THIS BUU: OMAHA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, 1921. 8 D Worlds Greatest Detective Gases (Coutlnued From Tut One.) say of them. But their movements from January 9 till January 12, the day of the robbery, were enough to make any quick-wittcd'person think there was something the matter. '"I read all about the robbery in the paper," she told the detective, ..."and it seems to me that if they had nothing to do with it it is a very re markable coincidence." A very great deal of help is given lo the police by people who keep hotels, boarding houses and rooms, for when any criminal flies from justice all the place's are quickly in formed and given a description of the wanted persons, so the detec tive knew that the landlady proba bly had really good grounds for sus picion. "Tell me your story In your own way," he said, "and we'll soon see if you are right." Miss Pitt's Suspicions. "I didiit think anything about them until after the robbery," said Miss Pitt, "for they seemed a re spectable and quiet couple enough, and the little baby , they had with them would have disarmed suspicion in any case. "But they left me to look after the baby on the day of the robbery," said Miss Pitt, "and went up to London. They told me they didn't knew when they would be back, but I got a telegram saying they would arrive by the mail train, and they came at 2 in the morning." "There's nothing very suspicious in that," smiled the detective. ' Probably a good many people went , up to London from Leamington that dav for a day's enjoyment." "It wasn't that, but what hap pened the foJlowmg day which made me suspicious," replied the landlady. "When they came down to break fast the next morning I found they had changed their appearance, es pecially Mr. Tarpey." "In what way?" asked the detec tive. "Well, he had a dark beard and moustache, and when I saw him he had shaved off his beard, leaving an imperial like a Frenchman. The description of the man who robbed the jeweler said he had a dark beard. Mrs. Tarpey asked me especially if I didn't think his appearance had altered a lot, and didn't I think he looked much younger for the change? Another thing that struck me as funny was that Mrs. Tarpey had a bruise under her eye, as though she had had a blow on it. Then the day before yesterday Mr. Tarpey asked me for a foreign Bradshaw, and said he might have to go abroad for a few days. Then I thought I'd come and tell the police." The quick wit of Miss Pitt cer tainly put the detective on the right track, but when he arrived at the lodgings of the Tarpeys he found that the man had flown, leaving his wife and baby behind. "Let me see that Bradshaw," he said. . ' ) He hoped that he might get a due-from the timetable as to the di- "recfion in 'which his bird had flown, and he was right. The first thing noticeable about the railway guide was a page turned down at the trains and vessels to Holland! And Holland, as the detective knew only .. . . , i too well, is tne nappy selling grounu for jewel thieves. There are more stolen gems disposed of in Amster dam, in fact, than in any other coun try "in the world. Significant Discoveries. But though the detective immedi ately wired a full description of the wanted man to Holland this clue, unfortunately, led no farther, and , he was for" many weeks lost to sight on . the continent. The detective, however, had got his wife, and he felt sure that in the Jong run he would get the chief criminal himself. On searching the rooms of the Tarpeys- in Leamington a number of significant things were discov ered. The most important were two small bottles with the word "Drug" written on them and a small white handkerchief. This latter still smelt faintly oi chloroform, while the -two bottles contained a quan tity of the anaesthetic! There were also several bottles of dye and a new razor, the latter bought, the de tective reflected, in order that Tar pey might remove his incriminating beard. This was sufficient for the detec tive and he promptly arrested Mrs. Tarpey and sent for Messrs. Lon don & Ryder's assistant to see if he could recognize her. This he had not the slightest difficulty in doing, and to make more certain that he was on the right "track, the detective ... - -. f 'V which he had found. "That's Tyrrell" he said at once. "Mr. Mark Tyrrell, he called him self. " ; , "Same initials, and pot far from bis real name, Michael Tarpey," re marked the detective. "And the next thing will be to find him." But the detective was not able to find any of the jewels at the lodg ings of the couple m Leamington, or any trace of them having been sold. He was, however, able to prove that Mrs. Tarpey had had some of the jewels, at any rate, for in the course of his inquiries he learned that her sister had received a sealed pack age, with the instruction to keep it till she came for it. The detective promptly opened this parcel and found, as he expected, some of the missing jewelry in it. The package contained two valuable diamond pendants, whicli the jewelers had no difficulty in recognizing as their property. ' Reckless Gamblers. Inspector Shore, in the course of his investigations, found clues which not only Snowed him the crime had been carefully planned, but also pro-.