PAGE 0 THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1011. frH I His Castle on I the Rhine. And How He Sold It to a Descendant of Its First Owner. By F. A. MITCH EL. T Copyright by American Press Asso- V elation, 1811. On the loft bank-of the Rhino Is the ruin of one of those old castles which have stood In that region for centuries. This particular castle some years ago was bought by Carl Blshoff, a German American who had made a lot of mon ey brewing lager beer. Blshoff bought with the castlo a few pieces of furni ture, pictures and other curiosities that were several hundred years old and had been handed down from one pur chaser to another. With the decay of tho castle and tho gradual breaking up or loss of these articles all that re mained had finally been concentrated In one room, which, when tho owner was there, ho used for a living and bed room. In this apartment was an antique fireplace big enough to roast un ox. Over the chlmneypleco hung a picture that was especially prized by Carl Blshoff. Blshoff was an admirable amateur chess player. Indeed, ho had on sev eral occasions tackled professionals with fair success. Tho reason he prized tho picture that hung over the chlmneypleco at his castlo was be cause it represented n curious position between chess players. They were In medley.al dress, the one long and thin with a black beard, tho other stocky, whose beard was fiery red. Tho dark man wore his beard at a point, while his mustnchlos wero turn ed upward, giving him a malignant expression. Tho red bearded man was of a pleasant countenance. Tho picture represonted him looking on the board, evidently troubled at a prospect of being checkmated by his antagonist, who was regarding him with an ex pression of triumph. On a plate at tached to tho frame was tho name of tho picture in German, "Checkmate In Six Moves." There was a legend con nected with tho painting that tho man who had built and owned the castle would some day return.to repossess it When he came so the legend said he would assume tho position of the red bearded man In tho picture, and instead of being checkmated in sir moves ho would checkmate in tho same number. Blshoff chuckled at this legend, say ing that if any one could get his castlo In that way ho was welcome to do so. lie had studied for hours trying to discover a method by which the short man could save himself and had failed. IIo considered' tho problem in soluble, and several chess experts who Jiad seen the picture had agreed with him. One autumn Blshoff, who had run over from Americn to Berlin, con cluded to pay a visit to his castlo to see that all was ready for the coming winter. A caretaker lived in a room that had been repaired and furnished for him and his wife and could pro vide what Blshoff required in tho way of refreshments. Blshoff would bo obliged to spend ono night in tho cas tlo and would do so in tho room al ready described. It was a lowering afternoon when he reached tho castle, clouds hanging low about the battlements. After mak ing an inspection and talking over the conditions with his caretaker Blshoff, who had directed a fire bo built in his chamber, dined there, and when ho had finished pulled a big armchair up blforo tho blazing logs. Not feeling especially happy in his gloomy abode, he directed his caretaker to make him a hot punch. This was set on a table beside him, and as the hours slowly passed ho drovo off his loneliness with frequent potations. Presently ho fell into a dose. How long be slept he didn't know, but the first thing he did know tho door was opened and a man camo into the room. Blshoff looked up. expecting to seo tho caretaker. He was mistaken. Tho person wHo entered was one ho had never seen, no approached Blshoff with outstretched hand and with a cor diality that seemed more appropriate for a host thnn a guest. Then he drew a chair before tho fire, warmed his hands and, taking a pipe from his pocket, began to smoke. "Well," he said to Blshoff. "this is a dismal night without, but pleasant within. I'm glad you've made your self comfortable." Blshoff has never been very clear in his statements about this man. Wero it not that he has been so sure ho was awake and so explicit about some circumstances connected with tho visit one would bo warranted In nssumlng Hint ho was dreaming. At first, ho says, it only struck him that tho man was very queer looking, very .qucerly dressed and wore n red beard. But nt bis entrance Blshoff did not con nect him with the picture. Blshoff was so astonished that for some timo ho made no response. In deed, he couldn't think of anything to soy. Finally he broke sllenco by ask In German: "Wheace como you?" "From up tho river. I have had a hard pull. Do you know I came near being caught in that whirlpool? I was ; pulling along when I heard a voice singing. Glancing up, I saw a benutt- ful woman looking at me. oh, so tender , lr. I could not keep away from her. Turning toward the shore. I oon found my boat was beginning to whirl. With a powerful effort I turnxl and pulled back into smooth water. Tlu suin'iir continued sweeter than before, but stopped my curs with a bit of Wutli I found in my boat and did not Ion); to ward the shore. I narrowly I'scilpcd the Lorelei." "The