Home
  By Author [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Title [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Language
all Classics books content using ISYS

Download this book: [ ASCII ]

Look for this book on Amazon


We have new books nearly every day.
If you would like a news letter once a week or once a month
fill out this form and we will give you a summary of the books for that week or month by email.

Title: Nick Carter Stories No. 155, August 28, 1915; The Gordon Elopement; or, Nick Carter’s Three Of A Kind.
Author: Carter, Nicholas (House name)
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Nick Carter Stories No. 155, August 28, 1915; The Gordon Elopement; or, Nick Carter’s Three Of A Kind." ***

This book is indexed by ISYS Web Indexing system to allow the reader find any word or number within the document.

AUGUST 28, 1915; THE GORDON ELOPEMENT; OR, NICK CARTER’S THREE OF A
KIND. ***



                              NICK CARTER
                                STORIES

  _Issued Weekly. Entered as Second-class Matter at the New York Post
 Office, by_ STREET & SMITH, _79-89 Seventh Ave., New York. Copyright,
 1915, by_ STREET & SMITH. _O. G. Smith and G. C. Smith, Proprietors._


            Terms to NICK CARTER STORIES Mail Subscribers.

                           (_Postage Free._)

               Single Copies or Back Numbers, 5c. Each.

                     3 months               65c.
                     4 months               85c.
                     6 months              $1.25
                     One year               2.50
                     2 copies one year      4.00
                     1 copy two years       4.00

     =How to Send Money=--By post-office or express money order,
     registered letter, bank check or draft, at our risk. At your own
     risk if sent by currency, coin, or postage stamps in ordinary
     letter.

     =Receipts=--Receipt of your remittance is acknowledged by proper
     change of number on your label. If not correct you have not been
     properly credited, and should let us know at once.

 =No. 155.=      NEW YORK, August 28, 1915.        =Price Five Cents.=



                         THE GORDON ELOPEMENT;


                     Edited by CHICKERING CARTER.



CHAPTER I.

AN OPEN QUESTION.


Nick Carter did not interrupt the sobbing girl. He listened patiently,
grave and attentive, letting her run on in broken, desultory phrases,
until her first paroxism of grief immediately following his arrival
should abate sufficiently for her to tell him connectedly what had
occurred.

“They may say what they will--what they will, Mr. Carter, but I cannot
believe it, will not believe it,” she tearfully declared. “My faith in
him is unshaken. He is incapable of such deceit, such cruelty, such
terrible treachery. He is the victim of a plot, a hideous conspiracy, or
some terrible crime--oh, I am sure of it! He would not betray me in this
way, not for life itself! I know he would not. Arthur is above such
duplicity, such terrible----”

Nick now checked her with a gesture.

“I agree with you, Miss Strickland,” he said kindly. “Arthur Gordon is,
in my opinion, a thoroughly honorable man. As you are so sure of it,
too, and that he is the victim of a conspiracy, you best can serve him
by subduing your agitation, and telling me precisely what has occurred.
I can do nothing, nor form any opinion of the case, until I know all of
the circumstances.”

“Mr. Carter is right, Wilhelmina,” said her elderly uncle, Mr. Rudolph
Strickland. “It is very kind of him to come out here, with his
assistant, this morning. Dry your eyes, therefore, or let me talk with
him. I can inform him, Mina, better than you.”

“Do so, Mr. Strickland,” said Nick, turning to him. “What has befallen
Arthur Gordon, as far as you know?”

The scene of this interview, which was the beginning of one of the most
extraordinary criminal cases in the career of the famous detective, was
the library of a new and exceedingly fine wooden residence in one of the
most beautiful rural sections of the Bronx.

The hour was about ten o’clock, on a charming May morning, nearly seven
months since Nick Carter first met these people, and recovered for Mr.
Rudolph Strickland the costly art treasures stolen from the Fifth Avenue
flat, in which he then resided, resulting also in the arrest of the
notorious European crook, Mortimer Deland, together with a gang of local
confederates.

Nick had frequently met Arthur Gordon since then, and he knew that this
wealthy young banker and broker of Wall Street was contemplating
matrimony, but he was ignorant of many of the particulars which Mr.
Strickland hastened to impart.

“This is Mr. Gordon’s new house,” said he, “though he already has deeded
the entire estate to Wilhelmina, who soon is to be his wife.”

“We were to be married next Wednesday evening,” put in the girl more
calmly.

“This is to be their home, Mr. Carter, and I am to live with them,” Mr.
Strickland continued. “Both insist that I shall dwell no longer alone in
the flat I recently occupied.”

“You now are living here, I infer,” Nick remarked.

“Only Mina and I, aside from our several servants.”

“I see.”

“It was Arthur’s wish that the wedding should take place in the home he
is to occupy. So he bought this fine estate of several acres and then
built and furnished this beautiful residence. It was completed nearly
three weeks ago.”

“It certainly is a fine place and a fine house,” Nick admitted, glancing
around.

“I since have been living here with Mina, while she has been making
preparations for the wedding,” Strickland went on. “Mr. Gordon has been
living at home with his parents, in Riverside Drive, all the while, but
he has been coming out here each afternoon after business hours to
direct the laborers who still are at work on various parts of the
estate.”

“Was he here yesterday afternoon?” Nick inquired.

“Yes, until nearly six o’clock.”

“And then?”

“We supposed he would return to dinner at that time, as usual, and we
sent one of the servants to call him from the golf links, where he went
to supervise the work of some of the laborers. The servant returned in a
few moments and stated that Mr. Gordon had gone.”

“Gone where?”

“That’s the question,” said Mr. Strickland. “I am stating the
circumstances in the order they occurred, that you may be better able to
determine whether----”

“Oh, you are too slow, Uncle Rudolph,” cried Wilhelmina, interrupting.
“I cannot endure this suspense. Here, Mr. Carter, read this! It came by
mail this morning. It will tell you, in a nutshell, what is said to have
occurred; but I cannot believe it, will not believe it. They say---- Oh,
Mr. Carter, they say that Arthur Gordon has deserted me, and eloped with
his handsome stenographer!”

Nick had heard of such cases. He did not reply to the grief-stricken
girl, nor make any comments. He took a letter which she, starting up
while speaking, hurriedly brought from the library table and tendered
with trembling hand.

It was a typewritten letter, on paper bearing the printed business
heading of the missing banker, also the date of the previous day. It
read as follows:

     “My Dear Mina: I am writing you a few lines before leaving my
     office, on a subject which, though I am to see you within an hour,
     I have not the heart or courage to discuss with you in person.

     “This is a late day, indeed, for me to discover that it is best for
     us to part permanently; that I would do you a far greater wrong in
     making you my wife, than in taking the step I am about to take.
     Conditions have arisen that make it imperative, however, and I can
     see no wise, or even possible, alternative. I shall be far away
     when you read this, and it is my intention never to return. I
     cannot ask you to forgive me. My only hope is that you can forget
     me, and in time find one more worthy of you.

     “You already have the deed of the new place, which, with all it
     contains, I hope you will keep in part amendment of the wrong I
     have done you. Do please try to forget me.

                                                        ARTHUR GORDON.”

Nick Carter’s grave, clean-cut face, on which Mina Strickland’s tearful
blue eyes were anxiously riveted, underwent no change while he read the
letter. He handed it to Patsy Garvan, his junior assistant, who had
accompanied him there, saying quietly:

“Read it, Patsy. The case evidently is one that we must investigate.”

Patsy obeyed, without replying.

“Please tell me at once, Mr. Carter,” Mina pleaded. “Do you think
that----”

“That Arthur Gordon wrote it?” Nick interposed, turning to her.

“Yes.”

“Frankly, Miss Strickland, I do not.”

“Oh, thank Heaven for that!” cried the girl. “Your opinion is worth more
to me than that of all the world. It must be, then, that he is the
victim of----”

“Stop a moment,” Nick again interrupted. “My opinion will be worth more
after I know all of the circumstances. It now is based only upon the
fact that all this is very unlike Arthur Gordon.”

“It is, indeed.”

“Let me question you. That will be the quickest way to bring out the
salient points,” said Nick. “Answer as briefly as possible. You received
the letter this morning?”

“Yes, sir,” said Mina, eager to proceed.

“The written signature is like Gordon’s?”

“Precisely.”

“You have had other letters from him, of course?”

“Yes, many, Mr. Carter.”

“Were they usually typewritten?”

“No, no, very rarely. He nearly always used a pen.”

“Do you know whether he can use a typewriter skillfully, or even
easily?”

“I don’t think so,” said Mina. “I think he dictates all of his
typewritten letters.”

“I doubt very much, nevertheless, that he would have dictated such a
letter as this,” said Nick, when Patsy returned it to him.

“That’s true, chief, for fair.”

“Bear in mind, Mr. Carter, that it would have been dictated to the girl
with whom he is said to have eloped,” put in Mr. Strickland
suggestively.

“Admitting that, even, he would have been much more likely to have
written so personal and private a letter,” Nick replied. “Who is his
stenographer?”

“Her name is Pauline Perrot,” said Mina.

“A French girl?”

“Of French extraction, I think.”

“You have seen her?”

“Yes. She has been out here twice in the past ten days with Mr. Gordon.
She boards in Fordham, through which he passes when coming out here with
his touring car. He has, for that reason, frequently taken her home from
his office when on his way here.”

“Is she a very attractive girl?” Nick inquired.

“I don’t think so,” said Mina, with brows knitting. “She is tall and
dark, with black hair, and eyes that frighten me. I tremble when she
looks at me. She fills me with awe, and---- Oh, Mr. Carter, I have felt
sure there was something wrong, some calamity coming, though I could not
imagine what. A cloud has been hanging over me ever since I first saw
Pauline Perrot.”

“How long has she been in Gordon’s employ?”

“Four or five months, I think.”

“Have you suspected her of other than business relations with him?”

“Not for a moment,” cried Mina. “Nor do I now believe him guilty of
anything wrong. I feel sure he is the victim of a plot, a conspiracy,
or----”

“One moment,” said Nick. “Did he come out here with his touring car
yesterday afternoon?”

“He did, but sent his chauffeur home with it. I wondered at that, Mr.
Carter, for he never had done so before, nor did he offer any
explanation.”

“And you did not question him?”

“No, sir.”

“Did he appear as usual?”

“Not quite,” Wilhelmina admitted.

“In what way was he different?”

“He was more serious and self-absorbed, as if he had something on his
mind. He remained with us only a short time, then said he was going out
to see how the work on the links was progressing. He added that he would
return a little later. That was the last I saw of him,” Mina concluded,
with a sob.

“There is much more to this, Mr. Carter,” said Mr. Strickland. “I went
out to seek him, or make further inquiries concerning him, after our
servant stated that he had gone.”

“What did you learn?”

“I was told by one of the workmen that he left the links about five
o’clock. When last seen by them he was walking south toward a woodland
road in that locality. I continued my search in that direction, and I
soon met two women who had seen him.”

“Women you knew?”

“Yes, two sisters, Mary and Ellen Dawson. They could not be mistaken,
for both were employed here by Mr. Gordon to help clean and settle this
house.”

“Ah, I see,” Nick nodded. “When and where did they see him?”

“About ten minutes before, at the juncture of a crossroad half a mile
from where I met them,” Mr. Strickland went on. “He then was talking
with Pauline Perrot. Both of the Dawson women have seen her here, and
both immediately recognized her.”

“There evidently was a rendezvous,” said Nick.

“I think so,” Mr. Strickland agreed. “Gordon then had a leather suit
case, but the women did not know whether it belonged to him or his
companion. She was clad in a dark-green traveling costume. When Gordon
saw the two women approaching, he hurried away with Miss Perrot, as if
anxious to avoid recognition.”

“In which direction did they go?”

“East, through the crossroad.”

“Did you continue your search?”

“I did not, Mr. Carter, for I supposed that Arthur had unexpected
business to look after, having been sought by his stenographer, as I
then inferred, and that he would return during the evening, or telephone
to us.”

“Have you telephoned to his residence this morning?”

“Yes, indeed. He was not at home last night, nor can his parents explain
his absence. They supposed he spent the night here.”

“Have you telephoned to his Wall Street office?”

“I have, of course--about half an hour ago,” said Mr. Strickland.

“With what result?”

“Only two of the clerks then were there. They could give me no
information, but I directed them to call me up at once, if Mr. Gordon
came in. I have no hope of that, however, in view of the letter Mina has
received.”

“It does not, indeed, seem probable,” Nick allowed.

“Added to all this,” said Mr. Strickland, “there now are rumors,
probably resulting from the gossip of the Dawson women, that Gordon has
eloped with Pauline Perrot. If she is not in his office at her customary
hour, ten o’clock, I shall begin to fear----”

Mr. Strickland was interrupted by the ringing of a telephone on a stand
in one corner, and Wilhelmina uttered a cry, and ran to the instrument.

“Wait!” Nick exclaimed. “Let me answer it.”

The girl obeyed without a remonstrance, if not quite willingly.

“Well?” queried Nick over the wire.

The response came in quick, agitated tones:

“Hello! I want Mr. Gordon, if he is there, or Mr. Strickland. Hurry!”

“Mr. Gordon is not here. Who are you?”

“Mr. Beckwith, his cashier. Where can I communicate with Mr. Gordon? Do
you know? He was not at home last night. I have just called up his
residence. I must find him, or----”

“One moment, Mr. Beckwith,” Nick interrupted. “This is Nick Carter
talking.”

“Nick Carter! Good heavens! What has occurred out there?”

“Tell me, instead, what is wrong in Gordon’s office, that you are so
disturbed.”

“Wrong enough!” came the quick reply. “Cash, bonds, and securities,
aggregating sixty thousand dollars, are missing from the vault. Unless
Mr. Gordon removed them----”

“Wait!” Nick commanded a bit sharply. “Is Pauline Perrot there?”

“She is not. She has not come in yet.”

Nick glanced at a French clock on the mantel.

It struck the half hour at that moment, a single stroke, like a sudden
death knell--the half after ten.



CHAPTER II.

THE MAN WHO ESCAPED.


Nick Carter decided instantly what must be done, also not done. He
continued talking with Beckwith without a perceptible pause.

Nick questioned him briefly, obtained Pauline Perrot’s Fordham address,
and he then directed him to give no publicity to the matter, but to
await the arrival of Chick Carter, his chief assistant, whom he would
immediately send to Gordon’s office to investigate the case.

Nick then called up the library in his Madison Avenue house and talked
with Chick. He gave him a brief outline of the circumstances, together
with such instructions as were necessary, and he then directed him to
report in person at Gordon’s residence in the Bronx.

“It will take him a couple of hours at least,” he remarked to Patsy,
after hanging up the receiver. “We can get in our work elsewhere, in the
meantime, and return before he arrives.”

Naturally, of course, several pertinent questions had arisen in Nick’s
mind, and which could not consistently be ignored, in spite of his high
opinion of Arthur Gordon.

Was he really the writer of the letter received by Mina Strickland? Had
conditions really arisen which made imperative the course he said he was
about to shape?

Had he realized at that late day, indeed, that he was not as deeply in
love with Wilhelmina as he had supposed? Had he, too, become helplessly
infatuated with Pauline Perrot, and as an only desperate resort
determined to desert Miss Strickland and elope with the stenographer?

Was it he, in that case, who had taken the cash, bonds, and securities
from the vault in his office? Had he sacrificed all but that small part
of his fortune, to say nothing of character, friends, and family, for a
mad love for another woman?

In view of the fact that Gordon had been acting voluntarily, and in a
measure had deceived the Stricklands as to his intentions the previous
afternoon, Nick could not but give the foregoing questions serious
consideration. He had, as observed before, known of such cases. They
were common enough, in fact, and what man has done, man may do.

Nick’s face reflected none of his thoughts, however, when he turned from
the telephone and stated what he had learned; and the effect upon
Wilhelmina was about what he was anticipating.

“Good heavens, is it possible?” she exclaimed, ghastly with increasing
apprehensions. “All that money gone from his vault? Don’t keep me in
suspense, Mr. Carter. Tell me just what you think about it. Tell me----”

“I must look deeper into the matter, Miss Strickland, before I can tell
you anything definite,” Nick interposed evasively. “I have not changed
my opinion, such as it was, and I will lose no time in sifting the
matter to the bottom. Try to be patient until I have done so.”

“I will try, Mr. Carter, at least,” she replied. “But all this must be
the culmination of the terrible secret dread I have been feeling.”

“Secret dread?”

“I say that only because I have not mentioned it to any one, being
unable to ascribe a definite cause for it,” Mina explained. “But it has
been hanging over me like a depressing cloud ever since I first saw
Pauline Perrot--ever since, in fact, the escape of that terrible
criminal, Mortimer Deland, from the prison hospital.”

“Yes, I remember,” said Nick, regarding her more intently.

“You were employed by Arthur, you remember, to run him down,” she went
on. “I have heard that Mortimer Deland never forgets, nor ever forgives.
Since that extraordinary escape, Mr. Carter, I have lived in fear of
him, for fear that he might attempt to kill Mr. Gordon, or in some
terrible way avenge----”

“Pshaw!” Nick checked her kindly. “Put Deland out of your head. It is
unfortunate, of course, that he fooled the hospital guards, and
contrived to give them the slip.”

“Unfortunate, indeed.”

“But as far as seeking vengeance goes, it is much more probable that he
immediately fled to Europe, whence he came,” Nick added. “Besides, I am
the man he would seek, and not Gordon, for it was I who cornered and
convicted him. There is no occasion for those apprehensions, Miss
Strickland.”

“I hope not, I’m sure,” said Mina. “You are going?”

Nick had taken his hat from a table on which he had placed it.

“Yes,” he replied. “I will return in a couple of hours, however, and
Chick may arrive in the meantime. We will leave no stone unturned to
ferret out the truth.”

He led the way out to his touring car, in which Danny, his chauffeur,
had been waiting in front of the house.

“To Fordham, Danny,” he directed. “Let her go lively.”

“Why to Fordham, chief?” questioned Patsy, when both were seated in the
tonneau and the car was speeding down the long driveway to the rural
road.

“To inspect Pauline Perrot’s apartments and interview her landlady,”
said Nick, with rather ominous intonation.

“Do you suspect her of being a crook?”

“I think she is back of this whole business, Patsy, of whatever it
consists.”

“Gee, that looks like a cinch!” declared Patsy. “Either she is playing a
deep game, chief, and working it out with wonderful success, or Gordon
has lost his head completely and bolted with the woman.”

“The last may possibly be true, since other men have been equally
foolish,” said Nick. “I find it hard to believe of Arthur Gordon,
however.”

“That goes, too.”

“I doubt very much that he would have gone so far as to buy a big
estate, build and furnish a fine residence, and then bolt with a girl he
has known less than six months.”

“But he evidently met her voluntarily yesterday afternoon.”

“She may have wheedled him into doing so.”

“But how, if Gordon did not remove them, could she have got the bonds
and securities from his vault?”

“Chick will try to find out. I have left that to him, and given him all
of the necessary points. It is useless for us to speculate upon it.”

“Gee, it’s surely some case, chief, and likely to become a difficult
one,” said Patsy. “It’s odd, too, that Miss Strickland has felt so
apprehensive of deviltry by Mortimer Deland since his escape.”

“That’s like a girl of her sensitive nature.”

“For all that, chief, Deland must be a mighty slick gink, or he never
could have given the hospital guards the slip in female attire, to say
nothing of having contrived to secretly get the garments. That whole
business is still a mystery.”

“And likely to continue one,” said Nick. “It looked to me like bribery,
Patsy, rather than cleverness on Deland’s part, and the bribery of a
prison official is difficult to expose.”

“That’s right, too.”

“It was no fault of ours, however, for we did our part when we rounded
up the rascals,” Nick added. “Take the road to the left, Danny. I’ll
give you the street and number after we hit the town.”



CHAPTER III.

CONFIRMATORY EVIDENCE.


It was eleven o’clock when the touring car containing the detectives
stopped in front of an attractive wooden residence in a quiet and very
reputable section of Fordham.

Nick directed Patsy to accompany him, while Danny waited in the car, and
his ring brought an elderly, refined-looking woman to the door, whom
Nick at first supposed was one of the boarders.

“I wish to see Mrs. Lord, the landlady,” he informed her.

“I am Mrs. Lord, sir,” was the reply, smiling. “Will you walk in?”

“Yes, thank you. I wish to inquire about one of your boarders.”

“One of them!” The woman laughed lightly. “I have only one, sir, and I
consented to take her only to slightly increase my limited income. I do
not keep what might be more properly termed a boarding house. What Miss
Perrot pays me enables me to keep an extra servant, which relieves me of
most of the housework. Will you be seated, gentlemen?”

They had followed her into a neatly furnished parlor, and Nick now saw
plainly that she was an unassuming and thoroughly honest woman, one upon
whom a crafty person could very easily impose. He reasoned, too, that
that might be why Pauline Perrot was established there.

“Your boarder is Miss Perrot?” he said inquiringly.

“Yes, sir.”

“Is she at home?”

“Oh, no, she never is here at this hour,” said the landlady. “She is
employed as a stenographer by a New York banker, Mr. Arthur Gordon. But
she now is away on a visit. She will be gone about a week.”

“Gee! that’s sure to be the longest week on record,” thought Patsy.

“When did she go, Mrs. Lord?” Nick inquired.

“She left from her office yesterday, sir, but she sent her trunk away
two days ago.”

“Why did she send her trunk in advance?”

“I don’t know, sir. I did not inquire.”

“Did you know Miss Perrot before she came to board here?”

“I did not, sir. She was a stranger.”

“Do you now know anything definite about her?”

“Only what she has told me.”

“I’m afraid that is not very reliable.”

“Dear me! What do you mean?” Mrs. Lord exclaimed apprehensively. “Who
are you, sir, that you question me in this way about her?”

“My name is Carter. I am a detective,” Nick now informed her. “Mr.
Gordon is mysteriously missing, also a considerable fortune from his
office safe. Miss Perrot is suspected of----”

“Not of having robbed Mr. Gordon?” interrupted the landlady
incredulously. “Oh, I cannot believe that, sir! She has repeatedly told
me that Mr. Gordon was quite likely to marry her.”

