savaBa w?? w &; - t SECOND PART. tKOW TIKST iSERIESOF SHORT STORIES By J. Marsden Sutcliffe, entitled JBHE EOMMCE OF M MSUBAtfGE OFFICE, Betko Passages ik the Expedience op Me. AUGUSTUS "WlLliIAM WEB ' BEE, Formerly General Manager of the Universal Insurance Company. ALL SIGHTS SfhE Wey of the World. The scene is the beautiful churchyard of Harrow on the Hill, which commands one of the finest landscape views to be seen in broad England a spot dear to the worship ers of Byron's genius, as a favored retreat of the poet in his boyish days, and immor talized by him in pathetic verse. Here, tradition records, Byron would often come to escape the din and commotion of the playground attached to the great public school, where so many of the most famous of English worthies statesmen, warriors, poets, thinkers were trained and taught, and having carved their names deep in the oak of the school benches, went forth to write their names deeper still upon English memories and English hearts. Here that proud spirit held his earlier communings with nature, on whose ample bosom he may have found repose, and an influence to charm away the fretful turbulence of his spirit, about which, even in those early days, the shadows which finally clothed him round had already begun to gather. It is the last dav of summer term 60 years ago. Speech day is over, and the last vis itor has long since departed. Three strap ping youths, the silken down just showing on their upper lips, are idly lounging on the tomb traditionally assigned as the scene of the poet's reveries. t It is not only the last day of the term for these three, but their last day of school life. To-morrow, when "the tooting horn" wakes the echoes in the still sleeping village, the coach will bear them away from the scene which, for nine long years, has been their common home, and carry them hence, each to tread his own path in the world. They have been firm friends hitherto, and before they separate will breathe mutual vows of eternal constancy; but who shall say what may betide them when the un sealed book of the future shall have opened its pages? Charles Lowndes, the sturdiest of the three, with limbs like a well-trained ath lete, is destined "food for powder." His father died, fighting in one of the Indian frontier wars, and powerful interest has been employed by one who held the father dear to secure a commission for the son in the th, and generally to forward his pros pects in his self-chosen career. The th is under orders to sail for Bombay, and Lown des has received instructions to join his regiment immediately. He will barelv have time to learn the goose-step and get initiated into some of his new duties, before the Nabob troopship gets under weigh and spreads her white wings to the breeze. He looks, every inch of him, a soldier, worthy to bear the commission ot the then maiden Queen, and one to be depended upon to bring-faonor to the colors he is to carry. Bis frank,open face proclaims him honest as the day and true as steel. There is something sardonic in the face of Mark "Westlake, the second of the trio; -something hard and cruel about the lines of the month, round which a curious smile, half-amused and half cynical, is wont to play, and which the passion thatnow sleeps' ana anon names lortn irom ms nasning dark eyes does nothing to belie. He has some thing of the poet's temperament in his com position, fervid in love and fierce in hate; and you would jndge him to be endowed with a nature which would make him an implacable enemy but a fast friend when affection or interest inclined him. 'West lake has his holidays cut out for him. Nigh by the Yale of Llangollen a maiden aunt, who has burdened her slender means with the care of his orphanage, has her home. The next three months will find him in "Wales busy with rod and line, a deadly foe to the trout which are sporting and leaping in mountain stream and tarn all unsuspicious of their impending fate. In October he journeys to London to Degin his studies at Guy's, for "Westlake has de cided to adopt surgery as his profession and has dreams of rivaling the fame of John Hunter. The third of the group, with laughing blue eyes, and the retreating chin which is ever the sign of weakness of character, is in other respects a handsome lad, and good natured to a fault. But let the Pates deal kindly with Pierce "Wharton, for he is the sort to go under if beaten hard by the stern wind of circumstance. He is destined for the Stock Exchange. His uncle, to whose care his mother, the widow of a clergyman, bequeathed him, and who is a sharebroker, means to introduce him to his own profes sion, and he has only this brother of his dead mother and his own honest endeavors to look to in order to make his way in the world. All three lads are orphans. Their com mon sorrow may have been the bond which in the first instance drew them together on the day when they were severally launched on the great world of school. But whatever was the attraction in the first instance, there was enough of identity in their tastes (or shall we say dissimilarity?) slowly to weld together the links ot the friendship which had grown stronger with each succeeding term, until the three became inseparable, and were ironically dubbed "The Three Graces." "I wonder when we shall meet again," Pierce "Wharton exclaimed sentimentally, breaking a long silence which had reigned among them. "Yes, I wonder too," "Westlake replied. ' "We have been 'comrades in friendship and in mischief allied,' " quoting aline from his favorite poet "But here comes the end of it all. "What a pity it is school days don't last 1" he added, with a discontented air. "Don't say that," cried Lowndes, thirst ing for the life or action, and dreaming al ready of "seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth." 