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The Exeter Times, 1890-3-27, Page 7A FALSE FRIE !just gave you my cheque after endorsing Holmes stared at the banker in amaze - anent, es well he might. But without observing this, Mr Clayton A STORY OF MODERN BABYLON.proceeded ; " It was only yesterday I saw i the cheque, which I had drawls on my private • CHAPTER VIII. look and gave him back the slip of paper, account; and then," he added, with eager "Oh,1 was forgetting." she said quiekly ; interest," the question struck ire at once— Sen Whether he had o been dreaming or awake, "I ustn't tell you—we are not allowed to When did Fanne give you the cheque ? 1'4 as when the current of thought passed t thin I iicfh tell anybody. My }husband will soon be in,it when he met you that night at Albert his brain, Frank Holmes was unable to thi th sir, and you can speak to him about it." Gate ?„ eHe hadt been in the polis rehearsing the It wahardly fair to use the opportunity ; e " ;1'o," the other answered, like amen, in bevidence given in the police court. It will but the husband, for all that Iiomles knew, . a dream. remembered that Lady reeeivort stated mia+iit be an obstinate man --no uncommon 1 " Then, when did he pass it to you? Did luraseertainlyanoty ever received a letter, h enomenon when you want very particul- he send it by post, or how?—Don't you see,. and had certainly not received one for weeks phenomenon ly anyinfarina#ion from the species --and it Frank, flow every act of Fauna's that night is prior to her death—except one, which was avis of vital imllortauce to discover the author important ---the most trifling act might nosy rom a music -seller. How thencould 'tier- of the advertisein nt. , be turned to vital account for lh}m, if he is garet Neale have received a communication .. Did you ever •see the Miss Neale who innocent?" making an apointutent on that Saturday was murdered near the top of this street ?„ to this, Frank Holmes could say nothing. evening ? Not through the post ; certainly en he asked. It was indeed a day of ill omen to. all of them not by telegram, which would have been l The avenin started, and stared . at him:1 when Claude Fauna first entered the house °' Yes, many times," alto answered. " She in Cadogan Place -.-and who hats brought used to come here with the young ladies to him e there , buy things." I " Take this draft' with au, in ease it "" Naw, Mrs Grierson, I have reason to should be of any u,.e, added lir: Clayton think that it was in answer to this advertise -1 and placing the paper in his peeket-book, ment that poor Miss Neale v.iis led to go into i Holmes wentwa ma co*;sz�e>ap,a the Park that night. Yon notice the date— C it was the 10th of June. If you conceal the author of that advertisement, you may be concealing the author of her death r' Still more noticeable ; and mot personally, for she rarely went out, and never alone. It was at this point that the light burst up- on FraHolmes—if it should prove to be light, sant merely the mirage of a heated imaginat on. There was one means of cor- respondence which no one had thought of as yet, and which. vas worth investigating. Miss Neale read the morning papers at the breakfast -table., The murder took place on the loth of June. Holmes alighted from The woman c her ;mods and trembl^ ods pond as follows :Tho author of "Tom the cab - Fleet Street, and commenced as d examination of the morninga ereof that ed frdni head to foot. Then a hot flush g I', date anti of theproceedingli e de •s. In leaped to her face, and with indignant eyes Toin's : tells ns of a Hulse that watched over she rushed to the hook which she had Ant Toms infancy, who wag f;iftea with "two that portion of the newspapers popularly t; p, left hands anal no bead." How often this know as the "agony column:' dei ivated w up a minute before. .- 1 3 him ►e anomalous individual is found outside of the intrigues, appointmcnts,ttutll and falsehood, cried, Hea%en forbid ---oh, the villain , nurser. t In the kitchen she is alwa s d t passions anus emotions for which there is no and seeing, her sweet face so often iu this yy p' other outlet or mode of expressiou, he hoed very shop --conceal hien"-•---Power of fur• ervr dishes and making the fortune of the pp fliers speech failed her, and she dashed over crockery dealers. In school lie is always at to discover some clue to 'taro u' 1t. sale's 1' the foot of his class rather by reason of a ter• . - 1 h sterical } o e lion ssth a n v a eaves f the k strange and unaccountable conduct, \a ill ensu meatal carclessnessand ins truulo than e t e ' 1? • 0 1 I them in seemed likely t rr man ever studied the print of a newspaper energ;} which ee. 1 k ly becaurse of pPlaitive stupidity. Iu olitics he #brow- is constantly beaking those blunders which statesmen pronounce worse than crime, la society, by various contretemps and 111010.