“I would not take much stock in what she has told you,” Nick dryly
advised. “Nor do I think it probable that she will ever return here.”

“Well, well, you amaze me!”

“Has she been receiving any visitors while here?”

“No, sir, never!” said Mrs. Lord emphatically. “I often have wondered at
that. She has no mail, nor appears to have any friends, except Mr.
Gordon. He frequently has brought her home from his office, but he never
came in.”

“Did she go out evenings?”

“Yes, occasionally. But she always returned at a reasonable hour, and
always alone.”

“I wish to inspect her room, Mrs. Lord,” said Nick. “This is a very
serious matter, or I would not make the request.”

“If all you have told me is true, sir, I cannot consistently refuse,”
was the reply. “I will show you the way.”

Both Nick and Patsy followed her upstairs and into an attractively
furnished front chamber.

“Everything is in order, Mr. Carter, but I have deferred sweeping and
cleaning the room until the day before I expected Miss Perrot to
return,” she said, when they entered.

“We will disturb nothing,” Nick replied. “Has she sent away all of her
garments?”

“I cannot say, Mr. Carter. I have not looked.”

“I will do so, then, with your permission,” Nick remarked.

He did not wait for a reply, but at once began a thorough inspection of
the room. In the wardrobe closet were some partly worn garments, two
shirt waists, a blue woolen skirt, an Eton jacket, and a single pair of
button boots on the floor.

Nick examined all of these very carefully, hoping to find some
suggestive mark on one of them, or evidence of some significance, but
the examination proved entirely futile. They were no different from the
garments of a thousand and one other young women.

The drawer of the dressing stand was empty, while the china trays on top
contained only a few hairpins, a plated stickpin of no great value, and
a few equally insignificant articles.

In one of the bureau drawers, however, Nick found a quantity of
underwear, including two pairs of stockings, of all of which he at first
made only a cursory examination. He soon noticed one curious fact,
however, and remarked to Patsy:

“By Jove, this is strange!”

“What’s that, chief?” questioned Patsy, joining him at the bureau.

“All of this underwear is new,” Nick pointed out. “Not a piece of it has
been worn.”

“You’re right, chief.” Patsy peered into the drawer. “That’s plain
enough.”

“But why it was left here is not so plain,” said Nick. “A girl going
away on a visit usually takes her best garments in preference to those
she has worn.”

“That’s right, too, chief,” Patsy agreed. “But she may be well
supplied.”

“I’m not at all sure that that explains it,” Nick replied dryly. “What
have you there?”

“Fragments of a letter from the waste basket, also the torn envelope in
which it came,” said Patsy. “It is written in French.”

“I thought you said, Mrs. Lord, that Miss Perrot has received no letters
while here?” said Nick, turning to the waiting landlady. “My assistant
has found one in her wastebasket.”

“I meant, sir, that she was not in the habit of receiving letters,” Mrs.
Lord hastened to explain. “A letter did come for her two days ago. It
was taken in and brought up to her by my servant. I really had forgotten
it.”

“I understand,” smiled Nick. “I must ask you to wait, however, while I
unite these fragments, so I can read the letter.”

“I am in no hurry, sir.”

“Written in French, eh?” Nick muttered, while he and Patsy seated
themselves at a table. “We soon can patch it together. It may provide a
clew to the girl’s identity.”

“That was my idea, chief,” nodded Patsy. “There is nothing doing in the
desk. I have searched it thoroughly.”

“Is there paste in the desk?”

“Yes.”

“Get it, also a sheet of blank paper,” Nick directed. “This letter is
written on only one side of the sheet. We can quickly unite the torn
edges and paste it to the other.”

The task was completed in a few minutes. The following letter, dated two
days before, and written in French with a pen and ink, then was brought
to light:

     “MY DEAR PAULINE: You have made me heartless, thoroughly heartless,
     and I ought to hate you for it. I am not sure that I do not.
     Though horribly averse to taking the hideous step upon which you
     insist, your threats leave me no sane alternative, none that would
     let me look my family and friends in the face.

     “I submit to what you require, therefore, but I will not leave with
     you until Thursday. I must adjust many personal matters, and also
     prepare for the future. One cannot live on love and kisses.

     “Make it Thursday, therefore, and in accord with the plans you have
     suggested. Not a word about it in the office to-morrow. It staggers
     me when I think of it, the horrible situation in which you have
     involved me. Some men would wipe you out of existence, as I perhaps
     shall--but, no, no, I could not live with human blood on my hands.
     Shame, sorrow, and remorse are terrible enough.

     “After Thursday---- Well, we shall see!

                                                       “ARTHUR GORDON.”

“Great guns! What do you make of that, chief?” questioned Patsy, after
both had read the letter, both being familiar with the French language.

“We will discuss it later,” Nick quietly replied. “This woman has ears,
you know, and a tongue.”

“I’ve got you.”

Nick slipped the letter into his pocket, also the torn envelope, then
arose and turned to the landlady.

“Do you know where Miss Perrot sent her trunk, or who took it away?” he
inquired.

“I do not, Mr. Carter. A man with a wagon came after it.”

“An expressman?”

“I don’t think so. There was no name on the wagon.”

“You saw the man and the team?”

“I did, sir.”

“Can you describe them?”

“Only in a general way. The man was short, thickset, and quite dark. The
horse was a gray one, and the wagon of moderate size, without a top.”

“Very good,” Nick said approvingly. “There is no doubt in my mind, Mrs.
Lord, that Pauline Perrot will never return to this house. She is
probably a very clever criminal.”

“In that case, Mr. Carter, I hope she never will return,” Mrs. Lord said
gravely. “I am much surprised. I would not have thought it.”

“Have you missed anything from the house?”

“I have not, sir. I now see, however, that a brush and comb which I
loaned her are gone from the dressing stand.”

“H’m! Is that so?”

“She may have taken them by accident when packing her trunk.”

Nick did not reply. Instead, turning to Patsy, he said:

“Raise both curtains, Patsy, as high as they will go.”

Then, dropping on his hands and knees, Nick began a sharp scrutiny of
the carpet and a rug near the dressing stand, much to the amazement of
the waiting woman.

For more than ten minutes he continued this inspection, and at times
using a lens and picking something from the floor. When he arose he had
between his fingers several black hairs, some quite long, which
evidently had dropped from Pauline Perrot’s brush or comb. He inclosed
them in his notebook, which he then replaced in his pocket.

“Now, Mrs. Lord, I am going to take away these few garments Miss Perrot
left here,” Nick informed her. “Here is my card. If any inquiries are
made, which is entirely improbable, you may refer the person to me.”

The woman glanced at the card, then gazed more intently at the famous
detective. She evidently had heard of him, but had not suspected his
identity till then, for she said quickly:

“Very well, Mr. Carter. I am sure that anything you do will be right and
proper.”

Nick bowed and glanced at Patsy.

“Roll up the garments and the pair of boots in the wardrobe closet,” he
directed. “Take them out to the car. I will bring the underwear in the
bureau.”

It was noon when they departed with the various articles, all that
Pauline Perrot had left as links in the chain, or to tell a fateful and
tragic story.

“Back to the Gordon place, Danny,” said Nick, after he and Patsy were
seated.

More than half the distance had been covered, when, rounding a curve in
the woodland road, two figures appeared some fifty yards in advance of
the speeding car.

One was a gaunt, lop-eared hound.

The other was a roughly clad man of middle age, with a shotgun under his
left arm, and under his right a large bundle. He turned quickly, as he
heard the approaching car, then stepped to the middle of the road and
held up the gun.

“Slow down, Danny,” Nick commanded. “That fellow wants us to stop.”

“Gee!” exclaimed Patsy, a bit derisively. “He’s got a gun. Are we up
against a holdup?”

“Nothing of that kind. He has something to say to us.”

Nick was right. For when the car stopped near him, the man approached
and said a bit gruffly:

“Gimme a lift, gents, will you? I want to go to Jim Bailey’s house, a
mile farther on. He’s a county constable. There has been a murder.”

“A murder?” Nick echoed. “How do you know? What have you there?”

“Some things Ginger sniffed out of some underbrush near the old millpond
back in the woods a piece,” said the man, with a glance at the hound. “I
saw a man and a girl plugging that way early yesterday evening. She had
this hat on, I’ll swear to that, and she was lugging this jacket on her
arm. Have a look at them.”

The man unrolled a dark-green jacket and a stylish, velvet hat of the
same hue. The latter was sadly battered and out of shape, as if beaten
with a bludgeon. A crumpled handkerchief fell to the ground.

“Here are two worked letters on the handkerchief,” he added, picking it
up. “P. P., as near as I can tell.”

“Pauline Perrot!” cried Patsy, momentarily excited.

He had recalled the description of the dark-green traveling suit worn by
Pauline Perrot, as reported by the two women who had seen her with
Arthur Gordon.

They were, indeed, the garments of the suspected girl.

All of them were soiled and--red with blood.



CHAPTER IV.

CHICK FORMS A THEORY.


It was eleven o’clock when Chick Carter, following the telephone
instructions from Nick, entered Arthur Gordon’s business quarters in
Wall Street to begin an investigation. He saw at once that the several
clerks in the latticed inclosure were somewhat excited. Business
appeared to have been suspended.

Chick found Mr. Beckwith in Gordon’s private office, adjoining the
business inclosure, a man well in the sixties and of a nervous
temperament.

“Thank Heaven, you have arrived, Mr. Carter,” said he, when Chick
entered and introduced himself. “This is terrible, terrible! Gordon
mysteriously missing. Miss Perrot gone. The vault robbed of----”

“Hold your horses, Mr. Beckwith,” Chick coolly interrupted, after
closing the office door. “There is nothing in going over the traces.
Nick has told me most of the circumstances, as far as known. Calm
yourself, and answer my questions.”

“Well, well, I will try. But there is nothing I can tell you.”

“Don’t be so sure of that.”

“Sit down, then. Come on with your questions!”

“To begin with,” said Chick, complying, “have you seen any indications
that Gordon and Pauline Perrot are in love, any sign of it on the part
of either?”

“No, no, never!” Beckwith quickly asserted. “Mr. Gordon is a gentleman,
and soon to be married. Miss Perrot knows her place, and has always kept
it, so far as I have observed.”

“At what time did she and Gordon leave here yesterday afternoon?”

“I don’t know. They were the last to leave.”

“Who was the last before them?”

“I was. It then was about four o’clock. All the other clerks had gone.”

“Where was Mr. Gordon when you left?”

“Here in his private office. He was talking with Miss Perrot.”

“Was the door open?”

“Yes.”

“Was he dictating letters, or----”

“No, he was talking with her,” Beckwith interrupted. “I could not tell
what he was saying, however, for both were talking in French.”

“Have they been in the habit of doing so?”

“Sometimes. Mr. Gordon speaks the language fluently and Miss Perrot is
of French descent. I think that is one reason why he employed her when
she applied for a situation.”

“Has her work been satisfactory?”

“Yes, perfectly.”

“You are the cashier?”

“Yes. I have charge here, subject to Mr. Gordon’s orders, of course.”

“Did you close and lock the vault before leaving?”

“I did not. Mr. Gordon had been using two books that always are put in
the vault,” Beckwith proceeded to explain. “I asked him if I should do
so, and close it before leaving, but he replied that he would attend to
it, and that I might go. I did so, of course, not knowing how long he
might remain here.”

“That left Gordon and Miss Perrot alone here.”

“Yes.”

“Are you sure that the missing cash, bonds, and securities then were in
the vault?” Chick inquired.

“I am positive about the cash, for I had put it in the vault within half
an hour,” Beckwith replied. “The bonds and securities, however, were
tied in several packages, and were in an interior drawer, or should have
been. They have been there for nearly a month, as we have had no
occasion to use them.”

“Did Miss Perrot know they were there?”

“She did.”

“Has she had access to the vault when in performance of her customary
duties?”

“Yes, at times. Mr. Gordon frequently sent her to the vault for books,
papers, or whatever he might want.”

“Could she have opened the interior drawer containing the bonds and
securities?”

“Not without a key.”

“Who has a key to it?”

“Only Mr. Gordon and myself.”

“That drawer is always kept locked, I infer?”

“Yes, certainly.”

“Could Pauline Perrot, by any means, have obtained an impression of your
key to that particular drawer?”

“No, no, it would have been impossible,” Beckwith declared. “My keys are
never out of my possession.”

“How about Gordon’s?”

“It might have been possible, Mr. Carter. He sometimes leaves his ring
of keys hanging in the lock of his roll-top desk, after having opened
it. I have seen them there, and cautioned him about it. But it is a
habit of his.”

“I see,” Chick nodded. “How recently, speaking positively, can you say
that the bonds and securities were in the drawer?”

“Three days,” Beckwith said promptly. “I then added a package to them. I
don’t think I have opened the drawer since then.”

“Has Gordon done so?”

“I don’t think so.”

“Is there any time during business hours, Mr. Beckwith, that Pauline
Perrot could have removed the bonds and securities without being seen?”

“Possibly.”

“At what time?”

“When I and some of the other clerks were out to dinner. Mr. Gordon
always was here at that time. No one in the outer office would have
thought it strange if Miss Perrot went into the vault. It would have
been inferred that Mr. Gordon had sent her. I don’t see, nevertheless,
how she could possibly have concealed the packages.”

“Pockets in her underskirts,” Chick said tersely. “That would have been
child’s play. I suspect, Mr. Beckwith, that that is how the theft was
committed.”

“But the cash----”

“That’s another matter,” Chick interrupted. “She may have found a chance
to slip into the vault and get it before she and Gordon left there
yesterday afternoon. How much cash is missing?”

“Two thousand dollars. It was in notes of large denomination, and in
packages confined with paper straps.”

“Was any cash left in the vault?”

“Yes, considerable, and all of the specie.”

“That seems to confirm my belief,” said Chick. “If the theft had been
deliberately committed, with no occasion for haste and fear of
detection, the thief would have taken all of the bank notes, at least.”

“I see the point,” Beckwith bowed.

“And I have not the slightest doubt that Pauline Perrot was the thief,”
Chick added. “Do you know whether she left here in company with
Gordon?”

“I know she did not,” Beckwith replied. “I have inquired in the other
offices in this corridor. I could find only one person who saw Mr.
Gordon leave. He was alone and was carrying a leather suit case. Mr.
Dayton saw him come out and head for the corridor and stairway leading
to the side door of the building.”

“Does Gordon usually go that way?”

“I don’t remember ever having seen him do so.”

“Who is Mr. Dayton?”

“He is the American agent for an English pottery concern. He has an
office on the opposite side of the adjoining corridor. The elevator boy
has told me that Miss Perrot left soon after four, and that she was
alone. Dayton is sure it was later than that when he saw Mr. Gordon.”

“You could find no one else who saw him?”

“No, sir. I have made exhaustive inquiries.”

“Did Mr. Gordon bring in a suit case yesterday, or was there one here
that you know of?” Chick questioned.

“I don’t think he has brought one in recently,” said Beckwith, shaking
his head. “There may have been one here, however, in that closet,” he
added, pointing to a door in one corner of the private office.

Chick arose and looked into the small wardrobe closet, but it contained
nothing of special significance. He turned back, closing the door and
remarking:

“You must do nothing about this matter, nor give it further publicity,
until you hear from me again, or from Nick. I do not wish to question
you further, but I will have a look at the vault.”

Beckwith arose to conduct him to it.

Chick made only a brief inspection of the vault, however, finding
nothing further on which to base an opinion, and he then repeated his
instructions to Beckwith and the other clerks and departed.

He did not immediately leave the building. He went, instead, to verify
Beckwith’s statements by having a brief interview with the one man said
to have seen Gordon departing the previous afternoon.

Chick found his office door a little farther down the corridor. It bore
a neatly printed sign:

“Edgar Hereford Dayton, Agent.”

“Humph! That’s a good bit English, don’t you know,” he said to himself,
while he scrutinized the name. “I guess ’e come from Staffordshire, all
right. I’ll have a look at him.”

Trying the door, Chick found that it yielded, and he stepped into the
small but well-equipped office. There was a wardrobe closet, a roll-top
desk, and on a table lay a pile of illustrated business catalogues.

A man seated at the desk turned deliberately in his swivel chair and
gazed at his visitor through a pair of gold-bowed glasses. He was a man
of medium build, clad in a rather striking plaid suit.

He appeared to be about forty years old, a man with brown hair and a
carefully trimmed beard, eyebrows that curved upward at the outer ends,
a quite florid complexion, and eyes that had a keen and searching
expression.

“Good morning,” said Chick, after closing the door. “You are Mr.
Dayton?”

“Yaas, surely,” was the reply, with a rather affected drawl. “What can I
do for you?”

“My name is Carter,” said Chick. “I have been talking with Mr. Beckwith,
the cashier over in Gordon’s office. He----”

“Oh, yaas!” Dayton cut in, with more manifest interest. “He was telling
me about a bad mess over there, deucedly bad, I judge. I say, you’re not
an inspector, are you?”

Chick smiled and took the chair to which Dayton politely waved him.

“That is what they call men of my vocation in England,” he replied.
“Here, in America, we are detectives.”

“Yaas, yaas, I see,” nodded Dayton, laughing and showing his teeth. “I
don’t quite get away from the home lingo, you know.”

“I inferred that you were English.”

“Yaas, that’s right, Mr. Carter. I’ve been over ’ere only a few months.
Don’t ’ang round New York but part of the time. Traveling ’ere and there
most of it. But I ’ave to ’ave an office ’ere, you know. I say, what can
I do for you?”

Not for a moment had his keen, intent eyes left the face of the
detective.

“Well, Beckwith was telling me that you saw Gordon leaving his office
yesterday afternoon,” said Chick, declining a cigarette the Englishman
now tendered, while he lit one for himself.

“Yaas, surely. I told Beckwith so.”

“Can you tell me precisely what time it was when you saw Gordon?”

“Well, no, I really don’t think I can,” Dayton drawled thoughtfully. “I
can ’it mighty near it, though.”

“What time would you say, Mr. Dayton?”

“Well, I lunched late with Percy Brigham, a Lunnon friend ’oo is over
’ere. It must ’ave been four o’clock when I left him. I’d say it was
quarter past four when I saw Mr. Gordon, then leaving his office. I was
unlocking my door, and he passed right by me.”

“Are you acquainted with him?”

“Yaas, in a small way.”

“Did he speak when passing?”

“No, he did not, the which ’it me kind of funny,” said Dayton. “He
looked a bit bunged up by something, I thought, so I didn’t speak to
him. He went round to the back corridor, don’t you know, and that was
the last I saw of him.”

“You told Beckwith, I think, that he was carrying a suit case.”

“Yaas, so he was,” Dayton quickly nodded. “A leather suit case, and I
thought he must be going away.”

“Did you observe anything else about him?” Chick inquired. “Did he
appear pale, or as if mentally disturbed?”

“Waal, yaas, I’d say he looked a bit punk around the ears,” Dayton
drawled slowly. “I wouldn’t want you to bank too ’eavy on what I’m
saying, though, for I saw him only a moment, don’t you know. I don’t
think as ’ow I can add to it.”

Chick Carter was of the same opinion. There was something very insipid
in this Englishman’s voice and manner, aside from his expressive eyes,
and despite that he somehow impressed Chick as one whom he had seen
before, the latter decided that he had nothing to gain by interrogating
him further.

Chick thanked him for his information, therefore, then arose and
departed. Seeking the street, he hailed the first taxicab he could see,
and at once started for the Gordon residence to report to Nick.

Mr. Edgar Hereford Dayton sat for a long time gazing at his desk. The
minutes crept away far more rapidly than he imagined. All the while,
too, his eyes had a gleam and glitter doubly intense than before.

He arose, at length, and shook his fist at the closed door.

Then, opening the wardrobe closet, he drew out a suit case, into which,
with what it already contained, he crowded--a blue dress, hat, and veil,
a woman’s underskirt, and smaller articles that scarce need mention.



CHAPTER V.

THE MAN WITH A DOG.


Nick Carter had a keen eye for faces, remarkably keen, and that of the
man encountered while he was returning to the Gordon residence did not
appeal favorably to the discerning detective.

It was an angular, swarthy face, with a sinister expression accentuated
by several days’ growth of stubby beard, and a certain sly, shifty light
in the fellow’s eyes aroused in Nick a feeling of suspicion.

Suppressing any betrayal of it, nevertheless, he exhibited an immediate
interest in the bloodstained articles the man was displaying, asking
earnestly, while he subdued Patsy Garvan with a significant nudge:

“When did you find these, my man?”

“’Twasn’t me as found them,” was the quick reply. “Ginger found them. He
nosed them out. He’s got a scent like a bull moose in the hunting
season. I pulled them out from under a log and some underbrush, after
Ginger found them.”

“How long ago was that?” asked Nick.

“Less than half an hour.”

“And how far from here?”

“Less than a mile. I reckoned a murder----”

“One moment,” Nick interposed. “What is your name?”

“Pete Henley. I live off yonder in the crossroad a piece. I was gunning
for birds around the pond when I struck this sort of game.”

“Did you find any other evidence of a murder?”

“That’s what,” nodded Henley. “Blood on the grass and bushes. Some are
trampled down, and a lot of footprints and heel holes in the ground
point to an ugly fight.”

“I see,” Nick said gravely. “That does look bad.”

“I did not wait to hunt for the girl’s body,” Henley went on, with grim
glibness. “It might be in the pond. I reckoned I’d better rush these
things to Bailey, the constable, and then show him where Ginger found
them.”

Nick was quick to notice that the man invariably attributed the
discovery to his dog, rather than taking it upon himself, from which
there appeared to be only one logical deduction--that Henley had some
covert reason for doing so.

“You can do better, Mr. Henley, than take these to the constable,” said
Nick, who had merely glanced at the bloodstained articles.

“How’s that?” questioned Henley.

