Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 06, 1910, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
IIIL CIRCULAR STMKASE
&VmahY ❖
ROBERTS
❖ RIMZHART
ILLUSTRATIONS BY £^vvV r * / V'
ItPrfuair not »y odaof -MJttuf c+ T
SYNOPSIS.
Miss Tntirs. spinster and guardian of
Gertrude ami Halscy. established summer
headquarters at Sunnyside. Amidst nu
merous difficulties the servants deserted.
As Miss Innes locked up for the night
■he was startled by a dark lieu re on the
veranda. Unseemly noises disturbed her
during the night. In the morning Miss
Innes found a strange link cuff-button In
» harrip' l*. Cert rude and Halsey arrived
With Jack Bailey. The house was awak
ened by a revolver shot and Arnold Arm
strong was found shot to death in tlie
hall. Miss Innes found Halsey's revolver
on the lawn, lie anil Jack Bailey had dis
appeared. The link cuff-button mysteri
ously disappeared. Detective
arrived. Gertrude revealed she was en
gaged to Jack Bailey, with whom she
talked in the billiard room a few mo
ments before the murder. .Tamleson ac
cused Miss Innes of holding back evi
dence. Me imprisoned an Intruder in an
empty room. The prisoner escaped down
a laundry chute. Gertrude was suspected.
A negro found the other half of what
proved to be Jack Bailey's cuff-button.
Halsey reappears and says he and Bailey
left in response to a telegram. Gertrude
•aid she had given Bailey an unloaded
reVolver, fearing to give him a loaded
Weapon. Cashier Bailey of Paul Arm
strong's bank, defunct, was arrested for
embezzlement. Halsey said Armstrong
wrecked his own bank and could clear
Bailey. Paul Armstrong's death was an
nounced. Halsey's fiancee, Ix>uise Arm
strong, was found at the lodge. The
lodgekeeper said Ixjuise and Arnold had
a long talk the night of the murder. Lou
ise was prostrated. Louise told Halsey,
that while she still loved him she was to
marry another, and that ho would despise
her when he learned the whole story.
It developed that Dr. Walker and Louis*
were to be married. A prowler was heard
In the house. Louise was found at the
bottom of the circular staircase.
CHAPTER XVl.— Continued.
"I was not sleeping well," she be
gan, "partly, I think, because I had
slept during the afternoon. Liddy
brought me some hot milk at ten
o'clock and I slept until 12. Then I
wakened and —I got to thinking about
things, and worrying, so I could not
goto sleep.
"I was wondering why I had not
heard from Arnold since the —since I
saw him that night at the lodge. I
was afraid he was 111, be
cause—he was to have done
something for me, and he had not
come back. It must have been three
when I heard some one rapping. I
eat up and listened, to be quite sure,
and the rapping kept up. I was cau
tious, and I was about to call Liddy.
Then suddenly I thought I knew what
It was. The east entrance and circu
lar stal#«use were aKays used by
Arnold whim he was out late, and
sometimes, when he forgot his key, he
feould rap and I would go down and
let him in. I thought he had come
back to see me—l didn't think about
the time, for his hours were always
erratic. Hut I was afraid I was too
weak to get down the stairs. The
knocking kept up, and Just as I was
about to call Liddy, she ran through
the room and out into the hall. I got
up then, feeling weak and dizzy, and
put on my dressing gown. If It was
Arnold, I knew I must see him.
"It was very dark everywhere, but,
of course, I knew my way. I felt along
for the stair-rail, and went down as
quickly as I could. The knocking had
stopped, and 1 was afraid 1 was too
late. I g'lt to the foot of the stair
case and over to the door onto the
east veranda. 1 had never thought of
anything but that it was Arnold, until
I reached the door. It was unlocked
and opened about an lnd>. Everything
was black; it was perfectly dark out
side. I felt very queer and shaky.
Then I thought perhaps Arnold had
used his key; ho did —strange things
sometimes, and I turned around. Just
as 1 reached the foot of the staircase
I thought 1 heard some one coming.
