ai 7v iSvl fc 1 y i KUi a if VI 5 THE FATAL REQUEST OR FOUND OUT- By A L Harris Author of Mine Own Familiar Friond etc Copyright 1S9 1 by Oat set I publishing Company Copyright l 9 o J bystreet Smith CHAPTER XXV Continued The train started on the journey which was to end in its destruction and mile after mile sped away in si lence Qnce more the feeling of re straint had settled down upon us and this time heavier than before Then I remember a sudden awful never-to-be-forgotten crash followed by cries and shrieks such as havejauig in my ears ever since JP I found myself flung violently for ward against the opposite side of the compartment amid the smashing of woodwork and with the presentiment of some awful doom upon me Iwas half stunned but recovering myself found that I was not much hurt Then I remembered my companion and turned my attention to him Silas I cried Are you hurt But before he could reply another sound was added to the awful babel of cries and groans all around Tire Are we heard shrieked in voices mad with terror mingled with agonizing cries for help The atmos phere became stifling a sickening in supportable odor was wafted towards us and clouds of thick black suffocat ing smoke began to drift past Silas I shouted in mad terror to my friend come exert yourself it you wish to escape instant atli And I caught him rom body and tried to compel him e but in vain he only gave ream of agony i Save yourself he s Janed I can not stir and I think my leg is b oken I was almost demented and tore at the shattered woodwork which made his prison with my fingers but only fo increase his agony without freeing n im from his horrible position And already the atmosphere was like that of a furnace and hell itself seemed to be open I could not save him but I might save myself I knew the door on the other side was unlockeJ so that I might attempt to escape that way CHAPTER XXVI Dr Jeremiahs Little Bill This was all The reader drew a long shuddering breath My God he whispered voice and everything seemlns to fan him the moment in s the face of the revelation which had burst upon him My God To think that I should know the truth at last But how marvelous How utterly be yond the realization of my wildest dreams Not for an instant did it ocsur to him to think the narrative false It was too astounding and what was more it agreed so exactly with all the strange and hitherto mysterious cir cumstances which had attended the tragedy And the man he had wrong ed the man he had hunted down and would have betrayed to death believ ing him to be the vilest of his species whose whole nature he had read falsely by the light of his unjust sus picions His eyes were closed he seemed to be hardly breathing Had he fainted or was ihis death Was he to be left alone and in the dark with a dead or dying man He rushed to the door and dashed out of the house in search of a doc tor James Ferrers was not dead but the nearest medical man on being summoned to the house shook his head over tlie case Heart he said briefly Get him to bed I do not think he will ever need to get up again By this time the vhole household was roused and the sick mans daugh ter was hanging in speechless grief over her fathers unconscious form At one time it was feared that he would pass away unconscious but the untiring application of restoratives was at last productive of some effect and two or three hours later the dy ing man opened his eyes He saw his daughter kneeling be side his pillow and not far away his old friends son Avho by some means had asserted and maintained a right to remain in the sick room The doctor seeing that the patient had regained consciousness for a while before the end stood aside so as not WMMmSami ml sn I have nothing to forgive was the broken answer I prepared for flight but before I had taken the first step I was stayed by my friends voice James he cried and the roaring of the flames almost drowned his voice which was sharp and shrill with horror put me out of my misery Save yourself but shoot me through the brain first Quick quick It was the most merciful death and without pausing a second which on that awful day might have meant a human life I drew the revolver placed it to his temple My God from the reader and pulled the trigger Even as I heard the report a thin tongue of flame curled upward through the splintered flooring and without even looking back without even a glance at the face of my friend forced open the door and sprang from the now burning carriage with the smoking weapon still grasped in my right hand In doing so I trod upon some smouldering timber and wrenched irv ankle severely so that for a long time I was lame A few hours later and I was con veyed to town together with a com pany of the other survivors and as soon as I reached my destination my strength forsook me and I was pros trated for days by a nervous illness the result of my late terrible experi ence When I recovered it was to find that there was a hue and cry already after me that the partially consumed corpse of a first class passenger had been discovered snot through the head and that all the evidence pointed to the crime having been committed by a fellow traveler who had made his es cape during the terror and confusion of the catastrophe and who was being eagerly sought for Since then 1 have had to submit to the ordeal of seeing myself