/AATATTA T \ TT.V TTMr im-\r ; tfa iA V A in l.QOO. n NEW YORK'S ' GREAT HARBOR Queer and Graeeoma Secrete of the Vast Watergatfl of tha Nation , ETCHINGS OF ITS LIGHTS AND SHADOWS ThniimiiKl * Working nn HiVntcm , Mntiy of Them In AVnyn tlint Arc Dark I2xtcrt unit Amateur ThlcvcM Work ol 1'ollcc , 'NDW YOHIC , Aug. 14. There Is no hamlet In the United States so remote that it ought not to bo Interested in Now York harbor , for through that great water gate nnd under the towering torch ot the Statue of Liberty como the great ships from all parts ot the world which bring to us EO per cent of our imports nnd from It go out the ships cnriy- Ing 75 per cent of our exports. And there In no person from the bootblack In Seattle to the richest ranch owner in Texas * , from the Missouri mountain girl to the best-drcsaod woman of fashion in Chicago , who Is not affected by our European trade In como way , however , slightly. Now York harbor's waters bear messages or supplies every year to or from pretty nearly every human being tn America. These are the busiest days ot the year thoro. It Is a queer place. More than 30,000 men and women are en gaged In doing ypur business nnd mlno for us In Now York harbor und nowhere In the world are there stranger people than ai.iy bo found among thorn. Yet Now York harbor has had no historian. Olckorm wrote of London's Thames nnd Hugo , Durami nnd a dozen others have told the story of the Solno of Paris , but Now York's qrcat harbor and Its two rivers , with -enough anchorage ground for every vessel afloat on nil the oceans In the world and with over Mxty miles of docks , has not been recognized by the great ones who have told true stories. It Is tbo under current of Wo about tbo harbor which are moro In to red tin 5 , nnd be ing under currents they nn > . some at them , . no dark nnd dovlous ns the black bottom waters of the rivers which touch the ooze nnd twist and turn among the piles below the docks. A dork night. Two men creep carefully to a slightly jcmoto water front such as that of 'Astoria or Uavonne. They slouch and lurk alone ; until they find a small boat un- pmmlcd. Silently they slip Its moorings , craw ] slowly In ' and row out to the deep channels iwhoro'ships pass. They wait there , , - . drifting , until a schooner .bound out to sea V comes near , with sails set or towed by n \ steam tug. Prom its atom a rowboat or dingy Is trailed by a rope. The silent watch ers become animated. They pull quickly but quietly between the small boat and tbo passing schooner's stern. They cut the lino. The schoonerpasses on. The men have set themselves up In trade. . They have secured the first and most Important tool. Started In Trade. They conceal their acquisition under some dock and carefully rotufn"lho' , stolen boat to its original moorings before daylight. It has been stolen too near homo and they would bo in danger of arrest If they kept It. But the schooner 'which ' 'owned the second ono has gene to sea. and the theft cannot bo re ported before they have had plenty of tlmo to alter the appearance of their prlzo by tar , by paint or by mud so completely that there will bo no chance of capture. They are perfectly equipped now for river thievery. Jerry McAuley , .who has turned from the leadership of a desperate gang of river thieves to become a useful missionary among the sailors , tells how ho and ono at his boy ' In'this'way ' ' ' ' churn's. -'this'-way 'got'thclr'start'Mn the business which . { hey pursued eo successfully for many years. These trays , -with their boat , became the nucleus ofwhat was afterward known as the Franklin dock gang of harbor thieves. Tholr rendezvous was under a dock nt the foot of Franklin street , where the aesthetic tastes of their leader wore later demonstrated toy elegant furnishings. The expensive carpet was stolen from the cabin of a palatial steamboat and the chairs and pofas caimo from whatever craft were not sufficiently guarded. The place was amply lighted by lanterns taken from boats and piers. When the loader and his young accomplice \f were now at the business , before they hod ' jf' learned the larger way of gagging or sandbagging - bagging the night 'watch of , a pier or vessel , they used to loiter on the docks and when opportunity offered roll a barrel or box of goods Into the water. Ono would ba waiting "down the tlde' 'wlth their boat and torwed their plunder to the Franklin dock under cover of the night. As It was not always . easy to toll 'by the looks of a package . * whether It would float or sink , they lost * * many of the things which they dumped from piers. Dut this difficulty "was overcome tea a considerable extent when a young oysterman - man Joined them and suggested the use of oyster tonps. In tlmo this gang became so export In the various methods of grappling that It inado no difference to them whether property went to the bottom or not. It was only ( when -women had ibeen admitted to this rendezvous that the noise of midnight orgies nttracled the police. Then , of course , the place was no longer safe ns business head quarters. Great Is the Ingenuity of these thieves. Constantly they steal wines and liquors from the docks In a way which almost defies do- tcctlon. 