10 TIIE SCItANTON TBtBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 15, 1895. 1ST MANS By ANNA KATHERINB OREEN. Copyrlrvl 1805k by f My destltiaitlim was Cuahing, a email iown some fifteen, miles from Hartford, and my errand there can be best ex plained by the following letter received at police headquarters In the latter town: 1 . Gentlemen: Three men have disap peared lately In our parts. Two of them were ' strangers, and one a well-known, half-witted peddler, accuBtomod for sev eral years to wander from house to house In this vicinity. As this district Is a lonely one and not In Immediate connection with ony railroad, the matter has not attracted much attention outside of this place. But fcore there Is much excitement, and If you think It worth while to send us a de tective, I Shalt be Blad to give him such details as may further his Invcstlgat-ons. .Obediently yours, Obadluh Trohm. The last charge which my superior had given nie was to move warily in this affair. I therefore concealed my Identity and entered the tavern In Cushlng with a surveyor's Instruments tn my hand. My first talk was with mine host, a kind-faced. Jovial man, whose look in spired confidence both in his honesty nnd discretion. The topic which I nat urally chose was Mr. Trohm. Was he an accessible man and was he likely to (have any property to sell suitable for a large manufacturing plant? Mr. Sim mons (for that was my good host's name) opened his eyes In amazement. "Well, no," said he; "he Isn't." And then he explained to me that Mr. Trohm owned no land save that on which his house was built, and that, for one who had neither wife nor child, he loved his home and clung to the few acres sur rounding it with a pertinacity more marked than was shown by anyone else In the community. "Never mind," said I, "I am going to ten him. Perhaps he can point out to me some available property in the vi cinity." . Perhaps," rejoined the other. And not being of a suspicious temperament, the good man went on talking about Mr. Trohm till I had learned enough to be satisfied that I should have no trou ble in approaching this gentleman, aa he was one of the most genial and hospitable of men. "Though he keeps no servant, he makes everybody wel come," was Mr. Simmons' assurance, "and for a bachelor, makes them mighty comfortable, too." As all this showed a certain amount of esteem for the man, I felt my confi dence in him Increasing, and prepared at once to visit him. But when I aslted the landlord where Mr. Trohm lived and if tt was within walking distance, a very decided change passed over the good man's face. "Do you want to go there now?" he asked. "If sa I will see If I can find one of my men ito accompany you." "But is that necessary? Cannot I And the house alone?" "Why, yes," he answered, cheerfully, but still with a vague tone of alarm in hie voice; "but it's out of the way like, and I have known fellows, no bigger than you, don't like the woods." "O, It's in the woods?" "Yes, that is, the road winds through the woods, and It la a little dismal, you know. But Mr. Trohm's place is very pleasant, very pleasant. Indeed. Only I wouldn't go any further than his front gate, If I were you. The road is a long one and well, you had better come back -the way you go." This was all very suggestive to my curiosity and highly provocative of a number of questions, but I was deter mined to get my first information from Mr. Trohm, and so passed the matter oft as a kindly hint, which I secretly did not mean to take. The landlord seemed satisfied with my manner, and seeing I did not want a companion, did not urge ' his offer further. I accordingly started out alone, after receiving minute directions as to the course I should take. Oushing has but one street, but half way down this, a road branches off in a wide curve, and on this road Mr. Trohm lived. The trees which were sparse near the village Increased In number rapidly as I advanced, and by the time I had gone a quarter of a mile, I found myself lnr a veritable wood. Not & cheerful one, either. There was marsh under foot and withered boughs overhead, producing an effect that was anything but cheerful, although the eun shone 'brightly and the air was balmy. I was therefore both surprised and gratified to see the chimneys of a bright and most attractive-looking old house rise suddenly before me, with a charm about Its trim door-step and flower-bordered walks that; is only to be found in very old places that have been appreciatively cared for. A fence painted white enclosed a lawn like veU vet, nmd the house Itself, shining with a fre3h coat of yellow paint, bore signs of comfort In Its white-curtained win dows not usually to be found in the solitary dwelling of a bachelor. Would the man correspond