Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 134, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 June 1915 — Page 2

Dark Hollow

By Anna Katharine Green

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SYNOPSIS- ▲ curious crowd of neighbors invade ths mysterious home of Judge Ostrander, county judge and eccentric recluse, following * 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. The judge awakes. Miss Weeks explains to him what has occurred during his selxure. He aecretly discovers the whereabouts of the veiled woman. She proves to bo the widow of a man tried before the Judge and electrocuted for murder years before. Her daughter la eHSgsd to the judge's son. from whom he is estranged, but the murder is between the lovers.. 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 years before. The judge and Mrs. Scoville meet at Spencer’s Folly and she shows him how. on the day of the murder, she saw the shadow of a man. whittling a stick and wearing a long peaked cap. The judge engages her and her daughter Reuther to live with him In his mysterious home. Deborah and her lawyer. Black, go to the police station and see the stick used to murder Etheridge. She discovers a broken knife-blade point embedded tn It. Deborah and Reuther go to live with the judge. Deborah sees a portrait of Oliver, the judge’s son, with a black band painted across the eyes. That Bight she finds, tn Oliver’s room, a cap With a peak like the shadowed one. and • knife with a broken blade-point Anonymous letters Increase her suspicions. CHAPTER IX—Continued. "I have been told-—’’ thus Deborah easily proceeded, ’’that for a small house yours contains the most wonderful assortment of interesting objects. Where did you ever get them?*’ "My father was a collector, on a ■very small scale of course, and my mother had a passion for hoarding which prevented anything from going •ut of this house after it had once some into it” "My husband —" began Mrs. Scoville, thoughtfully. Miss Weeks stared in consternation at Mrs. Scoville, who hastened to say: "You wonder that I can mention my husband. Perhaps you will not be so surprised when I tell you that In my eyes he is a martyr, and quite guiltless of the crime for which he was punished." “You think that?” There was real surprise in the manner of the questioner. Mrs. Scoville's brow cleared. Che was pleased at this proof that her affairs had not yet reached the point of general gossip. "Miss Weeks. lam a mother. I have a young and lovely daughter. Can I look in her innocent eyes and believe her father to have so forgotten his responsibilities as to overshadow her life with crime? No, I will not believe it Circumstances were in favor of his conviction, but he never lifted the stick which struck down Algernon Etheridge.” Miss Weeks, who had sat quite still during the utterance of these remarks, fidgeted about at their close, with what appeared to the speaker, a sudden and quite welcome relief. “Oh!" she murmured; and said no store. It was not a topic she found •asy of discussion. The sadness which now spread over the very interesting countenance of her visitor, offered her an excuse for the introduction of a far more momentous topic; one she had burned to Introduce, but had not known how. “Mrs. Scoville, I hear that Judge Ostrander has got your daughter a pi«no. That is really a wonderful thing for him to do. Not that he is so close with bis money, but that he has always been so set against all gayety and companionship. 1 suppose you did not know the shock it would be to him when you asked Bela to let you into the gates.” “No! I didn’t know. But it is all right now. The judge seems to web come the change. Miss Weeks, did you know Algernon Etheridge well enough to tell me if he was as good and irreproachable a man as they all •ay?” “He was a good man, but he had a dreadfully obstinate streak in his disposition and very set ideas. I have heard that he and the judge used to argue over a point for hours. And he was most always wrong. For instance. he was wrong about Oliver.” “Oliver?" "Judge Ostrander’s son, you know. iMr. Etheridge wanted him to study for a professorship; but the boy was determined to go into journalism, and you see what a success he has made of it. As a professor he would probably have been a failure ” “Was this difference of opinion on the calling he should pursue the cause of Oliver’s leaving home in the way he did?" continued Deborah, conscious of walking on very thin ice. But Miss Weeks rather welcomed than resented this curiosity. Indeed, she was never tired of enlarging upon the Ostranders. "I have never thought so. The judge would not quarrel with Oliver on so small a point as that. My idea is. though I never talk of it much, that •they had a great quarrel over Mr. ' Etheridge. Oliver never liked the old student; Pre watched them and I’ve eeen. He hated his coming to the house so much, he hated the way his father singled him out and deferred to him and made him the confident of pll his troubles. When they went on IMr walks. Oliver always hung back,

