THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. i.h- SECOND PART. PAGES 9 TO I2P U C0T FIEST ASERIES OF SHOBTSTORIES By J. Marsden Sutcliffe, ENTITLED THE ROMANCE OF AI ItfSUKAMJE OFFICE, BnxG Passages nr the ExrEEiEKCE op Me. AUGUSTUS "WILLIAM WEBBER, Formerly General Manager to the Universal Insurance Company. ALL RIGHTS BEFORE THE CURTAIN. It -would not be fair to the reader to ask him to attach any credence to the true his tories I am about to relate, without inform 'ine him how I became acquainted 'with the facts to which his indulgent attention is in cited, and the circumstances under which these Teracious records are sent forth to jmeet the public eye. As the necessary ex planations are associated with the happiest 'events in my life with which all happy and intending Benedicts will 'surely sympathize and, as the only person who has a shadow of claim to impose an in terdict, has strictly enjoined npon me to avoid any appearance of concealment about the matter, there can be no reason why I should not take the reader Into my con fidence without further circumlocution. Mr. Augustus "William "Webber was for .many years the Secretary and General Man ager to the Universal Insurance Company, which, all the world knows, has its head quarters in a palatial block ot buildings in the city, with imposing branches in the leading cities of the empire, not to speak of lands more remote. The Universal, as its name was no doubt meant to imply, undertook to effect insur ances on every known and conceivable risk, simply adjusting its terms in particular instances to meet special contingencies that appeared to call for a deviation from the fixed tariff. The office only confined its operations within the limits defined by the two terminal points that mark man's pil grimage, to wit, the cradle and the grave. So all-embracing was the scale on which its business was conducted that a city wag was once heard to remark that the only risk that the Universal had ever refused to entertain was an insurance against fire in the next .world. On that point so the wit remarked the directors cheerily adopted the agnos tic philosophy and declined to plunge into the unknown. It will be inferred, therefore, from this bon mot, that the company, which owed so much of its prosperity to the skill and inde fatigable labor of Mr. "Webber, transacted its business on a scale that may be appro priately described as both varied and im mense. It was not surprising, then, that when Mr. "Webber arrived within sight of his sixty-fifth birthday the strain of his tre mendous responsibilities became too great for his strength, and that alter long resist ing the advice of his physician he decided to "strike his flag," and spend the evening of his days in occupations less laborious. His retirement took place soon after my acquaintance with the family commenced. The directors showed their appreciation of his services by voting him a pension equiv alent to one-half of his former salary. In the event of his death the pension was to be continued to his widow. There were some of Mr. "Webber's friends who contended that the directors might have behaved more handsomely in the'matter of his retiring allowance, though the person chiefly interested has never been heard to complain that his treatment fell short of his own expectations. But stress was laid on Mr. "Webber's long and splendid services, and his no less long and expensive family. It was. an open secret among his intimates that Mr. "Webber's nest-egg was of very small dimensions. Some even went so far as to say that when the nest came to be ex amined, as it must when his testamentary dispositions came to be revealed, that the egg would be minus altogether. The actual size of Mr. Webber's nest-egg was made known to me, under circum stances that call for explicit mention, since they led to the publication of the narratives that are to follow. It happened in this way. I had a Ion? in terview with him at his residence, Myrtle Lawn, Streatham, one blissful and ever memorable July evening. It was the even ing when; with considerable trepidation, I asked him to ratify the attachment which had grown up between his eldest daughter, Laura, and myself. I had been introduced to Laura some months before by my friend, Rex Barclay, who shared with me a top story set of cham bers in Lincoln's Inn, and who described her to me as "an awfully jolly girl," but "without a tocher." This information was something of a surprise to me when later on I came to know the good style in which the "Webbers lived, until I remembered what a little way a large income will go when there is a large family to be reared, and especially when there are seven sons, whose ambition 'leads them to spurn a desk at the Universal, and fixes itself on the choice of professions whose secrets are only to be learnt on pay ment of a heavy premium. Laura's portionless lot did not, however, damp the ardor of my incipient passion, but rather added fuel to the flame. In this respect her position was not wholly pnlike my own. Not that I was actually penniless. The favorite nephew of a bach elor uncle, I had succeeded to all that he (had to bequeath a little capital which, se curely invested, brought me in an income of i250. This was more than sufficient or my 'wants while I was wailing for the briefs to come in, but a ludicrous sum to think of marrying upon. But I had found means to be busy while waiting, until some solicitor, gifted with more than common penetration, should discover the stores of legal learning that were hidden away beneath my horse hair wig. The time not spent in haunting the law courts was employed in contributing light, fugitive pieces to the magazines, which, when they paid at all, paid abomin ably. Still, it was something. I farccLbet ter with the newspapers. One or two articles offered to the Dailg Argus were accepted and handsomely remunerated. Better still, this led to occasional invitations from the editor to write for him on subjects suggested by himself. Altogether, I was doing well for a novice so well that, growing wearied in waiting for briefs that never came, and becoming more fascinated with the new work, which left few idle hours at my dis posal, I finally turned my back on the law and laid in a larger stock of foolscap than