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~— —— Ae SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Three adventurers named Thorne, Van Hoeck and Brace nied by Brace's iittie daughter Lola) find ia Africa an enormous (accom alae . who in blind, fears lest Thorne (who ye robbed of murdered, He suspects hve atone, CHAPTER II. A Night of Terror. THUCGH f laughed at Van Hoeck’s suspicions 1 could t wholly free my mind of them. That night after I had retired to my room I sat up late, reading. At Inst I fancied I heard a faint noise in the hall. Tiptoeing to the door I opened it and saw on the threshold Lola lying curled in a heap fast asleep, She had doubtless crept into the house by the unlocked pantry door and, weary of lone liness, had crept as near as possible to my room, where, fatigue overcoming her, she had fallen ableep. I did not disturli her, but sat in a nearby chair to wait for her awakening. I must have fallen asleep. for when I Jnoked again at the spot where she had Jain the child was gone. Early next morning Van Hoeck asked me if I was armed. On learning I was not, he forced upon me a long, ugly look- ing clasp-knife, which he begged me to carry for my own protection and for that of the diamond. When we met at breawfast Edith was in her customary bright and cheerful mood. Reassuref by her appearance, €ir Edmund said, smiling— “Well, my dear, has there been any recurrence of strange sounds and spectral sights during the night?” “Yes," she answered; “but they did not frighten me, for I knew it was only poor Lola,” “Lola!"’ 1 exclaimed. “I had left a light burning,” she sald; “the blinds were turned downward, and the light shone upon them; the tap- ping awoke me. It was just the same sound that I heard be- fore. While I was looking at the blind before the open window, the tapping stopped, and I saw a finger come down between the third and fourth lath from the bottom, and turn “the third; after that the finger slid in between the next two, nd turned the second. Then I saw her two lustrous black eyes looking through, Almost immediately afterward they Gina Dpear se: th re you sure it was Lola?" I asked. ‘ex, they were her eycs. do you know what time It was when you esked. “I can be sure of that, for in taking my watch from the sian. {t fell, breaking the glass and stopping the hands, and Nery soon after that I heard the clock strike. She showed me the watch, the minute-hand was #0 bent that {t could not pass the hour-hand; when I lifted it the movement recommenced, proving that the spring had not run down, The hour marked by thé hands was five minutes to 1. “At five minutes to 1 Lola was sleeping at my door,” I suw her?’ 1 faid. That night as I was about to go to bed a wild scream ran; through the house. We all rushed by instinct to Edith room. The door was open. On the floor, in her night-dri lay Euith in a dead faint. It was with difficulty we aroused her. Nearly an hour passed before she was quite herself. What happened in Edith’s room that night I did not learn until the next morning, but I will give her accotint in this place In ordor to preserve the sequence of events. Bhe left the Jamp burning on the table, screened from her by the lace curtains of the bed, and had securely bolted the door of the room, It was half past 11 when she lay down, and she felt so ttle fear that she fell asleep almost tmme- diately. A pillow sipping from beneath her head awoke her, she believed. ‘Then it struck her that she had left @ light on the table; it was now out, and all was dark. She wondered if this was a trick of imagination. Was she awake or asleep? Saying this to herself, she felt for the pillows. To her astonishment she found that both were gone. Bhe leaned out qnd felt upon the Moor as far as she court reach to the right. The pillows had not slipped out on that side. Then putting her shoulder against the wall she felt down on the left. There was nothing there. What did it all mean? Decidedly this must be a new freak of her imag- fmation. Bhe doubled the bolster and gave it a little pat; then she put up a lock of hair that had come down, and told herself not to be etupid about a little thing like that; and wondering whether she should dare to tell of this incident in the morn- fmg, she dropped on her eltiow, and laid down her head- Gown, down, dowa till & touched the bed. “What was this?’ she asked herself, starting up in @ fright. She felt from aide to side; now the bolster was gon: there was nothing there but the bed. After all, might