DOUBLE. ***





                              NICK CARTER
                                STORIES

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=No 157.=          NEW YORK, September 11, 1915.          =Price Five Cents.=




                         A HUMAN COUNTERFEIT;

                Or, NICK CARTER AND THE CROOK’S DOUBLE.

                     Edited by CHICKERING CARTER.




CHAPTER I.

WHY WAS IT DONE?


“Extraordinary--that doesn’t half express it. I know of no word that
would. To some extent, Nick, at least, men’s motives are usually
discernible in their conduct. But in this case--why, there was nothing
to it. It is utterly inexplicable. It was like a horrid dream, a hideous
nightmare, or the mental abnormalities of a dope fiend.”

Nick Carter laughed and spread his napkin, with a significant glance at
his chief assistant, Chick Carter, who sat at one side of the table,
that of a private dining room in a new and fashionable New York hotel.

“Well, Mr. Clayton, if the story you have to tell warrants so remarkable
a preface, it will be interesting, at least,” said the famous detective.

“Yes, Nick, and then some,” Chick agreed, smiling. “He so has aroused my
curiosity that I really am all ears.”

“I don’t think I shall disappoint you,” said their companion, more
gravely.

He was a fashionably clad man of thirty-five, of medium build and with
clean-cut, attractive cast of features, smoothly shaved. There was in
other respects nothing specially distinctive about him. He was the type
of well-bred, well-informed, and thorough business man with which New
York City abounds.

“Aside from the pleasure of having you dine with me, I am very glad of
the privilege of telling you about my extraordinary experience,” he
added, gazing across the table at Nick. “I want your opinion about it. I
was tempted to call on you for advice immediately after it occurred, but
there were many reasons why I did not do so. I have been terribly busy,
you know, since the opening of the new Westgate six months ago, when the
directors gave me entire management of the house. Busy, Mr. Carter, is
no name for it.”

“I can imagine so,” said Nick. “You certainly have a magnificent hotel
here.”

“There is none better in the city, nor one more generously patronized by
wealthy and fashionable people,” said Clayton, with a quiet display of
pride. “We are getting the cream not only of local society, but also
that of the traveling public. We are almost constantly crowded. It’s an
honor, indeed, to be the sole manager of such a house.”

“I agree with you, Clayton, but you are the man for the position, I
judge,” said Nick. “I guess the board of directors made no mistake.”

“It was partly due, perhaps, to my owning quite a block of the stock,”
Clayton replied, with a smile. “Now, to return to the main matter, I
will tell you of my extraordinary experience.”

“When did it occur, Clayton?” Nick inquired.

“Three months ago, Mr. Carter, during the first three days in
September.”

“Three days, eh? It covered a considerable period.”

“A period of apprehension and anxiety beyond description.”

“Began at the beginning, Clayton, and tell me the whole business.”

“I can tell you only what occurred. It will be up to you to determine
why it was done and what it signified.”

“I will endeavor to do so.”

“As is my custom once a week,” Clayton began, “I had been out to
Washington Heights to dine with my mother, who dislikes hotel life and
for whom I bought an attractive place out there three years ago. Miss
Langham was with me, the young lady to whom I am engaged. She is the
only daughter of Gustavus Langham, president of the Century Trust
Company.’

“I am acquainted with him,” Nick observed.

“They have a suite here in the house,” Clayton added. “My only other
companion was my chauffeur, Paul Hazen, who was driving my touring car.
We started to return about ten o’clock. We had covered less than half a
mile, and had arrived at a point in the road where there are no near
dwellings, when we were held up by a touring car that stopped as we were
approaching, and at such an angle across the road that we could not pass
it.”

“The occupants evidently had been waiting for you,” Chick remarked.

“So I presently learned, though I did not think so at the time,” Clayton
replied. “One of the men in the car, the top of which was up and the
side curtains on, had alighted and was looking at one of the front
wheels. Two other men were getting out, and I inferred that they had met
with a mishap. The moment we stopped, however, some twenty feet from
them, all three approached my car, and one of them called me by name. I
then supposed him a friend, whom I did not immediately recognize.”

“Was it a dark evening?” Nick inquired.

“Not at all. It was bright starlight.”

“What followed?”

“The spokesman of the party did not wait for an answer,” Clayton
continued. “He drew a revolver and ordered me to get out of my car,
saying that I must go with him. At the same time another drew a gun and
held up my chauffeur.”

“What type of men were they?” Nick asked. “Did they appear to be
ruffians?”

“Quite the contrary. They were well dressed and appeared like gentlemen,
aside from their conduct. Each wore a full beard, however, and I at once
suspected that they were in disguise.”

“A very natural inference, Clayton, under the circumstances.”

“They meant business, all right, for my protest was immediately checked
with a more threatening command to get out of the car. I was told,
nevertheless, that I would not be harmed, robbed, nor subjected to any
serious inconvenience, providing I made no resistance. I was also told
that their only purpose was to detain me from this hotel for a short
time.”

“I follow you,” Nick nodded.

“Their spokesman, who did all of the talking, so informed Miss Langham
and Hazen,” Clayton proceeded. “He commanded them to return to the
hotel, and to state that I had left town for a few days. He warned them
against disclosing the truth and making a stir over my abduction. He
threatened, in case they did, that my life would be the forfeit. On the
other hand, he promised that I should be liberated and allowed to return
safely, if his instructions were rigidly obeyed.”

“Did you say anything to him except to protest against the outrage?”

“No. He wouldn’t permit it, and the interview lasted only a few moments.
I saw plainly that I had no alternative but to obey, however, and I
resolved to take the rascal on his word. I directed Hazen and Clara to
obey the scoundrel, therefore, and to take no steps for a few days, at
least.”

“I infer that they did so, since the outrage was not published.”

“Exactly. That was the reason.”

“You then went with the gang?”

“Yes. I had no alternative. Hazen was ordered to drive on with Miss
Langham, and the gang waited until my car had disappeared. I then was
commanded to get into the other, which I did, taking a seat between two
of the knaves in the tonneau.”

“Were there only three in the gang?”

“There was one other, the man who was driving the car.”

“Did he also wear a beard?”

“Yes.”

“All undoubtedly were in disguise,” said Nick.

“Sure thing,” Chick added. “Four bearded men in a bunch is very
suggestive.”

“Continue. What followed, Mr. Clayton?”

“I then was blindfolded, but not bound nor gagged, though I was
threatened with death if I made any disturbance. I decided to take my
medicine quietly, and I so informed the rascals.”

“Otherwise you might have been roughly handled.”

“I inferred so. Ten minutes later, after a rapid ride in directions I
could not possibly determine, I arrived at a house and I was guided to a
room on the second floor. I have not the slightest idea where the house
is located, for I was completely lost by the several turns the car had
taken.”

“That was done in order to blind you.”

“No doubt.”

“What then occurred?”

“Then began the extraordinary part of the outrage,” said Clayton, with
an expressive shrug of his shoulders. “The bandage was removed from my
eyes. I found myself in quite a large room, the four walls of which were
entirely hung with thick black cloth. Not a window or door, not a
picture, not so much as a square inch of the wall paper, were visible.”

“By Jove, that was strange, indeed,” Chick remarked.

“Even the chandelier, pendant from a perfectly plain, plastered ceiling,
also was covered with the same somber cloth. It was like opening one’s
eyes in a chamber of horrors, or one draped in deepest mourning.”

Nick Carter smiled.

“The design of your abductors is obvious, Clayton,” said he.

“Do you think so?”

“I certainly do,” Nick nodded. “All that was done to prevent your seeing
anything by which you subsequently could positively identify the room.”

“Well, well, that may be true, Nick, though I then was so affected by
the mystery that that explanation did not occur to me,” said Clayton.
“Nor, in fact, have I since thought of it.”

“What else did the room contain?” Nick inquired.

“Only two common wooden chairs and a narrow bed, the linen and blankets
of which were perfectly plain.”

“Was the floor bare?”

“Yes. The appearance of it, however, indicated that a carpet had
recently been removed.”

“Additional evidence that I am right,” said Nick, smiling again. “The
rascals took care that you should see absolutely nothing by which you
could identify the place. Was the room lighted with electricity, or
gas?”

“Gas. One jet of the chandelier was burning.”

“What followed?”

“Only three of the scoundrels accompanied me to the room. I did not
again see the fourth man until the evening of the third day of my
captivity.”

“Well, what occurred?” Nick inquired.

“The three men then wore black masks,” Clayton continued. “I was ordered
to remove all of my clothing except my undergarments. I did so under
protest, of course, and all of my discarded garments were taken from the
room by one of the rascals, who passed out between two overlapping
draperies and through a concealed door. He presently returned with a
woolen bath robe, which I was told to put on.”

“And then?”

“A strong cord then was tied around my ankles, with about a foot of
slack between them, which allowed me to hobble slowly, but effectually
prevented me from flight, or attempting to do anything desperate. I then
was invited to make myself at home, and told to be patient until I was
liberated.”

“By Jove, that was a strange experience,” said Chick. “What do you make
of it, Nick?”

“Wait till I have heard the entire story,” Nick replied. “Were you left
alone in the room, Mr. Clayton?”

“Not for a moment, Nick, during all the time I was there,” said Clayton.
“Two of the masked men withdrew. The third took one of the chairs and
remained to guard and watch me. He was relieved by another about six
o’clock the following morning, and the third relieved him about noon.
This was repeated for three days and nights. Not once did I see either
of them unmasked.”

“Did they talk with you?”

“Part of the time, but only on ordinary topics. They would not discuss
the outrage in any respect, nor permit me to question them. On the
morning following my abduction, however, I was given a pen and paper and
ordered to write to Clara Langham, stating that I was well and
comfortable, and that she and Hazen must not deviate from the
instructions given them. I was told to add that my absence would not
exceed three days. I afterward learned that the letter was mailed one
hour later in New York.”

“It was dropped in town, Clayton, so that your whereabouts should not be
indicated by the postmark,” said Nick.

“I inferred so, of course.”

“Were you well fed and properly treated, aside from your confinement?”

“Yes. I could not reasonably find fault. I was presented with the
morning and evening newspapers, also with several magazines, and was
permitted to read at will.”

“I see.”

“Not once, however, did I pass beyond those dismal black curtains, or
get so much as a glimpse at anything outside of that somber room,”
Clayton added, with some feeling. “Not once was I without the gloomy
companionship of a masked man in one of the chairs. I saw only three of
them, as I have said, but I was under frequent scrutiny of another, I am
sure, whose evil eyes were watching me through some part of the somber
draperies.”

“Did you hear him, that you feel so sure of it?” Nick questioned.

“No.” Clayton quickly shook his head. “I did not hear him, Nick, or see
him, not once, but I frequently felt that some one was stealthily
watching me.”

“And that continued for three days?”

“Yes. In the evening of the third day, Nick, my clothing was returned to
me and I was told to dress. I then was blindfolded and guided from the
house. Then followed another ride in the touring car, under the same
conditions as before, and I was taken to a lonely road in an outskirt of
Fordham.”

“And then?”

“I then was directed to follow the road for a quarter mile, when I would
reach a trolley line into town,” Clayton said, in conclusion. “The four
men then rode rapidly away, and one hour later I arrived at the
Westgate, much to the relief of Miss Langham and my chauffeur, who were
on the verge of reporting my abduction to the police. That’s the whole
story, Nick. Now, as Chick asked, what do you make of it?”

Nick laid aside his napkin. The dinner had been progressing during
Clayton’s recital, and coffee and cigars were in order.

“Well, I hardly know what to say,” Nick replied. “Have you notified the
police, or taken any steps to identify your abductors?”

“I have not,” said Clayton. “They told me that any efforts along that
line would be futile. I noticed the number on their touring car, but
upon looking it up I found no such number. They had a doctored number
plate.”

“Obviously, Clayton, they took every precaution, not only to hide their
identity, but also to prevent you from identifying the house in which
you were confined, in event of subsequent suspicions,” said Nick. “That
they apprehended subsequent suspicion, moreover, shows plainly that they
were paving the way for the execution of some later design.”

“That does seem reasonable. I have not thought of that.”

“Has anything since occurred that might have a bearing on the matter?”

“I know of nothing, Nick.”

“Everything in the hotel is all right, so far as you know?”

“Yes, indeed. Things could not be better.”

“I asked only because your abductors wanted to detain you from the hotel
for a short time, or so one of them said.”

“Very true. But there is nothing wrong here. I am sure of that.”

“You have told me, then, all that you know about the affair, and you are
without any suspicion concerning it?”

“Exactly. I have told you all, Nick, and am completely in the dark,”
Clayton earnestly declared.

Nick knocked the ashes from his cigar and prepared to rise from the
table.

“I have only this to say,” he replied, more impressively: “Be on your
guard. Men never go to so much trouble, nor take such chances, Clayton,
unless they have some definite and probably felonious design in view.”

“That’s true, Nick,” Chick put in.

“There certainly is something in the wind,” Nick added. “It is
impossible to predict what it is, or when it will occur, but it is safe
to say it relates to something with which you are identified. Otherwise,
Clayton, you would never have met with such an experience. I can only
warn you to be vigilant and constantly on your guard. A bomb may burst
when it is least expected.”

“That’s right, too,” Chick declared, as they arose from the table. “No
man, Nick, could say more.”

Mr. Chester Clayton thanked the detective for his advice and promised to
be governed by it.

Precisely one week later, at eleven o’clock in the morning, Nick
Carter’s prediction was fulfilled.

A message from Clayton, addressed to Nick, and received in his library,
called the detective to the Hotel Westgate.

It contained only half a dozen words:

“Come quickly. The bomb has burst.”




CHAPTER II.

AN AMAZING ROBBERY.


Nick Carter responded immediately to Clayton’s urgent message. It was
half past eleven when he entered the magnificent new Westgate, and
almost the first person he saw in the spacious and elaborately designed
rotunda and main office was one of the house detectives, Nat Webber,
with whom he was well acquainted.

Webber saw him entering and hurried to meet him.

“I am looking for Mr. Clayton,” said Nick. “Where will I find him?”

“He is with Mademoiselle Falloni, in her suite on the fourth floor,”
said Webber, with his face reflecting no end of conflicting sentiments.
“She’s up in the air a mile. So is Madame Escobar, who has the adjoining
suite. Clayton has it all over both of them, however, for he’s in the
air out of sight. It’s my opinion, Carter, that he has suddenly gone
daffy, as mad as a March hare, or any old jack rabbit. There can be
nothing else to it.”

“What do you mean?” Nick demanded. “What has occurred here?”

“I’ll tell you what I know,” said Webber. “If you can tell me what it
means, Nick, you’ll be going some. About half past ten--stop a bit. Come
here and let me show you. Do you see that door?”

He drew Nick toward the office inclosure while speaking and pointed to a
door leading out of it to the right.

“Yes, certainly,” said Nick.

“That’s the door to Clayton’s private office,” said Webber. “There is an
opposite door which opens into a corridor leading to one of the
stairways, the ladies’ elevator, and the main dining room.”

“Well?”

“At half past ten,” Webber resumed; “Clayton was seen to leave the
office inclosure and enter his private office. He closed the door, as he
habitually does, denoting that he does not wish to be intruded upon. The
clerks never interrupt him at such times except on very important
business. Those are his instructions.”

“Well?” Nick repeated.

“About five minutes later Clayton came from the corridor and spoke to
the head clerk, Robert Vernon, over the counter, directing the clerk to
hand Mademoiselle Falloni’s jewel casket from the vault, remarking that
she wanted them in her suite and that he would take the casket up to
her.”

“Is that so?” Nick muttered, brows knitting.

There was no need for Webber to tell him of the tremendous value of
Mademoiselle Falloni’s wonderful jewels. The world-famous prima donna,
then singing _Cleopatra_ with the International Grand Opera Company, had
created a sensation and broken all records with her dazzling display of
gems and jewels in her portrayal of Egypt’s ill-starred queen.

The precautions to preclude robbery, moreover, would have seemed amply
adequate to protect her. Three special detectives occupied her limousine
during its run to and from the opera house. They guarded her dressing
room between the acts. They watched her constantly when on the stage.
From the moment her jewel casket was taken from the vault in the
Westgate, in fact, until it was safely returned to it after each
performance, these three trusty guardians never once lost sight of it.

Not less careful of her own costly jewels, which were deposited in the
Westgate vault when not in use on the stage, was Madame Escobar, the
celebrated Swedish contralto, to whom Detective Webber also had
referred.

Half a million of money, in fact, was a conservative estimate of the
value of both superb collections, though that of Mademoiselle Falloni
greatly exceeded the other.

“Continue,” said Nick, gazing steadily at Webber. “Tell me the whole
business.”

“That won’t take long,” returned the detective. “After five more
minutes, Nick, Clayton again appeared at the office inclosure and asked
for Madame Escobar’s jewel case. He remarked to Vernon that the two
singers wanted to compare some of their diamonds, and that both caskets
would presently be returned. Vernon did not for a moment suspect
anything wrong. Who on earth, as a matter of fact, would have suspected
Clayton of anything crooked? Vernon brought the jewel case from the
vault and Clayton departed with it.”

“And then?”

“He came out of his private office a few minutes later, entering the
clerks’ inclosure.”

“You mean through the door between the two offices?”

“Yes, certainly.”

“But when he came after the jeweled caskets, or the first one, at least,
he came from the other door, and through the corridor.”

“Exactly.”

“What followed?”

“Vernon asked, when Clayton entered the inclosure, if it would not be
wise to have me keep an eye on Mademoiselle Falloni’s suite,” said
Webber. “Clayton asked him for what reason. I was standing near enough
to hear both. Vernon replied that something might happen to the two
jewel caskets, since he, meaning Clayton, had left the women alone with
them.”

“What did Clayton say to that?” Nick inquired.

“Say to it?” Webber echoed. “He asked Vernon to explain, which he did,
and Clayton then staggered all hearers, myself included, by declaring
that he had not been out of his private office for nearly half an hour.
Great guns, what a crust! Could you beat it? Could you beat it, Nick?
The man has gone daffy, clean off his perch. He----”

“One moment, Webber,” said Nick, interrupting. “Where were you when
Clayton came after the jewel cases?”

“Right here in the office.”

“Did you see him?”

“See him--certainly, Nick, I saw him.”

“Are you sure it was he, absolutely sure?”

“Rats!” Webber blurted derisively. “Sure of it? That’s a fat question.
Do you think I’ve been hanging around here for six months and don’t know
Chester Clayton by sight? I know it was he, Nick. I would stake my life
on it. Here’s Vernon. Ask him.”

Nick turned to the head clerk, who had been listening over the marble
counter, within a few feet of which the detectives were standing.

“What do you say, Mr. Vernon?” he inquired.

“I can speak as emphatically as Mr. Webber,” was the reply. “I know
positively that Mr. Clayton took both jewel cases from me.”

“You would not admit, then, that you could be mistaken?”

“Impossible--utterly impossible!” Vernon forcibly declared. “Why, Mr.
Carter, he stood as near to me as you are at this moment. He is not a
man who could be successfully impersonated by another.”

“Certainly not,” put in Webber flatly.

“His smooth-shaved face could not be duplicated,” added Vernon. “The man
was Clayton, with Clayton’s features, eyes, voice, and manner of
speaking. Furthermore, an impersonator, if that is conceivable, could
not have had on Clayton’s clothing. I would have detected any change
since morning. I noticed his suit, his navy-blue necktie, and his
carbuncle scarfpin, when I gave him Mademoiselle Falloni’s jewel casket
over the counter. Mistake--that’s utterly absurd, out of the question.”

Nick did not argue the point.

“How large is the casket?” he inquired.

“About a foot long and eight inches square on the ends,” said Vernon.
“It is made of aluminum and it has two combination locks.”

“And Madame Escobar’s?”

“That is a leather-covered case, about half as large.”

“Both of these thefts, then, if such they are, took place in about
twenty minutes?” said Nick inquiringly.

“Just about that, Mr. Carter,” Vernon nodded.

“What did Clayton say, or do, when informed of the circumstances?”

“He said very little, except to repeatedly assert that he had not been
out of his private office,” said Vernon. “He appeared nonplused,
completely staggered for a few moments, and then he suddenly ran through
his private office and out into the adjoining corridor, where he began
searching in all directions for a man who had been with him all the
while in his private office--or so he said,” Vernon added significantly.