'A ' rowboat puts under n pier in the dark , Its occupants are provided with a barrel and n long auger. The rest Is simplicity Itself. A hole bored through the floor of the plor nnd into /barrel / of anything which will run transfers the property to other owners and If they manage to evade the police patrol they have no difficulty with the watchmen / > n ( Tin nlnr Mnr rln thnV haVO ITlUCh fllffi- culty In disposing of a barrel , for Instance , of wlno or spirits , nt the price which they can sell with good profile. Sometime * u Murder. There are many of these thlovca. They are cunning and often desperate. They kill n man occasionally In spHo of the water jiollco , Four nuirdera wore attributed to thorn last year. And there were others. The police are well organized and work desperately hard. Tholr work muat nol cease when darkness conies , and It Is in bail weather that they are most needed. They go heavily armed and eomotlmes the cracking of their pistora la replied to from the chore. But there are many things really out rageously dishonest , lurking In the shadows of ho harbor over which they can oxercUo no control. Most of these concern the pallors who man the ships. Nearly nil vcreela coming into port except the greal liners change their crews each voyage , am there are human sharks in New York harbor waiting to devour their wages when they ore paid off , moro dangerous than any sharki InfMtlog southern waters. They ore callev ' 'crimps ' , " and they combine the traits o : chipping ngonta with the business of keeping boarding house * of the dlngleat sort. It profits them to do two things. First to got the sailors to spend the pay from their laai voyage an quickly as possible , because If It bo spent quickly itwltt bo spent for rum If it bo spent for rum then the sailors may be easily awlndlod. Second , to ship tbo men again on eome other flilp as quickly as they can , so as to gather in. . the big commissions oa their wages. There have been ease * where men landing from a three-month * voyage early In the morning with their \\age * in their pockets have been captured b ; the "crimps" and their "touts , " pllote * about the dlvea during the day and the nigh and landed generally so drunk that they hare to bo lifted aboard on nn out-bound ehtp the following morning. Not only bed the "crimps" stolen halt their money , but they had rorclvcU liberal commissions on the otbcr harf , which bad been spent In saloons and dives. Little Hirer Tlilcver. . A queer system of petty dishonesty Is practiced every Thursday , when the fishing smacks como Into the piers about Fulton market. A hundred boys will bo swimming there , ft score of thorn scampering naked over the -many smacks which como In to supply fish for the Friday demand. Every now and then a boy , watching his chance when nobody on the boat Is looking , will slip his thumbs -through the gills of n flnu fish and dtvo with It Into the water. After a while the lad will emerge from behind a boat , swimming on his side , with ono hand low In the water , and disappear around the end of a pier. There stands a young "spec ulator , " who pays G cents lor the fish. The boy always carries his money away In his check , generally along with a bulging quid of tobacco. "I gits 20 cents or n quarter for every fish I steals , " said he. They never mlnco the matter of stealing. " \Vhero do you sell them ? " Is asked "Any old place. Anybody'll pay a quarter for a flsh when do price In do market Is 18 cents pound. " So these boj-8 stand sometimes Just out- sldo the market and compete successfully vlth tbo men from -whom they have stolen heir stock , for these fish run from three o five pounds apiece. Other boys , I am In- ormed , have regular customers In rcstau- onts and small hotels , boarding houses , etc. It would bo tedious to enumerate the arlous commonplace means of drawing egltlmato livings from > the river , such as rdlnary fishing , wood gathering , etc. , though ho day's work of many of these water folk vould bo excellent material for the novelist. Jut there are plenty of Interesting sights o eeo by day and by night along this great waterway. You would bo the richest man In the world If you had everything that has been dropped Into East river , oven in the mlle or so between Its mouth and Brooklyn jrlJgo. You would have a stock of goods which In extent and variety would uiako Uio vastest modern department store acdm llko a vlllago knick-knackery by compari son. It would Incluclo all sorts of things , from a 'braes pin to a full-rigged ship , armed , provisioned and manned. Indeed , It was only bait a dozen years ago that some workmen , excavating for a subccllar In Water street , moro than two blocks distant from the present water line , came upon a ehlp which evidently had sunk at or near ono of the early-day moorings. Arms , am munition and the skeletons of men were there , but nobody has been able to make them tell -with certainty what ship It was or bow It sank. t On the llottnm of tlic Hirer. But some of the missing things are found