only tie Lola who was trying to frighten jeer. And just for one moment, as she leaned back on her sibow, she fancied she saw something like those luminous nyes in the midst of the darknesss, and close to her—there! (here, above her, toward the side of the bed. “Is tt you, Lola?’ she asked, but in @ voice so faint, for phe was sick with fright, that she herself could hardly hear the words she spoke. It was @ fancy, or the eyes were turned away. Yet, still leaning upon her elbow that quivered under her, she strained her eyes to penetrate the darkness, Not long, perhaps, though it seemed so, her heart beating painfully, her mouth parched and 4ry, the hot breath catch- ing the Back of her throat. Something. seemed to be touching her hair, Was it the Jace curtain? Ghe reised her trembling hand, and felt something level ‘with the top of her head. But it was not the curtain. It was the pillow, or she was mad. Her strength gave way, end she fell back upon the bed; but the territie suspicion that the pillows had been with- drawn for the punpose of smothering her made her throw her band up. ‘The pillow had descended; it was close to her face. She tried to scream, but ¢he pillow waa already upon her mouth, and smothered the ory, It closed Gown upon her head, firm and herd. She could no longer breathe, It pressed upon her throat, as she lay with the back of her head pushed down into the bed. The touch of Death aroused the instinct of self-preserva- tion within her, and, with @ frantic effart, she tore herself from under that ‘suffocating pressure, flung herself trom Hisd nae ery, aa respiration returned, cried with all her force for Ignorant of what had occurred in Edith's room before her cry tor help, I paced my room, after I had returned thither on her recovery from the faint, thinking how terribie the frigtit must have been that made her faint @ second time, and despite her belief in the unreality of these mysterious appearances, “Your turn will comé,"" Van Hoeok had said to me, and these words coming back to H “a nm of Gegrge Munro's Sons.) Such a plot was the more possible because it seemed im- possible. An act of legerdemain succeeds or not, accoriing to the skill with which the conjurer fixes our attention on a false train of operations while he works out the actual feat. As I made these reflections I took the Great Hesper from the pouch on my waist strap, and buckled it in its case upon my left wrist; then I doubly locked the door, saw that there was oll in the lamp, put a box of wax matches beside it on the table, and Mnally opened the long-bladed knife Von Hoeck had given me, and stuck it between the mattress and the side of the bedstead. The room was thickly carpeted and oak-panelied. The furniture—with the exception of the tollet arrangements and a low, saddle-backed chatr—was antique and of oak. The bedstead was particularly wide, with four carved pillars carrying a baldaquin and heavy curtains of some thick Uro- caded stuff, looped at the foot, but hanging loose at the head; it faced the orilel. Between the right side of the bed and the wall was @ square table—on which stood the lamp—with the saddle-back chair beside it. On the left-hand side of the bed was a tall carved black press, A large chimney, with a sculptured masitel and an cpen hearth, faced the door. A screen shut off the washstand, which stood to the left of the orlel. A broad settie with a valance, and covered with a stuff similar to the hangings of the bed, ran round the three-sided recess formed by the window—curtains of the same kind shut off| this recess. A corner cabinet, with folding doors in the lower part, fitted the angle of the walls to the right; between this and the door was a deep, wide and long chest, and atiove It a large mirror, An eseritoire, some high-backed chairs and ‘a second table, completed tho furniture. There was no door but the one opening upon the corridor, and no window save the ortel. In the early part of the night I had described these par- ticulars to Van Hoeck, at his request, and he had made me examine the press, the old chest, the hangings of the bed and settles; everything, in fact, which might afford a hid- ing place to Lola or another, I had even gone down upon my knees and looked under the bed to appease his anxiety, And yet now a vague uneasiness possessed me as I raised the lamp shade, and looked round the room. The dark oak wainscot, the sombre hangings, the painted celling overhead, absorbed the light; there was a black yold on the opposite