to his home? As if In answer to thi3 Inward query, the door before me swung open and I saw In the gap thus made the tall and smil ing figure of a man, older than I had antic palted, but with full as much dig nity as his tetter, had led me to expect. "Has Providence been so good as to bring me a guest this fine morning?" was h!s amiable greeting. "I am sure If you have come to relieve me of a rather tedious half hour, you are very welcome. But Is, it Obadlah Trohm you have come to see?" "It Is," I returned, bowing with all tha-reppect his appearance called forth. "And If I need any introduction myself, let this letter answer for me." And I handed him the epistle signed by his own name which he had sent to the ofllce it Hartford. The smile with which he had regard ed me from the first, changed from the mere conventional expression to one of heart-felt satisfaction. "I am glad to see you," he gravely remarked, his eye wandering from my face to the beauties of the garden be side us. Will you come In or will you sit down here?" he asked, pointing to two seats on each side of the porch, on which we stood. "You will find either place equally secure from Interruption. I keep no servants and whether out or In find myself wholly at home.:' Prom the look which I have ' Just mentioned a peculiar look full of the gloating delight of possession I Judged that he would rather remain within view of his flower-beds. And Indeed I afterward heard that he was seldom found In doors. I therefore answered his genial invitation by sitting down on one of the seats before us. He Immedi ately took possession of the other, and with an expectant air waited my ques tions, "And o ithesa woods bide a cayi- v. 1LJ Irving Bachellor. tery?" I boldly ventured, with a ges ture toward the east where the trees stood thickest. "Have the disappear ances of which;' you have written oa curred lately?" ' ' '' "One of them took place about Christ mas time, the other two but a few weeks back. The first one attracted no attention, nor the second, I may say; but when Chat poor boy, silly Rufus, dropped out of Bight and sound, people began to wonder and recall the fact that the two strangers I have men. tloned had also vanished ,from pur midst in a very queer and unexplained manner. And I," here the old gentle man became impressive, even going to the point of laying his hand on my knee, "and I remember two other cases, a year aback, of persons who came Into this road wtho were never seen to issue from it, or at least I am assured by an old friend of mine who lives Just where this road runs Into the main one. But whether all Mils means crime I cannot tell. Can you?" The question came so suddenly I started. "It certainly has that look," I remarked. "Arc there any doubtful characters In this neighborhood?" "So." he answered, brooding a min ute over my words. "Has any one In the village you have spoken to the folks there of course mentioned any name with suspicion?" "I have not talked about It. I pre ferred to broach the subject at once to you." He seemed surprised, but showed his recognition of my courtesy by a bow. "I supposed you would have first wished to have obtained a confirmation of my statement from the general gossip of the town. But It. is of mo conse quence; you can hear them talk later." And he again let his eye roam appre ciatively over his flowers and shrubs. "Have you any plan of procedure?" he suddenly asked. "I must first find out if there has been any crime," I . replied, letting my eye follow his Over the top' of a long well sweep that was one of the chief orna ments of the place to that dismal turn In the road, which I had been warned from pursuing. "Are there any other houses on this road besides yours?" I now put in, re calling his glance back to myself by a gesture. He looked at me seriously, if not anx iously, for a moment, and then said al most too indifferently for the tempor ary embarrassment he had shown: "Oh, I don't hold a monopoly of this by-way. There Is another dwelling on it some half mile further on. An equal ly old dwelling with this, but more fully occupied," he smiled. "A brother and two sisters remain to the Knollys fam ily, while I am the single representative of the Trohms." "A brother and two sisters!" I repeat ed, astonished at his visibly nervous manner. "How old a brother and what kind of sisters, I pray?" "Oh, young Knollys Is about 24; a stu pid fellow, but good, I suppose; wiille the girls what shall I call the girls?" ho mused, with an evident air of wish ing to strike the happy medium be tween Justice and candor. "Nice girls, of course, well educated, refined and all that, but queer yes, queer, as girls are apt to be who Jive in a den like that." "Den," I repeated, wondering as much at his