1tJdaj.MJh .. - 1.-t.J.r"r r-rrrn. -v f - ' 4F- H." s-VYv. - V vVVM.i '? -' -" . V . .. - - ""-n -Vj . - t . .'S' vSk. T .' . ttiK j.-2 " 3 i Mi V IV . Is . f K ggfeHvMjjy""1 ' "' "a SYNOPSIS. I t I-awrencc Elalcclcy. lav.-ycr. noes to Piitsburs With Uic- forcu :joii- m the Brcnsf.n ras- to jT-t 1 . .t iiu.-iuu.j .a. , John Gilmorc. million 11: e A l.nly re- j quests 131 k-io to bay ler a Pullman ticket. II.- cives her loi.tr U and re- Inlni Imwr I'l Up f-mls :i ilrutlkcu man In lower 30 and retire in lower 3. lif awakens in iov.vr 7 and Jlnfls his clothes and has miMn?. The man in lower ! is found nvinlcre.I. Cir cumstantial c- Science ;ui:its to both Biakeley and 1!.- man who sioi in.s rlotix . The tr.thi is vre-ke! and Blake- lev is ro.-out-l from a ln'rn'n;? o:ir uj.-i Kirl in blue. His arm is broken. The rhI proves to be Alison "West, ills partners sweetheart. BlakeVv re-turns honv and finds he is untlc-r surveillance. Jlovins pictures o: the train taken just before the wreck revtal to Blafce'.-v a man leap ing from the train 1.1th his stoien gnp. Invtisat!on proves that the man's name Is Sullivan. Mrs. Conv.-av. the woman for whom BlaUeley bought a l'ullman ticket, tries to make a bargain with bin for the forced no'es. not knowiiiS that th'-y are nissin:r Tllak.-h v Mid an amateur de tective inestlate the borne of Sullivan's! cIsler. From a servant Bhtkelev Ie-:rns , that Alison West I.nd ! -ti t! ere :i .1 J visit and Sullivan nad ! n attentive to J her. Sullivan is the husband or :i u.iiiqn ter of the murdered man. II! ii.r!e."s house is ransacked by the police. H" learns tiiat the aflalr between Alion and ).(. mm..am ... c- l:.cir. t.llj l!Ii i ln J1J" J1J 111 13 'Hi. .il 'III l" . jh.- , about t!:- attention pi d li r l.v Suli-van. I whom she was on Ju r ly to marry when the wreel; canv. It is p'aijieil to Rive Mrs. Conwav the fur,:' -1 notes In e- I change fcr S:lha:i. Mrs. Vmv.:y kills herself and Broasnh. anu t!-c aslies of the forged nsies are fouiul ::i lb" room. CHAPTER XXX. Ccr.tinusd. "When ditl you find it?" asked the lean detective, bending iorward. "In the itiorning, not long before the wreck." "Did you ever see it before?" "I am not certain," she replied. "I have seen one very much like it." Her tone was troubled. She glanced at me es if for help, but I wa.s powerless. "Where?" The detective was watch ing her clo'ely. At that moment there came an in terruption. The door opened without cc-remony, and Johnson ushered in a tall, blonde :i:an. a strangor to all of us. I glanced at Alteon; she was pale but composed and scornful. She met the newcomer's eyes full, and, caught unawares, he took a hasty backward etep. "Sit down, Mr. Sullivan." McKnight beamed cordially. "Have a cigar? I l:e your pardon, Alison, do you mind thLs smoke?" "Not at all." she said composedly. Sullivan had had a second to sound his bearings. "Xo no, thanks." he mumbled. "If 3'ou will be good enough to explain " "Hut that's what you're to do," Mc Knight said cheerfully, pulling up a chair. "You've got the most attentive audience you could ask. These two gentlemen are detectives from Pitts burg, and we are all curious to know the finer details of what happened on the car Ontario two weeks ago, the night your father-in-law was mur dered." Sullivan gripped the arms of his chair. "We are not prejudiced, either. The gentlemen from Pitts burg are betting on Mr. Blakeley, over there. Mr. Ilotchkiss, the gentleman by the radiator, is ready to place ten to one odds on you. And some of us have still other theories." "Gentlemen," Sullivan said slowly, "I give you my word of honor that I did not kill Simon Harrington, and that I do not know who did." "Fi'ldlededee!" cried Ilotchkiss, bustling forward. 