'Tor my part, he went on "I am glad to have done with Latin and Greek, and all the classical stuff. I never had the head for it. And then to be a soldier as my father was!" "Yes, and to be run through with a lance by one of those blackguardly blackskins as ' your father was," "Westlake bluntly re torted. "Pleasant prospect, I must say." The blunt home thrust from Westlake's mocking tongue told upon Lowndes, who 1 held his father's name in reverent recollec , tion, and was not a little proud that Ms J parent had died a soldier's death. A dark , shadow crossed his face as he thought of i, him now, lying in his bloody grave in that - far-off land whither his own steps would . soon be bent. f "Isn't that a little brttW, Westlake?" asked Pierce "Wharton, in a remonstrating tone. "Tne fact is, Charlie, old boy, "West lake here is so fhll of carviite other people's quivering fleiih with tools of another sort, I manity, as he says, that he cannot appre ciate the romance and the sacrifice of 'gfori- ' ous war.' " " SBut after alL" Lowndes nnieklv replied. pawing oywnarton's apologetio expiana- .wb - .. wv.tM.t, a miiwimrroro t.u.u., can a man act more nobly than giving IH?Jtow i&Z&TF THE POBLIbHED.J RESERVE J. his life for his country and his Queen at the call of duty?" "Exactly so," said "Wharton. "1 am of Horatius' mind: And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds. For the ashes of his fathers, And the temples of bis Gods?" "Horatins was an old Pagan," "Westlake replied, sententiously; and then murmured to himself, "strange that mankind should find delight in butchery." "How horridly you talk," cried "Whar ton, warmly. "Butchery indeed!" And then he began to troll forth in rebuke the old song, "Ye Gentlemen of England." "Do shut up that caterwaulling," "West lake said irritably. "See the rooks are off to bed. It's enough to make them return to join the concert for very envy." "Come, no more of this," Lowndes said in an authoritative tone. "Our"!friendship will be handed down to future Harrovians as a kind of sacred tradition. I won't have it spoiled by a jarring note the last night we shall spend together till heaven knows when." "Heigho!" cried "Westlake, "that brings us back to the point whence we started. 'When shall we three meet again?' Kow, Pierce, none of your stale quotation" he added, with a good-natured, but menacing look, as "Wharton, who had risen irom the tombstone on which they were sitting, struck an attitude which threatened a con tinuation of the witches' dialogue in "Macbeth." "All right, old fellow, you shall have a monopoly oi quotation for to-night, then." "And I will take you at your word," "Westlake replied. And forthwith he be gan in a rich, musical voice, trembling with scarcely suppressed emotion, to repeat the lines written by Lord Byron on the spot where they were gathered, beginning witn Ye scenes of my childhood, whoso loved recol lection Embitters the present, compared with the past, "Where science first dawn'd on the powers of reflection. And friendships were form'd too romantic to last. The eyes of all three were moist when "Westlake concluded his recitation, which he delivered with exquisite feeling and ef fect The past, as in a moment, was light ed up in the memories of each: the future, so unknown, oppressed them with its min gled hopes ana fears. Only consider their situation. The long happy years which they had passed together, the warmth of their friendship, the close of school life and the near approach of the hour for their sep aration, the uncertainty of their meeting again, the unknown possibilities of good or evil lying within the reach of them, the pathetic lines they had iust listened to. re peated with a passion oi fondness and re gret which vibrated in every tone of a finely modulated voice, the softly dying lieht of a summer evening, the sleeping dead be neath their feet; and, having considered all this, do not charge these lads with being sentimental; un-English, or unmanly it, before they turned away from the place consecrated by so many touching memories, they took oath and swore that, though seas should hereafter roll between them, and many years slip by ere they met again, come good fortune or ill-luck, they would be true to the memories of the past and loyal in friendship to the very end of life. The moon rose fair in the heaveas and filled the plains below with her soft, shim mering light, before they quitted the vener able churchyard; and, ere they went, they bound themselves by a tolemn vow, sealing their compact by strong hand-clasps, that they would note the hour when each suc ceeding moon would reach her fall, take out their watches and wait for it, and then they would think of each other, and of this last night of their school-life spent together in the churchyard of Harrow on the Hill. "Was theirs an instance where Friendships were formed too remantio to last? IL It was the year of the Indian mutiny. Twenty years had come and gone since "the solemn league and covenant" of eternal friendship in Harrow Churchyard, and the years had brought with them many changes. Lowndes was a sun-bnrnt warrior in the tar East who had seen much service, gained some renown, and reaped little benefit to himself. If promotion had gone by merit, he would long since have received "the col onelcy of his regiment As it was he had to put up with the rank of cantain and ad jutant of the th. The iriend whose patronage had procured lor him his commis sion, and who promised to push his inter terests in the service, for his dead father's sake, died soon afterthe young ensign sailed for Bombay. Lowndes' fate by no means an uncommon one, witness Havelock had been to see striplings with powerful friends behind them promoted over his head, so that while the hard work fell to his share the plums were dropped into other months. A great disappointment had overtaken