RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF aHr0W'0m WAS WEARY OF LIFE'S BURDEN Despondent Mother Drowns Child to Save It From Life of Toil. LTavTaVTaVTaaSaTavTsaTla?! I . ft :: i-ijim mm m M m M y I The JMlysteirT of HaraY IHloiase I i U' O'i By CLIFFORD S. RAYMOND jv ffi K . JSPPSivrf 1 amiiaS l ew WV&L paimS of aS3 W Illustrated by IRWIN MYERS :&. .( Copyright by George H. Do ran Co. CHAPTER IX Continued. 11 Hy llil.s time 1 lint) my senses fully recovered. 1 run to the nearest win low nnd v;ns Just In lime to see two figures, one In white, the other India tlnct, at the fur edge of the lawn, nul ling. They rim Into the woods, nnd while 1 Ktood nt the window, trying with painful consciousness of stupidity nnd Ineptitude to decide upon u course of action, I heard mi automobile en glue start in the lane hcyund the woods. Out of u stupor, In which I wntched the two strange 11 pi res no from the moonlight on the lawn Into the dork of the oak grove, I was aroused pos Blnly by the sound of the engine of the automobile with u course of' ngdon suggested. It camn ut fenrs long entertained, now present with a threat of Imminent consequence. I ran for the stairs, ilnHhlng the light, up the stairs and to Jed's room. His door was open. A I have said, tills wing was not wired for electricity. I turned my tight about the room, saw that the fewr which had caused me to patrol the house was realized and then bunted for the lamp, which I found ' nnd lighted. Jed's room was hi the disorder In which n hard-working housebreaker, Intent on finding Jewels he knew the room contained, might have left It. It seemed almost ripped to pieces. On a table was a small pearl-Inlaid ebony box. The lid was open ; the box wns empty. As 1 stood In the midst of the dis array of the room, with the empty box the most significant thing In It, the marvelous unreality of Hartley house, n smiling dread, seemed to have visible token. The empty hpx, I thought, hnd con tained the manuscript which recorded Mr. Sidney's secret. The Hash of white which I had seen In the ball Indicated the method by which It hnd disap peared. The two figures crossing the lawn In the moonlight were further Indication. There wns the sound of the automobile engine. I hnd u sore spot on my head. The manuscript, I know or believed hnd been In the box which stood with significant emp tiness In the midst of the disordered room of Jed, who had been kidnaped. If my surmises were correct, Mr. Sid ney's secret, upon which I knew the happiness of the family depended, wus In the hands of men designing to make use of It. Jed, being n mnjor-domn about the place, had In hlspoom u telephone con necting with the various servants' Quarters. I used It to arouse the chauf feur. It took five minutes of ringing his hell to nwnkeu him; when he re Bponded, I told him that the house hnd been robbed by a man and u woman dressed In white, who had escnped, under my sight, through Jho oak grove nnd had used an automobile waiting for them on the road beyond the grove. t told him to awaken one of the gar deners, take weapons and go as quick ly as possible south by the best roads. When this had been done, I called Mrs. Sidney's maid and told her to awaken Mrs. Sidney and tell 'her, If Ml fflffH ll. 41 wofnH "Oh, If We Can, We Mustl" She Cried. possible without alarming her, Hint I wished to speak to her on an urgent matter. In n few minutes the maid came back and said that Mrs. Sidney could nee me. I found her In the sitting room of her sulle. - "It Is nothing serious, Mrs. Sidney," I said "nothing that fc need now re gard as serious; and It 'does not con cern Mr Sidney's health. There has been an Intrude;' In the house. More over, the purpose wus to ureal? Into Jed's room, and Jed's room has been broken Into, I got n glimpse of the person who did It, u woman. I saw a man and a woman run Into the oak grove and I heard tin automobile en gine start on the re id. I have hcnt n chauffeur u.i'J n jrivilencr In chue. but they are tru II' g lUiilnst so great a Hurt bit l lifve no hope. What I fi'in ' li.' iiey have Mr. Sidney's diary. Do you know whore Jed kept It?" "No doctor." said Mrs. Sidney. "If I here had been any chance of finding It wo should hnve taken It away from hlin. In his absence we hnve searched his room frequently." "These people uroiafter the manu script, ami they are Mitlsficd Hint they have It." I said. "I am sure of that. There was a small pearl-Inlaid box, open and empty, in the middle of the Moor." "We never found such n box," said Mrs. Sidney. "Then It might have been there?" "It might." "If It wns, they have It nnd we must got it bnck." "Oh, If we can, we must 1" she cried, holding her bands no tightly clasped that the delicate bones made u crack ling noise. I tried to be encouraging nnd consol ing and, as if pructical mensure, gave her a bromide. CHAPTER X. Hartley house had a general offlcc where the business of the estate was handled. It was to one side of the main entrance. I hud promised to he an extraordin ary