E W i K - - i P Mfe 5- I -- Yfrj The Tribune F M KIM M ELL Publisher MCOOK NEBRASKA The Mystery OF CarneyQroft By JOSEPH BROWN COOKE Copyright HOT by 8tory Pres Corporation CHAPTER VII A Misplaced Joke The door was securely locked and bolted on the inside as I had left it the night before and a most thor ough search disclosed no other door opening into the room and no pos sible place of concealment for any thing of the bulk of a man The thought of a concealed opening in the ceiling over the bed naturally suggested itself to my mind but noth ing of the sort existed and a moments examination with a towel on the end of a walking stick showed a layer of dust which evidently had not been dis turbed for years In short the presence of the envel ope on my bed seemed to be shrouded in mystery of the most impenetrable kind but even it was exceeded in Its incomprehensibility by the aston ishing contents of the note My love for Florence Carney whs I had thought a secret buried deep In my own breast Surely I had never told it in all the years that I had cherished it so fondly and on one occasion at least I had denied it flatly Yet it was mentioned here in as matter-of-fact a way as if our engagement had been formally announced and our wedding day named I turned the matter over and over in my mind as 2 strolled slowly along in the winding road that led to Hos kins hotel but I was rib nearer a so lution of the problem when I finished my breakfast than I had been when I left the house There were a number of letters for me at the post office but I had no interest in them and stuff ing them unread into my pocket I wandered back to Carney Croft still pondering deeply Unlocking the door I returned at once to my room and again made a careful search for any possible means of ingress after the door was closed and secured for the night While the lock might have been turned from the outside with a master key there was still the holt to hold it and that this could not have heen slipped by any other hand than mine I was absolutely sure Moreover there was no hidden mechanism connected with the holt which was a simple commonplace af fair bearing the name of a well known maker and evidently attached to the door after the house was completed Giving up in despair for the pres ent at least I descended to the ground floor again intending to make a minute inspection of the house and grounds when a faint odor of cigar smoke attracted my notice and I saw that the library door was ajar Tiptoeing forward I peered through the opening and beheld to my amaze ment a familiar figure seated comfort ahly in one of the large leather chairs with his feet resting lazily on an other in all the assurance of appar ent proprietorship At the same in stant he turned his head slightly in my direction and uncertain as to whether he had seen me or not I re treated rapidly and noiselessly up the stairs to my room where I locked my self in and tried to smother my an ger and view the situation logically While the manner in which the -note had reached me was still as much of a mystery as ever its contents at least were explained and my fury knew no bounds at the wholly unwar ranted impertinence of this sorry at tempt at a practical joke To me the matter was so sacred so precious so entirely my own that my rage at the frivolity of this contempt ible jest drove from my mind all thought of wonder that a man who I had every reason to believe was miles away should be at this very moment under the same roof with me I sat down and gazed out of the win dow across the river to the heavily wooded hills in the distance and made an almost superhuman effort to control myself Finally I opened the letters that had come by the morn ings mail and began to read them in a perfunctory way The -second was from my secretary and as I perused it I suddenly awoke from my apathy and read with interest Two letters came this morning from Mr Carney one postmarked Lon don and the other Paris I forward them with other papers under sepa rate cover Dr MacArdel called this afternoon and was greatly surprised to learn that you had gone away so suddenly and without sending him- word He said he wanted to see you on a person al matter and seemed quite disap pointed at missing you The Jarvis case has been post poned to the fall term The letter closed with a few memo randa of business matters and by the time I had finished reading it my mind was clear to an extent that enabled me to see things in a reasonable light and to appreciate that the mystery of the note was as deep if not deeper than ever Opening the door I strode down stairs Into the library and up to the figure In the chair Hello r exclaimed grasping him by the arm Better late than never he re sponded with a hearty laugh What made you sneak upstairs in that mys terious way Think I was a ghost No I replied slowly and serious ly I thought you were a scoundrel and I owe you an apology from the bottom of my heart Have a cigar old man said Mac Ardel CHAPTER VI il A Disappearing Cigar Case What on earth brings you here Mac I exclaimed accepting his prof fered cigar and lighting it with a sud den Interest and respect for the tradi tional pipe of peace Train said MacArdel coupled with an overwhelming desire to seize upon you and take you off with me for a months vacation So thats why you called at my of fice yesterday afternoon eh I quer ied How did you know that I was there asked MacArdel My secretary mentioned in his letter that came this morning I ex plained And its a great good thing that he did for while the information only made a big mystery out of what appeared for -a moment to be a com paratively small one it served fortu nately to clear you in an instant from a very serious charge that I