“I am a New York detective, Nick Carter, and I am already investigating
the disappearance of the two persons you claim to have seen last
evening,” Nick explained agreeably. “The man is Arthur Gordon, the
banker, and the girl is his stenographer, Pauline Perrot. She is known
to have worn a hat and jacket like these yesterday afternoon. Besides,
her initials are on the handkerchief.”

Henley’s jaw sagged perceptibly when he heard the detective’s name.

“I dunno about that,” he demurred. “D’ye mean you want me to go with
you?”

“Certainly,” said Nick, in friendly fashion. “I would not permit
Constable Bailey to interfere with my work on the case. I never allow
anything of that kind.”

“But he might----”

“Never mind Bailey,” Nick insisted. “I will take charge of these
articles, and I may want you to aid me further. So get into the car with
us, Henley, and go to the Gordon place. There will be something in it
for you, if you help us solve this mystery. There is room for your dog,
also. Tumble in with him.”

“I dunno----”

“Nonsense! You want to see justice done, don’t you?” Nick demanded. “If
you don’t----”

“Yes, yes, sure,” Henley now cried, as if suddenly hit with an idea that
a persistent refusal would occasion suspicion. “That’s just what I want.
That’s why I was hiking to see the constable. But I’ll go with you, Mr.
Carter, and later will show you where Ginger found these things, if you
say so.”

“That’s precisely what I want, Mr. Henley.”

“He’s got some nose, this dog,” Henley added, while he seized the
scrawny animal and tossed him into the car. “Some nose, that’s what he’s
got. Ginger can’t be beat.”

“He looks bright and intelligent,” Nick allowed pleasantly. “Sit in
front with the chauffeur, Henley, but put the articles Ginger found into
the tonneau. That’s the stuff. I’ll examine them after we reach the
Gordon place. Let her go, Danny.”

The remaining distance was speedily covered, with merely cursory
inquiries and remarks by the detective, well calculated to relieve
Henley of any misgivings. Upon arriving at the house, however, he turned
to Patsy and said:

“Go in ahead and tell Mr. Strickland and Wilhelmina that they must go
upstairs and remain until I send for them. I don’t want them butting in.
You need not explain in just those words, however.”

“I’m wise, chief,” said Patsy, springing from the car. “I’ll clear the
field for you.”

“Leave the car here, Danny, and take Henley and the dog around to the
kitchen,” Nick then directed. “Have the cook give Ginger some meat.
You’ll kindly wait there till I’m ready to talk with you, Henley, won’t
you?”

“Sure thing, Mr. Carter, if you say so,” Henley quickly consented.

“Good enough!”

“I’m right here to lend you a hand.”

Nick detected in the fellow’s narrow eyes, nevertheless, that same sly
and shifty gleam he at first had noticed, a look that seemed to give the
lie to his apparently agreeable consent.

Patsy returned a moment later to assist in taking the various articles
into the house, stating that Wilhelmina and her uncle had complied with
the detective’s request.

It was nearly one o’clock when Chick Carter arrived in a taxicab,
directing the chauffeur to wait, and Patsy appeared at the door to admit
him.

“Gee whiz!” he said quietly. “You’re just in time.”

“Time for what?” Chick questioned.

“To see the chief cut loose,” said Patsy. “Talk about having a long
head. No four-footed beast has got anything on him, ears included.”

“I’m well aware of that, Patsy, already.”

“But this yanks the bun. Wait a bit and you’ll see. Come into the
library.”

Nick Carter then had been studying the evidence he had found for nearly
half an hour, but he really had mentioned to Patsy only a few of his
discoveries and deductions, being too absorbed in the work to discuss
it.

With a lens in his hand, and a frown on his intent, clean-cut face, he
was bending over a table on which the various articles had been placed,
and which gave Chick some little surprise when he saw them.

“Great guns!” said he, approaching. “Are you starting a
secondhand-clothing store.”

“Not by a long chalk,” said Nick. “I’m starting a ball rolling that will
probably crush a gang of crooks. Sit down. Have you been to Gordon’s
office?”

“Certainly.”

“What have you learned? Close the door again, Patsy.”

Chick then made his report in detail, adding confidently:

“Take it from me, Nick. Pauline Perrot is a remarkably clever crook.
I’ll wager my pile that she is the one who robbed the vault, in spite of
Gordon’s mysterious absence and his suspected relations with her.”

Nick smiled a bit oddly.

“Have a look at this evidence, Chick, while I tell you where we found
it,” he replied. “You may change your mind.”

Chick hastened to comply, while Nick mentioned all of the essential
points in the case, as thus far presented.

Chick’s face became more grave while he looked and listened. He twice
read the letter found in Pauline Perrot’s wastebasket, bearing Gordon’s
signature, and then he glanced at the bloodstained garments she was
known to have worn when last seen with him.

“By Jove, I may be wrong, after all,” he said seriously. “The case looks
different to me. It must have been Gordon himself who took the bonds and
money from the vault. Are you sure this is his writing?”

“Here is a specimen of his writing,” said Nick, taking a letter from the
library desk. “Compare them.”



CHAPTER VI.

NICK CARTER’S FINE WORK.


Chick Carter was not long in coming to a conclusion concerning the two
letters Nick had submitted to him.

“By Jove, the writing appears to be identical,” said he, after a careful
inspection. “If this one in French is a forgery, Nick, it’s a mighty
clever one.”

“Don’t overlook something,” said Nick, smiling a bit oddly.

“What’s that?”

“You already have sized up Pauline Perrot as a clever crook.”

“That’s true,” Chick admitted. “In proof of it, assuming this Gordon
letter to be genuine, it shows plainly that she has involved him in some
kind of a desperate situation, so desperate that he evidently consented
to elope with her, despite that he closes by intimating that he might
attempt to kill her.”

“Obviously,” Nick agreed.

“Has he done it?” Chick glanced at the bloodstained hat, jacket and
handkerchief. “Did he really go the limit and execute his threat? These
things certainly point to that. Combined with all of the other
circumstances, Nick, it establishes an almost sure case of murder.”

“One that, in case Gordon cannot be found, would convince a court and
jury?”

“Surely.”

“Suppose the body should not be found?” suggested Nick.

“I think the case still would stand,” Chick replied. “A jury would
surely convict on such circumstantial evidence as this.”

Nick smiled again.

“That’s why I have dug into it for all I am worth,” he said dryly. “I
will show you a few points that you fail to detect.”

“You mean?”

“These few hairs, Chick, to begin with,” said Nick, taking them from a
scrap of paper on which he had placed them. “Mrs. Lord told me that
Pauline Perrot had stolen a brush and comb. That suggested something to
me.”

“What was that?”

“A hairbrush cannot be entirely cleaned of all the hairs it takes in
among its bristles. I reasoned that Pauline Perrot decided that it was
much easier to steal the brush than to clean it, and less dangerous than
to leave it in her chamber. That set me to hunting for hairs on the rug
and carpet. I found these. The devil always leaves a gapway open.”

“What about them?” Chick questioned, a bit perplexedly.

“Use my lens,” said Nick. “Observe that they are exceedingly dry, having
none of the oily gloss and pliability of hairs fresh from one’s head.
Notice, also, the tiny speck on the end of the longest one. It looks
like the root of the hair.”

“I see.”

“But it is not,” Nick quickly added. “It is much too hard and brittle.”

“What do you make of it?”

“Instead of a root, Chick, it’s a speck of glue.”

“By Jove, that is significant,” Chick muttered. “In that case, then,
Pauline Perrot probably wears a wig.”

“Gee! it’s a cinch,” declared Patsy, from the opposite side of the
table.

“Have you other reasons for thinking so, Nick?” Chick questioned.

“Yes.”

“Namely?”

“Notice these undergarments and stockings,” said Nick. “All of them are
new, or very nearly so. I am convinced that none of them have been
worn.”

“Why are you so sure of it?”

“Here are Pauline’s button boots,” Nick went on. “Compare the size with
the size of the stockings. The stockings are two sizes larger than the
boots. Who ever heard of a girl buying hosiery larger than her shoes?”

“By Jove, you are right,” said Chick, carefully inspecting both.

“It was a mistake she made--another devil’s gapway.”

“And you infer from this that she has worn none of the other garments?”

“I am sure of it.”

“But why, then, did she have them in her possession?” Chick demanded,
racking his brain to fathom it. “Why did she leave them in her bureau
drawer?”

“She can have had only one logical reason, Chick, consistent with all of
the other circumstances,” Nick replied. “She did not buy them to wear.
Though she wore feminine outside garments, she preferred another kind
next to her evil skin. She left these in her bureau, Chick, only that
persons having occasion to seek her, or investigate her conduct, might
not for a moment suspect that Pauline Perrot is--not a woman.”

“Not a woman!” echoed Chick, with a gasp of surprise.

“That’s what I said,” Nick nodded.

“But you don’t for a moment suspect her of being a man?”

“That is precisely what I suspect.”

“Nonsense! Remember that she has for several months been employed as
Gordon’s stenographer, and that she----”

“Wait a bit,” Nick interrupted. “We quite frequently know of women
masquerading as men. Take the case of Murray Hall, who for a quarter of
century wore only male attire, blinding all with whom she associated,
and the secret of her sex was not discovered until after she died.”

“I know about that, Nick, but----”

“I know what you would say,” Nick again interrupted. “But given the
right type of man, Chick, the reverse subterfuge would be just as
feasible--a man with an effeminate, mobile, and beardless face, a man
with medium figure and consistent voice, together with the subtle art
required for such an assumption. We have met just that type of man,
Chick, both of us.”

“I cannot recall him,” Chick declared. “Whom do you mean?”

“The man of whom Wilhelmina Strickland has been living in fear since he,
by this same artifice, made his escape from a prison hospital,” Nick
replied. “The man of whom, though unidentified when she saw him in
female attire, she felt an immediate aversion and dread--that is, upon
first seeing Pauline Perrot.”

“H’m, I see!” Chick muttered.

“Mina Strickland’s sensitive nature and feminine intuition were more
keen than her eyes,” Nick added. “They were far more keen than the eyes
of Arthur Gordon. The man I mean, Chick, is a past master of the art of
personal disguise and character assumption, and so clever and versatile
a crook that for years he eluded the European police and----”

“Oh, I’ve got you,” Chick interrupted. “You mean Mortimer Deland.”

“Exactly.”

“He and Pauline Perrot are one and the same.”

“As sure as you’re a foot high.”

“This French letter, then, is a forgery?”

“Undoubtedly,” said Nick. “Deland is an expert penman. We long have
known that. He is wanted in Paris for forging the signature of the
prefect of police, a trick by which he escaped from brief custody.”

“Also the letter sent to Miss Strickland?”

“A forgery, Chick, surely.”

“You may be right, by Jove, though it seems almost incredible,” said
Chick.

“We shall find I am right,” replied the detective confidently.

“My money goes on that, chief,” declared Patsy.

“But what’s the game, aside from the robbery?” Chick questioned,
pointing to the bloodstained articles. “What’s the meaning of these?”

“That’s what we must discover, as well as the present whereabouts of
Deland and his confederates,” said Nick. “Arthur Gordon undoubtedly is a
prisoner in their clutches. He knows nothing about the robbery, nor
about the case, as we now see it.”

“You reason----”

“That he was in some way trapped by the supposed Pauline Perrot, and
it’s up to us to discover how,” Nick went on. “This evidence has
obviously been planted only to denote that Gordon has killed his
supposed female stenographer. Deland’s deeper game is, I suspect, to
subsequently bleed wealthy old Rudolph Strickland out of more money, by
approaching him in some crafty way with an offer to produce Gordon and
positive evidence of his innocence.”

“Gee whiz! that looks dead right to me,” put in Patsy. “Mr. Strickland
would give up handsomely for the sake of his niece and Mr. Gordon.”

“Undoubtedly, under such circumstances,” Nick nodded. “He would,
moreover, be a very easy mark. By the way, Chick, did you verify
Beckwith’s statements by talking with Dayton?”

“Yes, of course,” said Chick. “He corroborated what Beckwith had told
me.”

“And he is the one man, the only one, who saw Gordon departing with a
suit case, eh?”

“What do you make of that?” questioned Chick, noting Nick’s subtle
intonation.

“Another devil’s gapway,” Nick dryly declared. “It was thought necessary
by Deland to have it appear that Gordon carried away the money and bonds
in a suit case.”

“Ah, I see, now.”

“With that object in view, Pauline Perrot artfully detained him in his
office until all others had gone. If Gordon knew nothing about this foul
business, however, it is safe to say that he had no suit case when he
left his office. We know that he had none when he arrived here, or Miss
Strickland would have informed us.”

“Holy smoke!” cried Patsy. “In that case, then, Dayton must be one of
Deland’s confederates.”

“That’s the very point, Patsy,” said Nick.

“By Jove, he should be watched, then,” said Chick. “There would be
something in that.”

“I think so, too,” Nick quickly agreed. “You return to town, therefore,
and try to pick him up before he leaves his office. Get on his trail by
some means, if possible, and don’t lose sight of him.”

“Leave him to me, Nick.”

“In the meantime, with Patsy to help me I have other fish to fry.”

“You mean?”

“The man with a dog--Ginger.”

“Henley?” questioned Chick. “Why do you suspect him?”

“First, because this evidence, if planted, was discovered so quickly
after the seeming murder,” said Nick, pointing to the bloodstained
articles. “It’s long odds that, in a genuine case of murder, it would
not have been found within a few hours of the crime.”

“That’s true,” Chick quickly admitted.

“Second, because Henley is the man who found it, and he don’t look good
to me,” Nick added. “He has a bad eye. Besides, he has been very careful
when speaking of the discovery to attribute it to his dog, which
convinces me that he fears suspicion, if he takes it upon himself.”

“Gee! I thought of that,” declared Patsy. “You have hit the nail on the
head, chief, for fair.”

“I think that these crooks, in order to expedite matters and create a
general belief that Gordon has murdered Pauline Perrot, planted this
evidence and probably more, and immediately started Henley with it to
inform the constable, aiming to get in their work on old Mr. Strickland
as soon as possible. I saw that Henley was a bit set back when he
discovered my identity and that I already was at work on the case.”

“I noticed that, too, chief,” put in Patsy.

“Henley decided to seize the bull by the horns, however, pretending he
wanted to aid me, and I think he now has something up his sleeve,” Nick
added. “I’m going to give him a chance to show his hand.”

“How so?” Chick questioned.

“I’m not yet sure what I shall frame up. Be that as it may, Chick, you
hike back to town and get after Dayton. It’s dollars to fried holes that
he has a hand in this game. Use your own judgment as to the best course
to shape, and leave Patsy and me to tie knots in this end of the string.
That’s all for the present.”

“Enough said, too, Nick,” replied Chick, seizing his hat. “You have
pulled off a clever bit of work, remarkably clever, and we’re now right
in line to deliver the goods. Leave Dayton to me. I’ll get him.”

Chick did not wait for an answer. He hurried out of the house and
started for town in the taxicab.



CHAPTER VII.

HENLEY SHOWS HIS HAND.


It was, indeed, a clever bit of detective work that had enabled Nick
Carter to form a theory consistent with all of the circumstances and the
accumulation of evidence denoting that Arthur Gordon was guilty of the
basest of treachery and the most heinous of crimes, and which would have
been convincing not only to the public, but probably to all other
detectives than Nick Carter himself.

He keenly realized, however, that a theory based only upon his own
convictions was not enough, that absolute evidence was needed to
convince others, and he was not long in hitting upon a plan by which he
thought he could obtain it.

Nick hurriedly explained it to Patsy, giving him a few necessary
instructions, and he then sent him to call the suspected man from the
kitchen.

Henley came slouching into the library a moment later, with Ginger
trailing at his heels. He had a more lowering look in his shifty eyes.
He had become impatient and suspicious during his long wait. He did not
fancy his having been excluded from the conference of the detectives. It
smacked of distrust of him, and his resentment was manifest in his
swarthy face.

Nick saw it, of course, and at once took steps to dispel it.

“Pardon me, Henley, for keeping you waiting so long,” he apologized with
a heartiness well calculated to be convincing. “I had no idea it would
take more than a few minutes to examine these articles. Sorry to have
kept you waiting.”

“That’s all right, Mr. Carter,” growled Henley, with countenance
lighting. “Time ain’t wuth much to me. I reckoned you’d want a good look
at them.”

“I have examined them carefully, Henley.”

“What d’ye think about it?”

“It looks like a bad mess, very bad,” Nick said, more gravely.

“So it does,” Henley nodded. “There ain’t nothing to it but murder, that
I can see.”

“I’m inclined to agree with you,” Nick replied.

“Sure thing, chief,” put in Patsy. “What else can you make of it? It’s
dead lucky we met Mr. Henley. He sure has put us on the right track.”

“And he can do still more to aid us,” supplemented Nick approvingly. “I
suppose, Henley, you are perfectly willing to assist us. You will be
well paid for your services. I guarantee that.”

“Your word’s good enough for me, Mr. Carter,” said Henley, consenting
with a readiness denoting that his misgivings were entirely dispelled.
“I’m right here to lend you a hand. Say what you want, sir, and I’ll do
it.”

“Good enough,” Nick declared. “We’ll set about it at once. Find the
butler, Patsy, and have him give you a pair of Gordon’s shoes. I will
look after those left by the girl. We’ll leave these other articles
until we return. I’ll take the precaution, however, to lock the library
door. Get Gordon’s shoes and rejoin us in the car.”

Patsy hastened from the room, then started upstairs to say a few
encouraging words to Strickland and Wilhelmina.

“I wish to visit the spot where you found these garments, Henley, or
where Ginger nosed them out, to be more correct,” said Nick, taking only
the pair of button boots from the table and thrusting them into his
pocket.

“I’ll show you,” said Henley. “That won’t take long.”

“We will expedite matters by going in my car as far as possible,” Nick
added. “Bring along the dog. We may find him useful.”

“He’s some dog, Mr. Carter; you can bet on that.”

“He looks it, Henley, no mistake. One moment while I lock this door and
remove the key. Now, then, we’re off.”

Nick led the way out to the touring car, in which Patsy presently joined
them, bringing a pair of Gordon’s shoes, and in another moment they were
speeding down the long driveway toward the woodland road.

“Take us to the point where we picked Henley up, Danny,” Nick directed.
“He then can take the ribbons and show us the way.”

“You can run a quarter mile farther,” said Henley. “That’ll take us to
the crossroad. It’s rough going, then, too rough for a buzz car.”

“We will walk the remaining distance, Henley, in that case,” Nick
replied, all the while with an air of friendliness and appreciation of
his services that appeared to deceive the swarthy ruffian. “I think you
said it is less than a mile from the road to the pond you mentioned.”

“’Tain’t more than half a mile.”

“Just where did you see Gordon and the girl last evening?”

“Going through the crossroad.”

“We traced them to the juncture of the two roads.”

“It was a quarter mile from there that I saw them.”

“Was Gordon carrying a suit case?”

“That’s what,” nodded Henley. “The girl had her jacket over her arm. The
man had an ugly look, and they seemed to be in a fuss over something,
but I couldn’t hear what they said. I watched them till they turned a
bend in the road, and that was the last I saw of them.”

“Gordon looked threatening, did he?”

“I sure would have thought so, Mr. Carter, if he had been looking at
me,” Henley forcibly declared. “He looked fit to fight a dog.”

If Nick Carter had wanted further evidence of Henley’s complicity in the
knavish game that was being played, these last statements would have
convinced him of it, in view of his own discoveries and deductions. He
did not betray his suspicions, but pretended to have entire confidence
in the rascal, interrogating him along much the same lines until Danny
brought the car to a stop at the crossroad.

Nick was the first to alight, followed by Henley and the hound, while
Patsy paused to question:

“Am I to go with you, chief?”

Nick hesitated for a moment, as if he had given this matter no previous
thought, and he then said abruptly:

“No, you’ll not be needed. Henley and I can look over the ground and
accomplish all that can be done.”

“Sure we can,” put in Henley, with ill-concealed eagerness.

“You return with Danny, Patsy, and keep an eye on those things in the
library. There is a bare possibility that some one will try to destroy
them, in case our suspicions are known.”

“That’s right, too,” Patsy quickly agreed. “I thought you were taking a
chance, chief, in leaving them there.”

“You return and look after them,” Nick repeated decidedly. “I’ll hoof it
back with Henley after making an investigation. He won’t mind the
tramp.”

“Mind it be hanged!” cried Henley. “Tramping round these diggings is the
most that I do.”

“That settles it, then,” said Nick. “Back into the crossroad to make a
turn, Danny, and wait for us at Gordon’s place.”

“I’ve got you, chief,” nodded Patsy. “We’ll keep an eye on things.”

Nick did not hasten his departure with Henley. He waited until Danny had
turned the touring car, then watched it speed away with both of his
assistants, till it vanished around a near bend in the road.

Henley stood silently watching him, with his shotgun under his arm.
There was a gleam of secret satisfaction deep down in his shifty eyes,
an ominous curve in his thin-lipped mouth. Both vanished instantly,
however, when Nick turned and said:

“Now, Henley, it’s up to you.”

“I’ll make good, all right,” was the reply, with a covert significance
the detective was quick to notice.

“Lead the way, then.”

“I’ll soon show you, Mr. Carter,” Henley added, with the same sinister
significance. “Come on, Ginger. He’s some dog, Carter, some dog. Ginger
can’t be beat.”

Nick did not reply. He followed the swarthy ruffian over the rough
crossroad, stopping at intervals to study the ground, stating that he
wanted to examine the footprints of the missing couple, if any could be
found. He delayed frequently in this way--but with an entirely
different object in view.

Twenty minutes brought them to a path through the woodland, into which
Henley struck without hesitation, remarking grimly:

“They must have gone this way. It was on this side of the pond that
Ginger nosed out the bloodstained togs.”

“How far is the pond from here?” Nick inquired, following him.

“Not far,” Henley gruffly assured him. “It’s over the hill and down into
the valley. There’s another path on t’other side of it, leading to a
road running south.”

“Toward Fordham, then.”