Lorelei!" exclaimed Blslmir. "You tell jour experience as If It had really happened. The Lorelei Is a myth." "Call her what you like. 1 don't wish any more of her. I'll take some of that punch. I need n bracer after my narrow escape." Taking a mug from the mantel, he poured out some of the liquor and drank It off. "One would Judge from tho way you conduct yourself." said Blshoff, "that you ure at home here." "I am." , "What do you mean?" snapped Blsh off angrily. "Oh. don't get huffy. Let us enjoy ourselves together." Then, noticing a chessboard and chessmen on a table, he added: "Do yoli play chess?" "res." "Well, there is no better way of spending an evening. Let us havo a game." He took up the chessboard, set the pitcher of punch aside, placed the board on tho table, arranged the -men. Without saying "by your leave," he took the first move. Blshoff, wonder ing at the man's audacity, lowered his eyes to the chessboard nnd soon forgot his astonishment in tho game. He saw at once that the stranger was an ex cellent player. Tbe game was a long one. and for some time neither gained an ndvnntage; then Blshoff, thinking bo saw a way to checkmato his an tagonist, moved and looked up nt his antagonist as if to say, "I'll soon have you now, my fine fellow." The stranger looked up, too, and with a low laugh turned his head toward the picture of tho chess play ers that hung over the chlmneypiece. Blshoff glanced from the board to the picture, then back to the board. He started. Tho chessmen wero in the same position as in the painting, Blsh off having the advantage. And then It dawned on Blshoff that his visitor and the man with the red beard were one nnd the same. "I will checkmate you in six moves," said the stranger. "You mean that I will checkmate you in six moves," said Blshoff. "This against your castlo that It Is I who checkmates you." IIo drew forth a draft for 30.000 marks on a bank In Cologne. "Done." said Blshoff. His opponent took up a piece nnd moved it like, an automaton. Blshoff moved again. On the stranger's fourth move something Blshoff had never counted on happened. It seemed to him that tho tables were turned. Aft er a long time he moved. The stran ger moved again. Blshoff, who now lost his head, moved for the fifth time. "Checkmate!" said the stranger, moving. "You've won; the castle Is yours!" gasped Blshoff. The stranger chuckled. "All this is very queer!" gasped the American, staring at the man with eyes as big as butter plates. "You are mistaken. Nothing is queer. What is, is. You have only certain relations with the world of which you are conscious. You think the past is dead. Nothing is dead. Everything always lives, but all things change. Good night. This castle is now inlno, but I leave you in possession for the present." That's all Blshoff remembers of that memorable evening. The next morn ing ho awoke sitting In his chair. The fire had gone out. and he was shiver ing. Ho left without oven waiting for breakfast and offered tho castle for sale. An ngent found a purchaser, and before Blshoff returned to America he mot tho man in tho agent's office to complete tho sale. lie nearly fainted on recognizing in tho new owner his visitor who had checkmated him at ches3. While tho papers were being made out and tho signatures appended Blsh off continued to stare at the purchaser, who gaTO no sign of ever having seen him before. The man was in modern dress, and. his beard, though red, was cropped close. Uo had lost everything of his old fashioned appearance in the picture. In other words, ho seemed to have been taken out of the fifteenth or sixteenth century and dropped Into the twentieth. "Hnvo you over been in tho castle?" Blshoff asked him. "No. I do not live In Germany. 1 have since my boyhood been In busi ness in South Americn. It is there that I have acquired tho means to re cover the home of my ancestors." At this point the ngent finished work ing on the papers and snM: "Barau Becker comes Into his own after many centuries. Ho is a lineal descendant of tho original baron who built tho castle. It was lost some 400 years ago at a game of chess. There is a legend that a descendant of Us first owner would como again into its possession in the same way that it was lost to tho famllyS Blshoff was bo affected at this in formation that ho signed his receipts nnd hurried away without asking nny questions, much to his regret ever since, for ho appears to bo in a mud dle about tho whole affair. The only part of it about which ho Is certain is that be was wldo awako and In his full senses when tho events occurred in the agent's office. Ho always ends his story with the remark, "Thero is so much legend about that Rhine country that some of It must be true." NIKOLA TESLA HAS A NEW INVENTION. Electrical Journal Ssys Ho Can Eatit) Transmit Great Energy. A new development of n mechanical principle upon which Nlkolu Tesla Is said to have been laboring for some years is described in tho Electrical Re view. This latest development In me chanics for which so much Is claimed by friends of tho inventor Is based on tho adhesion and viscosity of liquids and gases and Is said to afford a novel means of generating nnd transmitting mechanical power. Dr. Tesla is very optimistic