and more than onee I have seen him make a grimace of distaste when his father urged him forward. He was only a boy, I know, but his dislikes meant something, and if it ever happened that he spoke out his whole mind, you may be sure that some very bitter words passed.” t Was this meant as an Innuendo? Impossible to tell. Such nervous, fussy little bodies often possess minds of unexpected subtlety. Deborah gave up all hope of understanding her, and, accepting her statements at their face value, effusively remarked: "You must have a very superior mind to draw such conclusions from the little you have seen. I have beard many explanations given for the breach you name, but never any so reasonable.” A flash from the spinster’s wary eye, then a burst of courage and the quick retort: “And what explanation does Oliver himself give? You ought to know, Mrs. Scoville.” The attack was as sudden as it was unexpected. Deborah flushed and trimmed her sails for this new tack, and insinuating gently, “Then you have heard —” waited for the enlightenment these words were likely to evoke. * It came quickly enough. "That he expected to marry your daughter? Oh, yes, Mrs. Scoville; it’s common talk here now. I hope you don’t mind my mentioning it.” Deborah’s head went up. She faced the other fairly, with the look born of mother passion, and mother passion only. “Reuther is blameless In this matter,” she protested. “She was brought up in Ignorance of what I felt sure would prove a handicap and misery to her. She loves Oliver as she will never love any other man, but when she was told her real name and understood fully what that name carries with it, she declined to saddle him with her shame. That’s her story. Miss Weeks; one that hardly fits her appearance, which Is very delicate. And, let me add, having once accepted her father’s name, she refuses to be known by any other. I have brought her to Shelby where to our own surprise and Reuther’s great happiness, we have been taken in by Judge Ostrander, an act of kindness for which we are very grateful.” Miss Weeks got up, took down one of her rarest treasures from an old etagere standing in one corner and laid It in Mrs. Scoville’s hand. “For your daughter,” she declared. "Noble girl! I hope she will be happy." The mother was touched, but not quite satisfied yet of the giver’s real feelings towards Oliver, and, after thanking her warmly, remarked: “There is but one thing that will ever make Reuther happy, and that she cannot have unless a miracle occurs. Oh, Ido not wonder you smile. This Is not the day of miracles. But if my belief in my husband could be shared; if I should be enabled to clear his name, might not love and loyalty be left to do the rest? Wouldn’t the judge’s objections, in that case, be removed? What do you thinly Miss Weeks?” “There! we will say no more about it” The little woman's attitude and voice were almost prayerful. "You have judgment enough for two. Besides, the miracle has not happened,” she interjected, with a smile which seemed to say it never would. Deborah sighed. Whether or not it was quite an honest expression of her feeling we will not inquire. She was there for a definite purpose and her way to it was, as yet far from plain. The negative with which she followed up this sigh was one of sorrowful acceptance. She made haste, however, to qualify it “But I have not given up all hope. I know as well as any one how impossible the task must prove, unless I can light upon fresh evidence. And where am I to get that? Only from some new witness.” Miss Weeks* polite smile took on an expression of indulgence. This roused Deborah’s pride, and, hesitating no longer, she anxiously remarked: “I have sometimes thought that Oliver Ostrander might be that witness. He certainly was in the ravine the night Algernon Etheridge was struck down.” Had she been an experienced actress of years she could not have thrown into this question a greater lack of all innuendo. Miss Weeks, already under her fascination, beard the tone but never thought to notice the quick rise and fall of her visitor’s uneasy bosom, and so unwarned, responded with all due frankness: “I know he was. But how will that help you? He had no testimony to give in relation to this crime, or he would have given it.” “That is true." The admission fell mechanically from Deborah’s lips; she was not conscious, even of making it Then, as her emotion choked her into silence, she sat with piteous eyes searching Miss Weeks' face, till she had recovered her voice, when she added this vital question:

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN,

"Wow did you know that Oliver wee tn the rarine’ that night? I only guessed it” “Well, it was in this way. Ido not often keep my eye on my neighbors <oh, no. Miss Weeks!), but that night I chanced to be looking over the way just at the minute Mr. Etheridge came out and something I saw in his manner and in that of the judge who had followed h<m to the door, and in that of Oliver who, cap on bead, was leaning towards them from a window over porch, made me think that a controversy was going on between the two old people of which Oliver was the object This naturally Interested me, and I watched them long enough to see Oliver suddenly raise his fist and shake it at old Etheridge; then, in great rage, slam down the window and disappear Inside. The next minute, and before the two below had done tailring, I caught another glimpse of him as he dashed around the corner of the house on his way to the ravine.” "And Mr. Etheridge?" “Oh F he left soon after. I watched him as fie went by, his long cloak flapping in the wind. Little did I think he would never pass my window again.” So interested were they both, that neither for the. moment realized the strangeness of the situation or that it was in connection with a crime for which the husband of one of them had suffered, they were raking up this past, and gossiping over its petty details. Mrs. Scoville sighed and said: “It couldn’t have been very long after you saw him that Mr. Etheridge was struck?" “Only some twenty minutes. It takes just that long for a man to walk from this corner to the bridge.” “And you never heard where Oliver went?” “It was never talked about at the time. Later, when some hint got about of his having been in the ravine that night, he said he had gone up the ravine, not down it. And we all believed him, madam.” “Of course, of course. What a discriminating mind you have, Miss Weeks, and what a wonderful memory! To think that after all these years you can recall that Oliver had a cap on his head when he looked out of the window at his father and Mr. Etheridge. If you were asked, I have no doubt you could tell its very color. Was it the peaked one?" “Yes, I could swear to it,” And Miss Weeks gave a little laugh, which

“Was the Difference of Opinion the Cause of Oliver's Leaving?”

sounded Incongruous enough to Deborah, in whose heart at that moment a leaf was turned upon the past, which left the future hopelessly blank. “Must you go?” Deborah had risen mechanically. “Don’t, I beg, till you have relieved my mind about Judge Ostrander. I don’t suppose that there is really anything behind that door of his which is would alarm anyone to see?” Then. Deborah understood Miss Weeks. But she was ready for her. “I’ve never seen anything of the sort,” said she, “and I make up his bed in that very room every morning.” “Oh! And Miss Weeks drew a deep breath. “No article of immense value, such as that rare old bit of real Satsuma in the cabinet over there?” “No,” answered Deborah, with, all the patience she could muster. “Judge Ostrander seems very simple in Lis tastes. I doubt if he would know Satsuma if he saw it.” Miss Week- sighed. “Yes, he has never expressed the least wish to look over my shelves. So the double fence means nothing?” “A whim,” ejaculated Deborah, making quietly fcr the door. “The judge likes to walk at night when quite through with his work; and he doesn’t like his ways to be noted. But he prefers the lawn now. I hear his step out there every night" “Well, it’s something to know that he leads a more normal life than formerly!" sighed the little lady as she prepared to usher her guest out “Come again, Mrs. Scoville; and. if 1 may. I will drop In and see you some day.” Deborah accorded her permission and made her final adieux. She felt as if a hand which had been stealing up her chest had suddenly gripped her

RENI

throat, choking bar. Aha had found the mao who had cast that fatal shadow down the ravine, twelve years before. CHAPTER X. Anonymous Letters. Deborah re-entered the judge’s house a stricken woman. She reached her room door and was about to enter, when at a sudden thought she paused asp) let her eyes wander down the hall tW they settled on another door, the <u>S she had closed behind her the night before, with the deep resolve never to open it again except under compulsion. A few minutes later she was standing in one of the dim corners of Oliver’s musty room, reopening a book which she had taken down from the shelves on her former visit She remembered it from its torn back and the fact that it was an algebra. Turning to the fly leaf, she looked again at the names and schoolboy phrases she had seen scribbled all over its surface, for the one which she remembered as, "I hate algebra.” It had not been a very clearly written “algebra," and she would never have given this interpretation to the scrawl, had she been in a better mood. Now another thought had come to her. and she wanted to see the word again. Was she glad or sorry to have yielded to this impulse, when by a closer inspection she perceived that the word was not “algebra" at all, but “Algernon, I hate A Etheridge—l hate A. E—l hate Algernon E-,” all over the page, and here and there on other pages, sometimes in characters so rubbed and faint as to be almost unreadable and again so pressed into the paper by a vicious pencil point as to have broken their way through to the leaf underneath. The work of an ill-conditioned schoolboy! but —this hate dated back many years. Paler than ever, and with hands trembling almost to the point of incapacity, she put the book back and flew to her own room, the prey of thoughts bitter almost to madness. It was the second time in her life that she had been called upon to go through this precise torture. Then, only her own happiness and honor were involved; now it was Reuther’s; and the fortitude which sustained her through the ignominy of her own trouble failed her at the prospect of Reuther’s. And again, the two cases were not equal. Her husband had had traits which, in a manner, had prepared her for the ready suspicion of people. But Oliver was a man of reputation and kindly heart; and yet, in the course of time this had come, and the question once agitating her as to whether Reuther was a fit mate for him and now evolved itself into this: Was he a fit mate for her? (TO BE CONTINUED.)