before, with such good success that I soon felt justified in broaching mv hopes to Mr. "Webber. Mr. "Webber received me with great kindness, and, without staying to hear all I had to say, he cleared the ground at once, by his own candid avowal that thongh he might give me his daughter he could give me nothing with her, and very little, if any thing, hereafter. Having made a clean breast of his own position, Mr. "Webber pro ceeded to question me on mine. He warmly commended the prudence of my proposal to settle the whole of my uncle's bequest on xaura, out drew in his horns when he learned the whole extent of my income and the sources whence it was derived. It was plain to be seen that Mr. "Webber . did not think much of literature as a pro fession. He frankly told me that he was not eo much dissatisfied with the income I was making as with its precarious character. He insisted upon the importance of a ap pointment that held the promise of perman ence and certainty about it. In the long -run he brought the interview to a close by !- 1'CBLISHED. RESERVED. informing me that whilst I was free to come and go, there would be no engagement, nothing that could bind Laura, until I brought the news that I had obtained a fixed appointment that would bring in an annual sum not less than that which ac crued from my inheritance, and which I had proposed to settle on Laura. Mr. "Webber's contingent assent did not trouble us young lovers. Laura gave me her promise, which was quite unconditional. She would wait, so she said, till we were both staid, elderly people, if necessary; and she ratified her promise with "the first kiss of love." And bo the time slipped by until jnnstmas. The Christmas dinner was eaten, and the guests at the table had retired (for a chil dren's party was in progress in honour of Mr. "Webber's birthday), he and I were left alone chatting "over the walnuts and wine," when the bright and happy face of my dar ling appeared in the doorway. By a pre concerted arrangement she came to join us while I opened out to her father a little se cret I had breathed in her ears a few hours before, and which promised to bring us very near to the fruition of our hopes. ""Well, pussy, what do you want?" said Mr. "Webber, as Laura came and seated her self on a vacant chair by my side. "She has come to hear what I have to say to you, sir," I replied, speaking for her. Mr. "Webber darted a quick glance of in quiry, as if he more than suspected what was coming. "We are thinking of marriage at Easter if we have vour permission," I said. "At Easter!" exclaimed Mr. "Webber. "That is very soon. But what about the conditions? Ton remember them?" "I think I do," was my reply. "They were a permanent engagement, and a salary of not less than 250." "You have stated them exactly," said Mr. "Webber, who with nervous fingers was engaged in peeling a walnut. "They are complied with," I remarked triumphantly. "The editor of the Argus sent for me yesterday, and after compliment ing me on my work informed me that there was a vacancy on the staff, which he was pleased to offer me." "And the salary?" queried Mr. "Webber. "Four hundred a year, sir. It is only a junior's place." "Four hundred," said Mr. "Webber, mus ingly. "Come that begins to look like busi ness." "But that is not all," I cried, enthusias tically, as I saw how well he was behaving. And then I then went on to expatiate on the advantages of the post that had been so unexpectedly offered me, pointing out that it would not interfere to any material ex tent with my present pursuits, and pleading hard that with so promising a future open ing out there was no reason to interpose any delay to the consummation of our happi ness. Laura, who had been sitting with her hand in mine, gave me a little pressure of approval. "What have you to say, pussy?" said Mr. "Webber, beaming with fatherly affec tion and pride on his daughter. But Laura's answer need cot be recorded. Before the interview closed Mr. "Webber had given his consent; and Laura, after throwing her beautiful white arms round her father's neck and kissing him fondly, waved an adieu to me and sped from the room to join the bright-faced youngsters who were gathered round an "enormous Christmas tree in the schoolroom. But Mr. "Webber and I lingered for some time longer, in which he entered into more minnte detail than upon a former occasion into the share he was prepared to take in our settlement On this it is unnecessary to detain the reader iurther than to say that after Mr. "Webber had concluded his ex planation, he sat for some time thoughtful and silent. Presently he spoke. "I don't see how it is to be done," he said, "and yet I shonld like to give Laura something substantial on her marriage a really good serviceable piece of plate for instance that would outlast her time and serve to remind her of her father when I am gone. Not that she will need such a re minder," he added, "but her home will not be furnished to my liking unless it contains some visible and abiding memorial of mv love for her and my appreciation of the place she has filled in our hearts and home. Then Mr. "Webber broached to me a pro posal that had been slowly simmering in his mind while he sat silent. "If I were to set to work to write up my experiences while I was at the Universal, would you undertake to put them into lit erary shape and procure their publication?" he suddenly asked. I was struck with the proposal, and we proceeded to talk it over. Mr. "Webber reminded me how long and varied his experiences had been at the Uni versal, and what strange histories had come under his notice in his capacity as general manager. "There can be no doubt," he said, "that the benevolent objects promoted by insurances have amply justified the ex istence of the companies in countless num ber of instances, but one shudders to recall what awful crimes have been committed for no assignable reason whatever than was to be fonnd in the greed that the premature payment of a life policy could satisfy. In Palmer's case, for instance, it was strongly suspected that there were many other deaths that might have been laid at his door than the murder of John Parsons Cook. There was the fact, at all events, that in several instances he had effected, or caused to be effected, insurances on lives