k The Tribune F M KIMMELL Publisher MCOOK OF NEBRASKA The Mystery CarneyCroft By JOSEPH BROWN COOKE Copyricbt 1907 by Btory Iress Corporation CHAPTER IX Two Ghosts As he spoke MacArdel reached for his cigar case and my eye followed his hand to the table beside which we both stood and where I nad seen him lay it only a moment before It had vanished as completely as if the earth had swallowed it up Instinctively I sprang back and closed the door with a bang while MacArdel was going through his pock ets in a bewildered sort of a way that was ludicrous to witness The things gone said MacArdel as he finished his search I wouldnt have taken an even hundred for it These mysterious occurrences are usually explained in a very simple manner when all is said and done I observed dryly Doubtless well have no trouble in finding out what became of it Oh dry up said MacArdel im politely as was his wont The door was only open about six inches I continued Nobody could have come in Or gone out said MacArdel Well I went on its shut now Suppose we have a look about Without any apparent reason we searched the room high and low for the missing cigar case peering into vases and jars moving furniture about and disturbing things generally until the place looked like a curio shop in the middle of housekeeping Finally we gave up in disgust and suddenly struck with the ridiculous ness of our own performances sat down in the chairs that we had for merly occupied by the side of the table The cigar case was lying under the lamp where MacArdel had first laid it down There was nothing to say and so we said nothing At length MacArdel picked it up examined it carefully put it in his pocket and muttered Lets get ou of here Ware I want some fresh air Once outside the house he contin ued Thats the most remarkable oc currence I ever heard of Ghosts dont walk by day so it couldnt have been spooks but how on earth do you ex plain it I dont explain it I replied Its just like the note on the bed Oh nang the note on the bed cried MacArdel This happened right under our eyes and noses Well what if it did I persisted It isnt any more mysterious and weve got to get to the bottom of the whole business before we can let Miss Carney come back No vacation for us my boy We must stay here and find out whats going on We walked all around the house in vestigating every nook and corner of its walls and shaking the cellar win dows and other subterranean openings to assure ourselves that they were se curely fastened Not finding anything of interest on the outside we returned again to the interior and beginning at the top inspected every square inch of space until we reached the base ment and were ready to descend to the cellar I had discovered two can dles which we lighted for this explor ation and I confess that my hand traveled instinctively to the revolver in my hip pocket as we started down the stairs The cellar however disclosed noth ing of importance though we examined it thoroughly As we were about to ascend I noticed the pile of empty whisky bottles and after finding that there were exactly two dozen of them had not a doubt that they were the ones Mr Carney had ordered and emp tied during his short stay at Carney Croft three years before In brief there was nothing to indi cate that the house had been disturbed in any way since it was closed by Miss Carney and we strolled slowly along the road to Hoskins for our luncheon completely baffled at every point Dont you keep a watchman here asked MacArdel at length I wanted to I replied But the Carneys didnt think it necessary That night we sat on the veranda discussing the happenings of the day while the full moon shone coldly in the zenith and the river splashed fret fully against its banks back of the trees The town clock in the distant vil lage had just struck the hour of mid night and I was beginning to yawn openly after my long day of excite ment and exertion when MacArdel said laughingly Nows the time to trot out your ghosts Ware The clock just struck 12 you know As he spoke I grasped his arm and pointed to the path leading to the river Two filmy white figures one larger than the other were wafted along under the trees as if they were part of the air itself and from them came an odor so faint and yet so over powering in its fetid oppressiveneao jj1 - that 1 could scarcely draw my breath For an instant MacArdel sat as one petrified and then with a muttered cry he sprang over the rail and fol lowed the fleeting things into the blackness of the overhanging trees I was after him in a bound Run ning with all our speed wo saw the creatures whatever they were sail majestically before us as on wings of air until they reached the river where in the full glare of the moonlight they vanished suddenly under our very eyes When I overtook MacArdel he was leaning heavily against a tree trunk gasping for breath Ware he said as soon as he could speak That odor was the smell of the grave Theres nothing else like it I tell you man I