tsssm TSir!K 3SWr R' 12 THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1891. h WRITTEN FOU T1IK DISPATCH BY ANNA KATHARINE GREEN, Author of "The Leavenworth Case," "Behind Closed Doors," Forsaken Inn," Etc., Etc. SYNOPSIS or PKIXKDIXG NUMBERS. A wandering rider flnds a deserted stone lionso in New York State. The building is in jtooil repair aud completed all except the railings on the staircase. An innkeeper 'JO rears oldglres him the wr.tten hi-tory of the houe and of the events of 5a years before Three yminc men. P'lilo Adams, Orrin Pay and Lemuel Phillips were in love with a yonn" lady named Joliet, who accepted the hand of Colonel Sc'iujlcr, the wealthiest man of the com munity, on the condition that he should build hera house to be her own. Orrin Day when lie find" that Juliet has accepted Colonel Schuj ler, becomes excited and jealous anil' Juliet asks Philo Adams to keep company with Orrin so that ho and her fiancee shall not meet The Mono house i commenced by Colonel Schuyler and On in watches its progress from laj to day. On a moonlight evening Orrin and Philo visit the graveyard "and while there witness a scene between Colonel Schuyler and Juliet. Colonel Schuyler has to go auav on business and entreats Juliet to swear that sho will marry no one c!sc but him. She finally swears to bo no one's wife but his, and to wed Mm when tl!e house is completed. Colonel Schuvler departs and Orrin disappears. Vhilo. in the Colonel's absence, discovers that Juliet loes Orrin. Colonel cchuvler re turns and storms because his house has not progressed rapidly during his absence He employ- more men and bids them hasten the work. Philo tlnds Orrin alter a search in a house which ho is building and which has been nearly completed, and suspects that lie is building it foi Juliet and that it will be a race between the two men for her hand Colonel Pchu ler discovers that Juliet is prepaied to flr with someone else, aud accuses Philo of bcinu the one Mho is at the bottom of the trouble Philo says lie is not the man and Colonel ehuvlcr asks the name of bis rival. Philo refuses to" tell it, suggesting that the Colonel ask Juliet. Colonel Schuyler says he has asked her. and that she refuses to aaser. .lie men roaimnm i-mio 10 mvo mm rne name. Just at this moment Orrin sweeps by on horseback. Philo calls attention to tho rider, and Colonel Schuyler guesses from Phtlo's words that Orrin is tho man. Tho next day Omn calls on Philo and nsks him to help him and Juliet to get away. Philo goes to Juliet's house and while there Orrin nrri cs and Juliet flies to his arms in tho presence of her fathor and affianced. Orrin tries to persuade Juliet to marry him at once, out Colonel Schuyler tells them to wnit a month and they can have his stone house. Juliet decides to wait. and Orrin grows impatient at the delay, threatening to ride away with licr whether sho is willing or not. Continued from last Saticrday. "Xo man, you should say," quoth Orrin latterly, lashing his horse till it shot far ahead of me, so that some few minutes pasted before we were near enough together for him to speak again. Then he said: "She loads me with promises and swears licit she loves me more than all the world. If half of this is true she ought to be happy with me in a hovel, while I have a dainty cottage for her dwelling, where the vines will soon grow and the birds sing. You have not seen it since it was finished. You shall ec1 it to-night. I choked as I tried to answer, and won dered if he had any idea of what I had to contend with in these rides I seemed forced to take without any benefit to myself. If lie had, he was merciless, for once launched into talk he kept on till I was almost wild with hateful sympathy and jealous chagrin. Suddenly he paused. Tlie forest we had been threading had for the last few minutes been growing thinner, and as the quick cessation in his speech caused me to look up, I saw, or thought I saw. a faint glow shining through the branches before me, w hich could not have come from the reflection made by the set ting sun, as that had long ago sunk into darkness. Orrin who. as he had ceased speaking, had suddenly reined in his panting horse, now gave a shout and shot forward, and I, Jiardy knowing what to fear or expect, fol lowed him as ?ast as my evidently weary animal would carry me, and thus bounding along with but a few paces b-twecu us, we cleared the woods and came out into the open fields beyond. As we did so a cry went up from Orrin, faintly echoed by my own lips. It was a fire that we saw, aud the flames, which had now got furious headway, rose up like pillars to the sky, illuminating all the country round, aud showing me, both by their position and the glare ot the ifieam beneath them, that it Mas Orrin's house which was burning, and Orrin's hopes which were being destroyed before our eyes. The cry he gave as he fully reali7ed this I shall never forget, nor the gesture with which he drove his spurs into his horse and flashed down that long valley into the ever increasing glare that lighted first his flow ing hair and the wet flanks of the animal he bestrode, and finally seemed to envelope him altogether, till he looked like seme avenging demon rushing through his own dement of fury ami fire. I was far behind him but I made what time 1 could, feeling to the core, as I poised, the wvirdness of the solitude before me, with just this element ot horror naming up in its midst. Not a sound save our pound ing hoofs interrupted that crackling sound of burning wood, and when the roof fell in, as it did refore I could leach his bide, I could hear distinctly the echo which fol lowed it. Orrin may have heard it, too, for lie gac a groan and drew in his horse, and when I reached him 1 saw him sitting there liefore the smoldering ashes of his home, silent and inert, without a word to say or cm car to hear the instinctive words of iBympathv 1 could not now keep back. Who had done it" Who had started the Maze which hid in one half hour un done the work and hope of mouths? TXa.1 was the question which first roused me and caused me to search the silence and darluic-s of the night for some trace of a human presence, if only so much as the mark of a human foot. And I ivtuml it. There, in the wet margin of the eJream, I came njxin a token which may aiean nothing and which may mean -. But I cannot wmeeeu here of the doubts it brought me; 1 will only tell