which came to a remarkably rapid end soon afterward." "I sui pose there is no week passes by in which some clever, but unscrupulous, scoun drel is not devising fraudulent measures of which the insurance companies are the vic tims," I remarked. "Indeed that is so," replied Mr. "Webber. "No week, you say; but you might have said no day. Such cases were so frequent with ns that I was compelled at last to urge my directors to include a private inquiry agency with our own detectives as part of our regular staff." "And could you find work for them?" I asked, receiving this information with sur prise. "Plenty of it. Think of what our fire losses might amount to if we did not take precautions to protect ourselves against in cendiary frauds. "Why, Doggett, the head of this department, has saved us in that one point alone, in a single year, far more than his services have cost the office." "But cases of incendiarism have scarcely the romantic interest attaching to them to interest the public," I remarked, anxious to 'draw Mr. "Webber on the character of his proposed reminiscences. "Some of them have," he replied. "But I am not thinking of cases of that kind though we might find room for one or two in the unlikely event of us running short of more interesting matter. "Do you see that ring?" he said presently, removing from his fingers a ring containing a large diamond of the purest water. "That ring is associated with one of the most ro mantic disappearances that I can remem ber, and one that baffled Scotland Yard for many a long day." And, thereupon, Mr. Webber told me the story of the strange disappearance of Mr. preserve its pastoral character and its old Constnia (which will find a place in these I world ways. PITTSBURG, narrations of real life), after which it is needless to add I fell in with Mr. "Webber's proposal, and engaged, when he had com pleted his reminiscences, to assist in prepar ing them for publication, with what result the reader must now judge. Before we rose from the table it was set tled that at the earliest moment Mr. "Web ber had tUne to compare notes with Mr. Doggett. the private inquiry agent to the Universal, he would begin his taBk. The profits of publication were to be de voted to the purchase of the memorial of a father's fond love and an eldest daughter's filial devotion, on which Mr. "Webber's heart was bent. Easter came, and with it my marriage to "the handsomest and most loving-hearted girl in England." My space is run out, and I cannot stay to describe how Laura looked as a bride. I know that I was the happiest fellow alive that day, and that there was a smile of placid satisfaction on Mr. "Webber's face, as he handed me a bulky volume of notes recording his varied experiences, just as a plentiful shower of rice and old shoes were hurling through the air as the signal for our neparture. The reader is now in possession of the se- cret which vouches for the accuracy of the histories now to be related. The explana tion has been a long one, but it has not been too long if it has enlisted the sympathies of the reader in behalf of Mr. "Webber and the stories he has to tell. I have only to add that I received the MS. in such a condition that I judged the less it was tampered with the better. "Tell the public exactly how you became Possessed of the narratives," was Mr. "Web er's parting charge to me as Laura and I drove away from Myrtle Lawn, to start the journey of life together. And then he humorously added, "It may save me and my prospective sons-in-law some trouble, if the three eligible young men who may chance to come this way on your errand know exactly the dimensions oi their future father-in-law's nest-egg." I have endeavored to carry out Mr. "Webber's instructions to the letter. NO. 1. THE CROSS HALL TRAGEDY. Mr. Timothy Bradburn, the owner of Cross Hall, whose tragical death created a remarkable sensation in the North of En gland many years ago, belonged to a race that is fast disappearing, if indeed it would not be correct to use the past tense and de scribe it as now vanished. He was a mem ber of that class which formed the backbone of old England before the age of steam came in and turned the older order of things topsy-turvy the class of small freeholders who farmed their own land; whose wives and daughters were not ashamed to be seen jogging to market behind old Dobbin, the mare, taking with them the produce of dairy and poultry yard, and employing their wits when they arrived at their destinations in obtaining the best terms they could; while the male folk gave themselves up to the rearing and cultivation of stock, and boasted that they could mow a swathe of grass with the best They were a sturdy, independent race, with no nonsense abut them, honestly con temptuous of what they ridiculed undor the name of "fine notions," and not a bit ashamed of the bridge that carried them over the rough places of life to the El Dorado of genteel competence. In truth, they had no need to be ashamed of there suits of "their skilful husbandry. "What wonderful cheeses and delicious-looking rolls of amber butter, with the sweet aroma of cheese room and dairy still upon them I "What a store of eggs and fatted poultry and well-fed pork! "What geese at Michaelmas, and turkeys of excellent weight and incom parable flavor at Christmas those market carts used to contain! The mere sight was" enough to tickle the palate of a jaded epi cure. The wives and daughters of these small freeholders looked as if they throve on the appetizing dainties they carried to market. The women were always buxom, and some times handsome even. The lasses were comely and roguish, with complexions like milk-and-roses, firm and ample busts, arms plump and shapely, come to perfection as only arms can by constant nse and healthy fairing arms that would have cast into the shade the spindle limbs of a professional so ciety beauty. If Thomas gave Mary a sly pinch as he overtook her at their tryst- ini vt1nA iinrtl tlin llfHrflinn t-nn if .ao ten to one that Mary would scream, but she would not have to roll up her sleeves and show how "black and blue" was the im pression that Tom'-s mischievous fingers had made. The flesh was too wholesome and firm for that! If hard work rendered their hands a trifle too large for beauty, their hearts were