• * The Mystery of a Silent love • • dKhevafer WILLIAM IE QUEUX ‘ U AUTHOR “THE CLOBED BOCK," ETC ILLUSTRATIONS fy C D RHODE5 CT3**r**c#r or r*c smart s/t n/ausR/x> co SYNOPSIS. i Gordon Oregg Ik called upon In Leg horn by Hornby. Hie yacht l-ola’a owner, sad doling aboard with him and his frrrr.d, Hylton Fhater. accidentally sees a torn photograph of a young girl. That nigh' lh< . onsuj’K aafe Is robbed. The |»dt e hnd that Hornby Is a fraud and the leda’s name a fals. one Gregg vis its C’apt Jack Purnford of the marines aboard hi* vessel. Purnford knows, but will not reveal, the mystery of the I*nla. "It concerns a woman.” In London Orrgg is trapped nearly to Ms death by a former servant. Olinto. Visiting in PamfHes Gregg meets Muriel Lelthcourt. Hornby appears and Muriel introduces him as Martin Woodroffe. her father’s friend Gregg finds that she is engaged to Woodroffe Gregg sees a copy of the tort, photograph on the Lola and finds thai the young girl Is Muriel’s friend. Woodruffe disappears. Gregg discovers the body of a murdered woman in Kan noeh wood The body disappears and in Its place is found the body of Olinto. Gregg talks to the police but conceals his own knowledge of the woman. Muriel rails secretly on Gregg and tells him that alie Is certain that a woman as well as a man lias been murdered. They search Ran no. h wood together, and find the b*«5> of the woman Gregg recognizes her as Artnida. Olli to's wife Gregg tells the police, but when they go to the wood the body has ills appeared. In London Gregg meet* Olinto. alive and well. Fall ing lo get any clue from Olinto, Gregg traces the young girl of the torn photo graph CHAPTER VIII—Continued. “Well, the last I received only a fortnight ago If you will wait a mo ment I will go and get it. It was so a* ran go that I haven’t destroyed it.” Asd she went out. and I heard by the the frou-frou of her skirts that she • as ascending the stairs After live* minutes of breathless anxi ety she rejoined me. and handing me the letter to read, said: “It is not in her handw riting—I von der why?" The paper was of foreign make, with blue lines ruled in squares. Written la a hand that was evidently foreign, for the mistakes in the orthography were many, was the following curious communication M. I war Lydia: Perhaps you mar never c*-t this letter— the last I shall ever be able to send you. Indeed I run great risks in sending it. Ah’ you do r> t lit...v Che awful disaster that has happ-ned to tne. ail the terrors at.J t’ *• torture* 1 endure But no one can a**.»t me. an.i I am now looking forward lo the time when It will ail be over. Po you re. ol’.e : our old p.-a. ful days in the garden at Chichester? 1 think of them always always, and compare that sweet pva e of the past with my own terrible •offering* of today. Ah. how I wish I •“****• ere- you once again: how that 1 imght fee* your hand upon my brow, and bear y..ur words of hop*, and encourage ment' Bat happiness is now debarred from me. and I am only sinking to the grave under this slow tort are of body and >f soul. ’This Will pass through many hands be fore it reaches the post If. however, it Hter does get dispatched and you receive It. will you do m- one last favor—a favor to an unfortunate girl who is friendless and !»■dpi* ss. and who will no longer trou ble the World’ I; Is this Take this let ter to te ndon, and call pon Mr. Martin Woodroffe at ** Cork street. Piccadilly, ■bow him my letter, and tell him from we that through it all 1 have kept my promt**”. and that the secret Is still safe He will understand md also know why I run not write ttd* with m> ,,vn j,an water on!y the e>:cP8S )t Miica This is partly in very fine x - si eu; pension, causing the par sistent opalescence which is frequent ly observed in the water used by those afflicted with pellagra.' The remedy seems to be Injection of some alkaline substance; preventive meas ures seem to point to treatment or drinking waters with limestone. Tri sodium citrate, a harmless alkaline substance, gives excellent results in curing.” Prehistoric Animal. The American Museum of Natural History, in New York city, has recent ly acquired the skeleton of a new dinosaur, which has been named Sau rolophu3. "the crested saurian.” Mil