“Well, well, if that man can be found, he will corroborate Clayton and
settle the----”

“But he cannot be found, Nick,” Webber put in forcibly. “Clayton cannot
even recall his name. No man inquired for him at the desk. No man was
seen going to the door of his private office. No man was seen to leave
it. The elevator boy in that corridor is equally positive, on the
contrary, that he saw Clayton twice on the stairs. Others saw him also,
and it’s absurd to suppose all are mistaken.”

“You speak as if thoroughly convinced, Webber, that Mr. Clayton has
stolen both jewel cases; that he has suddenly turned from an upright and
honorable man and become a criminal,” Nick said, more forcibly.

“No, no, I don’t mean exactly that,” Webber quickly protested. “But the
circumstances, Nick, certainly speak for themselves. What I really think
is that Clayton has lost his mind; that his brain is turned by overwork,
anxiety, and the thought of having property of such extraordinary value
in the hotel vault. I think he removed the jewel cases in a state of
mental aberration, from which he has not yet recovered. I don’t think
he now realizes that he did so, or knows what he has done with them.”

“Well, that is a more considerate view of the matter, at least,” Nick
replied incredulously. “Did you overhear any conversation in the private
office, Mr. Vernon, during the time Clayton claims to have been there?”

“I did not, Mr. Carter.”

“Could you ordinarily have heard it? Are voices audible to persons in
the outer office when the door of the private office is closed?”

“Not unless they are raised considerably above an ordinary tone,” said
Vernon. “One must speak quite loud to be heard outside.”

“Where is Clayton now?” Nick inquired.

“With Mademoiselle Falloni,” said the clerk. “He rushed up to her suite
after his vain search for the visitor he claims to have had, and almost
immediately he sent down the message I telephoned to you. He has not
since been down here.”

“Call up my house again, Mr. Vernon,” Nick abruptly directed. “Tell
whoever answers you that I want Chick and Patsy Garvan to come here
immediately. Tell them to wait here for me, if they arrive before I
return. Get a hall boy. I will go up to Mademoiselle Falloni’s suite at
once.”

“Front!” shouted the clerk.

“The bomb has burst, indeed,” thought Nick, as he hastened toward the
elevator.




CHAPTER III.

THE WOMAN WHO FAINTED.


The incidents depicted had transpired quickly. Only about half an hour
had passed since the extraordinary crime was discovered, assuming it to
have been a crime, rather than the irresponsible act of a man mentally
unbalanced, as Detective Webber suspected.

Nick Carter did not have any faith in that theory, however, though he
deferred forming any definite theory of his own until he had looked a
little deeper into the circumstances. The startling news had spread
through the house by that time, as appeared in the numerous guests who
had gathered in the corridors, engaged in earnest discussions of the
case, and observed by the detective while the elevator sped up to the
fourth floor.

Nick was promptly admitted to the magnificent suite occupied by
Mademoiselle Falloni and her two maids, and the scene in her apartments
was about what he was expecting.

He found Mademoiselle Falloni completely prostrated by her loss. She was
lying faint and pale on a luxurious couch in the parlor, in the care of
her maids and a physician living in the house.

Madame Escobar, who had been called into the suite, was nearly as deeply
distressed, but she had greater command of her feelings. She was in
tears in an armchair.

Mr. Clayton, whom Nick had not seen since their dinner of a week before,
now appeared to have gained his composure, and evidently was remaining
there to do what he could to calm and encourage the two celebrated
vocalists, both of whom had been guests of the hotel during the previous
month of the opera season.

The only other person present was a stately, graceful girl in the
twenties, as beautiful as the ideal of an old master. She was very
pale, however, with such manifest anxiety for Clayton that Nick
immediately identified her as Clara Langham, the young lady to whom he
was engaged.

“Ah, here is Mr. Carter, now,” cried Clayton, hastening to greet the
detective. “We have been waiting for you, Nick. I have been trying to
calm the ladies, and have succeeded only by predicting the speedy
recovery of their jewels through your prompt work in this terrible case.
Let me introduce you and tell you about it, that no time may be lost.”

“I already am informed of most of the known circumstances,” Nick
replied, shaking hands with him. “Detective Webber and Mr. Vernon have
told me. Time, as you say, may be of value.”

Clayton hastened to introduce the three ladies. The two victims of the
crime brightened up perceptibly upon seeing the famous detective, though
still with irrepressible sobs Mademoiselle Falloni begged him to restore
her lost treasures, which Nick assured her that he would leave no stone
unturned to do.

Miss Langham greeted him more calmly, saying, with girlish earnestness,
nevertheless:

“I heard of the dreadful circumstances and that Chester was here, so I
came to comfort him. Oh, please, Mr. Carter, don’t think for a moment
that he is guilty of anything wrong. He is incapable of it. This is the
outcome, I am sure of that terrible experience of three months ago, of
which he has told you.”

“I think so, too, Miss Langham,” Nick replied.

“I am so glad to hear you say so. I felt sure of it the moment I heard
of the terrible crime.”

“I will do all that is possible, Miss Langham, I assure you.”

Clayton then introduced the physician.

“Doctor David Guelpa,” said he. “Shake hands with Mr. Carter, doctor. He
is the Hungarian specialist, Nick, who has quarters in Fifth Avenue.
Luckily he was in his suite on this floor, however, when Mademoiselle
Falloni was informed of the robbery. For she fainted dead away, and
since has been in hysterics. I sent for Doctor Guelpa, and he came
immediately.”

“I am pleased to know you, Mr. Carter, very pleased,” said the
physician, while they shook hands. “I long have known you by name. Very
pleased, sir, I am sure.”

Nick bowed and responded in conventional terms, at the same time viewing
the Hungarian specialist a bit curiously.

Doctor Guelpa was a man of medium build and apparently about forty years
old. He looked like a foreigner. His complexion was medium, also, and
his head was crowned with a bushy growth of reddish-brown hair, while
his lower features were covered with a mustache and a profuse crinkly
beard of the same obtrusive hue.

He wore spectacles with tortoise-shell rims and bows, the lenses of
which were unusually thick, and he blinked frequently in a way denoting
near-sightedness and a slight nervous affection. He spoke with a slight
foreign accent, moreover, but was a man of pleasing address and evident
gentility.

Nick turned almost immediately to Clayton, however, saying while he took
a chair:

“That we may lose no time, as you say, we will get right at this matter.
I have sent for two of my assistants. While waiting for them, Clayton,
I wish to hear your side of the story.”

“There is no side of it, Nick,” Clayton earnestly answered. “I am
outside of the whole business, barring the assertions of others that I
figure in the case, I deny that emphatically. I know nothing about the
crime, for such it is, of course.”

“You were in your private office when it was committed?” questioned
Nick, intently regarding him.

“Yes, certainly, as I have stated.”

“In company with----”

“I don’t know with whom,” Clayton interrupted. “I entered my office
about half past ten, intending to write several personal letters. I had
been there only a few moments when the door was opened, that leading
into the hall corridor, and an elderly, well-dressed man stepped in and
asked me to spare him a few minutes upon important business.”

“A stranger?”

“Yes. He mentioned his name, but I did not note it carefully and I
cannot now recall it.”

“What did he want?”

“I asked him of what his business consisted, and he said that he wanted
to confer with me about special hotel rates and accommodations for a
wealthy Persian prince, for whom he stated he was acting as an agent,
and who is coming to America incognito with his wife and a retinue of
servants.”

“You then consented to talk with him?”

“Yes. I suspected nothing, of course, and the proposition appealed to
me,” Clayton explained. “I invited him to be seated, and we entered into
a discussion on the matter. He appeared well informed and questioned me
along various lines bearing upon the subject, at the same time making
numerous entries in a notebook of the terms and other details that I
mentioned.”

“I see.”

“I anticipated that I might obtain a desirable and profitable patron,”
Clayton added. “Our interview lasted about twenty minutes, I should say,
and he then thanked me and departed, stating that he would see me
again.”

“And then?”

“I then returned to my desk and began my letters. Unable to recall the
precise address of the man I was about to write, however, I stepped into
the general office to get it from the bookkeeper. I then learned from
Vernon what had occurred, Nick, and that was the first I knew of it, and
all that I know of it.”

“You attempted, I understand, to find the stranger with whom you had
been talking.”

“Yes, naturally,” nodded Clayton. “When told so positively that I had
taken the jewel cases, it quickly occurred to me that I might find it
necessary to establish an alibi. The stranger is the only person who can
corroborate my assertions. I rushed out of the office to find him,
therefore, but he had disappeared.”

“That is unfortunate,” said Nick. “Not that I personally doubt your
statements, Clayton, but because his corroboration of them would dispel
misgivings from the minds of others, some quite closely associated with
you.”

“I realize that, Nick, most keenly,” Clayton said gravely.

“It seems utterly incredible to me, nevertheless, that Mr. Clayton has
misrepresented anything, or is capable of such a crime,” Doctor Guelpa
remarked, quite forcibly. “I really will never believe it.”

“Thank you, doctor,” Clayton said quickly, bowing.

“Describe the man with whom you talked, Clayton,” Nick directed.

“He is an ordinary type of man, Nick, apparently about sixty years old.
He has dark hair and a full beard, sprinkled with gray. He is quite tall
and of rather slender build. He talked and appeared like a gentleman.”

“He wore a full beard, did he?”

“Yes.”

“It’s ten to one, then, that he was disguised.”

Doctor Guelpa laughed audibly.

“I hope you don’t imply, Mr. Carter, that one in every ten men that wear
a full beard is in disguise,” said he jestingly. “I have, as you see,
quite a profuse growth of whiskers.”

“Not at all, doctor,” Nick replied, smiling. “Under the circumstances
involved, however, I always distrust bearded men.”

“Yes, yes, to be sure,” nodded the physician. “I appreciate the point,
of course.”

“Can you recall in the stranger, Clayton, as you now remember him, any
characteristic in voice, figure, or manner of speech, resembling that of
either of the masked men whom you encountered three months ago?” Nick
inquired.

“I cannot say that I do, Nick.”

“Well, one fact is obvious,” said the detective. “If you are not
mentally wrong, Clayton, and I see no indications of it, and if your
statements are true, of which I personally have not the slightest doubt,
this crime was committed by a man closely resembling----”

Nick was interrupted by a quick, insistent knock on the hall door.

Mademoiselle Falloni’s maid, who then was standing near by, hastened to
open it.

Madame Escobar uttered a cry, with countenance lighting, and started up
from her chair.

“Courage!” she cried, addressing Mademoiselle Falloni. “Some one brings
news--good news, perhaps! Courage, Helena!”

Instead, however, a stately woman in black swept into the room, a
remarkably handsome woman in the fifties, but whose hair was prematurely
gray, and the gravity of whose refined, almost classical face denoted
that her life had not been one of all sunshine. She was fashionably clad
and in street attire.

Clayton sprang up to meet her, crying impulsively:

“My mother! I did not dream it was you.”

The woman stopped short, gazing at him with wide eyes and an expression
of dread on her white face.

“What is this I hear, Chester?” she cried, as if oblivious to the
presence of others. “Tell me quickly. Tell me quickly, my son! You
suspected of crime, of----”

“No, no; nothing of the kind,” Clayton hurriedly cried, both hands
uplifted. “A crime has been committed, but I know nothing about it. The
criminal was a man so like me that----”

Clayton caught his breath and stopped short.

The woman had reeled as if struck a blow, and every vestige of color had
left her face.

“Like you!” she echoed, gasping. “So like you that--that----”

Doctor Guelpa started toward her.

“Careful, madame!” he cried, with hands outstretched. “Be calm, or you
will----”

His warning came too late.

The woman’s eyes suddenly rolled upward. Her arms dropped lax at each
side. Before any observer could reach her, she fell unconscious upon the
floor, as ghastly as if the hand of death had suddenly claimed her.




CHAPTER IV.

HOW NICK SIZED IT UP.


Nick Carter entered his Madison Avenue residence at four o’clock that
afternoon and hurried into his library, in which Chick Carter and Patsy
Garvan were awaiting him.

Their investigations in the Hotel Westgate had ended abruptly
temporarily some time before. They had been productive of no more than
has appeared. No additional clews were discovered. No trace of the
stolen jewel cases had been found, nor any evidence or testimony
obtained pointing to the identity of the thief, aside from that
involving Chester Clayton, the one most important man in the house, and
the only one, in fact, or a perfect counterfeit of him, could so have
obtained the jewel cases from the hotel vault.

Numerous persons had been found who had seen him in the hotel office and
corridor, nevertheless, or positively testified thereto; but none who
had seen the stranger he described, and on whom alone he could depend to
corroborate his statements and establish his innocence.

As a result of all this, both Mademoiselle Falloni and Madame Escobar
had insisted that Clayton must be arrested, which was reluctantly done
by Detective Webber, despite the objections of Nick Carter and his
refusal to comply with the insistent demands of the famous vocalists.

The mission from which Nick was returning at four o’clock, however,
appeared in his first remark.

“Well, I got him out,” he said, while removing his coat and hat.

“On bail?” Chick tersely questioned.

“Yes. I had to put up some argument, however, and his bondsmen a cool
thirty thousand dollars,” said Nick, laughing a bit grimly. “I promised
Judge Sadler that I would find the real crooks and recover the jewels,
or, rather, I predicted it, and it now is up to us to make good.”

“Make good, chief, is right,” declared Patsy. “I’m on nettles to get at
it, for fair, if I only knew where and how to begin.”

“The way will open,” Nick replied confidently.

“What’s your big idea, chief?”

“This job was done by some one living in the hotel.”

“Do you really think so?”

“I’m sure of it. No outsider could have accomplished it. It was done too
quickly. The entire trick was turned in twenty minutes.”

“That’s right, too,” nodded Patsy.

“Nor could an outsider have got away with both jewel cases, taken
separately, without being seen by some one in the house. The crook is a
guest in the hotel, so are probably his confederates.”

“Do you think the stranger who talked with Clayton had a hand in the
job?” Chick asked.

“Undoubtedly. His part was to detain Clayton in his private office until
the rascal who impersonated Clayton could turn the trick.”

“But, by Jove, it seems incredible that Clayton could have been
impersonated,” Chick said doubtfully. “It’s not easy to counterfeit a
smooth-shaved man of his type. Especially under such circumstances. He
got by at least a dozen persons who are well acquainted with Clayton.
Besides, Vernon noticed his garments, his necktie, and his carbuncle
pin. By Jove, it seems incredible.”

Nick emphasized his reply by thumping his desk with his knuckles.

“Clayton either is guilty, or he is not,” said he. “I feel sure he is
not. If I am right, and I’m going to bank the limit on it, he was
impersonated by some one. You must admit that.”

“Certainly,” Chick allowed. “That goes without saying.”

“It is confirmed, moreover, by what occurred three months ago.”

“Clayton’s abduction?”

“Yes.”

“How do you now size it up?”

“It’s as plain as twice two,” said Nick. “That job was pulled off only
to pave the way for this one. Clayton was abducted to be studied, that
his voice, manner, facial expressions, every outside detail of him, in
fact, might be perfectly imitated. You remember, Chick, that he sensed
the frequent and stealthy espionage of some person whom he did not see.”

“Yes, indeed, I remember.”

“That unknown spy, take it from me, was the crook who to-day
impersonated Clayton,” Nick added.

“Well, possibly.”

“Bear in mind, too, that Clayton was deprived of his outside clothing
during the entire three days of his mysterious captivity. His pin was
duplicated in the meantime, and a suit of clothing precisely matching
his was obtained. I learned, when I questioned him privately after his
mother was revived and the circumstances explained to her, that he
to-day had on the very suit he wore at the time of his abduction.”

“By Jove, that is quite significant,” Chick admitted.

“Gee whiz! it’s more than that, Chick,” cried Patsy. “It’s almost
convincing.”

“That’s precisely what it is, Patsy,” said Nick. “Since then, no doubt,
the rascals have obtained other suits like those worn by Clayton, rather
than depend upon his wearing that particular one at the time when it was
necessary to commit the robbery. He probably wore it to-day by chance.
The coincidence, nevertheless, is no less significant on that account.”

“Not an atom less, chief, surely.”

“Do you think, then, that they had this jewel robbery in view when they
abducted Clayton?” Chick asked.

“I certainly do,” Nick replied. “Mademoiselle Falloni’s jewels have a
world-wide reputation. They have been the sensation of Europe. She
invariably wears them when singing _Cleopatra_. Her engagement in New
York at this time was announced months ago, also the fact that a suite
in the Westgate had been retained for her. All of these details were
literally handed to the crooks by the newspapers, enabling them to
definitely plan this robbery.”

“Well, all that does seem quite reasonable,” Chick nodded.

“Let’s go a step farther, then,” Nick continued. “Having thus paved the
way for the crime, what was the most natural step for the crooks to have
taken, or at least the one who was to impersonate Clayton?”

“You say.”

“Obviously, Chick, it would have been to take quarters in the hotel,
seeking apartments convenient for the job and pretending to be a
reputable person. Not only could Clayton’s daily habits in the house
then be observed, but suspicion after the crime would also be averted.”

“Why so?”

“Because old residents in a hotel are seldom suspected under such
circumstances. Recent guests are the ones who incur distrust.”

“That also is true, Nick.”

“Furthermore, no doubt, the crooks have reasoned that no connection
would be suspected between this crime and the abduction episodes of more
than three months ago.”

“Nor would it have been, Nick, if Clayton had not mentioned the strange
circumstances to us.”

“Possibly not. Nothing definite, at all events, would have been deduced
from them,” said Nick.

“Gee! it strikes me, chief, that we ought to derive some advantage from
all this,” said Patsy.

“I think that we can.”

“What’s your scheme?”

“I want you, Patsy, to return to the Westgate in disguise,” said Nick.
“Get next to Vernon, the head clerk, and confide your identity to him.”

“And then?”

“Then learn from him what persons now in the house have been permanent
guests for the past three months, or since a week or two earlier, having
arrived there about the time of Clayton’s abduction.”

“I see the point, chief,” Patsy quickly nodded.

“There probably are not many who have been there precisely that length
of time, and the books will readily supply the information. Get a list
of them from Vernon, and then proceed to look them up on the quiet. Sift
out who cannot be reasonably suspected. Well-known persons, those of
recognized integrity, any whose apartments are badly suited for such a
job--there are many ways by which you can eliminate those not reasonably
to be distrusted.”

“I’ve got you, chief, dead to rights.”

“We may discover by this eliminating process some who seriously warrant
suspicion,” Nick added. “You then may go a step farther, Patsy, and see
what you can learn about them.”

“Trust me for that, chief. I’ll get all that’s coming to me,” declared
Patsy confidently.

“You may report in person, or by telephone.”

“That will depend on what’s doing. May I act on my own judgment?”

“If sure you are right.”

“That’s good enough for me, chief. Shall I leave at once?”

“Presently.”

“By Jove, there’s one point, Nick, that I cannot get over,” insisted
Chick, who had been deep in thought for several moments. “It won’t run,
grapple it how I will.”

“What point is that, Chick?” Nick inquired.

“The extraordinary likeness of the thief and Clayton. I know of no man,
not excluding yourself, who is so clever in the art of making up as to
counterfeit a smooth-shaved, clean-cut face like that of Chester
Clayton. That one point, which is inconsistent with the theory you have
formed, is still in my crop. I can’t swallow it.”

“I admit the difficulty,” said Nick, smiling a bit oddly. “I think
there is one person, however, who could enlighten us a little on that
point, if so inclined.”

“Whom do you mean?”

“Clayton’s mother--Mrs. Julia Clayton.”

“Why do you think so?”

“For two reasons,” said Nick. “First, because of something she said when
she entered Mademoiselle Falloni’s suite immediately after learning
about the robbery. I already have told you the circumstances.”

“But not what she said, Nick.”

“In reply to an assertion by Clayton that the robbery had been committed
by some man so like him as to escape detection, she cried with a gasp,
catching up only two words--‘like you! So like you that--that’--and
there she collapsed, Chick, unable to finish the response she had in
mind, and down she crashed upon the floor in a dead faint.”

“And you deduce from that?” Chick questioned.

“Merely that Mrs. Julia Clayton knows of some man who bears a very close
likeness to her son.”

“By Jove, there may be something in that.”

“It listens good to me, all right,” put in Patsy.

“But what did she say, Nick, when she revived?”

“That is where my second reason comes in,” said Nick. “She did not
volunteer to say anything about it, nor to explain her sudden collapse.
She listened to Clayton’s statement of the circumstances, and appeared
to feel relieved, but not a word of explanation came from her.”

“That was a bit strange, indeed.”

“I think Doctor Guelpa noticed it, also, for I detected a look of
surprise in his eyes.”

