6 The Mystery OF -= Carney-Croft By JOSEPH BROWN COOKE (Copyright, IJJO7. by Btory-l'res* Corporation.) CHAPTER Xl.—Continued. "Hope I didn't hurt you, Jenks," said MacArdel, apologetically, when we had him securely pinioned. "I just want to have a little quiet talk with you, but I'm not quite ready yet." We let the fellow up and seated him in a chair passing the hitching strap from the wagon about his waist for greater security. "Hy the way, Jenks," said MacArdel, as we were performing this last thoughtful act. "Nobody can hear if you shout, but don't do it, anyway, or I'll have to gag you. Mr. Ware and I have some matters to discuss and we don't want to be disturbed." We sat and talked about everything under the sun except Carney-Croft and its affairs, while I marveled at Mac- Ardel's actions, but was unable to question him as to his plans or ob jects in the presence of the conquered Jenks. MacArdel consulted his watch with gradually increasing frequency, and. finally, when the hands pointed to ten minutes before 12, he said abruptly: "Ware, you take this fellow down to the path where the ghosts come out and I'll go and get the widow. I've got her locked up in the house." The behavior of Jenks was remark able to witness, as MacArdel uttered these words for, although his capture aud that of his accomplice effectually prevented the reappearance of the ghost, at least on this occasion, he could not have shown more evidences of genuine terror if he had expected to encounter an army of specters, -ifter some difficulty I succeeded in getting him to rise, and, with his arms snugly bound behind his back, he shambled with trembling legs down under the trees where we were joined in anoth er moment by MacArdel and Mrs. Bruce. The two guilty ones did not look at each other, but stood in sullen defi ance waiting for what might come next. MacArdel placed them side by side, and, as we faced them, he be gan: "You two have been circulating ghost stories about this place all over the country. You've even been here yourselves at midnight, wrapped up in sheets and trying to scare people out of their wits and injure this property. You were here last night and when we shot at you we hit you, Jenks, and wounded your hand. You dropped the sheets and a lot of other things and then you came back and got them all after we had gone to bed. You can't deny it, Jenks, for wo found them in your wagon this morning, while you were asleep. Now, there's more than this," continued MacArdel. "There has been some queer doings in side the house, too, and you've got some way of getting in and playing your tricks." He stopped speaking and eyed them closely for a moment before going on. Then he resumed, slowly and impres sively: "But there's something even worse than all this to be explained, and we are going to find out about the whole matter if we have to keep you here all night. Several of the pieces of cloth in that bundle have been used for some thing else than making ghost clothes. You know what they've been used for and —" "Oh, my God, help me!" screamed Jenks, and before I could reach him, he reeled and fell forward on his face. As I turned to his aid I saw the same pair of filmy figures glide slowly past us but with increasing speed as they neared the river, where, on the prevt ous night, they suddenly vanished be fore our eyes. The widow made no sound, but ntood perfectly motionless with face like marble and eyes almost bursting from her head. MacArdel stamped his foot impa tiently and muttered: "There's more in this than 1 thought. Help me get this fellow up, Ware, and we'll take 'em both back to the hous*." CHAPTER XII. A Second Note. Half leading and half carrying the unfortunate Jenks and followed by Mtb. Bruce who walked as one in a dream, we returned to the house. Once on the veranda, MacArdel un bound the fellow's arms and, noticing bloodstains on his face and shirt front, examined him closely to see if he had sustained any severe injury iD his helpless fall. Nothing more serious than a badly cut lip was discfv»ered, and we took the pair into the library, where a light was burning dimly. Turning up the lamp so that he could see distinctly, MacArdel sent mo for a basin of water and a towel and stitched up the wound with material from his pocket instrument case. Jenks submitted to this procedure in a stupidly dazed condition and t.j soon as the little operation was com pleted and an improvised dressing ap plied, ho agal-n fell forward in a swoon. "Get him a drink, Ware," said Mac- Ardel. "There's whisky in my bag, you know." Jenks coughed and sputtered over the stuff in a manner nowise compli mentary to the quality of liquor affect ed by MacArdel, and then, bursting