Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 128, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1915 — Page 3

DARK HOLLOW

SYNOPSIS. ▲ curious crowd of neighbors Invade the mysterious home of Judge Ostrander, county Judge and eccentric recluse, following a veiled woman who has gained ■entrance through the gates of the high double barriers surrounding the place. The woman has disappeared but the Judge is found in a cataleptic state. Bela, his servant, appears in a dying condition and prevents entrance to a secret door. Bela dies. The Judge awakes. Miss Weeks explains to him what has occurred during his seizure. He secretly discovers the whereabouts of the veiled woman. She Proves to be the widow of a man tried before the Judge and electrocuted for murder yean bei ■ore. Her daughter is engaged to the Judge’s son, from whom he is estranged, but the murder is between the loven. She plans to clear her husband’s memory and asks the Judge’s aid. Alone in her room Deborah Scoville reads the newspaper clippings telling the story of the murder of Algernon Etheridge by John Scoville in Dark Hollow, twelve yean before. CHAPTER Vl—Continued. “Ah, Judge Ostrander," she exclaimed tn a hasty but not ungraceful greeting, “you are very punctual I ■was not looking for you yet" Then, aa she noted the gloom under which he was laboring, she continued with real feeling, “Indeed, I appreciate this sacrifice you have made to my wishes. It was asking a great deal of you to come here; but I saw no other way of making my point clear. Come over here, Peggy, and build me a little house out of these stones. You don’t mind the child, do you, judge? She may offer a diversion if our retreat is Invaded." The gesture of disavowal which he made was courteous but insincere. He did mind the child, but he could not explain why; besides, be must overcome such folly. “Now," she continued as she rejoined him on the place where he had taken his stand, “I will ask you to go back with me to the hour *when John Scoville left the tavern on that fatal day. lam not now on oath, but I might as well be for any slip I shall make in the exact truth. I was making pies in the kitchen, when eome one came running in to say that Reuther had strayed away from the front yard. And here I found her, sir, right in the heart of these ruins. She was playing with stones just as Peggy dear is doing now. Greatly relieved, I was taking her away when I thought I heard John calling. Stepping up to the edge close behind where you are standing, sir—yes, there, where you get such a broad outlook up and down the ravine—l glanced in the direction from which I h/id heard his call —just wait a moment, sir; I want to know the exact time."

Stopping, she pulled out her watch and looked at It, while he, faltering up to the verge which she had pointed out, followed her movements with strange Intensity as she went on to say In explanation of her act: "The time. Is important, on account of a certain demonstration I am anxious to make. Now If you will lean a little forward and look where I am pointing, you will notice at the turn of the stream a spot of ground more open than the rest Please keep your eyes on that spot, for it was there I saw at this very hour twelve years ago the shadow of an approaching figure; and it is there you will presently see one similar, if the boy . I have tried to interest in this experiment does not fail me. Now, now, sir! We should see his shadow before we see him. Oh, I hope the underbrush and trees have not grown up too thick! I tried to thin them out today. Are you "watching, sir?”

He seemed to be, but she dared hot tturn to look. Both figures leaned, lintent, and in another' moment she had gripped his arm and clung there. “Did you see?” she whispered. •Don’t mind the boy;dt*s the shadow I wanted you to notice. Did you observe anything marked about it?” She had drawn him back into the .ruins. They were standing in that lone secluded corner under the ruinous gable, and she was gazing up at ■him very earnestly. “Tell me, judge," she entreated as he made no effort to answer. With a hurried moistening of his lips, he met her look and responded, with a slight emphasis: “The boy held a stick. .1 should say that he was whittling it.” "Ah!” Her tone was triumphant. •That was what I told him to do. Did you see anything else?” z "No. I do not understand this experiment or what you hope from it" "I will tell you. The shadow which I saw at a moment very like this, twdlve years ago, showed a man ■whittling a stick and wearing a cap with a decided peak in front My husband wore such a cap—the only one I know of in town. What more did I need a* proof that it was his shadow I saw?" "And wasn’t it?" ‘ "Judge Ostrander, I never thought differently tin after the trial—till after the earth closed over my poor (husband’s remains. That was why I could say nothing in his defense—•why I did not believe him when he declared that he bad left his stick beSited him when he ran up the bluff After Reuther. But later, wx.cn It was mil over, when the disgrace at his death and the necessity of seeking < heme elsewhere drove me Into saß-

By ANNA KATHARINE GREEN

(Copyright, 1914, by Dodd. Mead. A Company)

Ing the tavern and all its effects, I found something which changed my mind in this regard, and made me confident that I had done my husband a great injustice." "You found? What do you mean by that? What could you have found?”