how on our elow anil wearisome passage home through the soinbrc woods, Orrin suddenly let his bridle fall. nd, flinging up his arms aboe his head, cn-d bitterly: "O that I did not love her so well! O tliatlhad never seen her who would makeof we a slave when I would be a man!" The gossips at the corners nod kuou ingly this morning, and Orrin, whose brow is moodier than the Colonel's, walks fiercely amongst thcin without word and without look. He is on his way to Juliet's house, and if their is enchantment left in smiles, I hid her use it, for her fate is trembling in the balance, aud may tip in a direction of which she little recks. Orrin has come back. Striding impetu ously into tiie room where I sat at work, he drew himself up until his figure showed it&elfin all its full and graceful propor tions. "Am I a man"" he asked, "or," with a Jiill in his voice brimmed with feeling, "am I a fool? She met me w ith such an unsus picious look, I'hilo, and bore herself with such an innocent air, that I not only could not say what I meant to say, but hae S remised lo do what I have snorn never to o accept the Colonel's unwelcome gift, and make her mistir-ss of the new stone house. ' "You are a man," I answered. For what are men hut fools where women of vneh enchantment vc concerned? lie groaned, perhaps at the secret rar casra hidden in mv tone, and sat down uu udden at Use table where I was writing. Yu did not s.e her," he cried. "You ! rot know with what charms she works, un she wishes to comfort and allure." Ah! did I not. "And Philo," he went on. alni'st humbly for him, "jou are mistaken if y-u think she had anyhand in the ruiu which lias come upon me. She had not. How I know it I cannot say, but I am le.idy to swear n, and you must forget any foolish fears I s;.ay have shown or any fooliH words 1 nifty have tittered in the first confusion of Jay iossand disappointment." "I will forget,' said I. "11.- fact is I do not understand her," he eagerly cxplaincl. "There was innocence inheruir, but tiiere was mockery, too, and she laughed as I talked of my grief and rage, a3 thauph she thought I was' playing a part. It was iar-rry laughter, and there was no ring of "dsehoofl in it. lint why shoald she .jiarnaiasi.' 1-. - - - This was a question I could not answer; j "The who could? Juliet is bevond the compre hension of us all. "But what is the use of plaguing myself with riddles?" he now asked, starting up as suddenly as he had sat down. "We are to be married in a month, and the Colonel I have seen the Colonel has promised to dance at our wedding. "Will it be in the new stone house? It would be a fitting end to this comedy if he were to dance in that." I thought as Orrin did about this, but with more seriousness perhaps; and it was not till after he had left me that I remem bered I had not asked whom he suspected of firing his house, now that lie was assured of the innocence of her who was most likely to profit by its burning. "Xow I understand Juliet!" was the ere with which Orrin burst into my prcs late this afternoon. "Men are saying ffc women whispering that I destroyed m own house, in order to save myself the shame of accepting the Colonel's offer while I had a roof of my own " Aud, burning with rage, he stamped his foot upou the ground, and shook his hand so threateningly in the direction of his fancied enemies tliat I felt some reflection of anger in my own breast, and said or tried to say that they could not know him as I did or they would never ac cuse him of so mean a deed, whatever else they might bring against him. "It makes me wild, it makes me mad, it makes me feel line leaving the town for ever!" was his hoarse complaint as I fin ished my feeble attempt at consolation. "If Juliet were half the woman she ought to be she would come and live with me in a log cabin in the woods belore she would accept the Colonel's house now. And to think that she, she should be affected by the opinions of the rest, and think me so destitute of pride that I irould stoop to sacrifice my own home for the sake of steppiug into that of a rival's. Oh woman, woman, what are you made of? Not of the same stuff as we men, surely." I strove to calm him, for he was striding ncrcciy and impatiently about the room. But at mv first word he burst forth with: "And her father, who should control her, aids and encouragC3 her follies. He is a slave to the Colonel, who is the slave of his own will " "In this case," I quietly observed, "his will seems to be most kindly. "That is the wost of iL' chafed Orrin. "If only he offered me opposition I could struggle w ith him. But it is his generosity I hate, and the humiliating position into which it thrusts me. And that is not all," he angrily added, while still striding feverishly about the room. "The Colonel seems to think us his property ever since we decided to accept his, aud as a miser watches over his gold so does he watch over us, till I scarcely have the op portunity now of speaking to Juliet alone. If I go to her house, there he is sitting like a black statue at the fireplace, aud when I would protest, and lead her into another room or into the garden, he rises and over whelms me with such courtesies and subtle disquisitions that I am tripped up in my endeavors, and do not know how to leave or how to stay. I wisli he would fall sick, or ins house tumble about his head! "Orrin, Orrin!" I cried. But he inter rupted my remonstrance with the words: "It is not decent. I am her atfianced husband now, aud he should leave us alone. Does he think I can ever forget that he used to court her once himself, and that the favors Fhe now shows me were once given as frceh , if not as honestly, to him? He knows I cannot forget, and he delights " "There, -Orrin," 1 broke in, "vou do him wrong. The Colonel is aboe your compre hension as he is above mine; but there is nothing malevolent in him." "I don't know about that," rejoined his angiy rival. "If he wanted to 'steal back mv bride he could take no surer course for doing it. Juliet, who is fickle as the wind, already looks from his face to mine as if she were "contrasting us. And lie is so handsome and suave and self-forgetting!" "And you," I could not help but say, "are so fierce and sullen even in vourlove." "I know it," was his halt-mutter ed retort, "but w hat can rou expect? Do vou think I will see him steel her heart away from be fore my eyes?" "It would be but a natural