THE CITIZU. . AVElMfKSDAY, NOV. 0, 1010. THE SHIPWRECK L A Lesson In Courage and In the Value of Life. By HOWARD FIELDING. Copyright, 1910. by Amrrlcnn 'l'ress Asso ciation. Mr. H.'irtlctt luul not visited his of flco that morning, ntul It may have been about noon when nn elevator dls gorged lilm on the level of his own place of business. Immediately he was nwnre of the high keyed, boyish Tolce of James, his handy ninn, a crea ture of many duties and of nn anx ious, devoted fidelity. "There's n lady waltlu' for you," Bald James. "She's In your room, she Is." "What sort of n lady?" asked Bart lctt. "A young lady," answered James. "She's been there about half nn hour, with a suit ensc. I never saw her be fore. She's got blue eyes, very blue eyes, she lias. And I guess she ain't feeltn' well. I took her In n glass o' water n couple o' times an' she drunk It She was thirsty, she was." Bartlett shook his head. Uo could not remember nny young lady of this kind. And yet the eyes "China blue eyes, James," said be. "like the color that you've seen on n fine cup and saucer?" "Well, to tell the truth," said James earnestly, "I never seen such a color anywheres before not on nothln', I didn't." . Bartlctt spent some seconds In re flection. "Go into my offlce," said he, "and eo If there's a letter from Mr. Carver of Philadelphia amongst my mail. If there Is I want It." Such a communication was Indeed there, and James brought it out. It was the querulous letter of a wor ried and weary man, nnd It affected Bartlett like the filing of a saw, for his nerves were in no condition to endure the caterwaullngs of a busi ness associate. Carver was afraid of b big note of Bartlett's which was maturing in a Boston bank. "You'll have to pull money out of the game to meet that note,", he wrote, "and that will cripple us. Instead of a handsome profit, we'll be likely to make a loss." And he went on to be wail the loss as if it were already made. lie declared that he was not fit even to think of the matter. The long siege of illness in his family had broken his nerve. "And, though we're all on our feet again," he added, "I'm thoroughly tired out. We never should have pulled through except for Celia Gilbert, and now the poor girl has broken down and must go home nervous prostration, and pretty bad, too, I'm afraid. And she'll have to travel nil the waj- to Boston alone unless you can go over with her Fri day night. I see by your letter that you'll be going over Friday or Satur day to try to fix up some way to re- rtE SHE BMIWJD AT HIM. new that note. But you won't be able to do it. You'll have to pay up con found the luck! "I'm sending Celia to you. She re members you ten years ago, when you were one of Johnny Harvard's lambs, though she was only a child at the time. You used to call on her sister 3r cousin or somebody. And, by the way, If you can go over with her, go by boat. Celia has had the most con founded luck In traveling by train. She's been In three accidents no fan cy smashups, but Just the usual thing an engineer nnd a couple of mall clerks sent aloft; nobody hurt In the high priced seats. The last case was l carload of laborers that got In the way, and Celia saw some of them afterward. I think she'd get a better Bight's rest on the boat." Bartlett took oft his hat and passed his left hand downward from the top to the back of his head. Ills brain was sore to the touch. "This Is my finish," ho said. "The girl will drive me erazy, but I can't in common decency let her go over alone. I have broken bread In her fa ther's house, and the old chap was kind to me." An ordinary man might have seen In (Via Gilbert only n very pretty girl who was pale and looked as If huo had been 111. Bartlett saw far more. The slightly gathered brows, tho steadied lips, the voice con stantly controlled to guqrd against tho revelation of a causeless excite ment, were oUi'iurnt to Bartlett. knew that llili gill's life from ment to iiMiiifin was held to i termlned nu.iid..id jf cnlniiiesH !, unresting heio.s.u, and when h i membered that she had come to snd state tlmitif.li Hie mere cxi of helpful kindness his soul erlei. against the government of the i , verse. She was cousin lo Cat . . wife: she had gone to that lions affliction