“That’s what. Gordon must have known about the pond. ’Tain’t very big,
but it’s as deep as a volcano. The devil himself couldn’t raise a corpse
sunk to the bottom of it. Gordon knew that, mebbe.”

“Quite likely, Henley, since he evidently wanted to get rid of the
girl,” Nick allowed.

“That’s how it looks to me. Bear off this way, sir.”

Henley strode away to the left and plunged through the bushes and
underbrush, Nick following, with Ginger bringing up in the rear.

Ten minutes brought them in sight of the pond, shut in on all sides by a
thick belt of woods, and Nick followed his uncouth guide down to the
edge of it and to the spot he was seeking, a lonely and suitable place
enough for such a crime as superficially appeared to have been
committed.

“Here’s the spot,” cried Henley, pointing to some trampled shrubs and
underbrush. “There’s the log where Ginger nosed out the girl’s hat and
jacket. They were rolled up and thrust under it, then partly covered
with dirt and leaves.”

“Yes, yes, I see.”

“Here’s blood on the bushes, and footprints in the ground and dry
leaves, as if the girl put up a fight to save herself from----”

“Stop a moment,” said Nick, intently viewing the evidence mentioned. “I
want to compare these shoes with the imprints.”

“Gordon’s shoes?”

“Yes. The button boots belong to the girl. She left them in a house
where she has been boarding.”

“You went there after them?” questioned Henley, with sinister scrutiny.

“Yes, certainly,” said Nick, without looking up. “By Jove, they
correspond perfectly, Henley. There’s no question about it.”

Nick was comparing both pieces of footwear with several impressions
found in the damp earth. There was, as he had stated, no question as to
the correspondence in size and shape, which was further evidence of who
had been there the previous evening.

“It looks bad, bad enough,” he added, after viewing the blood-spattered
bushes, the rough ground on all sides, and seeking vainly for evidence
showing in which direction Gordon had departed.

“You have made no search for the girl’s body, Henley, you said.”

“What’s the use?” Henley asked, with a growl. “A hundred to one it’s at
the bottom of the pond.”

“Very likely,” admitted Nick, with seeming uncertainty as to what course
to take.

“Gordon wouldn’t have waited to bury it.”

“True again,” Nick allowed. “If we only knew in which direction he
went----”

“We can find that out easy enough,” Henley interrupted, with eyes
gleaming for an instant.

“How so?” asked Nick, though he had expected and been only waiting for
these suggestions. “How can we contrive to trace him?”

“Leave it to Ginger.”

“You mean----”

“Ginger will show you,” Henley cut in. “He can trail him like breaking
sticks. He’s some dog. Mr. Carter, some dog. Wait a bit and I’ll show
you. Gimme one of Gordon’s shoes.”

“By Jove, that’s a good idea, Henley.” Nick cried, as if he had not
thought of it. “He can get the scent from this, perhaps, as you suggest.
I ought to have been wise to that.”

“Here you, Ginger, come here,” Henley growled harshly. “Come here, you
rascal.”

The hound bounded through the bushes and cringed at his master’s feet.

Henley seized him by the scruff of the neck and held to his nostrils the
shoe the detective had given him, then pointed to the larger of the
imprints in the ground.

“Get after him, Ginger!” he commanded, producing a leather strap and
hooking it to the dog’s collar. “Follow him up! After him, Ginger, you
rascal!”

The hound brightened up and appeared to know what was wanted. He began
to bark, until Henley cuffed him fiercely, and then he thrust his muzzle
to the ground, whining and eagerly tugging hard on the leather leash.

Henley seized his shotgun from the ground where he had placed it, crying
gruffly:

“I told you, Carter. He’s got the scent. Come on at my heels. Ginger’ll
trail him.”

“By Jove, I believe you are right, Henley,” Nick cried, following.

“I know I’m right. He’s some dog, sir, some dog.”

“Some dog, Henley, no mistake.”

“Can you stick close?”

“Bet you!” said Nick, as both plunged on after the hound. “You can’t go
too fast for me.”

“Sing out if I do.”

“I’ll hang on, all right. Want me to carry your gun?”

“Not much!” growled Henley. “I’m used to this ’ere business.”

“Gordon evidently went round the pond, instead of back to the
crossroad.”

“That’s so. He most likely was heading for the other road.”

“It looks so, for fair.”

“Ginger’ll trail him. Leave it to Ginger.”

The hound was plunging on all the while, with his muzzle to the ground,
and was shaping a course through the woods and around the south side of
the pond.

“Plainly enough, whoever planted this evidence wore the shoes Gordon had
been wearing,” thought Nick, tramping rapidly on behind Henley. “That’s
evidence enough, too, that he now is in the hands of this rascal’s
confederates. It would be like Mortimer Deland not to overlook a point
as essential as that. Where will the trail end? That’s the question.”

It then was, in fact, almost the only important question in Nick
Carter’s mind. He felt that he had a correct answer for all of the
others. He was not left long in uncertainty, however, for the trail was
not a very long one.

Ten minutes brought them to a narrow road on the south side of the pond,
though a quarter mile from it, and the hound started off to the left
without a moment’s hesitation.

Another eighth of a mile brought them to what evidently was an extensive
private estate. There were low walls through the woods, and away off to
the right could be seen at intervals, when the trees and foliage did not
hide them, the white stones and monuments of a distant cemetery.

“Whose place is this, Henley?” Nick inquired, while both scrambled over
a low wall over which the hound had leaped. “Do you know who owns this
estate?”

“Sure I know,” growled Henley, over his shoulder. “I know every place in
these parts.”

“Whose is it?”

“It’s owned by a man named Barker, Colonel Morgan Barker, but he’s in
Europe with his family. The house hasn’t been open for a year.”

Nick remembered the man and the place, also the Barker tomb, in which
Mortimer Deland had temporarily concealed the art treasures stolen from
Rudolph Strickland’s flat in Fifth Avenue, and from which gruesome
confinement Nick had rescued Patsy Garvan on the night of the round-up.

No additional evidence was needed to convince him that he had hit the
nail on the head, that Pauline Perrot and Mortimer Deland were one and
the same, and that this notorious European crook was back of the knavery
then in progress.

“It’s dollars to doughnuts, now, that the rascal has taken secret
possession of Barker’s unoccupied house,” Nick said to himself. “It’s
the old Barker homestead, and sufficiently isolated to serve Deland
admirably for such a job. He knew all about it, too, and that he would
ordinarily be safe from intruders. I’ll butt in on him, now, in a way
he’ll not fancy.”

The last scarce had crossed Nick’s mind when they emerged into the
cleared land back of the large old country house, stable, and
outbuildings.

Ginger was still tugging on the leash and leading the way between the
buildings and toward the rear of the fine old dwelling.

Not a word now came from Henley.

Nick glanced sharply at the house while they approached it. Shutters
protected all of the lower windows. The curtains at those on the upper
floors were closely drawn. The surrounding grounds, an eighth of a mile
from the nearest road, shut in by the trees of an extensive park, were
entirely deserted and running to rank grass and weeds.

When within ten yards of the rear door, toward which the hound was
heading, Nick said abruptly:

“Stop a moment, Henley. If our man is here----”

“He’s here, Carter, all right,” Henley cut in gruffly.

He swung round while he spoke and dropped the leash, then threw his
shotgun into the hollow of his arm, instantly covering the detective.

“He’s here, Carter,” he added, with sinister significance. “Don’t you
reach for a gun. Don’t move, blast you, or I’ll pepper you so with
buckshot that you’ll look like a sieve.”



CHAPTER VIII.

FACE TO FACE.


Nick Carter’s feelings upon seeing the sudden display of animosity by
Pete Henley were not manifest in his face. He gazed at the swarthy
ruffian with hardly a change of countenance, apparently indifferent to
the double-barreled gun with which he was covered.

“What’s the joke, Henley?” he asked coolly.

The ruffian had murder in his eyes, and looked as black and threatening
as a thundercloud.

“You’re the joke, Carter, if there’s any joke to it,” he replied, with a
snarl. “You’ve barked up the wrong tree and tackled the wrong bunch.
Stick up your hands, and be quick about it.”

“Certainly, Henley, since you insist so politely,” Nick rejoined,
raising his hands as high as his head.

“Keep them there, now.”

“But you might answer my question, at least, and explain this sudden
change of attitude on your part.”

“You’ll know soon enough,” was the reply, followed by a short, sharp
whistle.

Ginger did not respond to it. He had disappeared around a corner of the
house.

Instead, the back door was quickly opened and two roughly clad men
appeared on the threshold, both still under thirty. One of them
instantly darted back through the hall, and Nick heard him shout to
another in one of the adjoining rooms.

Henley, meantime, growled harshly, with his evil eyes constantly on the
detective:

“Come out here, Foster, and get behind the dick. Feel under his coat and
get his guns. Kneel down while doing it, so I’ll not hit you. I’ll plug
him, all right, if he moves a finger.”

“There will be no occasion, Henley, you rat,” Nick now said sternly. “I
value a whole skin too highly to take any chance against that
blunderbuss in such hands as yours. I see, now, that you have served me
a scurvy trick. Go as far as you like.”

“You don’t need to tell me that,” snapped Henley. “I’m on the way. Got
’em, Bill?”

“Both of ’em, Jim,” returned Foster, who had hurriedly disarmed the
detective and was threatening him with his two weapons. “Who is he?”

“Nick Carter.”

“Thunder! Where did you run up against him? If he----”

“You’re to bring him in, Jim,” cut in the man who had briefly vanished,
and now returned to the open door. “His jags says----”

“Is he out here, Brigham?” Henley interrupted, with countenance
clearing.

“Sure. Been here ten minutes.”

“That’s more like it,” cried Henley. “He can now take the ribbons. Get a
move on, Carter, and--stop a bit!”

Nick halted.

“Feel again, Foster, and fish out his irons. Snap them on his own
wrists, hands behind him, as he will on ours if he gets a chance.”

“You’ve told the truth once, Henley, at least,” Nick put in dryly.

“But you’ll never get the chance,” Henley retorted. “Dukes down and
behind you, Carter, or I’ll pull the trigger.”

“Don’t trouble yourself,” said Nick, obeying. “Point the gun another
way. It might go off by chance.”

Henley heard the snap of handcuffs around Nick’s wrists and saw Foster
straighten up after having secured him, and he then lowered the shotgun
and grinned maliciously.

“You thought you were the real thing, didn’t you, Carter?” he demanded.
“Get a move on and I’ll show you what you’re up against and where you
stand.”

“I can guess.”

“Into the shack, and no funny business, mind you, or you’ll hear
something drop, if you live until you hit the floor. Lead the way,
Brigham. Where’s his jags?”

“In the dining room, Jim.”

“Head that way. Plug along, Carter, where he leads.”

Nick felt the prod of the ruffian’s gun in the small of his back, but he
had no intention of offering any objection. He followed Brigham into the
house, a stocky, ill-favored fellow with fiery-red hair, and in another
moment he heard the door closed and locked behind him.

The hall was dim when the sunlight was thus excluded. It ran straight
through the spacious old colonial house to the front door. A broad, but
angular stairway led up to the second floor. There was a damp and musty
smell in the long-closed dwelling, and the rooms on each side of the
broad hall looked dusty, gloomy, and deserted.

The exception, in the last respect, was the large dining room into which
the detective was conducted by the three crooks.

That room contained only one occupant, however; the man in search of
whom Chick Carter had left the Gordon residence more than an hour
before--Mr. Edgar Hereford Dayton.

He was seated in one of the leather upholstered chairs, pushed back from
the polished table. He did not appear disturbed by what had occurred or
by the advent of the detective upon the scene, though he gazed at Nick
curiously when he entered, flecking the ashes from the end of a
cigarette.

His overcoat and hat were lying on a chair near the wall, and near it
stood a closed leather suit case.

Nick Carter identified him instantly as Dayton--and somewhat more than
that when he spoke.

Henley was the first to open fire, however, addressing Dayton and saying
gruffly, the moment he entered:

“You’d better clean out that town office, old sport, or fight shy from
it now on. I reckon this dick has sent his right bower to keep an eye on
it. Leastwise, I don’t see where else he would have sent him in such a
rush.”

Nick suppressed a smile. It amused him to find that Henley was a bit
more discerning than he had thought him.

Dayton appeared unmoved by Henley’s announcement and advice. He glanced
at the suit case mentioned, then responded with a curious mingling of
coolness and assurance that Nick was quick to remember:

“He is welcome, Henley, to inspect that office. It already is cleaned
out of all that would interest him. Suppose, instead of giving me
needless advice, you tell me just what this meddlesome fellow is after,
and what he has been doing.”

“By Jove, I’m not mistaken,” was the thought then in Nick’s mind. “This
rascal has even more strings to his bow than I suspected.”

“That’s quickly told----” Henley began to reply.

“But better told first hand,” Nick cut in curtly, with his gaze intently
fixed on the man he addressed. “I’ll give you the information you want.
I’ll tell you what I’m after and what I’ve been doing.”

“Ah!” Dayton spoke with an icy drawl. “Better first hand, indeed, as you
say. I do not yet place you, however, nor----”

“Oh, a truce to subterfuge,” Nick again interrupted curtly.

“Subterfuge?”

“You know me perfectly well--but not better than I know you.”

“Indeed?”

“You place me, all right, as I sooner or later will again place you
where you belong.” Nick went on sternly, disregarding the other’s
queries. “A wig, a beard, a reverse curve of the eyebrows, a more florid
skin, an altered voice--it takes more than those to blind me, though you
might get by others. Fly your true colors, Mr. Mortimer Deland, and I’ll
tell you what I am after and what I’ve been doing.”

“Ah! That is a great inducement, so great that I find myself utterly
unable to resist it.”

Deland replied with unruffled composure. He drew up a little in his
chair, gazed steadily at the detective for a moment, then raised his
slender white hands to his head, deftly removing the exceedingly
artistic disguise which Nick alone had been able to penetrate, and which
had fairly transfigured the mobile, sinister, clean-cut, yet strangely
effeminate features of--Mortimer Deland.

Jim Henley and the two frowning crooks near by evinced no surprise nor
made any comments. That Deland was the master, and they merely
hirelings, was perfectly apparent to the detective.

It appeared obvious, too, that Chick Carter must have arrived too late
to have picked up the supposed Dayton before he left his office--a
mischance that would seem to have badly aggravated the present desperate
situation of the detective.

Deland appeared to think so, too, for he smiled with vicious complacency
while he tossed his disguise upon the table, saying with the same frigid
voice and insolent assurance which was so characteristic of him that
they had at once betrayed him to the detective:

“Now, having met you halfway, Carter, and complied with the stipulation
you imposed, it is up to you to perform your part of the brief verbal
contract. Sit down, if you prefer; there are plenty of chairs. I regret
that I cannot release you, but that would be injudicious for obvious
reasons. Tell me, now, as you promised, what are you after and what have
you been doing, that my good friend Henley has rounded you up in this
fashion?”



CHAPTER IX.

THE ACME OF KNAVERY.


Nick Carter ignored Mortimer Deland’s mocking suavity, the miscreant’s
manifest air of superiority and contempt. He sat down directly opposite
the notorious crook, replying sternly:

“That may be quickly told, Deland, and I’m right here to tell it.”

“I am listening.”

“You wish to know what I am after. I am after a rascal who has been
playing a very extraordinary game, so extraordinary that he might have
won out and accomplished his evil designs--if I had not butted into the
game to thwart it.”

“Ah!” drawled Deland. “That makes it very unfortunate for him--but
doubly unfortunate for you, perhaps.”

“That last word is well added.”

“Indeed?”

“You will agree with me later.”

“I seldom agree with men of your vocation,” said Deland, smiling
ironically. “Be good enough to explain, Mr. Carter. I do not quite get
you. For whom are you seeking?”

“For Pauline Perrot--said to have been murdered by Arthur Gordon,” Nick
replied curtly.

“Dear me, is that so?” smiled Deland, with eyes narrowing. “I remember
Gordon. It was he who started you on my track several months ago, with
very disastrous results. I would not grieve deeply, Carter, if evil did
befall Mr. Arthur Gordon.”

“I am very well aware of that, Deland,” Nick said dryly. “Your assurance
of it is entirely unnecessary.”

“Pauline Perrot, eh?” queried Deland, unruffled. “Said to have been
murdered. She is Gordon’s stenographer, I believe. I think I have seen
her coming from his business office. Murdered, eh? What are the
circumstances, Carter? Have you succeeded in finding her--or what is
left of her?”

“Yes,” Nick said shortly.

“Dear me, is that so?”

Deland did not, in fact, then suppose it was so, Henley being the only
one of the four crooks then informed of what the detective had
discovered.

“I not only have found all that is left of her, but also all that she
left behind her,” Nick pointedly added.

Deland’s eyes took on a sharper gleam and glitter, his thin lips a more
sinister and threatening curve. The tinge of color in his cheeks waned
perceptibly. His long, slender fingers closed involuntarily, until their
carefully manicured nails bit into his palms. He laughed, nevertheless,
in a cold and mirthless fashion, while he echoed inquiringly:

“All that she left behind her?”

“Exactly,” said Nick.

“You mean----”

“The garments she left in the home of Mrs. Lord, with whom she has been
boarding.”

“You have been there?”

Deland’s brows knit closer and fell to a settled frown over his steadily
dilating eyes.

“How else could I have found the garments?” Nick demanded. “Yes, I have
been there and----”

“And that’s not the only place he’s been to, nor all he----”

“One moment, Henley,” Deland coldly interrupted. “I will hear you
presently. Permit Mr. Carter to have his say. What more, Carter; what
more?”

“Oh, there is a good deal more, Deland, if I chose to tell you all of my
discoveries and deductions,” Nick now said, more sternly.

“Ah, indeed?”

“So much, Deland, that it would reveal in every detail the knavish game
you have been playing,” Nick went on forcibly. “But you have overplayed
yourself, over-estimated the value of your cards.”

“My cards?”

“Have you not learned in all the years you have lived in vice and crime
that three kings, well played, will invariably beat three knaves?”

“See here, Carter----”

“Oh, you wanted me to have my say,” Nick went on sternly, interrupting.
“The three kings you have been up against, Deland, are Patsy Garvan,
Chick Carter, and myself--three kings in the detective deck. You,
Deland, are single-handed the three knaves--yourself, the man Dayton,
and the supposed murdered girl, Pauline Perrot. Three knaves, Deland,
never beat three kings.”

“You say--you say that I am Pauline Perrot?” gasped Deland, with his
wonderful nerve shaken for the first time.

“I not only say so, but I can also prove it,” cried Nick. “I say, too,
that you now have Arthur Gordon confined in this house, and that you and
these three rascals----”

“Stop!” Deland leaped to his feet. “I have heard enough from you,
Carter. Keep an eye on him, Foster, with a weapon ready. If he utters
another word, or makes an aggressive move, shoot him instantly. This
way, Henley, into the hall. I prefer to hear your story.”

An expression of devilish ferocity now had settled upon his vicious
white face. He strode into the hall, Henley following, and for several
minutes the two remained there in a whispered discussion.

Nick Carter waited with apparent indifference.

“There soon will be something doing, I imagine,” he said to himself. “I
wonder whether Chick arrived in time to pick up his quarry. That now
appears very improbable. Fortunately, however, I have another string to
my bow, one that Henley does not even suspect. The odds are
considerable, but--ah, well, I have never known him to fail to make
good.”

There was a still more vicious look on Deland’s face when he returned
with Henley. It was like that which it had worn when, having caught
Patsy Garvan as he now had cornered Nick, he left him to die in the
Barker tomb.

He came and stood directly in front of Nick, gazing down at him and
saying, with icy severity:

“Henley has made it perfectly plain to me. There is no occasion for you
to say more.”

“Very well,” Nick returned indifferently.

“You are very clever, Carter, very clever,” Deland went on. “I have
never in Europe encountered an inspector who compared at all with you.
You are so dangerous, Carter, that the world is too small for both of
us.”

“Why don’t you move out?” Nick coolly inquired.

“You have exposed my game, indeed, and thwarted part of it,” Deland went
on, as if there had been no interruption. “But I have, at least, the
money and bonds stolen from Gordon’s vault. They are in yonder suit
case.”

“Thanks for the information,” Nick again put in. “It will save me from
searching for them.”

“I also have Gordon, here, as you have inferred,” continued Deland
icily. “And, best of all--I have you!”

“I would be foolish to deny it,” Nick dryly allowed.

“And here, Carter, before we bolt for parts unknown, is where I shall
get even with you and with him, where I will forever wipe you out of my
path. Gordon is bound hand and foot in a room on the top floor.”

“Thanks again, Deland.”

“I will send you both to the devil.”

“By what route, pray?”

“In a chariot of fire!” cried Deland, with a sudden outburst of
ferocity.

“Well, well, that will beat walking,” Nick declared, not in the least
daunted by the significance of the miscreant’s threat.

Deland swung around to Foster and Gribham, who had stood listening with
stoical indifference to the foregoing colloquy.

“Go and get him, you two,” he fiercely commanded. “Bring Gordon down
here. We will wipe them out together. We will leave no evidence here to
tell the story. We will bind both, lock them in the library closet, and
then fire the house.”

“That’s the stuff!” Henley said, with a growl. “It will burn like
tinder. That will finish them.”

“Get Gordon--get Gordon!” Deland fairly shrieked. “Bring him to the
library. We can be out of here with our plunder, with the deed done, in
less than a dozen minutes. Go and get Gordon. Bring Carter after me,
Henley. Bring him into the library. I’ll do it--I long to do it! It
shall be my hand that starts the flames!”

In another moment all of them, Nick Carter included, were striding into
the dimly lighted hall.



CHAPTER X.

THE OTHER STRINGS.


Patsy Garvan did not ride far with Danny Maloney after their parting
from Nick Carter and Henley. Glancing back over his shoulder, Patsy
waited only until they had rounded the curve in the road, when he called
quickly:

“Slow down, Danny, and drop me. We’re out of sight.”

Danny obeyed at once, saying regretfully:

“Gee! I wish I was going with you. I might be needed.”