manner as his words. "Oh, any house Is a den where flow ers don't grow," he laughed, leaning over to pluck a spray of honeysuckle from the vino that curled about the columns of the porch. "I like sunshine, beds of ros.es, fountains, and a sweep of lawn like that we see before us." "And the Misses Knollys have no such adornments to their house?" He shrugged his shoulders. "Why talk about the Knollys. The subject you have come to discuss Is much more Interesting. It is two weeks now since r saw siMy 'Rufus leaning over the fence there, counting the blossoms on my oleander. When I looked again ten minutes later he was gone, and that is the last that any of us know about him." . . .t "He might have strayed into ine woods,"-1 suggested. "We have searched the woods. Silly Rufus was a favorite in these parts, and his fate has aroused much interest. Oh, we have looked for him far and near, but we have not found him and never will. I am thinking." "But what motive " I began. But suddenly Mr. Trohm's eyes had become Impenetrable, and I saw there was some underlying reason on his part for preserving a certain reticence con cerning his suspicions. . Could they have reference to the Knollys family? It seemed a preposterous supposition, and yet I felt impelled to change my question into the remark:' "Perfect frankness on your part would be of great assistance to me. The least clue is valuable In such cas.es. A doubt, a surmise even, yes, whether It be true or false, will often put a de tective on the right track. I should be obliged to you If you told me why you so often glance down the road towards the east." "Well, to be frank," he laughed, "I cannot tell you. It Is Involuntary on my part, perhaps because. I am as much perplexed as you. I feel that death and danger lurk in this neighborhood, but I cannot locate where. Perhaps you can; at .all events that will be your business for the next few days." Seeing by this he had reached his limit, I rose. Instantly the hospitality of the man asserted Itself. "You must not go without some refreshments," he said. "Will you step Into the house and have a glass of wine or I see your eyes roaming longingly towards my old fashioned well would you like a draught bf water fresh from the bucket?": --.'. I assured him I did not drink wine at which I thought his ey"3s brightened but that. neither did. I Indulge In water when in a heat, as at present, at which he looked disappointed, and rose quite Irritably from his chair. But he recovered himself in a moment and ac companied me to the gate with every appearance of cordiality. But when he saw me turn resolutely toward the east, he. called out quite imperatively: "Where are you going? Don't go that way; the other way, my" good fellow, the other "way." "But my duty leads me east," I called back. "Then you shall not go alone. Walt a moment and I will accompany.you." ; But I declined this attention, Vhich would have greatly hampered me, and tapping my breast significantly, I cried: "OH, I am not alone," and bowing a last farewell, hastened on, leaving him frowning at the gateway. II. . ' My feelings as I left Mr. Trohm and entered the darker portions of the road were confused and varied. I was not afraid,, nor was I exactly easy, though I . carried a pistol, half-cocked, In my side pocket. I expected to encounter some one or something out of the ordin ary, and moved 4iurrledly( on, though with great circumspection. ' It was a bright day, as I have said, and In another mood.. I would have en joyed the scenery. Now, however, I was on the 'lookout for the Knollys mansion and took no time to observe the wild - beauties about me. . Finally without, premonition or adventure . of any kind I came upon It, a great, gaunt, neglected building of colonial time, whose first appearance awoke a tremor, and from which on closer in spection no suggestion came save that which breathed of decay and death. Yet it was a home, as more than one indication showed, and once had been a courtly one, with possibilities of aris tocratic splendor. A grove of half-decayed trees separ ated it from the road, and the effect produced from these may have partial ly accounted for the special aspect I have mentioned. At least I was willing to think so, and was about to seek a way through the tangled underbrush which everywhere hindered my steps, when I heard a sharp whistle, and, looking up, saw a young man emerge from the open doorway. He was calling to some dogs, who 'immediately ap peared and began to leap about him, and as he did not see me, though the dogs did, I had ample opportunity to study his face. It was a good-natured but wholly commonplace one, and from the fact that he did not note the distraction ap parent In his dogs I drew the conclu sion that he was