Pierce "Wharton. His uncle, who was childless, though married in the old Har row days, lost his wile and took to himself another mate, many years vounger than himself, who presented him with a numer ous progeny. Mr. "Wharton the elder con sidered that alter disbursing the cost of his nephew's education and providing him with a stool in his office; he had paid his debts in full to Mr. Wharton the younger". Pierce stayed on with his uncle, earning a modest salary until he was 30, when the return of Mark "Westlake to his native land, from which he had long been absent in the hum ble capacity of a ship's surgeon, altered'his whole prospects. "You had better marry my sister, "Whar ton, he said; "she has a snug little fortune of her own a matter of 3,000 or 4,000 and leave 'mine uncle' to fend for himself." Westlake made this suggestion more in jest than earnest, but it so fell out that soon afterward Pierce Wharton and Alice "West lake met, and Wharton's suggestion proved an unconscious prophecy. They were mar ried, after a brief courtship, and having taken a snug little house at Brixton, "Whar ton obtaineda suite of offices and set up for himself at a stock and sharebroker. His first client was his old school friend, Charlie Lowndes, who forwarded to him his little savings from time to time to invest at bis own discretion. Mark "Westlake had passed through a more checkered career. He ran through a successtul and brilliant course at Guy's, and then went to Paris to continue his studies there. Later he accepted a suc cession of appointments as snip's surgeon, less in the interests of his profession than to gratify his tastes as a naturalist, employing' his time at every foreign port in adding to his biographical specimens. After his re turn, when he had succeeded in getting his sister off his hands, he returned to Paris, where he gave himself up to the study of nervous diseases. Next, returning to En gland, he invested his lortune in purchas ing a lunacy practice, and settled down in a gloomy, barrack-like building on the Nor folk coast The practice was a paying one, and for some time Westlake made money; but his ( tastes if ere expensive, and the money disappeared as fast as it was earned. The special subject to which he had de voted his life possessed for him a singular PITTSBURG PITTSBTJBG, fascination and charm. Indeed, it may be said to have amounted to an infatuation of 6o overmastering a kind, that he had no hesitation in setting aside every scruple that would have been acknowledged by a less infatuated student, whenever a moral obstacle stood in the way of the advance ment of the interests of science. If report may be trusted, Westlake was a vivisectioniit long before the term vivisec tion fell on the startled ears of a humane world. Certainly an incredible number of live rabbits, cats and dogs found their way to the "Eetreat" as his place was called, which set the minds of the Norfolk rustics wondering "what Doctor "Westlake could want with all that live stock." But the bucolics of Norfolk never penetrated the secrets of the Eetreat If any belated trav eler passing near the. asylum after nightfall chanced to be startled by agonizing cries as irom living creatures-in torment, ft was set down to "those poor bodies who were kept inside to have their reason mended." " Certain it is that Doctor "Westlake was often employed in his laboratory in pursuit of his occult studies at the expense of some poor quivering animal, when his attention might have been better employed in the supervision of his agents, and particularly of a brute named Howgate whose cruelty cost his master dear. Howgate was a fiend in human shape who delighted in the inflic tion of pain. One night when his master was employed below, in torturing dumb animals in the in terests ot science, Howgate was engaged in one of the wards above in torturing a poor half-witted creature who died under the treatment "Westlake interfered, but he was too late. He could not repair the broken ribs nor heal the lacerated lung. The former, might have been within the scope oi his skill, if the injury had stood alone. The latter was not "Westlake would have covered up the affair if he could, but the friends of the patient were startled by the suddenness of his death, and when they came down, bringing a medical friend with them, "Westlake was quick enough to perceive that the truth must be told. An inquest was held, and though by his evidence "Westlake endeavored to screen Howcate, an incensed Norfolk jury insisted on sending Howgate tor trial to an swer a charge of manslaughter. But Dr. "Westlake's testimony told with better effect on the minds of the jury who adjudicated upou the case at the following Norwich As sizes, and Howgate was acquitted and re leased after a sharp reprimand from the judge. Notwithstanding his barbaritv the man was valuable and Westlake took him back7 into his service. But the esclandre worked irreparable mischief on "Westlake's pros pects. His practice fell off. Such clients as still availed themselves of his services were of the least reputable class, who had sinister ends of their own to gain, by risk ing their relatives to Howgate's tender mercies. Matters were in this state at the com mencement of the year 1857, when a clond arose in Pierce "Wharton's sky. He was seated one morning in his office, in the month of March, going through his corre spondence, when his eye fell upon a letter bearing the Indian postmark. There was something in that letter that should have stirred the best feelings in the breast of an honest man, although it blanched the cheek of Fierce Wharton when he recognized the handwriting, and a chill feeling of dismay smote his heart as soon as he had mastered its contents. It was a letter from his old school friend Charlie Lowndes. Its pages were filled with chatty gossip of the