side of the bed, where the light from the lamp was intercepted by the curtains; I could not seo even the outline of the great press. I readjusted the shade, turned the wick higher, and, half undressed, threw myself upon the bed. I was not afraid— in strength I was a match for any natural foe, and I did not believe in the existence of any other—yet I felt myself in- fected with Van Hoeck's presentiment of tmpending calamity. I had hung my watch in the pocket upon the hanging at the head of the tied; its lively ticking sounded strangely out of keeping with the gloom and stillness of the surroundings. The shaded light gaye a funereal aspect to the bed-hangings the baldaquin over my head might have been @ catafalque for the dead. I wondered how many men had ended their days on, this bed since those hangings had been put up. Would Van Hoeck's presentiment be fulfilled? Should I be found there in the morning dead? It was well sulted for a murder, that bed, with its pall-like hangings to conceal the lurking murderer. Tie-tac, tic-tac, tlc-tac, tle-tac, tle-tac. My ear had become so familiar wo the brisk movement of my watch that the silghtest sound was euatite above it And a sound slight indeed I heard. To my mind, dwelling then upon assassins, it sounded Uke the drawing of a dagger from its sheath. Turning my head toward the side from which the sound seemed to proceed, I fancied I saw the heavy curtain move, it was between me and the lamp. I drew myself up gradually, and leaning forward, I eud- denly flung back the curtain with my left hand. There wae no resistance to my hand; nothing to be seen teyond but the lamp burning steadily on the table, the saddle-back chair and the dim outline of the big chimney-plece. I got upon my knees and pushed the curtain flat against the wall, to be sure that there could by no possibility be any one concealed in the heavy folds—to assure myself thet my suspicion was utterly without foundation. This end of the room was comparatively Mght, and the saddle-back chatr was so placed as to preclude the posst- bility of any one hiding beyond it. If the curtain had indeed moved, it must have been by a hand from under the bed. It was easler to Welleve that I ‘had been mistaken in seeing the sight movement than tc suppose that I had overlooked a concealed thief when I looked under the bed to satisfy Van Hoeck; so I let the curtain fall and lay down again, My thoughts still dwelt upon the Idea of assassination. A cause !s sometimes discovered by examining the effect Now, what effect had been produced by these attacks on Edith, The first had frightened her excessively; the second had made a slighter impression—thus far the effect had been confined to her; but the third—for only to a third fright could I attribute her scream of terror—had brought her fa- ther and myself from our rooms. Instantly, something like the truth flashed upon my mind: To bring me from my room was the very object with which the attack upon Edith had been made. Unriddling the mystery with this key, I assumed that the thief had watched me close the door upon Van Hoeck and return to my room; that, after allowing me sufficient time tc get into bed, but not to fall into sound sleep, he had made the attack upon Edith, opening her door Veforehand to pro- vide a speedy means of escape and to allow her cry to be more distinctly heard; that, having succeeded in terrifying her, he had sped down the stairs in the left block, passed through the Ubrary and dining-room, and ascended by the stairs in the right block about the same time that I might be supposed to Nave reached Edith’s room, and that, reckon. ing upon my keeping the Great Hesper under my pillow, and leaving it there in my alarm upon Edith's account, he had expected to have possessed himself of our treasure. If what I thus assumed was the fact, then indeed this plan might have sucoceded buc for Van Hoeck's prudent insistence upon my etrapping the diamond to my wrist. ‘As 1 thus explained what had happened, a more startling reflection ocourred to my mind. The thief had been disap- pointed in not finding the dlamonf beneath my pillow, but he yet might not have relinquished the hope of getting it. Tie might net have Jeft the room. He might bo hidden there at that very moment! ‘The fellow might be under the very bed I was lying upon) ‘The movement I had seen in the curtain, the sound simi lar to.the drawing of @ blade from {ts sheath (which might well have teen caused by the movement of the heavy valance of the ped), strengthened the suspicion. Was he lying thera waiting for the sound of my heavy breathing to assure him that I slept? There was scarcely the necessity to wait for that, for] tey and open a sardine tin with a pocket-knife.”” what resistance could I, lying upon my tack there, make against foe springing out of the dark upon me? j thovght of the clasp-knife Van Hoeck had given me,| says unkind and true things about the living; the epitaph says kind and untrue “TT ANE esa ORLD'S”.