kind, and their manners'simple and homely. It was ot such a race that Timothy Brad burn was born. There had been Bradburns at Cross Hall time out of mind. A sun dial on the smoothly-shaven lawn in front of the old houe bore the initials P. B, and the date 1486. Mr. Bradburn used to say that the initials referred to the founder of the family of the Cheshire Bradburns, who came to that country from Northumberland after the battle o'f Bosworth Field had closed the long fend between the honses of York and Lancaster. The date was assumed to refer to the erection of the house, a sup position that appeared to be borne out, not only by the appearance of the ancient and picturesque dwelling which had been the home of successive generations of dead-nnd-gone Bradburns through the centuries that had elifjsed since Peter Bradburn migrated into Cheshire, but was further attested to by a carved beam within, which bore the same initial; and (Jate 1486". Cross Hall was one of those old houses, half timber, half plaster, the oak timbers stained black and.thc plaster washed over with a dazzling whiteness, that form an at tractive feature on any landscape. Such houses were common in "merne England" once. It was in such a structure that Shakespeare was born. But the ax of the destroyer has been laid at the root of many of these old roof trees, and they have nearly disappeared, along with the race to whom they gave shelter through life's "strange, eventful history." Many fine specimens of this antique order of architecture are, how ever, to be found in parts of Lancashire and Cheshire; in the latter county more so now adays perhaps than in the former: for Cheshire, ot all northern counties, with the exception of "Westmoreland and Cumber land, is least violently divorced from an historical past, and has contrived lrlfflB!wFi& MmimlK Alii IK iiIoWm "Mi IBB J- Tltohf HEHlmllVn wJhH rf SltSif wwWfS&J SATURDAY, JANUAEY 26, 1889. i Cross Hall is one of the finest specimen of' this style in house building that either of the two'counttes contain. It has a bold frontage, and two projecting wings, one of which, in early Tudor days, and later still, was traditionally reported to have served for a chapel. The black-stained wood work presents innumerable curves and lines, fan cifully conceived, which, standing out by way of contrast from the white ground worK, remain to tell of what an Englisman's no tion of art was as applied to 'domestic architecture toward the end of the 15th cen tury. Still speaking ot the site as it was in Timothy Bradburn's time, before it was altered past all recognition; a few flower beds cut out in the green turf of the lawn in front imparted an air of cheerfulness, while the lawn itself, extending to the en tire front of the house, gave an idea of roominess, until further progress was checked by the ha-ha, beyond which the rich meadows, green as emerald and golden with buttercups, stretched far away. The farm consisted of about 150 acres of the best grassland in Cheshire. The nearest village was three miles away, and the market town is, or was in the old days, the ancient city of Chester, with its venerable walls and its "urious and ever delightful rows. The blue hills of the Cambrian range closed in the prospect on one side. So much for Cross Hall. Now for its inmates. "When this story opens the establishment of Mr. Timothy Bradburn was reduced to four persons Timothy himself,Nancy Baddeley, aniece by marriage; Selina Gubbins, his honsekeeper, and Frank Trestrail, about whom more here after. Timothy Bradburn was a widower of 65. He had married young in his father's lifetime, the daughter of a Cheshire yeo man, versed in the mysteries of cheese and butter-making; and as his mother was dead, and his father well stricken in years, he took his bride home with him to Cross Hall. After 12 months of almost idylic bliss Timothy Bradburn's dream of happiness came to an end. He carelessly left his loaded gun reared against the clock in the kitchen, and bis young wife took up the weapon to restore it to its place. It so hap pened that the trigger caught in her apron string, and in trying to disentangle it the gun went off inflicting a serious wound. There was enough knowledge of amateur surgery at uross nan to arrest the bleeding; but the shock to the system brought on a premature confinement, and Mrs. Bradburn died in giving birth to her first child. For months afterward, Timothy Brad burn was like a man demented, and, like Rachael, "refused to be comforted." He not only attributed the accident to his own carelessness in leaving the loaded weapon about, but in the bitterness of his remorse, he accused himrejf of the, guilt of the double-murder of his wife, and the child whose coming had been looked forward to with much loving anticipation by the newly wedded pair. Time, "the great healer," modified Timothy's grief and assuaged the bitterness of his self-accusations. But from his wife's death he grew unsociable and self contained. Cross Hall farm had invariably been left to the eldest son; and when Timothy's father died, he adhered to the custom of his ancestors. But Timothy acquired not only the old homestead but the bulk of his father's wealth, to the exclusion of his younger brother, George, who had led a wild, racketty youth, and who was barely mentioned in the will. "When George heard the will read, after his father's funeral, he was in high dudgeon. He stormed and raved, declaring that his father had never done an unjust action in his life, and would not have done so in his will, "if he had not been put up to it," and ended by calling heaven to witness, in fearful oaths, that he would be revenged on the brother who had supplanted him. An angry scene 5f altercation between the two brothers was put an end to by Timothy commanding George to quit Cross Hall immediately, and never to darken the doors again. George took his brother at his word. He packed up his few belongings, quitted Cross Hall the same night, took a situation as farm-bailiff on a neighboring estate, and, having mar ried a daughter of the soil, cherished a vio lent hatred against Timothy to the day of his death. Late in life, Timothy married again a woman nearly his own age, who did not long survive her marriage. Her life at Cross Hall was such a brief one that