t t t 1 j V I I H V y i R J i X L x t ft v THEFATAL REQUEST ORFOU N D 0 U T ii i ii i ii jiii mini mi ii By A L Harris Author of Mino Own Familiar Friend etc Copyright 189 1 by Oat tell FZ b 1 1 1 h I n g Company Copyright a 0 o 3 bytreet Smith CHAPTER IV Continued My doar James interrupted Mr Burritt hastily yea must know very well that it isnt that But the truth of the matter Is Ive a great averslon to firearms Still if you will assure mo that the weapon isnt loaded - 111 Ill assure you of that or anything else that will add to your peace of mind was the somewhat equivocal reply At any rato it isnt loaded now and what is more I will also give you my word that I will not at tempt to blow out my brains during the journey or he added as a sort of afterthoughtJanyone elses When Mr Burritt and his friend ar rived at the station the latter took a considerable amount of trouble to insure a separate compartment to themselves In tact Mr Burritt rather fancied ho saw him give something to the guard who thereupon locked tho door upon them and consigned them to solitude The carriage in question it may be worth remembering was the fourth from the engliie I wonder thought Mr Burritt to himself as the train steamed out of the station which is the pocket he carries the revolver in Then his thoughts wandered away from tho actual present I suppose I shall find them all right at home Dear dear anyone would think I had been away a month What an old fogey Im get ting By-the-by I wonder what James is thinking about he looks uncom monly gloomy I wish hed say some thing instead of staring out- of the window in stony silence Somehow one doesnt like the notion of riding alone with a man who has shed another mans blood especially when ho carries a revolver I wonder whether hos thinking of that or what If Mr Burritt could have read what was passing in his companions mind he would have been amazed to find pealing to her son I suppose theres no miutike about the day Your door father dtdnt men to morrow Her son produced the telegram which In had about him and repeated the coutunts aloud Am returning to day by the 430 train Sjall be homo to dinner Friend atcompaaies me Well Im sure I dont know what to do about i exclaimed the poor lady almost wringing her hand3 Hadnt jou better go and speak to cook yourself said her son making tho propoiai without the slightest comprehension of what it involved I suppose I had murmured his mother very well Jane you can say Im coming suid she left the room leaving the 7oung people together Arent yon tired of standing May asked her brother addressing the girl who had scarcely varied her attitude an inch in tht last half hour Tired sht exciaimed half turn ing round WTiat has that got to do with it I want to ba the first to see them Then me added Tell me what you meant to say a little while ago when you began I wish and stopped Why ho answered gloomily I was going to say I wish the governor had never started on this journey though he addeif in a hurry of course hes all right missed the train or else theres a blok on the line or something only He b oke off without bringing hiA sentence to a conclusion and asktd Was that what you wished too I she exclaimed I wish that and more I wish he had never had that letter I wish his friend who ever he is had never corta back from where he was Oh come now was thj would be comforting response now youre go ing ahead too far Of courso its vex ing and all that but after all the only thing that will really suffer will be the dinner and that wont be fit ir dMiiii Started to his feet with a cry hat instead of dwelling upon the past he was merely repeating over and over to himself the words which the former had spoken only a few hours before The secret lies be tween us two The secret lies be tween us two CHAPTER V The 430 Train Dinner at Magnolia Lodge had been ordered for a quarter to eight in or der to suit the convenience of the trav elers who were expected to arrive at about that hour As tlie time drew on Mrs Burritt suddenly became troubled again in her mind concerning the soap dish I do wish after all I had ordered the best spare bedroom to be got ready though Ive generally consid ered the second best good enough for a single gentleman and I suppose he is a single gentleman Eut for all that Here they are suddenly cried her daughter May who was watching from the window Well its too late to make any change now sighed her parent half relieved at having the matter sum marily settled and perhaps he wont notice the crack I do hope my cap is on straight The said cap was as usual consid erably out of the perpendicular but as it happened its lack of rectitude was in this instance of no particular consequence for the alarm proved false and the cab which had at first appeared as though about to draw up before the house resumed its snail like crawl and gradually disappeared Then came another sppll of waiting They must have missed their train at London Bridge said Ted Burritt Perhaps the other one was late Ive looked in Bradshaw and see that its due in town at seven