“One is better than two,” Patsy replied, leaping down to the road.
“There’s only half the risk of being seen. I can fill the bill, all
right, single-handed.”

“So long, then, and good luck.”

“Same to you.”

Danny sped on with the car.

Patsy Garvan, however, plunged into the woods, at once shaping a course
that would bring him in sight of the crossroad through which Nick and
Henley were to pass.

It was to enable Patsy to make this detour that Nick repeatedly stopped
on the road, pretending he wanted to find footprints left by the missing
couple.

Patsy accomplished the move with no great difficulty, and entirely
unsuspected by Henley, owing to the artful attitude toward him that Nick
had assumed.

Patsy saw them pass along the road; in fact, saw them on the edge of the
pond, and then he followed them at a discreet distance until, from
behind one of the outbuildings, he saw Nick held up by Henley and
afterward taken into the house.

“Gee! that does settle it,” he said to himself. “I must know who is
there and what’s going to come off, but it won’t do for me to approach
the house from this side. Those rats are in the rear rooms, or a side
one, or they could not have reached the back door so quickly after
Henley whistled. I’ll make a circuit to the front road and have a look.”

It took Patsy several minutes to do so, seeking the shelter of a wall
over which he could plainly see the front of the dwelling, and he then
met with an agreeable surprise.

A familiar whistle fell upon his ears, and he turned and discovered
Chick under the same wall.

“Gee whiz!” he exclaimed, when they met. “This is dead lucky, for fair.”

“It’s not all luck, I guess,” Chick replied. “Give the chief the credit
for it.”

“You found your man?”

“I arrived just in time to see him leaving his office.”

“He must be out here, now, since you are here.”

“That’s what,” Chick nodded. “He went round to the back door of the
house about ten minutes ago. I’ve been waiting and watching till I could
get a line on what’s going on in there.”

“Gee! I can supply that line, all right,” chuckled Patsy.

“Cut loose, then,” said Chick.

Patsy informed him with very few words what had occurred, and the
subterfuge Nick had employed.

“It now is up to us, Chick,” he added. “The gang we want is in that
house, and probably Arthur Gordon. We must go in and get them. There’s
nothing else to it.”

“Only one thing,” corrected Chick, who again was sizing up the house.

“What’s that?”

“The way to get in, Patsy, so as to catch them hands down. It’s a
hundred to one that they are on the ground floor, also in one of the
rear rooms, as you have said.”

“It’s a safe gamble, Chick, in my opinion.”

“And I am equally sure that we could not force any of the lower windows
without being heard. We can take a chance and approach the front of the
house, and by climbing that trellis at the east end of the veranda, we
can reach the veranda roof and three of the second-floor windows.”

“Like breaking sticks,” nodded Patsy approvingly. “It’s dollars to
doughnuts that we then can quietly force one of the windows.”

“I think so, too.”

“Well, what do you say?”

“I say do it, Patsy, and be quick about it,” Chick declared, when unable
to discover a sign of any person in the front part of the house.

“I’m with you,” Patsy muttered. “Head straight across the lawn to the
east end of the veranda.”

They vaulted the wall while he was speaking, then covered the distance
at record speed. After waiting and listening for a few moments, they
felt sure that they had not been seen. To climb the trellis and reach
the veranda roof then was child’s play, and both then began an
inspection of the curtained windows.

Chick found one through which he could work his knife blade, thrusting
up between the sashes, and in a very few moments he had succeeded in
throwing the lock.

Noiselessly raising the lower section, he then pushed aside the curtain
and peered in, finding that the window opened into the hall on the
second floor. Listening, he could faintly hear voices from below, but
could not distinguish whose, nor what was said.

“Come on, Patsy,” he whispered, with a significant glance at him. “Have
a gun ready. I’ll lead the way.”

“You won’t be far in advance,” muttered Patsy dryly.

Crawling quietly through the window, one after the other, they tiptoed
toward the broad, angular stairway leading to the lower hall.

“Keep on, old top,” whispered Patsy, now with a revolver in each hand.
“The sooner we get them the better.”

“I think so, too.”

“They’re in one of the side rooms. Ah, that was the chief’s voice.”

“Come on,” Chick muttered, starting down the stairs.

Patsy followed close at his companion’s heels.

They had made only the first turn in the stairway, when the voice of
Mortimer Deland, rising high with the last threatening words he was
addressing to Nick Carter, coupled with his fierce commands to his three
confederates, fell loud and clear on the two detective’s ears.

Chick Carter glanced at Patsy and pulled out a second revolver.

“Fire the house, will he?” he whispered hurriedly. “There’ll be firing
of another kind done here, if necessary.”

“You bet!” nodded Patsy, with brows knitting.

“Shoot to kill, if you have to shoot.”

“Kill goes!”

“They’ll come out this way,” Chick said hurriedly, as they reached the
foot of the stairway and paused for an instant near the front door.

“Had we better rush in on them?”

“We might meet them on the threshold and get into too close quarters,”
said Chick, after an instant’s thought. “We’d better get them after they
come into the hall.”

“I guess you’re right.”

“Slip across into that front parlor and be ready to nail them from that
side,” Chick directed. “I’ll cover this part of the hall.”

“I’ve got you,” Patsy nodded. “Give a yell when you’re ready.”

He darted across the hall with the last and into the dim, luxuriously
furnished parlor.

Chick crouched back of the rise of the stairs.

Both scarce had gained these positions when the four crooks, with Nick
in their midst, issued from the dining room and headed toward the front
of the hall.

Chick waited until they were midway between the several doors, that no
swift leap into either room should save any of them. Then he uttered the
yell for which Patsy Garvan was waiting.

“Now, Patsy, get them!”

Nick Carter heard him, and then saw both. As quick as a flash, he
shouldered both Deland and Henley to the middle of the hall, then leaped
quickly back into the dining room, out of range of a chance bullet.

Chick saw the idea, and a shriek instantly followed his yell.

“Hands up, you fellows! We’ll drop the first man who resists!”

“Every man!” roared Patsy, with both guns leveled.

There were four weapons covering the crooks, with bullets enough in all
to have riddled them.

Only one of them acted under the impulse of desperation--Jim Henley.

His shotgun, with which he had been prodding Nick in the back, leaped to
the hollow of his arm.

Bang!

It was Chick’s revolver that barked. The shotgun fell to the floor, and
Henley with it, shot through the head.

Nothing more sanguinary and determined was needed. Deland and his other
two confederates instantly threw up their hands--and kept them up till
Patsy and Nick Carter were ready to fit them with bracelets.

That ended the sensational features of the extraordinary case. Henley
died within an hour, and two hours saw the other three in the Tombs, two
to be convicted and sentenced a fortnight later, and Mortimer Deland to
return to finish his unexpired term in the State’s prison.

Arthur Gordon was found, as stated, bound hand and foot in an upper room
of the old house. Though intensely grateful to the Carters for his
rescue and liberation, he was a thousand times more surprised at what
they told him. Up to that moment he had not dreamed of the true identity
of Pauline Perrot, who had, as Nick had inferred, artfully wheedled him
into meeting her on a supposed business matter with a friend that
evening, only to throw him into the hands of Henley, Foster, and
Brigham.

The gratitude of Mr. Rudolph Strickland, and the joy and relief of
Wilhelmina, when Gordon was brought home safely and the truth made
known, were all that the most vivid imagination could picture. Their
reward to Nick and his assistants, too, was in corresponding proportion.

It afterward appeared, too, that all of Nick’s suspicions and deductions
were absolutely correct; and that Deland, in assuming the character of
Dayton, had done so only to have a quick refuge from Gordon’s office, if
it became necessary, and a character in which he could bury Pauline
Perrot at a moment’s notice.

Nick Carter had thwarted him completely, however, and had secured him
temporarily, at least.


THE END.

     “Blood Will Tell; or, Nick Carter’s Play in Politics,” will be the
     title of the long, complete story which you will find in the next
     issue, No. 156, of the NICK CARTER STORIES, out September 4th. In
     this narrative you will read of the final round-up of Mortimer
     Deland. You will also find the usual installment of the serial now
     running in this publication, together with several interesting
     articles.


DEMONSTRATED.

It was a saying of a wise man that we have one mouth and two ears in
order that we may listen twice as much as we speak.

A teacher once quoted this remark to his pupils, and not long afterward,
to see how well the instruction was remembered, asked:

“Why is it that we have two ears and only one mouth, Brown?”

Brown had forgotten the philosopher’s explanation, but thought the
question not a very hard one.

“Because,” he said, “we should not have room in our face for two mouths,
and we should look too crooked if we had only one ear.”

“No, no,” said the master, “that is not the reason. You know, don’t you,
Smith?”

“Yes, sir,” answered that hopeful. “So that what we hear may go in at
one ear and out at the other.”



SNAPSHOT ARTILLERY.

By BERTRAM LEBHAR.

(This interesting story was commenced in No. 153 of NICK CARTER STORIES.
Back numbers can always be obtained from your news dealer or the
publishers.)



CHAPTER VIII.

MELBA GALE.


“Guess I’ll borrow your motor cycle, old man, if you don’t object,” said
Hawley to his host.

“What! You don’t mean to say you’re going to Oldham again?” the latter
protested. “How about your doctor’s orders to keep quiet and avoid all
excitement?”

“I shall try to avoid excitement as much as possible while I’m in town,”
the Camera Chap replied dryly. “But I’ve got to go this time. When duty
calls, physician’s orders don’t count, you know. Here’s the telegram,
old man. You can see for yourself that it’s really a case of must.”

His host perused the telegram and shook his head disapprovingly. “I
can’t say I think much of a boss who won’t leave a man alone during his
vacation--especially when that man has been ordered by his physician to
keep his thoughts away from business. This managing editor of yours must
be a peach, Hawley.”

The Camera Chap laughed. “Oh, Paxton is all right. There isn’t a whiter
man in the newspaper game. The _Sentinel_ must need that picture badly,
or you can be sure they wouldn’t have bothered me with it. May I have
the motor cycle?”

“Of course, if you are determined to go. But if I were in your place,
I’d send them back a telegram that they’d have to get another man to do
the job. Seems to me that they could have got the picture just as easily
by wiring to a local photographer and leaving you alone. Surely anybody
can take a picture of a building. No particular skill required for
that.”

Hawley smiled grimly. “Some buildings are harder to take than others.
I’ve a sort of an idea that this snapshot of the city hall is going to
be one of my masterpieces. I’m eager to get at it.”

His host shrugged his shoulders. “I can’t see why the job should appeal
to you so greatly. I thought you liked snapshots which involved risk.
Surely there isn’t anything particularly thrilling about taking a
picture of a building.”

Perhaps it is needless to say that the Camera Chap’s host was not aware
of the new anticamera bill which the Oldham council had recently
enacted. Hawley did not enlighten him.

Five minutes later, just as the Camera Chap was about to start, his
friend made an astonishing discovery.

“Why, you absent-minded beggar!” he exclaimed laughingly. “You’re
actually going off without your camera. Don’t expect to be able to take
a picture without it, do you?”

The Camera Chap grinned. “I’m leaving it behind purposely,” he said. “No
use taking my big camera for this job. I’ve got a kodak in my coat
pocket, and that’ll serve the purpose just as well--better, in fact, for
this particular snapshot.”

Of course, Hawley would have preferred to have taken his larger camera
with him, but he realized that it would have been sheer folly to have
attempted to photograph the city hall with anything larger than a kodak.
With six months in prison staring him in the face, he had to be content
with a smaller picture.

The pocket camera, however, had an excellent lens, and, of its class,
was the very finest instrument obtainable. The Camera Chap always
carried it with him so as to be prepared for such emergencies as this.
On many occasions in his eventful career it had enabled him to turn
defeat into victory after he had been foiled in his attempts to use his
more conspicuous apparatus.

“It really is kind of odd that Paxton should have given me this
assignment,” Hawley mused, as he motored down the steep mountain road
which led to Oldham. “He was so emphatic in urging me to obey my
physician’s orders to forget that there was such a thing in the world as
a camera. When I gave him my telegraph address and told him not to
hesitate to send for me in case I was needed, he replied that he
wouldn’t think of doing so unless the entire city of New York was
burning and there wasn’t anybody else to photograph the conflagration.
Paxton always means what he says, too. Funny that he should have sent me
this telegram.

“But, then,” he added, anxious to make excuses for his managing editor,
“I suppose he figured that this was such an easy assignment that it
couldn’t do me any harm. Of course, he doesn’t know about this new
anticamera law. If he had known of it, no doubt he would have preferred
to go without the picture of the city hall rather than have asked me to
run the risk of going to jail.”

The Camera Chap had traveled two-thirds of the distance to Oldham, when
suddenly, as he approached a bend in the road, there came to his ears a
sound which caused him to put on more speed, in spite of the fact that
the motor cycle was already going at a rate which the steep down grade
and the unevenness of the road rendered somewhat dangerous.

It was a scream which caused him thus to risk his neck--the piercing,
startled cry of a woman. It appeared to come from just beyond where the
road turned.

Rounding the curve without taking the precaution of slowing down, Hawley
came in sight of an automobile--a small runabout--standing in the
roadway. At the steering wheel of this machine sat a girl who was
cowering in terror from a ragged, rough-looking fellow of the hobo type,
who stood on the running board.

The Camera Chap took in the situation at a glance. Evidently the
runabout had broken down, and the tramp, seeing that it was stalled on
this lonely country road, and that its sole occupant was a girl, had not
hesitated to annoy her.

The noise of the approaching motor cycle was warning enough for the
ruffian. Before Hawley could get to him, he had jumped from the step of
the car and dashed through the thick brush which lined the roadway.

The Camera Chap applied his brakes and brought his motor to a stop
alongside the car. Then, with a reassuring word to the girl, he jumped
from his wheel and went in pursuit of her annoyer.

But the bushes were so thick at this point that the slight start the
fellow had was sufficient to enable him to get away. Hawley went
crashing and floundering through the brush for some time in the hope of
hitting the trail of the fugitive, but finally had to give it up as
useless.

“I’m afraid I’ve lost him,” he said, somewhat crestfallen, as he
returned to the girl in the automobile. “I don’t suppose he can have
gone very far, but these bushes are worse than a maze at a county fair.”

“It’s no matter,” said the girl, with a smile. She seemed to have
recovered a great deal of her lost composure. “I’m just as pleased that
you didn’t catch him. I really don’t think the fellow meant any harm. He
asked for money. The reason I screamed was because he looked so rough.
The road here is so lonely that I lost my nerve when he came through the
bushes and climbed onto the car. I suppose if I’d given him a few cents
he’d have gone away quietly enough. I’m afraid I’m rather silly to be
scared so easily.”

“Not at all,” said the Camera Chap. “I guess anybody would have been
scared under the circumstances. What’s the matter with the car; a
breakdown?”

“Oh, no,” the girl replied. “There’s nothing the matter with the car. I
stopped merely because I--I was waiting for somebody whom I expect to
meet here.”

Her hesitation and the vivid blush which accompanied these words
enlightened Hawley as to the gender of this somebody for whom she was
waiting.

She was an exceedingly attractive girl, and Hawley found himself envying
the man whom she expected to meet. But as he had no desire to intrude
upon this tryst, he stepped over to his motor cycle, and turned to the
girl inquiringly.

“Guess I’ll be getting along,” he said, “unless, of course, you prefer
to have me remain until the arrival of this--er--person you’re
expecting. Are you afraid to be left alone here?”

“Oh, no,” she answered, in a tone which told him of her eagerness to get
rid of him. “I’ll be all right, thank you. Please don’t let me detain
you. I don’t intend to stay here. I’m going to turn the car around and
ride slowly back toward Oldham until I meet--the friend I’m expecting.”

“That’s a very sensible idea,” Hawley said. “While the machine is in
motion you’ll be in no danger of annoyance from any more tramps.”

He doffed his cap, and was just starting the motor of his cycle when the
girl called to him.

“I quite forgot to thank you for your timely assistance,” she said,
giving him a gracious smile, which did a lot to atone for her evident
anxiety to have him depart. “I assure you that I am very grateful.

“I live in Oldham,” she went on. “If you would care to call on us, I am
sure my uncle, with whom I live, would be glad of the opportunity to add
his thanks to mine. My name is Melba Gale, and----”

“Gale!” the Camera Chap repeated, speaking more to himself than to the
girl. “That must be merely a coincidence, of course. Surely you are no
relative of Gale, of the _News_?”

“Do you mean the New York _Daily News_?” the girl inquired, some
astonishment in her tone. “I have a cousin who for several years has
been a reporter on that paper. It is with his family that I am living. I
am an orphan, and my Uncle Delancey’s house has been my home ever since
I was three years old. Do you know my cousin?” she asked, looking at him
keenly.

“I have met him,” the Camera Chap replied evasively.

“In New York?”

“Yes.”

“Then, perhaps you can tell me,” the girl began. Then she broke off
suddenly as, glancing over her shoulder, she caught sight of a young man
mounted on a bicycle who was approaching from the direction of Oldham.

It needed only one glance at her flushed, radiant face to tell Hawley
that this was the lucky man who was expected.

The Camera Chap would scarcely have been human if he had been able to
refrain from staring at the latter. Naturally, he was curious to see
what the fellow looked like.

And, as the bicyclist drew near, Hawley experienced another great
surprise.

This young man who was hastening to meet Miss Melba Gale, niece of the
proprietor of the Oldham _Daily Chronicle_, was no stranger to him.

It was his friend, Fred Carroll, proprietor of the _Chronicle’s_ bitter
rival, the Oldham _Daily Bulletin_.



CHAPTER IX.

TIMELY WARNING.


“Hello, Frank!” exclaimed Carroll, in an astonished tone as he jumped
from his wheel. “I certainly didn’t expect to find you here.”

“I am equally surprised to see you, old man,” the Camera Chap replied
dryly. Then he added, a twinkle in his eye: “I didn’t know you were in
the habit of going bicycle riding during office hours.”

“I don’t make a habit of it,” Carroll returned, with a guilty grin. “The
fact is---- Why, hang it all, Hawley, you infernal old busybody! What
business is it of yours, anyway?”

As the Camera Chap’s name was mentioned, the girl’s brown eyes opened
wide with surprise, and she uttered a faint exclamation; but neither of
the young men heard it.

“It’s none of my business at all, old scout,” Hawley admitted, laughing.
“And, moreover, I’m going to make myself scarce immediately. I’ve got a
hunch that this is one of those cases where two is company and three is
a tremendously big crowd. Besides, I have a pressing engagement in town
and have got to get a move on.”

“Wait just one minute, please,” cried Miss Gale, as the Camera Chap was
mounting his motor cycle. “Fred, is this Mr. Hawley, the New York
_Sentinel’s_ camera man? Because, if so, I am just in time.”

“Just in time for what, Melba?” inquired Carroll, while the Camera Chap
stared at her wonderingly.

“To prevent him from going to Oldham,” the girl answered. “It was solely
on his account, Fred, that I sent you that note asking you to meet me
here. I wanted to tell you to warn Mr. Hawley of the trap which had been
set for him.”

“The trap!” exclaimed Hawley and Carroll in chorus.

“Yes,” said the girl. Then, turning to the Camera Chap, she exclaimed
tensely: “You spoke just now of having a pressing engagement in town,
Mr. Hawley. Isn’t it your intention to take a photograph of the city
hall?”

“It is,” Hawley replied. “I am on my way to get that picture now. But
how in the name of all that’s wonderful, Miss Gale, do you happen to
know about my assignment?”

Instead of answering his question, the girl asked him another.

“You received a telegram to-day, did you not?” she said. “A telegram
supposed to have come from the managing editor of the New York
_Sentinel_?”

“Supposed to have come from the managing editor!” Hawley repeated, a
suspicion of the truth suddenly dawning upon him. “Do you mean to say,
Miss Gale, that----”

“I mean to say that that telegram was a fake,” she declared, without
waiting for him to finish. “It didn’t come from New York. It didn’t come
over the wire at all. It was composed and written by my cousin on one of
the typewriters in the _Chronicle_ office. It was part of the trap which
my cousin and the chief of police have set for you, Mr. Hawley.”

“I see,” said the Camera Chap quietly. “Their scheme, of course, was to
lure me to Oldham to take that picture, and then have me sent to jail
for six months for violating the new law. Clever little plan. And it
came pretty near succeeding, too. I had no suspicion that the telegram
wasn’t genuine. If you hadn’t warned me, Miss Gale, I should surely have
walked right into the trap. I can scarcely find words to thank you
enough.”

“How did you manage to find out about it, Melba?” Carroll inquired, with
a fond glance at the girl.

“Chief Hodgins was at our house last night,” she replied, “and I
overheard him and my cousin discussing the plan. They didn’t know that I
was listening, of course; but I managed to overhear enough to enable me
to understand what they intended to do. The chief expressed doubts as to
whether the scheme would work. He said that Mr. Hawley would probably
hear about the new anticamera law, and would not be so foolish as to run
the risk of going to jail. But my cousin said that he was confident that
the telegram would do the trick. He said that Mr. Hawley had never been
known to balk at an assignment, and that no amount of danger could keep
the rattle-brained fool--those were the words he used--from coming after
that picture if he thought the _Sentinel_ needed it.”

Carroll looked at the Camera Chap admiringly.

“That’s a mighty fine tribute to get from an enemy,” he exclaimed
enthusiastically. “You ought to be proud of that compliment, Hawley, old
fellow.”

“My cousin didn’t mean it for a compliment,” declared Miss Gale. “He
stated it merely as a fact which would insure the success of their
plan.”

“That makes it all the more of a compliment,” Carroll said. “Tell me,
little girl, did you let those fellows know that you were wise to their
game?”

“No, I didn’t. My first impulse was to tell my cousin just what I
thought of such a contemptible trick, and warn him that if he attempted
to carry it out I should certainly interfere; but upon second thought I
decided to say nothing to him. I thought it would be a better plan to
notify you so that you could warn Mr. Hawley to pay no attention to that
fake telegram.”