by the grapplers who are sent for when anything from a capstan to a chronometer Is lost overboard , and the number of things they flsh up , besides these for which they seek , would rnako an Interesting volume. Ono day some ten years ago a party of students from one of the schools near the river came down to bathes Ono of their number , a very expert swimmer , was lull of pranks. It was bis delight to dlvo from the plor and quietly como up behind a pile or In some other hidden place with a view to frightening bis comrades. This day when lie dove his companions were not In the least frightened. That trick had been played on them before. They know a good one to play In return. Slyly they slipped into their clothing and ran away. As they departed there was a commotion among some grap- jilers who were working just below the pier. The students returned and found that the grapplers had drawn the body of their com rade from the bottom of the river. And this is by no means the only Instance where .the grapplers have brought gruesome evidences "of human tragedy to the surface of 'North ' river when they were merly lookIng - Ing for lost articles. And sometimes the bodies they bavo found have been weighted In order to keep them down , and that means a murder. The harbor police have funny experi ences sometimes. Not LawTircnltcrn. Only a short time ago the watchman at one of the big piers on this river sent in n hurry call for the harbor police. A eteam launch was sent quickly to the place where some thieves were reported to bo operating under the pier. The policemen ran as close as they could and threw the rays of a dark laniorn under the plor. Sure enough , there were some men in a boat , keeping suspl- cloualy quiet. "Como out of there , " called the rounds man. "Sh-fli-h ! " answered the men. "You'll scare every blamed eel out or the river. " When ! they did como out they showed the policemen half a boatload of eels and said that it was a condemned sbamo that a pcace- alblo and honest occupation should bo be trayed by plaguoy policemen , who are paid to protect just such Industries. I asked an old boatman the oilier -lay if ho bad ever run across anything of value floating in the river. "Woll , yes , " said ho. "I once fiiurd a floater and the family gave mo ? 100 for res cuing It. " Then ho fetched a tremendously long wink and added : "Thero was over [ $200 in money and a cold watch , too , that nobody ever peeped about , ' Ho did not seem to think he bad done anything to bo ashamed of In robbing the body for which the friends bad paid him eo generously. Ho also told mo of another boatman who ono morning , years ago , found n bateau afloat with a man's body In It. Tbo man had boon shot. It was subsequently fount ) to bo thd body of Oim Sackow , whom Policeman Musgrovo had killed In a night battle. Over 100 shota were exchanged be tween the policeman on the dock and Sac kow and two zmla In the boat. Stvckow's pala were never heard of after that and It Is supposed that the policeman killed all three t of tbo river thieves. The Ifnrliar'H Demi. But the harbor does not always glvo up Its dead eo easily. There is ono llttlo bay on Staten island near to the government revenue and quarantine station , however , into | which an arerago of 100 human de relicts float every year. This Is a harvest not . to bo despised for the local coroner , who is also an undertaker. Ho watches the Now York , New Jersey and Brooklyn Hats of missIng - Ing ' carefully and trios to bring about Iden tifications. If ho succeeds the friends of the dead usually give him the work of burial , and these fees , added to the official payment for Inquests , have made him very prosperous. His ' subjects are mysteriously taken to him by the currents of the harbor , although , strangely enough they land little other drift in "Dead Man's Cove , " which Is the name whUh baa not unnaturally been given to the llttlo Indention In the coast. Less gruesome , but sometimes much more exciting are the events In tbo lives of the legitimate harbor boatmen. Much of their work Is commonplace the transfer of people to and from ships anchored out , and such things. ' But there U a boatman near the Battery who had a lively experience onfl night which ho reported to the police later. It was blowing a gale and was quite dark. Ho was making his boat fast to Us moorings. A 'well-dressed roan rushed up and wanted to .bo taken to the Now Jersey shore. "Take tbo ferry , " growled the boatman. "This Is no weather for a small boat. " "I'll glvo you $100 for the job. " The boatman did the work without an other word , although It was a dangerous night. Then ho reported it to the police. They know who the man was , but they have kept quiet the Identity of the criminal who slipped through their fingers Into another state so cleverly. The man know that the lorries were watched and also knew how to dodge them. There have been other big fees and other exciting trips. A naval officer exceeded his shore leave and caught his ship just as It was rounding the Battery with the assistance of a boat man from that historic point. They wore nearly run down