return on his part for your former courtesies," I could not forbear saying, in my own secret chagrin aud soreness of heart. "But he shall not do it," exclaimed Orrin, with a backward toss of his head, and a sud den thump of his strong hand on the table before me. "I won her once against all odds, and I will keep her if I have to dan the devil's smiles myself. He shall never again see her eyes rest longer on his face than mine. I will hold her by the power of my love till he finds himself forgotten, and for very shame steals away, ieaiing me with the bride he has himsell bestowed upon me. He shall never have Juliet back." "I doubt if he wishes to," I quietly re marked, as Orrin, weary with passion, ran lrom my presence. I do not know whether Orrin succeeded or not in his attempts to shame the Colonel from intruding upon his interviews with Juliet. I am only sure that Orrin's counte nance smoother itself after this day, and I heard no more complaints of Juliet's waver ing fidelity. I myself do not believe she has ever wavereil. Simply because she ought from every standpoint of good judg ment and taste to have perfcrrcd the Colonel and clung to him, she will continue to cleave to Orrin and make him the idol of her wayward heart. But it is all a mys tery to me aud one that does not make me very happy. I went up by myself to the new stone house to-day, and found that it only needs the finishing touches. Twenty workmen or more were there, and the great front door had just been brought and was leaning against the walls preparatory to being hung. Being curious to see how they were pro gressint; w ithin. I climbed up to one of the windows and looked in. and not satisfied I with what I could thu see, made my wr.y into the house and up the main staircase, which I was surprised to gee was nearly completed. The sound of the hammer and saw was all about me, and the calling of orders from above and below interfered much with any sentimental feelings I might have had. But I was not there to indulge in sentiment, so I roamed on liom room to room till I sud denly came upon a sight that drove every consideration of time and place from my mind, and made me for a moment forgetful of every other sentiment than admiration. This was nothing less than the glimpse which I obtained in passing one of the win dows, of the Colonel himself down on his knees on the scaffolding aiding the work men. So, so, he is not content with hurry ing the work forward by his means and in fluence, but is lending "the force of his ex ample, and actually handling the plane and saw in his anxiety not to disappoint Juliet in regard to the 'day she ha3 fixed for her marriage. A week ago I sould have told Orrin what I had s,ecn, but I had no desire to behold the old frowns come back to his face, so I determined to hold my silence with him. But Juliet ought to know with what manner of heart she has been so recklessly playing, so after stealing down the stairs I ielt I should never have mounted, I crept from the house and made my way as best I could through the huge forest trees that so thick ly clustered at its back, till I came upon the high road which leads to the village. "Walk ing straight to Juliet's house I asked to see her, and shall never forget the blooming beauty of her presence as she stepped into TIIF.Y WEBX the room and gave me her soft white hand to kies. As she is no longer the object of my wor ship and hardly the friend of my heart, I think I can speak of her loveliness now without being misunderstood. So I will let my pen trace for once a record of her clfarms, which in that hour were surely great enough to excuse the rivalry of which they had been the subject, and perhaps to account for the disinterestedness of the man who had once given her his heart. She is of medium height, this Juliet, and her form has that sway in it which you see in a lily nodding on its stem. But she is no lily in her most enchanting movements, but rather an ardent passion flower burning and palpitating in the suu. He bkin, which is milk white, has strange flushes in it. aud her eyes, which never look at you twice with "the same meaning, are blue, or gray, or black, as her feeling varies and her soul informing them is in a state of joy or trouble. Her most bewitching feature is her mouth, which has two dangerous dim ples near it that "go and come, sometimes withont her volition and sometimes' I fear, with her full accord and desire. Her hair is brown, and falls in such a mass of ringlets that no cap has ever yet been found which can confine it and keep it from weaving a golden net in which to entangled the hearts of men. When she smiles you feel like rushing forward; when she frowns you ques tion yourself humbly what you have done to merit a look so out of keeping with the plavful cast of her countenance and the arch bearing of her spirited young form. She was dressed, as she always is, simply, but there was infinite coquetry in the tie of the blue ribbon on her shoulder, and if a close cap of daitty lace could make a face look more entrancing I should like the privilege of seeing it. She was in an amiable mood aud smiled upon my homage like a fairy queea. , "I havecoiiie to pay my final respects to Juliet 1'layfair," I announced; "for by the tokens up yonder she will soon be classed among our matrons." My tone was forma1 and she looked sur prised at it, but my news was welcome, and so she made me a demure little courtsv be- foie saying iovously: "Yes, the house is nearly done, and to morrow Orrin and I are going up there to gether to see it. The Colonel has asked us to do this that we might say whether all is to our liking and convenience." "The Colonel is a man in a thousand," I began, but, seeing her frown in her old pettish way, I perceicd that she partook enough ot Orrin's spirit to dislike any allusion to one whose generosity threw her own selfishness into startling relief. So I said no more on this topic, but let my courtesy expend itself in good wishes, and came away at last with a bewildering remembrance of her beauty, which I am doing my best to blot out by faithfully re counting to myself the story of those infin ite caprices ot hers which have come so near wrecking more than one honorable heart. I do not expect to visit her again until I pay my respects to her as Orrin's wife. It is the day when Orrin and Juliet are to visit the new house. If I had not known this from her