“His peaked cap lying in a corner of the garret. He had not worn it that dhy; for when he came back to be hustled off again by the crowd he was without hat of any kind, and he never returned again to his home — you know that, judge. I had seen the shadow of some other man approaching Dark Hollow. Whose, I am in this town now to find out.” Judge Ostrander was a man of keen perception, quick to grasp an idea, quick to form an opinion. But his mind acted slowly tonight Deborah Scoville wondered| at the blankness of his gaze and the slow way in which he seemed to take in this astounding fact At last he found voice and with it gave some evidence of his usual acumen. "Madam, a shadow is an uncertain foundation on which to build such an edifice as you plan. A dozen men might have come down that path with or without sticks before Mr. Etheridge reached the bridge and fell a victim to the assault which laid him low." “I thought the time was pretty clearly settled by the hour he left your house. The sun had not set when he turned your corner on his way home. So several people said who saw him. Besides —”

"Yes; there is a ’besides.* I’m sure of it"* "I saw the tall figure of a man, whom I afterwards made sure was Mr. Etheridge, coming down Factory road on his way to the bridge when I turned about to get Reuther." "All of which you suppressed at the trial.’” “I was not questioned on this point sir.” “Madam"—he was standing very near to her now, hemming her as it were into that decaying corner—“l should have a very much higher opinion of your candor if you told me the whole story." "I have, sir.”

His hands rose, one to the righthand wall, the other to the left, and remained there with their palms resting heavily against the rotting plaster. She was more than ever hemmed in; but, though she felt a trifle frightened at his aspect, which certainly was not usual, she faced him without shrinking and in very evident surprise. "It seems too slight a fact to mention, and, indeed, I had forgotten it till you pressed me, but after we had passed the gates and were well out on the highway, I found that Reuther had left her little pail behind her here, and we came back and got it. Did you mean that, elr?” ' / "I meant nothing; 'but I fglt sure you had not told all you could about that fatal ten minutes. You came back. It is quite a walk from the road. The man whose shadow you saw must have reached the bridge by this time. What did you see then or—hear?" "Nothing. Absolutely nothing, judge. I was intent on finding the baby's pail, and having found it I hurried back home all the fasteh" "And tragedy was going on or was just completed, in plain sight from this gap!" "I have no doubt, sir; and if I had looked, possibly John might have been eaved." The silence following this was broken by a crash and a little cry. Peggy’s house had tumbled down. The small incident was a relief. Both assumed more natural postures. "So the shadow is your great and only point,” remarked the judge. “I shall not desist. Judge Ostrander.” "You are going to pursue this jack-o’-lantern?" "I am determined to. If you deny me aid and advice I shall seek another counselor. John’s name must be vindicated.” . He gave her a. look, turned and glanced down at the child piling stone on stone and whimpering just a little when they fell. “Watch that baby for a while," be remarked, "and you will learn the lesson of most human endeavor. Madam, I have a proposition to make you. You cannot wish to remain at the Inn, nor can you' be long happy separated from your daughter. I have lost Bela. I do not know how, nor would I be willing, to replace him by another servant. I need a housekeeper; some one devoted to my Interests and who will not ask me to change my habits too materially. Will you accept the position, if I add as an inducement my desire to have Reuther also as an inmate'of my home? This does not mean that I countenance or in any way anticipate her union with my son. I do not; but any other advantages she may desire she shall have. I will not bo strict with her." Deborah Scoville was never more taken aback in her life. The recluse opening his doors to two women! The man of mystery flinging aside the reticences of yean to harbor an inno-