in doing it. In ono day , three years ago , when five big steamers had gone ashore in a dense fog , ono newspaper alone paid to these boatmen and to tugs $600 to carry its reporters around in their searches for the stranded vessels , OM'V A HINT M3KDI3U. Ami the AVoiunn In the Cn e Wn Siot Afriilil ( o Give It. The best looking girl In tbo I'lno mountain country , reports the Washington Star , was Susan Natter , and Susan was extremely , not to say foolishly , fond ot Jim Davis , a young man who was my chief tlmberman la tba season , and who owned and conducted a good farm in the river bottom as a side Issue. Jim was the catch of the mountains , and , like other men in that happy class , ho was careless and stood a fair chance of losing what ought to be his because ho was too sure of it. Susan was Just the girl for him , but ho had almost worn out her patience by his dilly-dallying policy , and one day I thought the end bad surely como and It was all up with Jim , who was a favorite of mine as a winner of the Susan stakes. "I want to see the best dress pattern you got In the store , colonel , " she said to mo as I sat out in front of the commissary one day , "and beln' mighty partlckeler , Iwant you to wait on me , " she added with a smirk not usual to Susan. "Oh , indeed , " I said chafllngly , going around behind the counter , "something must bo going to happen ? " "I reckon thar Is , " she admitted , frankly. "Good for you , " I laughed , ' 'and I'm glad that Jim has got his senses at last. " "Jim ? " she sniffed disdainfully. " 'Taln't Jim ez fer ez I " , know. " , , ' , , "Not Jim ? " I almost shouted , for Jim was my choice for her. "Not Jim ? Well , who Is it ? " "Oh , 'that's fer mo to know and you to find out , colonel , " she laughed provoklngly , and gave mo no further satisfaction. She bought the goods and went away , and two hours later Jim came In from work and said he was going over the mountain that night with ono of the Martin girls to a. dance. "By the way , Jim , " I said , "did you know Susan Natter was going to get married ? " "Thunderatlon , colonel , no , " he. 'blurted out. "Ner she ain't , la she ? " "I guess eho is. I sold 'her ' a wedding dress tbls afternoon , and she told one she was. " "Who's she goln * ter marry , colonel ? " ho asked , anxiously. "I don't know. She wouldn't toll me. " "Well , she'll tell mo , colonel , " ho Bald , with the lines getting hard across his face , and llttlo wrinkles of doubt and fear showIng - Ing 'between. Jim was facing a possibility that had never presented lUolf to him in Its full strength. He went out of the store and up the road leading to old man Natter's place. The next morning ho stopped at the store on his way to work. "Did you flnd out who > it was ? " I asked him at once , for I was Interested more than he had beon. " 'Course I did , " bo answered , with confl- dence. "Who Is it ? " "Me , " and he laughed the short laugh of the man who had been made to do what ho knew ho should have done , and what he moat wanted to do. "Oh , " I exclaimed , "is that It ? " And later I discovered that Susan bad devised a to the point , and 'by ' my unwitting , but by no means unwilling , assistance , she had succeeded - ceeded ftlly. Jntlurc Illllon In Very III. SARATOGA. N. Y. . Aug. 15. Judge Henry G. Hilton bad a sinking spell today and was unconscious for some time , but rallied and at noon was resting cmparatlvely eaHy. HIS LATEST EXCUSE. "You're a drinking man , lean tell by your swollen face. " "Oh , no mum , a kissin * bug k issed me. " THE DOCTOR'S STORY. Romance of n Telephone Call Hung by Spirit Ilnnds. lly HELEN A. COUSINS. I was a young man of 27 , and had Just hung out my sign In a llttlo manufacturing vlllago of about 2,000 Inhabitants. There were at this tlmo thrco other physicians In tbo town , and during my four weeks' 'stay I bad been favored with but few patients. I boardoJ with an elderly lady whose grand son cared for the garden and stable. My boarding mistress 'was precise and methodi cal In everything , and was n model of punc tuality , so I ono day set my watch , and the clock In my llttlo office , ten minutes foot , In order to bo prompt at meals when at home. On the evening of .that day , Just before the clock struck 10 , my telephone hell rang. I had only the day previous bad the Instrument put In , and hastened to nntwcr my first call. "Como Immediately to Mlll- vlllo No. 20 High street. Take the 10 o'clock train. "It Is too late for me to catch that train , but I will drive over with my team If that will do. What Is the case ? " I asked. No reply. "Hollo ! " I called again , but alt was still. Then I rang up the central ofllcc. "I'leaso connect again with the parties who called for Dr. Wildes , " I said. "No ono has called for Dr. Wildes , " an swered the volco of the operator In the cen tral olllce. "You must 'be ' mistaken , for I have Just been talking with eomo one through the telephone who wants me , " was my reply. "The wires must bo crossed somewhere. I will see If I can flnd out where the trou ble Is , elr , " came in a sleepy volco from the central. I -put on my hat