own lips I should have known it from the fact that the workmen all left at noon, in order, as one of them said, to leave the little lady more at her case. I saw- them coming down the road, aud had the curiosity to watch for the appearance of Orrin anil the Colonel at Juliet's gate, but they did not come, and assured by this that "they meditated a later visit than I had antici pated, I went about my work. This took me up tlte road, and as it chanced, led me within a few rods of the wood within which lies the new stone house. I had not meant to go there, fori have haunted the place enough, but this time there was leason for it, and satisfied with the fact I endeavored to fix my mind on other matters and forgot who was likely at any moment to enter the iorest behind me. But when one makes an effort to lorget he is sure to remember all the more keenly, and 1 was just picturing to my mind Juliet's face and Juliet's pretty air of mingled pride and disdain as the first sight of the broad stone front burst upon her, when I heard through the stillness of the woods the faint sound of a saw, which coming from the direction of the house seemed to say that some one was still at work there, As'l laj understood that all the men had been given a half holiday, I felt somewhat surprised at this, and unconsciously to myself moved a few steps nearer tbq opening where the house stood, when suddenly all was still aud I could not for a moment determine whether I had really heard the sound of a saw or not. Annoyed at myself. nd ashamed of an interest that made every trivial incident connected with this affair of such moment to me, I turned back to my work, and in a few moments had finished it and left the wood, when what was my astonishment to see Orrin coming from the same place, with his face turned toward the village, and a hardy, determined expression upon it which made me first wonder and then ask myself if I really comprehended this man or icuow what he cherished in his heart of hearu. Going straight up to him I said: "Weli, Orrin, what's this? Coming away from the house instead of going to it? I understand that you and Juliet were ex pecting to visit it together this afternoon." He paused, startled and his eyes fell as I looked him straight in the face. ""We are going to visit it," he admitted, "but I thought it would be wiser for me to inspect the place first and Eee if all was right. An unfinished building has so many traps in it, rou know." And he laughed loudly and long, but his mirth was forced, and I turned and looked after him as he strode away, with a vague but uneasy feel ing I did not myself understand. "Will the Colonel go with you?" I called out. He wheeled about as if stung. "Yes " he shouted, "the Colonel will go with us. Did you suppose he would allow us the satisfaction of going alone? I tell you, Philo," and he strode back to my side, "the Colonel considers us his property. Is not that pleasant? His property! And so we are," he fiercely added, "while we are his debtors. But we shall not be his debtors long. When we are married if we are married I will take Juliet from this place if I have to carry her away by force. She shall never be the mistress of this house." "Orrin! Orrin!" I protested. "I have said it," was his fierce rejoinder, and, he left me for the second time and passed hurriedly down the street. I was therefore somewhat taken aback when a little while later he reappeared with Juliet and the Colonel, in such a mood of BOTH DTIAD. forced gayetv that more than one turned to look after them as they passed merrily down the road. Will Juliet never be the mistress of that house? I think she will, my Orrin. That dimpled smile of hers has more force in it than that dominating will of yours. If she chooses to hold her own she will hold it, and neither you nor the Colonel can sav her nay. AVhat did Orrin tell ine? That she would never be mistress of that house? Orrin was right, she never will; but who could have thought of a tragedy like this? Xot I, not I; and if Orrin did and planned it But let me tell the whole jnst as it happened, keeping down my horror till the last word is written and I have plainly before me the awful occurrences of this fearful day. They went, the three, to that fatal house together, and no man, saving myself per haps, thought much more about the matter till we began to see Juliet's father peering anxiously from over his gate in the direc tion of the wood. Then we realized that the afternoon had long passed, and that it was getting dark; and going up to the old man, I asked whom he was looking for. The answ er was as we expected. "I am looking for Juliet. The Colonel took her and Orrin up to their new house, but they do not come back. I had a dreadful dream last night, and it frightens me. Why don't they come? It must be dark enough in the wood. "They will soon come," I assured him, and moved off, for I do not like Juliet's father. But when I passed by there again a half hour later and found the old man still stand ing bareheaded and with craning neck at his post, I became very uneasy myself, and proposed to two or three neighbors, whom I found standing about, that we should go towaid the woods and see if all were well. They agreed, being affected, doubtless, like myself, by the old man's fears, and as we proceeded down the street, others joined us till we amounted in number to a half-dozen or more. Yet, though the occasion seemed a strange one, we weie not really alarmed till we found ourselves at the "woods and realized how dark they were and how still. Then I began to feel an oppression at-heart, and trod with careful and hesitating steps till we came into the open space in which the house stands. Here it was lighter, but oh! how still. I shall never forget how still; when suddenly a shrill cry broke from one amongst us, and I saw Bulph Ur phistone pointing with finger frozen in horror at something which lay in ghastlv outlinc upon the broad stone which leads up to the gap of the great front door. w nat was it.' e dared not approach to see, yet we dared not linger quiescent. One by oiie we started forward till finally we all stood in a horrified circle about the thing that looked like a shadow, and yet was not a shadow, but some horrible nightmare that made us gasp and shudder tnl the moon came suddenly out, and we saw that what we feared and shrank from were the bodies ot Juliet and Orrin, he