was nurs ing against you Humph said MacArdel the way you treat your Condemn em -without a So thats friends hearing eh Well Mac I replied this had to uimn positive way unless he had known that it was true Now you are the only person living with whom I have ever talkod on this subject for you will remember that you once inti mated pretty broadly that I was in love wfth Miss Carney And you denied it flatly he re marked Yes I replied I denied it flatly MacArdel I said soberly looking him squarely in the face youve cpr nered me and I might as well tell you the whole thing It was three years ago when we talked of this before and 1 must have loved her then and from the day I first saw her 13ut not as 1 love her now old man for now she is my all in all and my only thoughts are for her welfare and her happiness You know I saw her very frequently when she was living in town and now that she is away our correspondence is necessarily frequent so that I can keep informed of her whereabouts and know of her needs from the es tate Of course you could not pay her any attentions unless you meant to ask her to marry you said MacArdel but I dont see any objection what ever to that I know you havent any money but your social position is as good as hers and you are doing well in your profession It seems to me that it would be a very appropriate match if you love each other No Mac I insisted Its better as it is Considering my position In con nection with the estate it would he a mean advantage for me to take and Mac if she refused me I helieve 1 would kill myself Im such a fool over it But suppose she didnt refuse you said MacArdel softly laying his hand I on my arm I lJ Jllml Afi 3 - v fatten J zirm When Did You Get It do with a matter that -only you and I knew anything about and what you know about it you have merely in ferred Then when I saw yoirhere in the house there seemed to he no other explanation at all -at least of the most important part of the thing But now it is more hopelessly tangled up than before for as you were in my office yesterday afternoon you could not pos sibly have had anything to do with it Delightfully interesting Imsurel said MacArdel and most appropriate when occurring in a hpuse alleged to be haunted Still I confess I could follow you more closely if I had some faint glimmer of an idea of what you are talking about I handed him the note and he read it slowly and thoughtfully When did you get it he asked Found it on my bed this morning when I woke I replied Who put it there he continued How the devil do I know who put it there I returned excitedly The bouse was locked up and so was the room The window was open I ad mit but I am positive that no one could have gotten in that way There are too many vines about it and not a twig was bent So you thought it was a miracle and that it must have been I who performed it eh said MacArdel I know you always maintained that I worked a miracle when I cured your typhoid Hang it all Mac- I exclaimed I dont care a snap of my little finger how it got on the bed I want to know who wrote it Well I didnt anyhow said Mac Ardel I never heard of it before I suppose somebody wanted to play a joke on you for your temerity In sleep ing alone in a haunted house Pretty poor sort of a joke to be sure but I dont see anything to warrant your getting so excited over it See here Mac I said drawing my chair up close to his you dont seem to understand just what 1 mean The point is simply this No one could have written a hlng like that in such a No old man its no use talking that way I replied Ill just go on as Ive been doing Its the only thing I can do as I see it Bet you a dinner at Sherrys that you propose to her and marry her within two years said MacArdel with a quizzical look in his kindly eyes and with a half hearted grasp of his hand I accepted the wager with a temerity that was half wishing and half hopeful So you see why I feel so strongly about this note I said rising and opening the door which I had closed carefully on my entrance The sub ject is one that I cannot bear to have trifled with and anyway I cannot im agine who could have rend my inner most thoughts so correctly That puzzles me more than the mysterious appearance of the letter in my bed I fancy well be able to explain that without much trouble said MacArdel lighting a fresh cigar and laying his cigar case on the table beside him These mysterious occurrences always happen in a most simple fashion after all is said and done One night last summer I ras reading in bed and just before putting out the light I laid my eyeglasses on a Mttle table about six feet from the window I was pe rfectly sure about it for the spring was bent slightly and I had spent several min utes fussing with them before I put them down The next morning they were gone and never turned up in spite of the most vigorous search un til the maid found them three or four days later hidden completely in the folds of the lace curtain which had blown across the table and caught them up As my room was on the fourth floor and had been securely locked all night the affair was quite mystifying until it was so simply ex plained Well find out before long how the letter got on your bed and that will doubtless lead to the dis covery of its author Have a fresh cigar and show me around the place a bit It looks mighty interesting and romantic TO BE CONTINUED DONE IN A HURRY GREAT RAILROAD STUNT OF THE LONG AGO Man Who Helped to Narrer the Grand Trunk Line Tells How the Work Was Pushed to Its Completion Uncle Ame By rant of By rants Pond Me took part in a railroad stunt back in 72 which makes one realize that the much abused railroads have ac complished some big things in 35 years Uncle Ame helped as he says to