regimental mess and the station. It breathed throughout the language of affection and confidence, so that Pierce Wharton's brow became less clouded as be read on. Toward the close, however, the letter went on to say that Lowndes had obtained his majority at last and was looking forward at no distant day to planting his feet on English soil after 20 years absence. The th were expecting to be ordered home immediately, and in three or four months time he expected they would be sailing gaily up Southampton water. The letter, after expressing the joy with which Major Lowndes was look ing forward to meeting his old chums once more, concluded by requesting Wharton to release the securities he held for Lowndes' benefit and bank the sum in his name. If the information that Lowndes' return was close at hand caused a palpable tremor to pass through Pierce Wharton's frame, an emotion more intense and visible was pro duced when he read the instruction requir ing him to sell out the shares he held in Lowndes' behalf. Those shares had been disposed of months ago to relieve Wharton from the sharp pressure ot necessity, and cold though the weather was, thick beads of perspiration stood upon his pale brow as he found the obligation suddenly imposed upon him to bank several thousand pounds' in the name of Major Lowndes before that officer arrivecTat Southampton. His plain, downright robbery of his friend he clothed in the euphemistic term a tem porary loan; aphrase that had helped him to plav juggling tricks with his conscience when he stooped to the base transaction, and which went a long way in concealing from himself the true nature of his offense. He overlooked the trifling fact that he had obtained this temporary loan without the consent ot the lender. It is always the same, every-ready excuse of weak and sorely-tempted men for malfeasance. The clerk who "borrows" from his unconscious employer, the fraudulent trustee who "bor rows from tne wiaow ana orpnan, tne om cial who "borrows" from the. company that honors him with its confidence, and all the gang of nefarious scoundrels who abuse their positions of trust 'show little fertility in excuses for their thefts. They all sing the same refrain to the praises of "a tem porary loan." The world, however, looks on these transactions with a colder and sterner eye, and calls these loans, obtained without consent of the lenders, by the ugly and uncompromising name of embezzle ment, and society is judicially and execu tively organized to see that this class of bor rowers receives thejr due. i The punishment looked very real and for midable to Pierce Wharton as he sat with the Indian letter before him. Where was he to obtain the money wherewith to make good the wrong he had done his friend? Not from his uncle. The elder Mr. Whar ton, even if inclined to advance so large a sum to his nephew, would require ample security, and "Wharton had none to give, More than that "Uncle Ted" would be guilty of the offense of manifesting an in ordinate curiosity about the reasons which justified his nephew in asking for so largefa loan; and Pierce Wharton did not see his way clear to gratifying "Uncle Ted's" curi osity. For one thing, no other reason than the truereason would go down for a mo ment with that sharp man of business, and Pierce Wharton knew that his noble would scarcely advance him 6,000 pence to keep him out of prison and shield him from the inst eonseauences of dishonesty. " Where theri was'he to obtain, the money? J SATTJKDAT, MAUCH The time at his disposal, was short. That morning's Times confirmed the information contained in Major Lowndes' letter. The th were expecting orders to return by every mail, and it was concluded that mid summer at furthest would see the famous regiment onoe more in England. Pierce "Wharton sat ruminating oyer the dilemma in which his frand had placed him without seeing any means of extrication. At last a glimmering of light seemed to dawn upon his somber reflections, and he hastily dis patched one of his clerks with the following telegram; Vrom To Pierce Wharton, Dr. Westlake, Loughborough road, The Retreat Brixton. Gorllngton,Norfolk. Send dog cart to meet me at Norwich station at 5 o'clock. Important ni. Gorlington is a small village on the Nor folk coast, standing high on the cliff, over looking the German Ocean. It numbers some 400 inhabitants, principally of the fishing class, and is situated nearly equi distant from Norwich and Yarmouth. The village consists of two or three short tortu ous streets, built In a fashion that would provoke a smile from a city surveyor, but was justified in the experience of the Gor lingtonians by the capacity of the little vil lage, so built, to withstand the fierce gales which bldw on that stormy coast 'In the center of the village stands the church, built of squared flint, which, with the natu ral polish of its surlace, gives the building the appearance of a mosaic of grey time stained marble. Beyond the village, half a mile away, stands the 'Sylum, as the rustics term the Eetreat, whose gloomy appearance is less due perhaps to auy idea on the part of the architect to erect a structure as for bidding as architectural rules permittedt as to the necessity of the building possessing strength sufficient to defy the fury of winter tempests that beat with appalling fury upon that exposed situation. The nearest railway station was 14 miles away; Norwich was further still. But Dr. "Westlake's patients were usually conveyed to Gorlington via Norwich, and Pierce "Wharton had chosen to reach Gorlington by the same route, because an examination of the time tables had shown him that he could do some necessary business on the Stock Exchange and still arrive at Gorling- ton in time for dinner; whereas, by the alternate route, he must either sacrifice the day's business or put up with the incon