perron In meeting extraordinary circumstances, but all I did was to go to the office and, lighting the lights, sit there. I wns In the extreme dejection of a weakling when the door opened and Isabel came In. "What are you doing, up?" I asked. "I'll ask the same thing of you. What are you and the whole household doing, awake nnd moving?" , I told her that housebreakers had been surprised nt work nnd hnd es cu'mhI. "If you have been disturbed," I sug gested, "probably your father has, also. You had better go to his room nnd tell him that the servants have been flus tered by n burglur scare, and then you had better go to your mother's room nnd stay with her until things quiet down." That seemed sound enough advice, but when Isobel had gone I was left wondering again what to do next. It was out of the question to notify the authorities. The thieves had stolen something which, from what I knew of It. I preferred to have In their hands rather than In the possession of the police. Our detective agency I could trust, but I did not want to communicate with anyone but McOuIre, the superin tendent, nnd there was no need of tele phoning hhn until later In the morn lng. The case, as I thought It over, enme to this: The Spaniard and the attor ney, by the nld of a confederate, a woman, had obtained possession of the dlnry containing the secret of Hartley house. They would soon be heard from. They would not disappear. We did not have to pursue them. They would pursue us. There was the possibility of dealing with them by force extra-legally. Any thing we did for our protection had to bo done extrn-legally. I thought Mc Gulre could and would nttend to that, and I Intended to Instruct him to con sider murder the only process not to bo thought of. , I tried to rcconcllo my Ideas of Mr. Sidney's character with the facts of the family's terrible dilemma. What could a mnn of so Just and honorable, kindly and charming a nature us re vealed In his old age have done, even In a hot and pnsslonnte youth, which ho could not face now? What crime could he have committed which not only constituted n dnnger to his secur ity but remained n source of satisfac tion to him? For two hours I sat by the telephone, expecting momentarily to henr from the chauffeur who hnd goue In pursuit of the thieves. It was about four o'clock In the morning there was a pale suggestion of light In the windows when Mrs. Aldrlch, the housekeeper, came to the ofllce. She was an Imper turbable lndy of disciplinary hublt and ordinarily unruflled dignity, but now she was disturbed. "Doctor," she said, "Agnes, the new maid, cannot be found. She Is not In her room. Her bed hns not been touched. Most of her belongings and her suitcase are gone. I came to you with this probably unimportant do mestic Incident, thinking that well, the occurrence of the night might have some connection with this girl." "I think Agnes probably yas In volved In the matter," I said. "We have nlways so dreaded to take a new servant," said Mrs. Aldrlch, "but Agnes came recommended for the month by n very faithful girl who wanted a month's leave. Has anything of great value been taken?" "Nothing of any Intrinsic value whatever, Mrs. Aldrlch. I Imagine the robbers were alarmed before they found uny Jewels or plate." "That's a consolation, In any event," nld the housekeeper; "but we never shall he able to take In a new servant agnlii with nny wise of inltid." The ehitun'eur telephoned ns Mrs. AldrW'h went away. The chase In the night had b-e(i useless, as might be expected and I told him to return home 'w Mrs. Aldrlch brought me n light breakfast, and one of the. Hardeners came to say that the dogs bad been found In the woods. They had been fed drugged meat and were sick and even now barely able to stand. I was preparing to go to Mr. Sid ney's room when the telephone rang again. It was n call from the village of Horwich, forty miles east, a place of some repute, or 111 repute, for the number nnd character of Its drinking places and madhouses. The man calling me said he was the. constable of the township of Horwich nnd asked If he werctalklng to a per son of responsibility. I assured him he wns. Then he told me that an auto mobile accident hnd occurred two miles out of Horwich nnd that the only Identifying mnrks suggested Hartley house as n place to make Inquiries. He asked If I could come to Horwich. I endenvored to question him over the telephone, but he mild there wus little Information he. could give, a i Had My Bottle of Beer. mnn and n womnn In a car man past middle age, a young womnn In white; the mnn was dead, the womnn badly injured. "I'll be cvcr as soon as possible," I sold. 