“That was a much better plan,” the Camera Chap declared. “I am very
glad, Miss Gale, that you didn’t say anything to your cousin. Had you
done so, it would not have been possible for me to carry out the idea
that has just occurred to me. I think I have a little surprise in store
for those fellows.”

“You’re not contemplating taking any legal action, are you, old man?”
Carroll inquired anxiously. “I suppose you could prosecute them for
forgery or conspiracy, or anything of that sort. They richly deserve it,
of course. But for Miss Gale’s sake I hope you won’t do it.”

“Of course not,” said Hawley indignantly. “What do you take me for,
Fred? I’d be a fine specimen of humanity if I were to repay Miss Gale’s
kindness by trying to send one of her family to prison. And she’d have
to be the chief witness for the prosecution, too; otherwise I’d have no
case. Do you think I’d be capable of that? Legal action is quite out of
the question, of course, under the circumstances. Besides, I don’t like
going to court.”

“Then what is this surprise which you say you are going to give them?”
Carroll inquired.

The Camera Chap chuckled. “You’ll have to excuse me for not answering
that question now, Fred. If I did, it would spoil the big laugh which I
think I can promise you later on.”



CHAPTER X.

THE PHOTOGRAPH.


Less than half an hour later, the Camera Chap entered the Invincible
Garage, on Main Street, Oldham.

“I want to check my motor cycle here,” he said to the man in charge.
Then, taking from his pocket the small camera of expensive make with
which he had intended to take the snapshot of the city hall, he added:
“I’d regard it as a great favor if you’d take care of this, too, for a
little while.”

“Sure,” assented the garage man, holding out his hand for the camera. “I
suppose you want to make sure that you won’t run foul of the new law,
eh?” he remarked, in a jocular tone.

Hawley nodded gravely. “I don’t want to take any chances,” he explained.
“You see, I happen to be quite a camera fiend. Whenever I run across
anything worth photographing, I simply cannot resist the temptation to
take a snapshot. So, as I am a peaceful, law-abiding citizen, I think it
will be a wise plan for me to leave my camera in your custody. If I
haven’t it with me, I can’t very well be tempted to break the law, can
I?”

“Not very well,” the garage man answered, with a broad grin. “But, say,
if you’re so keen on taking pictures, why don’t you get a permit from
the chief of police? Then you can take all the snapshots you want.”

“Maybe the chief wouldn’t give me a permit,” the Camera Chap replied
dryly.

“Sure he would,” the garage man declared confidently. Hawley was a
perfect stranger to him. “The law wasn’t made to prevent people like
yourself from taking pictures. It is true that the chief of police has
full power to grant or refuse camera permits at his discretion; but
anybody can get one--provided he ain’t connected with the _Bulletin_.”

“Why the discrimination?” the Camera Chap inquired, with seeming
innocence.

“It is very evident that you’re a stranger here, sir, or you wouldn’t
risk that question. It is generally understood that the _Bulletin_ was
the cause of this anticamera law being passed. You see, there’s a bitter
fight going on between the _Bulletin_ and the town government; and, the
other day, that newspaper scored heavily by publishing a couple of
snapshots of the chief of police, which made him boiling mad.”

“Indeed!” exclaimed Hawley, with well-feigned astonishment. “I shouldn’t
think the chief would object to having his portrait published. Is he
such a modest man?”

The garage man grinned again. “Nobody ever accused big Bill Hodgins of
modesty that I know of. But you see, sir, these weren’t ordinary
portraits. Some nervy photographer--I understand it was a young camera
man from a New York newspaper--sneaked into the chief’s private office
at police headquarters while he was taking a midday snooze and took two
snapshots of him fast asleep at his desk. Those were the pictures which
the _Bulletin_ published on its front page. Naturally, Bill Hodgins was
peeved.”

“Naturally,” the Camera Chap agreed. “What an outrage! Really, some of
those newspaper photographers go a little too far sometimes. Under the
circumstances, I don’t blame the chief for refusing to grant a camera
license to anybody connected with the _Bulletin_.”

“No, indeed,” said the garage man. “But, as I say, anybody else can get
one; so, if I was you, I’d go straight to police headquarters and apply
for a permit.”

“Oh, I guess I won’t bother,” said Hawley. “I don’t intend to stay in
Oldham very long, so it is scarcely worth while. Just take good care of
that camera of mine, will you, old man?”

The Camera Chap sauntered up Main Street until he came to a store which
sold sporting goods, toys, and cameras. Entering this shop, he stepped
up to the toy counter.

“I want to get a present for my little nephew,” he announced to the
saleswoman. “Don’t know exactly what I want yet, so I’ll look around a
bit, if you don’t mind.”

It didn’t take him long to make a selection from the large variety of
toys displayed on the counter and shelves. Then, with his purchase in
his hand, he was just about to leave the store, when, apparently, a
sudden thought came to him.

“By the way, you sell cameras here, don’t you?” he inquired.

“Yes, sir--at the rear of the store,” the saleswoman replied.

Hawley stepped up to the photographic counter and purchased a small film
camera.

“Wrap it up in good, strong paper, please,” he requested the salesman.
“I want to conceal the fact that I’m carrying a camera.”

“Haven’t taken out your license yet, eh?” said the salesman, with a
smile.

“No, not yet,” the Camera Chap replied.

“Well, why not drop into police headquarters right now and attend to it?
Then you won’t have to be afraid of getting into trouble. It’ll only
take you a couple of minutes.”

But Hawley did not drop into police headquarters, although he passed
right by that building on his way to the city hall.

Chief Hodgins happened to be standing in the doorway as the Camera Chap
passed. He was engaged in conversation with the younger Gale.

“I’ve got a feelin’ that he ain’t coming,” the big chief remarked
uneasily. “You can depend upon it that he’s heard about this law and is
afraid to take a chance.”

“Don’t worry. He’ll come, all right,” declared Gale confidently. “The
only thing that could keep him away would be a suspicion that that
telegram of ours wasn’t genuine, and I’m pretty sure he won’t suspect
that.”

Then suddenly Gale caught sight of Hawley, and poked his companion in
the ribs.

“Look! Here he comes now,” he whispered excitedly. “What did I tell you,
chief?”

“By Jiminy! It’s him, sure enough,” the head of Oldham’s police force
muttered. “I’ve only seen him once--and that time I only got what you
might call a fleetin’ glimpse of him--but I’d know the rascal anywhere.
I could pick him out of a thousand.”

“Don’t let him see us,” Gale whispered cautiously, pulling his companion
farther back into the hallway of the headquarters building. “Compose
yourself, chief.”

This last remark was called forth by the fact that Chief Hodgins’ round
face had turned scarlet, and his little, beady eyes seemed about to
leave their sockets. His fat fingers opened and closed convulsively, and
he fairly trembled with the fury which the sight of the Camera Chap
aroused within his breast.

“I can hardly keep my hands off him,” he growled.

“Don’t do it, chief,” Gale urged. “Go easy or you’ll spoil the whole
game. In a few minutes you’ll have the satisfaction of marching him to
jail. That’ll be much better than physical violence. See, he’s heading
straight for the city hall; and I’ll bet dollars to doughnuts that that
brown paper package in his hand is a camera. He must be a bigger idiot
than I thought him if he imagines he can fool us by such a bluff.”

“Come on,” said Hodgins impatiently. “Let’s trail the loafer. I’ve got
six of my best men stationed around the city hall, laying in wait for
him. I assigned the best detectives on my force to the job, but they may
fall down, and I’m not taking any chances. Come on, young feller. We’ll
make this pinch ourselves.”

“Great!” exclaimed Gale, a gleam of malicious satisfaction in his eyes.
“I’ll enjoy taking an active part in the arrest, chief. I’m just as
anxious as you are to see that chesty Camera Chap laugh out of the other
side of his mouth. I’ve got several old scores to settle with him, and I
wouldn’t miss this opportunity for a mint of money.”

They waited until Hawley was half a block ahead, then they crossed to
the opposite sidewalk and followed him cautiously up Main Street, taking
care to keep far enough back to prevent his recognizing them in case he
should glance behind him.

But this precaution proved unnecessary, for the Camera Chap did not once
turn his head in their direction. Apparently blissfully unconscious of
the fact that he was being shadowed, he kept right on until he reached
the white, domed building which housed the local government of Oldham.

Here he halted and carefully surveyed the edifice, shifting his position
several times as though he had difficulty in making up his mind which
viewpoint would best serve his purpose.

Gale and the chief of police had ducked inside the doorway of a store.
From this place of concealment they watched him closely, and a grunt of
joyous anticipation came from Hodgins as they saw him remove the paper
wrapping of the package in his hand and reveal a film camera.

“What did I tell you!” Gale whispered exultantly. “I knew I was right
about the contents of that package. In another minute or so he’ll have
snapshotted himself into jail.”

“He’s taken the picture already,” growled Hodgins. “I just seen him turn
that little knob at the side of his camera; and he’s got the confounded
thing pointed straight at the city hall. That’s plenty good enough for
me.”

He was about to step out of the doorway, but Gale hastily pulled him
back.

“Hold on, chief,” he whispered, smiling at the policeman’s ignorance of
photography. “He hasn’t taken the picture yet. He’s merely focusing, and
the law doesn’t forbid that. Wait until he squeezes the bulb and exposes
the film. Then we’ll have the goods on him.

“And say, chief,” he added eagerly, “let me have a few words with him
before you place him under arrest, will you?”

“Huh! What do you want to say to him?” growled Hodgins suspiciously.

Gale smiled sardonically. “I just want to have a little fun at his
expense, that’s all. It’ll be great sport to kid him. It can’t possibly
do any harm--there’s no danger of his getting away, so please do me that
favor, will you?”

The Camera Chap seemed to be having some trouble in getting a
satisfactory focus. He fidgeted with his camera for several minutes
before he was quite content with the reflection in the view finder. But
at last he was ready to take the picture, and there was a faint clicking
sound as he squeezed the bulb.

The noises of the street, of course, prevented Gale from hearing this
click; but he saw Hawley’s fingers compress the rubber bulb, and he knew
that the psychological moment had arrived.

Stepping out from his place of concealment, he confronted the Camera
Chap just as that young man was in the act of restoring his photographic
apparatus to its original paper wrapping.

If Gale had loved Hawley like an only brother, his face could not have
been more expressive of cordiality as he advanced toward the latter with
hand outstretched.

“Well, if it isn’t good old Hawley, as large as life!” he exclaimed
effusively. “My dear fellow, this certainly is a pleasant surprise.”

The Camera Chap looked startled. “Hello, Gale,” he said nervously,
apparently failing to see the other’s outstretched hand. “This meeting
is a surprise to me, too. But I can’t stop to talk now. I’m in a big
hurry. He was about to move on, but Gale detained him by clutching his
coat sleeve.

“Don’t be in such a rush, old fellow,” he said pleasantly. “Surely you
can spare a couple of minutes. There are so many things I want to say to
you. In the first place, what on earth are you doing in Oldham?”

“I am taking a little vacation,” Hawley replied, trying to wrench his
arm free from Gale’s detaining grasp.

“Is that so? That’s queer. I’m taking a little vacation, too,” said
Gale. “My folks live in this town, you know. But say, old man, I’ve had
a rare piece of luck. I’ve accidentally stumbled across a rattling good
yarn which I’m going to put on the wire in a little while. The New York
_Daily News_ will be tickled to death to get it.”

“Indeed!” exclaimed Hawley, making another ineffectual attempt to free
his imprisoned coat sleeve. “But really, Gale, I must be going. I’ll see
you again some other time.”

“Don’t be in such a hurry,” Gale protested. “I must say, Hawley, you’re
not a bit sociable to-day. I want to tell you about this story I’ve had
the luck to pick up. It’s a peach; and I think you’ll be interested.
It’s about the arrest of a well-known New York newspaper man,” he went
on, with a sardonic laugh. “A fellow in your own line, Hawley. They’re
going to send him to jail for six months.”

Never had Gale seen the Camera Chap more panic-stricken than he appeared
now.

“Let me go!” he gasped. “What the deuce are you holding on to me like
that for? I tell you I’ve got to get away. I’ve got an important
engagement.”

“Just a minute, old chap,” said Gale softly, taking a tighter hold on
his victim’s sleeve. “I really can’t let you go until I’ve told you how
very glad I am to see you.

“By the way,” he added, pointing to the camera in Hawley’s hand, “I see
you’ve been doing a little work during your vacation, too. Did you get a
good picture?”

“Oh, no,” Hawley replied nervously. “I didn’t take a picture at all.
I----”

He didn’t finish the sentence; for just then some one stepped up behind
him, and a big hand clutched him by the coat collar. “You lie!” a hoarse
voice bellowed. “You miserable whelp, you’re caught with the goods this
time.”

The large hand and the hoarse oath both belonged, of course, to Chief of
Police Hodgins. As he grabbed the Camera Chap, the six plain-clothes men
who had been lying in ambush pounced out of their various hiding places
and surrounded the prisoner.

The latter smiled grimly as he glanced swiftly around at this circle of
scowling faces.

“Gee whiz!” he exclaimed. “You’re certainly taking no chances on my
getting away, chief. If I were a murderer or a desperate bank burglar I
could scarcely expect a bigger bodyguard.”

“You’re worse than a murderer or a bank burglar,” growled Hodgins. “And
you’d better keep your mouth closed, or we’ll close it for you.”

He snatched the camera from the prisoner’s hand and snapped a pair of
handcuffs on his wrists. He had no fear of Hawley’s making his escape;
but he used the handcuffs because he wished to make things as unpleasant
as possible for that young man.

As they started to march their captive down Main Street, Gale, walking
close beside the Camera Chap, laughed like a villain in a melodrama.

“Without exaggeration, my dear Hawley,” he chuckled, “this is quite the
happiest day of my life.”



CHAPTER XI.

IN COURT.


It was not until two hours after the Camera Chap’s arrest that his
friend, Fred Carroll, learned of it.

The proprietor of the _Bulletin_, returning to his office after his
tryst with Melba Gale, was just seating himself at his desk when the
telephone claimed his attention. It was the voice of Parsons, his police
reporter, which came to him over the wire.

“Is that you, Mr. Carroll?” said the reporter. “I’ve been trying to get
hold of you for the past two hours. They’ve arrested your friend, Mr.
Hawley. They’re just taking him to court now.”

“The deuce you say!” exclaimed the proprietor of the _Bulletin_. “What
have they got him for?”

“Breaking the new anticamera law. I’m afraid he’s in bad, too, sir.
Looks as if they’ve got him dead to rights. He took a photograph on the
street outside the city hall, and they caught him at it. Of course,
Hodgins will make the most of this opportunity to get square.”

“Suffering Cæsar!” muttered Carroll, a troubled look on his face. “What
magistrate are they taking him before, Parsons?”

“Judge Wall, sir.”

“Wall!” The troubled look on Carroll’s face deepened. “He’s the biggest
grouch on the bench, and a personal friend of Hodgins. Poor old Hawley!
I’m afraid they’ll give him the limit. All right, Parsons, I’ll be right
over. We must see what we can do.”

As he hurried to court, Carroll said to himself, with a frown: “The
reckless chump! What the dickens did he want with that picture, when he
knew that telegram was a fake? I suppose that was the big laugh he
promised me. He made up his mind that he’d get that snapshot, anyway,
just to show those fellows how little he was afraid of them.
Unfortunately, though, it looks as if they’ve turned the laugh on him. I
wish I’d guessed what he was going to do, so that I could have persuaded
him not to take such a desperate chance.”

Although Carroll lost no time in getting to the courtroom, the Camera
Chap was already being arraigned when he arrived there. Chief Hodgins
was in such a fever of impatience to wreak his vengeance upon that young
man that he had prevailed upon his honor to try the case ahead of
several other less important cases which, according to the regular
order, should have preceded it.

News of Hawley’s arrest evidently had traveled fast, for Carroll
recognized in the courtroom several men whose presence there, he felt
sure, was prompted solely by a desire to see the Camera Chap sentenced
to six months in the county jail.

Prominent among these was old Delancey Gale, who stood beside his son,
within the railed inclosure in front of the magistrate’s desk--a
privilege accorded to representatives of the press--stroking his white,
mutton-chop whiskers and shaking his head deprecatingly every time his
gaze rested upon the prisoner’s smiling countenance, as though such
depravity as he saw there was almost past his comprehension.

Most of the other men in the spectators’ benches were
politicians--members of the ring against which the _Bulletin_ was waging
war. They had no grievance against Hawley personally, but they regarded
his prosecution as a blow at Carroll and his newspaper, and therefore
they had come there with thumbs down.

As the proprietor of the _Bulletin_ entered the courtroom, he was
greeted by vindictive scowls from this group. One had only to glance at
their faces to realize how intensely bitter was their feeling toward
this young New Yorker who had done--and was still doing--his level best
to brand them as the grafters they were.

But their scowls were quickly succeeded by friendly smiles as a burly,
rawboned man of middle age, whose countenance was set in grim lines,
entered the courtroom close on the heels of Carroll, stepped pompously
up to the bench, and took a seat beside the magistrate without waiting
for an invitation to do so.

The newcomer was the Honorable Martin Henkle, mayor of Oldham, and the
most powerful political boss that town had ever known.

Mayor Henkle was not in the habit of gracing the police court with his
presence; but so great was his interest in this case that he had
adjourned an important hearing at the city hall in order to attend the
trial.

The mayor’s visit was a source of great gratification to Chief Hodgins.
Since the _Bulletin’s_ publication of those painful snapshots showing
that corpulent official in a somnolent pose, there had been a marked
coolness between the mayor and the head of the police department.

While the former had not carried out his threat to remove the latter
from office, he had let it be plainly seen that Hodgins was in great
disfavor at the city hall. Consequently the police chief was glad now to
have the mayor present to witness his triumph over the Camera Chap. He
felt confident that this arrest would go a long way toward restoring him
to favor.

It did not take Chief Hodgins long to present his evidence against
Hawley.

With a note of pride in his voice, he told the court how by his
vigilance and alertness he had been successful in catching the defendant
“red-handed,” in the act of taking a photograph on a public highway of
Oldham.

“And I hope, your honor,” the chief concluded, “that you’ll see fit to
make an example of the rascal; for if ever there was a desperate
character, he’s one. Just see how he stands there grinnin’ now--right in
your honor’s face.”

His honor, who was a dyspeptic-looking little man with a peppery temper,
glared at the prisoner, and inwardly resolved that he would “give him
something to grin about” in a little while.

Gale and the six detectives gave testimony corroborating that of the
chief of police regarding the taking of the photograph.

Everybody in the courtroom, including Fred Carroll, thought that the
case against the Camera Chap was a strong one, and wondered why the
latter didn’t manifest more concern as to the outcome.

Hawley’s face continued to wear a cheerful smile as he listened to the
evidence, and this smile expanded every time his gaze rested on the
camera reposing on the magistrate’s desk, which Chief Hodgins had
offered as an exhibit.

“You say that a photograph was taken,” the magistrate suddenly remarked.
“Have you the picture, chief?”

“I have the negative, your honor,” Hodgins replied promptly.

As he spoke, he glanced swiftly at the Camera Chap, whose face had
suddenly lost its smile, and now wore an expression of mingled
indignation and amazement.

“In order to make the evidence as complete as possible, your honor,” the
chief of police went on, “I took the roll of film from this fellow’s
camera, in the presence of witnesses, and had it developed. The result
was this picture of the city hall, which I now offer in evidence.”

As Hodgins handed the negative to the magistrate, Hawley’s gaze traveled
from the incriminating strip of gelatin to the face of the younger Gale.

On that countenance he saw an expression which fully enlightened him as
to who was responsible for this piece of manufactured evidence--an
expression half triumphant, half anxious.

“What a chump I was not to have foreseen that he’d do that,” he mused
ruefully. “I guess this isn’t going to be such a ripping good joke,
after all. It looks very much now as if I’m going to be engaged for the
next six months in the unprofitable pastime of making large stones into
little ones.”


TO BE CONTINUED.


ELEPHANT OFFENDERS IN THE ARMY.

In India, elephants are used for many purposes, but principally for
carrying heavy loads from one part of the country to another. The Indian
government employ a number of them, especially for their artillery.

These elephants are very particular about their rights. For instance,
when formed up on parade, the elephant who has served longest takes the
right of the rank, the others forming up in succession, according to
their seniority, just like soldiers. Sometimes, either by accident or
design, an elephant will take up a position to which he has no claim,
when there is at once a great commotion, his comrades insisting upon his
retiring to his proper place.

With such intelligent animals, it is therefore little to be wondered at
that punishments for grave offenses are generally preceded by a
court-martial in precisely the same manner as with soldiers.

One such scene of trial and punishment of an elephant guilty of murder
is thus described by an eye witness, a military officer:

“The prisoner, with eyes filled with tears, was marched in front of us,
between two other elephants. Along with them came all the witnesses. The
president, Major C----, read the charge: ‘Elephant Abdul is charged with
causing the death of Syce Ramboucles by catching him by the legs with
his trunk and beating his brains out against the wall of the grain hut.’

“The first witness called deposed that he was in the lines at twelve
o’clock, seeing the elephants fed. When the trumpeter sounded ‘feed,’ he
saw Syce Ramboucles run with a bag of grain toward Elephant Abdul. At
this time all the other elephants were fed, consequently Syce Ramboucles
was late in feeding Elephant Abdul. The witness ordered the syce to
hurry, but the latter did not seem to move any quicker. As soon as he
approached, Elephant Abdul seized him by the legs and dashed his head
against the little grain hut. Eight syces gave similar statements.

“When they had finished, the president, who had kept his head down the
whole time, with the elephant’s defaulter sheet in front of him,
suddenly looked up and glared at the prisoner. Seeing the elephant’s
eyes swimming in tears, he said:

“‘It’s no use; that game won’t do. I am quite accustomed to see tears,
and never take any notice of them. I see by this defaulter book that you
have been guilty of no fewer than sixteen crimes of injuring people, and
I have not the slightest compassion for you.’

“The members of the court-martial all agreed with him, and, after a
short adjournment, found Abdul guilty, and sentenced him to fifty lashes
and two years’ imprisonment.”