veniences of a tedious journey by a slow train and a late arrival. When the train steamed into Norwich station Wharton saw his brother-in-law standing on the platform. Dr. Westlake's sardonic face, grown more sardonic than ever since we saw him last, and with a look of cynical hardness upon it that it had. not before, lighted!, up with pleasure as Pierce Wharton stepped from the train and saluted him. "Well," he exclaimed, " 'it is an ill wind that blows nobody any good,' I was just thirsting for a little society when yonr tele gram came." "It is awfully good of you to put your self about by coming for me yourself," Wharton replied. "Not a bit of it. The drive to and fro will do me good. And besides," he added after a pause, "I had to come." The dog-cart, drawn by a spirited blood mare, was waiting outside the station in charge of a groom from the Maid's Head. It was opened behind to receive a large sqnare basket, securely fastened upon the seat behind. "I hope you do not object to the basket," Westlake remarked as he lighted his cigar, and the groom stood aside from the horse's head. "Not in the least. What have you in side?" "The Gorlington Puzzle." And then, smiling grimly at his companion's look of astonishment, he added: "I have a score of rabbits here. I call it the Gorlington Puzzle because it puzzles the natives there to know what I do with lll my live stock. I fancy they think I fees my patients on rabbit pie at most times, with a fricassee of cat and a ragout of dog just to vary the monotony." "You are still experimenting with the pcor beasts?" Wharton inquired. "And shall be as long as my eyesight lasts." "I should think you have destroyed as many lives as Samson." "More!" was the laconic reply. The "City of Churches" was left behind, before conversation was again renewed. But when once the mare's head was fairly set toward Gorlington, Dr. Westlake bean .again. "How is JUiceY" "Very well, but her spine is still weak." "And always will be, I fear." Doctor Westlake knew that nothing but the excellent constitution of his sister had held at bay that progressive paralysis which was her inevitable doom. Shortly after the birth of her first and only child, Marcia, she had missed her footing in descending the stairs, and received serious injuries to her head. Concussion of the brain was the result and attention being exclusively given to this, the physicians overlooked the trivial injury she had received In the spine. Trivial then! for if it had been detected at the time and attended to, the mischief could have been remedied; but the injury had not been discovered until the eyil 'had pro gressed too far, and rendered everything ex cept a palliative treatment useless. Mrs. Wharton was able to get about, though only with difficulty". But she had her bad bouts when she remained a prisoner to her sofa for days together, racked with excru ciating headaches. At other times no stranger who saw her comely face with the bloom of apparent health upon her cheeks, and her plump, shapely figure, "would im agine that the fiat had gone forth against her. "And how is -Marcia, my little name sake?" Doctor' Westlake went on, pursuing his inquiries . "She grows bonnier every day," Wharton answered. "We must have them both down here in thesummer. Our seabreezes will do Alice good, though nothing can arrest the mis chief ton great pots in town failed to find out o&til ft was to late to cure. And now, Wh.rton. old man. wake no and tell mn t brings you to Norfolk at this time of yar. Not for pleasure: I know that very ell. Take vonr crates 'with a clean rash. man, ana out witn It. "Wharton, "on this hint" it was broad enough ''spake." He told Westlake the whole miserable story, commencing with the rise of his difficulties, from which he had won for himself a temporary respite at the price of honor, down to the reception of Major Xowndes'letter, and the despair that had prompted the telegram and this visit to Norfolk. Dr. Westlake heard the whole story through without interruption and withont betraying by the slightest sign that the shameful confession had engaged his atten j r ... ?. .. DISPATCH. 16, 1889. tion At its close he quietly remarked, "Well, I have never' kept up that friend ship of ours that began at school, but if I remember truly, you have; which makes this business of yours ever so much worse. I could not treat a man so, who trusted in me, as you will find, Wharton." "What do you mean?" Wharton asked, querulously. "I mean that I will pull you through this, but in my own way, and on my own conditions, mind; for Alloa's sake and Marcia's, and for the sake of 'auld lang syne,' and because you trust me. I do not think that .you have gone on the same principle with Lowndes, poor fellow. He trusted von. and von have deceived him. You have trusted me, and I will pull you o?t oi tne mess, a'nat is wnat x mean. "I knew von would help me if you could." Wharton said; passing by the rebuke; "but j. aian'tsee how you couia." "Neither do I," replied Westlake, dryly. "I see no W3y out of it just yet Have an other cigar and leave me to think it out" Silence now fell between the two men. broken only by the sound of the flying wheels and the quick' step of the mare, while Dr. Westlake pondered over the knotty problem. Evidently he did not find the solution of the difficulty an easy matter. lor ne remained in a brown stuay until tne horse, answering to the rein, slackened speed as they passed through the narrow streets of Gorlington, and bowled along the road that led to the "Eetreat" that stood out from the darkness like a frowning prison beneath the star-lit sky. ' The sound of advancing wheels was heard within the porter's lodge; for as they reached the entrance gates they flew open as if by magfc and clanged to again without necessitating any check upon rein, and in another moment Wharton