lying with face up turned and arms thrown out, and she with her head pillowed on his breast as it cast there in her last faint moment of conscious ness. They were both dead, having fallen through the planks of the scaffolding, as was shown by the fatal gap open to the moonlight above our heads. Dead! dead! and though no man there knew how, the terror of their doom and the retribution it seemed to bespeak went home to our hearts, aud we bowed our heads with a simultane ous cry of terror, which in that first mo ment was too overw helming even for grief. The Colonel is nowhere to be seen, and after the first few minutes of benumbing horror, we tried to call aloud his name. But the cries died in our throat, and presently one amongst us withdrew into the house to search, and then another and another, till I was left alone in awful attendance upou the dead. Then I began to realize my own an guish, and with some last fragment of secret jealousy or was it from some other less definite but equally imperative feeling? was about to stoop forward and lift her head from a pillow that I somehow felt de filed it, when a quick hand drew me aside, and looking up, I sawltalph standing at my back. He did not speak, and his figure looked ghostly in the moonlight, but his hand was pointing toward the house, and when I moved to follow him, he led the wav into the hollow entrance and up the stairway till we came to the upper story u here he stopped, and motioned me to ward a door opening into one of the rooms. There were several of our number already standing there, so I did not hesitate to ap proach, and as I went the darkness in which I had hitherto moved disappeared before the broad band of moonlight shining into the room before us, and I saw, darkly sil houetted against a shining background, the crouchiu? figure of tho Colonel, staring with hollow eyes and maddened mien out of the unfinished window through which in all probability the devoted couple had stepped to their destruction. 2b Be Concluded Next Saturday. EUROPE Tho Special Cable Letters to Till; DIPATCII iKingalltho news of Great Britain and the Continent. GUY FA WKES LEADER. The Ancient Home of tJie Man Who Was at the Head of the Famous LONDON GUNPOWDER CONSPIRACY. Asliby St. Ledgers, Its Description, Its long, Eventful History. A LETTER IX THE WAKEMAN SECIES fCORRFSrOXDEXCE OP Till". DIRrATCir.1 Asnev St. Ledgers, England, Sept. 21. One feels quite a prideful thrill of original discovery if he can hit an objector place in all Europe where the great Ameri can globe trotter has not already come; took a hasty glance; photographed everybody and everything with a snap camera or upon his majestic memory; chipped off a piece of the object or shrine for his collection; made half a dozen notes with a stylographic pen for future reference; cut his name and the date of his visit upon any available wood work about the spot, or otherwise left his mark; and then with a "biff!" and "zip!" projected himself mcteorically through space to the next pleasing or hideous object of interest. I have found one spot in Great Britain where these is at least no local record of the species. The fact is a noteworthy one and the place itself posseses extraordinary in terest. It is called Ashby St. Ledgers. To be very definite regarding a locality so dis tinctive for its so far quite unknown bean ties and interest, it is but a tiny "village four miles north from Daventry, 16 from Northampton, in the middivision of the county of Northampton, hundred of Taws ley, petty sessional division, union and county court district of Daventry, rural deanery of Daventry, archdeaconry of Northampton and diocese of Peterborough." ITS ONE CLAIM TO CELr.BP.ITr. Tho taxgatherers of the crown have thus minutely located the village and parish and to make it perfectly accessible to those who "do" Ireland, Scotland and England iu one one week or less it should be added that Ashby St. Ledgers is but 13 minutes' walk westward from Wilton station, on the main line of the London and Northwestern Bail way from London to the noted school town of Bugby, and that the most noted conspir acy in English history, popularly known as "Guy Fawkcs' Gunpowder Plot," was concocted within the sunny, slumberous precincts of its now crumbling and ivy-covered walls. Stripped of their usual bigoted verbiage, it was a plan originated by Sir Itobert Catcsby, lord of this very manor, and other malcontents, including Thomas Percy, Christophar and John "Wright, Thomas and Itobert winter, one Bates, and their brave tool, Guido (or Guy) Faux (or Fawkes), representing the enemies of James I., to remove an obnoxious government at a single explosion o' gunpowder, instead of by a great and protracted waste of gunpowder through prolonged cruel civil war. TIIK DETAILS Or THE PLOT. They rented a fine cellar immediately un der Parliament House and succeeded in concealing within it 30 barrels and 4 hogs heads of gunpowder, "covered witli billets and faggots of wood, great iron bars, stones," eta. besides young and ambitious Mr. Fawkcs, "wrapped in a cloak and oooteti anu spurred, aim provided witn, "a dark lanthorn and a tinder boxe with which to set olF the touchwood," which, com municating with the 30 barrels and 4 hogs heads of gunpowder, at the instant of the King's convening Parliament, November 5, 100.1, was expected to give immediate relief to the political situation. However, by means of an anonymous let ter to Lord Monteagle, whom some one of the conspirators desired to save, the plot was discovered, young Mr. Fawkes, whom the pictures represent as having for some time neglected iiis hair and beard, was dog ged out of his mysterious surroundings, spread upon a convenient rack, inducing a confession, and shorly after hanged; while 1'ercy Catesby, "Winter and the two "Wrights werechased from this place through "War wickshire to Holbeach, in Staffordshire, where they were all slain, fighting to the death, except "Winter. He was captured alive, to die on the gallows; and a sufficient number of others, directly or supposititi- ously connected witli tins mad ellort. win:nr thk conspiracy 'was born. The manor of St. Ledgers, the former home of the arch conspirator, Sir Robert Catesby, is one of the most ancient in Britain. It possesses an eventful history. I am indebted for its romantic narrative to my host, Major II. 1. Scnhouse, its pres ent proprietor and lord of the