not overburdened with acuteness. Had the sisters, then, all the brains of the family? I was de termined to find out as soon as I should encounter any one more willing to talk about them than Mr. Trohm. .Meantime the young man had re mained Impassive and the dogs merely restive; and, strange as it may appear, I experienced a vague disappointment at being allowed to pass the gate of this house, and eventually to leave it far behind me without any adventure to warrant the apprehension displayed by my host and my late entertainer, Mr. Trohm. On my. return to the tavern I made Mr. Simmons my confidant and was as tonished. at the effect which was pro duced upon him by the name of Knol lys. Though he tried to hide It, there was evidently some reason In his own mind for not being startled by this as sociation of their name with the possi ble crimes I was Investigating; and when I urged him to be frank he al lowed, with an Impulsive burst of feel ing, that there had always been some thing wrong with the Knollys; and, urged still further, brought out a letter he had received some few months since from his daughter, who was a hospital nurse In Denver, and laid it before me. "There," said he. "Sophia won't like it, but such facts as you will And writ ten there ought not be kept secret. I thought so at the time and I think so all the more now that these disappear ances have accumulated In our town till we are afraid to move through our own woods after dark." Astonished to be offered a clue In a letter written from Denver, I did not reply to this burst but hastened to open the folded sheets before me and to read the following remarkable lines: Dear Fa ther I have Just heard a per fectly unexplalnable thing about the Knollys. The person who told me was a Miss Grant, who visited them about Christmas time. She is a patient of mine, and when she heard I was from (lushing was so startled, and showed so much agitation, .that I insisted upon knowing why, when she related the following story: Her father and the Knollys father had teen life-long friends, and though the young people had never met there had always been an understanding be tween them that Miss Grant should sometime make a visit to Cushlng. This was brought about last December, and Miss Grant, with the full knowl edge of the Knollys girls, arrived In town early one Wednesday afternoon and was driven directly to their door. She expected a cordial welcome, but she noticed before she was half way up the steps that something was amiss. One sifter only was In the hall to greet her. and that sister was abstracted and pale, and looked oftener behind her and np the stairs than at her newly ar rived guest. Miss Grant was not even asKed to take off her wrap's, till over come ty the heat of the sitting-room into which they had stepped, she her self loosened her furs, at which Lu cetta I think It was Lucetta who re ceived her seemed to recover her wits and tried to play the hospitable hostess, but with such ill success that Miss Grant was almost tempted to resume her furs and return to Fulmlngham Station. Something, however, In her your.g hostess' eye restrained her, and endeavoring not to notice the other's To Regulate, Tone Up, I Invigorate STOnACH, LIVER ' -v- . ;: bowels; V 1 . , ,, . " ''.:'' thereby curing constipation, dyspepsia, biliousness, dispo sition to sick headache and kindred ailments, take Dr. Pierce's -Pleasant Pellets. K X ONCE USED,' ALWAYS Iff FA VOK. Om Dom, All Mrflrtnt PaaUci. preoccupation she (talked rapidly on every available topic till the other sis ter came In. Miss Knollys, as you know, is a grave person, but very pleas ing and attractive. She won upon Miss Grant at once, but for all that her pres ence did not greatly relieve the situa tion, for her first glance was directed toward her sister, who Instantly bound ed up and left the room, and not till they were alone did she seem to notice her guest, whom she then greeted warmly, but with that same air of ab straction and constraint which had been so painfully observable In Im cetta. Miss Grant had expected that she would now be taken to her room, but on the contrary Mlas Knollys sat down, and with an apologotlcal air informed hor of how sorry she felt that she could not show her the precise attentions she wished. Circumstances, she said, over which they had no control had mado it Impossible for them to offer her the guest chamber, but if she would be so good as to accept another for that one night they would try and accommo date her more properly thereafter. Miss Grant, who had noticed the pov erty evident in the house, broke tn with the generous assurance that any room would be acceptable to her, and BtlU expecting to be taken up stairs, began to gather up her wraps. But Miss Knollys