because she was no. tnere and for no other reason. Celia sat In his office all the re-: the day. At half past 5, when Ban! went aboard the sound steamer nil his worries on his back and i!i pule, silent girl for sole companion was conscious of a depression of sp.r Its such as he had never felt before. They had some dinner by and l.y. nnd perhaps the food was good f Bartlett. At any rate, In tho com of the meal he was vouchsafed a n v lntlon. He perceived that Cella's ir enco wns not depressing; ho hnd b"iii laboring under a preconceived Idea f whnt her effect upon him ought to be, in view of her condition, nnd 1 1 false notion had completely fom r him. In reality she had not uttered complaint nil day. She had express ed no despondent view, but had gen tly striven to dispel the gloom between them, all of which hnd emannted from himself. "Upon my word," sold he, lookln across at her, "you are a very cheerful young woman." "In comparison with whom?" "Myself." She nodded her head and smiled at him. "I am a good deal worried," said he. "This business of mine In Boston sits on me like an Incubus whatever that is." "I am sorry," said she. Perhaps he had looked for a little curiosity, and perhaps the china blue eyes read this in his face, for she tact fully asked a leading question, and he told his story. There were few peo ple In the world with whom he would have spoken as frankly. "The trouble Is," said he In conclu sion, "that I daro not go directly to the president of the bank. He's a tar tar, and this particular kind of re newal Is his pet aversion. But If 1 can have tho matter put up to him In just the right light by a friend of mine (and a pet of bis) inside the bank the thing will go through. I don't want Bolaud even to know that I came over to Boston to see auybody In the bank. I wouldn't have him know U for a thousand dollars." "Mr. Bolaud Is the president?" "Yes." "Suppose you should meet him on the street," she suggested. "I should dodge Into the nearest open door," said he. "If he saw me In Bos ton at this time he'd know what 1 was there for", and he doesn't like wirepull ing Inside his bank." "I don't like wirepulling anywhere," said Celia. "1 think you should meet Mr. Bolaud deliberately." "Not for gold and precious stones." "I have a feeling that you will," she insisted, "and I don't like the Idea that you're afraid of him." "I don't like it myself," said he, "but I am." "Then you'll surely meet hiru. I nev er daro to be afraid of anything for fear that It will happen." "I admit there's something in It," said he. Colla retired to her stateroom early, and Bartlett went down to the main deck, where in the girl's absence lie relapsed into gloom and consoled him self with strong cigars. A streaky fog lay on the sound. In the thicker places the steamer would slow down as if bewildered, aud lur whistle would exchange Impatient blasts of nautical conversation with other whistles. A human irritation seemed to animate these tones. Bartlett thought of Colin lying awake and listening to the mournful and alarming chorus. Tenderness camo to his heart. He regretted that he had not been kinder to her; that he had not spoken cheerier worus at their parting. "All the human sense and goodness have gone out of me," he growled. "1 am the wreck of what I was." It was past 11 when he went to his stnteroom, and ho sat for a long time on the edge of his berth, thinking despondently of tho morrow. The whis tle was now doing Its worst, and the answers were more petulent. He dis tinguished one voice among them that seemed angrier than the others, and it drew constantly nearer. Then for an interval ho missed that voice. Silence reigned for perhaps no more than a minute, but It seemed much longer. Bartlett rose to his feet ho knew not why. In the depths of the vessel he heard a bell strike once. The vibration of the fabric ceased. The engine was at rest. Suddenly, close at hand, tho whlstlo that he had listened for called out with Its strong voice. Two quick blasts answered it from his own ves sel, aud Instantly the bell In the depths rang sharply twice. Bartlett was in part prepared for what came next, but not for the mag nitude of it. The crash as the two ships met seemed nntural to his ears, but tho