oclock If so they ought to be here by this time The next half hour slowly ticked itself away without bringing any change in the position of affairs They were all vacantly conscious of an increasing sense of anxiety and de pression within Why did they not come Surely if they had missed one train there had been plenty of time to catch the next Then tho clock chimed the half hour and at the same moment an interruption took place The message Tan If you please m cook wants to know what she is to do about dinner Mrs Burritt started nervously Im sure I dont know Jane Then to eat if they dont come directly As if in answer to this remark Mrs Burritt at that moment re entered the room She was flushed and agitated and as was apparent to the most ob tuse observer on tho verge of tears Really cook has been most trying she sighed as she sank into the near est chair She almost intimated that I had done it on purpose She says she has never been used to such ways and that flesh and blood wont stand it let alone legs of mutton She says she can give us another ten min utes but no more The ten minutes passed as the pre vious thirty had done and at the end of that time three very dispirited peo ple sat down to their spoiltdinner May soon noticed that her brother whose attention had been obviously wandering for some time past appear ed to be listening to sometning from without At first her heart bounded Could it be that they had arrived at last Was it the click of the gate that he was straining his ear to catch or the sound of footsteps upon the gravel drive without So she too listened in her turn hoping to be able to distinguish one or the other of these welcome but long delayed sig nals But the only thing she could hear was the faint sound of a voice which seemed to be shouting something in the distance May also perceived that the voice was drawing gradually nearer and resolving itself into that of a peripatetic newsboy who was vending his wares and shouting out the most sensational headings at the top of his voioe Was that all Still he was not yet near enough for her to distinguish the sense of the sounds which caught her ear from time to time as she absently crumbled her bread and thought to herself over and over again If only father would come home Mrs Burritt as though the thought had set in motion some electric cur rent which connected the two brains remarked at this juncture I sup pose they are quite certain to be here some time to night Almost before the words were out of her lips her son who was sitting on her right started to his feet with a cry What is it Oh what is it ask ed his sister as a sensa of something terrible about to happen fell upon her He made no reply but with dilat ing eyes stood there with every facul ty absorbed in the one effort - Then ne raised one hand the other clutched the edgo of tho table Lis ten he gasped And tho voice without now closo to their very gates made Itself plainly hoard as it shouted out tho latest bul letin Spechul hedishun Hevenin Stand ard Orrible railway haccldent Over twenty killed and hinjured The four thirty from Dover wrecked by a down train carryln petroleum barrels The line on fire Horful scenes Artrend In details CHAPTER VI The Search for a Father What happened after this no one ever knew exactly Before Mrs Bur ritt had begun to grasp the idea that something was wrong her son had rushed from the room After what seemed an age of wait ing but was really a very short time he returned In his hand he held a copy of the newspaper which ho had just bought Mother ho said put ting a strong restraint upon himself I am afraid there has been an acci dent on the line You mustnt be alarmed for though some people have been injured there is no reason why my father should not have es caped and very likely the affair has been greatly exaggerated Ted said his sister In a voice almost as calm as his own though her face had lost every particle of color and seemed to have suddenly become years older Let us know the worst And she held out her hand for the paper The worst he answered with a sound like a strangled sob in his voice Why should there be any worst And as for the paper crump ling it up in his hand you cant place the slightest dependence upon that Im Im going up to town by the next train so as to be on the spot and He may bo hurt in some way you know he added slowly by way of preparing their minds for whatever might be tho result He may have come off with a broken leg or some thing of that sort You can hardly expect him to have got off scot free But whatever it is Im going to find him out and bring him back home Take care of mother this to his sis ter and he was gone But before he could leave the house while his hand was yet upon the latch he found himself confronted by the girl Good bye she said slowly and sadly You will do your best but I have no hope none He caught a train which was on the very point of starting and leaped into the first carriage he came to Then he took out the paper which he had kept so carefully from the sight of those others at home and began to