and. started toward the stable , meeting Jlmmto with lantern In hand. "I was just coming after you , doctor , " be said. "Your horse seems to be dreadfully lame , and I can't flnd out what alls her foot. " I sent the boy to a livery stable near byte to .procure . a team for mo , and was bathing and bandaging my own horse when I heard the whistle of the 10 o'clock train. Then re membering that my watch had been too fast , I muttered a very unauthordox expression as I thought of tbo sixteen-mile drive I must take m the cold March night. I had hastened In doors and put on a heavy ulster , when I heard the boy drive up to my door with the team. Again I went to the telephone , and ringing up "cen tral , " I inquired If ho had ascertained who had called for Dr. Wildes. "I cannot flnd that anyone has called for you this evening , " came the reply over the wire. Suspecting that somebody might be trying to play a , joke on me , I stepped to the door and had the team returned to the livery stable. I seated myself In nn easy chair by the flro and after reading a short tlmo I fell asleep. I awoke Just as my clock was strik ing twelve , and as the dast Btroko ceased my telephone again rang. I hastened to reply , and received Iho call , "Come to Mlllvljle on the midnight train , | to No. 20 High street. " "Who wants me ? " I asked , as I know not a soul In Mlllvlllo. I received no reply , altnougu l rang sev eral times , and putting on my overcoat and cap I seized my medicine case and hurried to rtho railroad station a few rods away , where the night train stopped on being sig naled. Before 1 o'clock I bad reached Mlll- vlllo and found the place to which I bad been summoned. ' It was an old-fashioned house , which had been modernized by the addition ot bay windows In the front , from ono of which phone a faint light. I hastened up the steps , but before my hand couldrtbiich the door It was opened from the insldcf-and I passed in. A very old lady with palo'faco and snowy hair silently pointed Into the next room. I entered and found I was in a good sized apartment that seemed to bo half parlor and half library. A leather covered lounge was drawn up before an open flro and upon it lay a man of perhaps 60 years. An ugly gash was In the right sldo of 'his ' head , which , with the partially dried blood upon his face , formed a picture at which I shud dered , I bent over him and felt for his pulse. His hand was cold , but In his grasp ho held a peculiar-shaped key , which. I saw plainly in the light of the flro. His Iip moved , and without opening his eyes ho Bald , "Tho second end bunch of grapes , the second bunch of grapes. " "Tho man is delirious , " I thought as I stepped Into the hallway. "liladam , " I called os I peered around In the darkness , "please bring mo a basin of warm water at once. " I heard no sound except my own voice. I could faintly see by the light of the flro that shone from the library that there were throe or four other doors leading from the hall. One after an other I tried to open ( them , but they were all locked fast. I ran back Into .tho room from which I had Just come. The leather covered lounge was still drawn up in front of the flre , but the man was gone. I looked wlldry around Ihe room , but no sign of him could be seen. I drew my hand over the lounge , and found my finger showed plainly on the dusty covering. Tbo flro was burning low , and I seized my medicine case from the chair where I had placed it , stopped Into the hall and hastily opened the frontdoor. , Once out side Iho house my courage returned , and looking back , I shouted , "Whore are you , sir ? " but no answer came. Then I grasped the door bell and rang peal after peal , but nil I heard were the echoes dying away in the empty house. I may as well confess that I ran > to the railroad station. When I asked the night watchman who Hvcd at No. 20 High street , he replied : "I cannot lell you , sir. as I am but llttlo acquainted in the place. " Still puzzling my brain over the mystery , I remained with him until B o'clock the next morning , when 'the first train took me homo , II. The next afternoon , my courage having returned , I drove over to Mlllvlllo and wont straight to the bouse which I had visited the previous night. I went boldly up the front steps and was ringing the. bell when a man at work In tbo next yard looked over the low fence. "Thero Is no one at home , elr , " bo said. "Whero are the people who belong hero ? " I asked. "They are spending the winter In southern California , and have been away slnco last September , " was bis reply. On returning 'to ' my office I found a tele gram from my elster , who lived In an adjoin ing state. In response to It I started at once , and on arriving at her home the following morning I learned that an elderly physician , n friend of her husband , was about to give up actlvo practice. Arrangements were speedily made and I moved to my new loca tion. During the spring and summer I was kept busy and had but little time to myself , yet often I pondered over my midnight visit to Mlllvlllo , trying to persuade myself that It might be only a delusion of my