Infernal din that followed shook the soul of him with terrors wholly unexpected. Bartlett ran out Into the saloon ami looked across. Ho saw some tangled wreckage and a cloud 'of steam through which was visible a blur of light. This came from the other ves sel. Men were pouring up from beiow, drenched with water and many of them liberally dabbled with blood. Celia! Tho uamo leaped Into Bart lett's mind with a shock that made his head swim. He rail to the door of her room ntul thundered Umu calling to her. f'ho answered I,, very much In her usual tone. . "1 will be ie.d. In a moment." said and utmost I nmedliitely np cd. He was amazed that she sh .. bo dressed. "Are many people huttV" she ns "We must tiy to help." And crossed to the wreckage. An officer and some uniformed r groes. with a passenger or two, ve, disentangling the injured from !'. wreck of staterooms. Bartlett Jolir this party and was astonished to we men nnd women come forth from th mass of splinters with but a fe scratches. He worked with zeal f i perhaps two minutes, which deemed long, and sufficed for multltudliioii service. Then he climbed out of 1 1 a tangle and looked around for Celia. The young lady with nervous prns trntlon, whoso doctor had sternly oi BANDAULNO TIIK WOUNDS UPON A MAN'S HEAD. dcred her to abstain from all exertion nnd excitement, was kneeling on the floor of the saloon deftly bandaging the wounds upon n man's head. Admiration of her courage thrilled In him. He remembered that his own work was not done. A honrso voice was calling from behind a stateroom door which was jammed so that It could not bo opened. Bartlett got his fingers Into a crevice and ripped the lock out through the woodwork. The door swung open. Tho Interior of that room, If it could still be said to have an Interior, was an Impossible ruin. The rear wall was the grny sea fog, the berths had fallen Into the nether wreckage, the floor was shattered so that It looked like the debris of a picket feuce, but It held. And on that shivered floor, clothed In pajamas supplemented by a pair of trousers and one shoe, stood Curtis Bolaud, president of the It. and It. National bank! Bartlett extended a hand and drew him to a securer footing. Except for n few bruises and scratches he was unhurt. "Ha, Mr. Bartlett," said lie cheerily, "so you're my preserver. Where Is Miss Gilbert? Safe, I trust." Bartlett pointed across the saloon to where Celia still knelt among the wounded. "God bless her!" snid Boland fer vently. "I know her well by sight her father and I are neighbors ;n Brooklyn but I have never met the young lady, so I kept aloof win i I saw you with her In the dining room this evening. I expected to meet you later in Boston, of course." The collision of the two vessels seemed a small shock compared to his collision witli Curtis Bolaud. The service he had rendered utterly debar red htm from asking favors at the bank. Tho floor did not sink under him The night's calamities were at an end. Water tight compartments kept the vessel afloat, and she proceeded slow ly under her own steam to New Lon don, whence the passengers proceeded by train to Boston. Bartlett, Boland and Miss Gilbert were companions on this Journey, and for a large part of a way the lady, utterly exhnusted, slept profoundly. And one of the men watched beside her with something nkln to n father ly affection, the other with deeper ten derness. He know now why tho eyes that he had seen ten years before had never faded from his memory. "Bartlett." said the banker, "I for get whether you are married." "I am not," answered Bartlett. "A year from today who knows?" There was a long pause. 