was a coroner for too many years and have opened too many coffins not to know it He sank to the ground from sheer exhaustion A moment later I heard a crackling in the underbrush not far away and with a shout I dashed into the bushes followed by MacArdel Suddenly there was a glimpse of white through the leaves and with a warning cry I drew my revolver and fired twice with care ful aim The object in white fell to the ground and we were upon it in an in stant while the continued crackling of branches showed that some one was escaping at the top of his speed The white object was a bundle of towels and odd pieces of bed linen and the articles were permeated by the same indescribable odor that we had noticed as we pursued the fleeting creatures in white down the path to the river MacArdel poked the parcel open with a stick and spread the pieces aboutin the moonlight as it filtered in through the branches overhead making bright V Wo decided that ro were quite equal to this task and proceeding to the stable undertook to hitch up on our own account MacArdel did the driving and I sat on the seat behind him in all the glory of an escortod guest As we turned the corner Hnto the road that led to the station a sudden gust f wind wafted into my face the scrlbable odor that had c my nostrils the night before w ailed him to stop Mac I said theres something wrong here I can get that confounded smell again He pulled up his horse with a jerk and springing to the ground began with me to peer under the seats of tho vehicle A moment later he ex tracted from a pile of hlankets and laprobes a bundle of white cloths similar in appearance to those we had discovered on the previous night and exhaling the same odor Put them back I exclaimed sud denly and cover them up again top After we get the trunk we can take them to tho house and see what they are Great idea muttered MacArdel only I was on the point of suggesting it myself Get in here with me The airs better up front I clambered into the sent by his side and we proceeded on our way to the station Who is it that owns this turnout asked MacArdel Do you know any thing about him Nothing more than that he makes regular trips to and from the trains I replied Runs a sort of local express you know between the station and Hoskins hotel Carries the mail and passengers if there are any Did you ever see him and talk to him continued MacArdel They Were Wafted Along as If Part of the Air Itself patches here and there under the trees Whether because of his startled remark that this was the smell of the grave or perhaps on account of the nervous strain to which I had just been subjected I was forced to view this operation from a respectful dis tance and was glad when the investi gation was completed Leaving the rags for such they were strewn about as MacArdel had scattered them we returned in silence to the house and reseated outselves on the veranda Mac I said abruptly a moment later do you know that we left this place standing wide open and that some one may be inside by this time Not much danger of that said MacArdel slowly Whoever was around here is as far away by this Lime as he can possibly get Make no mistake about it Ware those pieces of cloth down there have been around a corpse I shuddered in spite of myself and we slept in the same room that night with the doors and windows bolted and a revolver under each of our pil lows CHAPTER X Courtship and Business We breakfasted at Hoskins As we were rising from the table MacArdel said Ive got a trunk up at the sta tion I suppose I can get somebody around here to take it down to the house Theres an old fellow here who drives what he calls an express I replied I expect hell attend to it for you Hoskins was standing by the door as we left the room and I asked him where we could find the stage driver but his reply was far from encourag ing Ye cant find him at all he said He didnt git in till nigh mornin an hes abed yet His wagons aout teh th barn an ef ye want teh hitch up yerselves an git th trunk yere wel come to fur all I can see Id send one o my boys fur it ef I could but Oh yes I said He was the first to tell me about the ghosts at Carney Croft all that story of the Bruce womans prophecy that the place would be haunted you know Humph said MacArdel thought fully And wheres the Bruce woman now She lievs on the place yet I re plied Miss Carney gives her the use of a little house and about 20 acres of land rent free and some man about here works the property on shares for her Its that hilly land about a mile east of the house where the big elm is You remember I told you the new golf links would take in that tree and the land around it Our return trip from the railway station took us past Hoskins again and that individual was sunning him self in front of the house as we drove up By the way Hoskins said Mac Ardel stopping his horse and beckon ing the man toward him whats the name of the fellow that owns this out fit Jenks said Hoskins briefly Sam Jenks th lazy