My nerves were going anyhow, there
In the dark, and I could scarcely
stand. 1 got up as far as the third
or fourth step; then ( felt that some
one was coming toward roe on the
•talrcase. The n**xt instant a hand
met mine on the stair-rail Some on*
brushed past me, and 1 screamed
Then 1 must have fainted " *
That was I.ouisi s story There
could he no doubt of Us truth, and the
thing that made It Inexpressibly awful
to me was that the poor girl had crept
down to an wer the summons of a
brother who would never need her
kindly office again Twice, now, with
out apparent cause, some one had en
tered the ho'ise by means of the east
entrance; had apparently gone lifs
way unhindered through the house,
and gone out again as lie hud entered
Had (Ms unknown visitor been there
a third tie e, the night Arnold Aim
strong »n murdered? Or a fourth,
n time Mr Jamleaon had locked
some on> in the clothes chute?
Sleep was Impossible, I think, for
any of us We dispersed finally to
baile and dress, hating Louise little
Mit lor her experience (tut I
determined that before the day wui
over alii' luutit know the true state of
affairs Another decision I made, and
I Mit it Into ex. i n''mi immediately
after br. .ku»t I hud one of the
mm?*d bedrooms In th» east Ming,
back ahum the small corridor, pre
pai'-d lor upancy and front that
lilite on Aleg, the gardener, slept
there One man In lhai barn of a
house an abft irdlty, w tit thing *
happ< luii, all th<i time, and I must say
th*t Sl« \ a mob 'liable a
inv oif iimilil i=i -.1 bly bav< b. n
Tl-u next iii,unllig, al . Hal > and
I niad' m«• ihau*i >.• • n, si m
tb« rit tl lit • ii" I «airy
at n i » »n<i th "I i g
from It 'I nere wa« no evidence cf
an. Uiiag 'in ml I' ti •» '• itid
i-U i\ J) V
"My Home Is in Englewood," the Doo tor Began.
had we not ourselves heard the rap
ping noises, I should have felt that
Louise's imagination had run away
with her. The outer door was closed
and locked, and the staircase curved
above us, for all the world like any
other staircase.
Halsey, who had never taken seri
ously my account of the night Liddy
and I were there alone, was grave
enough now. He examined the panel
ing of the wainscoting above and be
low the stairs, evidently looking for a
secret door, and suddenly there flashed
into my mind the recollection of a
scrap of paper that Mr. Jamieson had
found among Arnold Armstrong's ef
fects. As nearly as possible I re
peated its contents ta him, while Hal
sey took them down in a note-book.
"I wish you had told me this be
fore," he said, as he put the memo
randum carefully away. Wo found
nothing at all in the house, and I ex
pected little from any examination of
the porch and grounds. But as we
opened the outer door something fell
into the entry with a clatter. It was
a cue from the billiard room.
Ilalsey picked it up with an excla
mation.
-"That's careless enough," he said.
"Some of the servants have been
amusing themselves."
I was far from convinced. Not one
of the servants would go into that
wing at n(ght unless driven by dire
necessity. And a billiard cue! As a
weapon of either offense or defense
it was an absurdity, unless one ac
cepted Ltddy's hypothesis of a ghost,
and even then, as Halsey pointed out,
a billiard-playing ghost would be a
very modern evolution of an ancient
institution.
That afternoon we, Gertrude, Hal
sey and I, attended the coroner's in
quest in town. Dr. Stewart had been
summoned also, it transpiring that in
that early Sunday morning, when
Gertrude and I had gone to our roopis,
he had been called to view the body.
We went, the four of us, in the ma
chine, preferring the execrable roads
to the matinee train, with half of Cas
anova staring at us. And on the way
wo decided to say nothing of Louise
and her interview with her step
brother the night hu died. The girl
was in troubh- enough us it was.
CHAPTER XVII.
A Hint of Scandal.
In giving th'- gist of what happened
ut the in<|Ui'it, I have only one ex
cuse—to recall to tint reader the
events of the night of Arnold Ann
•strongs uiurder. Many things had
I occurred which were not brought out
,at the inquest and some thlug were
j told there that were new to me. Al
together, It was a gloomy affair, and
! the six tien In the corner, whu con
•tltuted the coroner's Jury, were «-vi
iti-nily the merest puppets in the
hands of thut all powerful gfutlfiucu.
the coroner.