'T'iease keep the effects all to gether." There was no doubt In my mind that the quavering little rascal of a lawyer with his precise way and timid but controlling unscrupulnusness bad come to the end of his road and at the very moment when he had suc cess In his hand. There wns no rea son to doubt that the woman was the maid Agnes whom I hnd surprised at midnight stealing down the stairs from Jed's room with Mr. Sidney's diary. Kut if we were rid of the timorous, grasping little attorney, we Were In worse dllllcultles. With thenttorncy and his Spanish client, we lit least knew the manner of dealing. It was disconcerting I might almost be for given the exaggeration of saying It wns horrifying to consider that the uiary was nclng Handled ly n con stable, n sheriff or n coroner or een by nny Idler or resort-keeper In the vlllago of Horwich. If the automobile accident had dis posed of one Ingenious enemy onl to make a half-dozen equally unscrupu lous ones, or to apprise (I was tempted to think this wus worse) one Incor ruptible officer of the condition of Hartley house In either event, we were the worse for the change In elr cumstance. One of the stablemen knew bow to drive a car, and I asked him to bring out the uutomobllc which I used when I went to town. The chauffeur, when he returned, would have been up most of the night. I did not want to Impose on him. I might bo'gone -most of the dny. In a half-hour we were away toward Horwich. I never had Leen over the road, which ran by old forms with stone fences nnd wns little trav eled except by the people who lived along It. Originally the place had a resect able tavern. It wns called the White Owl. It was still respectable, but odd ly enough, It wns the success of the Whlto Owl which had attracted the other plnces. I Inquired for the constable and was told that I should likely find him nt the Whlto Owl, he being a frequenter of that place and now having n case which needed n great deal of drinking and talking over. I went to the White Owl nnd on en tering the barroom, which really had an attractive rather than a disreputa ble appearance, saw a group nt men about a short, broad, square-sliotil-dered fellow who was talking to the Interest of half u dozen or more fel lows. My entrance made no dl.vertf on. nnd Judging, 'from what I had been told, that the squat, talkatlvo fellow was be const nhti- nnd that he was telling the story I wanted to know, I decided to remain unidentified, have a bottle of beer from the Imrtender, who enme liiilMirnri--tN.v from the con stable's iuni'.lon-und thus us au M S---' - t eavesdropper get what I ainie to gel In direct conversation. I hnd my bottle of beer, and the Imr tender went back to the group, domi nated by the squat, talkative fellow. lie was not the cnmle type of con stable. He showed Intelligence anil decision, but evidently be wus fond ol i a story when he hud It to tell. He was saying: j "I was up late because there was a bad set at the Half Dny. and Kill Dal ley thought be might have trouble with them before he got them on (belt way. About one o'clock they had a quarrel, without anything but talk, divided Into two sets and went away In two ears toward the city. Kill uml I split u bottle of beer, and Kill said he'd he going himself. It wns neurl.v one-thirty then, nnd 1 thought I'd wait up for Number Eleven at two o'clock and see If anyone got.olT. "Kill gave me the keys and told tn to shut the place up. I bad another bottle of beer iuiiI was playing soli taire on the bar when Number Eleven stopped. "I went to the front door of the bar and looked over toward the station. A man had got off, and he was headed toward the Half Day, which was the only place showing n light. I waited In the doorwuyi and when he cume up, I snw he wns n foreigner. He bud gold rings In bis ears. "He made as If he wanted to coma In. He didn't speak enough English for me to make out what be was sny Ing. I let him In, nnd he went up to the bur, put down n quarter mid point ed townrd the whisky. I gave him the bottle, nnd he pointed to me and smiled. So 1 said I didn't mind If I did, and wo bad a drink together. I thought I'd like to know whut this fel low wnnted In town, so I didn't sug gest It was closing time. "Then I wus surprised to bear a car coming along. The other fellow seemed to be expecting It. We both went to the door. The car stopped at the door, and n iiian helped a womnn out. He wns a little old shriveled fellow. She was young nnd pretty. "The old fellow snld something to my foreigner, and he threw Ids arms in the nir, wriggled all over, laughed and fell on the old fellow and kissed him. The old boy struggled and kicked, but the foreigner Just picked him right up and kissed him on both cheeks. "That old boy wus mud when he got loose. 'This Is unthinkable,' he snld. 