confronted by the reward of one hundred pounds offered for my detection and have lived in daily and hourly fear of being charged with tne committal of this crime if crime it can be called of which I was guiltless in thought if not in deed It is this which is kill ing me and I do not regret it Sometimes I regret nothing not even the shot which took my best friends life and branded me with the brand of Cain to interfere with those last solemn moments The dying mans gaze rested upon the young man who in obedience to a gesture approached and bent over him with a strange intensity and his lips moved Do you forgive he murmured close to the others ear so that the words might be heard by none but him for whom they were intended I have nothing to forgive was the broken answer You acted for the best and I bless you for it A look of peace fell upon the corpse like countenance upon the pillow and he turned his eyes again upon his daughter Dont grieve much for me my child said he and when I am gone He gave a deep sigh his eyes closed and his head fell a little to one side The doctor pressed forward This is the end he said and a very peaceful one But it was not quite the end Once more the dying eyes opened and fixed themselves upon the pale remorseful face of the young man who had once hoped to see him expiate his deed upon the scaffold Then he turned them rom him to the bowed head of the girl who knelt with her face hidden upon the other side of the bed and back again His lips moved for the last time but no words issued from them He tried again and this time though there was no sound it seemed to the other who had his eyes fixed upon them and his ear strained to catch the lightest whisper that the motion of the lips might be translated into the words Keep my secret I will I will he answered and even as he uttered these words the end came The next day Ted Burritt returned home unexpected The first thing he did was to write a brief summary of events to Dr Jere miah Cartwright who in spite of the very short time which had elapsed since his last visit again made his ap pearance at Magnolia Lodge osten sibly to hear further details but more particularly to carry out a deep laid scheme of his own And what do you mean to do eh I mean about the young lady Oh you neednt look as though you dont understand what I am talking about Ive not forgotten what you told me about her What a beautifulblush And the little gentleman chuckled then all at once became ally grave By-the-by he said slow ly and with a noticeable tendency to avoid his friends eye about that bill of mine Ted looked surprised -- Bill he repeated Yes bijl continued the4 doctor You didnt suppose I vas gojng to let you off did you You havent forgot ten what I said a little while back about sending one In have you The young man looked and felt non plussed I have made up my mind to take it in kind What I mean is continued Dr Cartwright that Instead of receiving payment for whatever servicesfmay have rendered in ready money I am willing to take it out in some other article And what might that article be was the natural but still perplexed in quiry Your sister was the brief and much to the point response By Jove was the exclamation it called forth followed by you dont mean it Dont I though Tvas the deter mined reply Ive been meaning it for some time past Whats more Ive sounded the young lady I dont mean with a stethoscope and she wasnt half so much surprised as you seem to be The brother of the young lady in question burst out laughing I suppose I shall have to give in and I may as well do it sooner than later About three months later a gentle man in the most irreproachable attire called at the residence of the late James Ferrers Esq of Belmont House Hampstead and requested to see Miss Ferrers That young lady who had descended to encounter her visitor quite in ignor ance as to his identity was confounded beyond measure to discover in the supposed stranger none other than that same individual whom she had first met at the Royal Academy and who had afterwards occasioned her the greatest perplexity of mind by doub ling the part of the young man who waited at table and cleaned the plate Only he had grown the loveliest moustache and it seemed perfectly im possible to imagine for a moment that he had ever done such a thing as polish the forks and spoons and make himself generally useful Ted plunged at once into the object of his Aisit I should have called much sooner he remarked Avith a compassionate glance at her deep mourning but was afraid of intruding upon your retire ment I have a statement to make an explanation to give which I cannot withhold any longer He came nearer to her and oh the presumption of the creature actually ventured to take her hand Do you remember being at the Academy one day last June and drop ping your catalogue Did she not But she made no audible reply and the explanation thus propitiously commenced was continued without any interruption beyond an oc casional stifled exclamation on the part of its recipient It is not necessary however to re port the whole of what passed during the interview A certain portion only of it need be referred to as being of some interest And you really mean to say said Miss Ferrers to the young man you really mean to say that you fell in love with me then and there and took the situation and put up