study more earnestly the brief but terrible announcement which it con tained To be continued As She Understood It He was telling a poker story but she only caught this sentence And then of course I called and She interrupted him reproachfully and also with some asperity Ive caught you John Henry she exclaimed Here Ive been trying to get you to call on the Joneses for the last three months and you wouldnt do it said you didnt like to make calls then you go out and make one by yourself or else you go calling with someone else Yes that must be it What is she Jphn Henry Who is this person who can get you to make calls when you wont make them with your wife John Henry looked at his masculine friends and winked slyly Shall I -tell her he asked Might as well they said In this case he then told her three ladies induced me to call Three Yes but he hastened to add if you came across them in the pack you would probably call them queens It was a great joke his masculine friends assured him of that but he hasnt succeeded in explaining the matter to his wifes satisfaction yet Chicago Post St Peter Remembered A poor son of Erin died and was lauded as a very good man by all his neighbors Arriving at The Gate he found his way barred by Saint Peter Before ye can enter says Saint Peter will ye tell me ye are not guilty of any great sin I am not said Paddy Think again said Saint Peter Well says Paddy thinking hard I remember once using bad language over an ould rooster we had That was a great sin said Saint Peter and yez cant come in Paddy turned sorrowfully away but before he had gone for Saint Peter recalled him Ive been thinking said Saint Peter and I think ye must have had great provocation and that your lan guage was perhaps excusable Ye can come in I remember I once had trouble with the same sort of bird myself The Kitchen Range A fine housekeeper says since paint ing her kitchen range she has never blackened it with stove polish Every spring when cleaning house she buys a can of enamel from a druggist and naints her stove with it The stove needs no cleaning except dusting wiping off DEATH FOR INDUSTRY DANGER INVOLVED IN INCREAS ED FOREIGN COMPETITION For Every Days Work Brought In from Abroad There Must Be an Equivalent Days Work Lost to the Wage Earners of the United States An important and enduring contri bution to economic and political litera ture is to be found in the speech of Lafayette Young before the Polk County Republican Club in Des Moines Cct 20 1903 It is a speech that will live and if we are not mis taken will do duty in more than one campaign In vigor of style In clear cut epigrammatic expression in viril ity and in uncompromising stalwart ism it deserves and will have a place among the greatest speeches of the greatest advocates of Republicanism and Protectionism Iowa was essential ly the proper place for its origin Iowa the home of progressives tho breeding ground of backsliders the culture field of tho re form bacillus the state where a premium Is paid for the be trayal of party principle We have long been of the opinion that Lafe Young was needed in that section of the country Now we know it The speech of Oct 20 demonstrates the fact With swift strokes the editor of tho Daily Capital sketches political his tory for the past twenty seven years Coming down to the time when the reformers and the progressive in side the Republican party made their first successful attack upon the policy of protection when as now they were saying The tariff is too high it must be reformed Mr Young tells what happened to prospr ity in 1892 and the four years following But the country was startled after calm was restored after the election of 1892 when it was discovered that the grand aggregation of disagreement and discontent had captured the gov ernment Fear was in the land Men who voted for Cleveland trembled and regretted it Then followed the strug gle upon the part of Cleveland and his Young devotes attention ana though he calls nobody by name it will be strange indeed if there be not some burning in the eais of some people in high places out there in Iowa His chapter on competition is a superb specimen of logic and sarcasm Says he There never is competition when every man has more tnan he can do There will not be competition until half the men have less than they can do There is never any competi tion so long as a man cannot make a thing as rapidly as he can sell it There will be competition when it takes a man two days to find a cus tomer for the thing that he made in one day Some people like to be coaxed to buy They like to be chased by the man who has something to sell They like to get cut rates looks like new does not rust and They have not been getting ct rates and lately There are never any cut rates in good times They say they do not want to tear French People in Britain I down the tana wall tney only want There are 26600 French in Great to lower it a couple of inches Usually Britain and Ireland more than three fourths of the number being in Lon don The business most followed among these is cookery