“Why didn’t you question Mrs. Clayton?”

“The time was not favorable,” said Nick. “She was not in a mood to have
answered personal questions. I saw that plainly enough, Chick, and I
decided to defer interrogating her. I preferred, moreover to see her
alone.”

“You intend doing so, then?”

“Surely.”

“When?”

“This evening. I shall call at her home on Washington Heights. I think I
may find her alone.”

“In that case----”

“In that case, Chick, she will tell me what she had on her mind this
morning, or I’ll know the reason why,” Nick interrupted, with ominous
emphasis, while he arose from his swivel chair. “Go ahead, Patsy, along
the lines I have directed. We’ll start this ball rolling.”




CHAPTER V.

PATSY STRIKES A SNAG.


Patsy Garvan never did things by halves. Soon after six o’clock that
evening a dapper young man of remarkably inoffensive aspect, barring a
somewhat fierce upward twist of his mustache, which was also remarkable
in that it could be quickly transferred to his vest pocket--soon after
six o’clock this dapper young man entered the Hotel Westgate and
sauntered to the office inclosure.

Though it was a busy hour of the day and the subordinate clerks actively
engaged, Patsy quickly found an opportunity to speak to Vernon, to whom
he said quietly:

“Keep that same expression on your face, old top. A look of surprise
might be seen by some gink whom we least suspect. I’m Garvan, Nick
Carter’s assistant. Invite me into that cubbyhole back of the
bookkeeper’s desk. I want a bit of information from you.”

Vernon instantly grasped the situation. He nodded, while smiling and
shaking hands with Patsy over the counter.

“Step around to the end of the inclosure and I’ll let you in,” he
replied.

Patsy did so and was admitted, taking a chair back of the bookkeeper’s
high desk, which concealed him from view of persons outside of the
inclosure.

“By Jove, Garvan, I never would have recognized you,” Vernon then
laughed quietly. “What can I do for you?”

Patsy told him without stating why he wanted the information, but
cautioned him to say nothing about the matter.

“I can tell you in a very few minutes,” Vernon then said, more gravely.
“The ledger accounts will show just who has been here during the period
you mention, also just when they arrived. I will get it. We will look it
over together.”

“Go ahead,” nodded Patsy.

It required, as Vernon had said, only a few minutes to learn who had
been permanent guests in the hotel since the middle of August. The list
was not a long one. It contained only four names, in fact, though
thousands of transients had been coming and going during the same
interval.

“Permanent guests did not begin to flock in, you see, until the end of
the summer season,” Vernon explained.

“So much the better,” said Patsy. “This simplifies the matter. Two of
these guests are women. What do you know about them?”

“Both are wealthy widows,” said Vernon. “One is seventy years old, and
she has only a maid companion. The other has two daughters, who occupy
the same suite with her. Her rooms are on the ninth floor.”

“Any man living with either of them?”

“No.”

“I can safely drop them then, all right,” thought Patsy. “What about
this man Hanaford, of London?”

“He is an American representative of several big English woolen mills,”
said Vernon. “I have known him for a long time. He is about sixty years
old and is a man of unquestionable integrity.”

“What about the last, then?” questioned Patsy, assured as to the English
agent. “By Jove, he’s the man the chief saw in Mademoiselle Falloni’s
suite this morning--Doctor David Guelpa.”

“Yes, the same,” nodded Vernon. “I am not so sure about him.”

“What do you know about him?”

“Very little. In fact, Garvan, nothing positively reliable. He came here
on the fifth of September, as you see, with a valet named John Draper.”

“Two days after Clayton’s abduction and liberation,” thought Patsy, with
growing suspicion.

“He stated that he was a Hungarian physician, a throat specialist, and
that he might remain indefinitely in New York,” Vernon continued. “He
took an expensive suite, which he since has occupied with his valet, and
a few days later he opened offices in Fifth Avenue, which he still
retains. I don’t know how much business he does, Garvan, but seems to
have plenty of money.”

“Is a social man?”

“Not at all. He is very reserved.”

“What are his office hours? Is he usually here at eleven o’clock in the
morning?” asked Patsy, quick to suspect his presence in the hotel on
that particular morning.

“No, not ordinarily,” said Vernon. “He may have been detained this
morning.”

“It’s very obvious that he was here, all right,” Patsy said dryly. “Does
he have any mail?”

“No, none. I suppose it goes to his office.”

“Does he receive any visitors?”

“Very few. There are two men who occasionally come here to see him.”

“Do you know them?”

“No.”

“Where is his office?”

“Less than ten minutes’ walk from here,” said Vernon. “I will look up
the number for you.”

“Never mind it, Vernon, at present,” said Patsy, detaining him. “On what
floor is Doctor Guelpa’s suite?”

“The fourth.”

“Is it near the stairway, or elevator?”

“It adjoins the side stairway.”

“The one leading down to the corridor adjoining Clayton’s private
office?”

“Yes.”

“H’m, is that so?” Patsy muttered. “This looks very much as if I had hit
a promising trail.”

“You mean----”

“Never mind what I mean, Vernon, and be sure you don’t lisp a word of
this, nor look at Doctor Guelpa as if you had any distrust,” cautioned
Patsy. “Is his suite on the same floor as that of Mademoiselle Falloni?”

“Yes, and in the same corridor.”

“What’s the number?”

Vernon glanced at a schedule on the bookkeeper’s desk and quickly
informed him, Patsy mentally retaining the number.

“Have you seen Doctor Guelpa this evening?” he then inquired.

“Yes. He went in to dinner just before you entered. It’s not time for
him to come out.”

“Did Draper, the valet, come down with him?”

“I’m not sure. I saw Draper in the office just before Doctor Guelpa
showed up, however, and he may be at dinner.”

“I’ll mighty soon find out,” thought Patsy; then, aloud: “That’s all,
Vernon, and I’m vastly obliged. Mum’s the word, mind you.”

“Trust me, Garvan,” nodded the clerk.

Patsy thanked him again and departed. He had decided what course he
would shape. He knew that he could easily learn whether Doctor Guelpa,
or his valet, then was in the physician’s suite.

“If both are absent, by Jove, I’ll have a look at his rooms,” he said to
himself. “They may contain something worth seeing. It may be more than a
coincidence, by gracious, that he was a Charley on the spot this morning
and contrived to be in mademoiselle’s suite so soon after the robbery.

“He may, if my suspicions have feet to stand on, have been out to learn
what had been discovered, or was suspected, and what detectives were to
be employed.

“This looks too good to me to be dropped without looking deeper, and
I’ll snatch this opportunity for a peep at that sawbones’ rooms before
I phone the chief. A throat specialist, eh? I’ll have him by the throat
sooner or later, if I find I’m on the right track.”

Patsy was seeking the fourth floor while indulging in this hopeful train
of thought. He ignored the elevator and quickly mounted the several
stairways, and brought up at the door of Doctor Guelpa’s suite.

It then was half past six, and many of the guests had gone down to
dinner. The long, luxuriously carpeted corridor was quiet and deserted,
lighted only with an incandescent lamp here and there.

Patsy listened at the door for a moment. He could hear no sound from
within, nor detect any evidence of a light.

“It’s a hundred to one the sawbones is out,” he muttered. “I can woolly
eye that valet, all right, if he is here. I’ll pretend I’ve got a bad
throat, trouble in my pipes, and that I want to consult his jags from
Hungary. He’ll be a wise gazabo, all right, if I can’t fool him.”

Patsy was folding his handkerchief in the form of a bandage, which he
then fastened around his neck, turning up his coat collar, much as if
the advice and aid of a physician was really necessary. Putting on a
look of abject misery that would have deceived a clairvoyant, he then
knocked sharply on Doctor Guelpa’s door.

It brought no response from within.

Patsy listened intently, then knocked again, with the same negative
result.

“Gee! that’s good enough for me,” he muttered. “It’s a cinch that both
are out, and it’s me for the inside. I’ll make this door look like
thirty cents.”

Patsy had it unlocked and opened in less than thirty seconds, at all
events, and he then stepped into the entrance hall. A thick portière
across an inner door was closely drawn. The room beyond was in darkness.
Silence reigned in the gloomy suite.

Closing the hall door, Patsy groped his way to the other and found an
electric switch key on the wall near the casing. He turned it and a
flood of light revealed a handsomely furnished parlor, also the partly
open doors of two adjoining bedrooms.

He could see through one of them a broad bed, with other sleeping-room
furnishings, also two large trunks near one of the walls.

A roll-top desk in the parlor caught his eye. The cover was raised, and
he turned in that direction.

“I’ll see what that contains, for a starter,” thought Patsy. “’Twas very
good of him to leave it open. I’ll go through it like a shot through a
gun. The drawers first and then----”

Then, on the contrary, the hurried search he had begun abruptly ended.

The silence was broken by a threatening command from behind him, a voice
so curt and cold that no sane man would have ignored it.

“Cut that! Sit down in the chair, or you’ll drop on the floor in a
condition you’ll not fancy.”

Patsy, kneeling at the desk, one of the drawers of which he had pulled
open, swung round like a flash.

A tall, smoothly shaved, black-eyed man had stepped noiselessly from one
of the bedrooms. There was murder in his eyes, also in his right hand.

It held a revolver, aimed point-blank at the crouching detective.




CHAPTER VI.

UNDER TRUE COLORS.


Patsy Garvan realized on the instant that he had been trapped; that he
was in wrong, as well as right; that the man who now held him up must
have suspected something threatening, and instead of responding to the
knock on the outer door, had quickly extinguished the light in the
parlor and then stepped into the bedroom to await developments.

That, at least, was the way Patsy immediately sized it up.

As quickly, too, recalling the bandage around his neck and his upturned
collar, he resorted to a subterfuge which he thought might serve his
purpose and prevent an exposure of his true identity and designs.

Sharply eying the threatening intruder, therefore, whom he rightly
inferred was the absent physician’s valet, or more properly his
confederate, Patsy coolly answered:

“Don’t get miffed, old chap, and go slow with that gun. It might go off
by chance, you know, and I don’t like the way it’s pointing. You’ve got
me all right, and I’m not fool enough to butt my head against a brick
wall.”

Draper viewed him with a scornful curl of his thin lips.

“Sit in that chair,” he repeated, revolver leveled. “Keep your hands on
its arms, too, or this gun will go off in the direction it’s
pointed--but not by chance.”

“You wouldn’t kill a fellow in cold blood, would you?” asked Patsy,
obeying.

“Yes, or hot blood. It would matter little to me.”

“That would be foolish. You might be executed for murder.”

“Not by a long chalk. A man may protect his property with a gun, or that
of his employer.”

“So I’ve heard,” Patsy dryly allowed.

“What do you want here?”

“Anything I could get worth lifting.”

“You mean that you came here to steal something?”

“Don’t I look it? How else would you size it up?”

“I asked for information.”

“Well, I’m handing you straight goods,” said Patsy. “I’m in hard
sledding and in need of a lift, so I tried to get it without a formal
request. I’m not good at begging. Lemme go this time, will you? I’ll
never butt in here again.”

“I’ll make sure of that,” retorted Draper, with ominous significance.

Then he took a chair some six feet in front of Patsy, coolly sitting
down with the revolver still poised in his hand and ready for instant
use, if necessary.

Patsy realized that he was up against a man of nerve, as well as a man
who would not shrink from bloodshed under the circumstances. That he was
confronted by one of the gang that had abducted Clayton, moreover, and
one of the gang that had stolen the jewel cases that morning, he now had
not a doubt.

There was a brief period of silence, finally broken by Patsy.

“Well, what are you waiting for?” he asked. “Get busy. Do something.”

“I’m doing it.”

“Doing what?”

“Watching you.”

“You’ll not let me go, then?”

“Not so you’ll notice it.”

“But we can’t remain sitting here like two catsup bottles on a shelf,”
growled Patsy, with affected resentment. “Let’s come to some kind of an
understanding. What are you going to do about it?”

“I haven’t decided,” said Draper, constantly alert. “You’re a thief, are
you?”

“That’s what,” Patsy insisted. “I admit it, but it’s only because I’m
out of a job. I’m a high-grade thief, too, as you can see by my looks.”

“Yes, you look it, all right.”

“I’ve got a room here in the house, and I pass for a decent fellow. Call
up the hotel clerk, Vernon, if you doubt it, and he’ll tell you.”

“There isn’t any need of calling him,” Draper sneered. “I’m waiting for
some one else.”

“Who is that?” asked Patsy, pretending ignorance.

“You’ll soon see.”

“When? How soon?”

“When he returns from dinner. He’ll say what must be done with you. He’s
the big finger in this--ah, there he is. Don’t stir, or you’ll be a dead
one.”

Draper’s gaze was fixed more sharply upon his helpless hearer, and his
revolver again was leveled.

Patsy took him on his word and did not stir.

A key had been thrust into the hall door. The door swung open while
Draper was speaking, and Doctor Guelpa strode through the narrow
entrance hall.

He started slightly upon seeing the two motionless men, but if he felt
any great surprise, or any consternation, he did not betray it.

“Who is this fellow, Draper?” he inquired, pausing.

“He says he’s a thief,” replied Draper, without turning an eye from
Patsy.

“You caught him stealing?”

“It looks so.”

“How did it happen?”

“I was lying on my bed before lighting up, and I heard a knock on the
door,” Draper proceeded to explain. “I did not bother to answer it, nor
a second one, and then I heard him sneak in here. He switched on the
light and began to search your desk. Then I held him up--and here he
is.”

Doctor Guelpa came a little nearer and glared down at Patsy.

Patsy gave him stare for stare.

“Keep him covered, Draper,” said the physician, with ominous quietude.
“So you’re a thief, are you?”

“What’s the use of denying it?” asked Patsy. “I’ve told that gink with a
gun that----”

“Never mind what you told him,” Guelpa interrupted, more sharply. “Shoot
him instantly, Draper, if he stirs. We can say we caught him committing
a robbery.”

“That’s what I told him,” grinned Draper.

“Very likely he’s the scamp who stole Falloni’s diamonds,” added Guelpa,
more sharply watching Patsy’s face.

It underwent no change evincing his identity and designs.

“I’d be a fall guy, for fair, if I came in here after getting away with
that batch of jewels,” he said derisively.

“Keep him covered, Draper,” Guelpa repeated. “I’ll find out who he is.”

He came nearer to Patsy, then suddenly seized one side of his mustache
and jerked it from his lip.

Patsy uttered an involuntary cry of pain.

Guelpa gazed at him more sharply, with countenance turning as dark as a
thundercloud, while his teeth met with a sudden, sharp snap.

“Ah, I see!” he exclaimed, half in his throat. “You’re one of those
detectives whom I saw this morning. You’re that fellow Garvan.”

Patsy realized that he had nothing to gain by denying it. He laughed
indifferently and replied:

“I guess that calls the turn, doctor.”

“I know it does, not guess it,” snapped Guelpa. “What do you want here?”

“I wanted to see you.”

“For what?”

“To find out whether you have learned anything more about the robbery,
or whether you have any suspicion.”

“Did Nick Carter send you?”

“No. I came on my own hook.”

“You lie, you whelp,” Guelpa now said harshly. “You act only under his
instructions. There can be only one reason for your coming here and
breaking into my apartments. Carter thinks I know something about the
robbery, or suspects me of having committed it. Isn’t that right?”

“Right for him to suspect you?” asked Patsy, undaunted by the blaze that
had arisen in the physician’s eyes.

“Don’t josh me, Garvan, nor try to evade me,” Guelpa fiercely
threatened. “If you do, I’ll have your infernal life. Tell me--does
Carter think I committed that robbery?”

“How can I tell?” retorted Patsy defiantly. “I’m not a mind reader.”

“You know what he suspects.”

“No, I don’t,” Patsy insisted. “There is one thing I do know, however.”

“What is that?”

“That if he suspects you, Doctor Guelpa, he never so much as mentioned
it to me.”

“Is that true?”

“True as gospel,” said Patsy; and it was.

Doctor Guelpa hesitated for a moment, while Draper put in with an
assurance evincing his relations with the other:

“Don’t swallow that, doc, not on your life. It’s all bunk. He would not
be here, not sneaking in as I caught him, if Carter had not sent him.”

“Do you think so?”

“I think it’s a cinch.”

Doctor Guelpa gazed again at Patsy. His ferocity had vanished, but there
now was a gleam in his eyes that was thrice more threatening. He paused
for a moment with brows darkly knit, then said abruptly:

“You may be right, Draper. Watch the whelp. I’ll fix him.”

“I’ll watch him, all right,” returned Draper, with a warning scowl.

“Gee! I’m in wrong now, for fair,” thought Patsy, thoroughly disgusted
with the turn of the situation. “Fix me, eh? I wonder what’s coming. The
infernal rascal has something up his sleeve. Infernal rascal is right,
too, and I wish I had phoned the chief before butting in here.”

Doctor Guelpa had approached a wall cabinet directly behind Patsy, who
could not then see what the physician was doing.

He had opened the cabinet and taken from it a small vial and graduated
glasses, into which he was pouring a quantity of brown fluid.

Having obtained the desired quantity, he transferred it from the glass,
into a hypodermic syringe, the needle of which he carefully inspected.

Patsy waited a bit apprehensive all the while.

Draper watched him as a cat watches a mouse.

Doctor Guelpa closed the cabinet, then turned again toward Patsy.

“I don’t feel sure you are telling the truth, Garvan,” he said, with
affected uncertainty. “If I did, I would be willing to meet you halfway
and discuss this matter----”

“But I’m giving it to you straight,” Patsy insisted, interrupting. “Nick
doesn’t suspect you.”

“Doesn’t he?”

“He does not, Doctor Guelpa, on the level. He has not even thought of
you in connection with the robbery.”

“Before he does, then, I’ll make sure to get him and put him away. That
can be done--as easily as this.”

Standing with the syringe concealed in one hand, Guelpa suddenly bowed
and threw his arm around Patsy’s head, at the same time thrust the
needle into his neck.

Patsy vented a growl and began to struggle, despite that Draper clapped
the muzzle of the revolver against his breast.

The injection so quickly administered was a powerful one, however, and
acted instantly. It sent a tingling sensation through Patsy’s veins. His
strength deserted him, seeming to fly out through his toes and fingers.
He tried to shout for help, but his tongue was palsied. Only a hollow
gurgle came from his twitching lips.

Then, for it was all over in ten seconds, the light vanished, Guelpa’s
half-smothered imprecations turned to silence, the grasp of merciless
hands no longer could be felt, and Patsy lapsed into the realm of utter
oblivion and was lowered to the floor, as limp and ghastly as if life
had left him.

Doctor Guelpa straightened up and laid aside the syringe, while Draper
thrust the revolver into his pocket.

“Easily done, doc, is right,” he said, grinning. “This was the only way.
The meddlesome rat must have picked up a thread of some kind that led
him here. There was nothing for us but to dispose of him before he could
hand his information to others.”

“He meant it, nevertheless, when he said that Carter does not suspect
me,” Doctor Guelpa declared. “We must get him, then, before he does
suspect. It afterward might be too late.”

“That’s right, too,” Draper agreed quickly. “But can it be done?”

“It must be done,” Guelpa coolly insisted. “I know how and will turn the
trick.”

“And then?”

“This game that we have been playing must be continued. We must throttle
suspicion where we find it, and choke the cursed weed before it can
spread.”

“That’s the stuff, all right.”

“We must maintain our position and good standing here, Draper, or it
will be a case of bolt for us, with the police of the world out to get
us. That won’t do at all, Draper, not at all. We must bluff suspicion
to a standstill, or down it with a club.”

“I’m with you all the while,” said Draper approvingly. “I reckon we can
make good. But what’s to be done with this pup?”

“Pull out the empty trunk,” said Guelpa. “We’ll crowd him into it and
ship him to my office, then lug it into Biddle’s quarters. Ring for a
porter to lend you a hand with the trunk to the elevator. I’ll remark to
him, or to any other inquisitive observer, that it takes too much room
in my suite.”

“That can be done in ten minutes,” nodded Draper, hastening to bring one
of the large trunks from the adjoining room.

Doctor Guelpa smoothed his slightly ruffled coat and bestowed a kick
upon the senseless form of the detective.

“Dead easy,” said he, replying. “Cram him into it and lock it. I’ll get
Scoville on the phone, in the meantime, and have him come round here
with a wagon.”

Patsy Garvan heard none of this.

He was lying with his face upturned in the bright electric light, a face
as ghastly as that of a corpse.




CHAPTER VII.

A LEAF FROM THE PAST.


“Wait here. I may send you instructions.”

