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10 ‘THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.-C.. SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1890-TWELVE PAGES. Written for Tar EVENING Stan, murdered?” he said, laugh: and, upon ny | recognize the man in question. He was a dark- | The Ariadne to thread this labyrinth was not | from them, but there are others who cling AUCTION SALES. AUCTION SALES. J word, with his maznificent que and per- | complexioned man, between thirty and forty, | yet discovered. fondly to the scene of a vanishedlove. If Iam | - a = = | ——— - - — 9 fect vigor of health and manhood, he seemed | rather a good-looking man, and he looked like |“ All the detective's researches among doubtful | any judge of character Mra, Hatrell belongs to _ FUTURE DAYS, FUTURE DAYS. ee a | about the last man whom any one would try to | a foreigner, French or Italian, most likely | characters and the places which they are} the latter type, and she will remam in the rpuomas DOWLING, Anctroneer, 1 ALE OF THE UNDS AND PROP. * | decoy, in the heart of London and in brond | Itahan, known to haunt, ail his long hours of patient | home sanctified by an ideal wedlock.” « : SEY OF 1H NATIONAL FATS ASSOCIATION acncietees daylight. The idea seemed to be as Trea There were other witnesses examined, and | hanging about at railway stations, in cellars! “I believe you are right, Mr. Reardon,” said RXISHING GOODS PE DISTRICT i terous to me asit did to him. He told me I/the inquest was adjourned for a week, the | where they make music,at bars where they drink | Ambrose Arden, in his caim, slow tones. look- Stoke PRS ee i tale BY MiSS BRADDON could carry the money to the solicitors myself | usual order being given for the burial of the | mysterious liquors called by eccentric and} ing up froma volume he had taken, as if me- NOK HW BIA, 3 i Ot » if 1 lixed, an offer which I laughingly declined; | deceased in accordance with the desire of his | alarming names, and in this suspected quarter | chanicaliy, from the table near his elbow; “I ee 3 we ted = oo a ers rn friends. and in that, were but fruitless labor. He could | believe irs, Hatrcll’s gentle and adhesive i tom Oe Aah Oo BeARLn OF oD” ROAD AND THE U ud BLADENSBURG TURNPIA. ne of business, at just north oz Lhode Did you see the direction in which he went} The sijeurned inquiry evolved very little | see nothing and could hear notl:ing of anyman | nature will find comfort in familiar things— away? additional intormation, “Much of the original | answering to the description of the man who | after a time, I should be very sorry if it were artic. who is retire irom this Yes, I turned to watch him and his com- | evidence was repeated, but no new facts had | had announced himself as a Swiss watch maker | otherwise. Ishonld be very sorry to lose so is Store, No. 1400, A . ry vt the asuthorit: t i © panion, They went into Cranbourne alley. | been discovered relative to the murderer. ex- | atthe Denmark street lodging house. kind a neighbor and, above all, to lose my dear al Fair Ansocsntion of the Busses ot teneeee, EDI ‘That was the last you saw of them? cept Mr. Walker's repudiation of any know!-| The detective pursucd his researches at | little friend and pupil, Daisy.” rring ettlea, yfvorate, Chartered aud omvauized ‘abder the Yes, ‘There was one thing which I observed | edge of such a man's existence. ‘No man of | Havre, but he could obtain no trace uf any | “Poor little Daisy,” sighed the priest; “what | Susjsziea hrtley Cathey he Cait states, to the aucerwigmed, bewritae + nary 331. : 7 TSN on my way toward Chancery lane which, it has | thatname had ever been employed: in Mr. | such person lately embarked on one of the | a blessed thing tha since occurred to me, might have some bearing | Walker's workshops in Cornhill, The police Fecotwedt on the same day ‘oue ot the land records she is too young to know | Bicek-tin Tea and Coffee Pota, numerous American and otier steamers which | t extent of her lossor the manner of her| Crockery and Glass Wan . nteict, upon my poor friend's fate. As I passed a | had up to this time totally failed in their efforts | leave that port. Such a man might have sailed | father’s death.” Tin Loulet Bets, Woot un Ware, THe, one As . ‘ susall Fis ial Gallon ocase a furs doota eon tha 10a tease tae ca aliasing Wien! GF taimnintag | uaeaiad: at tice wax wething dietiastivia | <The) eke avet coeur know,” said Arden | Sescretetn: Brighen Aue Nace TMU SST ARC PEFORE THE CORONER. spotat which Hatreil and I parted I noticed a | notes. The murder not having been discovered | the description of the murderer. to mark him | firmly. Aan Tae Gk MOO eve 3 oe hock T In the E Stawlard of Wednesday, July | m0 sanding in the doorway, looking down the | until a day and « half after it had been done, | out from the common herd of superior me-| Mr. Reardon looked doubtful. § Lot of Miscel:ancons H Nb folowing teal est : Tn the Evening Stand edn + SUF | street in the direction of Cranbourne alley, and | the murderer had had ample time to cross the | chanice, Tyee nae reer , stegicmatd a £72, appeared the following: ane it seemed to me, on after consideration, that he | Channel before the police were on his track. “It's hard lines for aman to let such a chance | den from her always?” h: i asked, "I fear not. Much anxiety | was standing there for a purpose, on the watch | He would probably endeavor to dispose of the | slip through his fingers. the detective said to | She may be kept in ignorance of the trath Mysreriovs Dtsar ARANC EAL ESTATE VALUABLE REAL Es. | An of that certain piece, parcel and part of a tractet is being felt by the family and friends of Mr. | for some transaction in the street. He had a | notes in Holland or in Germany, and perhaps | himself. “but I don't believe any man will ever | while she isa child under her mother’s eye, by tal? VCOUNTY, MIAGINIA. |} ly he coauty of Washtsctou, am Robert Hatreil of River Lawn, Lamford, near | More intent look than a casual idler would have | leave Germany for America. "The London | grow rich out of the reward .or the discov but when she advances to girlhood and mixes | 4/3)S7" diary B. Hammer ‘ am a pat ato Senedak See 3 s ae | had. I erossed the road almost immediately | police were in communication with their bruth- | of Mr. Hatrell’s murderer. The job was too | with other girls—whcn she zuex to school ber. TSSS. ¥ Bewuming £ Henley, who has been missi after I observed this man, and I dawdled a | erhood on the Continent, and all suspicious de- | neatly done, and the people in it were too] ‘Shs will not go to. school,” interrupted | oi the land teow i a Va. . y day afternoon. He left the little on my way to St. Martin's lane, looking poores from Havre, Marseilles, Antwerp, | clever.” Arden, “any one would be mad to expose her | 8441 the rev ~ spur street, at 3 o'clock on th j at one or two shops, As I waited at the corner | Hamburg. Bremen, or any of the principal Seas to the tittle-tattle and ot « pack of with my face toward Longacre # hansom ports would be noted. The large reward which CHAPTER IV. girls, I wonder you can suggest such a th j Am tn front of ts 1 in Cranbourn | Passed close by me, and T recognized the man | had been offered by the widow of the deceased Pel