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND,

cence which he refused to let weigh against the claims of a son he had seen fit to banish from his heart and home! * . “You may take time to think of it” he continued, as he watched the confused emotions change from moment to moment the character of her mobile features. “I shall not have my affairs adjusted for such a change before a week. If you accept I shall be very grateful If you decline I shall close up my two rear gates, and go into solitary seclusion. I can cook a meal if I have to." And she saw that he would do it; saw and wondered still more. '1 shall have to write to Reuther," she murmured. "How soon. do you want my decision?” “In four days." “I am too disturbed to thank you, judge. Should—should we have to keep the gates locked?" “No. But you would have to keep out unwelcome intruders. And the rights of my library will have to be respected. In all other regards I should wish, under these new circumr eances, to live as other people live. I have been very lonely these past twelve years." "1 will think about it”

“And you may make note of these two conditions: Oliver’s name is not to be mentioned in my hearing, and you and Reuther are to be known by your real names." “You would —" "Yes, madam. No secrecy is to be maintained in future as to your identity or my reasons for desiring you in my house. I need a "housekeeper and you please me. That you have a past to forget and Reuther a disappointment to overcome gives additional point to the arrangement.” Her answer was: “I cannot take back what I have said about my determined purpose.” In repeating this she looked up at him askance. He smiled. She remembered that smile long after the interview was over and only its memory remained.

Dearest Mother: Where could we go that disgrace would not follow us? Let us then accept the Judge’s offer. I am the more inclined to do this because of the possible hope that some day he may come to care for mo and allow me to make life a little brighter for him. The fact that for some mysterious reason he feels himself cut off from all Intercourse with his son, may prove a bond of sympathy between us. I, too, am cut off from all companionship with Oliver. Between us also a wall la raised. Do not mind that tear-drop, mamma. It is the last Kisses for my comforter. Come soon.— REUTHER. ■ Over this letter Deborah Scoville gat for two hours, then she rang for Mrs. Yardley. The maid who answered her summons surveyed her in amazement. It

“If You Deny Me I Shall Seek Another Counsellor."

was the first time that she had seen her uncovered face. Mrs. Yardley was not long in coming up. “Mrs. Averill—" she began, in a kind of fluster, as she met her strange guest’s quiet eye. But she got no further. That guest had a correction to make. "My name is not Averill," she protested. "You must excuse the temporary deception. It is Scoville. I once ocupied your present position in this house." Mrs. Yardley had heard all about the Scovilles; and, while a flush rose to her cheeks, her eyes, snapped with sudden interest. "Ahl" came in quick exclamation, followed, however, by an apologetic cough and the somewhat forced and conventional remark: "You find the place changed, no doubt?" •Very much so, and for the better, Mrs. Yardley." Then, with a straightforward meeting of the other’s eye, she quietly added, "I am going to Boa

with Judge Ostrander, Mrs. Yardley—keep house for him, myself and daughter. His man is dead and he feele very helpless. I hope that I shall be able to make him comfortable." Mrs. Yardley’s face was a study. In all her life she had never heard news that surprised her more. In another moment she had accepted the situation, like the very sensible woman she was, and Mrs. Scoville had the satisfaction of seeing the promise of real friendly support in the smjle with which Mrs. Yardley remarked: “It’s a good thing for you and a very good thing for the judge. It may shake him out of his habit of seclusion. If it does, you will be the city’s benefactor. Good luck to you, madam. And you have a daughter, you say?” After Mrs. Yardley’s departure Mrs. Scoville, as she now expected herself to be called, sat for a long time brooding. There was one thing more to be accomplished. She set about it that evening. Veiled, but in black now, she went into town. Getting down at the corner of Colburn avenue and Perry street, she walked a short distance on Perry, then rang the bell of an at-tractive-looking house of moderate dimensions. Being admitted, she asked to see Mr. Black, and for an hour sat in close conversation with him. Then she took a trolley car which carried her into the suburbs. When she alighted, it was unusually late for a woman to be out alone; but she had very little physical fear, and walked on steadily enough for a block or two till she came to a corner, where a high fence loomed forbiddingly between her and a house so dark that it was impossible to distinguish between its chimneys and the encompassing trees. Was she quite alone in the seemingly quiet street? She could hear no one, see no one. A lamp burned in front of Miss Weeks’ small house, but the road it Illumined, the one running down to the ravine, showed only darkened houses.