it would probably have dropeed out of recol lection if she had not left behind her a niece the daughter of her dead sister Nancy Baddeley, a smart, saucy, handsome lass of 20 at the date of this story. Selina Gubbins, whe served Timothy Bradburn in the double capacity of house keeper and maid-of-all-work, was a some what hard-featured, high-chceked woman of 50. who needs no introduction. It mar mst be mentioned that she had lived in Mr. Bradburn's service all her life, and that her brother, John Gubbins, resided in the bosom of his family in a cottage a couple of hun dred yards away, and was a valued farm helper. About Frank Trestrail something more must be said, inasmuch as he plays an in fluential part in the story. "Who Frank Trestrail was, where he came from, or what was his true errand at Cross Hall, no one knew. He turned up at the farm unex pectedly, in the midst ot hay hnrvest. in the summer before Mr. Bradburn met with his death, and found the owner of Cross Hall laid up with an attack of gout, and very positive "that everything was going to wreck and ruin" in his absence. Trestrail offered his services to act as overlooker temporarily while Timothy was laid aside, aryl after "putting him through his facings" so the old man termed his snarling inter rogatories Mr. Bradburn engaged him, and finding Trestrail thoroughly efficient, he ended by asking him to remain when the hay harvest was over. Since which time Trestrail had stayed on. It was curious that Trestrail never vol unteered any information about himself, although his appearance and manners pro claimed him greatly superior to his position as farm manager. He was not subjected to any idle questions. He was not a compan ionable man, and Nancy Baddeley, after making one or two attempts to penetrate the outer crust, troubled her dainty head about him no more. "He minds his'business, and that's enough for nie; I can mind my own, and so there's an end on't," Timothy was heard to say, in reply to an inquisitive neighbor who ventured to rcmoudtrate with him on the unwisdom of giving house room to a man of whose antecedents nothing was known. Mr. Bradburn kept little company at Cross Ilall. A neighboring farmer would occasionally drop in, for a pipe and a glass and a chat about stock ana market prices; but that was a rare event. .For though Timothy, who was near-fisted, never failed to show himself neighborly when these de mands were made upon his hospitality, there was something in his manner that forbade the liberty being taken too fre quently. A more constant visitor to Cross Hall was 'William Bradbnrn, his nephew, a finely built specimen of the yoeman type, who had succeeded,on his father's death.to his father's post of farm bailiff, and who lived with his mother a mile away. Timothv had never condescended to nntfoe his nephew's existence, until he met the young man by the side of his father's grave. Mr. Bradburn had not been invited to at tend his brother's funeral, but he dispensed with this formality, and attended notwith standing. He even went so far toward burying the hatchet as to speak kindly to the widow, and to ask the young fellow to look in upon him at Cross Hall, promising him that he would always find a knife and fork waiting tor him there. "William Bradburn hesitated and then went. "When once he had broken the ice he went often, until his uncle wondered at the frequency of his visits. The magnet that drew "William Bradburn to Cross Hall was the bright eyes of Nancy Baddeley, eyes as "black as sloes," like Tony Lumpkin's sweetheart's, and as brilliant as stars in a frosty sky. Nancy was a well-made girl, with slightly irregular featnres which the rich carnation that dyed her softly rounded face redeemed from plainness. The dairy was her empire, and there she reigned a little queen. No one who saw her there, moving about among her milk-pails, standing good three inches higher in her pattens, with a short, gay colored petticoat revealing a particularly trim ankle, and her dimpled arms bared above the elbow, with a shawl fastened across her shonlders only half concealing a vusuui wojier man me ujiik. in me uairy, and her dainty head rising like a capital above the slender column of a faultless throat, could have remained unaflected by Nancy's charms, and her fresh, Hebe-like beauty. It was only after a close analysis that discovery was made that the cherry ripeness of Nancy's lies would have gained if her mouth had not been so large and to characteristically weak, or that Tier faco would have been really beautiful in spite of this defect, if her nose had been less fleshy. and the nostrils more delicately cut. But Nancy's face, in spite of these drawbacks, was really pretty, and had, what often serves better than merely flawless outUoes, the charm of ever varying expression, so that these defects passed unnoticed except by the critical eye of the connoisseur in fe male beauty. In "William Bradburn's eyes Nancy was simply perfection. "When "Mr. Bradburn saw that "William was "making up to his wife's niece," he changed in his demeanor to his nephew. "William was carpeted be fore his uncle in the old oak parlor, and sharply told that if he were "coming after" Nancy under the idea that she would in herit any portion of his uncle's wealth he was laboring under a mistake, and had bet ter abandon the project at once. Timothy declared that he had other views of dispos ing of Cross Hall, and his money. John Barnes would-be bis heir, conditional upon taking the name of Bradburn. Barnes was Timothy's nephew by his marriage with his first wile, whose sad death had left such an abiding impression on Timothy's memory and character, and he&had been chosen by the old man to be his heir because of some resemblance he fancied he saw in personal appearance and disposition to the bride of his youth, .there was, no aoubt, some idea of atonement to the dead wife was at work in his mind, in thus selecting her kinsman for his heir. But to proceed, Mr. Bradburn gave "Will iam to understand plainly that he would have no love-philandering at Cross Hall; and as a further dissuasive from courtship, he informed his nephew that if he would renounce his pretensions to Nancy, he would find him the money to stock & farm and set him going. Beyond this point, he inti mated that he