cscemigued nian Vicar.” Road to wits All th iad ioe a staal sak 6 ial’ aie being driven in itas the same man I had seen | was caiculated to stimulate the energies of — a z “Well, we will say there shall be est in the Denmark street é door of the cafe. Scotland Yard; but the efforts of Scotland Yard | The public inte pearance, whom he ac ied in the direc- id you know the man if you were to sce j resulted only in the following up_of various ! murder gradually diminished, aud finally ex- tion of Greek street, after taking leave of his ain? “ a ee arma —— NeEH leading to disappoint- | pired before summer leaves were withered and i Seal seecsusion & paresl of im afraid not. It was tha expression of his | ment and disgust 2 “ é pinay Thin eck ee ee ee ee a cur coc | teow: tak struck ime_not the tece’ tiectt’| Hs | 2'Tie ono Scsat’ WRich, if 1k codld have born: Pees (eevee Ciera mete thane Bank of England notes to the amount of some | 11) g keen, eager look, like a man in a des- | followed while 1t was warm, should have led to ee ee ee ee thousands, and it is greatly feared that he has) perate hurry. Fhe cabman was driving very | the apprehension of the murderer, was lost pepe ® man of, means and position, | been made away with on account of this money. | fast; the wheel almost grazed me asthe cab} scent, because the lapse of time had made it | 884 above all a man of unblemished characte Though for an only child that means self-contained, and not over-healihy | Lut the time will come when she | ratist mix with other people and go about in the | World, at home and abroad. Do you think no | Ps James Birch ou th cious acquaintance will ever be indiscreet | and Jaues Birch S- enough to tuk to her, in puro sympathy, about ena, Senet es F thereat; te * jurchas % -takiug it for granted that B 5 ° Next, because it was a shock to socicty in gen- | (} 4 f . mes Butcis % lice have been on the alert since yester- | shot round the corner. : cold before the Scotland Yard hounds could be | 5 — oubted Cont. | 2¢ knows all that can be known about it west 13 teen Sanduimardongy oh sht| In what direction was the eab going? laid on. eral to discover that » man of undoubted cour- | "That is a long to look ahead,” said raid ste day morning. but up toa late hour last night 1d be assassinated : Letwee eee age and powerful physique co} t audiniacey tad bean made ‘Toward St, Giles’ church. Ten days after the murder there came com- |}: lich dn a th aol : ‘That would be in the direction of Denmark | munications from the Credit Lyonnais at Nice, | @bro8d daylight, in a decent London street, The foliowing notice appeared in the Times | street, would it not? from the Credit Lyonnais at Cannes, and from | working peogie vad that hi rds acl on July 8: It is the way to Denmark street. I} Mr. Smith's bank at Monte Carlo, which dis- escape tnchallenged with his plunder, Daeaprut Morper 1s Dexxank Srncet, | walked over the ground this morning. posed of the question as to what had become of | “"'Thure were a good many leading articles in Bioomssvny.—The mystery of Mr. Hatrell's| The wituess appeared deeply affected, but} the money which should have been paid for | the newspapers upon the cabyect et. Robert disappearance has been solved, and the worst | gave his evidence in a straightforward and bus- | young Squire Florestan’s river meadows, the ieee sees fate: ‘The Danmark cieeut fears of his family and friends are only too | imeaslike manner. bundle of notes which Robert Hatrell had | mystery wax served up to the British. Pabl fatall ed. On the S0thultimo a foreizner | | You had known the deceased from boyhood, pocketed so gaily that summer afternoon after | which glonts over alleuch mysteries, with every ble appearance, representing him-| you say. Did youknow anything in is- his cheery luncheon at the Army aud Navy | variety of jourmalisti the Brit in fracuavenel widcinaker, eupbered ai | tory of kin Wife caleulated ta) tetow any tigi tenn be i ¥ | variety of journalistic s pau Arden, “I hope hearted, ha nished, “her will grow upa light- mind so well tur- full of interesting evil you apprehend ever me to} ‘ong enough to b the shock, Inthe meantime 1 trust that all | her friends in this place. irom the highest to the lowest, will do their best to keep her in ignorance of everything—except the one fact has lost a good and affectionate girl, Watker's, Cornhill, took a second tloor back | upon his rensons for accompanying this for- |" In'the morning of July 7 an elderly woman | {awiie mere told, n= they had beon vers often lenze Was bed room at No. 49 Denmark street. payiag a | eign woman to Denmark street? had called at the Credit Lyonnais at Cannes to | ang degencrate age thaleuch Scinee aa. tho rc tat . He appeared to be a pthing: : Pas exchange two notes of £500 each for French | Denmark strect murder were t saaiarel Gabe arden to get rid of time, in accordance u ne its Wo | along maid north lane i Person of urderiy and sober habits. He was} | You liad never heard of his having relations | money. She was n person of ladylike appear- | pemmark strect murder wore, the natural out | wiel) Mr. Reardon's iggestion that it wot ; ohh @ut of doors ail day, and he went in and ont & person called Antoinette? ance and manners, spoke French with a Fari- | clasgos, and unspeakable corruption in the aris. | Weil to leave the mourner to herself for morning and i Without attracting avy} No. I never heard of notice from his fellow-lod upon himself and always | ha § unks, to the wn and river, the flowers | 9 * r ee tract: theres along Uh were in the perfection of their ny one by that name. | sian accent, pressed the cashier as a per- rs, He waited | But Ihave heard of him speak of a gir) in| sonage to whom the utmost respect was due, ed his door be- | Paris with whom ke was in love two or three | She was very particular in exacting the fulleat hour or so. The is and shrat tocracy, a depth of degradation under a venecr of refinement, whereby was naturally fostered dalo-dzs: ee at ibe ane summer beauty, clumps of roses, hedges ot | 7"! — = = fore going ow therefore no enrios- | years before his marriage. rate of exchange for her thousand pounds, and | eM devel ee tinct of | the | roses. standard roses, aivact <roaee, Baal Toe, WALTER B. WILLIAMS & CO. Auctioneers. ity exeited by the fact that the room remained | Do you suppose that there was an intrigue | seemed to take a miserly delight in the trifling a wavo of crime was passing over England, and | Climbing roses, made the glory of the long, | waLxuT wT. CHAMBER SUITES, PARLOR closed during the whole ot last ‘Tuesday, and | between him and that girl? profit made on the transaction. She informed | that a savage Tee of bloods i bold tia in the | 2@fFow lawn, and between the lawn and the SUITE, VELVET AND BRUSSELS CAKPET 1, TNs 1. and recorded in Liber’ although no one had seen the lodger in que I think not. He spoke of her quite frankly, | the cashier, en passant, that slie had hired a| air. aud the Brition Public wes tnedhennece, | Tiver there was an Italian terrace with yews | UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS, LOUNGES, -KUGs | og scy., uf tite land recoras of xa tion 1t was supposed that he had gone out at | and t ioree ts ublic was furthermore me occasion inthe presence of his | villa in the