# HOME w MAGAZI THE WOMAN WHO USES CHEMICALS. WILL THE 1903 SUMMER GIRL BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | NOTHER object Genson in the danger of a careless use of so-called blemts! A destroyers is being painfully demonstrated by Miss Margaret Corr at the | Harlem Hospital, The extraordinary gullelessness of women and girls of | more than ordinary inteiligence in all other directions, when it comes to the | question of the use of alleged beautifiors is really disheartening. | ‘Timo and time and time again | have told in this paper of the danger of chem- | foal depllatories prepared from recipes of uncertain origin, put up and sold with- cout clear instructions as to the character of the Ingredients or the method of application, delivered to the purchaser without any warning as to the harmful, possibly fatal, results that may follow careless usage. Yet almost every day— | certainly several times each week—do I receive a letter from the unhappy victim of the fascinations of a printed formula, an alluring pamphlet or clever saies- | | | manship. Miss Margaret Corr was affiicted by a slight downy growth on her upper lip and chin. ‘All women hate and many suffer real anguish from the consciousness of this | enpeclaity disfiguring blemish, Very few, relatively speaking, understand the nature of this erratic hair | growth, and many who aro sensible on every other point have the most di torted.and unreasonable views as to what superfluous hair {s and how !t can be kept in abeyance or destroyed. ‘Margaret Corr presumably knew nothing about superfluous hair except that sho hated tt and wanted to get rid of It. Her sweetheart, according to the pub- Mshed accounts, advised her to procure a depilatory paste which was put up by a neighboring éruggist. Miss Corr bought the mixture of the druggist and applied it at 6 o'clock Inst Saturday evening, covering the sides of her face, her chin and her upper iip with the paste. The pain in a few minutes became intense, but Miss Corr prob- ably thought a certain amourt of sufforing went with the cure and bore the agony with courage. She even attempted to distract her thoughts from the torture she was endur- ing by taking a walk. When she was unable to stand the suffering longer she went home and applied some vaselme, Then she started out again, and a few moments later she fainted apparently in the street. A policeman hastened to her. She wi removed to a hospital unconscious, her legs paralyzed and with pronounced symptoms of arsenical poison. Every one who tas had experience with the treatments for the removal of superfluous hair knows that the accidents resulting from ignorance and careless- ness in using what are called chemical! depilatories are numerous, deplorable and frequently result in permanent disfigurement. Fortunately the pain that accompanies thelr unskilful use {s so great that It rerves as a sort of warning and leads to an application of an agent which neu- tralizes the effect of the active poison in the chemical depiiatory. If I had my way I would forbid the sale to and application of @ chemical depilatory by an amateur. Many of the chemical depliatories contain orp!ment, which is yellow sulphuret of arsenic, a highly polsonous and dangerous substance. Quickiime ts the basis of many hair removers, and the druggist who made ‘stiss Corr's destructive mixture says he obtained his formula from a medical | publication and that It contained quicklime, carbonate of soda and lard. Every one who knows the processes of removing hair by a chemical understands that the active ingredient must be powerful enough to destroy—literally eat up or dis- solve—the halr to the surface of the skin. It has to be a powerful and in a sense & dangerous substance to do thi: ‘A chemical depilatory powerful enough to dissolve the hair may only be used safely by an experienced person. It should, in the first place, only be applied to a very small surface at a time ‘and the Instant the burning sensation is pronounced a counteracting application