about the results of his long experimenta tion, but will not discuss the matter for publication. Ho expressed sur prise that nny one had heard of his latest work before the appearance of his account of it in tho electrical pub lication. "The efficiency of tho machines Dr. Tesla has constructed on this princi ple," tho Electrical Ilevlew says, "Is evidenced by their remarkable per formance, small turbines or rotary en gines being run at n peripheral speed scarcely more than half of that of re action turbines and giving several times the output of tho latter." The article describes a small steam turbine recently exhibited In New York "hnving a motor only nine and three-quarter inches in diameter and two Inches wide," which Is said to be capablo of developing 110 horsepower with free exhaust. This machine, it is further stnted, has no blades, vanes, valves or sliding contacts of any kind. "On account of the great simplic ity of the apparatus, reversibility and extraordinary output," the article con tinues, "it will undoubtedly find an immense vnriety of uses, and the com mercial world cannot fail to be deeply Interested in this new development The electrical industry in particular should be greatly benefited by this latest effort of Dr. Tesla." STABS A MOUNTAIN LION. Texas Farmor Slew a Beast That Had Killed His Child. Maddened by the sight of n mountain Hon standing over the dead body of hi3 three-year-old Bon, Juan Morales, a farmer living seven miles from Brownsville, Tex., killed tho beast with a knife thrust in the heart after a fif teen minute struggle, in which he sus tained injuries which will cost an arm. Morales had gone to a neighbor's on an errand and loft his three children, aged three, seven ' and ten years, nt homo. His wife died some months ago. Do wns returning and heard the screams of his children. Rushing info the house, he saw a mountain Hon, which weighed over 400 pounds, crouched over tho lifeless and almost headless body of his little son. Tho beast sprang at Morales, and the desperate fight began. Morales, who ia forty-two years old and an athlete, tried for a strangle hold on the nnl mal, which fought with its paws and was fast pulling the flesh from the right arm and shoulder of Morales when ho managed to get out his knife and made several cuts at the moun tain Hon, which only made it more fe rocious. Morales was almost exhausted when he succeeded In driving tho big blnde of tho knife Into the heart of tho ani mal nnd staggered from its grasp as It fell dead at his foot. Morales fainted, and his two llttlo girls revived hliu with cold water nnd then helped him to bandage tho wounds. It was a long Journey to town for medical aid, and, without a conveyance handy, Morales determined to make the trip on foot with his two surviving children. They had almost completed the Journey when a man In a wagon picked them up nnd carried them to Brownsville. NO FLEET FOR SAN FRANCISCO Acting Secretary of Navy Won't Lend It to Aid Celebration. Acting Secretary of tho Navy Win throp has denlod the request of vari ous civic organizations In San Fran cisco that the proposed cruise of the raclflc fleet to Hawaii be postponed ho that tho war vessels may take part In n naval parado Incident to the break ing of grot'.nd for the Pnnnraa-Pnclfle exposition, which will take place on Oct. 14 next upon tho occasion of President Taft's visit to San Francisco. Tho Pacific fleet is scheduled to sail from San Diego 911 Oct. 1 for Honolulu. In denying the request Mr. Wlnthrop said the cruise could not be postponed without serious detriment to the fleet'n efficiency. His First Day at School. I know a little boy who starts Upon a journey far today, And, oh, the love of anxious hearts That follows him along1 the way! A traveler to wondrous lands, He turns and smiles and waves again To ono with wistful' eyes who stands Already lonely at the pane. She knows the road Is rough and long For baby feet so soft and small; She knows how travelers bravo and strong 'Neath stress and storm and burden fall. But naught of woes her wanderer knows Nor reckons .of the strife In store. Blithely, without a, care, he goes, Like the pay venturers of yore. Along that road are love and fame And good for all, yet some there be Who find at last but grief or shame. Whose end Is pain and poverty. Ah, mother of that little boy Who fareth forth alone today, Ood grant your prayer that peace and Joy Attend his footsteps all the wayl -Leonard II. Robbing In Newark Evening I NEW TALES THAT ABE TOLD Mr. Archbold's Bridge Hand. John D. Archbold. the Standard Oil company's real head, Is a bridge fiend, ne lives beyond Tarrytown-ou-the-Hudson, ,nnd in order to be certain of a plcasanat dally game he bought a fast steam yacht some years ago. At tho closo of each business day Arch bold and his friends go aboard. No man is admitted to the dally gather- TnB MEN CltUUQ TO TUB BOAT. Ing unless ho is n pluperfect past .mas ter of bridge whist. If his game falls off he is dropped from tho daily party. The other day two oarsmen went out unwisely on a windy day. Their frail shell "buckled" in tho swell, and the pair were thrown into tho drink Just as the Vixen (ame whooping along. Tho Vixen's captain stopped her, ma neuvered