7 10 THE SCHA25TON TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 14, 1895. E. ROBINSON'S SONS 435 to 455 North Seventn Street, Scranton, Pa. ;.; ESTABLISHED IN 1876 . !! ' Is today known throughout this and neighboring states for the manufacturing of the finest, most wholesome and palatable of all Lagers. There is nothing used by them in the manufacture of these goods but the choicest of Imported and Domestic Malt and Hops to be obtained anywhere. With all the immense storage fa cilities and modern improvements they are in position to furnish the best of goods. The Celebrated Pilsener Lager Beer of this firm has a national reputation, and is always sought after by lov ers of Good Beer. 1 he sales of this concern have grown to such proportions from year to year that it has become a necessity to increase and put in additional improvements right along until it is now the most complete Brewery in the country. A special brewing of Thuringer Beer has been made for the Holidays, a high grade Beer, which can be obtained at all leading hotels and restaurants in the cities and surrounding towns. Ask BOW. t le Miaier rlayeffl Copyright, 1805, by Bachellor, Johnson and Bacliellor. ' 1 " SYNOPSIS. fAfter the disastrous retreat of the Arm tf Napoleon from Mohcow, HrltfudleAJ Jorard wns sent through German terrl- tory, nominally friendly, but really ripe f 1 . I .. n T.'-r. n.w. .1.1 I for revolt, to raise troops In France. On his way he has observed with some dis may the Murk looks of the hostile peas ants, who In ono place drnnk a mysterious toast to the leter T. A little later he Is warned of his peril by a terror-stricken man hidden by the road side. "It means death to me If X am Been helping you," the man had said. "Death! From whom?" asked the briga dier. CHAPTER II. "From the Tufrendhund. From I.ut sow'a night-riders. You Frenchmen are living on a powder magazine, and the match haa been struck which will fire it." "But this la all strange to me," I paid, still funTbling at the leathers of my horse. "What Is this Tugendbund?" "It In the secret society which has planned the great rising which Is to drive you out of Germany Just as you have been driven out of Uussla." "And these T'a stands for It?' "They are the signal. . I nhauld have told you all this in the village, b'ut I dared not be seen speaking with you. I galloped through the woods to cut you off, and concealed both my horse and myself." "I am very much indebted to you," said I. "and the more so as your are the only German that I have met today from whom I have had common civil ity." "All that I possess I have gained through contracting for the French armies," said he. "Your emperor has been a good friend to me. Mut I beg that you will ride on now, for we have talked long enough. Beware only - of I.utzok's nlght-ridersl'f "All that is best in Germany," said he. "But for God's sake ride forward, for I have risked my life and exposed my good name In order to carry you this warning." , Well, If I had been heavy with thought before, you can think how I felt after my strange talk with the man among the fagsrots. What came home to me even more than his words was his shivering broken voice his twitch ing face, and his eyes glancing swiftly to right and left and opening In horror whenever a branch creaked upon a tree. It was clear that he was in the last extremity of tetrpr, and it, is possible that he had cause, for not long after I had left him I heard a distant gunshot and a shouting; from - somewhere be hind me. It may have been some spots man hallooing. to his dogs, but I never again either heard or saw the man who had given me my warning. I kept a good lookout after this, rid ing swiftly where the country was open and alowly where there might be an ambuscade. It was serious for me, for 1 fir a Kingdom iy A. CONAN BOYLE. since D00 good miles of German soil lay in front of me; but somehow I did not take It very much to heart, for the Gcr- Kmans hail always seemed to me to bp h kindly, Rentle people, whose hand " - . ... tt)sed more readily around a plpestem thVn a swordhilt not out of want of valor, you understand, but because they are fA'niiil, open eouIs, who would rath er len good terms with ull men. I did not knkiv then that beneath that home ly Hurfat here lurlts a deviltry as fierce and far raore persistent than that of the CastlliVn.or the Italian. And It witf not long before I had It shown to me thnt there was something: more serious abroad than rough words and hard looks. ' had Tome to a spot where the road runs upward through a wild track of heajherlnnd and van ished Into arr oak-wpnri.' I may have been half way up the hill, when look ing forward I saw something gleam under the shadow of the tree