She had left the corner and was passing the gate of the Ostrander homestead, when she heard, coming from some distant point within, a low find peculiar sound which held her immovable for a moment, then sent her on shuddering. It was the sound of hammering. Hearing this sound and locating It where she did, she remembered, with a quick inner disturbance, that the judge’s house held a secret; a secret of such import to its owner that the dying Bela had sought to preserve it at the cost of his life.

Oh, she had heard all about that! The gossip at Claymore inn had been great, and nothing had been spared her curiosity. There was something in this house which it behooved the judge to secrete from sight yet more completely before her own and Reuther’s entrance, and he was at work upon'it now, hammering with his own band while other persons slept! No wonder she edged her way along the fence with a shrinking, yet persistent, step. She was circling her future home and that house held a mystery. As she groped her way along, she had ample opportunity to hear again the intermittent sounds of the hammer, and to note that they reached their maximum at a point where the ell of the judge’s study approached the fences. Rat-tat-tat; rat-tat-tat She hated the sound even while she to herself: "It is just some household matter he is at work upon—rehanging pictures dr putting up shelves. It can bo nothing else.” Yet on laying her ear to the fence she felt her sinister fears return; and, with shrinking glances into a darkness which told her nothing, she added in fearful murmur to herself: "What am I taking Reuther into? I wish I knew. I wish I knew." (TO BE CONTINUED.)

ROYAL IN ITS MAGNIFICENCE

“Founder’s Room” In Pittsburgh Carnegie Library Is a Splendid Apartment. A recent report of the Pittsburgh Carnegie library cbntains a picture of the "founder’s room," of which a writer in the Boston Evening Transcript says: "It seems to be a vast apartment, about fifty or sixty yards long and nearly as wide. It has indirect lighting and a flagged floor, upon which one might play hopscotch if one felt inclined. There are four or five thrones in the room, one on each side of the fireplace, and there is a table with a lamp on IL The room is very magnificent; it has all the spaciousness and discomfort of a royal palace. "What Mr. Carnegie does in this room we are not told. There are no sleeping accommodations, unless one of the thrones is really a folding bed. It does not look cosy enough to use for an oflfce."*

Infantile Paralysis.

A famous German physician proves that infantile paralysis is often carried from one household to another by domestic animals, such as chicken* ducks and cows.

WORLD'S NEW CRANARY

Ezra’s Tomb oh The Bank of the Tigris

OF all the problems of territorial distribution that will follow the war, perhaps none is of greater importance than the future of Mesopotamia, for it seems certain that most fertile tract of the earth’s surface is destined to regain its ancient position as the granary of the world. This legendary cradle of the race — it contains the supposed site of the Garden of Eden—bears a name strictly descriptive of the country, set as it is “in the midst of rivers,” the four streams of Eden—Pison (now a flooded swamp west of Babylon), Gihon (now the Hindis branch of the Euphrates), Euphrates proper and Tigris. For thousands of years one majestic civilization after another flowered in this region, but for many centuries past the beauty of life has been fading, until now not only Eden but almost the whole of Mesopotamia has become an arid waste crying aloud for the renewal of youth. If Mesopotamia comes under British control it is probable that its regeneration wil] be brought about by some such scheme as the magnificent plan Es irrigation and flood control proposed y Sir William Willcocks, who declared he could re-create the Garden of Eden and make the hanging gardens of Babylon blossom again like the rose. Hopes for Its Future. Writing in the Missionary Review of the World, Dr. Arthur K. Bennett of Busrah, Arabia, says: Mesopotamia Is a country north of Arabia proper, which though peopled by Arabs today dates back to the civilization which was in its glory three thousand years before Christ. Here is the seat of ancient Babylon, the Queen City of the Earth, the metropolis of literature and art for all the nations of the then known world. Today excavations have revealed a system of canals which told of its wonderful fertility and researches in its ruins during the last half-century have brought forth the prose and poetry of that marvelous civilization. Inhabited by such glorious peoples, it stands today a desolate place in comparison, surrounded by wide wilderness and waste, and only peopled along the river by a few straggling Arab cities here and there. There are many reasons which lead me to hope that Mesopotamia has a