A few days later the first part of the sentence was carried out.

The whole battery was drawn up in a square, fourteen elephants forming
one side and the noncommissioned officers and men the other three sides.
In the center were two huge elephants, the prisoner Abdul, and the
senior elephant, to whom the task of inflicting punishment always falls.
Besides these two elephants, all the officers of the battery, the
provosts, the brigade major, and the doctor, were in the center, and
elephants numbers two and three stood on either flank, in case the
prisoner might try to escape. Four great iron pegs were driven into the
ground, to each of which one of the prisoner’s legs was chained. The
senior elephant, Lalla No. 1, stood by, with a huge cable chain fastened
around her trunk, waiting further orders.

When all was pronounced ready, the doctor, who stood with a watch in his
hand, gave the signal to begin. Lalla raised her trunk in the air, gave
it two turns, and down came the cable with terrific force on Abdul’s
back. A loud thud was heard, followed by an unearthly roar from the
unfortunate Abdul.

Again the doctor gave the signal, and down came the cable with terrific
force, causing more roaring. Again and again it came down, until the
full number of lashes were given, after which the prisoner was marched
back to his quarters, trembling from head to foot, and having a few
lumps on his back as the result of the lashing. The parade was then
dismissed, and things went on as usual.


CONTINUED HIS EXPERIMENTS.

Among the adventures which befell a young engineer a short time back,
was the perilous one of falling down the shaft of a mine. The shaft was
not in use during the winter, but as it was essential to have it in
order before spring, the young engineer determined to examine it.

There were no ladders to this particular shaft, and he elected to be
lowered by the windlass. It was necessary, therefore, to hold on tightly
to the rope, keeping one foot in a loop at the end. He settled himself
firmly and swung off, the rope in his right hand and a candle in his
left.

The shaft was about three hundred feet deep, and he was halfway down
when he leaned forward to examine the wall of the shaft, and as he did
so his foot shot out from the noose. It was coated with ice. The candle
was jerked out of his left hand, while his right slipped down the icy
rope like lightning, and closed on it with a death grip.

Then he felt himself swinging by one hand to the end of the rope and
instinctively reached up to the loop with the other, only to find it a
smooth coat of ice which gave scarcely any hold. He could never cling
there long enough to be hauled back to the mouth of the shaft, even if
he should succeed in making the men hear his cry for help.

The shaft was pitch dark, and it was therefore impossible to judge his
rate of descent, as he hung--literally between life and death--with
every faculty strained to the one act of clinging to the rope.

His hands were numb with cold and little by little he felt them
slipping. Another moment and he went.

But not far, for when he let go he was not three feet from the bottom of
the shaft. All the same he felt decidedly shaky as he groped about for
his lost candle, which he found, and then coolly completed the
exploration for which he had descended.


DRINK OR TEMPERANCE?

A temperance orator was describing to his audience how his own life had
been influenced by total abstinence.

“You know,” said he, “that I am chief of my department. Three years ago
there were two men in our office who held positions superior to mine.
One was dismissed through drunkenness; the other was led into crime, and
is now serving a long term of imprisonment, and all through the
influence of strong drink. Now, what I ask,” he cried, growing eloquent,
“what has raised me to my present high position?”

“Drink!” was the vociferous but unexpected reply, which he received from
a number of the audience.


HE WANTED TO KNOW.

His five-year-old boy was perched on his knee, and the fond father gazed
at him with eyes that beamed with paternal pride.

“Papa”--pointing out of the window--“what are those men doing over
there?”

“Building a house, my son.”

“Why?”

“Because they are paid to do it.”

“Who pays them for doing it?”

“The man who is putting the house up.”

“What does he pay ’em for?”

“For building the house.”

“Why?”

“Because--well, because they would not build the house if he did not pay
them.”

“What does the man want the house for?”

The paternal smile became rigid.

“To live in.”

“Hasn’t he got a house to live in?”

“Oh, yes!”

“What does he want another one for?”

“Oh, for other people to live in.”

“What other people?”

“Oh, men and women and little boys and girls.”

“Why do they want to live in the house?”

“Well, they must live somewhere.”

“Who?”

“The people.”

“What people?”

“Any people.”

“Why?”

At this juncture the innocent, prattling child saw a firm hand descend,
and hastily retreated in time to prevent a collision.



THE NEWS OF ALL NATIONS.


Interesting New Inventions.

A safety pocket to hold a watch securely is a feature of a new apron for
workmen.

A device for removing tires from wagon wheels has been invented that
exerts a pull exceeding a ton, yet weighs less than twenty-five pounds.

The principle of the automatic drinking fountain has been applied to a
water cooler by the invention of a bubbling attachment.

Flies can enter a garbage can that a New York man has patented, but as
they try to get out, they are caught in a wire trap, which can be
detached and the insects destroyed.

A new clamp to hold a cover on a milk bottle also serves as a handle to
carry the bottle.


Won’t Cut Hair Until Bryan is President.

Bryan Wise, nineteen years old, of Crane, Mo., will get his first hair
cut when William Jennings Bryan becomes president.

“Then his hair will grow so long that he will stumble over it,” the
thoughtful reader may surmise; but be that as it may, Bryan Wise, son of
a Crane, Mo., brakeman, has for nineteen years been a total stranger to
the barber’s chair, and, having stood the “gaff” for so long a time, it
looks as though he will continue to do so. At present his hair touches
his waist when it is “undone,” but he wears it in a tight knot at the
back of his head.

The father of the long-haired youth was and continues to be a great
admirer of the former secretary of state, and he has every faith that in
the course of time his son will have the opportunity to have his hair
cut off.


Ker-choo! Arm Out of Joint.

Sometimes a sneeze can do more damage than ordinarily. W. H.
Wallingford, an automobile salesman of Portland, Ore., will testify to
this.

Wallingford was talking to a “prospect” in an auto salesroom. During his
argument in favor of the car he was selling, Wallingford raised an arm
above his head and leaned it against a door casing. Then the sneeze
came--and it came so suddenly Wallingford didn’t have time to “get set”
for it. His head and shoulders were jerked forward and downward when the
ker-choo sounded, and the arm was dislocated at the shoulder socket. A
physician reset it, and Wallingford, after a few days of rest, will be
back on the job.


Night at Ellis Island with Wrecked Mankind.

On wire and canvas cots, on wooden benches, and not infrequently on
tiled floors, hundreds of men sleep each night on Ellis Island, in New
York City. These men are not immigrants, although many, but by no means
most, of them are aliens. They are homeless, hungry men, who have
neither work nor the wherewithal to live, a condition that is in dire
contrast to the comfortable and happy existence of those who live in the
small cities and towns of our land, but one that for months has been
experienced by thousands of unfortunates in our metropolitan centers.

The island has been thrown open to them ungrudgingly, first because of
the sympathetic understanding of Commissioner Frederic C. Howe, and,
second, because the sudden fall in immigration has left unoccupied a
great many rooms and hundreds of cots previously needed for those who
came, as many of these men came, to the Land of Promise.

You do not have to look closely at these men to see how poorly dressed
they are; but, if you were to spend a night with them, you would find
that beneath their soiled and wretched outer covering there is no
clothing, and that the flesh, that is weak, in many cases is sore and
infected and in need of care. For with them underwear long since has
become a bitter memory of better days, and their feet are without socks
and their boots without soles.

Now, these men are not lazy men. Let there be no misunderstanding as to
that. Any one can satisfy himself on that score by announcing that he
needs a man to work. He will be surrounded by a hundred men, who will
not merely clamor for the job, but will actually beg for it. Some time
ago twenty men were needed to cut ice. It was cold work, in cold season,
but scores of men stepped forward when the call was made, and not one of
them had a stitch of underclothing to his body! The employment agent who
engaged the number needed supplied them with warm garments out of sheer
pity for them.

Here is what Commissioner Howe has to say of them:

“The unemployed men have been coming to Ellis Island for the past five
months. The numbers for the last two months have averaged between seven
hundred and eight hundred each night. The men are perfectly orderly, and
are most grateful for the opportunity offered them for sleeping some
place other than in the parks, under the bridges, or any other such
places as are open to them. They required no policing, and have not
given us a bit of trouble in that time. A large percentage of them rush
eagerly to the bathroom as soon as they arrive at the island. They
maintain barbers and clothes menders to keep in good condition, and are,
so far as I can judge, making every possible effort to retain their
self-respect under terrible conditions.

“It is almost complete presumption to my mind in favor of a man if he is
willing to sleep night after night on a hard wood floor, without any
covering over him, and that is what many of the men have been doing.
They get what little food they have as best they can, and the great
majority of them are in a state of chronic hunger. It seems to me a far
greater reflection upon this rich city that these men should be left
wholly to their own fate than it is upon the men themselves, for they
cannot create their own employment; many of them are in rags, and do not
present a good appearance, and some of them are so weak and enfeebled by
long exposure that they are hardly in position to help themselves.”

It was to learn something of these men at first hand that a reporter,
dressed as one of them, and unshaved and of sorry appearance, joined
their company for one never-to-be-forgotten night on the island. But the
suffering and discomfort were more than made up for by the fact that,
although these were rough men, in the privacy of the room in which we
slept--except for some swearing--there was not spoken one word that any
woman might not have heard. It is really a splendid thing to be able to
say that.

These unfortunate men say they are much happier within the hospitable
halls of Ellis Island than they ever could be at the municipal lodging
institutions, which they criticize very unfavorably and with various
reasons, among their objections being too many unnecessary questions
asked, entirely too much work expected for the amount of assistance
given, and many times no food at all when food is due; in other words,
they pronounce organized charity, as exemplified in New York, a proved
failure so far as it benefits those for whom it is supposed to be
carried on.


“King of the Pasture” Chases Girl “Hikers.”

If it hadn’t been for a wild bull, which has the habit of seeing red, in
a pasture they crossed, two Kansas schoolma’ams, Miss Edna R. Johnson
and Miss Lillian Jaggar, who are hiking on foot overland from Vernon,
Kan., to Pueblo, Col., would not be spending a week in Dodge City
recuperating before continuing their journey.

The bull chased the two young school-teachers across a rolling pasture a
half mile when they rolled to safety under a high barbed-wire fence.

Probably nothing would have occurred if the girls had not worn
sweaters--red sweaters. But they did not think of angry bulls in mapping
their tramp.

The bull charged up until his shoulders hit the wire, and then stopped.
But his bellows urged the girls to renewed efforts, and they raced on. A
farmer boy met them and offered them protection. They took it gladly.

They managed to get to Dodge City, but there they decided to remain
until their shattered nerves were restored. Hereafter, the girls say,
they will tramp along in the dusty road. No more pastures will entice
them. They have been tramping for two weeks and had covered over three
hundred miles without having ridden a foot of the way.


Youth Stops Runaway Team.

Fifteen-year-old Harold Dewey Howard, son of Mrs. Alice Howard, of
Baker, Ore., checked a runaway team belonging to H. E. Jordan, seizing
the animals by the bits and being dragged for nearly one hundred feet
before he was shaken loose. Young Howard was slightly bruised, but he
brought the horses to a standstill.


Life on Ole Mississipi in Days Befo’ de Wah.

There was recently held at Dubuque, Iowa, a meeting of shippers from
eight Mississippi Valley States for the purpose of restoring
transportation on “The Father of Waters.” The cities represented by
active delegates were St. Paul, Minneapolis, La Crosse, Winona, Galena,
Dubuque, Burlington, Quincy, Hannibal, Rapid City, East St. Louis, New
Orleans, and Cincinnati.

President Thomas Wilkinson, of Burlington, Iowa, was authorized to
appoint an energetic working committee to prepare a plan or system for
the practical utilization of the valley’s great water highway to meet
the demands of commerce occasioned by the completion of the Panama Canal
and other transportation exigencies. It is said the greatest enthusiasm
exists among the large producers and shippers of the valley over the
prospective resumption of river traffic, and that already many
encouraging offers have been received by those at the heads of the
enterprise.

The floodtide of the Mississippi River traffic under the old system was
reached July 4, 1870, when the _Robert E. Lee_ pushed its nose against
the St. Louis wharf at the conclusion of its great race with the
_Natchez_. Old rivermen say that almost from that hour they could detect
the falling off of the trade once so generously given the big “river
palaces.”

The _Lee_ beat the _Natchez_ into St. Louis six hours and thirty-six
minutes. Both steamers cleared the New Orleans wharf at about five p. m.
June 30th. The race was fairly even until they got close to St. Louis.
Jesse T. Jamison and Enoch King were in the _Lee’s_ pilothouse. They had
taken charge of the wheel at Cairo, and held their long trick clear into
St. Louis.

At Devil’s Island a dense fog settled on the river. There were no
lighthouses then, no electric flash lights to sweep out over the river.
The _Natchez_ was hanging on close. Many rivermen of that day insisted
that under certain conditions she was a much swifter boat than the
_Lee_.

As night came on, all the world was black. “You could almost feel it,”
graphically observed a man who was on the _Lee_. “Jamison looked across
at his mate handling the other side of the big wheel. ‘We’ll keep
going,’ he said. ‘Of course,’ replied King. The pilot’s decision in the
old river days was the law.”

The _Lee_ was drawing six feet. Leadsmen were out on the fo’castle all
night taking soundings. The boat never stopped in all that gloom.
Jamison said, many years afterward, that it was a harder ordeal on his
nerves than if he had been fighting all night on a battle line. The
_Natchez_ tied up during the worst part of the fog, and she had good
pilots, too.

The winning boat was welcomed into St. Louis by salvos of artillery at
Jefferson barracks, and hundreds of steamers and tugs black with people.
Some of these traveled many miles downstream to greet the victor, who
easily outdistanced all of them in the run to the city. The wharf boats
all along the great levee were crowded with cheering people. The event
made the _Lee_ the most popular boat on the river, and every member of
her hardworking crew became a hero.

In a recent talk about the vanished glories of the big stream, J. G. van
Cleve, a merchant of Macon, Mo., said:

“The commercial lifeblood of the city was represented in the activity
along the levee. The man who has never made a trip down the Mississippi
River in the real steamboat days has lost a page of life that would have
contributed to his love of country.

“The big Anchor Line steamers for Grand Tower, Cairo, Memphis, and
Vicksburg were scheduled to leave the St. Louis wharf at five p. m., but
they rarely got under way before nine or ten. The rules seemed to be to
hold the boat as long as there were offerings of freight, and it looked
like the shipping clerks in the big wholesale houses on Second and Main
Streets didn’t begin to get busy until late in the afternoon. Then wide
two-wheeled drays and trucks would clatter down the long rock levee like
an army of invasion. It was a lively sight. Officers would dart
helter-skelter, directing teamsters where to go, and saying things anent
their tardiness; the teamsters would swear at their mules, and the mates
would cuss the roustabouts. Everybody seemed to have a safe target for
his wrath, and nobody took offense. It was all a part of the game.

“By and by, long after supper, the last dray of freight would roar
across the wharf bridge, an army of black men would seize the stuff
almost before the team stopped, the mud valves would growl out great
clouds of steam forward to the paddle wheels, and some one
aloft--generally the captain--would pull the great bell for the third
time. That was the signal to cast off the hawsers and run in the gang
plank. Then the big craft, loaded nearly to the water’s edge amidships,
would slowly drift out into the river, stern foremost.

“When the line of boats was cleared, a seeming haphazard concert of
small bells and baby whistles below, was responded to by long, fierce
exhausts, spouting geyser-like from the steam pipes just forward of the
wheelhouse. The din of the bells and whistles, which nobody on earth but
the engineers could have deciphered, was kept up until the boat had
slowly turned around and headed south. The long voyage had begun. Then
the negro roustabouts, scattered around on coffee sacks and hemp bales,
started their evening musicale:

    “‘The boat comes sailin’ ’round de ben’,
      Good-by, my lovah, good-by;
    She’s loaded down wid wimin an’ men,
      Good-by, my lovah, good-by!

    By-by, my ba-bee,
    By-by, my ba-bee,
    Good-by, my lovah, good-by!’

“It was sung to a long, plaintive tune, carrying with it the agony of
parting forever. As it rolled out into the darkness, now and then
illumined by the red glare from an opened furnace, the black man seemed
to have come into his kingdom; a kingdom peopled with weird shapes and
enveloped in the mysticism of a dark continent. He was no longer a
humdrum hewer of wood and a drawer of water, but a part of the sublimity
of the great river. The steady move of the engines, the cascades from
the steam pipes, and the pleasant quiver of the boat seemed the natural
accompaniment of the negro’s lullaby, and the whole scene was so
enchanting that few passengers retired to their staterooms until late in
the night.

“The boat swept on past the great Vulcan ironworks, where the blasts
showed red against the houses, and gave them the appearance of a town on
fire; on past ‘Bloody Island,’ where statesmen met to shoot holes into
each other for honor’s sake, and then down the broad water avenue by the
mountains of iron the steamer sped, throwing behind great billows that
sparkled back the lights from the rear cabin.

“Far down the stream is a light close to the shore. The pilot knows what
that means. It is a wild-cat landing, where a freighter awaits with a
lot of goods, or some passengers who want to take the boat. In either
event somebody has probably been waiting by the riverside some six or
eight hours. The pilot pulls a ring in the top of his little house, and
the triple whistles above it give the peculiar signal of the line.

“The steamer runs far past the landing, turns laboriously around under
the chiding of the small bells and baby whistles, and forges up to the
landing, where the boat is made fast to a tree, and the gangplank runs
out, assisted by the rapid-fire comments of the mate. If there was much
freight to go on, the place was lighted by burning pine knots in an iron
basket placed near the gangplank.

“Promptly, as if glad of the call to duty, the deck hand was up and
ready for the work of loading. In those days he was a trusty machine,
and was proud of his great strength, of his boat, and even of the rich
vocabulary of his mate. He loved, when ashore, to talk of the big towns
he made, and of the way-up people he knew in them. He had a sweetheart
in every place where his boat put up over twelve hours, and his standin
was good until she was courted by a man from a bigger and faster boat.

“A large and fast boat never had had much trouble in securing plenty of
deck hands. But there was no prestige in accepting employment on a small
stern-wheeler, devoted mostly to freight traffic, although the wages
might be better. The aristocratic travelers patronized the fine
side-wheeled boats, with their white-and-gold cabins, and the
roustabouts liked best to work where they could be seen by patrician
eyes.

“Like everybody connected with the boat, from cabin boy to pilot, he
thought he was the whole show. He liked to show his strength, and the
ease with which he could carry a coffee sack or a pig of lead. Yet he
would permit a little, one-gallus mate, whom he could pick up and shake
like a mouse, to make public reflections on his family tree in words
that sizzled. The roustabout supposed the mate was hired for his
proficiency in that particular line, and if he hadn’t kept it up it
would have meant to him that the mate was ailing or neglecting his
employer’s interest.”


Confesses Wrecking Train.

William Davis, twenty-three, a farmer of Jasper, Ala., has confessed to
wrecking the Seminole Limited train near Nauvoo by putting a spike on
the track. Davis declares he put the spike on the track “just to see it
get flattened out,” and had no idea the train would be ditched.


Hen and Chicks in Cyclone.

A cyclone played a freakish trick on the farm of John Burns, near Perry,
Mich., when it picked up a coop of chickens and the old hen and carried
them forty rods over a fence into another field, where it deposited them
without any damage being done.


A New Saddle Invented.

A saddle has been patented by a New Jersey inventor which includes
leather flaps to cover the buckles which frequently wear out riders’
clothing.


Interesting New Inventions.

A device patented by a Virginia man can be used to hold a fishing pole
on land or in a boat, to signal with a bell when a fish has been hooked,
to dig bait, and to cut and clean fish.

A Kansas farmer has just invented a tool that takes the place of four.
It is a combination saw, sickle, corn knife, and pruning knife. The tool
is made to serve the various purposes by simply turning a ratchet.

A new arrangement for mosquito bars has been devised by a Texas woman.
There is an elastic band at the bottom, which keeps the netting firmly
secured to the bed or cradle, making it impossible for mosquitoes or
other insects to annoy sleepers. There is an opening on the side of the
bar, through which the person enters the bed.

A Minneapolis woman is the patentee of a strip of flexible material to
be inserted in a buttonhole to facilitate the work of sewing over its
edges.

So that baggage cannot fall out on passengers’ heads, a new rack for
railroad cars is almost completely inclosed, access being provided by
sliding doors.

To save a housewife bending over while sweeping, a dustpan has been
invented that is heavy enough to stay where it is moved with the foot
and with a guard to retain accumulated sweepings.

A novel sketching table for artists is supported by a single leg to
which an umbrella also can be clamped to provide shade.


Bibles Behind Their Bars.

Saloon keepers in Bellaire, Ohio, are so careful in their efforts to
obey the law that all have Bibles behind their bars to be used when any
question arises as to the age of the person buying a drink. When the
bartender is in doubt, he compels the seeker for liquor to swear on the
Bible that he is over twenty-one years of age.


“Most Beautiful Man” a Bare-legged Dancer.

The most beautiful man in the world has been found. According to
spectators at recent outdoor pageants near Boston, Mass., he is William
Alfred Williams, of Pittsburgh, Harvard, ’15, who has delighted by his
esthetic dancing.

He performs bare-legged, very bare-legged, in fact. The only one
compared to him is Paul Swan, a New York bare-legged dancer, but
Williams is rated more Adonis-like. Experts say he has a perfect
masculine profile.

Mayor Curley, of Boston, prevented bare-legged dancing on the stage in
Boston during the winter, but this spring pageants with bare-legged
dancing by both sexes have been given on a number of estates of wealthy
folk in and about Boston. Williams has been a leading figure in all of
them. His costume surely has been suited to the most tropiclike day. The
girls have been bare-legged, and that’s about all, but Williams goes
much farther than that.

A reporter found him bare-footed, bare-legged, and bare-headed,
practicing in the back yard of Miss Virginia Tanner, who directs the
pageant, and dances bare-legged duets with Williams. He said he had been
dancing a year and a half and was thinking of adopting it as a
profession after graduating from college. This was his defense:

“The attitude of the body, in dances, is the most graceful and artistic
way of telling a story.”