As English laundresses are prized in France sa French cocks are valued In England when a dam is high enough to keep the water out lowering it two inches would be as fatal as its entire re moval When the floods swept down through East Des Moines last May it T T was becauso somo progressive clll zen had probably insLsted that tho diko was a little too high and that it would do no harm to let tho water run over a little A tariff low enough to bring in foreign competition to destroy so called American monopoly would fall of Its purpose if it wore not low enough to bring in immense quan tities of goods from abroad If it did not increase importations it would bo a failure and if it increased importa tions it would close tho American fac tory Men who talk about competition deal with the subject glibly as if mar kets were abundant They think that largo importations would not throw any American out of a job But I say for every days work performed in Europe for the benefit of American somo American loses a days work whether he is employed by a trust or some heartless indiyidual operating singly and alone Somo men say that competition can be let in from Eu rope long enough to destroy tho trusts and combines and then be thrown out again by the readoption of protection Easily and unanswerably Mr Young shows that upon the high wages paid in the mills and factories which for eign competition would close depends the prosperity of Iowa farmers When men are out of work he says the farmer does not sell them spring chickens and potatoes No and neither does the doctor the lawyer the clergyman nor anybody else thrive as well always excepting tho pawnbroker As to the proposition that the tariff be revised by the friends of protec tion Lafe Young does not like it He is of the opinion that when an In dustry has been killed by tariff re duction It is none tho less dead be cause Republicans brought about tho reduction I say to night that if tho America- Congress in Republican hands in the year 1904 or the year 1905 under takes a general reform of the tariff ripping it here and there and enters upon a general debate and discussion of this great subject so vitally con nected with our commerce every in dustry will be killed just as dead as if the Democratic party were in power BIX 1 followers to keep the party pledges Then ensued the long debate on the tariff question and the factories closed banks collapsed and the great republic was in the throes of business disaster the like of which had not been since 1837 The American peo ple repented and felt educated in political economy They swore if they ever had another chance they would bury Democracy and free trade so deep that Gabriels trumpet would never reach any of them And they did it in 189G with that result the world already knows so well that Great Britain is now on the point of discarding free trade and profiting by the example of the United States in restoring prosperity through protection But there has been too much prosperity in the last six years and the reformers are at work again las they were in 1892 To them Mr and tho investigation were being made by the Democrats With truth and force Mr Young urges that when McKinley made his famous Buffalo speech in 1901 he had in mind the reciprocity of Blaine and only that and never contemplated ad justing a reciprocity treaty to kill one industry which we had promised to protect to build up another already protected Mr McKinley did not believe in reciprocity in competitive products in reciprocity that would take from a single American worker his job be he a worker in a factory or on a farm He did not believe that the cheapest products of any foreign country should be permitted to enter into competition with the products of the Americans who grow sugar cano in Louisiana and Texas who grow sugar beets in Colorado and Califor nia who grow tobacco in Connecticut and Wisconsin who grow fruits and vegetables in Florida who grow wool in Ohio and Montana who grow grain in all the Northern states He would never have urged such a policy upon Congress Much less would he have called an extra session as a means of forcing it through In one of the concluding paragraphs of Mr Youngs speech the situation is thus summed up If any of these schemes of tariff ripping are to be seriously considered the best thing any man can do is to convert his present property into money and then wait until the crash comes and buy other peoples property at 25 cents on the dollar It seems strange that Republicans have been found giving ear to doctrines so re cently denounced Not so strange pos sibly when wo remember that Repub lican farmers and Republican working men in 1892 elected Grover Cleveland and with him a tariff ripping Con gress And unless this craze among Repub licans for tariff ripping is checked by Republicans we shall be found travel ing the same road as in 1892 with another tariff ripping Democratic president in the White House and an other tariff ripping Congress at the other end of Pennsylvania avenue KILLINa OFf INDIANS EAU DE COLOGNE