• remarks, he blazes. his way through life. If there is a corn under the table. he is One Ty -pa of Oharaoter The editor of the ao3I<,z Rote makes a column with an interest more absorbing. As 1»cces• ere r is . s a sac si me , it. wouhl he no easy matter to follow an ad• ing the book down upon the counter, --"June vertitementhad; toits original source, itwas the 'Jth- ":ti,---.1t<t 9,30 to -night. Park, pexin to discover, in the first news• South of Grosvenor (late."—Look at it, sir, gcaper thntt lie searched, no fewer than three and at the name and address p, notices during the week in question—one of 1 The woman s excitement was hardly bneat- sure to step on it: if there is a sora mud sen• them being on the Saturday morning ierthanhisown, The first glance at the hand sitive heart, he is sure to probe the which looked capable on the interpre. ,'aariting, of the origutal cocopy sent the blood wound with his bungling lance, and with - i out the least intention of hurting any- one's feelings. Sometimes this man with two hands finds his way into the pul tation applicable to the matter in hand, * bis heart ; and appended was the familiar He had notthoughtof ascertaining the papers signature, "C. Faure, 313.a Mount Street." taken in at Ladyaouthfort'a house, the 1[orn. I For e. time Holmes Ives unable to iiq Post would be ono of them ; but in that ' speak—almost unable to think. He remain- pit, and then, alas, 'Ns awkward wore, is aper he found nothing like what he was etl standing: befornsthe little vomiter with disastrous indeed. He amnia perceive the difference between foolish preaching aunt the foolishness of preaching„ He cannot be made to believe that a word in due season the Wednesday issue, and was as follows : „ What was to be doneness- i His situation any better that a word out of season. Iu "Saturday, old time and place." I WAS painfully perplexing. This tremendous• any walk of life this man seems to have tab The second was in these terms, and aft- lv ominous piece of evidenee was not his innate conception of little proprieties or peered on Friday .1 "Rave you seen my alone, to do as he. wished with ft --it was small amenities, A course of action is always message? I/o not fail." This might, or that woman's and would presently be her in bis eyes lawful orunlawful, never es;pedli• might not, refer to the former ; if an invest- husband's, and within an hour would be iii enter inexpedient. Very often suck a man igation, it was found to have been inserted the possession of the police. AN bat promise labors under the deluoiou that be is unusual. by the saute fietson, there would be good was ittitat belied trade to Mary Clayton . ly frank and honest ; and if he gets into 1 trouble though his inveterate bungling, he is likely to price himself on being a martyr to the truth, whereas in reality he deserves no more honor for Isis bravery than the man who runs his head against a hornet's nest. However, many a man who starts out in life in this ead condition is by no imam a hope. less ease. By recognizing:his besetting faults, by putting himself under the tutelage of a judicious wife, by care and thought and prayer, by looking at the "outer side of the shield"and by recognizing the rights of other people, be e311 often become ambidextreria and even grow a heal with lama brains in it. '.Chis process of develup:Pantie wartit the suddenly discovered presence of another s;irvirg for. roan behind him, who had entered the shop umobscrved by Holmes, and wasnow regard- SMUGGLING OIIINAMSN. ing; the writing in thebook withquiet,intent interest. It was°Mrt Grierson staring at , #ociking for. He carefully copied the three his hand npan'1lre. +open book. The discovery. advertisements, and studied thein over his even though ho had anticipated it, stunned breakfast in a restaurant, One was from him. It was the last rivet, grounds for fm lowing it up. The third, however, was mora precise -so precise that, appearing on Saturday mon:mg, it made the young man's heart jnm • "M. ---At 0.30 to -night. Park. South of Grosvenor Gate." Holmes, reading this message, so startling in its that lay in his power to secure amine's ae- signiti.anee, had to Steady himself by an ef- cluittal ; and her arms flew around his neck fort, It was characteristic of hire, and of as she kissed him for it. What fatality had the thoroughness with which he meant to brought hila to this -and what would Miry carry out