riggs, who had shown himself not
everscrupulous until he quarreled
w ith his employer, he had gone across
to the railroad embankment, and. by
jumping in front of the car. had
caused Halsey to swerve. The rest j
of the story we knew
That was my reconstructed theory
of that afternoon and evening; it was
almost correct—not quite
There was a telegram that morning
from Gertrude.
llalsey conscious and improving Prob
ably heme in day or so
GERTRUDE.
With Halsey found and improving
in health, and with at last something
to work on. 1 began that day. Thurs
day. with fresh courage As Mr
Jamieson had said, the lines were
closing up. That 1 was to he caught j
and almost finished in the closing was
happily unknown to us all.
It was late when 1 got up 1 lay in
my bed. looking around the four w alls
of the room, and trying to imagine be
hind what one of them a secret chain
t*er might lie. Certainly, in daylight.
Sunnyside deserved i;s nau
was a house more cheery and open,
less sinister in general appearance
There was not a corner apparently
that was not open and a hove-board,
and yet. somewhere behind its hand
somely papered walls I b. ieved firmly
that there lay a hidden room, with
all the possibilities it would involve.
1 made a mental note to have the
house measured during the day to d;s
cover any discrepancy between the
outer and inner walls, and 1 tried to
recall again the exact wording of tht
paper Jamieson had found.
'TO KB CONTINUED ■
Takes In Circuitous Routes
Letter Journeys Long Distance to
Reach Destination Ten Feet
from the Starting Point.
One of the most remarkable mail
routes in the world is that in which a
letter journeys in going from Beebe
Plain. Vt., to Beebe Plain. Quebec.
Canada. While the two offices are
within ten feet of each other—are lo
cated in the same room, in fact—a let
ter mailed from one office to the other
must make a trip of 294 miles—6? j
miles in Canada and the remainder in
the United States.
The plain, old-fashioned store build
ing which is situated on the interna
tional boundary line contains both
the United States and the Canadian
offices. There are separate entrances
to each, but both are in the same |
room, have the same lobby and there
are no partitions to mark the division
between the domain of Uncle Sam
and the possession of King Edward.
“If you mail a letter from the Ver
mont side addressed to the Quebec
side.” says the postmaster, “it goes ;
from here t8 the junction, then to New
port, then to White River Junction,
and back to Bennoxville, Qhebee, over
the Boston and Maine. There it is
transferred to the Grand Trunk and
goes to a south-bound mail pouch and
comes to Stanstead Junction and then
back to this same building, a distance
of 234 miles.
"If we wish to mail a letter from
the American side to Derby Line, it
must go to White River Junction and
then come back over the official
route.”
At the Half-Centurv Mark.
Youth is eternal to him who believes
in eternity. To me youth means anv
where from eight onward I was an
exceedingly old person at eight and 1
trust I violate no confidence when 1
confess a youthful exuberance now
that I have bumped against the half- j
way post. Fifty is a splendid time for
youthful expansion; ones fancy still
retains all its ingenuity while ' one s
judgment is bettered by experience
When sitting on the 50 milestone the
vane of man s vision points southward
to the past and northward to the fu
ture with a minimum of oscillation
Rancorous thought and splenetic ex
pression give way to quieter nerves
and calmer view, and the mellow light
ed vista of the years that have gone
soften the heart of the youth of a half
century of years—John Philip Sousa
in the Circle
AN OLD-TIME CLOWN.
J. B. Agler. (Tany Parker.) Praise*
Doan's Kidney Pills.
Mr. Agler is on* of the best known
men in the cirrus world, having been
on the road with a
wagon show 53
years. When inter
viewed at his tome
in Winfield. Kans„
he said: “i con
tracted kidney trou
ble in the war. and
suffered intensely
for twelve years.
^ Backache w as so
j" severe I could hard
ly walk and my
rest w as broken by
distressing urinary
trouble. T>or.r's Kidney Pills cored me
and my cure has been permanent for
five years. This is remarkable as 1
am in my ytrd rear
Remember ;h° name—Roar's
For sal-' by ail dealers 5 ■ cents a
box.