lions of years ago this creature, which was about thirty-two feet long and fif teen feet high, roamed the sands and swam the marshes of the part of Al berta that is now traversed by the Red Deer river. It lived on grass and could escape from the flesh-eating Alberto saurus only by its rapid swimming. Great numbers of these dinosaurs lived in the prehistoric coastal marshes; paleontologists have found the remains of several hundred speci mens washed out of the bank of a single quarry on the Red Deer river. Another set of bones found In the same region is believed to belong to the skeleton of a still older species of di nosaur, possibly an ancestor of Sauro lophus. Lord Fisher Believes in Speed. Although Lord Fisher is four years older than the regulation age at which a naval officer may normally hope to be employed, his methods at the admiralty give little indication of the advance of years. A short time ago he pounced upon a department at Whitehall with the intimation that a certain number of new vessels were required. The number, it may be mentioned, was about six or seven times as many as it is customary to order in any one year. The whole of the contracts for these vessels were placed in three days, and when the first sea lord went to inquire what had happened, and was told, he spared nothing in his execration of what he called the waste of time. In the ordinary way, three months is quite an average time for considering such j a tender.—London Globe LAID DOWN POINT OF LAWj Mississippi Judgment Is That Plaintiff Must Come Into Court With Clean Hands. In a suit for damages against a tele graph company heard by the supreme court of Mississippi in Western Union j Telegraph vs. McLudin it appeared that plaintiff had received two tele grams from a woman known to be an improper person. The company's mes senger informed various persons that the plaint1.ff had received these mes sages from the woman in question, thus betraying his intimacy with the ; sender, and, as he charged in his com- j plaint, caused him to lose caste with ! respectable women and forced him to resign his position where he then lived and take another less lucrative else where. In holding that there could be no recovery against the company the court said: “If a plaintiff cannot open his case without showing that he has broken 1 the law a court will not aid" him. It , has been said that the objection may j often sound very ill in the mouth of | the defendant, but it is not for his sake the objection is allowed; it is founded Ou g?r-er$l nriociples of pot icy which he shall have the ad van tage of, contrary to the real justice between the parties. The principle’ of public policy is that no court will lend its aid to a party who grounds his action upon an immoral or illegal act.” Always Co.vsiit-vis. When former President W. H Taft was in Kansas on a campaigning tour a few years ago, one of the members of his party threw away a cigar just as the president’s special passed some section hands. “Begorra.” said one of the section men. “didn’t Oi tell ye Taft is considerate of the common laborer? He jist now threw me a cigar and it was already lit. ’ National Monthly. Shunting a Sponger. Sponger—You don't happen to have i five-dollar bill about you, do you. lid man? Smart—Yes, 1 have. Here's a bill if exactly that amount from my hat ;er. Want to pay it? The Burlington will build a new de pot at David City. Bayard will soon have a new pic ture theater. Plattsmouth is to have a new city hall, to cost $12,500. The Stanton county fair will be held September 1 to 15. A water works system will soon be established in Milligan. The Farmers’ State bank of Valley has been granted a charter. Plans are nearly ready for Weep ing Water's new bank building. The contract for putting in Bridge port’s sewer system has been let. Fire caused $18,000 loss to the Eagle’s hall in Florence, a suburb of Omaha. A Chicago man is planning to build a $65.00i> moving picture theater in Fairbury. Otto Glick. shoe merchant, of Omaha, was killed in an automobile accident in that city. The annual pow-wow of the Omaha Indians will be held at Wait hill August 11 to 22. J. S. Swan reports a loss of more than 10,000 bushels of apples from scab in his orchard