future of marvelous development before It when they shall adopt western methods and progress. Indeed, it is fascinating employment as Hermith Freeman says, to watch the immemorial culture ?f the East, slow moving with the weight of years, dreamy with centuries of deep meditation, accept and assimilate as in a moment of time, the science, the machinery, the restless energy and practical activity of the West. Geographically there is no doubt but that within the last five thousand years the great delta caused by the confluence of the three great rivers, the Euphrates, Tigris and Karoon, has gradually pushed its way into the Persian gulf, until over two hundred miles of the sea has been replaced by land. Frazer, in his recent book, “The Short Cut to India,” says that these rivers at the present time advance the land from the silt they deposit to not less than eighty feet per annum. Sir William Willcocks says that undoubtedly many of the ancient cities of Babylon were very close to if not directly- on the Persian gulf, while the ruins of these cities are at the present time from two to three hundred miles back from the coast Busrah Once a Seaport. Busrah, the city where our Arabian mission is established, must have been at one time a port on the sea, but is now 60 miles from the mouth of the

CORACLE WITH GRAIN CARGO

river and is the terminal port for all lines of steamers plying in the Pen* sian gulf, and commerce with it is bound to increase. I have counted over twenty large ocean steamships in the Busrah river at one time, waiting for the shipment of dates. Here the English and Turkish river steamers ply to and from Bagdad on the Tigris, and to and from Mohammerah and Ahwaz in Persia on the Karoos river. If you will look up Busrah on the map you will see that it is in a direct line with Kurachee and Bombay from Constantinople and is on the track of the shortest possible mall route to India, and the railroad which the future is bound to bring. Seventyfive miles of date gardens extend from above Busrah down to the sea on either side of this wonderfully beautiful river, and twice daily the gardens are watered by the tidal wave. Sailboats coming down the river for hundreds of miles are laden with grain, licorice and provisions for sale or exchange at Busrah. In order that the situation may be more real, consider the political aspects which confront us on every hand. Busrah is at present in the maelstrom of political strife; many statesmen believe that the future battle of diplomacy will not take place in the far East but fn the. Persian gulf. Naturally the favored valley of the Euphrates will be the chief bone of contention.

Prominent engineers say that there are here sixteen million acres of the finest' land in the world, capable of yielding cotton and wheat, or the luxurious date palm. This land only needs proper care, and does not suffer from a dearth of water, but from the abundance of it. Floods are of yearly occurrence, ruinink crops and discouraging canals inland. Sir William Willcock^would bridle this immense power in tw mountains of Mosul, and by great dams high upon the two rivers. He would then irrigate the country from the Euphrates to the Tigris, and as this former river Is about eighteen feet higher than the latter, the situation is ideal to use all the Euphrates water for Irrigation and the Tigris for navigation.

Apple, the Beautifier.

“An apple a day keeps the doctor away,” is an old adage, and the same may be said of the orange, as it has

an equally fine effect on the entire system. If one is Inclined to acidity of the stomach, the juice of an orange is a counter-irritant. If the stomach is weak the juice of an orange Before breakfast is an excellent tonic for the entire day. If one is dieting to reduce, one or two oranges eaten at noon will nourish, fill the aching void in the stomach and reduce rather than add to the weight An orange always quenches the thirst, and in traveling it is much safer to eat an orange than to drink stale water. A hot orangeade before going to bed on a cold night warms the entire body and soothes the nervous system. The peel of an orange thrown into a hot tub softens the water to the ex* tent that the whole body benefits by it For cleansing the face soak a bit of orange peel in a basin of warm water, then go carefully over the face with the peel; afterward rinse in the water in which the peel was soaked. It is far more cleansing than cold cream and never promotes the growth of hair.

In the Abstract.

“They contemplate a trip to the Frisco exposition.” “That’s cheap enough.” “What? Why the fare—” "I was speaking of the contempla* tion.”—Philadelphia Public Ledger.