LIGHT ON JOHN’S “BARGAIN”

But Unsuspicious Mrs. Brown Could Only See Humorous Mistake Made by Store Clerk. “I see you have one of those cake pans that Bargun’s ten cent store sold last week at their special sale,” said Mrs. White, as she was visiting in Mrs. Brown’s kitchen one morning. "Yes. Isn’t that good value for ten cents?” replied Mrs. Brown, holding the pan up proudly. “Indeed it is,” said Mrs. White, taking the pan in her hands. "I wanted one, but the good ones were all gone before I could be waited on. How did you manage it?” “Oh, I sent John,” smiled Mrs. Brown. “I was busy and couldn’t go that morning, and you know John passes there each morning about eight o’clock, when the store opens. So I asked him if he wouldn’t stop and get me a pan, and he said he would.” "I should think you would be afraid to trust him to buy one. Some of them were quite badly damaged, you know.” said Mrs. White. “Oh, John is careful,” Mrs. Brown assured her. "He always gets the best of everything. The one he got me is absolutely perfect as far as I can see., “Well, isn’t that wonderful! I didn’t see a perfect one in the store. But didn’t your husband object to carrying the pan home? Mine would, and they never deliver anything sold at the special sales.” “They delivered this,” said Mrs. Brown. "John is well known and the stores are anxious to accommodate him. Then he has a way of getting things done.” "I shall certainly send Robert to Bargun’s the next time they have a special sale,” said Mrs. White. "Why, this pan Is just as gocd as the ones . they sell for a quarter at Jones’ hardware store, next door to Bargun’s.” "Yes, it is exactly the same,” said Mrs. Brown, triumphantly. “I thought it was, but I wanted to make sure; so I went into the hardware store the other day and asked to see their pans. They showed me one for a quarter that is exactly like mine. I told the man I had got a pan just like it for ten cents, and then he made the funniest mistake —he said he had sold John one only a few days ago. Wasn’t that queer?” “It certainly was,” said Mrs. White. —Youth’s Companion.

Cost of Fame.

Soon after victory had declared itself in favor of the British arms at the memorable battle of Blenheim the Duke of Marlborough, in traversing the ranks, observed a soldier leaning in a pensive manner on the butt-end of his musket. His grace immediately accosted him thus: “Why so pensive, my friend, after so glorious a victory?” “It may be glorious,” replied the son of Mars, “but I have only earned fourpence by contributing to all this acquisition of fame!”

ELAER, IND.

CRADLE of the NEW WORLD

TO students of early American history, Santo Domingo city Offers perhaps the most interesting field that can be found in the two Americas. No other city was so closely associated with the fortunes of Christopher Columbus; no other city can offer such a commentary on the fallen fortunes of the great admiral or the colonial policy of the Spanish crown, says Theodor de Bovy in the bulletin of the PanAmerican Union. On entering the excellent harbor formed by the mouth of the Ozama river it does not require a great effort of imagination to harken back to thq olden days of the conqulstadores. A large fortress frowns from the western bank of the river, and even today challenges the bold invader. The gayly painted houses with their massive walls and their queer roofs made of bricks present to the modern traveler a startling contrast to his usual landscape. By looking closely one can see on the western bank of the river the remains of the first Spanish settlement on the south side of the Island of Haiti. This first settlement on the eastern bank of the Ozama river was short lived, as the Spaniards soon found it too unhealthy there for their comfort. Accordingly, they moved over to the opposite higher bank and founded there the present city. Of the original settlement nothing remains but the ruins of a small chapel and of some other buildings. Overlooking the river, and within a short distance of the mouth, can be