Qcrtrude and I *nt well bark, with
our veils down. There were a nam
bur of people I knew: ltarbara Kit*
iiu&h. In extravagant mourning sh»
always w -nt Into black on th<> »llght
• ■»t provocation, kcum It was be-coiu
lug und Mr Jar via, the man who
; had come over from the <lre«uwood
| club the inglit of the murder Mr
1 Kartell w .is there. t>m, looking lut
| patten' a'• the Inquest dragged, but
alive to every particle of evidence
1 Krom a corner Mr Jamieson was
watehlng the proceeding* Intently
lir Ht« wart was called Krst Ilia
| evident)* was told briefly, and amount
ed to this tin the Huuday ii>>>rnlu|
j in - vluus, at a t(uart»r before nv», h«
I had been called to the telephone The
iue »g» was I row n Mr Jar vis, who
I aalit d him to ewuie at om> •> to tiuUUJF
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1910.
side, as there had been an accident
there, and Mr. Arnold Armstrong had
been shot. He dressed hastily, gath
ered up some instruments, and drove
to Sunnyside.
He was met by Mr. Jarvis, who took
him at once to the east wing. There,
just as he had fallen, was the body of
Arnold Armstrong. There was no
need of the instruments; the man was
dead. In answer to the coroner's
question—no, the body had not been
moved, save to turn It over. . It lay
at the foot of the circular staircase.
Yes, he believed death had been in
stantaneous. The body was still some
what warm and rigor mortis had not
set in. It occurred late In cases of
sudden death. No, he believed the
probability of suicide might be elim
inated; the wounds could have been
self-inflictedr but with difficulty, and
there had been no weapon found.
The doctor's examination was over,
but he hesitated and cleared his
throat.
"Mr. Coroner," he said, "at the risk
of taking up valuable time, I would
like to speak of an incident that may
or may not throw some light on this
matter."
The audience was alert at once.
"Kindly proceed, doctor," the coro
ner said.
"My home Is in Englewood, two
miles from Casanova," the doctor be
gan. "In the absence of Dr. Walker,
a number of Casanova people have
been consulting me. A month ago—
five weeks, to be exact —a woman
whom I had never seen catne to my
office. She was in deep mourning and
kept her veil down, and she brought
for examination a child, a boy of six.
The little fellow was ill; It looked like
typhoid, and the mother was frantic.
She wanted a permit to admit the
youngster to the Children's hospital
in town here, where I am a member
of the staff, and I gave her one. The
incident would have escaped me, but
for a curious thing. Two days before
Mr. Armstrong was shot, I was sent
for togo to the Country club; some
one had been struck with a golf ball
that had gone wild. It was late when
I left-—I was on foot, und about a mile
from the club, on the Clayburg road,
I met two people. They were dlsput
Ing violently, and I had no difficulty In
recognizing Mr. Armstrong The worn
an, beyond doubt, WHS the one who
hud consulted me übout the child."
At this hint of scandal, Mrs Ogden
Kitghtigh sat up very straight Jutnle
-1 son was looking slightly skeptical,
' and the coroner made a note.
"The Children's hospital, you say,
doctor?" he asked.
' "Yes. Hut the child, who was en
1 tered ns Luclen Wallace, was taken
away by his mother two weeks ago
I have tried to truce them and failed "
' All at once I remembered the tele
gram sent to la>ulse by some one
signed r. 1.. W —-presumably l)r
• Walker Could the Veiled wouu.n be
the Nina Cutriugton of the mes.->age''
Hut It was only Idle speculation I had
> no way of tlndlug out. and the Inquest
■ I Was proceeding
The report of the coroner's physi
" I elan came next. The |M«M mortem ex
amination showed that the bullet had
, entered the chest la the fourth left
• intercostal space and had taken an
i >ililltiu« course downward and back
j «nrd, piercing both th« heart and
I luugs The left lung was collapsed
t ! and the exit point of the ball had bet u
found In thu ggiisclus uf the back to
(he left uf thx spinal column It was
! improbable that sueh a wound had
• been self inflicted, and Its oblique
downward course pointed to the tan
I that the shut had bee a fired I rum
• above In other word as th* tuur
t|»-red man had been found d> ad at
able that the trot had be>-a tti<d hi
some one higher up on the stairs.