brain while In some stage of somnambulism. Ono evening at about 12:30 : I had returned from a professional call and wag about to retire , when 1 picked up the evening paper , which my thoughtful sister always left 011 my table. The llrat Item I read was a. no tice In the society column : "Miss Marguerite Lawton of Mlllvlllo is visiting her grand mother , Mr * . Stephen Powers Lawton , on College avenuo- " The name of the town 'brought ' to ray mind the mysterious call I bad once nn- ewered. I placed the paper on the toblo at my elbow. As I did so 1 became nwaro' of a feeling a * If some ono was In the room. Glancing hastily around I saw that I w.is alone , but ns my gaze agalei fell on the table I a/w / a moving flguro of a man's hand , holding In Its grasp the same peculiarly- shaped key. The hand moved over the table until it rested on tbo paragraph I had Juot read and the key tapped once or twlco on the name , "Marguerite. " The hand began to fade ; already I could see to read the letters that were under It and , as the shape of the key began to prow Indistinct , I seized a pencil and ma-lo a sketch of U on the margin ot the paper , opposite the paragraph. The key had barely faded from my view when my bell rang. A man stood In the door. "Como at once to Mrs. Lawton's , College avenue. " In response to my Inquiries , ho repllo.i , "Sho Is unconscious. It Is probably a stroke of paralysis. " In a few minutes wo entered the room whore a slight girlish figure , clad all In black , was kneeling by the sldo of a bed , whereon lay an old lady. She was quite dead and but ono glance was needed to show me that she was the mysterious ono * ho had opened the door for mo at the Mlllvlllo house. "Here is the doctor , Miss Marguerite , " said the man. The young girl rose and with a stilled sob bold out her hand to mo. "My dearest friend , my only friend on earth is gone , " she cried. A few days later my elster and I called to see Miss Lawton , who had decided to clcso her grandmother's house and go away. "Tho only relative I have now is my mother's half-brother , In California. He has telegraphed for me to como to him. 1'oort papa and I were eo happy there until his sudden death last spring. " Then she added , "I will show you bis picture , " and taking a photograph from a case on the table , she handed me the exact likeness of the man whom I had found upon the lounge with the ugly gash on his head. I did not question her at that time , although my curiosity was dinvcult to control , as I saw that she was deeply agitated , and I felt that she must bo kept as calm as possible. Destiny , fate or what compelled me to fol low Marguerite to California ? I was not wholly Impelled by the desire to obtain a solution to my mys tery , of which I felt that some how I held the key , having been to a black smith and had a key made from the drawing on the newspaper margin. In the latter part of January I placed my practice In the hands of ono of my medical friends who was not quite ready to settle down , and started out for a six weeks' vacation. Marguerite and my sister had kept up a correspondence , so I had no difficulty in find ing the object of my search and In less than flve weeks was on my way east with my bride. Before leaving California I had learned the particulars ot ( Mrs. Lawton's sudden death. 'Mareuerlte'a Grandmother , who had been a leader in society until her husband's death , was the possessor of some valuable diamonds , which a few years previous Eho had placed in her son's hands for Bate-keep ing until Marguerite should bo of an ago to wear them. Ho very seldom mentioned the Jewels to his daughter , and it was sup posed that he carried them around on his person. Ono day in early JIarch bo was re turning from a drive , when ho saw a man skulking around the street corner , who looked strangely familiar to him. Ho finally said to Marguerite , " , It has Just occurred tome mo that the stranger is Davidson , who used to bo employed by your grandmother. She wrote me eome little time ago that she had discharged him because she found him ono day trying to unlock her desk where her prlvato papers were kept. " The following day Mr. Lawton was brought home unconscious with a cruel wound In his head. Robbery was evidently the motive of the assailant , for the diamonds were gone , also the money and watch ot the victim. The poor man did not regain consciousness , but died In a few lours. Comparison of the dates showed that this occurred at the very tlmo I had been called tn Mlllvlllo. Inquiry proved also that the grandmother had been In her own homo , ill In bed with an attack of rheumatism on that night. Before going back to my practice I went with Marguerite to her old home. On ar riving there I told her of my mysterious visit and of the key which had been held out to me. I produced the ono I had made and naked if eho had seen ono like It , but she never had. When wo entered the dining room It was a bright sunny day. I looked around the room and aa my glance rested on the mas- slvo oak sideboard that was built into ono corner of the room I saw along the top were carved grape leaves