again surprised her by saying that her room was not ready, that they had not been able to complete all their arrangements and prayed that she would make herself at home where she was till evening. More and more as tonished and disconcerted, but hiding It bravely, for the sake of the pitiful look In the girl's eye. Miss Grant laid down her furs again and endeavored to make the best of the somewhat try ing situation. She talked and she laughed, though she met with but little response, noting all that was odd In her unaccountable reception, but giv ing no evidence of her concern or secret indignation. But let me tell the rest In her own words as I remembered them. The peculiarities observable In my re ception continued all day, said Miss Grant. When one sister came in, the other went out, and 'when dinner time arrived and I was ushered down the bare and dismal hall Into an equally bare and unattractive dining room, it was to find Lucetta only, seated at the head of the board. She made some apology for the fact, but It was so evi dently an evasive one that I scarcely heard It and kept looking at the empty place where the brother should sit, wondering If he was at the bottom of my strange reception. But as if to dis pel this supposition he presently came In, and though it was my first meeting with the nominal head of the house, Lucetta waited for a short nod from him before giving me the necessary introductions. He la a lumbering fellow and had I not been Intent upon solving the mys tery of their actions I should have taken tittle If any Interest In him As It was I watched him for what he might do or say, but learned nothing save that he was excessively stupid. The evening, like the afternoon, was spent-In the sitting room, with one of the sisters. One event alone lis worth recording. I had become excessively tired of a conversation that always languished, no matter on what topic it was started, and observing an old piano In one corner, I sat down before it and impulsively struck a few chords from the yellow keys. Instantly Lu cetta It was Lucetta who was with me then bounded to my side with a look of horror on her face. "Don't do that!" she cried, laying her hand on mine to stop me. Then seeing me recoil at her touch which was icy cold, she added with an appealing smile, "I beg pardon, but every sound goes through me tonight." "Are .you not well?" I asked. "I am never very well," she retwnod; and we went back to the sofa and' re newed our forced and pitiful conversa tion. 4 Promptly at 9 o'clock Miss Knollys came in. She was very pale and cast as usual a sad and uneasy look at her sister before she spoke to me. Imme diately Lucetta rose, and becoming very pale herself, was hurrying toward the door when her sister stopped her. "You have forgotten," she said, 'Ho say good-nlght to our guest." Iiiftantly Lucetta turned and, with a sudden, uncontrollable Impulse, seized my hand and pressed it con vulsively. "Good-night," she cried, "I hope you will sleep well," and was gone before I could say a word In response. "Why does Lucetta go out of the room when you come In?" I asked, de termined to know 'the reason for this peculiar conduct. "Have you any other guests In the house?" The reply came with unexpected ve hemence. "No," she" cried, "why should you think so? There is no one here but the family." And. she turned away with a certain dignity which cut short all further remarks. "You must be very tired,' 'she said. "If you please we will go now to your room." I rose at once, glad of the prospect of being relieved from these forced at tentions. She took my wraps on her arm and we passed Immediately into the hail. A3 we did so I heard voices, one of them shrill and full of distress, but the sound was so quickly smoth ered by a closing door that I failed to discover whether that tone of suffering proceeded from a mm of a woman. MIfs Knolly, who was preceding me, glanced back In some alarm. But as I gave no token of having noticed any thing out of the ordinary, she speedily resumed her way upstairs. As the sounds I had heard & .proceeded from above I did not follow her with much alacrity. But reflecting that whatever was going on In this house, It could by no possibility have any ref erence to myself, I resumed my cour age, which, however, perceptibly weak ened when I'found myself passing door after door down a long hall to a room as remote as possible from what seemed to be the living portion of the house. "Won't I have any one near me," I began, as my young hostess paused and waited for me to Join her on the .thres hold of the most forbidding room it had ever been my fortune to enter. "Oh," she smiled, "you need not be afraid. . tyothllTg can happen to you here; I am only sorry that we are obliged to offer