There were no marks of powder. The
bullet, a 38 caliber, had been found in
the dead man's clothing, and was
shown to the jury.
Mr. Jarvis was called next, but his
testimony amounted to little. He had
been summoned by telephone to Sun
nyside, had come over at once with
the steward and Mr. Winthrop, at
present out of town. They had been
admitted by the housekeeper, and had
found the body lying at the foot of
the staircase. He had made a search
for a weapon, but there was none
around. The outer entry door in the
east wing had been unfastened and
was open about an inch.
I had been growing more and more
nervous. When the coroner called
Mr. John Bailey, the room was filled
with suppressed excitement. Mr.
Jamieson went forward and spoke a
few words to the coroner, who nodded.
Then Halsey was called.
"Mr. Innes," the coroner said, "will
you tell under what circumstances
you saw Mr. Arnold Armstrong the
night he died?"
"I saw him first at the Country
club," Halsey said quietly. He was
rather pale, but very composed. "I
stopped there with my automobile for
gasolene. Mr. Armstrong had been
playing cards. When I saw him there
he was coming out of the cardroom
talking to Mr. John Bailey."
"The nature of the discussion —
was it amicable?"
Halsey hesitated.
"They were having a dispute," he
said. "I asked Mr. Bailey to leave the
club with me and copie to Sunnyside
over Sunday."
"Isn't it a fact, Mr. Innes, that you
took Mr. Bailey away from the club
house because you were afraid there
would be blows?"
"The situation was unpleasant,"
1 Halsey said evasively.
"At that time had you any suspicion
that the Traders' bank had been
wrecked?"
"No."
"What occurred next?"
"Mr. Bailey and I talked In the bil
liard room until 2:30."
"And Mr. Arnold Armstrong cacne
there, while you wera talking?"
"Yes. He came about half-past two.
He rapped at the east door, and I ad
mitted him."
The silence in the room was In
tense. Mr. Jamieson's eyes never left
Halsey's face.
"Will you tell us the nature of h!a
errand?"
"He brought a telegram that had
come to the club for Mr. Bailey."
"He was sober?"
"Perfectly, at that time. Not earl
ier."
"Was not his apparent friendliness
a change from his former attitude?"
"Yes. I did not understand it."
"How long did he stay?"
"About five minutes. Then he left
by the east entrance."
"What occurred then?"
"We talked for a few minutes, dis
cussing a plan Mr. Bailey had in
mind. Then I went to the stables,
where I kept my car, and got it out."
"Leaving Mr. Bailey alone in the
billiard room?"
"My sister was there."
Mrs. Ogden Kltzhugh had the cour
age to turn and eye Gertrude through
her lorgnon.
"And then?"
"I took the car along the lower road,
not to disturb the household. Mr.
Bailey came down across the lawn,
through the hedge, and got into the
car on the road."
"Then you know nothing of Mr.
Armstrong's movement! after he left
the house?"
"Nothing 1 read of his death Mon
day evening for the first time.
"Mr. Bailey did not see him on hi#
v/ay across the lawn?"
"I think not. If he had seen htm
he would have spoken of It."
"Thank you. That Is all. Miss Uer
trude Innes."
Gertrude's replies acre fully as con
cise as Halsey's. Mrs. Kltzhugh sub
jected her to a clone Inspection, com
ment ing with her hat and ending with
her shoes. I tlatter myself she found
nothlug wronst with either her gown
or her manner, but poor Gertrude'*
testimony was the reverse of com
forting She hud been smuutoued.
she said by her brother, after Mr.
Armstrong had gone. She hud waited
! In the billiard room with Mr. Bailey
: until the automobile had been ready.