'Why. I can tell you " But McKnight pushed him firmly into a chair and held him there. "I am ready to plead guilty to the larceny," Sullivan went on. "I took Mr. Ulakeley's clothes, I admit If I can reimburse him In any way for the inconvenience " The stout detective was listening with his mouth open. "Do you mean to say." he demanded, "that you got into Mr. Blakeley 's berth, as he con tent's, took his clothes and forged notqs. and left the train before the wreck?" "Th? notes, then?" "I gave them to Bronscn yesterday. Much good they did himl" bitterly. We were all silent for a moment. The two detectives were adjusting them selves with difficulty to a new point of view. Sullivan was looking dejected ly at the floor, his hands hanging loose between his knees. I was watch ing Alison, from where I stood, be hind her, I could almost touch the soft hair bch'nd her ear. "I have no intention of pressing any charge against you," I said with forced civility, for my hands were itching to get at him, "if you vill give us a clear account of what happened on the On tario that night." Sullivan raised his handsome, hag gard head and looked around at me. "I've seen you before, haven't I?" he asked. "Weren't you an uninvited guest at the Laurels a few days or nights ago? The cat, you remember, and the rug that slipped?" "I remember," I said shortly. He glanced from me to Alison and quick ly away. "The truth can't hurt me," he said, "but it's devilish unpleasant. Alison, you know all this. Yea would better go out." His use of her name crazed me. I stepped in front of her and stood over him. "You will not bring Miss West into the conversation," I threatened, "and she- will stay if she wishes." "Oh, very well." he said with as sumed indifference. Hotchkiss just then escaped from Richey's grasp and crossed the room. "Did j-ou ever wear glasses?" -he asked eagerly. "Never." Sullivan glanced with some contempt at mine. "I'd better begin by going back a little," he went on sullenly. "I sup pose you know I was married to Ida Harrington about five years ago. She was a geed girl, and I thought a lot of her. But her father opposed the marriage he'd never liked me, and he refused to make any sort of settie-sisnt. by MARY ROBERTA RINE1 AUTHOR f WE ClKCOLAft- .$.Jfec ULBSTRATIONS fey M. G. ICETTISl COPVRIOrtT 1909 C2T SOBP9 -ncvtut't cwtrrwa' I ""i ii ""M,M',1Bw'tT'Tg"M'' J Tft -wr M mwvr ik in k i n J- 1 111111 1 1 1 wm iiiiiiiiiith a mmi: m w a riys1-! "lax ai A s f KTU i & lU H HIv i 1 j vii 1 11 1 11 II 1 I m Johnson Uchercd in a Tall Blonde Man, a Stranger to Ail Of Us. "I had thought, of course, that there would be money, and it was a bad day when I found out I'd made a mistake. My sister was wild with disappoint ment. We were pretty hard up, my sister and I." 1 was watching Alison. Her hands were tightly clasped in her lap, and she was staring out of the window at the cheerless roof below. She had set her lips a little, but that was all. "You understand, of course, that I'm not defending myself," went on the sullen voice. "The day came when old Harrington put us both out. of the house at the point of a revolver, and I threatened I suppose you know that, too I threatened to kill him. "My sister and I had hard times after that. We lived on the contin ent for a while. I was at Monte Car lo and she was in Italy. She met a young lady there, the granddaughter of a steel manufacturer and an heir ess, and she sent for me. When I got to Home the girl was gone. Last win ter 1 was all in social secretary to an Englishman, a wholesale grocer with a new title, but we had a row, and I came home. 1 went out to the Heaton boys' ranch in Wyoming, and met Bronson there. He lent me mon ey, and I've been doing his dirty work ever since." Sullivan got up then and walked slowly forward and back as he talked, his eyes on the faded pattern of the office rug. "If you want to live in hell," he said savagely, "put yourself in anoth er man's power. Bronson got into trouble, forgipg John Gilmore's name to those notes, and in some way he learned that a man was bringing the papers back to Washington on the Fiier. He even learned the number of his berth, and the night before thej wreck, just as I was boarding the train. 1 got a telegram." Ilotchkiss stepped forward once more importantly. "Which read, I think: 'Man with papers in lower ten, car seven. Get them.; " Sullivan looked at the little man with sulky blue eyes. "It was something like that, any how. But it was a nasty business, and it made matters worse that he didn't care that a telegram which must pass through a half dozen hands was more or less incriminating to me. "Then, to add to the unpleasantness of my position, just after we boarded the train I was accompanying my sister and this young lady. Miss West a woman touched me on the sleeve, and I turned to lace my wife! "That took away my last bit of nerve. 