These were Nick Carter’s brief instructions to Chick, in fact, when he
left his Madison Avenue residence at seven o’clock that evening, to seek
an interview with the woman who, he suspected, could supply him with a
clew to the identity of Chester Clayton’s double, if not with positive
information concerning him.

Danny Maloney, the detective’s chauffeur, was waiting at the curbing
with his touring car. Nick gave him the necessary directions, resulting
in his alighting half an hour later in front of the attractive home of
Mrs. Julia Clayton, who had fainted so suddenly in Mademoiselle
Falloni’s suite that morning.

“You may wait, Danny,” said Nick. “I don’t think I shall be very long.”

“Long, or short, chief, you’ll find me here,” replied Danny.

Nick strode up the gravel walk to the front door and rang the bell.
Lights in the hall and one in the side rooms denoted that Mrs. Clayton
had returned.

“I hope I may find her alone, or that Chester Clayton is not here,” Nick
said to himself, while waiting. “She seemed averse this morning to
talking of the matter in his presence. That’s one reason why I suspected
that she----”

Nick’s train of thought was broken by a shadow on the figured-glass
panel of the door, which was opened by a pretty servant girl in a white
apron and starched cap.

“I wish to see Mrs. Clayton,” Nick informed her.

“Mrs. Clayton is not at home this evening, sir,” said the girl, a bit
oddly.

“Not at home?”

“No, sir.”

Nick eyed her more sharply.

“Do you mean that she is not here, or not seeing callers?” he inquired
pleasantly.

“Well, sir, she----”

The girl faltered, blushing confusedly, and Nick added kindly:

“I understand. Take my card to her, please, and say that it is very
important that I should see her. I think she will consent.”

The girl obeyed, returning in a very few moments.

“Walk in, sir,” she then said, smiling again. “Mrs. Clayton will see you
in the library. This way, sir.”

Nick was ushered into the attractively furnished room, where he found
Mrs. Julia Clayton still gazing gravely at the card he had sent in.
There was something irresistibly impressive about her, a mingling of
dignity and secret sadness that the detective’s sensitive nature was
quick to appreciate, even while conscious of her remarkable beauty and
womanly grace.

She arose immediately to greet him, extending her hand and saying:

“If I had known it was you, Mr. Carter, my servant would have been told
not to keep you waiting. I have had a most distressing day, and I did
not feel that I could see callers. I assure you, nevertheless, that I am
very glad to see you.”

“Thank you,” Nick replied, bowing.

“For I am deeply indebted to you,” Mrs. Clayton added feelingly.
“Chester telephoned to me after his arrest and liberation on bail. It is
very kind of you to feel such an interest in him, and to use your
influence in his behalf.”

“He is my client,” smiled Nick, taking a chair she placed for him. “I
couldn’t do less than I have done.”

“But in spite of such adverse circumstances, Mr. Carter, and the fact
that so many think him guilty,” she replied. “You are one man in a
hundred. I know that he is innocent, of course, but I don’t know how I
ever can repay you for your faith in him.”

“I will tell you how, Mrs. Clayton,” Nick said, more gravely.

“Tell me how?”

“Yes.”

“What do you mean?

“Let me begin by--pardon!” Nick broke off abruptly. “Will you permit me
to close the door?”

“Yes, of course, if----”

Nick arose when she faltered, quietly closing it, then resumed his seat.

“Servants are not always trustworthy, you know, and discretion is always
advisable,” he remarked. “Now, Mrs. Clayton, I will tell you what I
mean.”

“Well, sir?”

“Let me begin, however, by stating that anything you say to me will be
received in strict and inviolable confidence. Not even to save your son
from conviction and a prison sentence, Mrs. Clayton, would I, without
your permission, reveal any facts that you may disclose. You must be
frank with me, therefore, and tell me what I may find it absolutely
necessary to know, in order to save him.”

Mrs. Clayton had turned very pale and was trembling visibly.

“This is a strange beginning, Mr. Carter,” she replied. “What do you
expect me to disclose?”

“Only the truth, Mrs. Clayton.”

“About what?”

“Your son’s double,” said Nick. “The man who so resembles Chester
Clayton that he could perpetrate the crime committed this morning. Who
is this man? What do you know about him?”

The woman’s fine face hardened perceptibly. She appeared to nerve
herself to meet a threatening situation, to oppose with tooth and nail,
if necessary, the disclosures the detective evidently was determined to
evoke. She drew up a little in her chair, replying more coldly:

“That seems quite impossible, Mr. Carter. What put that into your head?”

“You did,” said Nick quietly.

“I did?”

“Yes.”

“Impossible! When?”

“When you met your son this morning, Mrs. Clayton, and fainted upon
learning that the robbery was committed by a man so like him that--but
you could not say more,” Nick broke off. “You fell to the floor in a
faint.”

“That is true, I admit, Mr. Carter----”

“And you also must admit, Mrs. Clayton, that the circumstances and your
own words permit of no other interpretation,” Nick interrupted, more
impressively.

“But----”

“Oh, I am not going to argue that point with you,” Nick again insisted.
“I am going to make you see the matter just as it stands. Your son’s
reputation and liberty are at stake. So is my reputation as a detective.
Only the truth can save him. Unless you are willing to aid me by
disclosing it, I shall have no alternative but to drop the case entirely
and let others try to pull him out of the fire. If they fail----”

“Wait! You have said enough, Mr. Carter.”

Nick would not have done what he threatened, but he detected in the
changed face of the woman that the threat would prove effective.

For Mrs. Clayton, though ghastly pale and with trembling lips as gray as
ashes, took on a look of sudden determination, that of a woman who felt
herself driven to the wall.

“I will tell you the truth,” she added, more firmly.

“You may safely do so,” Nick now said kindly. “It will go no further.”

“I shrink from it. Mr. Carter, chiefly for the sake of one man.”

“Your son?”

“Yes. I implore you to keep the truth from him, if that will be
possible. I have kept it from him all his life.”

“I will endeavor to do so,” Nick assured her.

“I will tell you with few words, then, my unfortunate history,” Mrs.
Clayton said, more calmly. “I was an English girl and lived in an
outskirt of London. I was married when I was nineteen to a man I did not
love, but who so had involved my father in financial difficulties that I
became his wife in order to save my father from bankruptcy and
dishonor.”

“I can appreciate the sacrifice,” Nick said gravely.

“My father died within a year,” Mrs. Clayton continued. “He and I were
all that were left of our family. Three months later, Mr. Carter, I
became the mother of twin boys.”

“Ah,” said Nick, “that is what I have suspected! Do not distress
yourself by telling me too many details, Mrs. Clayton,” he added
considerately. “The essential facts are all that I want.”

“They may be briefly told, Mr. Carter,” she said, with a grateful look
at him. “My husband was a bad man, much worse than I even dreamed of
when I married him. I discovered his despicable character much too
late.”

“Was he a criminal?”

“Yes.”

“May I know his name?”

“Why not? He has been dead many years. His name was Gideon Margate.”

Nick had heard of him, a notorious English crook, who had died in a
German prison something like ten years before. He considerately
suppressed the fact that he knew of the man, however, and said kindly:

“You are in no degree culpable, Mrs. Clayton, for the mistakes and
misdeeds of your husband. What more can you tell me?”

“Two years after the birth of my children, Mr. Carter, my husband
disappeared, taking with him one of my sons,” she replied. “I never saw
Gideon Margate again.”

“Nor the child?”

“The child was named David. I will not undertake to tell you what I
suffered from losing him, from my inability to trace him, and from my
terrible fear of the life to which he would be bred.”

“That of a criminal?”

“Yes.”

“And your fears came true?”

“Terribly so.”

“Tell me the bare facts?”

“I took my maiden name, Julia Clayton, about a year after my husband
disappeared,” she continued. “I suspected that he was in America, and in
the hope of recovering my other son, we came here, and since have lived
here. I have been in England only once since then, and that was twelve
years ago. I then saw in a London newspaper the picture of a criminal
who had just been sent to prison for five years for burglary.”

“You recognized him?”

“Yes.”

“Your son?”

“David Margate--yes.”

“Did you see him personally, or do anything about it?”

“Neither,” said Mrs. Clayton sadly. “What could I do? The die was cast.
My husband had shaped the boy’s life. That he should become a criminal
after arriving at the age of judgment and discretion showed only too
plainly that he had inherited Gideon Margate’s criminal traits.”

“I agree with you,” said Nick.

“Thank God!” Mrs. Clayton fervently added; “he left me the child who had
inherited my own character. Chester Clayton is above knavery and crime.”

“I agree with you again,” said Nick. “Now, Mrs. Clayton, let’s come to
the points bearing upon his case. Does Chester know anything about his
father and twin brother?”

“No, no, indeed,” she said quickly. “He knows only that his father is
dead. He does not so much as dream that he has a brother. I could not
cloud his life, mar his whole future, perhaps, by acknowledging David
Margate to be my son, when I learned that he was in an English prison.
It would, have been an injustice to Chester Clayton. The sacrifice would
have been too great.”

“That is true,” Nick agreed. “Have you ever seen David Margate or heard
anything concerning him since he was convicted in London?”

“No, I have not.”

“You have no reason to believe that he is in New York, then, aside from
the resemblance of the criminal who committed this jewel robbery.”

“That is my only reason. You now can appreciate why I was overcome and
fainted when told of the circumstances this morning,” said Mrs. Clayton.

“That is perfectly plain,” Nick nodded. “I think, too, that we now have
covered all of the ground that is material at this time. I will be
governed by what you have confided to me, and will do all that I can to
prevent the facts from leaking out. You may depend upon that.”

“I have no words with which to thank you, Mr. Carter.”

“Don’t try,” said Nick, smiling. “Assuming that the criminal in this
case is Chester’s twin brother, and despite that he ran across him and
observed the resemblance that made the crime possible, I think it is
quite probable that he does not suspect the relationship. Your husband
very likely never told him about you and Chester.”

“Do you really think so, Mr. Carter?”

“I do,” said Nick. “Men do not often reveal their own baseness, not even
to a son. I doubt very much that David Margate knows anything about his
early history.”

“I hope so, I am sure, for Chester’s sake.”

“Do you know under what name he was convicted in London?”

“I do not. I cannot recall it.”

“Was it a fictitious name?”

“Yes.”

“I will try to learn something definite about him,” said Nick. “I
appreciate your confidence in me, too, and I will rigidly respect it.
That is all I can say to you this evening about the case, but I will
leave no stone unturned to bring it to a desirable termination,
particularly in so far as you and Chester Clayton are concerned.”

Mrs. Clayton again thanked him feelingly, then remarked:

“I was somewhat surprised late this afternoon by a call from another man
whom I saw in Mademoiselle Falloni’s suite this morning.”

“There was only one other man, except Chester,” said Nick. “You refer to
Doctor Guelpa.”

“Yes.”

“He called here to see you?”

“Yes, about five o’clock.”

“Did he say for what reason?”

“He said that he was riding out this way and thought he would call and
see if I had entirely recovered. He did all he could to revive me this
morning, you know.”

Nick’s brows knit a little closer.

“Yes, I remember,” he replied. “Did he say anything about the crime, or
concerning Clayton?”

“No, nothing of any consequence, Mr. Carter. He mentioned you, however,
just before he left.”

“Mentioned me, eh? What did he say?”

“Only that you were very kind to stand up for Clayton under such
circumstances. He asked, too, whether you had been out here to see me.”

“H’m, is that so?” thought Nick. “I was right, then, in thinking that he
deduced something from this woman’s impulsive words and her sudden
collapse. He suspected that I did, also, and he evidently fears that I
may learn something from her. Where there is cause for fear, there are
grounds for suspicion. He may be the very man, the very hotel guest whom
I----”

Nick ended his shrewd deductions by glancing quickly around the room. He
discovered what he wanted--a telephone on a stand in one corner.

“Before I go, Mrs. Clayton, may I trouble you for a glass of water,” he
requested carelessly.

“Why, yes, certainly,” she replied, rising. “I will get it for you.”

“Thank you.”

Nick watched her sweep gracefully from the room.

Then, quickly stepping to the telephone, he hooded the mouth with his
hand and called up his library. Within half a minute he had Chick on the
wire, but he spoke only these words:

“No time for particulars. Go to the Westgate. Watch Doctor Guelpa.”

The answer came instantly:

“I’ve got you.”

Nick resumed his seat just as Mrs. Clayton was returning through the
hall.

“It will be better, much better, if she never knows,” he said to
himself.




CHAPTER VIII.

NICK WALKS INTO A NET.


It was half past eight that evening when Nick Carter, returning from his
interview with Mrs. Clayton, arrived at his Madison Avenue residence.

A taxicab was waiting at the curbing in front of the house, and Nick was
momentarily surprised when he entered his library. Its only occupant was
the visitor who had come in the taxi.

“Why, good evening, Clayton,” he said genially. “I was not expecting a
call from you so quickly. I am pleased to see you, all the same.”

One thought that had instantly arisen in Nick’s mind, however, in view
of his talk with Mrs. Clayton, was not reflected in his face. The
thought was:

“Which one is this? Chester Clayton--or his crook double?”

Clayton, as he certainly appeared to be, replied without hesitation,
without any observably intent scrutiny of the detective’s face.

“I have a reason for calling, Nick,” said he. “Your butler told me that
you would probably return during the evening, so I requested the
privilege of waiting here.”

“Quite right, Clayton, I’m sure.”

“He could not tell me, however, where you had gone,” Clayton added, in a
way covertly inviting the detective to do so.

Nick did not do so, however, but he was quick to observe the insinuating
remark and draw a natural conclusion, one that he made doubly sure did
not appear in his face.

“Well, that’s not strange, Clayton,” he replied, laughing. “I had no
definite destination when I went out. Besides, I seldom tell my butler
where I am going, unless my mission relates to a case in which my
assistants are employed. Then I usually leave word for them, as I would
have done this evening, had that been the case.”

A momentary gleam, the sinister light of secret relief and satisfaction,
showed like a fleeting flash in the depths of his visitor’s eyes.

“It does not matter in the least, Nick, now that you have returned,” he
said quickly.

“What’s on your mind?” asked Nick, taking a chair. “You said you have a
reason for coming here.”

“So I have,” said Clayton, more earnestly. “I think I have a clew to the
crook who got the jewels.”

“By Jove, is that so?”

“The chance is worth taking.”

“What do you mean? What kind of a clew?” asked Nick, with manifest
interest.

“It came from a woman friend of mine early this evening,” Clayton
proceeded to explain. “She talked with me by telephone. I have not seen
her.”

“Who is she? What is her name?”

“Grace Alcott. She’s an old flame, a girl with whom I have always been
quite friendly. I know her to be reliable.”

“What did she tell you?” Nick inquired.

“She said she had information for me bearing upon the robbery. She
intimated, in fact, that she could put me in a way to nail the crook and
recover the stolen jewels.”

“Well, well, that would be going some,” declared Nick, apparently
becoming more enthusiastic. “Have you any faith in her statements,
Clayton?”

“Enough to send me here, Nick,” was the reply. “One other reason is the
fact that she lives just around the corner from the business quarters of
a guest in the hotel.”

“I see the point. What guest?”

“The physician you met this morning.”

“Doctor Guelpa.”

“Did she mention his name, or hint at him?”

“No, nothing of that kind.”

“Why did you not go to see her, then, instead of coming here?” Nick
inquired.

“For two reasons,” Clayton now explained, more hurriedly. “One, because
you are handling this case and I feared that I might interfere with you
if I butted in and did something of which you were ignorant.”

“I see.”

“Another, because Grace said I had better bring a detective with me, as
he would more quickly appreciate the points she wanted to lay before me,
and that he also would know what should be done.”

“She wanted you to call on her, then?”

“Yes, indeed, as soon as possible,” nodded Clayton. “I grabbed a taxi
and rushed down here, therefore, hoping that you would go with me. I
thought that was the best thing for me to do.”

“I guess it was,” Nick quickly agreed.

“Will you go?”

“Yes, yes, Clayton, by all means,” assented the detective. “There may be
something in this. We cannot afford to leave any stone unturned. The
sooner we go, too, the better.”

“Good enough. My taxi is outside.”

“Come on, then, and we’ll be off. I’ll not even wait to tell my butler
where I am going,” Nick added, with a laugh, as they hurried out of his
office.

Clayton joined with him in the laugh and followed him into the taxicab.
He evidently had given the driver his instructions, for he made no move
to do so. He remarked, as they settled back on the seat and rode away:

“I hope this won’t prove to be a wild-goose chase, Nick, after all.”

“It ought not, surely,” Nick replied. “You say you know the girl to be
reliable?”

“I have always found her so.”

“How old is she?”

“About thirty.”

“Old enough, then, to have sense and judgment.”

“So I think,” nodded Clayton. “That’s why I feel hopeful.”

“She lives back of Doctor Guelpa’s business establishment, you said?”

“Yes, directly back of it, Nick.”

“How long have you known the physician?” Nick questioned, and he
instantly detected the readiness with which his companion took up the
subject.

“Oh, for months, Nick,” was the reply.

“He appears to be all right, doesn’t he?”

“Yes, yes, surely! Otherwise, I would not have him in my hotel.”

“I presume so. It may be, nevertheless, that Miss Alcott has discovered
something about him of a derogatory nature, her home being so near his
business office.”

“Possibly,” Clayton allowed; then, with a furtive glance at Nick’s
inscrutable face: “He appeared all right to you this morning, didn’t
he?”

“Yes, indeed,” Nick declared. “He appeared like a perfect gentleman.”

“You saw no reason to suspect him?”

“Far from it, Clayton.”

“I guess Miss Alcott’s clew, if she really has any, relates to some one
else, or something else,” Clayton now said, with less obvious interest.

“Most likely,” Nick agreed.

“We shall very soon find out.”

“True.”

“Have you formed any other suspicions since I last saw you?”

“No, none whatever,” said Nick. “I still am in the dark.”

Clayton did not add to his inquiries.

It was nine o’clock when the taxicab drew up in front of the house to
which the chauffeur had been directed. He at once was dismissed by
Clayton, who was the first to alight, and he then led the way up the
steps and rang the bell.

It was answered by a well-built, powerful man in evening dress, whose
dark features were only faintly discernible in the dimly lighted hall.

“Good evening, Scoville,” said Clayton. “I think Miss Alcott is
expecting me.”

“Oh, it is you, Mr. Clayton,” was the reply. “Yes, sir, she is. Walk in,
gentlemen, and come this way.”

“The butler, Nick,” Clayton whispered, taking the detective’s arm.

Nick nodded indifferently and allowed himself to be conducted through
the hall.

Scoville turned into the nearest room, a front parlor, the others
following.

“One moment, gentlemen,” said he. “I’ll switch on the light.”

He did so while speaking, and Nick Carter then saw into what sort of a
net he had walked--but entirely voluntarily.

Three men with ready revolvers were confronting him.

Scoville instantly drew another.

Clayton, or Clayton’s double, quickly closed the door through which
they had entered, then turned and said sharply:

“Now, Carter, throw up your hands! If you show fight, you’ll go down and
out on the instant.”

Nick raised his hands and backed against the wall. He appeared to be
greatly surprised and equally resentful.

“What’s the meaning of this, Clayton?” he demanded; and the mention of
the name brought laughs from the others.

They were Draper, Biddle, and Scoville, who had been mentioned by Doctor
Guelpa in his apartments, also a third man who had had a hand in the
robbery, one Joe Gaines.

“Oh, I’m not Clayton, Carter,” was the derisive reply. “I’m the man who
looks like him. I’m the crook who got away with the sparks.”

“Good heavens!” Nick exclaimed, in seemingly increased amazement. “Is it
possible?”

“You bet it’s possible!” cried Guelpa, with a sinister nod. “It’s more
than that; it’s a fact. When I run across a man who looks so near like
me that I can see no difference, I’m the sort of a covey who makes the
most of it. You didn’t suspect Doctor Guelpa, eh? Carter, we’ve put it
all over you. I’m Guelpa.”

“You?” questioned Nick, still as if astonished.

“That’s what, Carter, as sure as you’re a foot high,” the rascal
declared, with an exultant leer. “Come out a little from that wall. Keep
your meat hooks up, mind you, or you’ll have no further use for them.
Either of these fellows would kill you at the first sign of violence. I
shall do so a little later, at all events, so I don’t mind putting you
wise to the whole business.”

“That’s very good of you,” Nick now replied coldly.

“Slip in behind him, Biddle, and get his weapons,” Guelpa commanded.
“Fish out his darbies, also, and snap them on his wrists. Egad! could
one have more satisfaction than in doing a dick with his own bracelets?”