- vided him with the motive. The Tarpeys, he learnt, were heavily in debt through reckless gambling, ow ing something like $3,500, and they had determined on this robbery in order to get themselves square again. To show how hard up they were for actual cash, indeed, the landlady told the detective that Mr. Tarpey had borrowed the money from her on his return from London at 2 in the morning in order to pay the taxi fare from the station. Three days before the sensational gebbery Tarpey went tip London, and just after he had gone his wife asked the landlady if she would look after the baby or arrange for some one to do so if she wanted to go up to town for a day. , "My husband may send me a tele gram to spend the day with him," she said. "And, naturally, 1 should like to go." "As a matter of fact she received two telegrams the day before she went up to town," the landlady told the detective, "but she did not show them to me, so I don't know what was in them." But the eletcctiv,e soon learnt. They contained instructions to his wife to come up to London the following day, as everything was ready. Inspector Shore spent weeks be fore the accused woman was brought to trial at the Old Bailey, making in quiries in every direction for the missing husband. All the ports from the Continent were closely watched for his return, while the houses and haunts with which ne was known to be familiar were watched by the in spector's assistants in case Tarpey put 'in an unexpected appearance; but all to no avail. "I hone she's acquitted!" he said to one of his assistants on the day of the trial. "Then we shall get him." "What makes you think that?" answered the other. "Because when he thinks the coast is clear he'll send her a line to come to him, unless, as I strongly suspect, it has all been arranged be forehand what they would each do in case only one was captured. The robbery was too well planned for them to have overlooked that point. I believe he's in London somewhere now waiting, but he'll find I can wait longer," he added grimly. "I'll get him if I've got to wait years. That woman's never going out of my sight till I know where her hus band is." Mrs. Tarpey's Trial. Mrs. Tarpey was defended by the famous Montague Williams, per haps one of the most eloquent and one of the cleverest lawyers who ever defended an accused man or woman. Williams knew how to stage-manage a trial, and when the pathetic, pretty little woman stepped into the dock to answer the charge against her she was carrying in her arms her baby. She looked so in nocent, so charming with her little baby, to which she was paying con stant motherly attentions, that it would have taken a very hard-headed jury to convict her on a charge of assault and robbery, and see her torn from her child for a number of years. Montague Williams hardly required his own eloquence to con vince the jury that his client was a wronged woman, and she was soon released from her trying position after a triumphal verdict of "not guilty." But Detective Shore, at any rate, was not to be taken in quite so eas ily. He had dealt with too many innocent-looking women, and the more innocent they looked the more suspicious he became that there was something behind the pretty mask of their faces. He had made up his mind to watch Mrs. Tarpey and,' ac cordingly, from the moment she left the court she was never out of the sight of himself or . one of his as sistants. Several weeks slipped by, and Mrs. Tarpey lived quietly with her child as though she had come to the conclusion that her husband was not worth troubling about. Then one day she suddenly appeared dressed in widow's weeds, as though she had made up her mind her hus band was dead. "Now things are going to move," said Inspector Shore to the detec tive who reported that fact to him. "That's a signal to her husband in some way or other. I think he must casually see her, not necessarily to speap to, and the clothing she wears is a signal to him, probably to let him know she thinks it is safe to rejoin him. I suppose you haven't noticed her stop and talk to any stranger?" 4 "Not one," replied his assistant. "Everybody she has spoken to has been a friend or a tradesman." Patience Rewarded. The inspector was so sure that he was right that he threw up the great er part of his other work which his responsible position at Scotland Yard entailed in order to keep an ej-e on the young and innocent-looking widow. Day afters day he spent in one disguise or another outside her house, and practically followed her about. But day after day slipped by and Mrs. Tarpey never varied her ordinary routine of shopping or calling upon her friends. Then one evening she came out of he house unexpectedly, and. after a careful glance up and down the road, she hurried away with the detective after her. This time there was no calling on friends or shopping. Mrs. Tarpey entered a house in Maryle bone Road and hardly before ths door had closed on her the detective had called the policeman on his beat. "Who lives in that house ?" he asked. ' "It's let off in apartments, sir." re plied the policeman. "Most of the people have been there for years," "Do you know any of tlw serv ants?" "Oh, yes." "Any newcomers lately?" "Only one, a dark gentleman. He appears to be a foreigner, but he rarely goes ou except for a few minutes' stroll in the evening." re