Th> n she had locked the dour at the
fool of the staircase, ami, taking a
lump, had accompanied Mr. Italluy to
the main entrance of the house, and
bad watclled htm cross the lawn. In
stead of going at once to her roout,
she had goue ba» k to the billiard
room tor something which had been
left there The cardroout uud billiard
1 tuuu were In darkness, She. had
groped around, tuund the article she
| was looking (or. and was on the point
I of returning to her roam, whan she
had heard sume IIRH tumbling at the
;• •• k i' i! ■ •<r door Hh» had
thought It was probably her brother,
and had been about togo to th» door,
'wh« n she heard It open Almost tut
uo dtately there wa* a shot, and she
had roa panic stricken through the
diuwtug n M>W and bad the
house
ffu Ufa 1 OMU&UJbUj
NO WIN SIGHT
COLONEL GEORGE HARVEY SAYS
COUNTRY ALL RIGHT.
THE WRITER SEES NO CLOUD
Striking Article In North American
Review That Is Attracting Wide
Attention.
The attention of business and pro
fessional men In all portions of the
country has been attracted to a strik
ingly strong article by Col. George
Harvey In the September Issue of the
North American Review in which the
writer takes a view of the greatest
hopefulness for the future of America
and Americans. The article Is en
titled "A Pfea for the Conservation of
Common Sense," and it is meeting
with the cordial approval of business
men of all shades of political opinion
throughout the entire country. In
part, Colonel Harvey says:
"Unquestionably a spirit of unrest
dominates the land. But, if It be
true that fundamentally the condition
of the country Is sound, must we
necessarily succumb to despondency,
abandon effort looking to retrieval
an* cringe like cravens before clouds
that only threaten? Rather ought
we not to analyze conditions, search
for causes, find the root of the dis
tress, which even now exists only in
men's minds, and then, after the
American fashion, apply such rem
edies as seems most likely to produce
beneficent results?
Capital and Labor Not Antagonistic.
"The Link that connects labor with
capital Is not broken but we may not
deny that It is less cohesive than It
Bhould be or than conditions war
rant. Financially, the country la
stronger than ever before In Its his
tory. Recovery from a panic so
severe as that of three years ago was
never before so prompt and compara
tively complete. The masses are
practically free from debt. Money is
held by the banks in abundance and
rates are low.
"Why, then, does capital pause
upon the threshold of investment?
The answer, we believe, to be plain.
It awaits adjustment of the relations
of government to business. • * • The
Bole problem consists of determining
how government can maintain an
even balance between aggregations
of Interests, on the one hand, and the
whole people, on the other, protect
ing the latter against extortion and
saving the former from mad assaults.
"The solution is not easy to find
for the simple reason that the situ
ation Is without precedent. But Is
not progress being made along sane
and cautious lines? • • •
Conserve Common Sense.
-Is not the present, as we have
seen, exceptionally secure? What,
then, of preparations for the future?
Patriotism is the basis of our Insti
tutions. And patriotism In the minds
of our youth Is no longer linked solely
with fireworks and deeds of daring. It
is taught In our schools. A new
course has been added —a courso in
loyalty. Methodically, our children
learn how to vote, how to conduct
primaries, conventions and elections,
how to discriminate between qualifica
tions of candidates and, finally, how
to govern as well as serve. They are
taught to despise bribery and all
forms of corruption and fraud as
treason. Their creed, which they are
made to know by heart. Is not com
plex. It Is simple, but comprehen
sive, no less beautiful la diction than
lofty In aspiration. These are the
pledges which are graven upon their
memories:
"As It Is cowardly for a soldier to
run away from battle, so It Is coward
ly for any citizen not to contribute
his share to the well-being of his
country. America Is my own dear
laud, she nourishes me, and 1 will
love her and do my duty to her,
whose child, servant and civil soldier
1 am.
"As the health and happiness of
my body depend upon each muscle
and uerve and drop of blood doing
Its work In its place, so the health
and huppluess of my country depend
upon each cltlseu doing his wurk In
his place.
"These young citizens are our
hostages to fortuue. t'uu we not
safely assume that the principles ani
mating their Uvea augur well for the
permanency of thu Republic? When
before have the foundation stones
of continuance been laid with such
care uud promise of durability?