“Not much more, doc!” cried Draper, laughing.

“Dukes behind him, Biddle. I told you I’d get him, Draper,” Guelpa
triumphantly added, while two of the crooks hastened to secure the
detective.

“You made good, all right.”

“He isn’t in my class.”

“Few dicks are, doc, as far as that goes.”

“Why, he told me on the way here that he didn’t suspect me,” cried
Guelpa derisively. “We’ve got him dead to rights, then. He can have
handed nothing to others about me.”

“Surely not.”

“And we’ll make dead sure that he never will. I suppose you wonder,
Carter, what we are doing in this house.”

“Well, not seriously,” said Nick, with mocking indifference.

“It’s back of my business quarters, just as I told you.”

“You told the truth once, then, at least,” Nick said dryly.

“Yes, sure,” cried Guelpa, laughing again. “This makes a good retreat
for us in case of danger. That throat-specialist gag is all phoney, a
colossal bluff. I had to pose in some impressive character. We can slip
from my office into this house, or the reverse, in two shakes of a
lamb’s tail. We’re the bunch who got the sparks, Carter, all right, and
now we’ve got you.”

“Yes, that’s very obvious,” said Nick, coolly taking a chair. “Since you
are so communicative, Guelpa, if that’s your name, suppose you tell me
how you got away with the jewel cases so quickly.”

“Why not?” leered Guelpa, while the others laughed as if they enjoyed
the detective’s blindness. “Scoville was the stranger who held Clayton
in his private office. My room is on the same floor with Clayton’s. I’ve
got garments like his. Never mind how and when I got them.”

“No, it’s not material,” Nick allowed dryly.

“Not at all, Carter, of course. I merely stole down the stairs, clad
like Clayton, and got the first casket. Biddle, disguised as a laundress
and provided with a big, covered basket, relieved me of it in the
corridor, and got away with it in the basket.”

“Ah, I see,” Nick nodded.

“I then got the other and whisked it up to my rooms,” added Guelpa.
“Then I hurried into my own clothing and my Hungarian hair and whiskers,
and I was right on the spot when wanted by lovely Mademoiselle Falloni
when she fainted. Could anything have been easier? Why, it was like
money sent from home.”

“It does appear so, Guelpa, I admit.”

“I wonder you have not thought of it, Carter,” grinned the rascal.

Nick’s eyes took on a more threatening gleam. He now felt sure that this
man did not suspect his relationship with Clayton, or know anything
definite about his early life, as he already had predicted to Mrs.
Clayton.

“Oh, I have thought of it, Guelpa,” he said, a bit curtly. “Don’t think
me quite a lunkhead. I knew the crook had garments and a pin like
Clayton’s. I know also when the scarfpin was duplicated. It was when you
rascals abducted Clayton three months ago.”

Guelpa’s face changed like a flash.

“How did you learn that?” he cried.

“I have methods of my own for obtaining information.”

“You have, eh?”

“And that’s not all I know, Guelpa,” Nick added.

“Is that so?”

“Far from it.”

“Tell me, then, as I told you.”

Guelpa spoke with a scornful sneer, but looks of apprehension had arisen
to the faces of his four confederates.

“Why not, then, as you said?” Nick retorted. “Don’t imagine for a
moment, Guelpa, that you lured me blindly into a net. I knew the instant
I saw you in my office this evening that you were not Chester Clayton.”

“Rot!” cried Guelpa derisively. “If you knew that, why did you walk into
the trap?”

“So as to get a line on your confederates, these fellows,” said Nick
curtly.

“I don’t believe it.”

“I will tell you, then, something that you will believe,” said Nick.

“What is that?”

“That your name is not Guelpa. Your true name is David Margate. You are
an English crook. You were convicted of burglary twelve years ago, and
sent up for five years. You are----”

“Stop!” cried Margate, ghastly white. “How did you learn that? How do
you know----”

“Oh, I know that you rascals will not get away with this job,” Nick
sternly interrupted. “I’ll soon have you landed where----”

Guelpa, or Margate, broke in upon him with a terrible oath.

“You will, eh?” he fiercely added. “You’ll find you are wrong. You are
depending upon that fellow, Garvan, but we’ve got him, also, as we’ve
got you. See for yourself.”

He flung aside the portière that hung across the open door of an
adjoining room, then in darkness.

Plainly visible in the light shed through the doorway, however, sat
Patsy Garvan, bound and gagged and tied to a wooden chair. This was two
hours after he had been transferred from the hotel, and his recovery
from the drug Guelpa had injected.

“And that’s not all,” Guelpa fiercely added. “Spring open that panel,
Biddle. Let him see--let him see for himself!”

Biddle touched a hidden spring in the wainscoted wall, and a panel flew
open.

In the space beyond sat--the two jewel caskets stolen from the Hotel
Westgate that morning.

“We’ve not had time to open them, to whack up the swag,” Guelpa went on,
as if beside himself with fierce and bitter rage. “There will be time
enough for that. We’ve got Garvan and we’ve got you. I’ll send you to
the devil on the spot. I’ll give you a dose that will--oh, perdition,
Scoville, I’ve left it in my suite. I went out in such a hurry that I
forgot it. I must have it. It’s the only thing that will cause death and
defy detection. I must have it. I’ll go and get it. Watch me--watch both
till I return. And remember the signal--the signal! I’ll send both to
the devil. Wait till I return.”

And Doctor Guelpa, after pouring forth these commands with a ferocity
that precluded interruption, turned and rushed like a madman out of the
house.




CHAPTER IX.

THE MAN ON THE BED.


It was more than an hour previous to the episodes last described, when
Chick Carter responded to Nick’s brief instructions from Mrs. Clayton’s
residence, and then set out post-haste for the Hotel Westgate.

He did not know, of course, why Nick had been led to suspect Guelpa, nor
anything about what Patsy had discovered and what had befallen him. That
Nick suspected Guelpa, however, and very seriously, Chick had not a
doubt.

It was not eight o’clock when he approached the huge hotel, and purely
by a stroke of good luck, nearing a side entrance to the house, he
discovered the very man he was seeking.

Doctor Guelpa had just emerged and was hurrying away.

“By Jove, fortune favors me,” thought Chick, with a thrill of
satisfaction. “This is better than I could have hoped. There must be
something in the wind, or he would not be in such a hurry. If he gives
me the slip, however, I’ll eat my hat. I’d give something to know what
Nick has on him.”

Chick knew, however, that he needed only to follow the directions given
him.

With no great difficulty, he shadowed Guelpa to his office in Fifth
Avenue, a walk of about six minutes, and saw him enter the dark rooms,
those on the first floor of a remodeled house.

Much to Chick’s surprise, however, after waiting and watching for
several minutes, no light appeared at either of the windows.

“By gracious, that’s mighty strange,” he said to himself, then concealed
in an opposite doorway. “Is he remaining in there in darkness? What’s
his game, in that case, and why is he--great guns! there he is, now!”

Doctor Guelpa had come hurrying around the near corner, and was
evidently returning to the hotel.

Chick shadowed him again, but not without a quick survey of the opposite
house and the adjoining buildings.

“I’ll swear he did not come out of that house,” he said to himself.
“There is no way of getting to a back entrance from the avenue. There
may be an alley leading in from the side street. Either that, or he went
through the first house around the corner. Later, by Jove, I may
discover which. The game seems to have just broken cover.”

Chick followed Guelpa back to the hotel and saw him enter his suite.

Not content with that, wondering what he might be doing, he crept to the
door and peered through the keyhole.

The aperture, though limited, commanded a view of the parlor and the
bedroom directly beyond it. Both were brightly lighted--and Chick saw
enough to warrant all of the suspicions he had attributed to Nick.

He saw the man within discarding his Guelpa disguise and transforming
himself into a counterfeit of Chester Clayton.

“Thundering guns!” he said to himself. “This does settle it. But what’s
his next move?”

Chick concealed himself to wait and see.

Ten minutes later Guelpa stole down the side stairs and out of the
house. He was just in time to catch a passing taxicab.

Chick reached the side door just in time, moreover, to hear Guelpa shout
his hurried directions to the chauffeur.

“Great Scott!” he muttered, pausing. “To Nick’s residence! Why the
dickens is he going there? By Jove, I have it! He has discovered that
Nick suspects him and he now is out to get him. He reasons that he can
fool the old war horse and get by as Clayton.

“I may be wrong, but I’ll wager that he will get well fooled himself.
It’s now a thousand to one that he went to some house near his office,
probably the one back of it, in order to make arrangements for holding
up the chief. By gracious, that’s good enough for me to take a chance
on. I’ll hike back there and await developments. There would be nothing
in nailing that rascal alone. If I am right, which seems more than
probable, we can get the whole gang by this other course.”

Chick knew, of course, assuming that his theory was correct, that some
little time must elapse before Guelpa could return in company with Nick.
He did not hurry his investigation, therefore.

He returned to Fifth Avenue and had another look at Doctor Guelpa’s
business quarters.

They were in darkness, as before, with no sign of life within.

“I’ll see what I can discover around the corner,” Chick said to himself.
“The rat went out that way, I’ll wager.”

His investigations in that direction took him much longer. He could
find no way of getting to the rear of the house to which Nick was later
brought. It had, as a matter of fact, been boarded up by the rascals.

Chick then went back and picked the lock of Guelpa’s door, entering and
seeking the rear exit.

He then found that it led to the rear door of the other house.

Chick arrived there just in time, moreover, to hear from the back area
the arrival of Nick and Guelpa, both of whose voices he immediately
recognized.

“This does settle it,” he congratulated himself. “I’ll get in there and
hold up the whole gang. If I can get all of them under my guns--well,
there’ll be nothing more to it.”

It took Chick some little time, however, to noiselessly force a rear
basement window.

The scene in the front parlor was in rapid progress all the while.

Chick got in unheard and was stealing up to the adjoining room, just as
Guelpa rushed out of the house.

It was impossible to stop him, but Chick had heard enough to show him
the way.

The four men in the front parlor then were in animated discussion of
what had been said. Thy had no thought of another intruder. The portière
masking the door of the rear room had fallen back into place.

Chick crept into the room from the hall, and he then discovered Patsy
Garvan bound to the chair. He stole nearer and liberated him, then
slipped him one of his revolvers.

Not a word passed between them.

Ten seconds later, however, the portière was flung aside and both
detectives stepped into the room, with revolvers leveled.

“No monkey business, gentlemen!” Chick now said sharply. “The first man
who moves will be a dead one! We’ll shoot to kill!”

The threat was sufficient, or the guns.

Only one of the rascals moved, save to throw up his hands.

Scoville edged nearer the hall door, but stood with his back against it,
a position certainly not inviting suspicion.

“Good work, Chick,” Nick said simply, after the crooks had been
handcuffed and he had been liberated. “It is about what I was
expecting.”

“We’ve landed with both feet,” declared Patsy. “All we now want is the
master crook, the rat who jabbed that needle in my neck.”

“We’ll get him, all right,” said Nick. “Get those jewel cases, Patsy,
and we’ll head for the hotel. You remain here, Chick, and hold up the
rascal if he returns. I’ll have policemen here on the quiet in a very
few moments. I’ll not risk losing the rascal by not following him.”

“I’m with you, chief,” said Patsy.

Three minutes later four policemen entered the house and took the crooks
in charge.

Chick continued to wait for Guelpa.

Nick Carter and Patsy entered the Westgate a few minutes later. The
first man they saw was Clayton, in the office inclosure.

“Good God!” he cried excitedly, seeing the jewel cases. “You’ve got
them, Carter, you’ve got them! When and how----”

Nick checked him with a gesture and placed the cases on the counter.

“Put them in the vault, Vernon, and lock it!” he commanded, turning to
the thunderstruck head clerk. “You come with me, Clayton, and be quick
about it.”

Clayton leaped over the counter and Nick ran to the elevator.

“I’ll show you your double, Clayton, unless I am much mistaken,” said
he, as the car sped up to the fourth floor.

“My double?” gasped Clayton.

“That’s what. A fellow who looks like you. There’s nothing more to it.”

“This way, chief,” Patsy whispered, as they left the car. “I know his
door. Gee whiz! I ought to.”

They arrived at it in a moment.

A light was burning in the suite.

Patsy quietly unlocked the door with his picklock, and the three men
rushed through the parlor and into the bedroom.

An unconscious man was lying on the bed.

“Guelpa himself!” cried Patsy. “By thunder, chief, he has committed
suicide.”

“If he has,” replied Nick, “he will have saved himself a prison term.
Ring for Detective Webber. We’ll give the rascal in his charge.”

“I can’t wait--I can’t wait for that,” cried Clayton, in a frenzy of
joy. “I must telephone to my mother. I must telephone to Mademoiselle
Falloni. The joyous news must not be delayed. I’ll return in a couple of
minutes, Carter. My God! how can I ever repay you?”

“Let him go and spread the news,” laughed Nick, as Patsy turned from the
house telephone. “The crooks are booked to get theirs. As for this
rascal and his--ah, here is Webber now. Look after this scoundrel,
Webber, and put him where he belongs. No, no; don’t ask me to discuss
the case at present. We have made good, all right, and that enough for
now. As for us, Patsy, we’ll compare notes in my library, in company
with Chick.”

THE END.

You will read more of the mysterious David Margate in “The Blue Veil;
or, Nick Carter’s Torn Trail,” which is the title of the long, complete
story you will find in the next issue, No. 158, of the NICK CARTER
STORIES, out September 18th. You will also find an installment of the
corking serial now running, together with several other interesting
articles.


A BAD BOY.

For precocity, irrepressibility, and too often depravity, “Young
America” in these days can hardly be surpassed. Here is a story told me
the other day: A little chap, not eight years old, whose parents live in
one of the fashionable parts of New York, went last week to pay a visit
to his grandmother. While there, in rummaging through his grandmother’s
secretaire, he came across a half dollar, and shortly afterward he was
on his way downstairs to invest his “find.” He expended the whole amount
in candy, and, upon his return, was enjoying it in the privacy of his
room, when his grandmother put in an appearance.

“Why, Robby,” she exclaimed, taking in the situation, “where on earth
did you get all that candy?”

“Bought it,” was the reply.

“But where did you get the money?”

“A gentleman I met in the street gave it to me.”

“Robby, I don’t believe you are telling me the truth,” said the old lady
slowly, looking her grandson in the eyes. “In fact, I am sure you are
telling me a falsehood. A little bird tells me that you are.”

The boy looked at her with a somewhat incredulous expression.

“Now, come, Robby, tell me where you got that money?”

“Why don’t you ask your dickey bird?” was the ready reply of the bad
boy.




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 XVI.

A NIGHT’S WORK.


Patrolman John Hicks, of the Oldham police force, was a fairly vigilant
guardian of the law--in the daytime. But when his turn came to do night
duty, which happened regularly every second week, he always felt drowsy,
no matter how much sleep he took by day to prepare himself for his
nocturnal vigil.

“Which goes to show that night work ain’t the right thing for a man,”
Mr. Hicks was in the habit of complaining to his intimate friend. “It’s
against nature. The daytime was made for man to work in, and the night
for man to sleep in. Even the dumb beasts and the birds close their eyes
at night. When you try to reverse this order of things, Nature
rebels--and you can’t blame her.”

Being anxious to offend Nature as little as possible, Officer Hicks had
cultivated the habit of going to sleep standing up. So proficient had he
become in this difficult art that he could lean against a lamp-post and
slumber as soundly as if he were in his own comfortable bed at home.

The night which Hawley had selected for his photographic exposé of
police conditions in Oldham happened to be one of the nights on which
Patrolman Hicks was on duty.

He had selected the most comfortable lamp-post on his beat, and was
propped against it, enjoying a deep sleep, when a big, black touring
car, containing three men, came along.

The automobile was moving almost noiselessly, but even if the man at the
wheel had honked his horn as it drew near, it wouldn’t have caused any
discomfort to Officer Hicks. He was too sound a sleeper to be bothered
by the ordinary sounds of street traffic.

In his somnolent moments, Mr. Hicks did not present a very picturesque
appearance. Only a slender man can lean against a lamp-post and look
graceful; and Officer Hicks was almost as fat as Chief of Police
Hodgins. Moreover, like the latter, he had the habit of sleeping with
his mouth partly open.

But in spite of its lack of picturesqueness, his appearance caused
great delight to the three men in the black touring car.

That vehicle came to a stop a few feet away from the lamp-post, and one
of the men leaned over the side of the tonneau, and pointed a camera
toward the slumbering bluecoat.

Then there came a vivid flash of light, a dull, booming sound, and a
chuckle of triumph from the man with the camera.

Possibly the dull, booming sound and the chuckle of the man would not
have aroused Patrolman Hicks by themselves, but the vivid flash of light
hitting him squarely on the eyelids brought him to his senses in an
instant.

Springing to an erect position, he stared in ludicrous astonishment at
the automobile in front of him.

He was about to step into the roadway and ask the three men what had
happened, but before he could carry out his intention the automobile had
started off at great speed.

“Oh, well,” Officer Hicks muttered to himself, “I guess it was nothing
serious. Probably a fuse blew out, or something of that sort. Them
automobiles is queer things.”

With this reflection, he once more settled himself comfortably against
the lamp-post, and resumed his interrupted slumbers.

“That was a cinch!” said the Camera Chap to his two companions, as the
touring car sped through the quiet street. “Didn’t I tell you, Fred,
that there wouldn’t be much danger?”

“Well, we can’t expect that they’ll all be as easy as that one,” Carroll
replied. “Ye gods! Just imagine the lives and property of the people of
Oldham being intrusted to the care of a lazy, good-for-nothing shirker
like that! I hope you got a good picture of him, Frank. It certainly
ought to make the taxpayers of Oldham sit up and take notice.”

“At all events, it ought to make ’em buy _Bulletins_,” the Camera Chap
chuckled. “I bet you a new hat, Fred, that your paper’s circulation will
be more than doubled as a result of this crusade.

“But, say,” he exclaimed, as the touring car swung around a corner,
“aren’t we on another cop’s beat now? If so, hadn’t we better slow down,
and hunt for him?”

This remark was addressed to Parsons, the _Bulletin’s_ police reporter,
who was running the car. Parsons had been “covering police” for some
years, and knew the majority of the members of the force by name, and
what beat they were supposed to patrol. This expert knowledge made him a
valuable member of the expedition. As he was aware also of the habits
and weaknesses of many of the bluecoats, he was able to lead the Camera
Chap to those who were most likely to be caught shirking their duty.

The reporter glanced quickly up and down both sides of the street, and
reduced the speed of the touring car.

“This is ‘Red’ Horgan’s beat,” he announced. “And I guess I can tell you
where he is right now. Horgan is the most notorious shirker in the
department, and when he’s on night duty he generally spends most of the
time in ‘Dutch Louie’s’ place on Allendale Street. I have no doubt that
you’ll find him there now playing pinochle in the back room.”

The Camera Chap’s face lighted up at this information. “Playing
pinochle, eh?” he exclaimed eagerly. “That ought to make a bully
snapshot. Is it possible for a stranger to get into this Dutch Louie’s
place at this hour?”

“Sure!” Parsons answered, with a laugh. “He runs his place wide open all
night. Anybody can walk in and order a drink right at the bar, no matter
what the hour. Dutch Louie is a politician, as well as a liquor dealer,
and he doesn’t have to worry about his joint being pulled for violation
of the excise laws.”

“Good!” exclaimed Hawley joyously. “I was afraid I might have difficulty
in getting into the place. Is this Allendale Street we’re on now?”

“No; it’s the next corner. Louie’s place is halfway down the block,” the
reporter informed him.

“Then I think it would be a good idea to stop the car right here,” said
the Camera Chap. “I hardly think it would be a wise plan to ride right
up to the door. The sound of our motor might scare Officer Horgan into
dropping his pinochle hand.”

“No need to be afraid of that,” declared Parsons, with a laugh. “It
would take more than an automobile to faze Red Horgan. He’s a son-in-law
of one of the biggest politicians in the county, and has such a strong
pull that I guess he wouldn’t care if Chief Hodgins himself came into
the back room of the café and caught him playing cards when he ought to
be patrolling his beat. I’ve often heard him boast that there isn’t a
superior officer in the department that isn’t afraid to call him down,
no matter what he does--that if any of them dared to get gay with him,
he’d mighty soon show them where they got off at.”

“Must be a pleasant sort of chap,” said Hawley, with an ironical smile.
“It’ll be a genuine pleasure to publish his picture, eh, Fred?”