Quartier de Californie, and that she . to whom he was most devoted. I re-| required the greater part of this money to pey the deed o John A. J. and junipers planted at regular intervals,” and n tubs containing orange trees in the the usual hour in the moruing and let himself | w in at the usual hour in the called upon to take warning by these mon- vous developments of our nineteenth century ening. The house | member that upon that occasion his romantic | the season's rent in advance. She added also, = : . mca e ate spaces. There was flight of as in the oceupation of three :lifferent fami- | passion for the French woman was joked about | en passant, that the people of Cannes were | Ovlization, and in a general way to mend it5 | stone steps leading to the river ateach end of Poy ao eae ar an me i a lies—the first ficor being occupied by a work- Fy a n n a . husband and wife. Jdo not fora moment | usurious in their insisten workshop | believe in any dishonorable connection in his | forehand from a tenant whose integrity and foreigner, who | past life. : whose means it was impossible to doubt. "This Sut you think that Antoinette may have been | was said with an xir of quiet dignity which con- apon payment be- ing tailor,and the front room used as for three or tour_me Th gave the name of Saqui. ‘These voices crying in the wilderness of Lon: don life the British Public heard with but a languid interest. ‘The one fact that did in- | Howse of classic he terrace, and at the western end, with its | pP} NTH, at TEN O% ¢ residence 3 and District and ki ack to the setting sun, there was a summer | stroct uoriuwest, Wo will seli the above effects without E ~ orm, in Portiand st hag om WALTER B, WILLIAMS & CO., - - : : é ch in Italy would have been Auctionesta, self as a French Swies, the name of the girl he admired? firmed the cashier in his idea that he was deal- ED aaa tla woe at note rere te marble, At th ern end of the terrace, = ty BL the Jura, had been accommodated with a latch ery likely. ing with a personage. was the fact that London, was not altogether 4 | #2400 a lower there was a capacions ee re te reared S100 perches te key. It was only at o'clock yesterday morn-| And that the name was used asa lure to get| ‘These details wero communicated later in place devoid of danger to human life even in | Pat louse, containing a couple of outriggers, i iS, &C. wiaal of a brauch, thence with eard ing when the landlady knocked at the door of | him to the house in Denmark street? confidential talk with the detective who fol- | broad daylight, thata man aight at any un. | © Punt and wince eypbaiontacinced |r ee TONal TOTALS | south Orks Gogrere we the second floog with the intention of) J have no doubt that it was so. lowed up the clue; the main fact telegraphed | guarded moment be lured within four walls and | BO%t hous 2 favorite lounging place ree ; : ~ $ seking ber lodget to leave his room qpen in| When did you first hear of his disappearance. | so Geotlaud Yard was the fact that such’ and | Seung moans be lnred within f those who | Of Robert iatrell aud bis friends—a place on s este 4 1G-10 order that she might clean it during his ab-| Early the following day, when I received | such notes had been turned into Peonely rome argued that there tnust have been tome duck, | Nitich to smoke and talk in the summer twi- ANY E | 454-100 perches: wo: sence, Copel apin was first aro a His elegrm from his wife aking for information From Monte Carlo came an account of “al «pot in Mr. Hatrell's history, or he would not | Hatt as the plensure boats went by to Henley | Me XK ‘ é c ghoul seven, anti not being able te oheain any | heed wan fo Drache ails nan en ncn, ting | later transaction, An elderly lady Of arlsto- | o,readily have followedan ceknown momenger | _ Mica, Talbot bad seen her husband and the oo ¥ | band was to iunch with me on Monday, and ¢ appe: . Feply at six. she concluded that he had becn | naturally applied to me when first she took | frau epee’ out all night, and proceeded to inquire of | alarm. the other lodgers when he had been| A memberof the firm of solicitors in Lincoln’ Inst seen, she herself not having seen | Inn Ficlds gave evidence as to the appoi h “said line south Git dewrees J perches to thy beginnitue aud coutal: X of land, according toa survey ther NUT SkC ade by said Carpenter as surseyor. . DINING | ‘Together with all of the by DESTAL | ments on said several parcels or tract, D TALE | all of the ways, easements, privileses Kk BEDS, | tancestothe same belonging or in any wise appe: “LED | tame. ‘ihe above described parcels of land being the same roperty conveyed to sald association by Chaties T ad called at the English | on the strength of a woman's name. There | @ead man sitting there in close confidential there late on the afternoon of July 7 and | must have been something in the dead man’s re- | talk on a summer evening after dinner, while had changed three Bank of England notes for | lations with the woman called Antoinette which | She and her sister strolled ap and down the £500 each, taking in exchange French notes, | made it a matter of life and death to him to go | terrace or stopped to feed the white stately eee twenty franc pieces, and those large gold ‘S| wherever she snmmoned him. Otherwise. ns and their soft gray cygnets. he almost him since Monday morning—when he | ment made by the deceased for the payment | Sra handred francs’ which makoso fine & dis-| bearing in rained that be was ou his wey te wn ind ah6 could: Weak: kita sabllow wonuaer AAD OLE MALTESE passed her in the passaze at a quarter past | of the £3,865, and the execu- | diay in a rolenu on a trente vt qui ble. | i i Robert Hatrell’s laught he walked th 5 s " ram Poe hes a eet quarante table. | important business appointment, and that he | Robert Hatrell’s laughter as she walked there WARP, ANTIQUE HALL seven on his way out. No one remembered | tion o Meboneta described | sere, as at Cannes, the cashier had been im- | had four thousand pounds in his breast pocket, | HOw, with her back to the boat house, Whata| West pty sgt . K IN TABLE, WHITE © KMALTRESSES, F: having seen hom or heard any movement in his | the of Colonel MacDonald with the BODY B SEL 4 ~ ~ pressed by the distinction o' or | § iad ; that he ; | joyous, frank, expansive nature. What a happy CHS FURNITURE, AND pd gen Pe men in the tailor’s workshop had seen him pass | that was felt at Mr. Hatrell’s non-arrival, it | which she handled ¢ £500 note : 5 MIME the open door on his way down Picion being now aroused ¢ open, and a terrible spec jadicated long So argued Society, shaking its head sagely at | Of comfort and delight; strength. intellect. good | COMMENCIN WK AM. we il deeds of « experience of wealth. A gambler evidently, | dinner tables, where men atl women's eatyral | 1ooke, fortune, perfect’ health and a wife who | st tue sbavo uatued reside i das of Aarts thought the cashier, but a woman rich enough | interest in the tragedy of human lifosometimes | @dored hima, “And he been stabbed to | Sommect therein and town “ie being known to the firm that he was a of punctual and businesslike habits, and partien- ele met the view of | larly anxious to pass into possession of the la . to afford to gamble without any sordid anxic ets the better of that good taste which would | death ina shabby London loaging by an un- | jas-4t RATCLIFFE, DARR & CO., A those who entered the room. A man was found | property in question. 