plied the policeman. "I've not heard anything suspicious about him." "No, but I expecb you soon will," replied Shore. "I'm going to see that man, and I think you'd better come in with me in . case there's trouble." When the inspector entered the Next Sunday, "A Daughter of Pan" A Blue Ribbon Story by Stephen McKenna room where the "foreign gentleman" was he found him having dinner with Mrs. Tarpey, and the two were laugh ing together as though they had no care in the world. The widow's weeds seemed to have no very de pressing effect on Mrs. Tarpey, "Michael Tarpey, I arrest you for the robbery in Berkeley Square of jewels from Messrs. London & Ryder," said the detective. His patience had been rewarded! Shore Complimented! Three months after his wife bad undergone her terrible ordeal at the Old Bailey Tarpey faced a judge arid jury, and, strangely enough, he was defended by the same counsel, Mon tague Williams. But the clever law yer had not the heart-appealing ar-1 guments this time whicn he had in the case of the accused wife, and in fact, the only plea he could put up in mitigation of the inevitable sentence was that part of the jewels of the robbery had been recovered, though the majority had been sold in Ams terdam by Tarpey when he had bolted to Holland. It transpired at the time that Tar pey and his wife had been very hard up, and had been at their wits' ends to obtain money. One day they cas ually read a story of a diamond rob bery planned on very imilar lines to the one they carried out, and they de cided to translate fiction into fact. The robbery had been carried out with such coolness and method that Inspector Shore fully expected to find Tarpey an old hand at the game, and he was rather surprised to find that this was his first attempt at rob bery. , He was a cool hand, .however, as the following will show: After his trial he had the nerve to write to the firm he had robbed and apologize, i saying that he originally intended to rob another jeweler altogether! He was left to kick his heels in prison for eight years and to reflect on how the best laid schemes go wrong, es pecially when a man like John Shore is on the track! Douglas Straight, the prosecuting counsel, in his address td the jury took the unusual step of calling at tention to the remarkable patience Inspector Shore had shown in track ing down Tarpey after his wife had been acquitted and when most people had forgotten the amazing robbery. The Infernal Machine (Continued from Page Two.) ' was a rapid scurry of feet along the corridor. It passed, ceased definite ly. Then, in heart-stopping con firmation of his fear, the light went out suddenly. He stood clutching at his bunk, in an absolute darkness that enveloped him almost tangibly. He let go of the bunk in a dash for where he knew the door to be, slipped, with a sharp stab of accentuated terror, upon a wet floor sloping permanently at an acute angle, despite its slow rise and its seemingly endless subsequent subsidence. He crawled upwards on It, knocked his head against the door, pulled himself upright with a grasp upon its handle. Then, in a sudden access, lie found his voice. He shrieked piercingly, shriek up-: on shriek that rang through an apalling silence--ahrieked like a maniac forgotten In his cell. None came to answer him. There was no sound in the corridor out side. What was happening in that deathly silence which pervaded the great ship? He failed to bring him self to exact imagination. She still rose, still subsided, heavily, lazily. But the list which sloped the floor slippery under his feet remained uncorrected. Was she still afloat settling, slowly but surely? . He ceased his maniac shrieks to listen. There was no sound. This far down corridor, remote from thei general life of the ship, tenanted only by emigrants on the westward voyage, was deserted. He shook furiously at the implacably locked door, crashed his fists against its panels in frenzied blows that had no result but the flaying of his knuckles. He flung himself against it like a wild thing in a cage. The door remained Im movable. He stopped again, listened lis tened for the rushing cataracts of water he knew must be pouring in to the ship, down 'her companion ways, along her corridors. He heard nothing. There was no sound per ceptible in that rayless blackness which pressed upon him, save a sough and swish of water exterior to the ship. Then he understood. Of course, they would have closed down the watertight doors! He shrieked a, curse at that unknown officer on the bridge performing his obvious duty, in a vivid imagination of the great steel doors sliding down into their immovable positions, shutting off the water Indeed from this com partment, shutting him off inexor ably from escape even could he break out into the corridor. In the horror of this realization he relaxed his hold upon the door tilted forward against him, slipped and slid, in that utter blackness, down the sloping floor to the wall of the ship. He felt over It with trembling, eager hands, felt for the heavy brass fastening of the port hole. It was still Arm, though his hands were wetted In the water which welled up gently around its .r:m. Despite the complete cessation of the crashing impacts with which the ship had so long smashed Into the heavy seas, her. equilibrium was by no means stable. She still rose, though heavily and draggingly; still sank, ieven more and njore deeply it seemed, in a sluggish roll which emphasized in its swing-back the ugly list that the lift had failed to correct. In that engulfing blackness she seemed to "subside ever lower and lower, inert, Incapable of right ing herself, cradled still by a motion of the waters 'that swished and washed against her flanks, sinking with every lurch into rayless, un imaginable depths. - The frenzied man huddled there In the darkness against the wall wet with water from the leaking port had no doubt of it. He knew. That infernal chunk of coal had done its work only too well. Paralysed for any movement.