with everything just for the sake of being under the same roof with me He looked at her strangely for a moment before answering What other reason could there have been he asked She clapped her hands together in delight Whatever will the girls at school say to this The End Beechers Deacon Went to Sleep Pew sleepers are one of the bug bears of preacners said the Rev Robert Collyer the veteran New York minister I can speak feelingly from experience On one occasion when Henry Ward Beecher asked me to go to Plymouth Church to talk to his people he remarked jokingly let us hope that most of them were hard working folk who needed plenty of rest on Sunday and he felt that a ser mon trom me might be gratefully re ceived In the course of my talk I men tioned this and said that it was how ever a matter upon which my feelings could not be hurt and that I owed this imperviousness to Mr Beecher him self I told them that one Sunday years before when I was attenling a service at old Plymouth and Mr Beecher was thundering forth I saw one of his deacons asleep in a f ront pew I went on to say that always after this whenever I saw a man slumber ing peacefully through my most stir ring efforts in the pulpit I would say to myself Well let him sleep even the great Beecher cant keep em all awake Success The Vogue of Pantalets Pantalets came into vogue about 1820 They were loose flapping frills tied on under the knee and hanging over the foot The strings generally broke or slipped down and one learns of a young mothers trials with those horrid things in a letter quoted by Mrs Earle which says My finest dimity pair with real Swiss lace i quite useless to me for I lost off one leg I saw that mean Mrs Spring wearing it last week for a tucker My help says slie wont stay if she has to wash more than seven pairs a week for Myrtilla J THE HEAftST BOOM MOVEMENT FOR FREE TRADE BEHIND IT Calamitous Results That Followed the Adoption of This Policy In 1892 Would Repeat Themselves Work Ingmen Will Do Well to Remember The boom of William Randolph Hearst for the Democratic Presiden tial nomination in 1904 may be said to have been launched at a mass meet ing held in Washington on the 13th of August The ambitious individual In whose behalf this movement has been organized is the reputed possessor of a fortune of several millions of dol lars represented in great part by a number of daily newspapers whose columns appear to be chiefly conse crated to the destruction of wealth belonging to other people It Is upon this platform that Mr Hearst hopes to- reach the Presidency At present he is merely a Tammany Congress man from a New York city district In journalism he enjoys the distinction of issuing each day in four different cities the very worst lot of newspa pers of large circulation and vicious influence known in any part of the civilized world Upheaval revolution anarchy assassination if need be seem to be the guiding principles in these publications The mass meeting of August 13 in Washington was ostensibly engi neered by persons claiming to repre sent organized labor In the name of American labor the Hearst presiden tial boom is thrust forward By ap pealing to the unreason and the pas sions of American wage earners it is hoped to realize the political ambition of a man whose program and platform involve the ruin of labor and industry Down with All Trusts That is the battle cry of the Hearst boomers How shall the trusts be downed By the repeal of the Dingley tariff and the establishment of free trade That is the trust remedy chiefly relied upon almost wholly relied upon When the protective tariff -is swept away the trusts will disappear Such is the Hearst promise and plan Take free trade out of the Hearst propaganda and nothing remains Workingmen who are now employed all the year round at the highest wage rate ever known in this or any other country wage earners whose deposits in savings banks have increased in the past six years of a protective tariff from less than 2000000000 to nearly 3000000000 are expected to rally to the support of a political movement whose ultimate aim is to wreck all industry and stop all prosperity The work people and wage earners did something of this kind in 1892 and paid the penalty in loss of employ ment and wages in the melting away of accumulated savings in the pover ty hunger and untold sufferings of themselves and their wives and chil dren Evidently the Hearst boomers think American workingmen have short memories American Econo mist i5t SIGNIFICANT ADMISSION British Acknowledgment of the Value of Protection We confess that we never expected to see the officials of Great Britain deliberately furnish the Republican party of this country with the most convincing arguments in favor of pro tection The Cobden club is knocked into a cocked hat and the Anti Cobden club of the Nineteenth ward that pat riotic band of intellectual political economists should at their next meet ing make a minute of the subject Im portant as was the announcement of Premier Balfour the official state ments of the board of trade which is a government institution are much more so They announce that protec tion does protect that in spite of the fact that wages in this country are more than double those in Great Brit ain the amount of exports of manufac tured goods to this country has great ly decreased while our