manor. Aside from its peculiar interest, in view of St. Ledger's individual historic associa tions, it is most curious and fascinatiug as illustrative of the extraordinarily recorded, not traditional, age of innumerable English estates, tlieir frequent strange vicissitudes, aud the almost purely historic olumes which might be written upon nearly any single piece of entailed manorial property in England. The manor was granted by William the Conquerer to Hugh de Grentmaisnil over 800 years ago. At the time "Domesday Book," the first tax book of England, was prepared (1080-0), this Hugh de Grent maisnil held four "hides" of land in .Ashby. There were eight acies of meadow, and tfie whole was then valued at GO shillings. This Hugh accompanied the Conquerer on his expedition to England and was rewarded for his services with upwaid of 100 manors in dillereut counties, 20 of which lay in North amptonshire. THE HElnSIIIP'S SUCCESSION. He was associated with Odo, Bishop of Bayeaux, aud "William Fitz-Osborn in exe cuting the high office of justiciary of Eng land two years after the conquest," and died in 1091, six days after he had assumed a re ligious hauit. t He was succeeded by his son Itobert, from whom the estate descended in 1122 to Ivo de Grentmaisnil, his oldest surviving brother and heir. This Ivo joined the con federacy in support of lobert,Duke of Nor inandy,"in the reign of Henry I., but the en terprise failing, and being heavily fined for his delinquency, he applied for protection to Kobert.Earl of Melient,one of the King's chief counselors, at whose suggestion he un dertook a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. For this purpose the Earl loaned him 500 marks, or about 333, for which lie mort gaged to him all his possessions in England, by" way of security, for 15 years, on condi tion that it should be returned to his son Ivo, whom the Earl engaged on oath should be married to his own niece, the daughter of jlie Earl of "Warwick. The King ratified his agreement, but Ivo, the father, dying on his pilgrimage, the son was deprived of both his wife and his inheritance. Another Hugh de Grentmaisnil, successor of he young Ivo, appears to have subse quently recovered his patrimony, which de scended to his daughter, Pctronilla, who, marrying Bobert Blanchmaines, Earl of Leicester, the grandson of Itobert, Earl of Mellent, his possessions were all transferred into that family. UNDER THE LANCASTER KEOIME. In the rcigh of Henry II., Ashby con tained four "hides" of the fee of the Earl of Leicester, and subsequently became parcel of the duchy of Lancaster. From the reign of King John to the latter part of the reign of Edward III., this lordship was in the hand of the family De Crawford, when Emma, daughter of Itobert de Crawford car ried it in marriage to John de Catesby, of Ladbroke, in "Warwickshire. S'r "William Catesby, a grandson of John, was one of the three favorites who ruled England under Bichard III., the others be ing Sir Bichard BadclifTe and Viscount Lovell, giving rise to the memorable distich: Tlie rat, the cat and Lovell our dog, Kulo all Kngland under tlie hos tile "hog" bcitig an illusion to King Rich ard having adopted a boaV as one of the heraldic supporters upon his regal escut cheon. For this poetical libel Collingbourne, its author, was expeditiously, "hanged, headed and quartered" on Tower Hill, Lon don. Sir "William Catesby obtained grants of various forfeited manors and lucrative wardships; and attending King Bichard in his last expedition against the Earl of Rich mond he ,was taken prisoner on Bosworth Field. LOST HIS HEAD AND HIS LAND. Three days after he was beheaded at Lei cester. His lands were escheated to the Crown and granted to Sir James Blount, but were restored by act of Parliament to his son George in 1100. George Catesby, Esq., was succeeded by his son "William, a minor, who, dving without issue, the es tates descended to his younger brother, Bichard, who was member from "Warwick shire in the famous Parliament which proved so destructive to the English mon asteries. Sir "William Catesby, grandson and suc cessor to Bichard, was cited with others be fore the infamous court of star chamber in 1581, charged with harboring Jesuits and and being present at a secret celebration of the mass, ot which offenses they were con victed. Sir Bobert Catesby, liis son and successor, who originated the gunpowder plot on these grounds, lived until pursued and shot to deatli at Holbeach, Stafford shire, in 1005, in this picturesque old manor house. Catesby's estates having been confiscated by the Crown, the lordship and advowson of tne manor were granted, in loll, to air AVilliam Irving in fee. They were subse quently sold by Irving to Brian I'anson and Ann, his wife, with whose descendants they continued until 1703. INHERITED BY A WOMAN HATER. Theyweie purchased by Joseph Ashby, Esq.. and from him they descended to the late Lady Senhouse. who, dying in 1850, left the property to her only surving child. Captain William Senhouse, a bachelor and confirmed woman hater. On his decease, in 1884, Major Humphrey Pockington Scn kouse was called from his estates in Cum berland to act as executor, and found to his surprise that the splendid old property had been devised to him. This is a long "search" or "abstract of title," as the real estate law yers would call it. But what a grand his toric sweep it has! Approaching the place along tho highway from the southwest, you suddenly como upon the daintiest and most flower spangled village in England. It is a tiny collection of dependencies upon the manor; but there can nowhere else ba found such flower em bowered homes. Just at the northern edge of this, the whole forming a striking back ground to the side broidery of one of the finest wide, iiigh overarclnngs of ancient ash trees I have ever seen, first appears a huge wall, high, thick, ivy-hung and mossy. Surmounting this is a wonderfnlly pictur esque old gatehouse with two stories of chambers and an attic the veritable meet ing room of the conspirators. THE SURROUNDING STKUCTUKES. Behind this are other venerable outbuild ings, half a thousand years old and in per fect maze. To the right and higher, shows a grim, square Norman tower and the mossy roof of the parish church, whose "living'' is within the gift of the lord of the manor. Behind and above all are the many massive gables of this most splendidly fantastic