and ( bunches of grapes. Suddenly there flashed into my mind the -wordo , "Tho second bunch of grapes , " and mounting a chair I managed to reach it. After a few attempts I found I could move It a little and finally I succeeded in pushIng - Ing to ono side the entire cluster , leaving exposed a keyhole In a llttlo door of iron four or five Inches square. Producing my mysterious key I at once unlocked the door and found that the aperture contained a small Iron box , in which wo found the miss ing diamonds. Wo soon went to the house of Marguerite's grandmother , where wo have lived for this last eight years , during which time I have only once mot with another ghostly visitor. "But that ti another story. " JJ15AUTII3.S OF A MANILA. CHUIICH. Hcnmrkobly 'Artlxtlo Wood Cnrrlnir Don i ) by Nntlvm , There elands in the old walled city of Manila a church whoso rare beauty should win it a place among the famed temples of the world , relates the San Francisco Chron icle. It is the. Church of St. Ignatius of Loyola , and , as tbo name would indicate , was .erected by the Jesuit fathers. The ten years that elapsed 'between 1879 and 1889 were consumed in its construction , and a success that was truly artistic crowned the effort of a decade. The exterior is neither Imposing nor artistic , but It was upon the interior that effort was centered , and few structures In the world can boast of the perfect harmony of effect there attained. Practically the ontlro Interior is done In the native hard woods of the Philippine Islands that have 'been carved by master liauds , A remarkable fact in connection with the work is that it was all done by na tives. The designs were all made In Europe , but every credit Is due the workman who so closely followed their models , Tbls incident lllustratca a peculiar trait in the Filipinos. They lack the originality , 'but are wonderful Imitators , Glvo their carvers a model and they will duplicate to perfection. Let their painters see a picture and they will copy It to the perfection of detail. Permit their musicians to hear a composition and they will reproduce it on their own Instruments. Probably the most artistic piece of carving In the church ia the pulpit. It Is a rnawlve affair affixed to one of the giant columns close to the altar rail. On Its sides are a series of panels upon which have been carved scenes depleting Important scriptural events. The pulpit baa a 'beautifully ' carved base , and upon the outer elde of the bal ustrade are the figures of < ulnts. The figures have all been perfectly carved , and there has been a wonderful regard for detail , Proportions are pcifoct , and the effect Is at once harmonious and artistic. A prodigious amount of labor was expended upon thoj pulpit. Ilev. Father Francisco Slmo , ono of' the re-dors of the church , under who o di rection much of the work lias been done , relnua thnt the carving ot the base of the pulpit consumed two years , and that the balustrade occupied nearly as much time. Next to the pulpit the celling , which Is en tirely of carved wood , attracts the most at ' tention , There are a series of Intricate de signs that show the genius of art and the skill of the carver and the effect Is admir able. The columns , capitals and archrs have also 'beou done In wood and they , too , enhance the beauty of llu { church. The altars ono main and two side are also ot wood and show splendid specimens of the skill ot the carvers. , The floor is also of wood and the sheen j i of Its polish serves to heighten the general effect. Most of the wood useJ Is molave , best of nil the fifty varieties of hard wood that grow In the Philippines. It Is capable of rosl.itlng any of the insects that attack I wood , and neither heat nor water offcet It. ! Steel Is the only thing that will outlast U. ' H Is so hard that the fashioning of It Is very difficult , but the excellent results obI - I tallied make It worthy of the effort. Tbo i ort of wood carving has long been taught to the Filipinos , and the traveler In their Islands BOOS many samples of thc4r work. ' It has reached Its greatest perfection at the Jesuit college at Manila , and the work In the Jesuit church Is Incomparably the best so far dono. Twenty-three years ago the students of the college sent an elaborate plcco of carving to the Centennial exposi tion at Philadelphia , and with It won first prize- i - j ' The arclhtecturo of Manila may bo truth- j j fully said to bo relieved of mediocrity by I the churches , mid that of St. Ignatius Ix > y- ola Is the greatest of them all. The cathe dral massive structure of the Byzantine period attracts attention on account ot Its slzo and the fact that its foundation stone * were laid In the sixteenth century , but j neither Interior nor exterior arc particularly pleasing. AnoUier remarkable church In the old city Is that of St. Augustine , built way back In 1570 from a design drawn by n nephew of the architect who planned the j t famous Escurial In Madrid. For over 300 ' years It has defied carthquako and typhoon , and the original walls still stand as a monument ment to the builders. The design Is rather of the