bis task, that he restrained himself Clayton think of him' The poor fellow from starting oil' at once on so pregnant a groaned, and for a desperate half -minute clue, That, he was strongly of opinion that was violently tempted to seize the fatal book he hail found what he sought, was certainly and make way with it. Nay, he might the calf, ; but, he argued, would it not wait have done this -..drinking of Iter- -but for for ce*ther hour or two, until he had ex. ambled the other papers? Finding noticing like it in their eolunins,' he coda address himself to following up the origin of this ad- ertisement with the greater vigour and iia. • 1 ity of purpose. Yet, as he was passing the offices of the newspaper from which he had taken the notice` , on his way to another publishing of - Bee, unable to resist the temptation to go n and find out whore the advertise- ment hail corn from. It was the easier for him to do this from the fact that he was per - smelly well known in the office. He kuew whom to ask for at thatearly hour, and was iinnnediately shown to the gentleman he wanted. " Gissing," he said at once, " I want to know who inserted that in the issueof 10th ?" He laid the copy before the assistant -manager as he spoke. The latter read it and slightly raised his brows, " I'in afraid I can't oblige you, Mr. Holmes. You know that these things are confidential." " 1 am not seeking to indulge curiosity, Gissing. The business I am now upon is more serious. That advertisement appeared the morning of the clay alarg+aret Neale was mur- dered in Hyde Park. /so*, you will under- stand my motive." Mr. Gissing started, took up the advertise- ment and re -read it with deep interest, and then went toe file and confirmed it by refer- ring to the newspaper itself. "By Jove, Mr. Holmes," he said, " that does look—odd." " If it should turn out that the advertise- ment has obviously another connection," said Holmes, " I will respect the confidence placed in me, should you make known its origin. If, on the other hand, it sheds a light upon that tragedy, surely you will not withhold it ?" " Surely not.—Just wait a minute or two, aid I'll tell you where it came from." Mr. Gissing spent a while turning over the leaves of a large book until he found the ad- vertisement. Opposite the cutting was the cost, and the name of the party ordering the insertion and paying for it. The name was "J. Grierson, Istount Street, Park Lane." "Grierson ?" said Frank, Holmes, trying to remember the name. "Grierson. He is a stationer, who takes n advertisements - for the morning papers. He could tell you who gave him this one to insert." Holmes thanked Mr. Gissing, and went sassway- The.diseovery looked very ominous ; and he thought anxiously of Mary Clayton n view of the final disclosure which seemed looming. What if it should prove the rivet- ing link in the fatal chain of evidence coiled around the prisoner Faure ? Holmes had promised her to work for' Faune's acquittal ; and this was what he was doing! Impelled ' by a force which he was now unable to re. gist he was powerless to turn against it and nay : "I will go no farther 1" He would have to go farther—as far as the light would bring him ; and :he:.resolved. that what , hedis- covered he ,would'place in her own hands, to do as she willed with it.. - He strongly felt that there was no need for further investigation • until the source of this advertisement had been ascertained. On this, all would depend. • He therefore drove off to Mount Street direct, and went 'into the:stationer's shop, asking for the pro- prietor. - . Grierson was not in, which, perhaps, made Holmes's task an easier one, since it was Mrs. Grierson whom he saw.. She was a nervous little person, evidently not ascus- tomed to her husband's shop. So he ven- tured at once to ask her tolethimknow who ordered the insertion of , that advertisement in the morning paper of the lOtlr of June. She took the copy from his hand in a half- bewildered way, and proceeded mechanical- ly to search the books for the original. Sud- denly she shut up the book with a frightened now he was too eager to pay his debt, and abolish exemptions, "If he were acquitted, I should cer enothing ( What would this trial matter to me then? Olt, if he :amid only be acquitted, Frauk, 1 would kiss the feet of the judge and jury who told him he was innocent I" And he had solemnly promised her, then, to do all the newcomer who drew the attention of The law to be Enforced by tuned Stn Holmes to hint ; and slightly starting, he Customs (Meads. dropped his hands by his side, with a move. A despatch from Victoria, 11. C., says :— moot of despair, on