manor house within the English midland shires. The church itself is a study in ancient English ecclesiastical architecture, is extra ordinarily rich in monuments and brasses, and possesses many evidences of having been largely restorcdand beautified by John de Catesby about 1412. Its age, however, dates from many hundred years before that time. Many monuments of the Catesbys are found in the chancel wuicn escaped de struction, from the place being so sequest ered a one, at the time of the terrible pub lic outburst against the fatal treason of Kobert Catesby. But a portion of its floor is covered with flags, a suggestion of extraordinary an tiquity, as well of the beautiful village "rushbearing" processions, which were cer tain to have annually been seen within it. Its traditional south porch is as quaint a study as that of ancient Grasmere Church in Westmoreland. A private way leads to the hall of the lord of the manor. ST. LEDGER'S HISTORIC TULIP TREE. At Ashby St. Ledgers it passes through the ancient courtyard wall and winds across a noble terraced lawn and garden. At the rear of these, marking the boundary of the highway, is a majestic line of ash trees. Half waV between the Manor House and these stands the historic tulip tree of St. Ledgers, indeed, if not of England. Its girth at 4 feet from the gronnd is 10 feet and 2 inches. Its greatest spread of branch is 8S feet from north to south, 70 leet from east to west, and its height is 77 feet. The manor house is believed to be nearly 700 years old. The fronts retain their origi nal chaiacter, and are finished with gables and an open parapet. The east front is modernized. In the hall of the most an cient portion every oak panel bears a now almost indistinguishable painting of a head or an armorial device. The entire interior is a labyrinth of wainscoting, curious sunken and secret depositories, dark old hallways, wondroitsly carved chimney pieces and ian tastic stairways, balustrades and landings. It is believed "that the cellars coutain walled up secret passages to distant places of exit, and in one I found a huge stone altar, where formerly Christian England com pelled the pious to worship for fear of the gallows of Tower Hill. Edgai: L. Wakeman. FICTION Edgar Fawcett's great story, "American rush," is now running in the Sunday issue of THE DISPATCH. Tlie lit erary feature of tl.e jear. malTwhiskey F0R MEDICINAL USE NO FUSEL OIL THIS PtiSK MEH1CI.NAL WJllMvKV Is the best remedy lor Coughs, Colds, Chills, Malaria, Asthma, Bronchitis, and PNElf MOXIA. It relieves WOMEN of tho troubles incident to their sex. To MEX it is tho greatest boon, as it lclieycs that weary feeling m annoying to the business man. Duffy's Pure Mul( Whiskey can bo obtnined lrom your druggist or ) our grocer. Insist on having it. TaKe no substitute as it is the ONLY PUKE MEDICINAL ONE. Send lor our book. THE DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO. JIOCHESTEK, X. Y. M ESTABLISHED 1X7& BLACK GIN KIDNEYS, H Is a relief and sure cure, for gathe Urinnry Organs, Gravel Bladder. The Swiss Stomacn Bitters are a sure cure for D ysnensia. toads m auk Liver Complaint and every species of Indigestion. Wild Cherry Tonic, the most popular prep aration for cuie of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis and lung ttoubles. Either of the above, $1 por bottle, or 6 for $5. If your druggist does not handle thes foods write to WM. F. ZOELLEK, sole M'f'n 'ituburg, Pa, deSO-K-Tz ) isS3 BB3 A Electrical and Medical Treatment at 507 Pcnn Avenue. In order to more extensively introduce onr renowned method of scientific electri cal and medical treatment for disease, the Electhopathic Institute, of 507 Pesx ave kck. will treat all patients applying durine TIIE NEXT 30 DAYS FOK TIIE SU3I OF SIX DOLLARS PEK MONTH. This amount to include all medicines and the proper ap plication of all needed electrical treatment. Thisoirer holds' good until October 22. and applies to old patients as well as newcomers within that time. IVIio They Are. The staff of the Electropathic Institute recognize the fact that thcyare not open to the charge of "nameless," or to that of nsing obscure or doubtful people in any way, in connection with their institute. In proof of this we call attention to the fact that Lewis G. Davis, M. D., is at the -head or tho staff of physicians and surgeons of the Elec tropathic Institute of jOTl'enn avenue. Pitts burg. Dr. Davis graduated first at Jefferson Medical College or Philadelphia in 1879. After two years of private practice he took the post-graduate course of llellovno Hos pital Medical Collose of New York City; graduatlnpln 18S2. In addition to theso dis tinctions. Dr. Davis has special-course diplo mas in Physical Diagnosis tinder Professor Janoway; in Chemistry nnder Professor Doremus. in Skin Diseases under Professor Shoemaker, and in Surgical Anatomy under i'loiessor iieen Hisstaffof able associates have no less honorable credentials of their traininp, experience, skill and knowledge needed to practice medicino safely and suc cessfully. "WHAT THEY CAN DO. Mr. Thomas F. Robinson, tho well-knowrn boat-builder of Lafayotto street, Hazelwood, Twenty-third ward, says of tho Electro pathlc'Instttute. at 607 Penn avenue: Thomas F. Robinson, Ixifayette street, wood. Hazel- "After I began to recover lrom tho grip I was attacked with facial neuralgia, and suffered pain, continuous and almost crazing, in my face and head. I was also afflicted witn lumbago. The constant strain upon tne finally resulted in complete nerv ous prostration and insomnia or sleepless ness, that nearly set me crazy. I was in duced to apply to the physicians of the Electropathic 'Institute, at No'. 