trunks, and a man come out with a coat that He filmed was so slashed and spangled with told that he blazed like a fire In the sunli fit. he to- He appeared to be very drunk, fo reeled and staggered as ho rami wards mo. One of his hands was held up to his ear and clutched a great! red handkerchief, which was fixed to his neck. I had reined, up 'the mare arid looking at him with some disgust Ivan for it seemed strange to me that one Ivho wore so gorgeous a uniform n uld show himself in such a state In 1 oad daylight. For his part he looked ard in my direction and. came slowl, on ward, stopping from- time tlnle and swaying about as he gaied at me.l Bud denly, as I again advanced, he serf fimed out his thanks to Christ, and, lurching forward, he fell with a crash uytui the dusty road. Hla hands flew Lpward with tho fall, and I saw that jvhat I had taken for a red cloth waa (a mon strous wound, which had- left fa great gap In his 'neck, from which a dark bloodclot huna. like an epaulette, upon his shoulder. v-- - . . Like a l ire in tho SunlLht. the K. "My God!" I cried, as I sprang to his aid, "and I thought you were drunk!" "Not drunk, but dying," .said he. "But oh! thank Heaven that I have seen a French ofllcer while I had still strength to speak." I laid him among the heather and poured some brandy down his throat. All round us was the vast country side, green and peaceful, with nothing liv ing In sight save only tho mutilated man beside me. "Who has done this?" I asked, "and what are you? You are French, and yet the uniform Is strange to me." "It Is that of the emperor's new guard of honor. I am the marqls of Chateau St. Arnnud, and I am the ninth of my blood who have died In the service of France. I have been pursued and wounded by tho night-riders of Lut zow, but I hid among the bushwood yonder and waited In the hope that . a Frenchman might pass. I could not be sure at first If you were friend or foe, but I felt that death was very near, and that I must take the chance." "Keep your heart up, comrade," said I. "I have seen a man with n worse wound who has lived to boast of It." "No no," he whispered, "I am going fast." He laid his hand upon mine as he spoke and I raw that his finger nails were already blue. "But I have papers here lit my tunic which you must carry at once to the prince of Saxe-Felsteln at his castle of Hof. He Is still true to us, but the princess is our deadly enemy. She Is striving to mnke him declare against us. If he docs so It will deter mine all those who nre wavering, for the king of Prussia Is his uncle, and the king of Bavaria his cousin. These pa pers will hold him to us if they'can only reach him before he takes the last step. Place them In his hnnds tonight and perhaps you will have saved nil Ger many for the emneror. Had my horse pot been shot I might, wounded as I nm " he choked and the cold hand tightened into a grip. which left mine ns bloodless as Itself. Then with a groan his head fell back, and he had gone as a brave soldier would wish to go. Here was a fine start for my journey home. I wns leftwlth a commission of which I knew little, which would lead me to delay the pressing needs of my hussars, and which at the same time was of such Importance that It was Im possible for me to avoid It. I- opened the marquis' tunic, the brilliance of which had been dovlned by the emperor In order to attract those young aristo crats from whom lie hoped to raise these new regiments of his guard. It wns a small packet of papers which I WORKS la cur-Ins torturing;, disfiguring, hu miliating humours of the Skin, Scalp, and Blood when all eUo tolls. J...- oil thrMthoot till imrit. BritUk titpoii K Nnr. Mt Soi, l, Kta( Wwtfd-rt, Lonilon. Form Jfeea ASBCMlfeC., fete Frost, tales, U, I. a, , Robinson's Sons drew out, tied up with silk and ad dressed to the prince of f-f xe-Felstein. In tho corner. In a sprawling, untidy hand, which I knew to be the emperor's own, was written "pressing and most Important." It was an order to me, those four words an order as clear as If it had come straight from the firm lips, with the cold gray eyes looking Into mine. My troopers might wait for their horses, the dead marquis might lie where I had laid him amongst the heather, but if the mare and her rider had a breath left In them tne papers should roach the prince that night. I should not have feared to ride by the road through the wood, for I had learned In Spain thnt the safest time to pass' through a guerilla country is after an outrage, and the moment of danger Is when all is peaceful. When I came to look upon my mup, however, I saw that Hof lay further to the South of me, and that I might reach it more Girth Deep In Hcnilicr. directly by keeping to the