should be made. Too long contact with the skin will inevitably produce inflam- mation which, if not arrested, results In dermatitis, with suppuration, and a hide- ous and ineffaceable scar 1s usually the record of such an episode. ‘The moment a chemical depllatory burns the place should be gently bathed with warm water and then freely anointed with an unguent. Cold cream, vaseline or table of! will answor. Up to a certain point this counteracting treatment will ‘heal the irritation. But just as soon as the deeper tissues become involved the case Is serious and vii al m of of details of our grandmothers’ gowns, ‘celts which will bear the French Empresss’ name. The -summer girl has, however, drawn the line (and a/ good thing it will be at the crowded seaside resorts) on a Pronounced fashion of the Empress, namely, the hoop skirt and crinoline. S80 closely following Eugenie's styles, however, that {t may be only a question of time before the summer girl is wearing ap- parel that will necessitate a decrease in the number of in- have Veen popular, never been even hinted at. These diaphanous draperies, the delicate ti batistes will, however, magquerade under thoroughly twen- tleth century names. fashion. will recall most vividly to grandmother, BRING BACK THE CRINOLINE? Most of the Other Fashions Set by Empress Eugenie in the Fifties Are Revived. girl of 1908 she might feel that the old days when she set the pace of fashion had indeed returned. The summer irl is to be almost @ duplicate of the famous French Bm- Ne Empress Bugente could enjoy a glimpse of the summer Press so far as style 1s concerned, and her frocks above the waist will be the frocks of the ‘50s. Empress Eugenie fichus, shoulder effects, fringes, all the will be the new con- is the young woman of fashion tations being issued to crowded soctal functions, The advent of the Eugenie styles has come suddenly, for though drooping hats and loose, old-fashioned sleeves the extensive copying of details has The summer girl of 1903 will wear practically the same aterials in the quaintly fashioned gowns as did the throngs social butterflies who imitated the styl of Bugenie. jues and dainty ‘The low-shouldered effect in gowns will be a relgning Sleeves loose and flowing and elaborately trimmed tting in her corner the piazza, the days of her girlhood, The drooping shoul- ders wi!l be augmented by waists full and loose. These are requires akilful care if the subject ts to be saved serious and posslbly dangerous |e same styles as those in which the French Empress de- results, But why use chemical depilatories when tho safer methods are even more |l!shted. Fringes, ornaments, laces, pasaementeries, little fichus, capes, tiny umbrellas and fans, old- ettective and unutiended by danger. ‘The mechanical depilatories are even more satisfactory because they pluck the | halrs out by the rcots and the new growth is naturally longer in appearing than waen taken off at the surface of the skin. I an awaro,thut there are chemical depilatories that promise to permanently remove superfluous hair and destroy the growth, but a thinking woman will ap- preciate the fact that any chemical with sufficient power to penetrate the tissues and destroy the hair roots must first destroy the skin Itself. ‘The eafest depilatory is the plaster stick which is used after the manner of sealing wax. ‘The stick is melted and whfle warm but not hot enough to burn is smeared upon the hairy surface. As soon as It ds cold one end of the crisp mass is loos- ened and with a quick jerk the entire plaster comes off, bringing with it every alr torn out from the roots. ‘The operetion sounds rather brutal, but it {= not so in reality. three or four minutes, and at lenst it ts safe. ‘The skin cannot absorb anything poisonous from the simple plaster. No suppuration results through carelessness or inexperience, There are no fumes to be avolded on account of the danger to the eyes and through the nostrils, as {n tae application of chemical depilatories. All depilatories offer temporary relief only to the sufferer, and superfluous hair can be cnly permanently exterminated by the X-ray treatment or the elec- tric needle. fa \the 198 summer girl. Even the garlands of flowers which call to mind faded daguerreotypes will_be woven in the It takes but THE LATEST AIRSHIP, is ce an Terenas | 4s a] ire a a li a a ea ad Here is 8. F. Cody, of England, taking a brief spin in bis new airship, or roplane,” as he calls it. The photograph was taken when Cody was 400 