507 Pcnn avenue, this city, and was under treat ment less than a week when I began to grow betterandlam now completely enred. I cannot speak too highly of the phvsicians of the Pittsburg Bloctropathic Institute." Eluctroptl Institute, 507 PENN AVE., PITTSBURG. PA. (DON'T MISTAKE TIIE NUMBER). The physicians in charge of this Institute are reoisteked ajtd qualified physicians. They receive and successfully tieat all patients suffering from chronic ailments: MEBVOUS DISEASES, BLOOD DISEASES. BUEDMA- Tisar, paralysis, neuralgia, scrofnla and oatarru and all diseases of the Eye and Ear. Operations in electrical surgery performed by the consultinephysiciansof tho Institute. Isrunkenncss Clirrd. Opium Habit rurd. Consultation and diagnosis free. Ladies will lind a. trained female assistant in charge of their special department. Office hours: a. it. to 12 Jr.. 2 to 5 p. it., 1 to 0 p. it. Sun day: 10 a. m. to i p. jc. se2G-wsau The Liebig COMPANY Have for twenty-flvo years been putting up the famous product which stirred medical circles when flr3t invented and given to tho world by the renowned chemist, Justus von Liebig. Their EXTRACT OF BEEF Is known around the world and lias late ly been carried into "Darkest Africa" by Stanley. It is unapproachable for purity, flavor and benellcial effects. As Beep Tea, delicious and refieshing. Indispen sable in Improved and Economic Cooker-. Gennino ? . of Justus von Liebig with jfirL&cj signatnro " J se2G 75-WS t Visit every other place in the city and you -won't find such a magnifi cent display of Fall Novelties under one roof. There are so many new things that we cannot enumerate half of them. Come and see for yourself the greatest exposition of stylish, seasonable and fashionable wear ever at tempted in Pittsburg. IUCnifll7ErAO "e warm weather is now about over, and there'll is Si U ft B LhH ! be a brisk demand for neckwear. We show a large and carefully selected line one that will surely please all comers. High novelties in Feather Boas, Feather Ruchings, Ostrich Feather Col larettes, etc., from Si-5 to $2$. A Word About Underwear ! We have nothing but new goods in stock no shop-worn garments to palm off upon unsuspecting purchasers. Prices are nevertheless down to a fine point. Just read and see : Ribbed" Vests, long sleeves, Cotton, Merino and "Wool, 2oc, 48c, 7oc, Doc. Extraordinary values. Xatural "Wool Vests, o0c, 74c and Si. Fine Merino Vests, Ujc, 40c, 45c Fine Kibbed Drawers, ,"0e to 51. Misses' fine Natural Wool Vests, 2oc to 7."c. Misses' fine Scarlet "Wool Vests, 2."c to7."c TIE IB 4 lperbavin 510-518 MARKET STREET. ZDCCATIOXAI PENNSYLVANIA MIUTAKY ACADEMY, Chester, Pn.. 30th year, open" Sept. 16. A MIMTAKY college. Civil Engineering, Chemistry, Architect, nre, Arts. A preparatory conrso of one year. Circulars of Mr. F. G. Paulson, 1 "Wood St., city. COL. CIIAS. E. HYATT, President. Jv3-25-ws LUTIIEUV1LLE SEMINAHY (NEAK BAL TIMORE) for younst ladies. $225 per year. 39tli year. Modern convenience?, largo campns, fnll faculty, thorough train ing, homo comforts. Send lor catalogue. REV. J. II. TURNER, A. M., Principal, Lutherville, Md. Jy21-77-TTS VrEW RAPID PHONOGRAPHY AND JLl typewriting and complete business course taught at Park Institute. 201 North ave., Allegheny. New term onens Septem ber!. Evening sessions September 23. Cat alozues and iournal to any address free. au20-TT3 LEVI LUDDEN, A. M Principal. PITTSBURG ART SCHOOL Eighth year opens Sept. 23. Instructors: GEORGE IIETZEL. JOHN V. BEATTY. MARY II. It.VRNETT. H,rS""sti apply promptly. Address MliXs, 7- JOHN" W. BEATTY. PrinciDal. 413 Wood street. seo-36Tu3 URSULINE ACADEMY, OAKLAND. Boardingand day schools. Reopens Tuesday, j of five months,$130. Children nndcrls'yearsof age, $125. Day schools for girls. Pupils taken lrom tne age 01 1 10 1. Terms varyins irom M to $35. Tuition includes all branches of an English education, with French or Ger man, elocution, vocal music, calesthenics, outline drawing and fancy work. Private lessons in music, French, German, drawing and painting, at moderate terms. For fur ther particulars apply to Mother Superior. anl3-89-TT3 CTTIRIRir UNIVERSITY, SIXTH ST. A new management. Increased attend ance. The best discipline. The best In struction. English Training School for boy a and girls. Ten higher courses of study. Thirty experienced teachers. Students ad mitted daily. Tuitions reasonable. Day and Evening sessions. Send for catalogue. H. M. KOIVE, Prest. se24-D Duijuesiie Conservatory of Music. Carl Retter ani Clias. Davis Carter, Slnsicat Directors A new school of music to be coiulurtetl on tlie plan of the Koyal Conservatory of Munich. Germany. Full corps of instructors. Kijrhtcom uletc departments, free advantages In class In struction superior to any In the country- A thor ough and complete course of instruction for grad uation in each department, fcend for prospectus. CHAS. DAVIS CAKTEK. Manager, Dunuesno College building. Diamond st.v opp. Court IIoue. AND TYPEYRITING Taught Day and Evening at DUFF'S COLLEGE. For terms, call at the College office, 49 FIFTH AVE. an 12-42-3 &ORS LANKE ARE THE STRONGEST NONEGENUINEWITHOUTtheSA LABEL. There are 100 5A styles, each at Us cost, the best you can buy. 5A Tinker is Best of AU. ElA Extra Tet ranks noit to 5A Bafcer. 6A Horse Blankets sold by all dealers. ael!U5-3 GP.ATEFUL-COMFORTIXG. EPPS'S COCOA. BREAKFAST. "Tlra thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nu trition. and by a careful application of the Una properties of wen-eltcted Cocoa, Mr. Eppshaa grovided our breakfast table with a delicately avored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the ludicloususeof suca articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every ten dency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies ara floating around us ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well lortifled with pure blood and a properly nourished frame." tinj Srrvir Gazette. 3Iade imply with boiling water or milk. Soldi onlv In half-pound tins, by grocers. labelled thus; JAMEri EPI'S & CO., Homceopatblc Chemists, London, England. myl&-iO-TU3 Misses' fine Merino Wool V ests, 25c to 50c Gents' fine White Underwear, 50c, 75c, 51. Gents' Gray Camel's Hair, 50c, 75c, ?1 to 52 50. Gents' fine Scarlet Wool, 51 to 51 75. Gents fine Fancy Wool, 51 to 51 75. LITEST li CAPES, me .' jb3 m JA:zd st baa ea TS The accompanying cut illustrates one of our new styles of Capes which will be extensively worn this season. They are made with and with out sleeves. AVe would invite a critical inspec tion of these garments, knowing that the assort ment is unapproached by any other house in this section. Our stock of plain che.viot and fur trimmed Jackets is also unsurpassed in point of beauty and variety. Prices are sufficiently low to make trade brisk in the warmest veather. se20-TT33U i -. - . . . i. t ' tatu t i&J&wMg; r vre MKt . WVdVA3&i3& fc,l i. &J. j & - . xriirjs Ay. XzLe,iI&-XIb& i i, t iiiaki. jBjaiit..;vjaajBafc-fSftMTg3rejiafcj,j.. . itsraj&vUj&j i MttmitmSSSSHsSiii . , .. r-- .'' mavg?gEn-ifc ts BNB&mVE&&fri4iMMMMMMMMMMMMMMWBEKKB(BlmmMMKKHKmmmMwKKKmKKRKR t"'Tr"