7 & oe ooee ene eich woule & * a Sanne = co J r 3 - as to the result; a person whose presence did | exclude such subjects of conversation from re- | known hand. Jt was only a fortnight ago : > tae : rT. stubbed he ear’, ank « Kk as] "s , . ~ RY SALE OF VALUABLE MPROVED bom oo Lon, panthaae yp eyes — et beremdbenpied Peay bros Mr_ Hatrell’s | honor to the deligutfal little settlement on the | fined assemblies. that Sarzh Talbot and her husband had been RIY ON FIFTH SIRLET NORTHWEST | in one tract, the whole: since tts purchase Uy ¢ e body was y the bed ¢ cheek, deposed to the amounts and numbers | roei, Summer was gone and it was late autumn, | dining at River Lawn, They had gone down KEET AND ON MARYLAND AV. | ciation, haviug been and now being inciowed by a subs which had been stripped off the bed and of the notes, and stated that the police were ; e +, | to dine and sleep in the very flush of. midsum- FOUR AND-A-HALF stantial fence. be improvements thereou coum of about tue murdered man so as to | already in possession of these numbers and on | From Nice came a third telegram. Elderly | and the outside world had forgotten mae or) oom fost fi w LHWEST. & Commodions Building used as 9 clu bicod that tlowed from the we the alert to discover any attempt that might be | Woman exchanged two notes, such and such | Hattrell—had forgotten him just. wh: nar, Just $0, smell” the roses, Just for a tow 5 ee ee | cece cae ans ae ne must have been instantaneous, An empty bot | made to dispose of the notes either in England | BUtbers as advertised, for £500 each, and one, | widow was waking from a long, dull dr hours’ respite from London gaitics and London | District o - : erage Joo weg? con none tle labeled ‘Chloroform,’ and x sponge | or on the Continent. also number as advertised, for 1 July | agony to the reality of her irreparable los smoke, as Clara had expressed it in her jetter . 2 - ; which still retained fant odor of that drug. . Mo “d i 4 5 Fic e e = L with a ses “apacity tor nae ee ale ea | eat tl cee mate cea ‘The woods along the valley of the Thames | Of invitation. ‘There had been only the Vicar : 1 = re » i pc) ii e d Clieveden’s | 8ud Mr, Arden to meet them, the two men now n eepective wine: suggested that the victim had been made help- mark street, described the appearance an A letter following the above telegram in- | were clothed in russet and gold and Clieveden’s | * 6 h the iawyor. Thay | 8 pro situated hu the ra < . as eaccueteusiaaue ts nedeaies on asvachsrene ie piste ei he, aed formed the authorities of Scotland Yard that | glades were strewn with iallen leaves, The | im the drawing room with the lawyer. ‘They | ptbed proverty situated 1 the city ot Washinet : " - ‘ a nzage he elderly question w: f di mists of autumn rose in the early evening. pale | had been a most sociable party, full of talk. | J3NCNikt Tea. vi Horses, .735 Grand Stand Chair, struck. The deceased was a man of powerful se oor back bed room on the ‘Th the elderly woman in question was of dis- 0 y ng. Y - . 42 Pook oe : y praee: ee . o os 7 F e d ph: like, al th re att rell expatiating upon his p for the ar- | “At rouR OcLi P.M. Lot 34, in square No, | % Wagons, ‘vol Stands, build, whom few antagonists weuld have ¢ day preceding the murder. thuguished appearance, speaking Trench per- and antomlike, along @ river meadows, f th aeebick to be | 45 t hh street nurthwest next to ih bets Wason Harness, 6 Ha. rows, to attack sing! nded. His pockets : EE was a very civil-spoken man. He looked | fe¢tly, and supposed by the cashier to be a| and the tramp of the horses on the towpath ment of the land which was so soon to be | SP; Ot et and i .d by a Frame Dwe yiow Harness, 2 dren Kel rifled, but his clothing was uot otherwise dis- | quite the gentleman. He spoke English ike « | French woman. She had alleged as her reason | aud the ripple of the water against the sides of nd even in higher spirits than usual, ped At FIVE O'CLA% PLM. of ee ee ee He spo ghish for changing the notes that she had bought a | the barge had a ghostly ound. in the obscure | , here had not been a cloudin the horizon; and | Halt ut tut S athe West Hilt : Seadbabiie mpanr Che thiegs of Cha mander being | Sr coed Gk oo oe an plot of land at Boullicn, with’ the intention of | erayness throngh which boat and horses earae | Mrs, Talbot, who loved Harley street and all | Brautlyy amis of i sdsas No. Gu Sing ; = couveyed to Scotland Yard. man gentleman, in the tailoring, who occupies | puilding s villa there, aud she preferred to pay | slowly, as if moving in secret under the veil of | her London pleasures, had for once in her life | 475 on Maty.andavente, between 4¥4and Uih streows | }Short Handie Shoveley i Mr. Hatr Il had drawn a considerable sum of | my first floor. I should certainly have put hita | for #t in French money. The seller was an ig- | night, 4 | Sever cestarthebmavert saa Gh live | “Aud inuuediately thereafter the west half of lot Lof | together with euch other per money out of the bank, and was on his way to | down as a Frenchman, and he told me he was a | 20T@nt man, who scemed never to have seena| It was a mild and lovely day at the beginning me ie coe a eee cot ara can live A his lawyers in Lincoin's Iun Fields to complete | Frenelt Swiss, from the neighborhood of Neu. | Bank of England note; and there was also the | of October when Clara Hatrell left the house | like hermits in the height of the 2 Harrow Sulkic 1 Koad Machine, 1 Mower, « Harness, turbed, and identi! roperty owned by. said premises at the * of lots In sq) 2, bee improved | sald wesociation a tay Uo c ason,” she | py a brics structu id | 1 b: 1 But lly th - wow us the ny — the — ie Je, consisting of Benches, Tables, Feed- A : - ms tie ? i told her husband. ‘But really this morning, | corner of 6th street aud Maryland avenue southwest. | boxes. Tool the purchase of estate at the time as | chatel, tha sorke Mr. iker advantage upon the exchange. Again, as at | for the first time since her husband's funeral | t? a : pele tte ine of sale prescribed by “ sng Fi te loca OO tat a pl com pway tial porn oaae paste gavel ret igen pot ‘rove | Cannes, the distinguished elderiy lady showed | on the 1ith of July. She had insisted on follow. | When we were Icaving, T almost envied them | yitfuwo! sale prescribed by hed me third | | All of the shove deecsibed, real estate and thograna Sy | of the pu: in two | stand chairs are imcumbered by a prior deed of trust ef, in | fromm said cesvuciation ty Samuel st trom | ard C. Clagett, bearmg date May trust | co 1 a e! fi i ii ii °] ch vy: their quiet domestic life in that lovely pla The police are act aged in tl ur- spectabl ger. e of ‘g | herself eager for the utmost profit upon the | ing him to his grave in Lamford church yard, uae - i. Ft or wend eli te potralpeal anil beeot epahper oa ic waeaecenee Teens | exchange. and she had borne herself. with extraordinary | Aud now the bond of married lite w in possession of clue, A reward | not hesitate about taking hin i The money taken from the murdered man fortitude throughout the funeral service, had coed was gone like a dr of five hundred pounds