-, his imagination worked feverishly and yet, In that complete d&rk, could form no def- IN THE CLOUDS wj " i assay. wm i mm umsmm inite mental images. To his horror, that terrifying machine in his head had started again beyond his con trol. It was like being in a darkened movie hall, where the still whirring machine could only project flitting and fragmentary pictures from a torn film in the intervals of fre quent "black-outs" upon the screen. Eut still the machine went on mad deninglythe more maddening be cause somehow the machine was part of himself. The mental photo graph of a sinking derelict he had once seen , recurred over and over again In that patchy sequence the hulk sagging in the . seas which lapped over her, higher and imper ceptibly higher the decks awash, waves licking the canvas of her bridge and then the silent sudden cngulfment, disappearance. Were they still afloat, upon the surface ? He dared not give him self the answer. Even though they had sunk beneath the wave-tops, he remembered all scraps of ap posite knowledge that he had ever picked up coming to him with a memory preternaturally acute that great ships like the Gargantuan; if their bulkheads were closed, did not drop, like a stone to the bottom of the sea, but remained, swung as it were at an intermediate depth, in a slow and gradual subsidence as one compartment after another was burst into by the pressure of the water. Such he knew it was their po sition now, rolling sluggishly fath oms down how many. , he wonder ed? below the surface of the sea, sinking gently, -ever sinking, down, down, down in the darknass towards the bottom. That darkness! The aw ful of it came upon him suddenly in renewed access of horror. He put his hand out in It, invisibly. That darkness, utterly black, blacker-than the blackest night, which (nveloped him and seemed to choke him as he gasped in his terror that darkness would never be lifted It was black, stifling darkness for him for all that was left of his life darkness, complete, unbreakable, inexorable, until until death death In that blackness! He shrieked again and again, purposely, for he knew there was no hope of rescue, shrieked stridently in a mere blind escape of energy from overcharged nerves. For an indefinite period of time, hideously prolonged, he sat huddled and gasping, crouching against that wet wall of his lightless cell. How long was It since It had happened, since the engines had fallen silent, since their relapse into darkness? It seemed an eternity, was certainly many, many hours. Long, long ago they must have disappeared below the surface of the sea. He imagined bulkhead after bulkhead bursting under a torrent of unillumined water as they sank deeper and yet deeper, narrowing and ever narrow ing the margin of his life. Pres ently the last bulkhead would burst, and then. . . . Or perhaps It would not burst. Perhaps It would hold, and then, in a few days, as he used up the limited supply of air, he would suffocate. In a few days! He had been here, in this darkness, days already days and days! Yes, days and days he had been here and he was suffocating he was suffocating now! He felt his heart, big and thumping heavily, in his breast, swelling as though it would choke him. He tried to rise to his feet upon that unstable slop ing floor, reached for an unfound support In the blackness, and sank down again, gasping. Then, in that pitch blackness, the ship gave a heavy lurch, lifted once more as with difficulty, subsided in a long roll that threw him against the wall. The floor seemed to sink endlessly beneath him. He clawed himself partially upright and shriek ed, with his last breath, curses curses curses upon Rosa . Bauer mann, 'upon the "comrade)," upon that diabolical little German-Jew. itr Jyrxsez?j3'Aii essacjHgwssas - Yes, she was going now going finally. j He shrieked once more in that awful, oppressive blackness, shriek ed, his ears singing, that infernal machine in his head behind the eyes that could not see whirring madly to a climax, shrieked with his heart seeming to burst his breast, shrieked there was a mighty crash somewhere. The last bulkhead! He essayed one more shriek that was soundless, would not come beyond a gurgle, put his hands blindly to his face, felt them, with a feeble wonderment, wet with a warm fluid from his mouth, reeled dizzily upon that sloping floor. Ah, at last, thank God! thank God! there were lights, lights! flashes'and stars of dancing light! He pitched headforemost into a gulf of blackness. As dawn broke the S. S. 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