manufactured exports to that country are increasing rapidly The same applies to all pro tected nations so that Great Britain is declared to be in a disadvantageous position especially as the united States can so soon as there is a lull in local demand flood Great Britain with goods at much lower rates The first duty of a nation is to look after the welfare of its own citizens That is what we have done In estab lishing protection we have not only accomplished all that the Republican party ever claimed but have confound ed our opponents here and abroad The British government officially an nounces that our policy has been a successful one and will be of great injury to its own people unless retalia tory measures are taken Which is why we remark once more that we never expected in our day to see Great Britain the apostle of free trade acknowledge its own defeat and our own success What will the Democratic party say to this in the next campaign It seems cruel that they are deprived of their only stock argument but facts are necessarily cruel things when opposed to falla cious theories Philadelphia Inquirer Can the Democracy Get Right The Democratic party in Congress under the leadership of Senator Gor man has engaged in systematic oppo sition to the increase of the navy to any increase of the navy The Democrats admit that their pol icy is futile It is astonishing that they do not see that it is also suici dally foolish The United States has a greater ex tent of seacoast than any other na tion except the British empire Furthermore the United States is pledged by its unvarying policy for three quarters of a century and by the firmest convictions of Its people to the maintenance of the Monroo Doc trine When the Monroe Doctrine Is at tacked as It will be unless the United States make itself so strong and ready that none will dare attack it the at tack will be made by sea power To ward off such attack the United States must have sea power Yet the United States to day ranks only fifth among the nations of the world in sea power And of the four nations whose fleets surpass that of the United States three would gain greatly by breaking down the Monroe Doctrine These are the fundamental facts of the situation These facts were never more widely appreciated by the Amer ican people nor were the consequences of a failure in sea power ever more clearly understood than they are to day Yet the national Democracy through its representatives in Congress now attack the sea power of the nation and seeks to prevent its growth Under pretenseof working for peace Demo cratic Congressmen advocate a policy that would make war certain The question that forces Itself upon every thinking American is Can the Democratic party ever prove itself worthy to rule this nation Can the Democratic party ever get right Chicago Inter Ocean PROSPERITY AND SAVINGS Deposits Have Increased to Nearly Three Billion Dollars There is no such thing as real pros perity in this country when the gen eral public is short of surplus money There is no abatement of real prosper ity when the general public goes on making money and saving some of it The speculative gambler may be roll ing in wealth or ne may be absolutely poverty stricken and neither the one condition nor the other reflects the situation of the general public and the country Something that does unfail ingly and emphatically is the total of the savings banks deposits the sur plus wealth of the general public when we had hard times with the advent of the Wilson law savings banks deposits first ceased to increase and then actually decreased From 1893 to 1894 they fell nearly 10000 000 or to a total of 17479C1000 By 1902 they had risen to 2750000 000 Controller Ridgleys report showed that the total of the savings banks deposits is now 2935204845 From the experts who went broke in speculative excesses we hear that national prosperity turned downward in 1901 In that year the savings banks deposits were 2597000000 so that since that time to now there has been a gain of nearly 400000000 This gain since the turn of prosper ity is larger than the gain from 1893 to 1898 It is as large as the gain from 1895 to 1899 larger than the gain from 1S98 to 1900 when the boom was indeed booming as no one will deny Nearly three billions of savings banks deposits to day nearly twice what we had in 1894 does not look as if the general public were yet quit of prosperity Nor will it be if this nation continues a policy which keeps our industries protected against for eign Industries and our wage earners against foreign wage earners New York Press More Work for the Policeman The Journals prediction that the United States would soon have to ex ercise police power over the semi savage republics of San Domingo and Hayti is being swiftly fulfilled A delayed cablegram from San Do mingo says that marines from the Newark and Columbia have had a pitched battle lasting three hours with the insurgents who were routed with out the loss of even one American life The insurgents began the trouble by firing on the launch of the Newark and on a commercial steamship owned in New York Four hundred marines were promptly landed under cover of the guns of the Newark and the Co lumbia which shelled the insurgent camp and they engaged the Domin gans who lost two of their generals killed one wounded several officers captured and