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
A LITTLE TOO PRIMITIVE
Showrr Bata Arrangement Something
cf a Shack ta the
Participa.-.t.
August Re-morn, at a dintur m Sara
toga, i r;ust>d the seaside • •» ns of
New Kngland.
"Rut some of them." he add l. ' are
a little too primitive l remember a
story about the primitive town of
Rock'r R.vkford had a rough bath
ing establishment. with e shower hath
You stood in your bathhouse and
pulled a rope and a deluge of <-v>’ wa
ter descended from the celling
'Well, a lady visitor stood*one day
in her bathhouse, ready for the show
er S
herse’.f 'out no shower follow jcs,
gave the rope another tug. whoa the
gruff voice of the sui-or proprietor ol
the establishment sounded from aloft
" ‘Stand a p'int more to r.or-east
mum." it said, ‘if ye wgn: to get the
*ull forts''
"And the horrifi ed lady. looking up
saw- the old sailor frowning Impa
tiently through a hole in the ceiling
and tilting a barrel of sea water Jot
the shower."
SOLAR PLEXUS 5LCW.
Choily Soli—May 1-aw-have past unw
aw-good-night k.ss'
Miss Wise—Why. certainly, voe
poor, dear boy* How you must miss
•our nurse when you are away from
home:
WASTED A FORTUNE ON SKIN
TROUBLE
"I began to have an itching over tn.
whole body about s< v.a ><&rs ago and
this sefted tn my limbs, from the knee
to the toes. I went to see a groat many
physicians, a matter w h’.ch cost me a
fortunx*. and after 1 noticed that I did
not get any relief that way . I went ?o»
three years to the hosrital rut they
were unable to help tne there. I usee
a!! the medicines that 1 couid . ■ ■ but
became worse and worse. 1 had ar
inflammation wh;eh made me ..'most
craxy with pain When I showed my
foot to ray friends they would get
really frightened. 1 did not know
w hat to do 1 w-as so sick and had be
come so •'ervoas that 1 positively lost
all hope
“I hat’ --on the advert! ment el
the Cut.c..ra Remedies n proa; many
times. V . could no; make up my mind
to buy s iem. for 1 hrd already used sc
many - dicines. Finally ! did decide
to ur. - .he Cuticura R m ies and l
tell ye. that 1 was nev.r s.- pleased as
when ! noticed that,after hav r.g used
two sets of Cuticura Soap, Cuticura
Ointment and Cuticu-a P s. the on
tire inflammation had gone. 1 wras
completely cured. 1 should be oa'.y
too glad !f p-x>p!e with similar d ease
wrould come to me sr.d fid cut the
truth. 1 would only recommend them
to use Cuticura. Mrs Bor-.ha Sachs
1621 Second Ave . New York. N Y.
Aug. 20, 1?00.”
“Mrs Bertha Sachs is my sister-la
law and 1 know well how she suffered
and was cured by Cuticura Reme
dies after many ether treatment*
failed Morris Sachs. 321 C $$h St.
New York. N. Y, Secretary at
Peutsch-Ostrowoer Cnt.-Verein. Kemp
ner Hebrew- Benevolent Society, etc."
Managing a Husband.
Men are like children, they want
managing, although you must never
let them dream that you think so. No
child likes to he ordered about, no
man will endure coercion. Hut man
aging" it is an art so subtle, so elu
sive, tha: few women understand ever
the rudiments of it. Sisters mine, let
us reason together, says Woman'*
Life. In every human being there it
a spark of the divine: it is yours to
fan that spark into a Same—that is
managing a titan—it is to get the very
best out of him there is to have, an »
not two women in ten can do it.
Do not think that there is anything
unworthy in managing a man to
bring out the best is a high vocation.
Only let ns see to tt ihat we are
worthy of it. There are women who
have made angels oi men. but at the
cost of their own divinity. There ia
room for more than one unselfish pep
son in a family.
A careless philosopher says a man
never knows who his friends are un
til he hasn't any.
One genius is about all the average
family can afford.