moor3. Off I set, therefore and had not gone 50 yards before two carbine chots rang out of the brushwood and a bullet hummed passed ine like a bee. It was clear that the night riders were bolder In their ways than the brigands of Spain, and that my mission would have ended where It had begun If I had kept to the road. . ' It was a mad ride that, a ride with a loose rein, girth-deep In heather and In gorse, plunging through bushes, flying down, hillsides, with my neck at the mercy of my dear little Vlolette. But she she never slipped, Bho never fal tered, as swift and as sure-footed Us if she knew that her rider carried the fate of all Germany beneath tho buttons of his pelisse. And I I hnd long borne the name of being the best horseman In the six brigades of light cavalry, but I never rode an I rode then. My friend the Bart., had told me of how they hunt the fox In Kngland but the swiftest fox would have been captured by me that day. The wild pigeons which flew overhead did not take a stralghter course than Vlolette and I below. As an officer I have always been ready to sacrifice myself for my men, though the emperor would not have thanked me for It, for he had many men, but only one well, cavalry-leaders of the first-class are rare.' But hare I had an object which was- Indeed worth a sacri fice and I thought no mora of my Ufa ; mm than of the clouds of earth that flew from my darling's heels. We struck the road onee more as the light wan falling, and galloped Into the Ilttlo village of Lobensteln; but we had hardly got upon the cobblestones when off came one of the mare's shoes, and I had to lead her to the village smithy. His fire was low and his day's work done, so that It would be an hour at lenst before I could hope to push on to Hof. Cursing at the delay. I strode Into the village Inn and ordered a cold chicken and some wine to be served for my dinner. It was but a few more miles to Hof, and I had every hope thnt I might deliver my papers to the prince on that very night, and be on my way for France next morning with dis patches for the emperor In my bossom. I will tell you now what befell me in the Inn of Lobensteln. The chicken had been served and the wine drawn, and I had turned upon both as a man may who has ridden such a ride, when I was aware of a murmur nnd a scuffling In the hall outside my door. At first I thought it was some brawl between some peasants In their cups and I left them to se.ttle their own affairs. But of a sudden there broke from the low sullen growl of the volcea such a sound as would send Etlcnne Gerard leaping from his death-bed. It was the whimpering cry of a woman in pain. Down clattered my knife and my fork, and In an Instant I was In tho thick of the crowd which had gathered outside of my door. ' ' (To be continued.) BT INCREDIBLE. A Professional Ntirso Afflicted with llrifiht's Disease of tho Kidneys rinds a Cure. (From thn Buffalo News.) Mrs. A. E. Taylor has resided In Buf falo for over forty years, her address Is Z'.O Herkimer nvenu: as a professional nurse she hns nursed back to health mnny a sufferer. Disease In all Its varied forms have become as fpmiliar to her as to the regular practitioner. Her occupation Is one that tnxes the strongest constitution, but the fatigue of long watching and nursing at last brought her to a bed of sickness. Mrs. Taylor speaks of her complaint and cure as follows: "After being con fined to my bed for some time my dis ease assumed such a serious aspect that a doctor was re.Heri In. He pro nounced my ailment Blight's disease of the kidneys in the third degree nnd a very had case. My limbs swelled up so thnt I could not walk across the door, or. Indeed, help myself In any way. My face bloated up and my eyes swelled so that tho sight was badly Impnlred. This condition continued for nearly two months without any marked Improvement from the doctor's treat ment. I have taken quarts of buchu and juniper. I tried battery treatment, but all without any lasting benefit until I felt like finally giving up in despair. Hearing of Doan's Kidney Fills I gave them a trial, and after taking three boxes I was able to get up without as sistance (uid walk, something I had not done In months. I continued to steadi ly Improve with their use. The swell ing In my leg left, the color returned to my face, changing from a chalky color to a healthy bloon. I now consider my self entirely cured nnd I shall never rest praising; the little pill that saved me. "Bonn's Kidney nils are certainly a surprislrg discovery for kidney ailments'- I shall be glad to tell anyone of the wonderful cure they perfomcd for hie1." ... . . ' For sniff bj all dcnlers. Price BO cents. 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