into a cold perspiration, he began to tremble violently and beg piteously to be allowed togo home; while Mrs. Bruce, with pale, ghastly face, pre» served the silence that she had main tained from the first. "You may both goon one condi tion," said MacArdel, sternly, "and on one condition only! You must swear that you will never reveal a word of this night's doings without the consent of Mr. Ware or myself." "Swear nuthin'," muttered Jenks, feebly. "I'll have the law on ye fur this, ye varmint!" Like a flash MacArdel grasped his arm in a vice-like grip and said cold ly: "You remember how I handled you before, Jenks? Well, you know I'm your master when it comes to a fight, and unless you do as I tell you and do it at once, back you goto the path where the ghosts are!" "I hain't afeered of 'em ef you hain't," mumbled Jenks, with a half hearted attempt at bravado. "I reckon they won't hurt nobody none." His very manner showed that he wvs quaking in his shoes, and Mac- Ardel was quick to note it and make the most of it. "You won't have me with you, Jenks," he continued, impressively. "We'll tie you to a tree and leave you there alone, unless you do as 1 say. Do you understand?" That Jenks understood there could be no doubt, for his terror was obvi ous as he hastened to exclaim: "I'll swear, mister! I'll swear teh ' ' on One anything, ef ye'll only let us git aouten i this place an' go home!" There was a small Bible on the li- j brary table and MacArdel caused ! Jenks and the widow to place a hand j upon it as they successively took upon i themselves a solemn obligation to pre- ! serve absolute secrecy concerning the | affair of the evening. This done, Mac- Ardel addressed them briefly but im pressively: "Do not think, for a moment," he said, "that. I have changed my opinion as to your knowledge of the things that, are going on here. I'll admit that there is more to it than 1 thought at first and that more people are mixed up in it than I had supposed. Hut that only makes it the easier for us, because, in affairs of this kind, there is danger in numbers, and, while I am convinced that you two are the ringleaders in the whole business, the more confederates you have the soon er will we be able to make one of them confess. "You may go now, but mind you re member the oath you have taken to night or it will go hard with you both. As long as you keep this thing to your selves you won't get into trouble, but the moment you start any fuss about it you will hoar from us in a way that will make your hair stand on end! And whatever you do, don't forget that I'm a doctor, and that I know, just as well as you do, what those old rags have been used for!" With this significant remark, Mac- Ardel opened the door of the room and we followed them out of the house and watched them as they clam bered into Iho wagon and drove rapid ly away. When they were out of earshot I said ab-uptly: "This is a pretty mess that »ou've made of things, Mac! Do you realize that these people can have us up for assault and duress, and I don't know how many other crimes into the bar gain, and yet we're no wiser than we were before!" • Oh, yes we are!" said MacArdel. "We know a lot oi' things that we CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1907. never dreamed of at first, and if yon hadn't been so busy with Jenks when he toppled over you'd have seen w** I mean " "Well," 1 returned, "they were both frightened nearly out of their wits by the spooks, and I don't believe they know any more about 'em than we do!" "Nonsense!" cried MacArdel. "You did not watch them as closely as I did, that's all. 1 confess they were fright ened, but each in a different way. Now, Jenks was scared almost to death, and you may take my word for it that his terror was genuine, and that he believ ed the things to be supernatural. But it wasn't so with the widow. She knew all about them, you may be sure, and when they came so close to us she was only afraid that we would capture them or shoot them or do something of that sort. Of course this Jenks knows about the bundle of cloths be cause he had thein last night when you shot him in the hand, but I don't believe he has any idea of what they had been used for. I tell you. Ware, the widow is at the head of this whole job and Jenks is nothing but her tool." "Well," I replied, "it may be as you say, but I wish we were out of it. You may be right in your deductions, but they've got a perfect case against us if they choose to take it into court, and. with the popular prejudice that exists around here against the Car neys, a jury of these farmers would give us the limit of the law. It isn't a matter of fine, either, Mac. It's a felony that we've been