was standing in the well-lighted hall of the Eetreat The doctor's reflections had evidently brought lortn pleasant Iruit, for on joining Whar ton, after giving some instructions to his groom, his tones were cordial, and buoyant even, as he bade Wharton stand on no cere mony about dressing. "Your room is ready, and you will find a -good fire burning' there. Wash quickly and come down to dinner at once." Once.seated at dinner the incubus of black care fell off Wharton's .shoulders. His brother-in-law chatted gaily and told him his most amusing stories, so that Wharton thawed under the bonhomie of his host, and forgot the existence of Major Lowndes, and the errand that had carried him down to Norfolk. After dinner they adjourned to the doctor's ',den" a large room, half study and half museum. On the shelves fixed against the walls were rows of bottles con taining lizards and other reptiles and curious Crustacea; preserved in spirits, There were birds too, of every variety of piumage, mountea on stanas against the wall. Cabinets filled with priceless con- chological and entomological rarities, and many other curious collections, occupied the cenur oi tne apartment, ail. furnishing evi dence of the traveled man and the scientist. In one corner of the room there was a stand of books on medical subjects, many of them French and German works treating of mind and nervous diseases. Near this stand was a table with drawers and pigeon-holes, with a large easy chair comfortably placed to catch the heat from a brightly burning fire. On the opposite side of the fireplace was another easy chair, to which Doctor West- lake invited his brother-in-law, while ,on a table near he placed the spirit-stand and a box of fine Trabucos. After the two men were comfortably settled, the doctor opened fire. "This is the toughest job I have taken in hand for many a long day, but I think I see my way through it. To begin with, just to clear the' ground a little, you understand I cannot nnd this money myself. Things have been going from bad to worse with me since Howgate brought a 'Crowner's Quest' down upon us, and I have had serious thoughts of selling the practice and starting in France, where they are not so deucedly particular, auwever, iuab is uy tne way. I cannot find the money myse'f." "I scarcely expected you would," Whar ton replied. "That being so," the doctor resumed, "the next question comes, 'Where is it to be found?' I can see my way to that, if yon have enough of the devil in you to like the plan." "I am deep enough in the mire; I do not want to get any deeper, U I can help it "Bah! man, what stuff you talk. You will have to 'take a hair of the dog that bit you.' In short it is my plan or Dartmoor. If you do not mean to break my sister's heart and send her earlier to the grave, for which she is already marked, poor girl " "Hush, stop 1 Don't bring Alice's name into the discussion," Wharton cried in a tone oi anguisn. "If. beside that." .the doctor went on ruthlessly, "if you do not mean little Mar cia to grow up to know that she is a con vict s daughter, you must let me pull you out of the mess in my own way." "Agreed 1 You have said enough. Tell me vour plan." "Stop a bit," said the doctor, "there's no need for you to rush your fences in that that alarming manner. Better wait and hear my conditions." "Go on." "First, a fee for me of 5,000." "What." shouted Wharton, half rising from his chair in vexed astonishment "Or shall we say ten?" the doctor mused reflectively, as though.he had not heard his guest's startled exclamation. "Yes, on second consideration we will say 10,000. It has a better sound with it, and it will ena ble me to get rid of this place and transport myself to France. We will say 10,000." "What are youtalking about,"WestIake?" asked Wharton, looking at the doctor in a bewildered way, as if he' were not quite sure whether the doctor had not performed some mesmerio trick upon himself and ex changed his personality for one of his lunatic patients upstairs. "I am talking about my fee, if you would attend better and not interrupt me. That is settled then; 10,000. We won't say guineas, tt ough that would be more profes sional. Tben'there is Lowndes to be consid ered; 5,000, that is 15. Then there is your self. I suppose you cannot manage with less than another 10,000, or, wewill say 15 for von. Yes, that is the thing to a T. Twice 15 is 30. Jnst 30,000. The thing is worth doing for 30,000. Now for my secord condition implicit obedience from the first step to the last Do you agree?" "Eeally, Mark, old man." Wharton answered, grimly "this is, indeed, 'a retreat for the insane,' bnt I did not think you would be bitten with the plague." "I suppose that is meant far satire," the doctor replied. "Not a bit of it; but either you are mad or I am getting so; where In, the world is 5,000 to be got, let alone the 30,000 yon are romancing about." "That is my affair. I will help you to 30,000; 10,000 for me. 15,000 for yon, and 5,000 you owe to Charlie Lowndes to make good his loss, the only condition being thai you'bind yourself to obey orders." "Look here, Westlake," said Wharton, "I don't think yon would mock me in my trouble; God knows it's bad enough. I consent Only show me the way, for at present I am quite in the dark. You seem to be speaking in parables." "No parables at all. My plan will un fold itself to your imagination, step by step, as you obey me. My first instruction is: no qualms. Now mind that, there must be no qualms. You cannot afford to have a conscience. My second Instruction is, Strip." "Strip?" asked Wharton. "What do you mean Vr "Why I What does s'trip mean? Takeoff your cfbthes. T want to see what nerves you have got." Wharton, notwithstanding his growing mystification, complieH with this instruc tion, and stood up bare to his waist. Some time was spent by Dr. Westlake in conduct inga a careful medical examination of his patient. There "were tappings here and pokings there. First he was put into this position, and' then into that Then the doctor tapped again and listened with great intent ness. " "Take'a long breath. There, that will do. You are In excellent health: stund' as a bell." .. "Yes, there is nothing the matter with me," Wharton replied, as the examination concluded, "bnt I do not 'see where "all this ttods."" M ' "It tends in this direction," Westlake re- Sliedy "that before .next July you will be a ead man." 