bas been offered by the | There wae nothing retalsive in hi .. | Was thus accounted for—within a hundred and | stood by the grave till the last ceremony had | awaketh. i Z ie mewkinct bane tie terete macinie pis *PPOM- | ftteen pounds, ‘The odd money being in smaller been performed, the wreath of summer flowers | _ Mrs. Talbot was pacing slowly «long the ter- Extracts from tue report of the inquest pub Nothing. He told me that he should want | tes might easily be disposed of without leav- | Inid in its piace, and then she had gone quietly | Tce depressed by these thoughts, when a long lished in the # mes of the following day, Juiy 9: | no attendance, as he was used to ing any trace in the memory of the people who | back to the house where the happiest years of | Shrill shriek rang out upon the summer ail qual Insts broken, alee m when one of sale at TRNG, an t 10 »J8S1, mn Liber No. § Us, to secure the pay apOD bolas of eat ase 1, 1880, and Sho, with if property ng to be at of the us of sale | tion for days aiter day of sale | payable to be mplied wita within 1 rim te) on the Ist day of siting upon r k uf the property will be resid aiter 9 days’ previous ad- | interest at the rate of @ per eeutita per aint, pay. Ste Teak a tee ea ne, Bae, an inti- | himeclt. Sf he wanted = cup of tes he wonld | Tecelved it, There, could be very little doubt | her married life had been spent. She had gone | tuch a cry of agony a her ears had never | yertieeacnt, at the riak andcost of the Gefeulting pur- | tte ccmel amwealis, the Gnit abet Say end Bo: mate friend of the deceased and that he had | take the teapot down to my back kitchen—-1| that the elderly lady of Cannes was identical | to her room without word, save one gentle | heard until that grag Haag MSY ee oma et ; RUTLEDGE WILLS: eratid stand chai’s wilt be scld rubject to the iudebted= junched with him et the Army and Navy club | don’t buen any tire 1 the front room in sum-| With the elderly lady of Nice and Monte Carlo, | murmur of thanks to the sister who lind’ been | the open window of lier_ sister's bed room, the 4 beatae the on Monda: nt. Deceased was in| mer time nd would boil up my kettle, All he | Her description as given by the three cashiers | at her side on that trying day. Her sister foi- | large bow window, which w one of Kobert SAM'L MADDOX; 1 1 ree cai “ weeded Mee soles . unyard iu soit beth ati Particularly isi. spirits during Inucheon, being | would want would be for me to clean his room | tallied in every particniar, especially in the | lowed her upstairs, heard her lock the door of | Hatrell’s numerous improvements, She rushed | pexcaxgon Bhos., Auctioned Doveaube puted, ‘day ot wale, eb elatex = ~ ed trifling detail of “athe ticeable mole just | her room, and after listening outside fot into the house and ran upstirs, but quick as} — —— TEAMS ‘The KEAL ’ will be sod mnuch elated at the prospect of passing into | once or twice a week. me Gets pubaammguleeage nae mole just ables COD int mice AaUGONS (AMMAR ANE: Ms ious ar CLIFFE, DARE & CO., Auctioneers, on the ter the day of sale or immediate possession of asmall estate adjoin-| Did he bring any luggage? above the outer corner of the lett eyebrow, | minutes went down to the drawing room.where | She was Ambr Spon Ane ae Sacer ered ae es 920 Penusylvunia ave. now, within fir ter, the resi ing his own grounds on the banks of the | Ouly one sinall portmanteau, The police and in another detail as to the lady’s hands, | the clergym: ‘Thames. ‘The estate was under ten acres, but | have tal n of the parish, the family lawyer | there before her, and the former was in the act - a Payments at ove and two years from Ue day of sale, thataway. Itwas opened in my | Which were remarkable for their whitcness and | and Ambrose Arden were assembled. of breaking open the door as she reached the | SEVFNTY- ND FOUR HUNDRED | tor wai ae purchaser's 1 . will be siven, bearog the situation of the land was exceptional aud | presence and there was nothing in itexcept an | d¢ticacy of form—hands which had gone along | “I don't know what to do about Clara,” she | landing. —en h ORG STREET EXTENDED NEAR THE Coe | feelp-tn one and toe years freon thelt ste ite tate the amount to be paid for it arge—elose | old pair of trousers, a brush and comb aud } Way toward suggesting the idea of the lady’s | said anxiously, “she has locked herself in her | _ He had implored Mrs, Hatrell to open the FOSIXTE: NTH STREET NORTHLAST, the rate unum. payable upon £4.00). He. Col. MacDousid, could not | three empty bottles that had held chloroform, | Patrician birth and refined breeding to the | room, and I don’t teel that it is right to leave | door, and there had been no answer, so he put Sa eee roperty sold and ity remember the exact sum. Were you at home on the day of the murder? | ™inds of the three cashiers, her alone. Yet Idon’t like to force myself upon | his shoulders against the panneling and cage APTERNOO: After lunch JANUARY FOUR- on he offered to accompany the | Yes, I'was indoors all that day. One of the cleverest detectives in London | her. One cannot tell what to do for the best; it | Wrenched the door off its hinges, PUK O'CLOCK, we will se! r : : I atrell was sitting on the floor in the deceased to the Fank, where he was to cash a} Yet you did not seo or hear the dece: charged himself with the task of following the | may be better perhaps thatshe should bealone | Clara Hatre 5 0 : a S , check for the p money and from the | come into the honse? deceased | vail of this nameless lady, taking up the thread | with her grief.” HT Pan Spear pla etry lg tee Pyle! SUBDIVISION UF “Isa Tf the deimultstig purchare Bank—the West End branch of the Union} 1 was in my back kite! t at Nice after a quarter-past 11 upon the 8th of irs. Hatrell isa woman of deep religious | PANGS © a Len J EK WOOD." . : recording a: the purchaser's cost, aud, Saal Ol Sanden, in Cache street_he altered data tic Geeky Gok nn ee | aly, which was tiie timo of her latest Tecocded feeling.” said the pricet, “she will not be alone, | been written before marriage— These Lots are on G street extended near 16th street | the sum of 81,000 to be uepusited on acceptance of ) tet frout by plumb, feet deep; are con- Lerd.c liue. Sewer, f these lots, making | th ut, 1 to walk with him to Lineolu’s Inu Fields, the | Could you not hear people go in or out of | #PPearance, Sne has been borne up’ wonderfully this day, | SvO%t a8 ene bp oe ee asped | ennent to fleceased being somewhat im advance of the | the street door when you were in the back| It needed a good deal of close work in the | The same Power will be with her in the soli. | Upon her ; ar dak eek ck hour named for the interview with the vendor's | kitchen. way of inquiry at nearly every hotel in the city | tude of her room. It might be weil to leave he ot alice AG atti cannon | it — solicitors, He and the deceased had been at| Yes, { could hear them going along the pas- | to discover thatanclderly French woman of | her alone for an hour or two, Mrs. Talbot, | Be? * kad shoan' “elu ichiiy anil emig at Eton together aud he was, he believed. one of | sage and upstairs. but I wasn't likely to take | good appearance spent she night of the 7th of | After a period of solitary prayer she will be bot schelt Bowel Uy er wud atoes Gk Mr. Hatrell’s oldest and most intimate fricuds. | notice of woo wert out or came in, The men | July at the Hotel des Princes, that she arrived | glad of the comfort of your erly affection.” | Pmus te ae holee ceiketines ae so ‘They were im the habit of meeting trequently | from the tailor's workshop used to go in and | by the late train from Monte ‘Carlo, that her | ‘Yes, I think youare right. I will leave her os tak ae the property at. risk a in London and he bad often visited Mr. Hat-| out aud up and down at all hours, There are | only luggage consisted of a band bag, neither | to herself for a time, poor dear thing.” Kisses upon bor burning forkead, bot che teak | cusseraiter five days advertisement in some news: | Central Xatio rell at his house in Buckinghamshir. otuer lodgers in the attics and an old lady and | large nor heavy, that she went out soon after | _ Mes. ‘Talbot was an elder sister who bad mar- | Kisses upon her burning forhead, but she took | iwper jrullisied i Waclinetoi. 