committing to night, and that means a term in pris on, I want you to understand!" Closing up the house we retired to our room and, as we were making ready for the night, I said: "Why didn't you make them sign some kind of a paper that would have exonerated us? it would have been j just as easy as swearing them to it and | it would be hard for them to overthrow ! it in court. I might have thought of it ! myself, I suppose, but as I have been | following you blindly all the evening i without any definite idea of what j you've been driving at, my brain i wasn't working as quickly as it should have been.l tell you, Mac, I wish [we had some sort of documentary I evideuce to show that we wouldn't be | clapped into jail within the next day I or so." "Little good it would do to you," I said MacArdel, "if you treated it as I carelessly as those things you have in I your pocket. You'll lose 'em out in | another minute." 1 extracted from the side pocket of ! my coat, as it hung upon a chair, a folded paper which was on the point of falling to the floor, and as I did not remember having seen it before, I opened it and read with interest and amazement. On it was written in a bold flowing hand: "If you persuade Miss Carney to re main away from Carney-Croft and leave the house closed as in the past, the ghosts will make no further ap pearance, and neither Jenks nor Mrs. Bruce will disclose the affairs of to night. Otherwise BEWARE!" I handed it without comment to MacArdel who read it attentively and then exclaimed in triumph: "What did I tell you. Ware? It's just as I said. The widow knew what to expect when I locked her in the house and she wrote this note so as I to have it ready in case she needed it. Then she watched her opportu nity and slipped it into your pocket as she stood by your side. I told you I was on the right track, old man." "Maybe you are, and maybe you're not," 1 grumbled, as I curled up in bed and reached to see if my pistol was handy before I closed my eyes. , that the large majority of American women have kept their footing dur ing all the struggles of their sex since the close of the civil war. They have earned money when it was necessary to do it, but they have not raised money-earning to the highest place among the achievements of life. They have been shrewd, amused listeners to the feminine wrangles in clubs and newspapers, but are themselves usual ly silent and unpublished. Occasion ally they have exerted the power of dumb resistance with most salutary effect, as when for several decades they have silently refused to claim the right of suffrage. They are best known by what they do not do. They prefer to live in homes, not in boarding houses and ho tels. They are not childless mothers nor divorced wives. They find no higher codo of truth to teach their lit tle ones than that which Jesus brought to the world. They do not replace it by the sharp worldly wisdom of Con fucius or the vague yearnings of Buddhism. They answer all argu ments by the question: "Who has led man so far upward as Christ?" and go on quietly teaching their children tho Sermon on the Mount. You call them old-fashioned and commonplace, perhaps. But they are eminently sane. One of the strongest iroofs of their sanity is that they are content to bo women and not imi tators of men and that they still keep In their lives that charm of modesty and aloofness which the noisy minor ity of «ir women have so foolishly thrown aside. Sharp Practice. Andre Autard, who makes John D. Rockefeller's wigs, is a plump and ele gant Frenchman with thin black hair, a rich black mustache and black and sparkling eyes. Autard has a shop in the best quar ter of Paris. Here all the world goes to be shaved, ondulated, massaged. And here an American talked to the great hairdresser about the exorbitant duty that Mr. Rockefeller had to pay on his last wig. "It was sharp practice," said Au tard in the fluent English that he learned in London. "To compel Mr. Rockefeller to pay such a duty was hardly honest. Sharp practice it was —like the way I was treated in my ap prenticeship. When I was learning barberlng 1 applied for a post In Lon don. The patron engaged me at a cer tain wage and at the end of our talk he said: 'Of course it is understood that you speak both French and Eng lish." " Yes, sir,' I responded quickly, "and Dutch also.' " 'We have no dealings with Dutch men here,' said he, 'therefore I will take one-third off that salary." A WONDERFUL GAIN. A Utah Pioneer Telia a Remarkable Story. J. W. Browning, 1011 22(1 St., Ogden, Utah, a pioneer who crossed the plains in 1848, says: J "Five years ago the \ doctors said 1 had \ diabetes. 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