recognizing a noted On Friday morning, when the steamer officer of Scotland Yard, Olympian reached fort Townsend from The officer's interest hi the copy of the Victoria, the eustonis officer discovered eight advertisement' changed into a look of un- Chinlunen on board, concealed ander the qualified admiration as ho spoke to Foal boilers, pocked like sardines, It looked as Holmes. "Mr Holmes, you aro a man of thoughthe firemen weroimplicatedil bring. genius," he said quietly, "No one else ing them over, and Collector Br:oldies would have thought of it. I was up the street threatened to seize the Olympian. IIe told putting ideas together, when I saw you come Capt. Roberts if the offence was repeated, in hero ; I only dropped in to have a chat and it appeared that the employees aboard with you, little dreaming of—this ra Holmes felt sick. The officer lost not an- other moment ht taking possession of the book, which he carried away with him. "This looks very like the missing link, Mr Holmes," be observed, with deep satis- faction; "but of course I shall not lay any claim to the credit of it. I should not have fnadethe discovery—nobody except yourself could have done it." " For Heaven's sake, Cracroft," said Frank Hohues with an air of abhorrence, "take all the credit of it, and don't bring my name into the business at all !" JOHN IN LABA 1 1'S Indian Pate 4/e and XXX Brawn Stout Highest awarus ana 1fedals for Purity and Excel fence at Centennial Exhibition, Phil adelphia, 1876; Canada, 1876 ; Australia, 1877; and Paris, Prance, 1878. TESTIMONIA7,8 SELL CTE1) : • Prof, 11' H Croft, Public Analyst, Toronto,says:—"yfind it to be perfectly sound contahninguo nopurittes or adultor- atioaa, and can strongly reeorniniend it as perfectly pure and a very superior malt liquor.," John E adwarna,Pruteasor of Chemistry,Montreal,says: find them to bo roniarkably sound ales. brewed front Ware malt apd hops. Rev. i'..1..:d. Page.Protossor of Chemistry Laval fin.ver city. Quebec, says ;-."l inure analyzed the /adieu Pata'nle Manufactured bvZebu Labatt, Londen,Ontario , and lave found it a lightale, containing but little alcohol, of a tali- cious flavor, and of a very agreeable taste and,sunerior quality. and compares 'with tiro best imported ales. 1` have also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of the same brewery, which is of excellent quality its flavor is very agreeable ; it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a little richer in alcohol, and can be :compared a,dvantage- ouslywith any imported article. ASK YOUit (ItOC R FOR IT eintzman& Co IVIANIJFMFMA OT R RR1r► O Grand, Square Upright PIANOFORTES. The oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion, Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use. The HeintlamamPianos; are noted Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their Finely Regulated Delicate Touch, - Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced 8efntict. The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Moet Thorough WorCmalr Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Factory: -West Toronto JuictioiijWarsroito- t.d Worte el, ,.ice fir/ ..i.. V \,..r' mow./ r How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. Cnlver'- weirs Celebrated Essay or: h' radical cure of SraRilATOIutOOla or incapacity Maimed by excess or early indiscretion, The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clearly detnanetrates tram a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming; coneeqquenees of seif- abuse may be radically cured '• pPointing out a mode of cure at once simple, eortain and elfeotual, by mewl of which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may be may euro Himself cheaply, pri- vately and radically. t8f' 21.}e lecture should be in the handl, of every youth and every mania tbeland.. tient under seal, In a plain envelope, to any ad thet 1'C t 1, 1 • ill I'bol sides post•patd, on receipt of four cents, or two sent back to Victoria. The collector at Porti THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO the future every vessel on which stowaway 41 Ann Street New York Chinese aro found. The Scott exclusion act, Post Offroe Box 450 91i 88 ly lie says, is very explicit on this point, and declares that every vessel on which Chinese no nr ec . acs steamer were imp 1 a el 1 would 1 1 the vessel. Tho Chinese were ordered to bel postage stamps. Samples of Medicine free. Address Townsend says that ho intends seizing in are illegally brought into tl U •t 1St t shall be confiscated. In the past there has been some leniency shown, but so many attempts have been made by Chinamen to enter the United