Rooster is Phenom; It Crows Backward.

Jacob Newman, a clothier, living in Washington Street, Tarrytown, N. Y.,
owns a rooster that crows backward. He has another rooster that crows
naturally. The other day, as two strangers were walking by Mr. Newman’s
yard, the natural rooster crowed, and the other answered.

“Did you ever hear such an echo?” said one of the men. “It’s backward.”
Then they looked over the fence and heard one rooster crow and the freak
rooster answer.

Mr. Newman, who was in the yard, explained that the rooster crowed
backward, and it had always puzzled him.


Pumkin Patch in Pumkin.

Last fall Mrs. John Hoffman, of Lewistown, Pa., bought some pumpkins and
put them away for use in making pies. A short time ago she cut one of
them open and was surprised to find a pumpkin patch growing inside. The
seeds had all sprouted and were growing fine, lusty vines, some of the
vines having leaves.


Still Home Comforts When all Coal Goes.

Coal will disappear from the earth in three hundred years, although
there are seven and one-half trillion tons left. Then, instead of
freezing to death or descending in one mad rush on the tropics, humanity
will know a cleaner, more comfortable existence than ever.

Huge solar engines will gather the sun’s rays and transform them into
heat, light, and power. Millions of horse power will be developed from
waterfalls now unnoticed.

The farmer will guide an electric plow instead of a team of horses or a
gasoline tractor. When the flat dweller yells down the speaking tube for
more heat, the janitor of A. D. 2200 simply will throw a switch that
regulates current coming perhaps clear across or under the Atlantic from
the Sahara Desert.

The ideas belonged to Professor J. Paul Goode, of the University of
Chicago until he gave them to an audience at Mandel Hall on a recent
night. He is certain there will be no more coal in three hundred years,
but equally sure some genius will have perfected by then all the wonders
he described.


Seer Wins Freedom by Amazing Feat in Court.

Out of the mass of humbug and charlatanry about mind reading, fortune
telling, clairvoyance, et cetera, there emerges an occasional definite
fact apparently proving that the human intellect may possess psychic
powers. A case in point is the exhibition of mind reading made by
“Professor” Bert Reese in Judge Rosalsky’s court in New York, N. Y.

Arrested and previously convicted in a magistrate’s court for posing as
a fortune teller, Reese strikingly demonstrated his possession of
clairvoyant powers. He read names written on concealed slips of paper,
gave the amount of the judge’s bank balance, and performed other feats
showing familiarity with what was passing in the minds of his examiners.

Obviously, a man who can do these things under conditions making
collusion impossible, shows himself endowed with mental gifts as rare as
they are inexplainable. Washington Irving Bishop possessed them in even
greater degree; older New Yorkers readily recall his extraordinary
exhibitions of occult intelligence a quarter of a century ago.

More recently, Beulah Miller, a ten-year-old Rhode Island girl, gave
manifestations of the possession of such powers which aroused great
scientific expectations, but her later achievements or present
whereabouts seem to be unknown.

The mind-reading feats which won Reese his liberty unfortunately will
give a new impetus to imposture. But on the other hand they stimulate a
legitimate interest in questions relating to the possibility of the
development of a new sense and add to the data through which science may
some day solve the problem of human consciousness.

“This man is not a fortune teller, but a scientist and I offer him as an
exhibit,” said the counsel for Reese, the accused seer, to Judge
Rosalsky.

The judge selected two newspaper men to assist in the experiment. They
went into an adjoining room and wrote on slips of paper the maiden names
of their mothers. They also wrote two questions each on slips. The slips
were brought into the room where Reese was waiting. They had been folded
so that no writing was visible. Under his direction they were placed in
a hat and mixed up. Then the slips were placed in the reporters’
pockets.

Each man then took out a slip, still folded, and pressed it against the
exhibitor’s bald head. He turned to one man and said:

“Your mother’s maiden name was Electa Winans.”

To the other he said: “You want to know if Charley Becker is guilty. He
is not really guilty.”

The reporters then took two other slips from their pockets.

“You want to know how old Henry C. Terry is,” promptly said Reese. Then
plainly puzzled, he shook his head and went on to a question as to what
was the floor covering. The next question was: “Where did I do my first
newspaper work?”

He gave correctly the answer. The last slip Reese took in his hand, but
did not open it. He handed it back and directed the writer to hold it.
Then Reese said:

“Emma Drew was your mother’s maiden name.”

The answer to the first five questions had been given in a room
adjoining the court, but for the last Reese walked into the courtroom
and gave his answer in the presence of the judge and jury.

Judge Rosalsky wrote several questions, as follows:

“What was the ruling in the Shelly case?”

“How much money have I in the bank?” and

“What is the name of my favorite school-teacher?”

The demonstrator not only told what the questions were, but gave the
correct replies. Reese is seventy-four years old.

“I don’t know myself how I do it,” he said. “The answers just sort of
flash on my brain as a picture, just as ordinary objects are seen
through the eye.”


Kaiser’s Big Cannon Can’t Make Raindrops.

So many days during the last two months have been rainy or cloudy that a
great many people are led to believe that so much wet weather is owing
to the war in Europe. “Our heavy rainfall is probably caused by so much
firing over there,” is a remark frequently heard. Indeed, as long as man
can remember, it has been a theory accepted by many that constant or
heavy explosions in the air will produce rainfall. Tests of this kind
have been made in various parts of the country--more often in the west
and southwest--and sometimes with evident success, yet skeptics were
quick to say: “Shucks, it was time they had a shower, anyway.”

Now let us see how the ancients looked at this question. Almost since
the beginning of history there has been a theory--a silly one, says one
scientist--that battles caused rain. Battles, not explosives, observe,
for in the early centuries, A. D., there were no gunpowder or similar
explosives.

“Banish the thought,” says Forecaster Pennywitt, of the United States
Weather Bureau, in discussing the question of explosives and rainfall.
“There never was a more absurd idea. Not in all the history of the world
is it recorded that human endeavor wrung rain from the skies, either
intentionally or unknowingly. Rain falls by the will of nature only, and
the influence of man over nature, in so far as producing rain is
concerned, does not exist.

“None of men’s activities on earth has the slightest effect on the
rainfall. If nature decrees it shall rain, then rain it will; no other
power or force can bring precipitation.

“Almost since the beginning of history there has been a silly theory
that battles caused rain. This was the case even before gunpowder came
into use. The Greek writer, Plutarch, as far back as the year 150 A. D.,
held the belief that the glitter and clash of the sabers of the ancient
Greek and Roman warriors on the field of honor produced rain. He
believed it because it generally rained after every battle. As a matter
of fact, it had to rain after every battle, because they fought only on
clear days in those times; and, besides, it always rains once every
three days in the year, according to average.

“After gunpowder became an instrument of destruction, rains during time
of war were blamed on it. Even the United States government has shared
this belief that powder will produce rain, and it wasted thousands of
dollars trying to make it rain in Texas. Similar experiments were made
in Europe several years ago, and in France one scientist thought that by
employing the explosive he could transform hail into more harmless rain.

“Strange as it may seem to a good many people, there has been less than
a normal rainfall in western Pennsylvania and other eastern districts
during the last six months.”


Bees Settle in a Mail Box.

The wanderlust of summer got into the blood of a swarm of bees belonging
to Leo Nickoli, 448 Bellaire Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. They circled in
the air and flew away. Mr. Nickoli followed.

The awning in front of the drug store of the Klee Drug Company first
attracted the bees. But finding no place to alight there, the bees
transferred their attentions to a mail box near by. In a moment the box
was the center of the swarm, who were preparing to settle down among the
letters.

Mr. Nickoli, however, had different plans. With a hive baited with honey
comb, he began coaxing the bees into a new home. A crowd of two hundred
persons watched his operation, which lasted several hours.


Aged Preacher Finds His Long Lost Sister.

An only sister, whom he had not seen nor heard from for more than
forty-five years, and whom he believed to be dead, has been found by
Reverend W. H. H. Ruble, of Harrison, Ark., and immediately after the
locating of the long-lost sister, he has received news that sight has
been restored to the woman who has been blind for many years, as a
result of cataract.

Reverend Ruble’s sister is Mrs. E. J. Willis, of Knoxville, Tenn. She is
ninety-two years of age, and was last seen by her brother more than
forty-five years ago in Cleveland, a small town of Tennessee. As many
people do, the brother and sister kept in touch for a time, but
gradually ceased writing, until each had changed address and the old
addresses were forgotten.

Receiving no word for years, each believed the other to be dead, until
last January, when the annual conference of the M. E. Church was held in
Harrison, Ark. At that time Reverend Ruble met Reverend Murphy, a
delegate, who told him of the whereabouts of Chaplain J. A. Ruble, of
the Old Settlers’ Home in Johnson City, to whom Reverend Ruble wrote,
believing that the chaplain might be his nephew. The belief was true,
and the letter from Harrison was forwarded to Mrs. Willis, who was
overjoyed when she wrote again to her brother, the first time in nearly
half a century.


Arizona Girl Carries Mail on Horse.

Miss Matilda Sorey, of Higley, Ariz., may not be the only girl in the
United States who carries mail on a R. F. D. route, but she is probably
the only one who does so on horseback. When a new route was established
out of Higley, Miss Sorey, who is just twenty-one years old, was
appointed carrier. Her friends supposed she would use a horse and buggy,
but, instead, she covers the route six days a week on her handsome gray
saddle horse. She carries the mail in a sack swung over the pommel of
her cowboy saddle.


Didn’t Even Have a Barrel.

A short time ago C. J. Debes, who lives on a farm a few miles south of
Hagerman, N. M., arose early, as was his custom, and, after lighting his
gasoline stove and placing his kettle on, sauntered out through the
delightful morning air to feed his stock, without changing his night
robe for the more substantial clothing of the day.

Debes being a bachelor, and there being no near neighbors, everything
went well with him until he started to return to his house and found it
almost consumed by fire. His predicament seemed precarious, when the
neighbors, seeing the flames, rushed to the scene. Debes, however, took
refuge in the barn until a friendly neighbor brought in some heavier
raiment. The gasoline stove had exploded and enveloped the entire
building in flames, making quick work of its destruction.


No Government Reward for Passenger Pigeon.

Recent widespread newspaper accounts to the effect that the United
States Department of Agriculture is offering ten thousand dollars reward
to the person finding a passenger or “wood”-pigeon nest containing two
eggs, resulted in hundreds of letters being sent to the department.

The report is not based upon facts, as the department has offered no
such reward, and there is every reason to believe the passenger pigeon
which formerly roamed the country in flocks of millions is extinct. In
1910 about one thousand dollars in rewards was offered by Clark
University for the first undisturbed nests of the passenger pigeon to be
found in the United States. This was a great stimulus to action. The
hunt for this pigeon was fruitless. The offer of rewards was renewed for
several years, until it was fully established that the pigeon was
extinct.

The passenger pigeon up to 1885 ranged the American continent east of
the Rocky Mountains. The mourning dove has often been mistaken for the
passenger pigeon, which in a general way it resembles. However, this
bird is quite distinct from the passenger pigeon; it is shorter and has
different color markings.

The press reports stated that the now extinct passenger pigeon was
valued because of its usefulness in destroying the gipsy moth and other
moths and pests which are doing millions of dollars of damage. Although
the preservation of this pigeon is much to be desired, it would be of
absolutely no value in eliminating the gipsy moth, as the pigeons are
almost entirely vegetarian in their diet.


Wounded Dog Returns Home.

A dog belonging to Edward Dougherty, of Spring Grove, Pa., was shot
through the head twice with a thirty-eight-caliber revolver by
Dougherty. The dog lay on the same spot for seven days and seven nights,
but on the beginning of the eighth day he came back to his old home,
hardly able to drag himself along. After being fed and given water to
drink, the dog seemed to be all right.

The dog ate eggs from the nests in Dougherty’s henhouse before his
punishment and since his extraordinary experience he has not eaten one
egg. Mr. Dougherty is sure he put two bullets through the dog’s brain.


Muskrat and Trout Battle.

Lew McQuiston, a well-known angler of Bellefonte, Pa., witnessed a
unique battle a few days ago between a muskrat and a two-foot trout.

McQuiston went to Spring Creek shortly before dusk to try and land some
big trout. While whipping the stream, he saw something doing on the
other side of the creek, about sixty feet away from where he was
standing. In the quickly gathering shadows it was hard to tell at first
what it was, but after closer inspection he saw that it was a mammoth
trout and a muskrat.

They were engaged in mortal combat, and they slashed around through the
water until it was churned into foam. Then the muskrat managed to get
out on the bank, pulling the trout along with it. But the big trout
seemed to be able to fight on land as well as in the water, flopping
around and holding on to the muskrat’s nose until they finally both fell
back into the water.

Then there was another lashing and foaming, and the noise died away. A
few ripples told that the struggle was ended.

McQuiston looked around in the water for evidence of who had won the
battle, but found neither the muskrat or the trout. He does not know
whether it was a fight to the finish or a draw.


Tongue Fenders Demanded.

Tongue fenders for salted-peanut vending machines. That’s the latest
slogan of Montclair, N. Y., which already has put a legal muffler on
barking dogs and crowing roosters. It was proposed by Health
Commissioner James McDonough after he saw a small boy thrust his tongue
into a cup container of a vending machine to get the “crumbs.”


Finds Pennies in Turtle.

Roy Bowsher, of Ashville, Ohio, went fishing last week and caught a
turtle, which he sold to C. R. Cook, proprietor of a saloon. When Cook
opened the turtle, preparatory to serving it on his lunch counter, he
found two hundred and thirty-four pennies in it.



The Nick Carter Stories

ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY        BEAUTIFUL COLORED COVERS


When it comes to detective stories worth while, the =Nick Carter Stories=
contain the only ones that should be considered. They are not overdrawn
tales of bloodshed. They rather show the working of one of the finest
minds ever conceived by a writer. The name of Nick Carter is familiar
all over the world, for the stories of his adventures may be read in
twenty languages. No other stories have withstood the severe test of
time so well as those contained in the =Nick Carter Stories=. It proves
conclusively that they are the best. We give herewith a list of some of
the back numbers in print. You can have your news dealer order them, or
they will be sent direct by the publishers to any address upon receipt
of the price in money or postage stamps.


730--The Torn Card.
731--Under Desperation’s Spur.
732--The Connecting Link.
733--The Abduction Syndicate.
738--A Plot Within a Plot.
739--The Dead Accomplice.
746--The Secret Entrance.
747--The Cavern Mystery.
748--The Disappearing Fortune.
749--A Voice from the Past.
752--The Spider’s Web.
753--The Man With a Crutch.
754--The Rajah’s Regalia.
755--Saved from Death.
756--The Man Inside.
757--Out for Vengeance.
758--The Poisons of Exili.
759--The Antique Vial.
760--The House of Slumber.
761--A Double Identity.
762--“The Mocker’s” Stratagem.
763--The Man that Came Back.
764--The Tracks in the Snow.
765--The Babbington Case.
766--The Masters of Millions.
767--The Blue Stain.
768--The Lost Clew.
770--The Turn of a Card.
771--A Message in the Dust.
772--A Royal Flush.
774--The Great Buddha Beryl.
775--The Vanishing Heiress.
776--The Unfinished Letter.
777--A Difficult Trail.
782--A Woman’s Stratagem.
783--The Cliff Castle Affair.
784--A Prisoner of the Tomb.
785--A Resourceful Foe.
789--The Great Hotel Tragedies.
795--Zanoni, the Transfigured.
796--The Lure of Gold.
797--The Man With a Chest.
798--A Shadowed Life.
799--The Secret Agent.
800--A Plot for a Crown.
801--The Red Button.
802--Up Against It.
803--The Gold Certificate.
804--Jack Wise’s Hurry Call.
805--Nick Carter’s Ocean Chase.
807--Nick Carter’s Advertisement.
808--The Kregoff Necklace.
811--Nick Carter and the Nihilists.
812--Nick Carter and the Convict Gang.
813--Nick Carter and the Guilty Governor.
814--The Triangled Coin.
815--Ninety-nine--and One.
816--Coin Number 77.


NEW SERIES

NICK CARTER STORIES

 1--The Man from Nowhere.
 2--The Face at the Window.
 3--A Fight for a Million.
 4--Nick Carter’s Land Office.
 5--Nick Carter and the Professor.
 6--Nick Carter as a Mill Hand.
 7--A Single Clew.
 8--The Emerald Snake.
 9--The Currie Outfit.
10--Nick Carter and the Kidnaped Heiress.
11--Nick Carter Strikes Oil.
12--Nick Carter’s Hunt for a Treasure.
13--A Mystery of the Highway.
14--The Silent Passenger.
15--Jack Dreen’s Secret.
16--Nick Carter’s Pipe Line Case.
17--Nick Carter and the Gold Thieves.
18--Nick Carter’s Auto Chase.
19--The Corrigan Inheritance.
20--The Keen Eye of Denton.
21--The Spider’s Parlor.
22--Nick Carter’s Quick Guess.
23--Nick Carter and the Murderess.
24--Nick Carter and the Pay Car.
25--The Stolen Antique.
26--The Crook League.
27--An English Cracksman.
28--Nick Carter’s Still Hunt.
29--Nick Carter’s Electric Shock.
30--Nick Carter and the Stolen Duchess.
31--The Purple Spot.
32--The Stolen Groom.
33--The Inverted Cross.
34--Nick Carter and Keno McCall.
35--Nick Carter’s Death Trap.
36--Nick Carter’s Siamese Puzzle.
37--The Man Outside.
38--The Death Chamber.
39--The Wind and the Wire.
40--Nick Carter’s Three Cornered Chase.
41--Dazaar, the Arch-Fiend.
42--The Queen of the Seven.
43--Crossed Wires.
44--A Crimson Clew.
45--The Third Man.
46--The Sign of the Dagger.
47--The Devil Worshipers.
48--The Cross of Daggers.
49--At Risk of Life.
50--The Deeper Game.
51--The Code Message.
52--The Last of the Seven.
53--Ten-Ichi, the Wonderful.
54--The Secret Order of Associated Crooks.
55--The Golden Hair Clew.
56--Back From the Dead.
57--Through Dark Ways.
58--When Aces Were Trumps.
59--The Gambler’s Last Hand.
60--The Murder at Linden Fells.
61--A Game for Millions.
62--Under Cover.
63--The Last Call.
64--Mercedes Danton’s Double.
65--The Millionaire’s Nemesis.
66--A Princess of the Underworld.
67--The Crook’s Blind.
68--The Fatal Hour.
69--Blood Money.
70--A Queen of Her Kind.
71--Isabel Benton’s Trump Card.
72--A Princess of Hades.
73--A Prince of Plotters.
74--The Crook’s Double.
75--For Life and Honor.
76--A Compact With Dazaar.
77--In the Shadow of Dazaar.
78--The Crime of a Money King.
79--Birds of Prey.
80--The Unknown Dead.
81--The Severed Hand.
82--The Terrible Game of Millions.
83--A Dead Man’s Power.
84--The Secrets of an Old House.
85--The Wolf Within.
86--The Yellow Coupon.
87--In the Toils.
88--The Stolen Radium.
89--A Crime in Paradise.
90--Behind Prison Bars.
91--The Blind Man’s Daughter.
92--On the Brink of Ruin.
93--Letter of Fire.
94--The $100,000 Kiss.
95--Outlaws of the Militia.
96--The Opium-Runners.
97--In Record Time.
98--The Wag-Nuk Clew.
99--The Middle Link.
100--The Crystal Maze.
101--A New Serpent in Eden.
102--The Auburn Sensation.
103--A Dying Chance.
104--The Gargoni Girdle.
105--Twice in Jeopardy.
106--The Ghost Launch.
107--Up in the Air.
108--The Girl Prisoner.
109--The Red Plague.
110--The Arson Trust.
111--The King of the Firebugs.
112--“Lifter’s” of the Lofts.
113--French Jimmie and His Forty Thieves.
114--The Death Plot.
115--The Evil Formula.
116--The Blue Button.
117--The Deadly Parallel.
118--The Vivisectionists.
119--The Stolen Brain.
120--An Uncanny Revenge.
121--The Call of Death.
122--The Suicide.
123--Half a Million Ransom.
124--The Girl Kidnapper.
125--The Pirate Yacht.
126--The Crime of the White Hand.
127--Found in the Jungle.
128--Six Men in a Loop.
129--The Jewels of Wat Chang.
130--The Crime in the Tower.
131--The Fatal Message.
132--Broken Bars.
133--Won by Magic.
134--The Secret of Shangore.
135--Straight to the Goal.
136--The Man They Held Back.
137--The Seal of Gijon.
138--The Traitors of the Tropics.
139--The Pressing Peril.
140--The Melting-Pot.
141--The Duplicate Night.
142--The Edge of a Crime.
143--The Sultan’s Pearls.
144--The Clew of the White Collar.
145--An Unsolved Mystery.
146--Paying the Price.
147--On Death’s Trail.
148--The Mark of Cain.


Dated July 17th, 1915.

149--A Network of Crime.


Dated July 24th, 1915.

150--The House of Fear.


Dated July 31st, 1915.

151--The Mystery of the Crossed Needles.


Dated August 7th, 1915.

152--The Forced Crime.


Dated August 14th, 1915.

153--The Doom of Sang Tu.


Dated August 21st, 1915.

154--The Mask of Death.


Dated August 28th, 1915.

155--The Gordon Elopement.


Dated Sept. 4th, 1915.

156--Blood Will Tell.


   =PRICE, FIVE CENTS PER COPY.= If you want any back numbers of our
  weeklies and cannot procure them from your news dealer, they can be
  obtained direct from this office. Postage stamps taken the same as
                                money.

     STREET & SMITH, Publishers, 79-89 Seventh Ave., NEW YORK CITY



*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Nick Carter Stories No. 155, August 28, 1915; The Gordon Elopement; or, Nick Carter’s Three Of A Kind." ***

Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.



Home