did not intend to go; and the offer must be considered to be withdrawn if he heard anything more of his "goings on with "Nancy.''' " Timothy s interposition in 'William Brad burn's love affairs came too late. "Whatever views he may have entertained in respect to Nancy's future, Mr. Bradburn had not com municated them to Nancy herself; and Nancy never presumed on her relation to him as the niece of the second Mrs. Brad burn, nor did she suppose that she was any thing more to him than any other of the hired helpers on the farm. She bad her own room, and occasionally he made her little presents; but that was all. She had not been taught to call him uncle. She spoke of him as Mr. Bradburn, or, more commonly, called him the master. He boarded and lodged her, and paid her wages in return for her services, and there the matter ended. "When Nancy heard that Mr. Bradburn had interdicted their courtship she stole out secretly to meet her lover. Their meetings were not less frequent than before, the only difference being that they met in quiet country lanes and shady woods, where they enjoyed more freedom in telling out their mutual feelings and exchanging caresses than would have been possible at Cross Hall with Timothy Bradburn keeping watch out of the grim penthouse that overshadowed his deeply set eyes. Matters were in this position one morning late in the October following the summer that had seen Frank Trestrail become dom iciled at Cross Hall, when John Gubbins arrived at the farm to commence his day's work by milking the cows. Honest John was astonished to find the back door fast ened, no lights twinkling in the window, and no sign of an awakened or awakening household, such as customarily greeted him. He knocked at the door for a long time be fore he could make any impression on the sleeping inmates. At last, when he had continued knocking until his wrist ached with the exercise, he heard sounds of some one moving within, and then of heavy foot steps descending the great heavy staircase. Slowly the ponderous bars were shot back and Frank Trestrail appeared on the thres hold, apparelled only in his shirt, trousers and shoes. Trestrail looked heavy with sleep; but what startled John Gubbins most was to see marks of blood on Trestrail's shirt. Trestrail looked confused when his atten tion was drawn to the blood-stains on his linen, and professed himself at a loss to account for their presence. The men con tinued conversing in the kitchen until Se lina appeared. Then Trestrail left the kitchen to finish dressing, and John Gub bins, taking his milk-pails, departed to his milking with a satirical observation on the strength of Master's ale and tbe quantity that must have been drunk the night before to make them all sleep so soundly. Gubbins had nearly completed milking when Trestrail rushed across the farmyard, and' with blanched face and agitated manner bade John saddle the mare and go for the police and doctor, telling him that Mr. Bradburn was lying in a pool of blood in his bedroom, murdered. After Gubbins left to execute this order Trestrail sat in tbe kitchen shivering before the fire and buried in moody thought. He was recalled to consciousness by Selina, who was weeping, remarking through her sobs "It's strange that Nancy is not down yet She's not one to lie abed." "You had better go and call her," Tres trail suggested. "Hnppen she's murdered, too," said Selina, her already white face catching a more sickly hue at the force of this new train of thought. "Who should murder an innocent young girl like Nancy?" Trestrail answered. "Well, if it comes to that," said Selina, speaking sharply, "who should murder an old man like our master?" ""We had better leave that to the police to find out," Trestrail rejoined. ,lAs for Nancy there has no harm come to her. She has overslept herself like the rest of us, and ycu had better go and call her belore the police come." "I'm afeared,"SeHna replied. "Nonsense! What is there to be afraid of? Nancy is all right, I tell you," said Trestrail, growing angry at the woman's obstinacy. "Perhaps she is, and perhaps she isn't," Selina remarked in a more determinedtone than ever, "but whether she is or she isn't, I've seen enough upstairs to last me for my lifetime, and I won't go up 'em again till the police come." And Selina kept her word. It was 9 o'clock before the police arrived, for the sergeant lived in the village three miles away, and though "Williams, the ser geant, accompanied by a youthful constable, named Doggett, who had recently joined the force, hurried as fast as their legs would carry them to Cross Hall immediately after John Gubbins brought his message, there were no short cuts, and they had to walk all ihc way to the farm. "When the police ar rived, Selina consented to go upstairs and arouse Nancy, whom she found wrapped in a sound slumber, and had some difficulty in waking. "When Nancy was wide awake, and had begun to dress, Selina told her that her master was lying murdered in his bed. For a moment or two Nancy seemed unable to comprehend the terrible news, and then throwing a shawl round her shoulders, she wentjjustas she was, without completing dressing, to Mr. Bradburn's room, and catching sight of the horrible object lying on the bed, and the police standing there with Frank Trestrail, she gave a piercing scream and fell down in a dead swoon. She was taken back to her room by Selina and Trestrail, and after a long ad ministration of vinegar and burnt feathers Selina contrived to bring her round. But as soon as she recovered consciousness, Nancy went off into high hysterics, and fit followed npon fit, until she was put back to bed again, thoroughly exhausted. Meanwhile the police had concluded their examination of the room in which Mr. Bradburn had met bis death. The motive of the crime was apparent. A small safe that stood near the bed had been opened and the whole contents abstracted. The old man had evidently been roused from sleep by the presence of tbe thieves, and a heavy blow with some blunt instru ment on the head had quickly settled him. A gless of untasted brandy and water was standing on a table near his bed. An at tempt had been made, apparently with a crowbar, to detach the safe from the wall, with a view ot carrying it on bodily, ser geant "Williams