narrer the Grand Trunk It may Uncle Ame surprise some folks to know that the Grand Trunk was originally built to a five foot gauge The result was endless trouble Tioth when the Grand Trunk cars were sent over other lines or strange cars were to he run on the Grand Trunk Cars had to be specially constructed to meet the contingency with loose wheels on one side so that they could be set over to fit whatever gauge might come their way These loose wheels were fastened with metal pins which were forever working loose and causing all manner of smashups Traffic suffered delays ensued and the system was eventual ly found to he impracticable Some thing had to he done about it Finally the wise ones got their heads together and agreed that the track would have to be narrowed It would never do to suspend traffic while the herculean task was being accomplished The wise ones talked and talked and finally hit upon a plan Uncle Ame helped carry out that plan Word came to us long in the spring of 72 that the old railroad was a goin to be narrered he said to a reporter That was good news mister The wide gauge was no end of bother what with transferrin freight an pas sengers wheels comin off perpetual an trains runnnin into th ditch So we was glad to hear the standard gauge was a comin spite o all the trouble and expense you bet First thing we had to do y see was to unspike one rail all along the inside leavin jest three spikes to hold her At four a m we was all ready on the depot platform Pretty soon along comes an engine and some flat cars to take us to our new positions Mine was furthest from the depot There you be says the conduc tor lettin us off Now you wait right here until you see two trains pass with signs on the back car then get busy Purty soon we heard a whistle an along comes the east bound makin things hum Twant a great while before we heard number two kitin along tother way By she whizzed in a cloud of smoke an cinders Stick in out from the back platform we see the sign Last train going west Now jump boys I hollered an they jumped some I tell ye They certainly did make them spikes fly One man held a gauge two was armed with drawbars an the rest had sledge hammers an spikes Those with the bars run along pullin out the three spikes that held each rail others slipped the rail over to the gauge an the rest spiked down to every other tie Mister that was snappy work In an hour wed covered all but half a mile of our section an had the finish in sight where another section had started Coaches for Honeymooners The young folk whose springtide fancies turn toward wedding bells and honeymoons will rejoice to hear that the Midland Railroad company has its fatherly eye on them and hence a honeymooners carriage has been introduced into the service of the railway says the Dundee Scot land Advertiser Happily the car riage is not to attract the unmerciful curiosity of other passengers It is just a plain cozy first class compart ment on the coupe principle and it holds two persons and no more These two seat compartments will en able honeymooners to obtain the ad vantage of a reserved compartment at the price of two tickets The new compartment is in the middle of the new composite coaches which have just been built they are linked up by a side corridor with the other com partments of the coach At present these carriages are known in cold of ficial language as Composite corridor coaches AUTOMATIC STOP FOR TRAINS Simple Device Which Sets the Brakes If the Danger Signal Is Ignored On the subway in New York city and on the Boston elevated operating practically all the interurhan servico of that city there is now and for some time has been in use a simple mechanism a mechanical tripf by means of which when an engineer runs past a danger signal the motive power is shut off and the brakes are set mechanicully writes Carl Snyder in Everybodys This is what is known as the Kinsman stop It has been highly successful and has permitted much freer and closer run ning of trains than had heretofore been deemed possible It Is a practi cal and demonstrated success Its elevator has likewise developed an electrical device of the same na ture and this Is now being tried by one or more steam roads It is ex tremely simple It consists merely of an inner guard rail about 120 feet in length forming part of an open circuit in connection with the ordi nary block signal Projecting from under the engine is a heavy steel arm strong enough to resist all breakages and fixed on a stiff but sufficiently flexible spring so that it may be knocked about without danger The arm scrapes along the guard rail as the engine passes over it thereby clos ing the circuit and if the signal be at danger it automatically shuts the engine throttle and throws on the brakes It is set a little beyond the danger signalso that if the engineer has obeyed the signal it has no ef fect If he has run past the train is automatically stopped With this de vice goes a very Ingenious recording apparatus which shows every time such an automatic stop is made in other words how often the engineer has gone by his signals It Is a me chanical surprise test This record ing apparatus is under lock and key and is opened only by the inspectors at the end of the run HIS WRATHFUL GOOD BYE The Train Dispatcher Was Irritated at the Operator When the weather is foggy and damp telegraph wires work badly due to what is known as escape that is loss of current due to imperfect insulation moisture being a conduc tor On such occasions it is difficult for operators to keep their instru ments properly adjusted It frequent ly happens therefore than an opera tor will begin to use the wire while it is already in use This is termed breaking in and is at times a