sixteen men killed and wounded After inflicting this punishment the United States forces withdrew and the Newark sailed for Guantanamo Evidently the situation in San Do mingo is becoming intolerable The barbarian degenerates who inhabit that part of the island are only one de gree better than the negroes who com pose the population of Hayti They are not fit to govern themselves and they are becoming a menace to the peace of the whole Caribbean region The United States can not long per mit this state of affairs to continue al most within hailing distance of its island possessions It is bound by every consideration of selfish interest as well as by every moral obligation to the family of nations to put an end to it We do not want the island of Hayti but for the sake of our com merce we must take such police meas ures there as will prevent any further disturbances It is a satire on our civilization that at our very doors one of the fairest and richest islands of the sea is be come the prey of savages in perpetual riot many of them sunk in supersti tion and barbarism not found else where on earth outside of the Austra lian bush and the interior of darkest Africa If is time that the United States in terfered to police this island We can not permit any other nation to do so and it must be done Chicago Jour nal r FARMS ARE BIG IN DAKOTA Agricultural Munchausen Gives an Idea of Things There Yes sir resumed the Dakota farmer as the crowd of agricultur ists seated themselves round a Httlu table yes sir we do things on rath er a sizable scale Ive seen a man on one of our big farms start out In the spring and plow a great fur row until autumn Then ho turned round and harvested back We have some big farms up there gentleman A friend of mine owned one which ho had to give a mortgage on and I pledge you my word the mortgage was due at one end before they could get It recorded at the other You see It was laid out in counties And the worst of it is it breaks up families so Two years ago 1 saw a whole family prostrated with grief women yelling children howling and dogs barking One of my men had his camp truck packed on seven four mule teams and he was going round bidding everybody good by Where was he going He was going halfway across the farm to feed the pigs replied the Da kota man Did he ever get back to his fam ily It Isnt time for him yet Up there we send young married couples out to milk the cows and their children bring homo the milk London Tit Bits TRUE TO HIS WORD Incident Shows J P Morgans Keen Sense of Personal Honor A certain underwriting syndicate in volving a good many millions was or ganized on the eve of Mr departure for Europe but not com pleted when he sailed Upon his re turn he asked to see the subscription list and the balance sheets the work of the syndicate having been com pleted and the books closed As he glanced over the list he noticed that one name which he presumed would be there was missing and he said to his partner L do not see the name of here The reply was Wo were able to organize the syndicate without them and we therefore did so Instantly Mr Morgan replied But I promised them that they should come m Then making a rapid computation of what these bankers profits would have been had they been admitted to the syndicate Mr Morgan drew his companys check for the amount which involved several hundred thou sands and sent it to them Every bodys Magazine Turning the Tables The late Charles Denby former min ister to China practiced law in Indi ana before the outbreak of the civil war and a lawyer of Kvansville said of him the other day Col Denby as a lawyer was par ticularly good in cross-examination-He could confuse and frighten a wit ness and make him contradict himself in nine cases out of ten One day though the tables were turned The witness on this occasion was a mild young man with a slow care ful way of speaking Col Denby put him through a terrific ordeal In tho way of cross examination but to no effect The young fellow couldnt be swerved an inch from his first state ment Now young man look here said Col Denby finally is it or is it not the truth that an effort has been made to induce you to tell the court a different story from this Yes sir its the truth Ha Now on your oath said Denby I demand to know who the persons are who attempted this hein ous thing Why said the witness youre the principal one I guess Buffalo En quirer Smoothing Thinks Over Senator Clapp of Minnesota is a great campaigner and is constant I called upon to make speeches in his own state Last fall he was asked to go to a town called Erin Corners which i not far from his home town anl make a political speech Erin Corners is a Democratic ham let with no Republicans living with in its limits Clapp is a Republican He got to the village and found th town hall packed with Democrats IU tried to talk and they howled him down He tried half a dozen time- and each time was compelled to stop because of the noise and disturbance in the hall He was just about to quit when an old man who had worked as man on the farm of Senator Clapp -father came up to the platform an- said Dont mind them a lot of loafers and rowdif None of the decent people wou come Washington Post NEW SERIAL STORY John Burt BV FREDERICK UPHAA1 ADAIS A powerful portrayal of Amarican life of to day will be com menced in these columns next week