'It Is beyond expression. You human pig! Dog of u man slobbering beast 1' Then he stopped speaking English and snld a lot of things the foreigner un derstood, but It didn't make him mad. His eyes Just sparkled. He put n dol lar on the bur uml pointed to the whisky again. "'Krlng our drinks over here.' snld the old boy, pointing to one of the tables In n fur comer of the room. "They snt down, nnd the two men talked. The girl didn't seem to have the language. The foreigner was ex cited. The old boy kept wiping his eyeglasses. He wasn't showing us much nervousness us the foreigner, but he wns pleased over something. "I kept behind the bur, ns near their table us I could, and pleteuded to play solitaire and wait for their or ders, Uvatchlng them us much us pos sible nnd trying to make out whut they were talking about. Jl'retty soon they wanted another round of drinks. When I served them the old boy wnnt ed to know If he could telephone to the city. He paid me the toll, and I showed him the telephone booth and heard him give his number. It was River 41100. "When he got his party, he said; 'Is that you, Sim? Everything Is all right. Yes, ns expected. Let him go.' "That was all. He went back to the table. I noticed that he kept tight hold all the time on n leather case. When they got to talking again, the foreigner kept pointing toward the case uml began to get nioro excited As near as I could ninke out what was happening, as they kept on talking nnd motioning, It wus the black leather case the foreigner wanted, and the other mnn wouldn't let bint have It (TO 1112 CONTINUED.) Meredith and Lady Macbeth. Lady Kutcher In her "Memories of (Jeorge Meredith," recently published, gives the world not a little new Infor mation about the novelist which Is' tintl. slgnltlcnnt and extremely enter tabling. Here Is one of the passage she quotes from her diary which shows bis nmuzlng power to paint with words : "Mr. Meredith went with, fattier nnd mc to see Irving and Mrs. Crowe (nee Kiitcninn) In 'Macbeth.1 During sup per he explained the acting of the sleep-walking scene to mother, nnd, wishing to describe the way tln-U Lady Macbeth pushed the palms of her hands from nose to ear, he snld; 'My dear Mrs. Krandrnth, I assure you that sliu came tljrough her hands like if corpse stricken with mnnla In the act of resurrection'!" From "llook (Jos- -.IP." - , To n person, five feet tnT standing on the beach at seiyMo the boHon Is about two and thice-uuui'urt !-,!' av.ny. THEN TRIES SUICIDE Never-Endlng Cares, Heavy Labor, and Lack of Sleep, Had Driven Mother to Welcome the Thought of Death. Cleveland. Life had dealt hnr.-dily with Mrs. Ktitherlue Mlkulie. Years of hardship mid sulTeiing made her wish to end It, uml it was to save her daughter from u similar experience that she threw her llve-your-old clilld Into the water and tried to drown her well In Lake Erie. With a sigh and a shake of her head, she sat on her cot. in the prison ward ut City hospital and told the reasons which piomplcd her act. "Yes, my baby's gone," she said, "Now she won't have to suffer and struggle us I hnve. I'lense give me something so I can go to my baby. "I want to die. IMcu'-v let me tile." Rhe pleaded as she pressed her bauds to her temples. "This headache will never go." As If In a daze. Mrs. Mlkulie sat, clasping her hands about her knee.-, and sighed njtulu. Her eyes were red from tears, and she stared long ut the sheet. Her hands were coarse, bruised and swollen. Her long black hair glist ened us If still wet from the waters of the lake. Although she says she' s twenty nine. Mrs. Mlkulie seems nearer fort. "John? He can take care of him self bye and bye," she snld when link ed why she hnd not taken her twelve-year-old son with her to the lake. "Eight years I have this headache." she said, again pressing her bauds to her temples. "Oh. I so want to die. "Four years I have worked every night, nnd every day I can't sleep. This' headache never goes away. All day I walk the floor until It's time to go to work again. Never do I sleep." "Husband No Good to Me." "My husband? He wus no good to me. He worked u little, uml then he won't work again. He spent all the money drinking." Mrs. Mlkulie stared at the spoon which she took from a tray of food. "Ten yenrs ngo my husband cumo here. He left me In Croatia with my babies. Two years I did not hear Threw Her Child Into the Water. from him. Then I worked nnd saved mid afterward I came here, too. I had $5. "He worked sometimes) In a butcher shop. Hut all the time he's drinking, uml then he lost his work. "Four years I worked every night. In the tiny time 1 could not sleep. Lust winter he go sick and so did I. did not see him when he died. Yes, I cried u little; but be wus no good to me." Had Often Wished to Die. ' Continuing In Uer broken Engllhh. he said she went bnck to work'to pay fr her husband's funeral, but tl.d not want to leave her huhy. "I work'.'d Inst night, but nguln I could not sleep and still I had this Headache. walked the tloor. up and down, and then I suld: '1 will die.' "Please let me die nnd go to mj hnbv," she sighed nguln. Samuel White, 8100 Medina nventio N. E., wu-i working near the foot of East Seventy-second 'Btreet when ho heard n womnn was In the lake. Plunwlng in fully clothed, he swam to where she had disappeared. He dived and brought her to the surface. When she regained consciousness he cried: "Why don't you let me dlor cM" "My baby's In the Inke," she said, "pleiibo let mo die, too." White swam for some time before ho recovered the child's body. 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