11? fl 7 J Jlii S F A XK 3 O 11 TIME 11 , Editor and Proprietor. "Vol. IV. In Published WecMy, At New Rloomfield, Penn'a. BY FRANK MORTIMER. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. OXE DOLLAll PER YEA 11 1 y Oil 10 CEXTS PEIt MONTH, I TV ADVANCE. Dr. Spencer's Crime. J1Y CLARA AUGUSTA. I WAS sitting alone in my office, half dozing over an interminable article on lefective nutrition in the last Medical He me. The fire in the grate was low, the night K-as stormy, and the clock was on the stroke f eleven. I was just about to turn off lie gas and retire, for being a bachelor I lopt in a room connected with my office,. khen there was a pull at my bell. I started up suddenly, for this was some- Ving new. Middlebury was a decorous fort of a place, and people usually man- ged to be taken sick at seasonable hours. Old Mrs. Jerome had been threatening o die for the past five years, and at every isit I paid her she informed me solemnly hat when the decisive moment did come he desired me to be present. But as noth ing ailed the old lady beyond now and then tidigestion from too much high living, I ad never yet been called upon to be pres- nt at her death. Now, I thought, it must be that Mrs. erome is going. I took up my night-lamp and went to tho oor. A strong gust or damp, sleety wind early extinguished the light, but shading with my hand I dimly discerned the rm of a woman. "Come in," said I, holding open the oor, but she declined with a gesture of npatience. " You must come out ?" she replied, in sharp, imperative tone, "and be quick bont it." I put on my overcoat without demur, licked the surgery door, and stepped out lto the storm. As I did so, tho woman lid a firm hand on my arm, and putting ier face close to mine, said : "Dr. Lockwood, can you keep a secret?" "I think so, madam.'! "Swear it." "Is this secret of yours of professional iharacter? That is, is it anything you ish to confide to mo as a medical man ?" "It is." "Very well, then, I swear it I" "That is right. A man respects an tth, though why he should, is a mystery, uce most men's mouths are running over itn them." " Whither are you taking me, and for Iiat purpose ?" "To Clifton House, to see the mistress." I started. Clifton House was the old ansion recently taken by Dr. Spencer, a lianger to every one in Middlebury.. encer was a tall, dark, rather distinguish- looking man, who had hung out his u in the village only a few doors above hie, but as yet he had got no practice. He was unsocial in the extreme. He oided his neighbors persistently, and icn he did speak, he was not likely to at mpt prolonging the conversation. He had a wifo, it is said, but no one ev saw her. She was an invalid ; and a iss Melrose a friend of the family pre led over tho establishment, and sat at the ad of the table. AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY Nov Uloomfielcl, I3si., October 11. 1S70. Miss Melrose was very beautiful, and won tho admiration of all who visited at Clifton House, by her graco of manner and her fascinating conversation. "As we walk along," said my compan ion, "let mo explain to you just what it is necessary you should know. My mistress is ill." "I beg your pardon is it Mrs. Spencer, or Miss Melrose?" She laughed bitterly. "Miss Melrose ! I would stab her to tho heart sooner than own her for a mistress ! My mistress is a lady ; noble, loyal, and of gentle birth. It is an honor to any one to serve my mistress." " And she is ill? How long since?" "Ever since she married him curse him !" she muttered in a fierce undcrtono ; "but I must not get excited. I must tell my story, or rather hers. Two years ago through tho desire of her dying father, whom she loved passionately, Alicia Ilern don became James Spencer's wifo. Before that she was a healthy, blooming girl im mediately after the marriage sho began to fail. Do you see anything singular in that sir?" sho asked keenly. " Not necessarily." Let me enlighten you further. Dr. Spen cer at one time was engaged to Miss Lu cille Melrose, but he broke the engagement and married my mistress instead. Miss Melrose was poor as Job's turkey ; Miss Herndon was an heiress. And Dr. Spencer was deeply in debt and hard pressed by his creditors. Do you see any thing singular in that?" "Perhaps. Goon." " When my mistress married Spencer, she was only seventeen, and sho had been taught to obey her father in everything. Sho was a gentle affectionate child, and it would have been easy for Spencer to have won her love. But he did not care for that, it was her money ho wanted. It paid his debts, it bought him fast horses, it set his table with costly dishes, and it put it in his power to keep Miss Melrose robed like a queen. And all this time my mistress has been slowly but surely failing. And look you, Dr. Lockwood, I believe that she is not dying of disease, but of " She low ered her voice to a whisper as she spoke the word,, "poison !" "Impossible I This is a grave charge " " Of poison given her by her husband, who at her death will have sole control of all hor property, and be free to marry Miss Melrose! There is no time, to explain to you in detail the ono-thousand-and-one circumstances which have led me to this belief, for we are almost at the door. It is never the case that both Spencer and Miss Melrose are out of the house at the same time, or I should have called another phy sician before ; but to-night they are called away by the death of Miss Mclroso's sister, and will not bo back until to-morrow. With tho consent of my mistress I came for you, and oh, Dr. Lockwood,. I pray you save my dear mistress ! I nursed her when her mother died and left her a help less infant all through her babyhood and her