1 told my sister, and you can understand she was in a bad way, too. We knew what it meant. Ida had heard that I was going" He stopped and glanced uneasily at Alison "Go on," she said coldly. "It is too j late to shield me. The time to have j done that was when I was your guest. "Well." he went on. his eyes turned carefully away from my face, which must have presented certainly any thing but a pleasant sight. "Miss West "was going to do me the honor :o marry me. and " "You scoundrel:' I burst forth, thrusting nasi Atiscn West's chair. J "You you infernal cur!" 1 One of the detectives got up and stood between us. "You must remember, Mr. Blakeley, that you are forcing this story from this man. These details are unpleas ant, but important. Tou were going to marry this young lady," he said, turning to Sullivan, "although you al ready had a wife living?" "It was my sister's plan, and 1 was in a bad way for money. If I could marry, secretly, a wealthy girl and go to Europe, it -was unlikely that Ida that is, Mrs. Sullivan would hear of it "So it was more than a shock to see my wife on the train, and to realize from her face that she knew what was soins on. I don't know yet, unless MAN ft rT frt 1 i-.a-'-.i i'TH m, anagp some of the servants well, never mind that "It meant that the whole thing had gone up. Old Harrington had carried a gun for me for years, and the same train wouldn't hold both of us. Of course. I thought that he was In the coach just behind ours." Ilotchkiss was leaning forward now, his eyes narrowed, his thin lips drawn to a line. "Are you left-handed, Mr. Sullivan?" he asked. Sullivan stopped in surprise. "No," he said gruffly. "Can't do anything with my left hand." Hotch kiss subsided, crestfallen but alert "I tore up that cursed telegram, but I was afraid to throw the scraps awaj Then I looked around for low er ten. It was almost exactly across my berth was lower seven, and it was, of course, a bit of exceptional luck for me that the car was number seven." "Did you tell your sister of the tel egram from Bronson?" I asked. "Xo. It would do no good, and she was in a bad way without that to make her worse." "Your sister was killed. I think?" The shorter detective took a small package from his pocket and held It in his hand, snapping the rubber band which held it "Yes, she was killed," Sullivan said soberly. "What I say now can do her no harm." He stopped to push back the heavy hair which dropped over his fore head, and went on more connectedly. "It was late, after midnight, and we went at ence to our berths. I un dressed, and then I lay there for an hour, wondering how I was going to get the notes. Some one in lower nine was restless and Avide awake, but finally became quiet. "The man in ten was sleeping heav- ilv. I could hear his breathing, and It seemed to be only a question of get- ting across and behind the curtains of his berth witnout ueing seen, ah- or that, it was a mere matter of quiet searching. "The car became very still. I was about to try for the other berth, when some one brushed softly past, and I lay back again. "Finally, however, when things had been quiet for a time, I got up. and after looking along the aisle. I slipped behind the curtains of lower ten. You understand, Mr. Blakeley,' libit I thought you were in lower ten. -..ith the notes." I nodded curtly. "I'm not trying to defend myself." he went on. "I was ready to steal the notes I had to. But murder!" He wiped his .forehead with his handkerchief. --SK " He Retains Convivial Gentleman Never So Far Gone as to Do Unable to Dis tinguish Colors. The door was left open for the old est son to come in late at a home near Carlisle street and Synder ave nue, a few nights ago. but before, the son arrived a neighbor who had been out with "the boys" invaded the home and selected nothing less than the parlor, where he seated himself in a large rocking chair and began singing. A little daughter of the family was the first to hear the music and she ran to her mother, informing her after she had succeeded in arousing her that she heard some one singing. It was only after the mother listened several