"The future, then, is bright. And
the present? But one thing Is need
ful No present movement Is mora
laudable than that which looks to
conservation of natural resources.
But let us never forget that the great
est Inherent resource of the Amer
ican people Is Common Sense. 1/•!
that be conserved and applied with
out cassation, and soon It will be
found that all the Ills of which we
«t>mplalu but know not of are only
such as attend upon the growing
palus of a great and blessed country.
He Knew* the Game.
According to the Metropolitan Meg
astnv t>lre Chlui John Conway of Jer
ee> City, has solved the baseball e|-
uuee question by the posting of the
following prlutad uotlve on his deek
It tire headquarters;
"All rwquests for leave of al>st>uee
owing to grandmothers' funerals, laiue
ba> l huus* cleaning, loot lug. sura
thi at, headache, brainstorm, c«nt»!na'
a<• tiding general Indisposition, «4e ,
n ,»t be handed to the chief not lata*
than ten o'> lovh on the morning of the
game"
AN UP AND DOWN ARGUMENT.
Sara—l wants yo' toe understand
dat Ise no common nigger, Ise had a
good brlngin* up, I lias.
Pete —Dats all right, but ef yo' fools
wid me, man, yo'll hab a good frowin'
down, too.
Saving Money at Home.
There's lots of wastefulness In
soap. People usually argue that a
cake of soap costs five cents and that's
all there Is to It. But it isn't. "Easy
Task Soap," for example, does twice
the work of cheap, common rosin
soaps, and costs the same. It does the
work quicker, better and much more
easily. Its saving qualities only begin
with Its price; It saves clothes, fuel
and health. Don't use uncertain soaps.
Get Easy Task at your grocer's.
Foiled.
He was very bashful and she tried
to make it easy for him. They were
driving along the seashore and she
became silent for a time. "What's
the matter?" he asked. «
"O, I feel blue," she replied. "No
body loves me and my hands are
cold."
"You should not say that," was his
word of consolation, "for God loves
you, and your mother loves you, and
you can sit on your hands."—Success
Magazine.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall'f
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY «fc CO.. Toledo. O.
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 13 years, and believe him perfectly hon
orable In all business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.
WALDI.VG, KINNAN & MARVIN.
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
•yHtem. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 centa p«i
bottle. Bold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
True Independence.
You will always find those who
think they know what Is your duty
better than you know it. It is easy In
the world to live after the wonld's
opinion; it is easy in solitude to live
after our own; but the great man is
he who, In the midst of the crowd,
keeps, with perfect sweetness, the in
dependence of solitude.—Emerson.
Cures Human Skin Troubles and Is
Equally Good for Our Pets and
Domestic Animals.
Resinol Salve Is my ideal and fa
vored remedy wherever a salve ia
needed. It is as good for horses, dogs
etc., as for mankind. Truly a uni
versal healing Ointment.
W. P. Schmitz, Vet., Hinsdale, Mass.
World's Largest Cemetery.
At Kookwood, Australia, Is the
largest cemetery In the world. It
covers 2,000 acres. Only a plot of 200
acres has been used thus far. In
which 100,000 persons of all nationali
ties have been buried.
Could Walt.
"Why didn't you stay to ascertain
how badly the man was injured?" de
manded the Judge.
"Why," explained the chauffeur, "I
knew 1 could Hnd out from the dally
papers."
When Rubbers Become Necessary
Ami your shu«a pinch, shako Into your
shoes Allen'* Poot-Kue, the antlseptln
powder fur the feet. Cures tired, urhliiK
feet nnd takes the stint; out of Corns and
Uunlotix Always uaa It for Breaking In
New shoes and for damlnic parties P. Id
everywhere Hum pie mulled I'HEB.
Address, Allen tf. Olmsted, l.e Hoy, N. Y.
The years write their records ou
men's hearts as they do on trees —
Inner circles of growth which no e>e
cun see.— Bale Holm.
Feel Headachy? {
It probably comes from the
bile or some sick condition of
the stomach or bowels*. No
matter which, put yourself
right with
BEECHAMS
PILLS
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W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
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