innocent youth she was like an owu child to me 1 and now to see her fading hourly before my eyes ! Good Heaven I if I knew beyond all doubt that he was guilty; his life should pay the forfoit !" I was already beginning to feel a strong interest in this Mrs. Spencer, although I had never seen her, and began to take it for granted that she was a much-abused woman, and liko her old nurse I was in clined to feel a keen animosity for Dr. Spencer, as a man who had inflicted serious wrougs upon a defenceless woman. Mrs. Spencer received me iu hor cham ber. It was on the second floor, and was furnished with with exquisite elegance. Everything in the room bespoke the taste and delicacy of the ocoupant. The warm air was fragrant with the faint odor of heliotrope, and glancing around I saw the purple blossoms and green leaves in an ala baster caso on tho ledge of tho south win dow. Sho was a woman, who, once seen, could never be forgotten. I lmvo met in my life many beautiful woman but never one so lovely. She was tall and slight, with purely oval face, large, liquid eyes, and a dash of hec tic in her cheeks, which is never seen iu any person's countenance whilo in perfect health. She received mo as I now know she did everything, gracefully, and though there was a slight embarrassment in her manner when I spoko of her illness, sho answered my professional inquiries without hesita tion. As for myself, I laid aside all false deli cacy, and questioned her plainly as to her symptoms. Mis. Ilurd, her nurse, remain ed in tho room, and, added many little im portant items of information. When she spoke of her husband it was with a sort of hopeless sadness which dis tressed me greatly. Not a breath of suspicion against him in hci answers to my questions, and I felt sure that at present she knew nothing of what Mrs. Ilurd had such serious appre hensions. I was glad that it was so, for with her finely-strung organism it might have produced serious results. I made my examination of the patient as close as I could, and drew my own conclu sions. I could have sworn that Mrs. Spen cer daily swallowed arsenic in small quan tities, and the deadly drug was telling fear fully upon a constitution never".very robust. She said in answer to my questions, that she had had no physician except her hus band. He had thought himself better ac quainted with her case, and, therefore, bet ter qualified to treat it. He nevor left med icine with her to take ; he always brought it himself fresh from his office, and admin istered it personally. There was littlo enough that I could do in such a case. Anxious to do everything, the very circumstances of the affair left me nearly powerless. A charge of such a grave nature, of course, I could not make against Dr. Spen cer without tho amplest proof. If I hinted a suspicion every one would at once set it down to professional prejudice ; and if I could not substantiate my statement, the doctor could make ino pay dearly for such a slander uttered against him. The only dependence seemed to be in Mrs. Ilurd. To her I unbosomed myself freely. I told her, without reserve, that I believed Dr. Spencer was killing his wife by slow poison, and besought her to be con stantly on the watch to save the victim, and to discover some proof by which we could fasten his guilt upon him. She smiled grimly, and promised obedi ence. I gave her a powerful antidote for the poison I suspected and went home, strangely perturbed and auxious in mind. I did not sleep that night, and all tho next day I was in a high fover of excitement. A ring at the bell made me tremble a stop on the gravel outsido my office stopped my breath. I hardly knew what I expected to hear, and yet felt sure that before I slept I should hear something. And now I must tell the story as it was told to me. Dr. Spencer returned home the morning after my visit to Clifton House. He look. ed wretchedly, the old nurse said, and ap peared unusually gloomy and depressed. Miss Melrose came with him, and was decorously sad over the death of her sister. Women of her stamp always mourn to per fection. They never overdo nor underdo the thing as women with feelings are like, ly to do. Dr. Spencer came at onco to his wife's chamber. He thought she looked ill, and prescribed a cordial at once, saying he would go and fetch it. " You are always ordering cordials for her," said Mrs. Ilurd, musingly. "Why not take something yourself? You look like a ghost 1" NEWSPAPER, Ho eyed her keenly, but replied, com posedly : "I think I will tako sonio of tho cordial myself ; for I do not feel quite well. Ali cia, dear, shall I bring it hero and drink your health?" Mrs. Spencer smiled sadly in assent sho never disputed her husband and ho went out. Presently ho returned with two glass es. Both contained liquid, colorless and inodorous. Mrs. Ilurd was watching him with her heart in her throat ; for, as she told mc,she felt that a decisive moment had como. There was something in the gray pallor oh tho doctor's rigid face that told her of a desperate purpose in the man's soul. He lifted the glass on tho right of tho tray, and gave it to his wifo. "Drink it, dear," he said ; "it is a pana cea for all evils. I also, am going to take a glass of it !" and ho pointed to tho glass still on the tray. Mrs. Spencer accepted it, and was put ting it to her lips when Mrs. Ilurd inter posed : " If you will bring a tumbler of water, doctor ; Mrs. Spencer complains that the cordial leaves a bad taste in her mouth. And my old bones are so full rheumatism that it kills me to go down stairs." The doctor turned and bent on her a look as if he would read her though and through. But she kept her face impassive. If he had any suspicious, her