'Good,heavensl" exclaimed Wharton, "T, am in a madhouse with a vengeance." "There's not a bit of doubt about that," said the doctor, sardonically, "and here you will die and be buried comfortably next July or earlier, if the th leaves Aurnuga bad before we expect That's a. nice little graveyard in the village. I don't know whether you noticed it as we came through. It is a pity if you didn't, for there is six feet of earth waiting for you there. I prom ise you that when Charlie Lowndes returns he shall see the spot Look here, Wharton, have a drop of whisky, you have gone quite white." "It is enough to make any man go whte to hear his death calculated upon in that cold-blooded way." "So it Is," said Wsstlake, "but there Js no help for it A dead man you will be next July, and I take a fee of 10,000 for killing you." "Tell "me what you mean?" Wharton cried imploringly; "I undertake .to kill you, and after a desent interval, I bring you to life again the method is quite scientific, I do assure you ray off your little debt to Lowndes, present you with 15,000 pounds to begin straight again, and reward, myself with the remainder of 30,000 for my trouble." "You talk like a conjurer. How is it to be done?" " "Wait and see." To be continued next Saturday. INGEES0LL ON AN INF0BMEE. The Champion Infidel Sams Up the Boodler Kerr Testimony. ISFXCULZTZLXOBAXTO TBI DISPATCH. 1 Ne-w Yoebt, March 15. The desire to hear Colonel Ingersoll and Colonel Eellows sum up brought a crowd to the court room at the Boodler Kerr trial to-day. Among other things, Colonel Ingersoll, in his speech forthe defendant, said: . For some cause or other, as soon as a man f s indicted people are convinced that he most be guilty. It is the same as though a man were snspected of insanity. Let a man be so sus pected and every action will be looked upon as In sane. Half a dozen men met In a rear office, and everyone winks his eye and concludes that something is wrong. If they meet in the front office, in sight and hearing; of anyone, you can conclude that they are a little more hardened than those who meet In the rear office. When he came toFulIgraff, he said: Let me say right here that if FullgrafFs evi dence is not true, that ends this case. If be has sworn falsely, then he has dnc the grave of the prosecution, so far as this case is con cerned. I don't want to say anything cruel about this man, it would be like striking tha face of the dead. When a man who has gone wrongrepents and confesses he has my sympathy and respect. The moment that he repents is holy. The tears of repentance jewel the cheek of shame. When a man tarns his back on the darkness of falsehood and wrong, and faces the sunlight of truth he sbonld win the sympathy of everybody. Such a man I could throw my arms around and say to him: "Here, I will believe in you, and I will protect you and help you,though all the world Is against yon." That Is the sort of a man I am. But how different it is when a man is hunted, caught collared and confronted with a confession of Duffy's, and then oilers to make a bargain to put other men in prison, so that he may himself go free. Such a man de serves the scorn and contempt of every honest man. Colonel Fellows began the summing up for the prosecution, but didn't finish to-day. I0WEE CALIFORNIA QUIET. The Mexican Government Has Ko Fears of Laslne It. City op Mexico, March 15. Lower California is entirely quiet now. Governor Toorres has sufficient troops to preserve order in case they are wanted. Conserva tive papers insist that Mexico will lose Lower California, and the inference is that the United States will absorb it The Gov ernment, however, says there is no proba bility of losing Lower California. Bich copper and silver mines have been discovered on the Bamierez Varela conces sion, in the State of Guerrero. General Diaz de Vega has been released after eight months' imprisonment and on payment of a fine of ?1,000. Those Awfnl Train Bobbers. Magistrate Brokaw yesterday gave the eight men a hearing who were arrested for assaulting Brakeman Mike Cleary, of the Pittsburg and Lake Erie railroad, near Shannopin, Wednesday night. Three of the men, John Sullivan, Joseph Douds and H. B. Boss, were discharged. Sam Little, T. Lynch, F. H. Little and J. Thompson were sent 60 days each to the workhouse. Louis Goldstein was held for court RFAIITV i6etcrtbedby Evelyn Malcolm Ubnu l I in tonorrow't Dispatch, to gether with teieral suggestions for preserving it and increasing the fairness of a woman's face. Gents' Spring Neckwear. New four-in-hand, 25 to 50c; new satin scarfs, 25, 35 and 50c; beautiful patterns just opened atEosenbaum & Co.'s, 27 Fifth avenue. ihs ( Carpets, Lace Cnrtalns. New styles and colors inmoquette, wilton, velvet, body brussels, tapestry, ingrain and low-priced carpets. The Chelsea carpet at 12MC per yard, sold usually at 20c; but a few pieces left Our lace curtains at $1 a pair are worth examining, as they will com pare with $1 50 quality sold elsewhere. Geoboe W. Snahajt, . ihssu 136 federal street, Allegheny. Kid Gloves! Kid Gloves! The greatest bargains ever offered in Amer ica; 5 and 7 hook lacing gloves, odd sizes, 44 cents, worth $1.00. Our $1.50 finest French, real kid, embroidered backs, now 89 cents a pair, tan shades only. Our new