seen what is locally called “Lfc Casa de Colon,” the house of Columbus. This, however, was not built by Christopher Columbus, but by Diego Colon, son of the great admiral, some short time after a marriage had been contracted between Diego and Maria de Toledo, a niece of the duke of Alva. In consequence of this marriage Ferdinand of Spain returned to Diego the full powers and titles at one time possessed by his illustrious father. Diego Colon went to Hispaniola in 1509 with all the powers and prerogatives of a viceroy and built for his court a large fortified palace, the ruins of which even today give one an idea of the pomp and circumstance affected by the conquerors. Famous Cottonwood Tree. No visitor to Santo Domingo city is allowed to depart without having been shown the cottonwood tree to which Columbus is said to have tied his caravels when he entered the mouth of the Ozama. Whether or not this tree really served this purpose in the admiral’s time would be a hard matter to prove or to disprove. Local legend has it so, and a storm of indignation would break over the head of the doubter or the scoffer. At any rate, the tree looks old enough to make one inclined to believe the story and has been preserved from further decay with cement and a tin roof covering the affected parts. Santo Domingo is a walled city, and the greater portion of these walls still stand, almost as strong as when they were originally built. Massive gates at different points allow access to the city, and one is struck by the small- sentry boxes surmounting the battlements. To the seeker after memories of the great Genoese one might advise, first, a visit to the cathedral. Fronting the cathedral, on the plaza where biweekly the excellent little band of the Ozama battalion of the Dominican army gives a concert, can be seen a statue of Columbus In the symbolic attitude of pointing to the west, as if perpetually reminding one of his discoveries. He is standing by a capstan' upon which lies a chart, and he holds a pair of compasses in his right hand. Unlike the usual ran of states, the observer is Impressed by the noble attitude of the subject

Preceding a visit to the cathedral one should first call on the “mayordomo,” Senor Don Jesus Maria Tomasso, under whose charge the treasures of this edifice are guarded. It would I be hard to meet a more charming or cultured gentleman, or one whose knowledge of local history is greater. Senor Tomasso has at his fingers’ ends the history of the cathedral from the time of the building of the edifice to the present day, and a visit to this church, and more especially to the mausoleum of Columbus, which is in it, is not worth while unless one is accompanied by this worthy man. Senor Tomasso can tell of the completion of the cathedral in 1540; he can show the interested visitor the original wooden cross which in 1514 was erected upon the site where the cathedral now stands; he can tell one of the damage done to the cathedral by Sir Francis Drake when this noted British freebooter and his followers besieged the capital city of Hispaniola. The cathedral is rich in many treasures and possesses some noted paintings, amongst others a Madonna by Murillo, but undoubtedly its chief treasure is the remains of Columbus. Remains of Columbus. At the present time these remains are inclosed in a crystal case, which in turn is contained in a bronze casket, resting upon four massive marble columns, the whole surmounted by a magnificent white marble mausoleum, with bronze tablets depicting the various scenes in the life of Columbus. The mausoleum is surmounted by a

life-sized marble figure, representing the guardian spirit of the Dominican republic watching over the mortal remains of the great admiral. Perhaps the most interesting ruin existing today in Santo Domingo city is the San Nicolas church and hospital, built in 1509 by Nicolas Ovando in honor of his patron saint. While the first small settlement in the new world, Isabella, on the north coast of Hispaniola, boasted of a wooden chapel, and the second settlement, on the east bank of the Ozama river, had a stone chapel, the church of San Nicolas in reality is the first consecrated edifice that was built in either the northern or the southern part of the newly-discovered hemisphere. Nicolas Obando, when viceroy of Hispaniola, built this church and dedicated it to San Nicolas, but a short while after this he completely lost the favor of his royal patron ip Spain and was recalled, which recall was probably due to the regal pretense with which he held court in Santo Domingo city. After this there is little record that the church was used, which can be accounted for by the fact that Ovando was in disgrace and his church in consequence was not in favor with the sycophantic element in Santo Domingo city; and also because the larger and more Important cathedral was then practically completed. The San Nicolas church was allowed to fall into rains, but enough remains today to show the handsome outlines of this once splendid building and its imposing proportions. Outside the City of Santo Domingo, on the modern “carreterra,” or carriage road, one can still see today one of the oldest Spanish forts built in America, in an excellent state of preservation. It would be easy today to imagine this fort peopled with Spanish conquistadores, armed with halberts and arquebusses and protected by ponderous steel caskets and breastplates. a Even the moat surrounding this castle is still existent, and in the evening it would nqt require a wide stretch of imagination to hear the ghostly boom of an old six-pounder answering from its battlements the detonation of a far-away gun fiipd from the ramparts of the fort on the Ozama river.