surmised that it was with this crowbar the blow had been delivered which had killed the old man, and that after the deed had been committed there had been a change of plan, and instead of carry ing off the safe, the murderers had searched the old man's pockets for his keys, and hav ing found them had adopted the simpler plan of emptying the safe and carrying off the spoil. Near the open safe, and lying on the floor, the attention of the police was at tracted by something bright and shining, and, pick'ing it np and going to the window to examine it, Sergeant Williams exclaimed in a voice betraying great surprise, "Why, it is a diamond!" Alas! that diamond suggested a false clew and lead to the death of an innocent man on the gallows. But we are antici pating. The police having completed their exami nation of the bedroom, and the doctor hav ing arrived and certified to death having taken place for some hours, an investiga tion of the premises was begun. Sergeant "Williams sought in vain for any sign of a forcible entrance having be?n made into the house until he went around to the front. Then he discovered that the hall door, though stoutly made of oak, had not E roved strong enough to resist the cotn ined attack of ax and crowbar. But what puzzled Sergeant "Williams most and he was an intelligent and shrewd officer was to unriddle the mystery how an entrance so forcible, and accompanied by the noise that was inevitable in breaking down the door, had tailed to arouse the inmates. At that moment he cast a glance of keen inquiry at Trestrail, and noticed for the first time a slight smear, as if of blood, on the sleeve of Trestrail's shirt t ""What is ths?"-he asked, eyeing the man1 Keenly, "ana now came, it mere .look at it: it is blood I" N "I do not know how it came there," Tres trail replied; "it has pnzzled me greatly; and look here," he added, unbnttoning his waistcoat, and removing the scarf he wore round his neck, which disclosed to view sev eral blood stains on the front of his shirt, "what do you think of that ?" ""What do I think of that?" exclaimed "Williams. "Why, I think if you cannot give me an explanation and a good one, too how those stains came there, it will be my duty to arrest you for the murder of Mr. Bradburn." "I can give you no explanation," Ties trail answered, moodily, "Iurther than that those stains were not there when I went to bed last, and were not there to my knowl edge this morning until John Gubbins drew my attention to them when he knocked us np. Whether you like to believe it or not, that is the simple truth, and I stand on my innocence and court the fullest inquiry." "Ah! they all do that," the Sergeant answered, dryly; and then, after a pause in which he appeared to be turning matters over in his mind, Williams continned, "I will thank you to show me your room, Mr. Trestrail." Trestrail led the way upstairs, closely fol lowed at his heels by the two officers. It was dark when he dressed himself, but Frank Trestrail was accustomed to dress in the dark on those cold mornings in early winter. But it was a bright frosty morning, and the sun was shining, when Trestrail, followed now by the two police officers, again entered his room. At the first glance round the room, the sharp eye of the Ser .geant detected iresh evidence of the sus picion that was beginning to assume definite shape in bis mind. Going to the washing stand, attracted by what he saw there, Will iams discovered that the murderer of Mr. Bradburn had washed his blood-stained hands in the hand basin, leaving clear evi dence of his guilt in the water. Williams examined Trestrail's hands. He had done no work that morning. They were clean. In this, the Sergeant saw an additional con firmation of his growing suspicions toward Trestrail. "Take off that waistcoat," the officer said. Trestrail obeyed, and Williams, carrying the garment tb the window, searched for further blood stains, but the closest scrutiny failed to reveal any further incriminating sign. An examination of the pockets, how ever, threw what Williams called "an im portant light on the case." He drew forth from one of the pockets four diamonds, simi lar to the one that had been found on the floor of Mr. Bradburn's room. The officer took possession of the diamonds, and then glancing sharply at Trestrail, who gazed upon these multiplying signs of his guilt with white face, he placed his hand on hfs shoulder and said: "Francis Trestrail, I arrest yon for the murder of Timothy Brad burn, your master, committed some time last night or early this morning. You are not obliged to say anything, but whatever you do say will be taken down in writing, and may be used in evidence against you. Have you anything to say?" "No'thing! I am innocent," was the firm reply, as Trestrail made an effort to collect his courage. "You say you are innocent?" "I do." "Put the snaps on, Doggett," said Will iams, in a peremptory tone, taking out his notebook to write down the prisoner's state ment. "I will go with you quietly. There is no necessity to handcuff me," Trestrail said, in a sharp tone of pain, ns Doggett moved to obey his chief's command. "Put the snaps on," Williams replied, in a more authoritative voice than before. "We cannot stand upon punctilio in cases of this sort." Trestrail held out his hands to Doggett, with a hot flush of indignation on his fare and brow, and Doggett complied with his instructions. "Take your prisoner downstairs, and tell Selina that her brother must get his horse into the cart at once to go to Chester." As Doggett led his prisoner downstairs, Trestrail asked, "Will you do me a good turn, if you can?" "I will if it is consistent with my duty," Doggett replied. "I am innocent of yon poor old man I murder. Will you do your best to prove my innocence?" "I will do my best, but it will be hard work." "You swear that?" "I do." "Promise me, that even if they hang me for this, you will never rest until you have proved my innocence to the world." "I promise." "Then thank God there is one person who believes that I am not guilty of this crime. You do believe me innocent?" Trestrill added after a pause as they reached the kitchen. "I do most firmly. You haven't the look of a guilty man, and you haven't conducted yourself like one." But Doggett was a young, and inexper