for a few moments in the choppy sea and finally got ropes to tho men, who wero desperately cling ing to their boat. Archbold ran to the rail to see them helped ou board. In his excitement ho waved his hand as he was giving ttn order, and a fistful of lovely cards floated on the breeze. Tho men wore taken into the engine room and dried off. Archbold visited them there. "This should bo a lesson to you, young men," said he. "You should be more careful." They said thoy would be. They were profusely grateful for their res cue. "You ought to be," said Archbold solemnly. "Do you know what this es capade of yours cost me?" They didn't know, of course. "Tho very best bridge hand I ever held In my life," said John D. Mississippi's New Senator. Jnmcs K Vardamau, who recently won In the primary election for United States senator from Mississippi, bus been twice governor of tho state. Sen ator Leroy C. Percy, the present In cumbent, was elected by the legisla ture lust year to fill the unexpired term of tho late A. .1. McLaurln, nnd his term will not expire till 1913. But Mr. Percy, who was a candidate for the full term against Vardamon, has sig nified his intention of resigning when tho legislature meets In January, and Mr. Vnrdaman will undoubtedly he elected to fill out the balance of that JAMES E. VABDAUAK. tern at well as the succeeding period of six years. Three years ago Vnrda man contested with John Sharp Wil liams for the senntorshlp and lost by tho narrow margin of 325 votes out of a total of 117,525. Senator Vardaman Is a native of Texas and in his fiftieth year. Ills youth was spent on a farm in Mis sissippi, where he picked cotton and cut railroad ties until he was admitted to tho bar. Before being elected to tho governorship ho bad made his mark in the stnto legislature, where bo served as speaker. During the Spanish war he served In Cuba, reach ing tho rank of major, and was for como months in charge of the military court at Santiago, 7 aeirtfW Women Appreciate the Ballot. Mrs. Edward Taylor, wife of a mem ber of congress from Colorado, denies that In her state the women are tired of the ballot. Mrs. Taylor says there aro to Colorado 80,000 more men than women, yet In tho elections last fall tho voto cast by her sex was 43 pet ont nf tho total, WORLD'S BIGGEST WARSHIPS. Two New Ones For American Navy to Hold the Record. The two new battleships authorized by tho last naval act probably will bo of 23,500 tons displacement, or tho biggest wnr vessels In tho world. Tho largest ships so far designed for tho American navy are the New York and Texas, with a displacement of 27,000 tons each, nnd It became known only recently that tho navy department con templated exceeding their size. The new ships will have heavier ar mor than over beforo put on a battle ship, which accounts for their increas ed displacement. The armament of tho now vessels will be the same as the New York and Texas, with a main battery of ten fourteen-lnch guns. With this npproach to a 80,000 ton battleship the naval ordnance experts nro considering the question of a six teen Inch gun. It will require n 35,000 ton battleship to withstand the ter rific recoil from a main battery of ten Blxtecn-lnch guns. Ths Orange In Spain. It Is considered a very healthful thing to eat nn orango beforo break fast But who can ent an orango well? One must go to Spain to see that done. Tho senorita cuts off the rind with her silver knife, then, put ting her fork into tho peeled fruit, she detaches every morsel with her pearly teeth and continues to eat the orango without Josing a drop of tho Juice and lays down tho core with tho fork still In it "What is tho funniest thing you ever heard of?" "Why, I guess it's Henpcck's wlfo pitying a man she could hnve married, but didn't" Houston Post. "Your odo to Niagara is tho real thing. I felt that way when I first saw the falls." "I havo never seen tho falls," explained tho poet. "I got the Ideu from reading a railway booklet." Louisville Courier-Journal. When yott feel dA- vous, tired, worried or despondent it is a sure sign you need MOTT'S NERVERINE PILLS. They renew the normal vigor and make life worth living. Be sure and ask for Mott's Nerverine Pills EXEi?.0. WILLIAMS MFC. CO., Props., Cleveland, Ohio FOR SAIiE BY C. O. JADWIN. W. C. SPRY AUCTIONEER HOLDS SALES ANYWHEIIE IN STATE. ttttt:a:tutatjat:::::2::uj;:an;:t CLOSING OUT SUMMER GOOD Til COST To Clean MENNER & GO. Keystone Stores. Consisting of Made Up Goods for Ladies, Juniors and Misses. Wash Tailor Suits, Newest Styles. House Dresses, Wrappers & Kimonas, White Lawn and Marquisette One Piece Dresses. Kimona Shirt Waists and High and Low Neck Waists. Long Coats in Light Weight WooF, Pongee and Linen. Separate Skirts and Jackets will be sold low to close out all re maining stock. MER.N En & CO. 5mtmmnm:mtmmttmjmwmtmjmtmntmtm:mjmm:mttmt FOR RESULTS JOSEPH N. WELCH Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. Office: Second floor Masonic Build ing, over 0. 0, Jadwin's drug store, Honsdale. M. LEE BRAMAN EVERYTHING IN LIVERY Buss for Every Train and Town Calls. Horses always for sale Boarding and Accomodations for Farmers Prompt and polite attention at all times. 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