0-C. A deposit of BCARSON BOS. enenans Coroner Were you with the deceased at the | geutleman im the parlors, I might have _no- | ten o'clock on the morning of the 8th, lunched | ried six years before Clara made her debut. in | 22 notice, ass ee, nenmed fixed im that | oy purchaser's cust. RATCLIFFE, Daidk & CO - — an Counter of the bank when he cashed his check? | ticed a stranger'sstep, perhaps, if I had been | in her own room at twelve. and left the hotel at | society. She had married a rising pl ee See ieee nee nee serene seoae : Auctionecra, MEDICAL, &c. Col. MacDonald—I was standing at his elbow | on the listen, for | knew the footsteps of most | half-past twelve in a cab, which was called for | who had now risen to the fashionable level and Ce ee a et cite Sica’ at | "PVHOS. WAGGAMAN, Iteal ustate Auctioneer, ate hated at the time. of the lodgers. but L was very busy with my | her atthe door, carrying her bag with her, after | was one of the most popular doctors at the ‘She is mad,” cried Mra, Talbot, horrified at | J) = raiiroud ai f the PERSONAL PROPERTY will be on of ALL CASH ON DELIVERY he zrounds where this sale will tmke place are ace cessible through the (raius of the Ib. and O. railroud, Au luapection of the plat of the property may be had by calling 1 Steen. BAKNARD, Trustee, Su Sth street northwest, cost of defaulting pur- JOHN A. LUPE, Srustes IScMeNt 1M SOLE REWs- Central onal Baukot Wastineton c one and two years, mon the de. at option hot complied with in te days right rese V! kc c] e1 et - 2. = 3 Ac. WN, Did you observe where he put the notes? hy and € dula’t take euch notice duly paying her bill. Neither porter nor waiter | West End of London. Mrs. ‘Talbot that awful look, which mado her sister's face | TRUSTEES' SALE OF TWO: S ‘Phe Oldest Fstablished and only Eeliable Ladies? g 2 a a ee, 3 ‘¥ he oe - ce ” ” GDEN a Ww M " ‘ He put them inte a Russia leather note What was the state of the room when you and | had observed the number of the cab, nor had |sery anda school room to look after, and a | ke the face of a stranger; “mad, quite mad, R80 NASD ANG AND TENTH STREETS cin betuantieh Rae aan Oe babel 436 and 6th which he placed in his breast pocket, He was | Mr. Schmidt broke open the door? any one heard her direction to the driver. It | widely comprehensive visiting list, beginning | 5, then dic works tine he tea | oes caer He Pk Wearing a frock cost. [advised hum to baton |” ‘The deceased was lying on his back, stabbed | Was supposed she was going to the railway | with duchesses and dwindling down to strug- a ee Uneral | By virtue ofa deed of trust recorded in Liber N treatment. Consul pis cout, more in jest than in earnest 1:47, folio 457, oF 4 reco.ds of th : wd at the request . we Will sell at pubic au wou SAVUKDAY, JANU AL pt " A . i : ell lived in the darkness of a dis- «= Leon- | through the heart. ‘There was a chair lying on | station, andthe hour at which she left sug-| gling young women in the musical, literary, | Clara, Hatre rehe had| the floor beside the bed ‘as if it had teen | gested that she was going in the Rapide, whieh | suddremate ine, She bad an exacts Syne bea te knocked over ina struggle. The bed curtain | leaves Ventimille at six minutes past eleven for | bert a kind and generous husband; and’ she | Period she hovered on the brink of the grave. tion strictly rate rooms for Ladies, Medicine, sidered the money perfectly safe w placed it anbia LONG-ESTABLISHED AND When you left the bank with him did you | was drawn. A counterpane and blanket had | Paris. As the aforesaid Rapide stops at nearly | had so much to do and to think about at home | 4nd there wero dismal Pah ee ae s atsor Soba Devidane ooberetani 7m. ae. Olace hou, trom observe any susp: : been dragged off the bed and placed round the | every station between Nice aud Murscilles the | that she had not been able to devote any con- | doctor and her nurse lost all hope. Life and | S¢h.ire etiiniuc for the samo at. the soutnenst a ing about upon sither sid dacesundt « to sop up the blood, and the | lndy's range of country—as to choice where she | siderable part of her life to her sister's society, | Feason were alike in peril, and there was many | CUrner ot said it aud runn orth T2teet 10 | AQ TLENTION, ip y 2d You any reason to suppose that your friend was knife was : watched? as ta Not the slightest—no more than if he h come out ofa baker's shop after buy penny . But I do 1) Leet ; north 12 feet 10 ‘king m the wound, would alight—would be wid anything to indicate that the mur- | genera derer’s clothes or hands left the room. tr: . i A i y PI at i is uth line of said lot ; but there was a | She came now in this hour of mysterious and | @ ight when Ambrose Arden sat in his study | south line of to the alley ; thence south idea that any peraon so ill-advised as to | overwhelming calamity as an act of duty; but | ting to, retd, but never able to leave off | Ont alley. to the ‘bevinaisc, with Tieht of way were bloody when he | leave Nice was hardly likely to stop till he or | she was not altogether in sympathy with the | listening for the footfall that might bring him | through pussurcway between tii property and that aay smears upon the door or | she came ty Paris, Between Nice aud Paris | household at River Lawn, had not altogether | fatal tidings, ing this season of fear he | on thenur.h, ; ‘i 4 is » a ‘Terms: One-t hree equal 3 of bloody footprints on the floor? there was practically nothing—a wide area of | grasped the full measure of love which had | trely went to his bed room till the sun had “paved diag sealed instruct tor eularcing bust > incher, veloper ; abso. wwe mn Tout Bazar, ~ | TWAS NEVER BEE CONTRADICTED THAT bove the long level meadows toward | SHUits:i luscr bearing interest trom | ig Lauves’ Physician am the city baa asa fact that there w There wasn’t a sign of anything of that kind, | orange trees. seashore and mountain chain—| ruled between husband and wife, and. thus | sen above the long. lev adows toward | which note chaser bearing interest from | ing Ladies’ Physician 3m the city. Ladies, yo: about or watching him. The ides The police examined the room, © fon Vaniieacaimenst watering place or two—Cannes, | could not fathom the depth of the widow's | Henley bridge, and often the sunrise found