near Auburn. The body of A. Bauman, jr„ former sheriff of Dodge county, who drowned himself in the Piatte river, was found. The three-year-old son of Thomas Gliva was drowned in a milk can on the Gliva farm west of Platte Center. A picture film company has been organized in Cliaaron with A. L. An drews as president, capitalized at $9,000. Farmers with pitchforks harvested a big crop of fish siranded in reced ing tide water from the Blue river at Hastings. Ex-Governor Aldrich has purchased the Be!! line of six elevators along the Northwestern in Butler and adjoin ing counties. Tentative plans for laying the cor nerstone of the new Masonic orphans’ home on the Masonic grounds north of Fremont on August 15, have been laid. Thirty-five new bridges will be built in Cedar county to replace old ones washed out by floods this sum mer. Genevieve Hughes, a 6-year-old girl while picking flowers, stepped in front of a hay mower near Albion, and had her right foot completely severad. Mrs. Daniel Sullivan of Lincoln vas killed and >1. H. Quinn of Denton was seriously injured when an automo bile in which they were riding, turn ’d turtle near Denton. H. C. Probasco. assistant cashier of the Nebraska State bank at Lin coln, is dead. He formerly lived in Red Cloud and was one of the best known church workers in the state. There are in Nebraska 65.221 farm ers who till their own land against 38,747 who are tenants. Almost a quarter million people over twenty one are employed on farms. Charles Benson, instructor in the department of education at Kearney normal has resigned to accept a po sition in the Missouri State Teachers’ college at Cape Girardeau. The little 5-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Warner of near North Bend, lies in a critical condition, suffering from concussion of the brain, as a result of being kicked by a mule. A session of the Holdrege Chautau qua was broken up Saturday evening by rain and heavy wind, which finally blew' down the tent. Two thousand people were drenched before reach ing shelter. Henry Turner of Hugo, Colo., was thrown into a wire fence near Paw- ; nee City and instantly killed, his head j being nearly severed from his body, ! when a horse he was driving became frightened by a train. O. F. Dornblaser of Texas, national organizer of the Fermers’ Educational and Co-operative union of America, will lecture on the Chautauqua grounds at St. Edward, Monday af ternoon, August 16. Nineteen pieces of skin, each an inch and a half square, were grafted onto the burned body of little Emma Kerbel of Havelock at a Lincoln hos pital. The skin was contributed by two brothers, a sister and seven cousins. Perfect trust can be reposed in President Wilson by the people of the country, and he will save them from war. if that is humanely pos sible. So said Vice President Thom as Marshall of Indiana in a Chautau qua address at IJncoln. J. P. Kramer, one of the oldest cit izens of Syracuse, met with a ser ious accident. He had just returned from town and was driving his team and standing up in the rear of the wagon when the team suddenly jerk ed. while crossing a rough place, throwing him backward out of the waeron. breaking his back. The twenty-seventh annual old set tlers’ reunion of Cass and Otoe coun ties will be held at Union, Cass coun ty. August 13 and 14. John Bly, block signal maintainor for the Union Pacific, stationed at Elkhorn, was struck by a passenger train and instantly killed. The most effective test of endur ance ever tried by any manufacturer of farm tractor engines was complet ed when the Wallis "Cub" tractor, handled by the J. I. Case Plow works, finished its 1,000-mile durability run, from Cleveland, O., to Fremont. A deficit of $41,218.09 in the Omaha school funds was shown by the board’s financial report for the six months ending June ”0 this year. Dawes county, notwithstanding the recent heavy rains and hall, has yet the largest stand of grain known In the history of the county. One of the largest. If not the larg ost wool sales made In Wyoming this year, was concluded when W. R. Adams of Fremont purchased the Swan t.and and Cattle company’s clip of 600,000 pounds for 22 cents a pound The purchase price Is H32.000 WITH BARNS FULL OF STOCK