you Buch mean lodging. But all our other rooms are are out of order' she explained, firmly, "and to our great regret you will have to sleep, In this one for tonight." "But cannot I sleep with one of you?" I persisted. "1 won't put you to any In convenience. I am not accustomed to be. put off by myself." . , "I am sorry," she again repeated, "but It Is quite Impossible. If I could give' you 'the comforts you are accus tomed to, I should be glad. But we are unfortunate, we girls, and" She said .no more, but began to busy herself about the room, which I tried to see In as favorable light I could. Per haps she saw my failure In my face perhaps she felt herself the dreariness of the gray discolored walls, which the fire that had been lit On the' hearth did not serve to lighten, for she pointed to a bell-rope near the head of the bed and kindly remarked: "If anything dlsturbe you, pull that. It communloates with my room, and I will some at once and speak to you." I glanced up at the rope, ran my eye along the wire communicating with it and saw that it was broken sheer off before it even entered the wall. "I am afraid you will not hear me," I answered, pointing to the break. She flushed a deep scarlet, and for a moment looked as embarrassed as ever her sister had done. "I did not know," she murmured. "The house is so old, everything Is more or less out of repair." And she made haste to quit the room. I ran after her In alarm. "But there Is no key to the door," I objected. She came back with a look almost like anger on her stern face. "What do you fear?" she cried. "Is this a public house where you would be liable to Intrusion. You are In a private dwelling, my dear, and good Ood!" she murmured, beneath her breath, but not so low but that my ex cited senses caught the words she ut tered. "Can she have heard anything? Has the reputation of this place gone abroad? Miss Grant," she repeated more loudly, "you are as safe here as a babe on Its mother's knee. Nothing threatens you, nor need you have the least fear whether tbe night passes In quiet or whether It is broken by unac customed sounds. They will have no reference to you." Her look, her manner were encourag ing and for a moment I felt ashamed of my foolish tremors. What If I were banished to a remote corner In a dis mal and strangely ordered house! Was I not under the protection of two ami able girls, daughters of my father's old est friend? Certainly my conduct was ridiculous and could but add to Miss Knollys' trouble. Tuking her by the hand, I craved her pardon, and begging her to have no more concern about me, I returned to my room and carefully closed the door. But no sooner did I And myself thus shut in than all my vague doubts re turned and I would have given any thing for the meanest and smallest apartment In a crowded country tavern with normal commonplace people. But my fate was to be shut In, in this den of darkness and discomfort, and I forced myself to make the best of it. The candle which she had brought with her and set down on a small table by the hearth was too short to last long another circumstance which did not add to my happiness; while the fire was one of those light and flashy ones meant only to burn till bed is reached, and there was no wood to add to It. So that I had before me the prospect of a dark and cold room, If my foolish fears triumphed over my fatigue and kept me awake. So it evidently became my duty to sleep, and recognizing this fact, I looked to see how a sense of security could be obtained. The bed was light and could be pulled in front of the door; the windows but there was but one and that was heavily draped with thick dark stuff. Going to it, I dragged the heavy folds aside and looked out. A multitude of wintry boughs over shadowing a stretch of unbroken snow met my eyes, repelling me by its lone someness. I let the curtain fall again, and allowing my good sense to reassert Itself, I prepared myself for the night, merely yielding enough to my fears to pull the bed in front of the door; then I lay down, and with the light still burning, fell fast asleep. It must have been after midnight that I awoke in a violent tremble, and with the perspiration streaming from every pore. Some one or something was at my door. I heard the stealthy step, the swishing dress, which proved the Intruder to be a woman, and then the quiet, almost noiseless. Insertion of a key into the lock, followed by the quick turn which mads me a prisoner. Bound ing to the floor, I gasped out Miss Knol lys' name, but no answer came in re ply to my smothered appeal, and next moment I heard the step gliding softly away, filling me with so much alarm that I should certainly' have shrieked aloud 'if at that moment there had not risen from somewhere