him | day.of saleand securvi by, deed ut trust on property | couideutiy consult Dr. BROLBELS. V08 B st. 9.w. probability never entered into my hdl i ede id will be taken, net option of purchaser. | Jartcular attention paid to all diseases peculiar ‘There | Where did you find the sponge? St. Raphael—a shipbuilding settlement—and a | sorrow She had comforted a good many | Walking iu the lane between his cottage and | Maspositot 8100 quired at tine of waleaud | ladies, married or suugie. Forty years’ experience. Was nothing out of the commen iutwomen| About three yards from where the body was | seaport—but for pleasure, for gaiety, for move- | widows in her time and her general experience | River Lawn, It was the dreariest time of his | ail couveyanc going in and coming out of a bank. ‘The fact | Jying. fo eat purchaser's 1a ; t caine a is young | cost. Terms to be complied with in ten days front sale So OR GOTUKEK Hind ne ment, for the lovers of opera, ‘play house | had been that, however they might distress | life since the short, sharp agony of his young | cost. “Lermis to be compl: fiat pot pip wen tm EAD AND BE WISE.—DRDROTHERS, 006 BS gi his carrying some thousands could only be | “Should you know your lodger if you were to | and little horses, absolutely nothing. their friends by the intensity of their grief | Wife's illness and death, | Mo micincsaatioe purchaser. THOS Ee MAGGAMIASY rot BA pirated betore me and mage oath that beg TTT nate rans beeciaus Selecseation, © | eve kine again? ‘The intelligent detective visited Monte Carlo | during the first half of the first year of widow. | CRUE. Ao Ded him His litte pupil had Leon | THOS. R, WAGGA AeeH Sud willeuaranteea cure it, ali cases uf private diseases pond AByhins, occur on your way to Cran-| I could swear to him anywhere, and saw the cashier at Mr. Smith's bank. He | hood, they generally took their friends by sur- | oee oor be heraunt.and wai Westgate-on- \CERY SALE_OF VALUABLE LOT ON Z| tun'and advice tree st uy Lour of theday Sun. arne street to suggest the notion that you | John Smallman. journeyman tailor, deposed | went into the rooms and talked to the attend- ste by their rapid recovery in the second Res with <n ihevy of oomita’ Gil Slane a eA LST. BEIM : scribed and sworn to before me by Dr. BROTHERS, were being followed? | : to having seen the Freuchman go down stairs | ants. He met an acquaintance or two, also on | half. Ks herself, His son's vacation was| By virtue of edecree of the Supreme Court of the | SAMUEL.C. MILLS, » Notary Publicity and for the senothing. at af we had been followed the | sometime on Monday afternoon, He took no- | business, but he could find out nothing more | Dr. Talbot was one of the British Public who | tha__ herself. i rice of Ce 783, in | District of Columbia, this Sd.day of July, 1885. jact would, in all probability, have been un: a31-1m* : - D it : ep ipearyee passed in Equity No. d »of the factas on Friday and Saturday the | about the elderly lady. opined that there was something more than | BCs Spent | with | th . ; Siced by either of us. We were engaged in | man had been out all day—and wassupposed to |" He went to Cannesand put the Cannes cash- | met the eye of the coronor or the oneoneen Hees the bontitis OE nr etd | Jol A. Bickerton et ip are defendants. will se conversation the whole time and we were pass- | be in constantemployment in the watch mak- | jer through a kind of Socratic dialogue in the jury in the relations of his deceased brother- h aid b 5 a . . aa, the ta id bave been irk-| JANUARY THIKILENTH, 1590, at HALF Une throuse * busy Part of London. Nothing | ing trade. He laughed and told one of his | way of close questioning, but could get no | in-law and the person called Autoinetter Ques. | BeS® , The lad’s company wouid have been irk- | JANUARY THM Me HOOD J D BY 4 BOTTLE ‘or two of Dr. BROTHERS’ Invigorating Will cure auy case of Nervous Debility aud loss of happened, to my knowledge, out of the com-| mates that tho Frenchman had beca keepin tun has been already told, A house-to- | tioned ‘searehingly by his wife ou the subject | S0me to him in his tine of fear. "He preferred | fseate tuowiv and deaicuated ap the plat of the city | Maier Females “UO Bat ste; °° ee PSU Eat mon way until we entered Cranbourne street, | St. Mouday. He could not say the precise time | house visitation of the hotels resuited in the | of lis suspicion: he oplied. thet tite causes | to benlone to face the Se iaanepaie bed fulisred Lid with supruveweute,, | [)ISEASES OF SECKET—DR CONDORY. (FOR: where 9 middie-sged woman of respectable ap- | at which he had seen the man pass the landing, | discovery that an eldery French woman, travel- | obvious enough to any one who conld coed Ge | 2 fatal issue. No a np genase Peay pontperey balance in two equal ineriy castetnnt uhyeicien fo, Evat. Be. ot fd Prema, He ctor pe tana Poke te | but he knew that it was sometime after four, | ing alone, had descended at the Hotel de | tween the lines, and with this occult phrase | t Dear his agony, the stead loved in pations | manlmente Rd S26 12th st. naw. Tidtew hits wane gouped to answer her and | and that the ehurch clock hardby had not | France at 7:0 o'clock it the morning of the 7th, | Mrs, Talbot was constrained to content Lereelt, , Life of the woman whom he had loved in patient | secured by purchaser. - re ~~ e je way off while they were i et eI it at the option e purchaser. A deposit of one . , LYE W. EI Did ye z tion? "| when St. Giles’ church clock struck five. Marseilles an hour after midnight, She had | Robert Hatrell's will had to be read, He had | those among whom he lived his everyday life | teisin tte Sot ae te in eae ae anes andAt | 25 cents. All Dragrusta. Ware, 14th and Este m ‘ery little. as standing with my back to} Did you notice anything peculiar about the | breakfasted alone in her room, had gone out | stood almost alone in the world, without any | ¢\¢r since he first looked upon her fair young | Feserves the richt to readvertise aud sellatthe msk | city. al2-2m them, looking i print (shop. I am not | appearance of the mamas he passed the land- | before 11, had lunched and paid her Dill, and | relation nearer than second cousins. ‘The sec. | €vet - Lb datthe Fi h ik id th face. andeost of —a Po —. ove much good at the French language, and they left the hotel in a cab a little before 2 o'clock | ond cousins expected nothing from him, had | !¢°- i ‘ b MAT, Tees Were speaking French all the time. No. He walked with a bit of iewegeecthcd hel txthacattarnoon, minds iio sign since lis death Eaeegt in the way | , No One ever guessed his secret; not the hus- BS y » talking. | struck five. He generally went is vi ii i Tl il re i Mbt vans Manat tee or tele chcees ig. | struc Senerally went out for his tea | arriving doubtless by the train which leaves There was no family assemblage to which i4vo N.Y. ave, FINANCIAL ‘as it a long tion? was whistling softly to himself ash hi here th f letiece OF condolance to the sid band, whose fiery temper would have been | 5 anas WACTER B. WITKIAMS SOQ.) J Cl Se It seemed longish to me. I was waiting for | d Ho wan whistii erent | | There was nothing to show where the woman | of letters of condolence e widow. | quick to kindle into flame, had there been | —283-ds_ “lJ COMSOLL ~- SIO... wp Sciteadl, andl had very tits i. > own stairs, He was whistling that tune French | had gone when she left Nice. Inquiries at the ‘My unfortunate client made his will_imme- bat the lightest cause for jealousy; not the FRX ser A ! OTH Member 4. pend gia E deatemaccees _ le to engage my at- — are so uncommon fond of. , station there had been without result of any | diately after his marriage—or, I’ should rather | y ite. whore purity would lave been quick to | “on WEDNESDAY AFIERNOON, JANUARY. FIF- CORSON & MACARTNEY, Tasted ten minutes Po ‘Be conversation really | The Marseillaise, perhaps. you mean? kind. Whether she had turned her face | say, that he executed his will after his mar- | {Uic’larm atta word oF a look; not the triends |, TEENTH, 1500, at He LE-PAST FUUR O'CLOCK, we GLOVES BUILDING. 