cuss When js he going to marry the widow asked MacArdel in a most matter-of-fact way Thats jest it replied Hoskins in obvious disgust You tell me an Ill tell you Goodness knows hes ben a sparkin her long enough eversence baout a month after her boy got kill ed Spose he felt kinder sorry fer her at first an then after a time he began teh git mushy over it I wish teh goodness hed either marry her or leave her alone What with his gal livantin all over the country with her every week or ten days an not gittin his hoss in th stable till nigh onto daylight theres no dependin on him teh meet th trains or do anything else fur that matter Here he is now abed an asleep an ef it hadnt ben fur you gents a drivin up teh th deepo we wouldnt ha got no mail till night in all probability With this remark he fished out two mail bags which the station master must tinvp triccol in- tim ii- -e theyre all workin to day an I cant fhp J ut -- tne wagon ts we were drivine awav git hold1 o one nohow CTO BE CONTINUED IN DEATHS SHADOW LIFE OF RAILROADER SAVED BY A MIRACLE Caught on Bridge He Jumped What Seemed Certain Destruc tion but His Time Had Not Come to Perhaps no large body of men in any industry are exposed to so many dangers as are railroad men Thou sands of these faithful and heroic workers are killed every year and other thousands are saved from death only by the narrowest margin Some of these railroad escapes seem almost miraculous and seeing them many railroad men comfort themselves with a fatalism We cannot die until our time comes they say and so its no use to worry This is the philosophy of most men who follow dangerous occupations It is a false philosophy if the men who compile the chances of life for the insurance companies have their tistics right but so long as it sustains and encourages the men who work constantly under the shadow of dan ger little can be said against it E S Shepard of Deadwood S D used to be a track walker on the Col orado Midland On his division at that time the track inspectors had -no ve locipedes and Mr Shepard was com pelled to foot it every day over ten miles of mountain track His invari able companion was a big St Bernard dog named Bruno One day Shepard was inspecting the track as usual when he came to trestle No 4 a long structure across a gorge He paused at the end of the trestle and looked at his watch He had been told at the last station that the Midland express was an hour late and this would give him plenty of time to cross the gorge on the single track Man and dog started across without thought of danger They had reached TO A RAILROAD TRAIN MOUNTAINS IN THE The wooded hills stand silently Awe hushed anddad in sweet repose No bird is stirring noiselessly The woodbine clambers with the rose Sweet silence steeping hill and vale In sorcerers spell of quietude Is broken by the echoing hail Of iron voice in summons rude And thundering through the just domain Of Natures proud magnificence Behold mans sordid greed of gain His ripe colossal impudence L S Waterhouse CAP SAVED CHILDS LIFE Waving Red Mother Stopped Approaching Train While five men struggled mightly to extricate a girl from the New Haven railroad track at Stamford Conn the other day her mothers pluck and quick wit saved her from being cut to pieces by a train It was the childs red waved as a danger signal that halted the train within a few feet of her Nearly half an hour more passed be fore she was released While Amy the five-year-old daughter of H J Lamborns was hurrying from a neigh bors home to her own her foot was caught firmly between the planking of the crossing and a rail Her cries brought her mother who tugged at the little ones foot only to hurt her ankle until she screamed with pain Mn Lamborns cries brought three section laborers quickly to the scene A train was due soon and the men thought it would be easy to release small Miss Amy long before that But they had no implements but shovels and every stroke at the plank that held her gave Amy in tense suffering Not until they heard the whistle of the approaching en gine did they realize her danger Then it was that the mother plucking Amys red from her head ran down the tracks and suc ceeded in stopping the traim a point near the center of the brltlgo when the sharp warning signal of a whistle was heard Sherard looked up and saw the express coming around a curve not more tnn a hundred paces away I was paralyzed by h i he says I could not move fosvvwl or back ward Indeed there va no tne in moving for the engbj was bearing down upon me with frightful speed trying to make up lou time Below me at least 75 feet from the track level was the rock strewn bottom of the gorge It meant death to jump It was death to stand still Bruno the dog trembled and whined- at his masters feel He un derstood the danger and when the lo comotive was not more than 50 feet away the dog turned and jumped off the bridge Mr Shepard instinctively followed Brunos example There was little strength left in his