“But surely you’ve no intention of going into Dutch Louie’s place to get
it?” Carroll protested anxiously. “That’s out of the question.”

The Camera Chap looked astonished. “Why out of the question? Didn’t you
just hear Parsons say that anybody can get into the place?”

“Oh, yes, I haven’t any doubt that you could get in, all right; but if
you were rash enough to try to take a flash-light picture inside I
rather guess you’d have some difficulty in getting out. Dutch Louie’s
few patrons are a pretty tough bunch. They’d probably kick in a few of
your ribs before Officer Horgan placed you under arrest for taking
photographs without a license. Better pass this one up, old man, and
look for something a trifle easier.”

But Hawley had no intention of foregoing this opportunity to procure a
snapshot of Mr. Red Horgan in the rôle of a pinochle player. He realized
that there were difficulties in the way of his getting the picture, but
he was determined to make the attempt.

“It’ll be a gem!” he declared enthusiastically. “If I can get it and it
turns out all right, Fred, just imagine what a hit it will make with the
readers of the _Bulletin_. Stop the car, please, Parsons. Here we are at
the corner. I’m going to get out.”

Carroll clutched at his coat to restrain him, but the Camera Chap
laughingly shook off his hold, and got out of the automobile.

“You fellows wait here for me,” he said. “Keep the power turned on,
Parsons, and have the car all ready to start as soon as I come out.
It’s possible that we may have to make a hurried get-away, in which case
it would be inconvenient to have to wait until you cranked up.”

He was stepping to the sidewalk, when Carroll called to him:

“Hold on, there! If you’re such a stubborn idiot that you can’t be
dissuaded from doing this crazy thing, I’m going with you. Do you think
I’m going to stay quietly in this car while you’re inside that joint,
being killed? I guess not! The chances are a hundred to one that
there’ll be a rough-house as soon as you fire the flash,” he said. “I
don’t suppose that even with me to help you we’ll stand much chance
against that crowd; but, at all events, two’ll be better than one.”

“Three, you mean, Mr. Carroll,” exclaimed Parsons. “If there’s any
fighting to be done, I’m in on it, too, of course. I guess nobody’ll
steal the machine while we’re away.”

The _Bulletin’s_ police reporter was such a frail-looking chap that
Hawley could scarcely repress a smile at these words, although he
greatly appreciated the spirit which prompted them.

“Much obliged to both of you,” the Camera Chap said; “but, really, I
prefer to go alone. I think I can easily convince you that it will be a
much better plan for you fellows to wait here in the machine.”

“I won’t hear of any such arrangement,” Carroll declared firmly. “If you
go, I’m going, too; and if Parsons wants to come along, he’s welcome.
The more the merrier. You may have your faults, Frank, old man, but I
like you too well to be willing to sit passively here while you’re being
beaten to a pulp around the corner.”

“I’m not going to be beaten to a pulp,” the Camera Chap protested, with
a laugh. “I intend to use strategy. If I go alone, I feel confident I’ll
be able to get away with it; but if you fellows insist upon butting in,
you’ll surely queer me. I’m a stranger to that bunch at Dutch Louie’s,
but you fellows are not. Both of you would be recognized as soon as you
entered the place, and I’d have no chance to take the picture.”

Carroll had to admit that there was a lot in this argument, and, after a
little more demurring, he grudgingly consented to let Hawley have his
way in the matter.

“But I’m not going to stay here in the car,” he declared. “I’m going to
hang around outside that joint, and keep my ears wide open. As soon as I
hear the sound of a rough-house I’m coming in, for I’ll know then that,
in spite of all your resourcefulness and ingenuity, strategy has
failed.”

“All right,” assented Hawley, with a laugh. “If strategy fails, I’ll be
glad to have the help of those big fists of yours. But I feel confident
there isn’t going to be any violence.”




CHAPTER XVII.

A BIT OF STRATEGY.


There was no mistaking Dutch Louie’s place, for it was the only
restaurant on the block; moreover, the name of the proprietor was
emblazoned in white letters on a flaring red glass sign.

As Parsons had predicted, the place was wide open. Although it was
nearly two a. m., and the State excise law forbids business of the kind
after one o’clock, the two waiters were very busy serving drinks.

The Camera Chap walked through the front room, and entered the room
beyond. He pretended to be under the influence of liquor--walked like a
fellow who has all the sail he can carry. It had occurred to him that
this pretense might help his game along, although he had not as yet hit
upon any definite plan for the taking of the picture.

In a corner of this rear room several men were seated at a round table,
playing cards. One of these players wore a blue coat with brass buttons,
and his hair was the color of carrots. By these tokens, Hawley knew that
he was in the presence of Patrolman Red Horgan.

The card players were not the only occupants of the room. A dozen men
were scattered among the small round tables, sipping their beverages or
gulping them down, and paying but scant attention to the pinochle game
in progress in the corner.

They were, as Carroll had said, a rough-looking crowd. One had only to
glance at their faces to realize that anybody who came into the place
looking for trouble would not have to go out unsatisfied.

Hawley, spying an unoccupied table some yards away from the group of
pinochle players, made his way toward it, still keeping up the pretense
of being tipsy. He seated himself so that he faced the policeman and his
cronies, and, summoning a waiter, ordered something. Nobody paid much
attention to him. Patrolman Horgan’s gaze happened to wander in his
direction, but the glance was merely a cursory one. The policeman was
too busy “melding a hundred aces” to have much interest in the
harmless-looking, apparently very “tired” young man who had just come
in.

In another corner of the room was an automatic piano which was operated
on a nickel-in-the-slot basis. Somebody dropped a coin into this
machine, and it started to thrum a lively waltz strain.

This music--or near music--appeared to have a peculiar effect upon the
Camera Chap. Although the tune was a rousing one, it evidently served as
a lullaby in his case, for his eyelids began to droop, and his head
rolled from side to side in a ludicrous manner. When the waiter came
with what he had ordered, he was sprawled across the table, apparently
fast asleep.

The waiter shook him roughly by the shoulder. “Here, young feller,” he
growled, “here’s your drink. Wake up! This ain’t no lodging house. If
you want to sleep, you’d better hire a room upstairs.”

The Camera Chap roused himself as though by a great effort, and stared
stupidly at the glass which had been set before him. As soon as the
waiter had gone, he lapsed once more into slumber.

“That fellow over there seems to be dead to the world,” remarked
Patrolman Horgan, with a chuckle. “Must be worse than he looked when he
came in. Whose deal is it now?”

Needless to say, Hawley was by no means as “dead to the world” as his
appearance seemed to indicate. Seldom, in fact, had his brain been more
active than it was at this minute. As he sprawled across the table, with
his eyes closed, and his head resting on his outstretched arms, he was
summoning all his ingenuity in an effort to solve the perplexing problem
which confronted him.

“Everything is dead easy except the firing of the flash-light powder,”
he mused. “I can get a dandy focus from here without moving an inch,
and, with my camera held beneath the table, Red Horgan wouldn’t even
suspect that his picture had been taken--if it weren’t for that telltale
flash. That’s the great difficulty. How the deuce am I going to fire the
flash and get away with it?”

And then an inspiration came to him, and he began to groan. Usually he
was not in the habit of groaning when he had an inspiration, but he had
a good reason for doing so now. It was part of the plan which had just
suggested itself to his resourceful mind. So he proceeded to groan loud
enough to be heard by the group of pinochle players in the corner.

The waiter, hearing these sounds of anguish, once more stepped up to
him, and shook him roughly by the shoulder. “Hey, young feller, brace
up!” he growled. “What’s the matter with you, anyway? Are you sick, or
is it just an ordinary jag?”

Hawley sat up, and clapped both hands to his head, one to each temple.
The waiter and the others whose attention had been attracted by his
groans could see that his face was distorted as though with great pain.

“Oh, my poor head!” groaned the Camera Chap. “It feels as though it
would split in two. For the love of Pete, friend, if there’s any bromo
seltzer in the house, bring me some in a hurry.”

“Sure, we keep it,” said the man. “Just keep quiet a minute, young
feller, and I’ll fix up a dose.”

The Camera Chap was not surprised to hear that the drug was procurable
in Dutch Louie’s place, for he had noticed a sign on the wall as he came
in, announcing that it was on sale.

“Never mind about fixing it up,” he said to the waiter. “Just bring me
the bottle, a glass, and some water. I’ll do the mixing myself.”

Patrolman Horgan beckoned to the waiter as the latter was going out to
fill the order.

“What’s the matter with that guy over there, Harry?” he inquired.

“Oh, nothin’ serious; just a headache.”

“Is that all?” said the patrolman, in a disgusted tone. “From the way he
was groaning just now, I thought he was dyin’. Come on, fellers; it’s my
meld.”

When the waiter returned with a tray containing a small blue bottle, an
empty glass, and a second glass filled with water, Hawley had an
unlighted cigar between his teeth, but no one seemed to think it odd for
a sick man to indulge in tobacco.

The Camera Chap was not in the habit of smoking cigars, but he always
carried a couple in his vest pocket, and he had reasons of his own for
transferring this one from his pocket to his mouth.

He took the bottle of bromo seltzer, and emptied some of the white
powder into the empty glass. Then he turned to the waiter.

“On second thought, I guess I’ll mix it with vichy instead of plain
water,” he said; “I like it better that way.”

The waiter shrugged his shoulders, and went out to get a siphon of
vichy. As soon as he had gone, the Camera Chap became very busy, but
unobtrusively so.

His left hand stole into the side pocket of his coat, and when it came
out again the closed fist held a quantity of silvery powder. He poised
this hand over the glass containing the bromo seltzer, and the silvery
powder fell on top of the white powder.

Then his right hand went into his coat pocket, and he stealthily drew
out a small pocket camera, which he held beneath the table.

When he had done these things, he gazed anxiously around the room,
apprehensive that his actions might have been observed; but, to his
great relief, he found that nobody was paying any attention to him.

Then, as he saw the waiter approaching with the siphon of vichy in his
hand, Hawley struck a match, held the flame for a moment to the cigar in
his mouth, then threw the match away.

Apparently he was careless, for the match, still alight, instead of
falling to the floor, dropped into the glass of bromo seltzer in front
of him.

Instantly there was a blinding flash which momentarily illuminated the
entire room, and a dull explosion. The siphon of seltzer fell from the
startled bartender’s hand; several men gave vent to shouts of alarm;
chairs and tables went crashing to the floor.

Patrolman Horgan jumped excitedly to his feet, and advanced toward the
Camera Chap, who still sat at the table, surrounded by a haze of smoke
which was slowly lifting toward the ceiling.

“Great guns! What was that?” the policeman demanded.

Hawley, his face a picture of bewilderment, pointed to the bartender.

“That’s what I’d like to know,” he said indignantly. “What was it? Maybe
this man can tell us. I asked for bromo seltzer.”

“It was marked bromo seltzer on the bottle,” the astonished waiter
declared. “And I took it from the regular stock.”

He turned to the Camera Chap with sudden suspicion. “But what did you
throw that lighted match into it for, anyway, young feller? That was a
queer thing to do.”

“The match dropped in,” Hawley explained. “Didn’t you see that I was
lighting my cigar? But this is the first time I’ve ever heard of bromo
seltzer being an explosive. Mighty queer it should go off like that.
It’s a mercy somebody wasn’t killed.”

“Oh, I guess the stuff ain’t dangerous,” remarked Patrolman Horgan,
glancing around the room. “Nobody is even hurted, so there’s nothing to
get excited about. Let this be a lesson to you, young feller, to be more
careful in future where you throw lighted matches.”

“I certainly shall,” the Camera Chap assured him meekly.

“I thought at first it was somebody takin’ one of them flash-light
pictures,” said Patrolman Horgan. “It looked something like the kind of
light them camera people use.”

Hawley nodded. “Yes, it did look a little like that, didn’t it?” he
agreed. “I once saw a man take a flash-light picture, and, now that you
speak of it, there was some resemblance.”

A few minutes later Fred Carroll, pacing nervously up and down the
sidewalk outside Dutch Louie’s place, was astonished and much relieved
to see the Camera Chap step out of the doorway, a smile on his face, and
with no signs of having sustained bodily injuries.

“Thank goodness, you’ve come at last!” the proprietor of the _Bulletin_
exclaimed. “I was just thinking of coming in for you. I heard the flash
go off a few minutes ago, and things were so uncannily quiet afterward
that I was beginning to be afraid they had killed you. What on earth
happened?”

“I’ll tell you all about it when we’re in the car,” chuckled Hawley,
hurrying toward the corner where the automobile waited. “I don’t think
there’s any danger now, but just the same we might as well get away from
here as soon as possible. I don’t believe in taking any unnecessary
chances.”

Parsons, who was seated at the wheel of the motor car, uttered an
ejaculation of joy when he caught sight of the Camera Chap.

“You don’t mean to say that you actually got the picture?” he exclaimed
incredulously, as the latter climbed aboard.

Hawley grinned. “I got something,” he said; “but I can’t guarantee that
the result will be good. I had to manipulate my camera with one hand,
and I had to guess the focus. Under those conditions, the chances are
against the negative turning out all right. But it was the best I could
do under the circumstances.”

“How on earth did you do it?” Carroll inquired. “I can’t imagine how you
got off so easily. Do you mean to say that bunch didn’t jump on you when
you set off the flash?”

“Not at all,” replied the Camera Chap, with a laugh. “They were very
nice about it. There wasn’t any rough-house at all, Fred. The last I saw
of those fellows they were making a scientific experiment.”

“A scientific experiment?” Carroll repeated, with a puzzled frown.

“Exactly,” Hawley chuckled. “They were all gathered around the waiter
like students in a chemistry class. And what do you suppose that waiter
was doing, Fred?”

“I haven’t the slightest idea.”

“He had several bottles of bromo seltzer on the table before him, and he
was uncorking each one, and dropping a lighted match into it to see if
he couldn’t make it go off like a flash-light powder.”




CHAPTER XVIII.

A GOOD BAG.


“Whither next?” the Camera Chap inquired, after he had confided to his
two companions in the big touring car the details of what had happened
inside Dutch Louie’s café.

“I know a cop who goes to sleep every night in a lumber yard on his
beat,” Parson announced.

“Lead us to him!” said Hawley eagerly. “That sounds like an easy one,
eh, Fred?”

“I really think we’ve got enough already,” Carroll replied anxiously.
“After what you’ve just done, old man, I’m beginning to believe that you
can get away with anything; but what’s the use of running any more risk
than is necessary? You’ve got two good snapshots, and that is quite
enough to illustrate our story. Let’s call it a night’s work, Frank, and
not tempt fate any more.”

Hawley laughed at this suggestion. “Nothing doing,” he said. “I shan’t
consider that we’ve done our duty until we have at least a round half
dozen snapshots of delinquent cops in our collection. No use being a
piker, Fred. Two pictures on the front page of the _Bulletin_ would make
a measly showing. Besides, as I said before, I am by no means confident
that Red Horgan’s picture will turn out well. If it’s too poor a
negative for reproduction, that would leave us with only one. Lead the
way to the cop in the woodpile, Parsons. We certainly can’t afford to
pass him up. Is his beat far from here?”

“Yes; it’s at the extreme northern end of the town,” the police reporter
replied.

“Don’t you know any others we’ll pass on the way there?” Hawley
inquired. “We might as well take them in regular order. It’s growing
late, and we haven’t any time to lose.”

“Yes; there’s Mike Harrington, whose beat is on Cedar Street,” Parsons
replied promptly. “He generally hangs out in Windmuller’s Café when he’s
on night duty. His brother is employed there.”

“Great stuff!” exclaimed the Camera Chap gleefully. “We’ll pay our
respects to Patrolman Harrington before we disturb the slumbers of our
friends in the woodpile. Is he a pinochle player, too, Parsons?”

“I don’t think so,” the reporter answered, with a laugh. “You’ll most
likely catch him in the act of diminishing Windmuller’s stock of goods.
He’d have been ‘broke’ long ago for bad habits if it hadn’t been for his
pull. His father is a member of the city council and one of Mayor
Henkle’s most energetic political workers.”

“Oldham certainly has some police department!” Hawley chuckled. “Please
stop a short distance away from Windmuller’s place, old man. It wouldn’t
do to drive right up to the door.”

Carroll turned anxiously to the Camera Chap. “Do me a favor, Frank, and
cut this one out,” he pleaded. “There’s no sense in taking such
desperate chances. Windmuller’s place is almost as tough a joint as
Dutch Louie’s. Let Harrington alone, and pass on to some easier ones.”

“I guess this thing is going to be easy enough,” Hawley said
confidently. “I intend to work that bromo-seltzer trick over again. I
don’t see why it shouldn’t succeed as well in Windmuller’s place as in
Dutch Louie’s. In fact, I stand a much better chance of getting away
with it this time, for I know beforehand just what I’m going to do, and
can proceed with calm deliberation. Besides, practice makes perfect, you
know.”

Carroll shook his head deprecatingly; but he realized that argument was
useless, and made no further attempt to dissuade his rash and impetuous
friend.

Although the Camera Chap’s adventures that night were eventful enough to
be worth recording fully, limitations of space render it inexpedient to
describe them all in detail here.

In the main, his experience inside Windmuller’s place was similar to
what had happened at Dutch Louie’s. Once more he affected a bad
headache, and called upon the waiter to bring him a dose of bromo
seltzer; and when the white powder was placed before him, he made the
same use of it as he had done in the former instance.

Greatly to the relief of his two companions, he emerged from the place
unscathed, and laughingly assured him that he had succeeded in
snapshotting Patrolman Harrington, and had reason to believe that the
negative would be a fairly good one.

Compared with this exploit, the taking of a flash-light picture of the
policeman who was slumbering in a lumber yard at the northern end of the
town was not a difficult matter. Hawley succeeded in getting a
first-class snapshot of this sleeping beauty, and although the bluecoat
was awakened by the setting off of the flash-light powder, and,
bellowing with rage, chased the Camera Chap through the piles of lumber,
the latter managed to reach the automobile in time to make a safe
get-away.

Although he now had four snapshots of delinquent policemen, and Carroll
again pleaded that these were quite sufficient for their purpose, the
Camera Chap was firm in his determination not to give up the hunt until
the _Bulletin’s_ collection consisted of at least six negatives.

Parsons had reached his limit. He was unable to suggest where any more
members of the force whom he knew to be chronic shirkers might be found
that night; but even this fact could not discourage Hawley. He declared
confidently that if they rode around town a bit, and kept their eyes
open, they were likely to pick up a couple of random snapshots to
complete their night’s work.

So, while the citizens of Oldham slept peacefully on, in utter ignorance
of this enterprising effort that was being made to reform conditions in
their town--and incidentally to increase the circulation of the
_Bulletin_--the big touring car traversed the highways and byways in
search of more blue-coated victims of this relentless photographic
crusade.

This search was not unproductive. As the Camera Chap and his friends
rode through Main Street, they suddenly encountered the most sensational
and the most shameful spectacle of the night--a man in the uniform of a
captain of police so merry that he could scarcely stand.

“That’s Captain Alf Callman--the worst grafter and the biggest bully of
the department, barring Chief Hodgins,” exclaimed Parsons excitedly, as
he brought the car to a stop. “Don’t fail to get a good picture of him,
Mr. Hawley. This is a rare piece of luck. If ever there was a rascal who
deserved to be held up to public scorn and ridicule, it’s that brute
there.”

“Yes, Frank,” said Carroll, a scowl upon his face, “we want his picture,
by all means. A few weeks ago he beat up a crippled boy unmercifully for
selling _Bulletins_ outside police headquarters.”

The Camera Chap’s face grew grim. “And you mean to say you let him get
away with that?” he exclaimed, in astonishment.

“I did all that I could,” replied the proprietor of the _Bulletin_. “I
preferred charges against him in court, and I’ve been roasting him on
the front page of the paper every day since. But his pull enabled him to
have the case thrown out of court, and the _Bulletin’s_ roasts don’t
seem to have worried him much. He’s too thick-skinned to care what’s
said or printed about him.

“But, thick-skinned as he is,” Carroll went on, “I’ll bet he’ll rave
when he sees his picture on our front page, showing him in that
condition. That’ll hurt him more than anything else I can think of. So
be sure to get a good snapshot of him, Frank; one that’ll show the
public just what a beast he is.”

The taking of this flash-light picture was an easy matter, and there was
no risk attached, for Captain Alf Callman was too happy to realize what
was happening, and merely grinned fatuously when the flash went off.
Nevertheless, Hawley had never in all his career as a camera man derived
more satisfaction from the taking of a snapshot.