minutes that she. too. heard and was convinced that It was in" their house. The husband and father was aroused and he headed the procession down the stairs with a lighted candle. As he reached the door to tte parlor CAiauOvti1: ". Wiia vmsmaim ----. "Well, I slipped across and behind the curtains. It was very still. The man in ten didn't move, although my heart was thumping until I thought ho would hear it "I felt around cautiously. It was perfectly dark, and I came ocross a bit of chain, about as long as my fin ger. It seemed a queer thing to find there, and it was sticky, too." He shuddered, and I could sec All son's hands clenching and unclenching with the strain. "All at once it struck me that the an was strangely silent, and I think I lost my nerve. Anyhow, I drew the curtains open a little, and let the light fall on my hands. They were red, b!cod-red." He leaned one hand on the back of the chair, and was silent for a mo ment, as though he lived over again the r.wful events of that mora than awful night. The stout detective had let his cigar go out: he was still drawing at it nervously. Rickey had picked up a paper-weight and was tossing it from hand to hand: when it slipped and fell to the floor, a startled shudder passed I through the room. "There was something glittering In there," Sullivan resumed, "and on im pulse I picked it up. Then I dropped the curtains and stumbled back to my own berth." "Where you wiped your hands on the bed clothing and stuck the dirk In to the pillow." Hotchkiss was seeing his carefully built structure crumbling to pieces, and he looked chagrined. "I suppose I did I'm not very clear about what happened then. But when I rallied a little I saw a Russia leath er wallet lying in the aisle almost at my feet, and, like a fcol, I stuck it, with the bit of chain, into my bag. "I sat there, shivering, for what seemed hours. It was still perfectly quiet, except for some one snoring. I thought that would drive mo crazy. "The more I thought of it the worse things looked. The telegram was the first thing against me it would put the police on my track at once, when it was discovered that the man in low er ten had been killed. "Then I remembered the notes, and I took out the wallet and opened it." He stopped for a minute, as if the recalling of the next occurrence was almost beyond him. "I took out the wallet," he said sim ply, "and, opening It, held It to the light In gilt letters was the name. Simon Harrington." The detectives were leaning for ward now. thoir eyes on his face. Things seemed to whirl around for a while. I sat there almost paralyzed, wondering what this new development meant for me. "Do you believe me now?" He looked around at us defiantly. "I am telling the absolute truth, and not one of you believes me! "My wife, I knew, would swear I had 'killed her father; nobody would be likely to believe the truth. "After a bit the man in lower nine got up and walked along the aisle to ward the smoking compartment I heard him go, and, leaning from my berth, watched him out of sight "It was then I got the idea of changing berths with him, getting his clothes, and leaving the train. I give you my word I had no idea of throw ing suspicion on him." Alison looked scornfully incredu lous, but I felt that the man was tell ing the truth. "I changed the numbers of the berths, and it worked well. I got into (he ether man's berth, and he came back to mine. The rest was easy. I i dressed in his ctothes luckily, they fitted and jumped the train not far i irem uauimore, just before the wrecit "There Is something else you must clear up," I said. "Why did you try to telephone me from M , and why did you change your mind about the message?" He looked astounded. "Ycu knew I was at stammered. "Yes. we traced you. M- he What about "Well, it was this way; of course. ! 