ienced officer; and was unversed in the dark ways of crime. He had his experience to gather yet. Williams remained behind in Trestrail's bedroom, but without discovering any further evidence tending to implicate him in the dreadful Cross Hall tragedy. He continned his examination of the premises, but there were no signs of footsteps, owing, perhaps, to the hard frost. Having com pleted his investigations, so far as he thought necessary, he took his seat in the cart with the prisoner, after giving Doggett instructions that he was to allow no one to enter the apartments upstairs. And so, sitting between John Gubbins, who acted as driver, and Sergeant Williams, Frank Trestrail was driven away from Cross Hall, and late that day entered Chester with "gyves npon his wrist." (To be continued.') OFIUH EATING IN INDIA. lis Use as a Stimulant Almost Universal Hovr it Is Prepared. Times of India. In the hot weather there is much heat apoplexy even among the natives. They seem to need a stimulant or narcotic as a febrifuge, just as those on the coast do, and opium is undoubtedly a febrifuge. In the fens in Lincolnshire it is nsed daily as such by the peasantry. The Deccan, with its: bracing climate, appears to be the only part of the Presidency in which both opium eating and the habit of drinking alcohol are almost entirely absent. The Mahrattas are a more energetic race, it is true; but that also may be the effect of climate. la almost any village of Guzerat, if not in all you may see among the Hindoos the listless, apathetic manner and dull, sleepy eye of the) opium eater. Anywhere there it is only necessary to ask for a little Kasumba to ba offered it on all sides. The mode of making that drink is not pleasant to see. A little crude opium is produced and placed on a small ball of raw cotton. The maker holds this in the palm of his hand, and pours a little water on it. He kneads the opium into the wet cotton and goes on pouring water till the cotton is saturated with brown fluid. He then squeezes it out as from a sponge into the palm of his hand, and you are invited to sit on the ground while he pours the dirty stuff into youi mouth, from a still dirtier hand. The opium eater is alway dirty. These people ask but little food. Opium eatery, have no appetite. They will work just as, they are compelled to do in order to pro cure their drug. Ask them why their fields are uncultivated or half-tilled, and they say, "Look at the labor we should have to undertake." They listlessly drag one foot after another, silent and half asleep. In one village the reply given to an inquirer who asked if the people were well off, was,, "How could we be when opium is so dear?" No wonder the active little JMahrattas walked, through thA. country. Merc than -half the outlawry of the province is due to opium smuggling. Where the cultivators have managed to keep to a certain extent free from the opium fiend they are invaria bly well oft SUPERSTITION AND MUEDER. What the Belief In Thieves Candles Re sulted In History of the Crime. London Globe. A remarkable trial has just concluded in the Government of Kursk, in Southern Bus sia, with the conviction of four peasants for the murder of a girl of 11, they being sen tenced to penal servitude for terms varying from 8 to 20 years each. It was shown that the culprits believed in the strange super stition that candles made from human fat, made them invisible. In order tc obtain this necessary material, they first attempted to murder a boy in a forest; next they tried to kill an old peasant, and afterward a Bus sian clergyman, whom they met in a field. In all these cases they were unsuccessful, being disturbed before they could accom plish their purpose. On the 15th of October last, however, they came across a young girl, Lukeria Cherka- shina, in a lonely spot, and at once pro ceeded to strangle and mutiliate her. Out of the iat from this child's body they made' candles, with the help of whose supposed protecting rays they attempted a robbery. They were, however, caught and pnt in prison, where they confessed everything. It was stated in court that the superstition of "thieves' candles" is widespread in Itussia, which confirms Dr. Bloch's state ment that it still exists among the thieves of nearly all nations. THE NOMENCLATURE OP THE WAITER. Some of tho Qaeer Things Called for in Restaurant. Cincinnati Gazette. "Two hot devils, and one in the black!" shouted a waiter in a Vine street restaurant last night, startling a clerical looking old gentleman wearing a white tie, and causing him to look over his shoulder furtively to see if any of Beelzebub's Lieutenants could be thus materialized at the command of a waiter, brought forth at a high temperature and in a garb of black. Devils usually come in red, in pantomimes at least, and one "in the black" was an innovation to the clerical looking gentleman. The "devils" which the waiter ordered was de viled crabs, and when he shouted "one in the black" he didn't refer to devils, but to coffee without cream. The nomenclature of the waiter is a queer one. "Devils" are deviled crabs; "stack o' sinkers" is the playful way in which buckwheat cakes are ordered;" "pig in the mud" is the sugges tive name for a ham sandwich with mustard; "white wings, sunny side up," is the senti mental order of the waiter when he wants cues fried on one side alone; "Bostons" is the rather appropriate name for beans, and "mystery brown" is corn beef hash. RESPECT TOR TBANKUX A New York Ulan Wbo Always Raises Ills Hat When theName Is Mentioned. New York San As one of the Sixth avenue elevated trains was approaching a downtown, station a day or two ago, the brakeman, openingthe door, called out, "Franklin street." An old man of courtly appearance, who had been deeply engaged in reading a news-' Eaper, thereupon raised his hat. He kept is head uncovered until the train had moved away from the station, when he re placed his hat and resumed his reading. "I have heard of that old man from several of the trainmen," said the guard, "but I have never before happened to see him. He is not crazy; oh, no, but he always raises his hat when the Franklin street sta tion is called out, in token, I suppose, of his respect for the old printer and philoso pher whose name indicates the street." X, BPTSBBWsgKHLsKPKBfM