The last picture of the night was that of a policeman whom they
discovered a few blocks farther on, fast asleep in a doorway. He was so
dazed by the flash light that the Camera Chap had no difficulty in
getting away.

Having added this trophy to his collection, Hawley turned to Carroll
with a satisfied smile.

“Now, I guess we can go home,” he said. “I think we’ve done a fairly
good night’s work.”

“The best ever!” chuckled the proprietor of the _Bulletin_. “If these
pictures of yours turn out all right, I’ve got an idea that they’ll stir
this old town as it’s never been stirred before.”




CHAPTER XIX.

THE ENEMY’S MOVE.


Although the _Bulletin_ was not a profusely illustrated newspaper, it
maintained a photo-engraving plant of its own. Carroll had installed
this department when he first acquired possession of the paper, and had
brought a man named Neilson from New York to take charge of it.

It had been Carroll’s original intention to go in extensively for
half-tone illustrations, but his failure to make a financial success of
the publication had necessitated a cutting down of expenses wherever
possible, and now pictures were seldom used in the pages of the
_Bulletin_.

When Carroll informed Neilson that he would have to dispense with his
services, candidly telling him the reason, the engraver proposed that he
be permitted to take in outside job work in lieu of salary.

This arrangement had turned out satisfactorily for both parties
concerned. Neilson had managed to get enough outside work to make it
worth his while to stay, and Carroll was glad to have him on the job,
because, although he had practically given up illustrations, he
occasionally found it necessary to use a cut in the pages of the
_Bulletin_. These occasions were so rare, however, that great was
Neilson’s surprise when, on the day following Hawley’s night crusade
against the Oldham police, Carroll appeared in the photo-engraving
department with a half dozen negatives in his hand.

“Here, Ole,” the proprietor of the _Bulletin_ said, with a smile, “I
want these enlarged, and a two-column cut made from each. Make just as
good a job of them as you can, and remember that they’re for to-morrow
morning’s issue.”

“All for to-morrow morning’s issue?” exclaimed the engraver
incredulously.

“Sure thing! And all for the front page, too.” Carroll chuckled. “It’s
going to be the bulliest front page the _Bulletin_ has ever had, Ole.
Just take a close look at those negatives, old man, and I guess you’ll
understand why.”

Neilson stared hard at the small oblongs of film. “They ban look like
policemens,” he said.

“They are policemen!” declared Carroll, with another chuckle.

“What you ban going to do,” the engraver inquired, “get out a special
cop’s edition?”

“A sort of special cop’s edition,” replied Carroll, with a grin. “But,
say, Ole,” he added anxiously, “what do you think of these negatives
from a photographic standpoint? Will they make pretty good cuts, do you
think?”

Neilson inspected each one critically. “I can’t tell very well, of
course, Mr. Carroll, until I see the prints,” he replied, at length.
“They ban flash lights, I see; but they look like pretty clear negatives
yoost the same. Who took them?”

“A friend of mine from New York.”

“Did he develop them, too?” the photo-engraver inquired. “They ban a
pretty good job for an amateur.”

“Yes, he developed them himself,” Carroll answered. “We were so anxious
to see what results we had that we came back here at three o’clock this
morning, and Hawley--my friend from New York, I mean--used your dark
room. But, say, Ole,” he exclaimed anxiously, pointing to one of the
negatives, “how about this one? It isn’t quite as clear as the others.
Do you think you’ll be able to get a fairly good cut out of it?”

Neilson once more inspected the negative designated. It was a snapshot
of a group of men playing a game of cards. One of the men wore a police
uniform.

“I guess I ban able make it all right,” he said. “It isn’t very strong,
but I guess I ban able to touch up the print a bit, and get a good
result yoost the same.”

Neilson held up another of the negatives. “This ban best one of the
lot,” he announced. “I make extra-good cut of him.”

The picture in question was the snapshot of a man in a police captain’s
uniform. A scowl came to Carroll’s face as he gazed upon it.

“I’m glad to hear that, Ole,” he said grimly. “I want an extra-good cut
of him. And, by the way, make that one three columns wide instead of
two. I’m going to use it in the center of the page.”

Then Carroll went into the editorial rooms, and, seating himself at his
desk, began to write rapidly. For two hours he was occupied with his
task, and what he wrote seemed to afford him much satisfaction, for at
frequent intervals the other occupants of the room heard him chuckle
immoderately.

At length the long editorial was finished, and as he gathered the
closely written pages together, he exhaled a deep breath.

“Hawley said that the pictures would be the main feature of the
_Bulletin’s_ exposé,” he muttered; “and, of course, he was right. No
doubt about that. But at the same time I rather think this editorial of
mine is going to make quite a hit, too.”

Hawley heartily indorsed this opinion when, a few minutes later, he
dropped into the _Bulletin’s_ office, and Carroll showed him what he had
written.

“It’s great stuff!” the Camera Chap exclaimed enthusiastically. “Simply
immense! I never had any idea that you could sling English as well as
that, Fred.”

Carroll flushed with pleasure at his warm praise. “I guess it’s because
I feel so strongly on the subject,” he said simply. “A fellow can write
so much better, you know, if he really feels what he writes.”

“People who buy the _Bulletin_ to-morrow morning are certainly going to
get their money’s worth,” Hawley chuckled. “That editorial alone will be
well worth the price of the paper. Your readers ought to paste it in
their scrapbooks as a model of satire.”

“Cut out the joshing, old man,” protested Carroll. “If the readers of
the _Bulletin_ paste anything in their scrapbooks, it will be those
wonderful snapshots of yours. They’re going to create a big sensation,
Frank.”

The Camera Chap grinned. “Yes, the snapshots and your editorial combined
certainly ought to stir things up. Don’t forget that I’ve bet you a new
hat that your circulation figures will be more than doubled to-morrow,
Fred.”

“I’ll be quite satisfied to lose the hat,” Carroll chuckled. “And just
to show you that I don’t expect to win the bet, let me tell you that
I’ve already given orders to my pressroom to print twice the usual
number of papers to-morrow.”

“I guess you’re quite safe in doing so,” said the Camera Chap earnestly.
“I don’t think you’ll have many copies left on your hands. But how are
the pictures getting along, Fred? Have they been made into cuts yet?”

“Neilson is working on them now,” Carroll answered. “Come on up, and
we’ll see how he’s progressing.”

Neilson was working on an outside job--a half-tone cut for the
letterhead of a local tailor--when they entered his laboratory.
Observing this, Carroll was somewhat annoyed. He had asked Neilson to
rush the cuts through, and, while he realized that it was the outside
work which paid the expenses of the plant, he felt aggrieved that the
tailor’s half tone should be given first attention.

“How about that work I gave you?” he inquired sharply. “Started on it
yet, Ole?”

The engraver looked at him in astonishment. “How can I start on it until
you give me back them negatives?” he exclaimed. “I ban yoost coming down
to ask you for them.”

“Give you back the negatives!” the proprietor of the _Bulletin_
repeated, with a puzzled frown. “What on earth are you talking about?”

“I ban talking about those policemen’s negatives you want made into cuts
for to-morrow’s paper, of course,” replied Neilson, a trifle nettled.
“How can I make the cuts until I get the pictures?”

“But you have the pictures,” Carroll protested. “Didn’t I give them to
you?”

“Sure you gave them to me once. But you ban take them back again, didn’t
you?” replied the man indignantly.

“I took them back?”

“Sure! At least, you sent the boy for them--which is yoost the same, of
course.”

“The boy?” Carroll was beginning to grow uneasy. “What boy?”

“That boy Miggsy, of course,” Neilson replied, now thoroughly out of
temper. “What kind of a yoke you ban try to play with me, Mr. Carroll? I
ban serious feller, and don’t like foolin’. Didn’t you send that Miggsy
up here half an hour ago to say would I please let you have them
negatives back right away?”

Carroll’s face suddenly turned pale. “I certainly did not!” he exclaimed
excitedly. “I sent no such message. Do you mean to say that Miggsy told
you that I sent him?”

“He sure did. He said you needed the pictures to show to somebody, and
must have them right away. I ban yust starting to work on them when he
came up, but I gave them to him.”

With an exclamation of alarm, Carroll hurried downstairs to the
editorial rooms to interview the office boy. The youngster was not in
sight.

“Seen anything of Miggsy?” he inquired anxiously of one of the
reporters, whose desk was near the door.

“Not lately. The last time I saw him, Mr. Carroll, was half an hour ago,
when he went out to do that errand for you.”

“An errand for me?”

“Yes, that’s what he said. He was going out just as I came in, and he
seemed to be in a great hurry. I stopped him on the stairway, and
jokingly asked him what all the rush was about. He begged me not to
delay him, as you had just sent him out on an errand of great importance
which had to be attended to immediately.”

Carroll turned to Hawley, who had followed him downstairs. They
exchanged glances of consternation.

“What do you make of it?” the proprietor of the _Bulletin_ said
hoarsely.

The Camera Chap smiled grimly. “It looks very much as if our young
friend Miggsy had gone over to the enemy,” he said.

“Yes, I’m afraid so,” growled Carroll. “I can’t imagine any other reason
for his actions. The little ingrate! I’ve been pretty good to that kid.
I never thought that he’d do me a trick of this sort.”

He paced the floor nervously, his big fists clenched. “Great grief!” he
muttered. “Can it really be possible that all our trouble has been for
nothing--that we’re not going to publish those wonderful snapshots,
after all?”

Hawley patted his shoulder soothingly. It was in forlorn situations of
this sort that the Camera Chap’s sunny disposition showed up to the best
advantage.

“Cheer up, old scout!” he said to Carroll. “After all, there’s that
corking editorial of yours. Even without the pictures, it’ll make quite
a hit in to-morrow’s front page.”

“No, it won’t,” groaned Carroll. “That editorial won’t go on to-morrow’s
front page. I might as well tear it up. Don’t you see that I wouldn’t
dare publish it without the pictures? Those fellows would sue me for
libel. They’d swear that my statements were false, and, without the
photographic evidence, I couldn’t prove that they weren’t.”

“I guess you’re right there,” said the Camera Chap thoughtfully. “It’s
too bad that that fine piece of writing should go to waste. Well, better
luck next time, I---- Where are you going, Fred?” For Carroll, muttering
something under his breath, had stepped hastily toward the door.

“I’m going down to the pressroom to cancel that order for extra papers,”
the proprietor of the _Bulletin_ explained gloomily.


TO BE CONTINUED.

       *       *       *       *       *


WORSE AND WORSE.

There was a notice in the barber’s shop window reading “Boots Blacked
Inside.” A pedestrian halted and read and reread the notice, and then
opened the door and said:

“That ought to be shoes. Not one man in fifty wears boots in the
summer.”

The barber didn’t say anything, but, after due reflection, concluded
that the man was right, and so changed the notice to read: “Shoes
Blacked Inside.” He had scarcely put it up when the same man came along
again and opened the door to say:

“No one wants the inside of his shoes blacked. We pay to have the shine
on the outside.”

The barber puzzled over it for a while, and realized that the man was
right again, and next day the notice was replaced by one reading:

“The outside of shoes blacked inside.”

“That’s perfectly correct,” said the fault finder, as he came along in
the afternoon. “Never give yourself away on the English language.”

       *       *       *       *       *




THE NEWS OF ALL NATIONS.


Dies Preaching on Death.

“Prepare to live and you will be prepared to die,” said the Reverend R.
G. Collison, addressing a large congregation in the tabernacle of the
Oregon Christian Church Convention, at Turner, Ore. As he spoke he sank
to the floor of the pulpit and died within a few seconds. Death was
caused by apoplexy.


Dyestuff Makers Cheerful.

Aniline dye manufacturers in this country are making a tremendous, and,
they believe, an encouraging effort to supply the want of dyes, so
greatly needed since the cessation of German exportation of that
product.

Some idea of the way in which the domestic industry has been called upon
to meet the demand of the textile mills was given by one of the largest
American concerns in the dye business, who said that his company has
daily to reject orders for some thirty to eighty thousand pounds of dyes
because of their inability to manufacture them fast enough.

As an evidence of the satisfactory manner in which the American
manufacturers have rallied to meet the situation, he asserted that his
company was manufacturing four times as much dyestuffs this year as in
any year previous.

Although it has been less than a year since the dyestuff and chemical
industries were thrown into confusion by the war, a readjustment has
been partly accomplished, which has enabled mill operators to go ahead
with the manufacture of textiles.

From the way the American output has increased it would be safe to say
that inside of the next eighteen months manufacturers here will be able
to supply some $10,000,000 worth annually of dyestuffs to a home market
which could use $30,000,000 worth. Now that the American output is
expanding, our manufacturers feel confident that the trade lost by
Germany will not be regained.


This Aged Hen is a Real Coop Marvel.

“Eusapia Palladino,” the oldest hen in the town of Killingly, Conn., and
perhaps in the entire world, is to have a birthday party on the occasion
of her twenty-seventh birthday, which will come in a few days. All the
old hens in Killingly are looking forward to the event, and it is
probable that a few young chickens will be asked, just to give the party
a metropolitan flavor.

Eusapia, though of Spanish origin, lays her eggs in English and began
the work when but five months old. Her first egg, which her owner, Mr.
James Blanchard still has, was laid in November, 1888, and since then
she has laid an average of 144 a year. She has just laid another egg as
this story is being written, and only the greatest haste can prevent her
laying another before it is completed. She just lays around all day, as
might be expected at her great age. Unlike the Madagascar Bingle Hen,
which lays square eggs with a monogram, Eusapia lays but one egg at a
time.

Eusapia, it will be readily reckoned, was hatched from a black Spanish
egg ten years before the Spanish-American War, when shells burst less
frequently. She has seen a very active life, and greatly deplores the
dissipation, irregular hours, and loss of sleep incident to the poultry
shows which have become popular of late years. She does not smoke, has
never on any occasion partaken of alcoholic liquors, and can now read
without glasses if she cared to.

Mr. Blanchard has had several disputes lately with persons who, having
dined at the Killingly Commercial Inn, questioned that Eusapia was the
oldest chicken in the world.

Of late years Eusapia has been given to fits of depression, and the
admittance of eggs as parcel-post mail left her on the verge of a
nervous breakdown for days.

A thousand chicks have been hatched by Eusapia in her long and useful
life. She has always shown a great interest in them, has personally
supervised their early education, and has invariably responded, even in
late years, to their slightest cluck.


Laborers Kill Two-hundred-pound Shark.

A shark, measuring seven and a half feet long and weighing about two
hundred pounds, was killed in Weir Creek, an inlet of Long Island Sound,
by David McGowan, a sewer inspector; A. L. Hartman and several Italian
laborers, all armed with crowbars. The fight lasted more than a half an
hour.


Child Plays With Rattler.

Having a monster rattlesnake as a temporary playmate without being
struck by the deadly fangs of the reptile and killed was the unusual
experience of the little child of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hunt, of Scenic, S.
D., Mr. Hunt being the depot agent of the Milwaukee Railway Company.

The mother discovered the little girl playing with the rattlesnake in
the yard around the Hunt home. The snake appeared to like the
companionship of the little girl and made no effort to coil and strike.
The mother managed to drag the child from within reach of the snake
without arousing the anger of the reptile. The little girl strongly
objected to being separated from her strange playmate. After the girl
had been removed to a place of safety, the reptile was killed.


A Municipal Bat Roost.

The only municipal bat roost in the world was recently erected at San
Antonio, Texas, and is expected to have an important part in the city
fight against malaria and other diseases. The bat has been discovered by
Doctor C. A. Campbell, of San Antonio, to be one of the greatest enemies
of the mosquito, which is largely responsible for the spread of malarial
and similar germs. For this reason San Antonio is not only protecting
the bat by law, but has entered into the proposition of its cultivation.

Doctor Campbell has demonstrated that one bat will consume as many as
250 mosquitoes in one night. He has estimated that the amount of guano
that could be collected from a single bat roost, capable of
accommodating 250,000 bats, in a season of nine months, would equal
about forty tons--and guano, the highest of all fertilizers, is worth
forty dollars a ton. It is Doctor Campbell’s idea that the bat roost is
a natural hygienic measure, which should be adopted by governments,
municipalities, or corporations controlling large bodies of land, and
who are financially able to erect enough of the roosts to protect their
tenants. The roosts, however, must be constructed from a scientific
standpoint, so that they will not only attract bats, but cause them to
remain there permanently.


Knife Melted by Lightning.

Francis Wagoner, a farmer of Upper Mount Bethel, near Bangor, Pa.,
struck by a bolt of lightning during a terrific storm that passed over
that section lives to tell his story, but he will be marked for life.

Wagoner was sitting in the kitchen reading a paper when the bolt of
lightning struck a section of metal spouting, entered the bathroom
window, and went into the kitchen by way of the stovepipe.

From the stove the lightning hit Wagoner on the right leg, then crossed
diagonally to his left shoulder. On the way it came in contact with a
knife in his pocket, which was partly melted by the bolt. The lightning
left reddish streaks over his body, and he was badly stunned.


Girl Poses as Boy Five Years.

After five years of roaming about this country and Europe posing as a
boy, Edna Puffer, eighteen years old, arrested in the New Haven, Conn.,
railroad yards just as she was about to hop on a freight train for New
York, was thrust back into petticoats as soon as they could be procured.
She said she had traveled to Europe on board a cattle ship.

Convinced that Franklin Shaw, the sailor who was arrested in her
company, was unaware of his companion’s sex, although he had been with
her for nearly three months, Judge Booth, in the city court, continued
both cases.


Government’s Movie Shows.

The department of agriculture keeps up a special motion-picture factory
at which it makes the films it uses in promoting scientific farming. The
department heads use the films to illustrate lectures, and the field
force shows them at country schoolhouses and churches, where they have
invariably attracted large and interested audiences. Even before the
factory was set up, various bureaus of the department made use of films
in educating the public. Thus, the bureau of animal industry has a
special film to show Southern farmers how to make and use the dipping
vats that would free their herds of ticks. It also showed films that
illustrated the correct ways of handling meat, breeding cattle, and
raising poultry.

The good-roads division and the forest service have made a similar
effective use of motion pictures.


Rains Alligators in Iowa.

Is there really something to the belief that reptiles are sometimes
rained down from heaven or has somebody lost two perfectly good
alligators in the vicinity of West Liberty, Iowa? That is a question
West Liberty would like to have solved.

Two perfectly sane, entirely responsible, utterly truthful and eminently
respectable families report the finding of alligators in their front
yards, said front yards being separated only by the width of the passing
road.

On the farm of David Nauman an alligator was found prowling about the
garden and was destroyed by an excited member of the Nauman family.

On the place of Charles Carter, across the road, Mr. Carter in person
made the discovery, captured the alligator, and now has it on
exhibition.

West Liberty people say it has rained hard enough of late to account for
’most anything, but, beyond accrediting the advent of the alligators to
the sky, are at a loss to advance an acceptable theory.


Interesting New Inventions.

A doorknob connected with an electric lamp that may be switched on by
pressing a button has been patented by a New York inventor. The
invention is expected to help materially in the sometimes difficult
process of finding the keyhole after dark. The doorknob is illuminated.
The same principle is applied to the doors and dials of safes.

A cattle guard invented by an Arkansas man, a section foreman, has been
approved by railroads. It is made in three sections, so that it can be
removed for track surfacing. The guard consists of rollers, which are
made in a frame resting on top of the ties.

A Philadelphia University professor has invented a dust-proof,
fire-resisting glass case for museum specimens.

Wireless apparatus that weighs but eight pounds, yet will transmit
messages twenty-one miles and has received signals more than three
hundred miles, has been invented by a New Jersey man.

A sand box for automobiles, like the familiar device on locomotives, to
distribute sand under their tires to prevent skidding, has been patented
by a Massachusetts inventor.

What is believed to be the largest conveyer belt in the world, 893 feet
long by thirty-six inches wide, has been made for an Ohio stone quarry.

To keep the base lines of ball grounds dry when it rains, a
Pennsylvanian has patented a canvas cover, easily rolled for removal.


Sue for Wages Earned Back in Slavery Days.

After more than a half century has passed since the freeing of the
slaves, a suit was filed a few days ago in the supreme court of the
District of Columbia to gain compensation for work performed by them
during the years 1859 to 1868.

The suit was filed by H. N. Johnson, of Louisiana; Rebecca Bowers, of
Texas; C. B. Williams, of Mississippi, and Mamie Thompson, of Tennessee,
against William M. McAdoo in his official capacity as secretary of the
treasury.