Tuscan order , but modern additions have rather changed and obscured the origi nal Hues. The Church of Santo Domingo U another Imposing structure. H has an exte rior ot florid Gothic and nn Interior of nearly perfect Gothic , but the latter Is marred by some Impossible coloring and some inartistic statuary. The same com plaint may bo properly made of any of the score of churches in the city and surround ings , with the single exception of the APPEALS TO ALL Possessed of a delicate flavor of malt and hops sparkling In its state of purity , age and strength , tfQ/ . . -jf " " u.y | - uj in every feature. IlClEERa " _ * . _ fDCf > > , S y See that ( eclfS Is on the cork. Illustrated < ? Free" Highest Awards at International Exposition , Omaha. VALBLATZ BREWING CO. , MILWAUKEEU.S.A. OMAHA BRANCH : 1412 DOUGLAS STREET. Telephone 1081. /r it possible that you have not seen a copy of the Omaha ft ftm Use a postal to ask us for a HARNESS-SADDLED. ' Haney HADDLHI * AND COLLAHO fobbirt of Leather , Saddlery Hardware , JMfc We solicit your orders. 313-315-317 S. 13th. BOILER AND SHEET IRON WORKS 8ucoe orn IVlion A DmUe. Manufacturers boiler.1) , ainokg Blacks nnd troecnlnss , pressure , rendering , sheep dip , lard and water tanku , boiler tubes con- Inntly on hand , second linnd boiler * boueht and sold , Hprrlnl and promnt to rtpalra In city or country. 19th and Pierce. BOOTS-SHOES-RUBBERS , morican Hand I Jobbers of Foot Wear WKB1KUN AOKNTIirOn Xho Joseph Bauigan Rubber Oo. CHICORY Ohioory Go. Qiowtn n4 miaufacturc or all farm * of Chicory Omahi.-J fmont-O'N ll. DRY GOODS. E , Smith & Go. Lapirlare cad Jefcter * ol Zry Goods , Furnishing Good $ AND NOTIONS. I Church of St. Ignatius Ix > yol . When tha 1 tldo of American travel sets toward the Philippines , and when Manila Is Included In the Itinerary of the globo-trottcr between Slnsaporo and Yokohama this rofttly re markable structure will win Us plnco in tba -orld of art. n ins t'uinvtiss. A MUnoiirlnii SUI-HI-K llo In the 1HK K ' "l I'lnr iiu Ilurtli. In Oovo and Logan counties there Is ftl present n contest between the local papers over the rather novel query ns to whl.'li county has the blgfeest llnr , reports tin Kansas City Journal. And thU reminds ua thnt once upon a tlmo Oove county had n citizen who held up his good rlsht hand arvl mndo oath that ho believed himself to be tha lilqpost liar In whom God ever put tin breath of life. Ills nnmo was Abernathy , and ho was well known In the buffalo huntIng - Ing days when he used to como Into HiiiT.ili station nnd sell hides to .tin ) Thompson. Ono of his storlcf was that ho was the innn who killed Mormon Joe Smith In the jnns- gucro nt Nauvoo. 111. , and ho never came to the station without tclllivs of ono or moro Indians that hohad killed during tlic previ ous week's hunting. "I hov got forty-nine uv the red devils , an' I neort only one moro to rnako fifty , " ho eald to Jim Thompson too day as held up for Inspection nn oM blanket with a 'bullet hole In It In cvldcnco ot his latest slaughter. Now It ) u > ppcnad that toward evening of that day Company I , of the Third cavalry , which had been oul on n oottt , rode Into the station to camii for the nlcht , nnd Jim Thompson conceived iho Idea of having some fun with old man Aberimthy. So he set up n Job with Lieu tenant King , the commanding officer , nnd a pcrge.int nnd file arrested the old man and conveyed htm to the lieutenant's tent. "Mr. Abernathy , " said Lieutenant King , ns the frightened old Indian killer appeared before him , "I have 'been sent out by the government to apprehend certain men who bavo been ruthlessly nlnughtcrtng our wards , the Indians. I .understand that you hnvo killed forty-nlae nnd need only one to mnUo fifty , and now I want to know what you liavo to say for yourwolf. " "Swar me ! swnr mo ! " shouted the old man ns ho fairly quivered with terror , and with duo solemnity Lieutenant King ud- nilnlstered the oath. "Mr. Officer , I swnr befo.ro Gawd thet I linln'l killed no Injuns. I snld lilt , but I am a liar , sir , the wust llitr yo ever POCU In ycr bo'n days. Why jo kin take mo back to IHUioy and the hull population will swar that no alcli liar as old Abernathy over lived before ! I swar hit myself , sir , before tha good Gawd ! " Needless to say , Abcrnathy had no moro talcs to relate of his prowess. 1 FREE SAMPLE COPY. ' i = ft 9 ? I The Bee Publishing Company , | OMAHA , NEB. OK OMAHA. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. estem Coinpny Electrical Supplies. Bleotrlo Wtrlne Bella and Gas UrhttQB O. W. JOUK8TOH , Mrr. JC > Howard Bt John T. , OONTKAOTOH ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER PLANTS 424 South 15th St. HARDWARE. | 00- Hardware Co. Wholesale Hardware. Bicycles and Sporting Goods , 121J.Z1-13 lift * , ney Street. SAFE AND IRON ttORKS. 'he ' Omatia Safe and Iron Works , G. ANDKKEJi , Prop. Makes mpoclalty ofT ESI JAPES , T FTPT J-J-LtJ-s . - - - KHUTTKrtB. dnd Durular I'rnnf Bates arvi Vault Onor , eta nil ) 8. Mill P < . , OiufcU * . Nub , CBOHOBOSOUOBOMCHOHailOBOiOH J Insults Tell. The See g Want Ads o Produce Results. KOKOICOIOGKOMOJEOMOOHOKC