'Bartlett, how nre things going with you?" "Every prospect' pleases," responded tho young man. Tho banker eyed him for some mln utes. "Perfectly convenient for yon to meet that note?" "I enn mee't It," answered Bartlett, nnd then he straightened up in his seat. "I can do many things that would have been hard yesterday. I have had n lesson In courage, In self forpetfulness and in the value of life. I am worth n dozen of the Johnny Bartletts that havo been walking the floor this last mouth, and one of the proofs of It Is thnt I'm not afraid to tell you that I havo been walking the floor. I am not afraid of anything or anybody." Another silence, "Send mo over a llttlo money," said tho banker, "as llttlo as you pleane. just enough to mnko u showing. Send mo the siiino kind of paper for the balance. Wilt that suit?" "I should think so! But I don't usU"- "You have asked nothing," said Bo land. "Tho proposition Is mine " HELD OPJ HIE Woman Faces Burglars, Who Flee Before Bullets. HUSBAND BITTEN BY ONE. "111 Shoot Your Wife if You Shoot Mol" Would Bo Robber Tells Georgo Cisclotta, Whose Wife Puts Up Stiff Fight. Now York, Nov. 1. The neighbor- hood of Alexander avenue and One Hundred nnd Forty-fifth street, tho Bronx, was in n turmoil of excitement when shots were exchanged in n run ning fight between citizens and two men who hold up Mrs. Mary Cisclotta, at tho point of a gun, In her home nt 475 East One Hundred nnd Forty-fifth street. One of the alleged holdup men was caught after a fierce fight with a po- llccmnn. Both were Injured In tho scrimmage. George Cisclotta, a build ing contractor, In whoso home tho men attempted to rob his wife, wns also hurt, having been bitten by one of tho mon when he tackled him In his parlor. Mrs. Cisclotta wns in the front room of her homo when tho two men en tered, one of them pointing a revolver nt her and commanding her to bo quiet. At about this tlmo Mr. Cisclotta, who Is fifty-three years old, entered tho house from the rear, having been in the back yard. Without attracting at- tcntlon he got n gun from his bedroom. Then tho contractor, rovolver drawn, stepped Into the hnllway leading Into tho front room and told tho men to surrender. Neither moved. One of tham continued to point his weapon at Mrs. Cisclotta. "If you shoot mo I'll shoot your wife!" wns tho answer to Clsclotta's demands to give up. Cisclotta held his gun on tho man who held the other revolver pointed at the woman. In this way they stood several minutes. Finally the men nerv ously began to edge their way toward tho door. Seeing an opening as he ncared tho contractor one of the men sprang sud denly, dragging him to the tloor. As the two men fell, Cisclotta lost his hold on his gun nnd in the tusslo his left hand was bitten savagely. Leaving Cisclotta on the floor, the two men ran down a stairway leading to the street. The contractor quickly revived and following the pair began firing nt them. Tho fugitives ran to ward Alexander avenue, followed by Cisclotta. Shots were exchanged, but no one wns hurt, although there were many persons In One Hundred and Forty-fifth street when tho shooting began. AUTO XIHER ON TRIAL. Millionaire Whose Car Killed Miss Hough Faces Jury. New York, Nov. 1. Edward T. Ito seuhelmer. Indicted for murder in the first degree for the killing of Grace Hough with his automobile on tho night of Aug. 18 In the Bronx and going on unheeding, is on trial before Justice O'Gorman In the criminal branch of the supreme court. There was a special panel of a hun dred jurors, but the jury was obtained after forty-five of tho talesmen had been examined. Several were excused because they owned motor cars. Bo senlielmer is being prosecuted by As sistant District Attorney Maynard, nnd James W. Osborne appears for tho de fense. LOSES LEG UNDER TRAIN. Runaway Youth Meets With Serious Accident at Middletown. Middletown, N. Y Nov. 1. In try ing to board a freight train near Downsvlllo on tho Ontario nnd West ern rnllroad, Cornelius Voorhees, nged seventeen, who ran away from his home, 732 Melrose avenue, the Bronx, fen days ago, fell under the wheels. His left foot was crushed. lie was brought to Thrall hospital, this city, where tho log was amputated. Voorhees' companion wns Arthur Boss man of 401 Willis avenue, the Bronx. IIo Is twenty nnd also ran nwny. DRANK ACID THROUGH STRAW Mrs. George Coley. Despondent Over Husband's Death, Kills Herself. Middletown, N. Y., Nov. 1. Drinking carbolic ncid through n straw, Mrs. Georgo Coley quickly succumbed to tho draught nt her homo here. Tho woman, who had suffered from melan cholia for Boino yenrs following tho death of her husband, hnd recently been growing worse. Her sou, Glen II. Coley, gave up n course ho was talcing nt 1'rntt insti tute, Brooklyn, in order to enro for his mother. 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