The plaintiffs claim to be descendants of slaves who worked in cotton
fields of the Southern States, and they hold that they are entitled to
money their ancestors earned and which is now in the treasury, listed
under the title of “internal revenue tax on raw cotton.”

This money, the complaint says, amounts to $68,072,388.99, acquired
from the seizure of cotton gathered by plaintiffs’ ancestors. The
plaintiffs contend it should be paid to the descendants of those by
whose labor the cotton-yielding revenue was produced.

The bill asks that the court appoint an examiner to collect evidence;
that Secretary McAdoo be ordered to disclose the amount and source of
money now in the treasury under the listing of “Internal revenue tax on
raw cotton,” and that he be ordered to state any reasons he may believe
the plaintiffs are not entitled to the money.

The petition was filed by a Washington attorney representing Cornelius
J. Jones, of Muskogee, Okla. Jones, who is said to have prepared the
bill of complaint, is a negro lawyer.


Dies Close to Time He Set.

Peter White, an aged negro residing near Washington, N. C., died at
twelve-thirty p. m., just thirty minutes later than the hour he had
appointed. In April, White told friends that he would “give up the
ghost” at the stroke of twelve.

About this time Jerry Langley, colored, was giving the police of
Washington trouble. Langley had set the hour for his demise. He
postponed it several times, each time disappointing a great crowd of
blacks gathered for the dramatic exit of Langley. Finally, when he said
the thing was final, the crowd blocked the street and the police would
not wait for Jerry to die. They hustled him off to the county home. He
is still living.

White, the authorities say, may have been prompted by Langley’s example.
He had visions of himself being trolleyed aloft in a golden chariot. Old
age claimed him, doctors say.


Year’s Pickles in the United States.

If all the pickles manufactured in the United States were equally
divided among the inhabitants, every man, woman, and child would receive
about twenty-four, according to the statement of Frank A. Brown,
secretary and treasurer of the National Pickle Packers’ Association,
which held a business meeting at the Palmer House, Chicago.

“There are three million bushels of pickles raised in this country every
year,” he said, “and as there are about eight hundred pickles to a
bushel, every person in the United States would get about twenty-four.

“People often ask: ‘What good are pickles?’ They are one of the most
beneficial foods in the world, because there is just enough acid in them
to properly care for the teeth, and indirectly this improves the health
of the whole body.”


New Electric Fly Swatter.

Herschell Colyar, of Visalia, Cal., is the inventor of a new fly killer
that is guaranteed to get the best of them. The “killer” is a small
apparatus composed of a number of wires. It can be hung any place and
connected with the “juice,” and when Mr. Fly touches any of said wires,
he quickly falls dead.

A barber shop is fitted up with one of them, and it seems to be doing
remarkable work.

It is said that some of the largest companies in the country have been
working on such an apparatus for years, and finally had declared that
such an outfit could not be made. Colyar has been working on his
invention for about three years.


Head Clerk’s Ear Is His Own Cash Register.

Women carry their loose change in their stockings, children put their
money in their mouths, but Norris Bethel, head clerk for Florin Brother,
of Fall River Mills, Cal., makes a cash register of his ears.

When he is selling goods and is in a hurry for a nickel or a dime to
make change, he reaches to one ear or the other and finds the needed
coin.

Or, if he received a small coin, and is at some distance from the cash
register, he puts it into one of his ears until he has use for it or
until he is close to the cash register and can relieve himself.

The system is considered unique, and it is Bethel’s exclusively.


Apple-sizing Machine Invented in Oregon.

Asa B. and Frank W. Cutler, brothers, who operate one of the largest
fruit ranches in Oregon, have invented and are completing the
construction of an apple-sizing machine that works by means of weighing
mechanisms. The two young men, graduates in the mechanical-engineering
department of the University of Illinois, have been experimenting for
several years with grading and sizing machines, and during the past two
years have put to practical test graders that made the choice of apples
according to the dimensions of the fruit.

“However,” says Frank W. Cutler, “this method proved inaccurate, on
account of the different shapes of the fruit. The new method will insure
a standard pack, something that has been long sought by fruit
districts.”

The new grader is so accurate that it will grade into different bins
apples, the weights of which differ only a tenth of an ounce. The local
inventors have improved on the receiving bins that are placed at the
side of the graders. Their new bin tips itself toward the packer as it
fills automatically, the end resting nearest the packer resting on
springs.


How to Fireproof Clothes.

At the safety exposition held in New York recently, Doctor Charles
Frederick Pabst demonstrated how to make fireproof clothing. He poured
from one pound to a gallon of cold water in a solution of ammonium
phosphate. Then he took an eight-inch strip of ordinary cotton gauze and
dipped it in the ammonium-phosphate solution. He dried it with an
electric fan and held it in a flame for thirty seconds, but it did not
burn. He took another strip of gauze that had not been treated with the
solution, and, on igniting it, it burned in four seconds. He advised
that the whole family washing should be made fireproof. The expense of
an average-size family would be about fifteen cents a week.


His Machine Ties Bundles.

About eight years ago a father and his son began to work upon an idea
that had occurred to the elder man during his working hours in the
mailing division of the Chicago post office. A short time ago the result
of their joint effort was put in operation. It is a package-tying
machine that does the work of many men. So convenient is the little
contrivance that it has been introduced into the New York post office,
too, and the government now is negotiating with the inventors for more
of their machines.

The inventors are Romanzo N. Bunn and his son, Benjamin H. Bunn. For
years the men have been tying up bundles of outgoing letters for
transportation to the trains. Fast as the men worked, it always seemed
Bunn thought it should be done faster. His son worked on the mechanical
side of the problem. Together father and son toiled in a homemade shop
at their home. The little portable “tyer” was what came out of the
basement workshop.

The machine is about three feet high and about a foot square. It begins
operation after the mail has been distributed in the racks by hand ready
for tying to go to the trains. Then the machine is rolled along the line
of pigeonholes and fed, by hand, by its retainer. Packs of letters, four
inches thick, are placed into position, the machine is set in motion,
and then--click, click, clop! That’s the way it sounds. The first two
clicks indicate the tying of the packet of letters, sidewise and then
lengthwise, and the “clop” the dropping of the bundle into a waiting
basket.

Where the best men used to tie five or six packets in a minute, the
machine now ties thirty--and it has not tried for a record yet!


Flesh From Body Saves Eye.

The sight of Doctor E. Lerendinger, a professor of Hood College,
Frederick, Md., has been restored as the result of an unusual surgical
operation. Flesh was removed from the professor’s abdomen and placed in
a cavity above one of his eyes, which had been caused by an accident.
The operation was performed several weeks ago, but was not made public
until success was assured.


Tallest Couple are Wedded.

The tallest couple in Pennsylvania were united in marriage a few days
ago in Lewistown. The bridegroom, George Schaffer, who stands six feet
seven inches in his stockings, achieved quite a reputation when he was a
member of the Allentown police as the tallest cop. The bride is Mrs.
Angie Kern, six feet two inches tall. Both parties are about forty years
of age.

Mrs. Schaffer is a prospective heiress if she can break the will of the
late Charles Losch, who left about $150,000 to be divided among
relatives. She produced a letter purporting to have been signed by
Losch, saying that if she would take care of him in his declining years
he would leave her his homestead in Allentown, valued at $12,000.
Schaffer says he often heard Losch say he would leave Mrs. Kern the
homestead.

The newlyweds have purchased a farm, and whatever the outcome of the
will contest, it will not affect their happiness. The bride says she
fell in love with her new husband because she detested walking around
with a man shorter than herself.


This Modest Inventor Would Stop World War.

“I can make the United States the strongest nation in the world. I can
end the European struggle in a short time. I can make the smallest
nation most powerful.”

This is the assertion of John Vogelzangs, of Menominee, Mich., an
inventor, who claims to have a method of extracting electricity from the
air so that air craft might be manned with powerful guns and not be
forced to land until they want to.

“I can sweep the seas clear of vessels. I can kill armies and level
cities,” claimed the inventor, who in the same breath asserted he
favored universal peace, but that the world was not ready for it.

He says Secretary Daniels’ plan for an advisory board is good.

He refused to give out much information about his new device. He said he
lacked money to carry on the work, and displayed a letter from Mr.
Daniels, written before the war broke out, saying this nation was not
ready to take up his ideas.

Vogelzangs has a reputation for being an inventor of ability. He made a
street cleaner, which he refused to sell for $10,000. He also claims he
will revolutionize the berry business with a new picker.


Walks on 113th Birthday.

Mrs. Edna G. Goldman, of Glamorgan, Va., celebrated her 113th birthday
by walking ten miles to the home of her son, Henry Goldman, at Pound,
Va.

Mrs. Goldman was born in Appomattox County, Va., in 1802. Despite her
age, she cultivates a small patch of land in corn and beans each year.
This year she is “farming” about two acres.


Flivver is Not Amphibious.

Edward Kirby, of Newton, N. J., erred in believing a flivver amphibious.
It is alleged that he stole the automobile at the Grand Hotel, Golden
Springs, and, when closely pursued by other automobiles, he ran the
flivver into the Delaware River, seeking to reach Pike County shore.

The flivver floated several minutes and made quite a little progress in
the current, but when the body filled, she went down at the bow and soon
plunged to the bottom.

Kirby swam out and made his way across the river. He disappeared into
the woods there, and a posse under Sheriff Applegate is seeking him.


Song Tells of Old Man Who Had a Wooden Leg.

John Strain, of Greenwich, Conn., who lost his leg three years ago and
his temper recently, has announced that he intends to obtain a rubber
artificial limb. His statement was made to-day through a window of the
county jail, from which he will watch the dying sun precede each of the
next thirty twilights.

The reason Mr. Strain intends to obtain the new artificial limb
described it that his wife, a muscular woman, who has been getting
plenty of exercise since John ceased to work eight years ago, has been
and is in the habit of bounding his artificial limb off his forehead
when a domestic storm brews. The present limb is of wood, and, for
various reasons, is unsatisfactory to Mr. Strain and his brow.

Over the condition of the weather a quarrel started in the Strain home.
Mr. Strain declared he felt that a gale was coming from the northeast,
inasmuch as his left leg--not the wooden one--pained slightly. Mrs.
Strain, with that rare spirit of raillery which characterizes a woman
who supports four children, told John the weather could scarcely affect
a man who sat in the house smoking all the time. It was then that John,
according to the testimony of his wife in police court, threw eight
volumes of Dumas, apparently bound in zinc. His aim was true.

Mrs. Strain then took John’s artificial limb and hung it just west of
where he parts his hair. Her judgment of distance was perfect--it
generally is. She then cried for help.

When help arrived, John had hopped on one foot over the State border,
into New York. A sheriff with a rich baritone voice explained to him
that hopping about New York State with no hat and only an undershirt
over his shoulders would mean but little in his life. John thought
deeply, hopped over into Connecticut again, and was sentenced to thirty
days in jail by Judge James R. Meade.


Machine That Remembers.

A machine which will remember the date and hour of an appointment made
several weeks previous is one of the latest efficiency devices to be
placed on the market. A roll of paper strip passes over a flat surface
where the appointment is indicated, and a punch mark made in the margin.
When that time occurs, a gong is sounded and a reference to the strip
will give the information as to what appointment is to be kept.


Fifty Dollars Gone, Flivver May Survive.

Probably the maddest man in and about Montgomery County, New York State,
just at present is Reuben Hyney, who keeps a shoe store on the main
street of Fonda, and who, as a side line, rents his automobile to any
one who can fit in it. Mr. Hyney has no more temper than any other
normal man who lives in Montgomery County, but the shoe business has run
over at the heel a bit recently, and the other afternoon something
happened which increased Mr. Hyney’s height four inches.

Hyney was adjusting a spring-heeled shoe to a broad foot at about a
moment after two o’clock, when the telephone rang sharply. He dropped
his client’s foot onto his own and limped to the booth. A man with an
educated voice, as Mr. Hyney describes it, was asking if he might hire
an automobile for the afternoon. He said he was a school inspector and
was as busy as a one-eyed mouse in a cheese factory. He would come
running if the buzz wagon was not busy. It was not.

Hardly had the satisfied customer walked from the store when a bearded
stranger, wearing a slouch hat, stopped at the door, looked up and down
the street craftily, and entered.

“Wait there,” said the shoe merchant, pointing to the central design on
a piece of linoleum. “I will oil the machine and call my daughter.”

The stranger, laughing up his sleeve, through his vest and along his
hatband, reached into the cash register and took fifty dollars. Then he
sat down and waited until Miss Hyney came to watch the store. By this
time it was hardly worth it.

An hour later the mysterious stranger told the owner of the machine to
stop in front of a building in Fort Plain. He went upstairs.

Three hours later Hyney decided the stranger had given him the
metropolitan fare-thee-well. He entered the building and found nothing
but the janitor and a flock of rent signs.

Two hours later he was back in Fonda, telling his daughter about the
“cuss” who tore the soul out of a dandy four-hundred-dollar touring car
and didn’t pay for it. Then his daughter asked him if he had taken fifty
dollars from the cash register.

Mr. Hyney is in bed. But what’s the use?--he can’t sleep.


Capture Odd Pair of Mice.

A most remarkable freak of nature is a white mouse and a black one
captured in a bureau drawer by John Elias, who lives in Atchison, Kan.
The white mouse hasn’t a black spot on it and has black eyes. The black
mouse has fur as black as the ace of spades, and its eyes are brown.

Local zoölogists are unable to account for the strange markings of the
mice. They are very vicious and never miss a chance to attempt to bite
members of the Elias family while being fed.


Billy Goat is Boss of Town.

A billy goat tied up traffic in Kokomo, Ind., as effectively as the
street-car strike did in Chicago. The goat broke away from a colored man
who was leading it at the transfer corner.

The conductors of two cars standing there were on the sidewalk at the
time. They started for their cars and the goat started for them. The men
“beat it” for a candy store and won.

The goat then turned his attention to several pedestrians and soon made
a scatterment. About this time Patrolmen Elkins and Webb came along.

Webb lived on a farm and knew the habits of the goat. He kept in the
rear. Elkins bravely went forward to capture the goat. He managed to
seize the animal by the head and tried to go with him to the station.
Every time he pulled, the goat started to butt him. He held on for
several minutes, afraid to let go, until the owner of the goat relieved
him.


Aged Couple Joined at Last.

George W. Hayden, a retired farmer of Big Laurel, Va., and Larestia
Fulton, of Lipps, were married at the home of the bride’s son, Henry
Fulton, a few days ago. The bridegroom was some few days past ninety
years of age when the knot was tied and the bride was lacking a few days
of being eighty-seven.

About seventy years ago Hayden and Miss Helt--the bride’s maiden
name--were engaged, but quarreled, and both married other parties and
reared large families. Hayden’s wife died eighteen years ago and Mrs.
Fulton was left a widow three years ago.


“Well Broken to Hard Work.”

Although many bones in his body have been broken as a result of various
accidents during his life, W. M. Morgan, who lives near Lancaster, Kan.,
finds little cause for complaint for the treatment he has had at the
hands of “cruel fate.”

At various times he has had both shoulders fractured, a number of ribs
cracked, a thumb broken, both legs broken, and his right foot has almost
every bone in it broken. Despite all these handicaps, he works every
day at hard labor and has little use for the fellow who thinks hard luck
has given him a jolt.


Snake Swallows China Egg.

Blacksnakes down Gales Ferry way cannot tell china nest eggs for hen’s
eggs, according to a story related by Mr. and Mrs. R. B. de Bussy, of
Mount Vernon, N. Y. The De Bussys were recent guests of Miss Caroline
Freeman at the Bouwerie, Gales Ferry. Miss Freeman’s guests at that time
included Professor Heuser, instructor in German at Columbia University,
and his family.

Professor Heuser’s daughter, six years old, returning from the poultry
house at Bouwerie, reported no eggs, but said a big snake was in a hen’s
nest. A manservant, using an ax, killed the five-foot snake.

Miss Freeman then discovered that the china nest egg was missing from
the nest. The search led to the interior of the snake, where the missing
china nest egg was recovered.


Lightning’s Queer Freak.

Lightning apparently photographed a perfect likeness of a tree,
branches, twigs, and leaves, in minutest detail, on the breast of Edwin
Liesman, who was instantly killed in the Magnolia clubhouse on Mount
Penn, near Reading, Pa., in a violent electrical storm.

Liesman’s mother, Mrs. Bernard Liesman, and a friend, Harry Opperman,
were badly shocked, but will recover.

Liesman was sitting at a window next to a telephone. The bolt followed
the telephone wire. The tree outside the window was almost exactly
reproduced on Liesman’s body. The tragedy occurred during four brilliant
flashes in swift succession, putting out all the lights in the cottage.
Medical men and photographers were puzzled by the strange features
wrought on the dead man.


Sounds Like a Fish Story.

A flock of geese were swimming in White River, near Augusta, Ark., and a
splash attracted the attention of several men and boys who were near by.
A large blue channel catfish came up and grabbed a goose, taking the
fowl under with him.

People watched for some time, but the goose never came up. This may
sound like a fish story, but nevertheless it is true.


Ghostly Figure That is an Awful Shrieker.

A ghost, or some other creature with a voice like an armload of siren
whistles, has frightened the residents of Somerville, N. J., to the
point where it is no longer a joke, and they want to get to sleep. The
disorder, frightful beyond words, ghastly, ghostly, and hair elevating,
has been going on for a week, and the whole town is determined that
something is to be done about it.

Thomas Hagen, night roundhouse watchman, was the first one to hear the
shrieks. He was going round and round the roundhouse when the most
frightful bellow imaginable rent the air. Mr. Hagen, who comes of a
warm-blooded race, was so startled that his blood ran cold. It could
barely run, even.

Right across the railroad tracks from the roundhouse is the cemetery,
and Mr. Hagen, after recalling this, took a little jaunt up the road
that restored his circulation to normal. He notified the police force,
who were sitting up late, reading, and he became indignant when the
department took a cigar out of its mouth and laughed at him.

Every night since then the terrible noise has been repeated, and persons
who have passed the roundhouse have seen a strange figure flitting about
among the bushes and trees which border the railroad tracks at that
point. Some of them even describe the flitter, which is going some,
considering the speed with which they invariably leave the neighborhood.

For the last two nights every one in the village has been shuddering in
unison, and the vibration can be felt as far as Philadelphia. Every now
and then the shriek ceases and is replaced by a wail--and the wail is a
whale of a wail. It is a relief when the shriek starts again.

Mr. Hagen, who originally heard the alleged ghost and who has become
more bored with the noise than any of the comparative beginners,
yesterday resigned his position as watchman in the roundhouse. He
declared that if everything was on the square he would work forever and
willingly walk around and around and around all night, but that under
present conditions no self-respecting roundhouse watchman could stand
around watching.

Chief of Police Bellis will watch with seven railroad detectives. They
will stay right at the roundhouse until the ghost appears. Beyond that
they have made no arrangements.


Hoodoo Pursues Two Miners.

Two mining partners, Gus Erickson and Bert Pinney, of Hailey, Idaho, are
certainly pursued by some hoodoo. While working on a stage ten feet
below the surface, the stage broke away from its fastenings, dropping
Pinney down the shaft twenty feet, where, after he had turned head down,
his buckskin shoe laces caught on a nail and held him until help
arrived. Three hundred feet of water would have received him had his
laces broke.

The next afternoon Erickson came to town on his motor cycle to get the
mail. Returning, the motor cycle skidded in a rut, throwing its rider
over the handlebars into the road, the machine piling on top of him.
With his skull fractured in three places, he lay in the road an hour
before he was found. Both men will recover.


Former Water Boy’s Story.

A prominent business man of Castleton, Ill., told the following story
the other night to three or four citizens assembled in A. A. Webber’s
real-estate office:

“When I was a boy,” he said, “I used to carry water for the men to drink
when they were working in the field some distance from the house. One
real warm day I carried water to my father, who was running a mower and
cutting timothy for hay. As I was about to return home, I noticed a
prairie chicken fly up from the freshly mown swath. Thinking there might
be a nest of eggs--which, by the way, are fine eating--I investigated,
and what do you think I found? A prairie chicken with its head cut off,
the mowing bar being just the right height to perform the operation. I
also found the feet and legs that belonged to the one that flew away. It
probably stood up ready to fly as the mowing bar came along, while the
other remained sitting and lost its head. Needless to say, we had
prairie chicken for dinner.”

       *       *       *       *       *

                        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 Kidnapped 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.
196--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