1 did not know your name, Mr. Blake ley. The telegram said: 'Man with papers in lower ten, car seven.' and after I had made what I considered my escape. I began to think I had left the man in my berth in a bad way. (TO DE rOXTIXUED.) pi"""" One Faculty he made a rusa at the man and was about to strike him when he recog nized the intruder as his neighbor. The next morning the unfortunate fellow hired a man to paint his door and window frames a color different from that neighbor's home. He added that regardless where he spends his evenings, he never becomes color blind. Philadelphia Times. Satisfactorily Explained. Actor-playwright I have been told sir. that the Corot you sold me is not genuine! Art dealer. Who said so? Ac'-'-playwiigbt. The art critic of the Dally Whirl. Art dealer. Do you believo what their dramatic critics says about your plays? Actor-playwright I never thought of that! What have you to show me to-day? Smare Set. ALL 0VE1 NEBRASKA Killed by a Train. Cass County. Oscar Wonderholm, engineer at the pumping station for the, Plattsmouth Water company, was struck by Burlington passenger train Xo. 15 on the curve near the pump ing station and instantly killed. Bootlegger Arrested. Custer County. Sheriff Kennedy went to Anselmo and returned with Edward Penn, who was charged with bootlegging while a church fair was in progress at that place. Penn says he had the liquor all right, but did not sell any of it He was fined $30 and costs. Mortgage Record. Otoa County. According to the re port of County Recorder G. M. I.a throp. there v?are filed in his office during the month cf December four farm mortgages amounting to $12, 7.15 and two released, valued at fc.i.250. On tawn property eight mort gages were filed of the value of 9. 91)7.1 S and nine released, whose valuo was $S,S-1j.i5. Run Over and Killed. Lincoln County. J. E. Thresher, residing several miles north of Suth erland, was killed by being run over by a heavily loaded wagon. He was hauling railroad tics and In de scending a hill evidently fell to the ground in front or the wheels, and his life was crushed out. Deceased was about ".0 years of age and leaves a widow and family. Prisoner Rclecsed. Otoe County. Bert Wilson, the man who has been held in jail in Xe braska City for some time to ascer tain if he was not wanted at other places where he confessed he had committed unlawful acts, has been re leased, as it was found out that wihle at many of the places he had frac tured the law, none of the officers wanted him bad enougii to csme after hlci. Court Terms Fixed. Cuming County. Judge Guy T. Graves has fixed the terms of court for the Eighth judicial district of Ne braska for the year 1011, as follows: Cuming county. January 30, Septem ber 11; Dakota county. February 13. September 25; Stanton county. March . October 0: Cedar county, March 13. Xovember 13; Dixon coun ty. March 27, December 4; Thurston county, April 10, October 1G. His Ashes to Nebraska. Los Angeles (Col.) dispatch. Mrs. M. S. Hoxey, mother of Arch Hoxey, who fell from an aeroplane to his death Saturday, will not look upon the face of her dead son. "I want to remember my 'boy as I have known him." she said. The dead aviator's remains are to be cremated privately and his mother will take the ashes east to inter them beside the grave of his father at Atkinson, Xeb. Pall bearers at the funeral will be the fellow aviators of the fallen cham pion Brockins. Parmalee, Lathera. Radley. Ely and Willard. Superintendent Resigns. Otoe County. County Superintend ent R. C. King has filed his resigna tion with the county commissioners and will accept the position of super intendent at the institute for the blind on the Cth, so as to enable Su perintendent N. C. Abbott to go to Plattsmouth on that day and accept the position of superintendent of the public school of that city, a position to which he was elected by the board of education. Charles Speedie. su perintendent of the public schools of Talmage. has filed his application with the Board of .County Commis sioners to succeed Superintendent R. C. King. Robbed by a Bandit. Cass County. Mrs. AUred edger ton of Plattsmouth was on the train Christmas night, which was held up between Leavenworth and Kansas City by a lone bandit and whose pas sengers were relieved of their money and jewelry. The highwayman took Mrs. Edgerton's purse and money, but returned her ticket and trunk check. Engineer Fatally Injured. Cheyenne County. rTcd Huxcll. aged 27 years, a Union Pacific engi neer, was fatally injured at Sidney by being knocked down by the local switch engine while walking in the center of the railroad track. The wind and snow was