manner qui eted them, and putting down the glass he left the room. Then Mrs. Ilurd changed the position of the glasses. When ho came back, and he was absent only a moment, the nurse stood just where he had left her, and Mrs. Spencer was ly ing back in her chair with closed eyes. Again he lifted tho glass ; this time it was tho one he had designed for himself, and placed it at the lips of his wife. She drank the contents, swallowed a littlo of the water he had brought her, and thank ed him in her sad sweet way. "Now for my own cordial," said he, with affected gayety. " I indulge myself in something a little stronger," and, as ho spoke, he tossed off the mixture. "It made me stone cold to my fingers' ends to see hiin do it," said Mrs. Ilurd, iu relating the circumstance to mo ; "but Heaven is my witness I felt not a singlo twinge of conscience. I argued like this. If it wan simplo cordial, as he had said, it would do him no harm. If it was poison, his blood would be on his own head." He went to bed a half-hour afterward, complaining of fatigue. Iu the morning they found him dead 1 I was called to the post mortem examin ation, and we discovered in the stomach of the deceased a sufficient quantity of one of the deadliest poisons known to modern science to kill a half dozen men. My brother physicians agreed that tho man was insane, and had probably taken tho drug in one of his unsettled fits of mind. I did not dispute them, but, even before Mrs. Hurd told me her story, had my own theory in regard to his death. There was no publio exposure however, Mrs. Hurd and I agreed that it would benefit no one to make tho wretched aff air public and we kept our own counsel. Miss Melrose, iu spite of my conviction that she had been au active party to the conspiracy against Mrs. Spencer's life, I could not help pitying. Such a miserable, worn, and haggard faco as hois I have never soon, and when they buried Dr. Spencer, she was confined to her chamber with brain fever. I attendod hor in that illness, but though she recovered her health, she was never herself again. She was a harmless maniac, whose delight was in gathering flower and decorating the doctor's grave with them. She is living still, and she still gathers flow ers and lays them on that grave, singing to herself, meanwhile, a sort of low incan Terms: IX ADVANCE i One Dollar 2cr Year. IVo. -11. tation, which no ono ever pretends to un derstand. Not until Mrs. Spencer had been many years my wife, and faithful Mrs. Ilurd slept under tho violets, did Allicia ever know of the perfidy of her first husband. How I Got Invited to Dinner. M Y getting tho better of my wife's father is ono of tho richest things on record. I'll tell you how it was. You must know that he is monstrous stingy ; the complaint seems to run in the family, and everybody round our parts used to notice that ho never by any chance asked any body to dine with him. So one day, just for a chunck of fun, I said to Jeddy Dow- kins a dreadful nice feller is Jeddy " I'll bet you a penn'orth of shoe strings gainst a row of pins that I get old Ben Morkms that's my wife's father, to ask me to din ner. "Yeouget eout." said Jeddy; "why you might as well try to coax a cat into a shower bath, or get moonbeams eout of cowcumbers." " Well," said I, I'm going to try. And try I did, and I'll tell you how I went to work. Jist as old Ben was sitting down to din ner, at ono o'clock, I rushed up to the house at a high pressure pace, red hot in . the face, with my coat tails in the air, and my eyes rollin' about like billiard balls in convulsions. Rat-tat-tat ding-a-ling-a- ling. I kicked up an awful rumpus, and in a flash out came old Ben himself. I had struck tho right minnit ; ho had a napkin under his chin and carvin knife in his hand. I smelt the dinner as he opened the door. 0, Mr. Marking," said I, "I am tarna tion glad to see you. I feard you moughtn"t be at home I'm almost out of breath. I'm come to tell you I can save you a thousand dollars 1" "A thousand dollars I" roared the old man ; and I defy a weasel to go "pop" quicker than his face burst into smiles. " A thousand dollars ! X eou don't say so ! du tell 1" "Oh," said I, "I see you aro just havin' dinner now. I'll go an' dine myself, and then I'll come back and tell you all about it." " Nonsense," said he ; " don't go away ; come in and sit down, and enjoy yourself like a good fellow, and have a snack with me. I am anxious to hear what you have to say." I pretended to decline, say in' " Id come back;" but I had thoroughly stirred up tho old chap's curiosity, and it ended by his fairly pullin' me into the house, and I made a rattlin' dinner of pork and beans. I managed for some time to dodge the main pint of his inquiry. At last I finished eating, and there was no further excuse for delay ; besides old Ben was gettin' fid gety. "Como neow," said he, "no more preface. About that thousand dollars come let it out." " Well, I'll tell you what," said I, "yeou have a darter, Misery Ann, to dispose of in marriage, ain't yeou. "What's that got to do with it?" inter rupted ho. " Hold your proud steeds don't ruu off the track a great deal to do with it," said I "Neow answer my question." "Well," said he "I have." " And you intend when she marries to give her $10,000 for a portion?" "I do," he said. " Well, neow, here's tho pint I'm comin tew. Let me have her and I'll take her with $9,000 ; and 0,000 from 10,000, accor ding to simplo substraction just leaves 1,000 and that will be clean profit saved as slick as a whistle !" The next thing I knew, there was a rapid Interview going on between old Bon's foot and my coat-tails and I am inclined to think the latter got the worst of it.