1419 F St. RW. Séa tneek have ocak, a h No. It was the other tune—Youug Dunoy. | toward the Itallan frontier—or whether she | riage—for the will was drawn up at the same | wi lived in intimate relations with the fam. | Will sell i front of the premises that splendid Bulld- a in a know some French, 1 euppos ne. Tae L pesegieh as bas hes had gone ine Marseilles to Paris—or had | time ee epee eepiained ily;no one had guessed. Yes, one perhaps had | *™522tknownas |. ony og suakine snl Dales te Gorunnnens Death, T overheard enough to know that the woman} Had you or any of your mates struck up an ct eh pre ee tel ror arog taker rage por lpr erege 5 wile for . a ‘i ji : i id | fronting 22 feet Jef oe wits ath of 90 fest to an Denorite.. Exchange. Loans, Collections. hep ; OF any ¢ ward and crept by slow trains down to Biarritz | the bulk of his estate in trust for his wife for | 2ivined, his secret. | Qne pair of clear candid | (renting tie a at ie eee tise feckiomat | Raiiroud stocks and Mond andl securities, Joa dving state mae feng rho was very ul, | intimacy with this Frenchman—had you got | or Bordeaux--there was no power couldhelp the | her life, with succession to his children, share | & : ‘ od, any ar ‘As there expansion his pupil and plavfellow clasped her the northwest and suitabie for # private dwelli on the Excl CRF York, Puuladeiplis, Bostou to € ition with h ji i m : wanted to sce Hatreil. The woman seemed to into couversation nim Upon any occasion? | intelligent gentleman from Scotland Yard to | and share alike. is only one child she ‘Terms: Cue-third cash, balance in one two | and Baltimore to 0 A i i to bear six per cent interest. ‘A specialty made of investment Ganiinn tes en ae sped To think Mint Te clone, Party, and | discover, She was gone. From her appear- | will inherit all at her mother’s death. ‘The | “rms round Ss Kester ttt erpnee cy [ght SE yn ye ahd aul Loc tilroad, Gua, Inoturance aad Fert pe Anteriette repenng Person, | I heard the | seemed to think himself a good bit above the | ance at the Hotel de France at Canues te her | will gives the trustees power to anticipate some o Tae be Contaad aid oD Premises, or all cash-at option of purchaser. 4 deposit | Uo rjcan Bell Telephone Stock boushtand ecld. 3738 the course of the consi gno OF three times in| rest of the lodgers. He'd only been im the | disappearance from the Hotel des Princes at | portion of the estate, with Mrs. Hatvell’s cons (To se 2 st purchaserecont, terms te becom ———————S—_—_ course of the conversation. Hatrell walked | house a few days before the murder. Nice she had been alone. No mortal had been | sent, for the marriage settlement of any son or dave. otherwise right reserved to - — Paces further with me after this, leaving Did none of yousee him after that Monday | seen to hold converse with her—whosever ac- daughter. a codicil made in the beginnin; The Angelus. of defaul par = French woman waiting for him, ‘He told | afternoon? aes complice she might be she had been trusted to | of last year Mr. Hatrell leaves bis house and | Two simple souls stopped by a peal of bells, ington Dc." SUNCANSON BOS. OF. CLA’ me that he felt himseif obliged to go with this| Noue of us. I don’t believe he ever entered | carry out her mission uncontrolled and un- | the land appertaining to itto his wife, abso-| Amid the evening shades softly descending, ‘7 ae Auctioneers, P reliable oman to see some one—au old acquaintance. | the house after he left it that time. watched. lutely, with power to purchase conterminous | _ As homeward from their daily labor wending, our, ae te house wea matter of less than an) A cabman, who had come forward of his own| “The bond between her.and the murderer | land %o the amount of £10,000 out of the corpus | They pauso 10 Dray While the ‘sweet cadsiice hour, as the house was not far off, and in the | accord, deposed to having driven man from | must be very tight,” mused the detective, ‘or | of the estate.” Sur ab thn tek lacking in book meantime be, wants jee to go ou to the | Cranbourne street to the corner of Denmark | he would never trust her with the whole of his | “He always hankered after Florestan’s land, sense, = ‘itors aoe = ve in’s Inn Fields to explain | street about 4 o'clock on the afternoon of the | plunder. It’s my belief that she has gone to | poor fellow,” said the parson. ‘Strange that | But knowing well the world invisible, is unavoidable delay and to assure them that| murder. The man hailed him from the pave- , and that he was to meet her in Paris; |he should have met his death on the very day | Listening. they hear more than the solemn knell he would be with them half an hour after the | ment in frout of an Italian coffee shop’ He | but how to look for atman of whose antecedents | when he was to complete the purchase of the | _ Uf sounding chimes to wake their reverence; eppommtment. which was 4 o'clock. “I shail | told him to drive as fast as he cold go and he | I know nothing, and of whose appearance I | adjoming meadows. The will leaves Mrs, Hat- | So worshipping and spiritual they appear. vega naasl aM gon as I have—scen this| shonld have double fare. “He did drive fast, | know only the Yaguo. impressions Cf tures oF rel este make the nadine Decree Te See ain memes eck. person, san isan urgent case—sick- | yetting over the distance in abo Le aiuto. ""Riesmtadem hie ait an getting ut tive minutes, | four people who ail describe him differently, | tunate cireumstance. (LEO. W. STICKNEY, Auctioneer, 936 F. TRUSTED’S SALE OF VALUABLE IMPROVED ‘Clay was’ es ‘PROPERTY, BEING No. 102 1 STREEY —— a 8 feel the heavenly sphere; end the man gave hima florin. He got out at | isa problem beyond my intellectual powers.” “Fortunate,” exclaimed the lawyer. “Do ane hey ee aes tal mists Jarge suin of money on his person, and asked | the corner of tho street i q :: Dhey have no science raising men\ Bisa if the woman was known to hun He told | Witner stopped ts 090 Where lie, ent ns [en you think she will find it in her heart to re-/ ‘To blind the truth divine, that God exists. me that she was—indir She was nearly | saw him enter a house on the right hand Related to the person he was going to see, who | of the street, which he bad sine Sdentined as was an old acquaintance. “You don’t] the house where the murder was committed. myppote 1 am going to be devoyed and! Witness believed thas be would be able to Paris, main in place so associated with her hus-| —New York World. _—EpDWARD S. CREAMER,