in the house a cry so much more wild and unearthly than any I could have uttered that my own tongue became paralyzed and I sank to the ground In terror. A murmur of voices quickly sup pressed followed, but no second cry, and presently all was as still as if no sound had arisen to disturb the mid night I cowered, however, for many minutes longer against the floor, and then, stiff with the told and blinded by the darkness, for my candle had long ago burned out, I groped my way to the chair where I had laid my clothes and began with trembling Angers to dress myself. As I did so I paused every now and then to listen, but beyond the faint fall of a distant footstep, or the smothered sound of whispering voices, , I heard nothing, though every fibre in my body told me that some dreadful thing had happened, and that that event, what ever it was, had been a premeditated one, or why had my door been locked. Alive to my helplessness, and recall- J M Baiag's yJt Realm His life long CURES Rheumatism. Neuralgia. Coughs, Colds, . Lumbago, Sore Throat, Inflammation, Influenza, Frostbites, Bronchitis, Headache, Pneumonia, Toothache, Asthma. Cted Internally aa well aa Externally. A half to tmupoenful in half a tnmhler of water mrea Btamach troubles. Cold Chill,. Malarial FeTtra, Wind tn ttao Bowola, and all Internal paina. fifty Cents a Bottle. Sold by DrnUisU HADWAY & CO., New York. RADWAY'S PILLS. Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause perfeot digestion, complete assimila tion and healthful regularity. Cure con stipation and Its long list of unpleasant symptoms and rejuvenate the system. X cent a bos. AJ1 prufglflU, ing for my comfort the parting assur ance of Miss Knollys that nothing which might occur would have any ref erence to myself. I sat down In my clothes and waited with mingled hope and dread for daybreak. But I had miscalculated my amount of nerve. I could not sit thus passive ly for hours, and jumping up at last, I pushed my bed aside and laid my hand on the knob of my door to see If the lat ter was really fastened. I found that It was, and not knowing what to do with myself I leaned acalnst thn llnri and listened, counting my own heart Deats and vaguely hoping that some where In the house a clock would soon strike, telling me the hour. But no such relief came; on the con trary, the leaden moments went by without a sound to relieve them, and I was beginning to query whether It would not be better for me to avail my self of the warmth of my bed than to stand any longer shivering on the bare floor, when a faint noiBe, the first I had heard In some time, came from without, and the stealthy footfall returned to my door, paused a moment, during which I held my breath and almost Btopped my heart's beating; then the key was again inserted, turned and drawn out, leaving me again In com munication with the family. My first Instinct was to open the door, call out to the person who was gliding off, and ask what had happened. But natural timidity restrained me, and not till the step had quite disappeared did I venture to open the door and give one quick look down the tunnel-like hall. Darkness and darkness only met my eyes, and halting between the fear of what that darkness inclosed and the phamtoms of dread and horror with which my room was peopled, I stood halting on the threshold, when a sound of distant sobbing reached my ear, sounding so pitifully In the dismal si lence that, forgetting my own fears, forgetting the cause I had to dread that stretch of shut-up rooms before me, I dashed lightly into the darkness and sped, without thought or reason, In the direction from which these to kens of grief had seemed to come. lint this strange house is anything but simple In its construction, and be fore I had gone many steps I realized that I had left the main hall and was lost in another and a smaller one, from which I did not know how to emerge in the profound darkness. The sobs had The Only Remedy in Kinds Purchase Price if It Fails fo Ciire the Tobacco Habit in 4 fo 10 Days Is It Ciires While Yoii Continiie th? Us? of Tobacco. The greatest discovery of the agel A certain, pleasant, permanent euro. A lifetime's suffering ended for $5.00. Why smoke and spit your life away? Why suffer from dyspep sia, heartburn, and drains on your vital forces? Stop using tobacco, but stop the right way I Drive the nicotine from your system by the use of this wonderful remedy. Narcoti-Cure Is warranted to remove all desire for tobacco in every form, including Cigar, Cigar ette and Pipe Smoking, Chewing and Snuff Taking. Use all the tobacco you want wliilo under treatment, and in from four to ten days your "hank ering" and "craving" will disap pearthe weed won't taste good. ' Then throw away tobacco for ever. N