knees but he stumbled to the edge of the track and half fell outward and downward just as the heavy train went thundering by But some kindly fate was guarding Shepard that day In the language of the railroad fatalist his time had not come Instead of plunging down to be mangled on the stones at the bottom of the gorge he was surprised to find himself hanging head down ward over the edge of the trestle His left foot had caught in some way between two ties just outside of the rail The framework of the bridge shook under the impact of tho heavy train and every instant he ex pected to be shaken loose In the ter ror of the moment he became uncon scious and did not know what hap pened until he awoke and found him self being taken out of the train at the next station The engineer had seen him of course and had applied the brakes When the train came to a standstill the crew and some of the passengers ran back and found Shepard still hanging his left foot firmly wedged between the timbers His only physi cal injury was a badly wrenched ankle but the nervous breakdown un fitted him for duty for a long time ENGINEER HAD QUICK WIT An Expedient by Which a Serious Ac cident was Avoided On a single line section of a Scotch railway the quick wittedness and pluck of a driver prevented a frightful catastrophe says Chambers Journal A goods train was put into a siding to allow an express passenger train to overtake it The operations were car ried out in a great hurry to avoid the passenger train being delayed and the line clear signal was given be fore the whole of the train was in the siding When the express was ap proaching it was discovered that the goods train was longer than the siding could accommodate so that the en gine occupied the main line to the ex tent of several feet It was too late to stop the approaching express and a disaster seemed imminent when a plan of action occurred to the active brain of the driver of the goods train which he immediately put into opera ation by opening his regulator and putting the power of the engine against his train This action caused the spring buffers to compress so that the train occupied several yards less space It was now a fight be tween the power of the engine and the pent up force of the 100 buffer springs If once the engine wheels commenced to slip the springs would probably gain the mastery and force the engine on to the main line in the face of the oncoming express The driver gallantly stuck to his post manipulating his engine until the in creasing roar caused by the approach ing train told him the express was close upon him then leaving the regulator and the sand valves wide open he leaped from his engine For tunately his action was successful A few inches only intervened be tween the two trains but the express swept by in safety Steel Used by Railroads Railways use up over 2000000 tons of steel a year almost half the worlds product relp Hie Horse Nn nrtlcle la more useful shout the stable than Mica firM Put a little on Vi cnlnrllM before VOtt hoot op It -will lielp the horse and bring the load home quieter MICA AXLE GREASE wears well better than any other grease Coats the axle with a hard smooth surface of powdered mica which reduces i friction Ask the dealer for Mica Aile Grease STM0AEO Oil COMPACT uwrtxraUd j PUT RELIGIOUS DUTY SECOND Stern Laws of Business Come First Says Austrian Court An Interesting caso at law which centered on the observance of an old Jewish custom was decided in Vienna recently A merchant says tne Ameri can Israelite discharged a clerk on ac count of neglect of duty Among the charges against him was that he came to the store lato in the morning be cause he attended service at the syna gogue In order to say Kaddish the prayer for tho dead for his father The clerk argued that it was his privi lege and his duty to say the prayer for his departed father while the mer chant who was also a religious man maintained that if Moses had known that a man had to pay 8000 gulden a year rent he would have made differ ent laws The judge would not allow such an argument but decided in fa vor of the merchant because the daily attendance at the synagogue could not be considered the right of the clerk without tho consent of the employer i Importance of Sleep We should get up well every morn ing If we do not we are certain gradually to run behind in our physi cal bank account This proves that sleeping Is quite as important as eat ing The luxury of sound sleep is one of tho greatest means given to a man or beast for restoring and invigorating the whole system No one should al low business or anything else to cur tail this luxury and parents should promote it in children instead of drumming them out of bed early Homeopathic Envoy Immense African Dry Dock At Port Florence on the shore of the great lake Victoria which is the chief source of the Nile there is a dry dock cut out of solid rock by na tives who had never before done 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