blowing a gale and the steam from the engine shut out the view of the engine's ap proach. Huxell had been called to take his engine east and was close by thp water tank when the fatility occurred. He was thrown down un der the wheels, his lert arm cut off at the shoulder and his" right arm cut off at the elbow; his head was cut en the side and his back and lower limbs badly bruised. Wymore Man Arrested. Gage County. C. L. Wright of Wy more. who deserted his wife and three children two weeks ago. was arrested at Manhattan, Kan., and lodged in jail. Young Bride Loses Her Mind. Cuming County. Mrs. Anna S.tratt raan. a young and well known bride of a month ago, has become suddenly demented without apparent cause. The young woman was married a month ago and is a resident of Aloys, where her husband is a well-to-do farmer. Marriage Record Increase. Adams County. The marriage li cense record for the year just closed shows a decided Increase over the preceding year. During the year 1910 Judge Button issued 2S5 licenses to wed as against 24C for the year 1903 and 222 for 190S. The business of Police Judge Myers comt for 1910 was greater than for 1S09. There were three fines assessed during the year, however, that totaled $250, which brought the total up. The to tal amount of fines paid for the year was 977.15. Ai.rnHnt -.1 per cent AtabterYeparioJifirAs sinilating iteFoodandRrtufc tjwgHifSlowacteattiBoWbof MHmBHHHHHHHIHHH Promotes Digcsrion.Chetrful nessandResl.Con?ains neUher Qpium.Morphinc nor Mineral Not Narc otic JllxSmm Ax.it Sttd ATorimtUftdm h'trmStrd Ctor&ldSuja .Winkffrttm fXnvn AiwrfrrrR?m?dv forConstfoa- lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhcca, Wonns.Convufeions.Fevenah ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Compaxt. NEW YORK IDENTIFIED. Stranger My lad, I'm looking for a Mr. John Smith'' Kid I'm Mr. John Smith. BABY'S HAIR ALL CAME OUT "When my first baby was six months old he broke out on his head with little bumps. They would dry up and leave a scale. Then it would break out again and it spread all orer his head. All the hair came out and his head was scaly all over. Then his face broke out all over in red bumps and it kept spreading until it was on his hands and arms. I bought several boxes of ointment, gave him blood medicine, and bad two doctors to treat him, but he got worse all the time. He bad it about six months when a friend told me about Cuticura. I sent and got a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. In three days after using them he began to improve. He began to take long naps and to stop scratching his head. After taking two bottles of Resolvent, two boxes of Ointment and three cakes of Soap he was sound and well, and never had any breaking out of any kind. His hair came out in little curls all over his head. I don't think anything else would have cured him except Cuticura. "I have bought Cuticura Ointment and Soap several times since to use for cuta and sores 'and have never known them to fall to cure what I put them ca. I think Cuticura is a great remedy and would advise any one to use it Cuticura Soap Is the "best that I have ever used for toilet purposes." (Signed) Mrs. F. E. Harmon, R. F. O. 2, Atoka, Tcuu Sept. 10, 1910. Life-'s Varied Interests. "The weather's rather bad. Isn't ItT said the young woman. "Yes," replied the nonchalant youth. "Lucky thing It Is. Helps conversation. It would be a deadly bore to go on for ever saying 'it's a pleasant day. " The Cache. Kclcker Wo are told to do our shopping early. Bocker I know It; my wife has al ready concealed a forty-nine-cent tie In the top bureau drawer. Some people would drown with a life preserver at hand. They arc the land that seller from Rheumatism and Neural gia when they, can get Ham! ins Wizard Oil, the best of all pain remedies. It Is right to be contented with what we have, but never with what we are. Sir James Mackintosh. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is made to satisfy the' smoker. Feoplo who borrow trouble always givo more than they get. Guaranteed under the Foodaj f 9 I SJ HIB Exact Copy of WPPfc wawtm hwwmwh A t' when woassn speaks ox ber silent secret suffering she trusts you. 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