arcoti-Cure is entirely vege table and free from injurious in gredients, It never falls to give tone and new vigor to the weakest constitution. Remember If arcoti-Core does not deprive you of tobacco while eflectiug a cure; doesn't ask you to buy several bottles to be on ti tied to a guarantee; doesn't require a month's treatment; and, llually, doesn't enable you to stop tobacco only to find yoursslf a slave to the habit of tablet chewing. TO our patrons: Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many fat rons that they will this year hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until tho new crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to the excessively dry weather many millers ar of the opinion that it already cured, and in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will tako no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully three months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling hna placed Washburn-Crosby Co.'s flour far above other r brands. MEGABGEL & CONNELL Wholesale Agents. ceased, so I had nothing to guide me, and a prey once more to the horrors of my situation, I turned and fled back a fast as a complete Ignorance of my whereabouts allowed. With one hand on the wall at my side, I hastened on till I came to a turn, and taking It for the one I hod Inadvertently made a few minutes before, I whirled to the right and groped on, breathless and panting, till I came to an open door. As this was located Just where I had expected to find my own, I rushed in and shut It behind me; and still grop ing, found the bed, which seemed a long way from the door (longer than It had when I sought It before), and was in the act of feeling for the pil low, when my hand came In contact with something so dreadful, so blood curdling and unexpected, that my lips opened In a horrified shriek, which ter ror nevertliless stifled in my throat. I had touched the clay-cold face of a corpse. To Be Continued. i : ELEPHANT'S PRIVATE CAR. It is Eight Foot Clear on the Insldo and AO Feet Long. The Memphis Car and Foundry works Is building a circus train of six curs, which, when completed, will muke a train as long as two ordinary trains of that size. Thero are one elephant car and live tint cars in tha course of construction. They are nearly twice as long as the ordinary car, and the timbers and the irons are much heavier in every respect. The elephant cur is remarkable. This animal Is said not to be savage, but of an Inquiring mind. Ho wants to know what Is going on without, and he frequently thrusts his trunk through and rips open the sldo of a car and views the landscape at his will until tho keeejwr can have him more securely closed (n. The builders flutter thcmKvlves that Jumbo's skill will not let himself out of this car. It is e!i;ht feet clear on tho Inside and Is fifty feet long. Its sides are of double thickness. The outer wull Is of cypress and the inner of smoothly dressed ouk. There Is not a bolt head or a bar that he can get a hold of to twist out with his trunk. The barrel windows are covered with wrought iron bars that are fastened under the walls with bolts. Memphis Commercial. Cost of Soldiers rtrave. During the most peaceful years the world has 3,700,000 soldiers, who are with drawn from productive occupations to pose as soldiers. The pay, equipments, food and clothing of these men cost the world's taxpayers nearly JS.OOO.OOO a day. the World That Re-1 With Narcoti CtTRE, when you are through with tobacpo, you are through with the remedy. One bottle cures. Send for book of prominent tes timonies like the following: Huntington, Mubs., March IS, 1803. Ton .N Alteon Chemical Co, Sprluitfleld, Mass. Gentlemon; I havo used tobaoco ffj over twonty-Avo years, chewing ana smoking evory day from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. stopping only for meals. On Monday, Fob. 4, I called at yonr ofllce in Hpriocflcld. and bought a hot i lo ot the ("DBS which I used as directed, nnd on tho tenth day the desire for to bacco Had left ron nnd it baa not re turned. I did not loss a meal while t ik ing tho Cure. My appetitebas improved nn.l I consider NAncori-Cvna a grand thine. Very rospoctfully, CHAS. I LfNCOLN. Sir. Frank H. Morton, of Chicep-a Falls. 21 ass., late inspector of publio buildings for UoGaacuuaotts, says: I mod tobacco for twenty-flvo yean, and was a confirmed smokrr, In Jnst cinht dava' troatmont with Narcoti Curb! w'a through with tobacco, in fact tUo deatrs for tobacco vanished lika s dream, Vory reepectfirtly, FUAJN'K H. MORTON. If your druggist is unnble to give full particulars about Narcoti Cure, send to us for Book of Par ticulars free, or send $5.00 for bot tle by mail. THE NARCOTI CHEMICAL CO., ' Springfield, Mass. 7