source of great annoyance especially on a train dispatchers wire Recently C M Pierce Missouri Pa cific dispatcher at Osawatomie Kan was up against such a proposition It was quitting time for the day men along the line and one chap out in the western part of the state broke in to say G N which is the telegraph ers manner of saying good night A similar response from the dispatcher is authority to close up This man was not adjusted and did not hear Pierces acknowledgment Every few minutes he repeated his ex asperating G N Pierce was cov ered up with work and every interrup tion meant a set back to his plans that can only be fully realized by a member of the craft For the seventeenth time was heard the same old appeal G N Pierce in sheer desperation re sponded Good night good morrow good Lord good bye FREIGHT TRAFFIC THE CAUSE Responsible for Excess of Accidents in the United States How little we really know of the casualties on foreign railroads is in dicated by the fact that while French railroad statistics give the total of railway employes killed in 1904 at 22G and the injured at 509 the re ports to the labor inspectors under the French law give the following figures of accidents to employes in the transportation industry Killed 374 permanently disabled 513 dis abled not exceeding four days 327SS results unknown Goo a total of 34330 The reason why there are more casualties on American railways than on European is because the units of risk are greater here as can be seen in the following comparative table All Europe Unitd States 1904 1306 Miles of railway 1S977J rSftit Passengers car ried one mile UmOOOOOo 5000000000 Tons carried one mile S929J000000 iiOOOOOOOOCO The enormous freight traffic is the overshadowing element of peril in railway operation in the United States It is almost three times great er than that of all Europe Freight trains figure in three quarters of the prominent collisions reported here Slason Thompson in The World To Day OLD ENGINE HAS HISTORY Locomotive used by Dana in his earlier days in getting news into New York city from Albany Relieves Spring Catarrh y t V BjpBBffifflfcS i v--v vv IXVv fcpvS fcy MISS BORA UATDEN Without hesitation I write to thank you for the great relief I have found in your valuable medicine Pcruna and will call the attention of all my friends suffering with catarrh to that fact Be sides Ichecrftdly recommend it to alt suf fering with catarrh in any form Miss Dora Hayden Sig 6th St S W Washington D C A Case of Spring Catarrh Mrs N P Lawler 423 NBroadway Pittsburg Kas writes Last spring I caught a severe cold which developed into a serious case of catarrh I felt weak and sick and could neither eat nor sleep well A member of our club who had been cured of catarrh through the use of Pe runa advised me to try it and I did so at once I expected help but nothing like the wonderful change for the better I observed almost as soon as I started talcing it In three days I felt much better and within two iveeksl was in fine health Peruna is a wonderful medicine STUDENT MADE HIS POINT No Doubt the Policeman Understood What He Meant W H Mallock the well known English writer and political economist said at a dinner in New York apropos of a new definition of socialism I find that definition rather confusing It reminds me of the young Oxford students badinage with the police man Officer said the youth late one night Id like to ask you a Question Very well sir - Does the law permit me to call you an ass You move on the officer growled But stop a bit continued the youth Does the law permit me to call an ass a policeman The law dont say nothing about that was the gruff reply Then said the youth good night Mr Policeman BABY IN TERRIBLE STATE Awful Humor Eating Away Face Body a Mass of Sores Cuticura Cures in Two Weeks My little daughter broke out all over her body with a humor and we used everything recommended but without results I called in three doc tors hut she continued to grow worse Her body was a mass of sores and her little face was being eaten away Her ears looked as if they would drop off Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment and before I had used half of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment the sores had all healed and my little ones face and body were as clear as a new born babes I would not be without it again if it cost five dollars instead of seventy five cents Mrs George J Steese 701 Coburn St Akron O Aug 30 1905 English Ribbon Trade Flourishing The English ribbon trade is said to be now in a more flourishing condi tion than it has been in many years owing to the huge demands the dress makers and milliners are making up on the output of the manufacturers Shake Into Your Shoes Allens Foot Ease It cures painfulswollen smarting sweating feet Makes new shoes easy Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores Don t accept any substitute SamnleFREE Address A S Olmsted Le Roy N Y Queen Alexandra after a residence of 45 years In England has visited the tower of London She is said to have been ruch interested in what she Baw It is a pity to be ill Take Garfield Tea the laxative exactly suited to the needs of men women and children At is made wholly of herbs it purifies the blood eradicates disease overcomes constipation brings Good Health Work of Cupid in Germany The number of marriages in the German empire in 1905 was 485906 Krauses Cold Cure For cold in head throat chest or back liest remedy lor La Grippe Druggists 25e There are lots of people In the so clal scale who do not weigh much ir WintlowB Soothlntr Synip For children tcetMnz tof tens the numa rolncen In flammation allay palncures wlnl cutft 25ca botUe A bad Imitation is often better taa the real thing r 1 iS I J