Didn’t Look Much Like Hard Times in Western Canada. A. Meyer, who left one of the best Counties in Minnesota, probably be cause he got a good price for his ex cellent farm, and left, for the Canadl-n West, writes to his local paper, th~ Bagley Independent. His story Is »<■: worth repeating. He says: “To say I was greatly surpns-1 when I reached Saskatchewan and A berta would be expressing it mild; In a country where so much suffering was reported, I found everyone ;a good circumstances, and especially ail our friends who have left Clearwa ter and Polk counties. They all hav good homes and those who were r> ported to have sold their stock througa lack of feed, I found with their bar:. full of stock, and it did not look very much like hart times. They have from 160 acres to two sections of the finest land that can be found. Those that left here two or three years ago have from 100 to 400 acres in crops this year. Prospects for a bumper crop are splendid. It Is a little cold now, bv nothing is frosted, either in gard or fields. Land can be bought qv. reasonably here from those who •. unteered their services in the E pean war. Here are certainly - - best opportunities for securing a e home with a farm and indep* for life in a short time. Up started I heard that prices v high. Flour was reported at J..- ; hundred it is $4.25 here. In the - - all the groceries can be purcha. for nearly the same as in Mir,.. 7 . ■ on.y article that I found b;_- - was kerosene at 35 cts per e. When I saw the land I wonder' people do not live where the> duce enough from the soil to ma i comfortable living. We visited T Sater. John Dahls, WT. J. and R Holt's, Martin Halmen, Ole Ha Wm. Walker and Geo. Colby, a. from Bagley. We found well an : perous farmers who wished to fc r membered to all their Bagley frier. . (Sgd.) A. MEYER.—Advertised' ■ The Proper Term. “I'm going to celebrate my wo . i t wedding tomorrow," said the ta . drummer. "You mean your wooden wedd • - don’t you?” queried the grocer “No, I mean just what I said, a: swered the s. d. "It will be five year ago tomorrow since I asked a girl ?_ marry me, and fortunately she se , she wouldn't.” Beauty and the Beast. “A deucedly pretty girl!” “Stunning." "And a hideous bulldog "True. She ought to have a ma: along to lessen the contrast beta. *-; herself and the dog. Changed His Mind. Wife (during the spat)— During >j courtship you said you would glai! die for me. Husband—Well? Wife—Well, why don't you? Domestic Warfare. Little Lemuel—Why are there s many divorces, paw? Paw—Possibly, my son. because r sea of matrimony is infested «:: floating mines. Not Definite. "My husband,” remarked Mrs !la ker, "is a peculiar man. I have i handle him with gloves." “Boxing or rubber?” queried n friend Mrs. Barker. Only Vegetables for Him . "So you’re an applicant for th- p sition of gardener?" "Yes. sir." "Had experience with vegeta!> - “Oh, yes, sir; ten years " “I have a horse and cow yvi have to take care of." “Oh. I couldn’t do that, sir \ see, I’m a strict vegetarian." Hubby Will Economize “But your liance has such a sir salary; how are you going to Ih "Oh. we’re going to economize We; going to do without such a lot things that Jack needs." The Purpose of Thrift "Save up your pennies, my boy " "What for, dad?” “And when you get 25 of them e l your mother or I will borrow them . carfare." Applied Calisthenics. “I’m a retired acrobat." explaiiS the tramp at the door. “Then.” replied the stern faced inist. “you can go to the woodpile afl do the split for your dinner." Pleasing Father. “Jinks’ father wanted him to I into uplift work when he left "Well, did he”’ "Sure, he did. He took the chfl the old man gave him to begin ■ and bought an aeroplane." Economizing. "George, dear. I’ve succeeded in I dueing expenses. By having pvfl thing charged I find I have spent vl little money this week, and still say l have no business sense* ; ^B At a Muslcale. Host—Must you leave so soor. 'H Tootles” 1 thought you fond of good music. Mrs. Tootles—I am. (Mrs. Tootles exits during biaal^B lence.)—Harvard Lampoon. Suspicion "Is that your son studying the I ltn?” "Yes." answered Mr. Growchtr^B “What’s the tune he is play.fl "1 don’t know whether he’s * tune or a practical joke "