dollar gloves, all shades, at 75 cents; white 4 B dollar gloves at 35 cents, misses fine kid gloves, 4 B, 45c, at Hosenbaum & Co.'s. The People's Store. We are still doing business at our tempo rary quarters, 531 and 533 Wood st On and after Thursday, March 21, come to the new store on the old stand, 83, 85, 87 and 89 Fifth ave. That we shall show you a stock worth looking at goes withont say ing. Camfbklij & Dick, s Wall Paper. As this is our first season in this line, our stock is entirely new and fresh, and our prices are below anything you have ever known. All grades from 5c a holt to finest gold, select your paper now. Aethtjb, Schondelmyeb & Co., tts 68 and 70 Ohio st, Allegheny. Spring Dtllllnery Goods. All the new shapes inhata and bonnets, and new ribbons and flowers in greatest va riety at Bosenbaum 8s Co.'s. Th3 Physicians recommend Klein's Silver Age as the most efficient stimulant Genu' Flannel Shirts, New goods, 50c to $3, at Bosenbaum & Co.'s. ihs Visit Steinmann's. 107 Federal St.. for greatest bargains in watohes.- PnrK. bine and ecra' ribbed vm1s 20 and 25c, worth double, at Bosenbaum & Co.'s. "ths . ,,, Fejk, ClAbk&Flaog's walklnggloves. JAMZ3 H.'ATKBS & Co., 100 Filth aye. PAGES 9 TO 12. V .?. !j A DESERTED DIAMOHD The Old Haunts of the Sports Are Kow Sad, Mournful and Lone." A CHANGE FROM MOUTHS AGO. "Sho .Famous 4Q0 Probably Bcattered All Oyer the World. THE BEWSBOrS TENDER LAMENT THE fame of the Diamond has fled, and it seems, never to return.. For eight months the familiar places have been closed, and the change was something mar velous, and un less another change is made A Last Year's Nest. the contrast be tween the last and the present summer around the Diamond will make old timers weep. A famous writer's solemn deserted village, never looked more sombre, more quiet, or melancholy, than Diamond street yesterday. A street that one year ago flashed and shone with the gay dress of 1,000 professional gamblers, and 10,000, no less expert ama teurs, appeared like a tombstone, and the hollow laugh of an example of the survival of the fittest, a lone policeman, re-echoed from one building to the other, but found not one answering shout THK LONE WATCHMAir. Of the thousands of bright, keen, cheery faces usually about the poolrooms, not one was visible. All had disappeared as if swallowed by an earthquake, and the lonely watchman at Central station sighed, and smoked, and slept, and wondered what had become of all the good fellows in the world. They are all missed, grievously missed, by business and sporting men alike. Beform is sometimes a two-edged sword, and some are found who bewail the change. "Acirculationofnearly?25,000weeklywas taken right out of the city," said a gentle man yesterday, "and it went to enrich oth er places. The average gambler will not stop gamblingany more than the average drinker will stop drinking, and it would have been far better to have allowed them to continue their pursuit of a comparatively piarmless sort of gambling than to have driven them into the places they now attend. Do you want to know what has be come of them all? I can tell you. They are fre quenting poker and faro rooms, private and professional I will bet $500 that 200 gambling roooms are open in the two cities, nearly all private o f course, and thelaw can't get at them because they are out of reach. "I am chief "No More Quarter Shines." mourner," said Billy , the favorite manager of the restaurant in the room form erly occupied by H. O. Price & Co., "and no wonder. The boys were all cash cus tomers, paid .for what they ordered, and that was generally the very best However they may all be b ick again." The Western Union lost about $2,000 a week paid to them for operators, wires and messages by the owners of the pool rooms, and a well-known official of that company was not at all slow in exjressinghis opinion of the gambling fraternity in general. "They were our very best customers with out doubt," said he. "They paid high rates, and paid promptly, and if our bankers, brokers and even business men treated us half so fairly as they did, we would have no trouble at the end of the month. With all of their private wires and intricate business, they went on from one year's end to an other without a single complaint, and I would only know they were there when they appeared to promptly pay bills when due." The Only Four-Time Winner. Nearly150 men were employed in and about the rooms, and the boarding house blocks near the Diamond for awhile went begging for roomers to take the places of those either going or gone, as it is safe to say that at least 500 of the players roomed on or as near the Diamond as they could, get WHEBE THE GBIEVANCE LAVv But the most doleful howl, the most piti ful yell of indignation came from the newsies and bootblacks. There were no more fancy prices for shines, no more "Here's a quarter, Jimmy, lor luck," no more dimes fpr a coveted morning paper, and no more windfalls for taking a note, a telegram, or an order around the corner. Not a shiner or a newsie could be found on the Diamond yesterday. There was no trade there, and "Slobs" O Donnell's opinion of , the whole affair found vent in Na mournful sigh as he laid this tribute upon the graves of his departed customers. "Dey knowed what it was to be busted demselves." Objected to a Word. Messrs. Sproul, Mustin and Arter re turned from Harrisbnrg yesterday. They went there to protest against a section of the revenue bill, which provides that a 2 per cent tax be levied on the gross receipts of private bankers and brokers. They want the word "net" inserted for gross. The committee believe the change will be made. UVP goes a-shojrping m New York, views I t the inauguration and draws up a set of rules to govern the guests of the model Amem icon hotel. tSeeto-morroufiviaVATCS. TS -u.' 3 2u.l.s SEESSSS