feet above earth over Portsmouth harbor. He was demonstrating to the British Ad- miralty the advantages of his new Invention. At a glance the aeroplane seems a mere variation on the ordinary box. kite. JABS FROM LONDON PUNCH. Once you shake the tree of knowledge, you can't put the fruit back. ‘This! ff cryptic utterance reads like an extract from Ibsen, In reality it means that itl you knew what was going to happen you would never let your wife learn Bridge. “J fear no foe in shining armor,” sang the man at the concert, “Don't you, old chap?’ grumbied the bachelor in the front row. ‘Then you ‘There is not much difference between an epigram and an epitaph. An epigram and, stretching out my hand, I felt for it where I had stuck] things about the dead, it—between the mattress and the bedstead. I could not find ite (To Be Continued.) Mr, Morgan has at last become the victim of too much trust, He is stated to ave been duped by the famous Paris amt forgera, lf s you could fill !t in for a million dollars and ha | money. all the world to hummin ever, Mr. Morgan is not at large, nor is the Kalser trying to scare the rest of the earth to any unusual degree. vowage life of a te | 00 trees that will mak and it takes fifty yea: that will make three Lies, wen for every mile of track. shioned gloves and handkerchiefs will be duplicated by THE MONEY LORD AND THE WAR LORD. Bony WED if you could get the first affixed to a check no trouble in drawing the Can you read these signatures? The second signature attached to a certain sort of angrily ke a great beehive. gning blank checks for the amus Just at present, }locks of Miss Society these coming summer evening®. P It Is (for the moment at least) ‘farewell to the taller made girl." Heretofore lovely woman has delighted iy |Sowns that show the graceful lines of her figure, and re cently the accentuated tight skirt has held her in its Mmited sway. But the spell of Empress Eugenie has descended upon fash{on’s realm, and with the exception of the skirt the styles of fifty years ago will be exactly duplicated. The summer girl's skirt will fit snugly over the hips, but in deference to Eugente's dictates in regard to the swaying hoop skirt the tiottom of the summer girl's skirt’ will be full and voluminous and will be covered with tiny ruffles which will give {t a fluffy effect. Flouncing ruffles, laces and puffings will cover the skirts and the billowy flounces will stand out in dangerous tmitation of their hoop photeo- type. ‘The hats which ‘Miss 1903” will wear will be the big, fat, drooping creations bound with soft scarfs or trimmed with a single long sweeping plume or garland of flowers. While the fashions of the day recall most vividly the daye. of the beautiful French Empress, when her girlish beauty and frankness drew about her beautiful young women whose eyes for style were as characteristic as their love for gayety, the Bmpress sits In widowed seclusion, the most dis- consolate and pathetic figure in all Europe. It im sald that a friend told her that fashion’s dictates for the summer girl of 1903 had reflected the styles of her su- premacy. “Then I am not forgotten, after all, to love," the cx-Empress sighed. in the world I used IT KNOUKS THE For Spots Anywhere Use document could set how- jement of the public Absolutely Non inflammable Cleans Gloves, Silks, Satins, Laces Guaranteed Not to f to injure the Finest FOR “HAMS” TO COUNT. The annual demand for railway tes 400 for each mile of track and the even years. It orest that h three ties oad Oo grow A tr ‘Therefore, five acres of forest are nece: Electr! there are in) the an unusual acre of included, FOR SALE EVERYWHERE One Trial Convinces Amusements, Why Not PROCTCR'S? Fo-Be7, 28; 80s. To-Nij ‘Kes., By ved Brerz Aft. puitor ise 000 miles of roa GOR LOUS VAUDRVILLE, Walhey & Eve. —Pull Orchemens. WSL; 3 \ Geese Others, DUSS ‘SOLOTsT, Eye Glasses, $1.00 a Pair. mmarkable chanc should appeal strongly to only because of the tie vsare SPECIAL BNGAGI The c ENT neryed Seatacon | GBS nd, $1.00, AD. Under the Airesion Hata 1 ia) dol Hid Saige get, 4 pair of five dollar 40 rie for folk hat ‘PRINGE OF Pll 100TH TIME NEXT sto FOR THIS WEEK at any of my threo stores. | Last Two [ers PAS TOH amine thei Cuehly and give you advice free Sf charg: 3d st. EB. 541 Fultonst,,Bklyn 192 Fulton st., Bklyn ar, OHA TOR'S New ¥ ork seer 4: DeKalb ay Orange at HERALD *3,2 i DAN DALY ix , EME, The Marvellous Achievement “VENICE IN NEW YORK. 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