DESTROYS CA NADIAN ABORIGINES They Have Been Quick to Learn That Toilet Preparations Contain Intoxi cants and the Demand for the De coctions Is Enormous Eau do cologne and other toilet prep arations are doing a great deal of harm among the Indians of Peace River dis trict In Northwestern Canada accord ing to a member of the Canadian Goo logical Survey who lias just returned from a visit to that region Tho harm comes from the fact that tho Indians drink them Cologne and various other concoc tions known as Florida water essonco of ginger and essence of peppermint are prepared especially for internal use by traders who aro not permitted to sell whisky to tho Indians Tho stuff Is In reality nine tenths puro alcohol J M Macoun of the Cana dian Survey says that tho traffic in alcohol thus disguised has becomo such a serious matter that tho mission aries have become discouraged and the business of the Hudson Bay Com pany promises to bo embarrassed The Indians havo learned that tho sweet smelling things are to drink and aro not to be wasted as exterior oint ments If one wero to consult the Dominion records of importations ono would suppose that the Indian half breeds of the Northwest had suddenly developed a remarkable fondness for cleanliness for the customs reports show an unusual increase In the quan tity of toilet water imported Most of these preparations come from tho United States According to Mr Macoun the effects of drinking these preparations aro very serious The cologne is especial ly injurious as it has shown a ten dency to affect the eyesight of In dians drinking it continuously An Indian who has drunk a pint bottle of cologne contracts a jag which would put a continuous round of ten Manhattan cocktails to shame Tho prevailing tint of everything accord ing to a few intelligent half breeds who had used cologne was a beauti ful green of varying shades Mr Macoun also asserts that ho took one drink of cologne just to see what sort of stuff the Indians wero drinking and found it so sweet and nauseating and at the same time so burning hot that he was glad to end his experiments The essence of pep permint water if taken in moderate quantities and the essence of ginger he thought might be beneficial to per sons exposed to the rigor of the north ern climates but it would be far hot ter to secure unadulterated essences prepared at a chemists rather than to drink the stuff prepared for tho Indians and half breeds GLADSTONES PCVER OF WILL Enabled Great Statesman to Conquer Physical Weakness Gladstone fables are rather numer ous A good many of them are demol ished in Mr Morleys Life The world used to hear that he never lost his power of sleeping after the most ex citing nights in Parliament But in his diary for 1852 he writes Nervous excitement kept me wakeful after speaking the first time for many years Twenty years later ho had several spells of sleeplessness He characteristically explains that it was not the lack of sleep that troubled him but the consequent state of his brain next morning At other times he was afflicted with neuralgic attacks His eyes magnificent to look at wero never very strong The Life more over supplies abundant proof of his possession of a vital force not to be measured by any physical standard He could conquer weakness by indom itable will and indulge in feats of en durance which would have been dan gerous but for his splendid powers of recuperation When greatly troubled he seems to have found the relief he required in talking it all over with Catherine his devoted wife New Mountaineering Records Mountaineering records have recent ly been broken in two respects in the Hunza Nagar peaks of the Himalayas on the northwest frontier of India For four years past Mr and Mrs Bul lock Workman have been carrying on climbing operations in those parts with the aid of Swiss guides and Aug 12 last Dr Workman and two guides climbed an unnamed peak near the Chogo Loongma glacier to a height of 23394 feet They did not quite reach the top but this is higher than the previous worlds record which is the summit of Aconcagua in the Andes 23083 feet Mount Everest however the highest peak in the world still remains unconquered On the same day Mrs Bullock Workman reached a height of 22568 feet which breaks the previous record for women held by herself by 1568 feet Mrs Workman is mild looking and middle aged with gray hair and a by no means athletic figure The Old Farm The old farmhouse I see It again In its low dark eaves the twittering wren Is nested as long ago And I breathe once more the south winds balm And sit and watch in the twilights calm The bats flit to and fro The white cows He at the pasture bars And the dairy cool with it tns and jars Is jtored with curds and cream Theres somebody putting the things to right And through the window I see the light From the tallow candle gleam The garden id rich with its old time bloom And I catch in fancy the faint perfume Of blossoms dank with dew And over it all is the starlit dome And round about It the peacti of the home How it all cones back to view