States from this port that the United States Customs Collector at Port Townsend has lost all patience. The order " I can't help doing that, Mr. Holmes," would seem to strike at the steamers Olym- replied the conscientious officer ; "but it pian and North Pacific particularly, as it is will only be anion g ourselves•—it is no con- said to be ahnost an impossibility for a cern of the public how or by whom the ev- celestial to stow himself away on these boats idence was obtained. I am going to Lady unless with the connivance of the crew. Southfort's house now, and I will let you know later on if any further evidence turns up Holmes went on down the street, while the officer turned into Grosvenor Square. The reader knows the intention with which the young man had actively entered into this case, and can measure the feeling with which he reflected on his discovery. Sup- pose that the officer Cracroft had not come Facts About Precious Metals. All gold contains a trace of silver. • Mexico's production was 835,000,000 last year Australia has produced 81,600,000,000 in gold. - A full mining claim is 600 by 1,500 feet, and contains twenty acres. on the scene when he did—Holmes would Up - to 1885 the output of the Comstock have gone, reluctantly, it is true, and tom- lode, Montana, was $324,000,000. municated to Miss Clayton the evidence he For every ounce of silver out of the Com - had found. He would have made stock mine a foot of lumber has gone out. no use of Now,it without her wishes being The total production of old and silver in known. it was out of his power P g to keep the discovery back, and the United States from 1792 to 1889 was he was grievously uneasy on account of it. 83,000,000,000. She was excited, her nerves were much Montana has thousands of acres of rich strung up ; would she think unkindly of him placer ground that can not be worked be - for what he had done ? . cause of lack of water. Holmes'could nothelp sharing the officer's The two.great mines in Montana are view that this was the °'missing link"—the mostappropriately named the Anaconda and evidence, which was felt to be so necessary, Granite Mountain. of Faume's correspondence with Margaret . A Mexican miner is the best judge and Neale. It looked perilously like it. The in• sorter of ore, but an American is the most itial M, the time and place, the authorship intelligent of all miners. of the message, all pointed to one dread con- ; ; The Granite Mountain mine, Montana, elusion. He knew how the police would rivet . produces 80,000 ounces a week, and is the. it. `richest mine in the world. He remembered his promise to Mr. Clay -1 Senator Stewart, of Nevada, is the father ton, and drove into. the City. What Mr. of the United States mining laws. He com- .Clayton had to say to him arouseda lively piled. them from old Spanish and Mexican interest, and gave hien the stimulant which authorities and Congress adopted them. at the time he so much needed. "It was only yesterday, Frank, said the banker at once, asking youfmding it struck me. I might Keeping one's Temper. have then of ht before. You re- I Socrates din himself in great emotion thought collect. what I spoke about that Saturday over a slave, said, '•I would beat you if I night when you came to Cadogan Place?" were not angry." Peter the Great made a "You refer to the—money?' law that if -any nobleman beat or ill-used his "The money, I confess, Frank, I sym- slaves, he should be looked upon as insane, paused with Faure when he mentioned his and a guardian appointed to take care of his embarrassing position tome. He felt that— person and of his estate. This great mon that he was causing you some pain, perhaps arch once struck his gardener, who, being a —in. regard to Mary and him under the man of keen"sensibility, took to his bed and circumstances. Then I took the course which died in a few days. Peter, hearing of this, you know : he gave me a rough estimate of exclaimed,: with tears in his eyes : "Alas ! I all the money he had had from you—between have civilized my own subjects, I have con - four and five thousand pounds—and I handed quered tether 'nations, yet I have not been him a cheque for that amount—for five thou- ' able to conquer nor civilize myself. sand, I fancied he would pay it in, and send but I see Legislature has decidedto you his own cheque for the money, b The Manitoba q WEAK MEN aqnuiackly llaa W°cureN theemau - selves of Wanting Vitality, Lost =Mahood, from youthful errors, one., quietly at home. Book on all private diseases sent free (sealed). Perfectly reliable. Over 50 years' experience. Address-. 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