_ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SA TURDAY, AUGUST 22.1014, * «= PAGE ELEVEN ° AUTOMOBILES AND CARRIAGES R . Phone 11 77 George W. Boyd, resi SEN LE LL AEN E A Homeseekers' Excursions * 1814--Round trip tickets to Wes- tern Canada, via Chicago and North Bay or Toronto on sale August 25th, and every other Tuesday thereafter, until October 27th, at very low fares Tickets good for two months. 3 } . : Settler's Excursions To Northern Ontario August 25th Return limit ten days from date gale. Liberal stop-over privileges. Seaside Excursions To Portland, Old Orchard and Kenne- punkport, Me., Watch Hill and Block Going dates Aug. 28th Island, R. I. to 30th. Return limit Sept. 14th, For full particulars apply to J, P. HANLEY, Railroad and Steamship Agent, ATERTRIPS Le=QUEBEC--SAGUENAY Toronto and Kingston leave dally $5.30 am, Rapids Steamer, tom TORONTO EXPRESS SERVICE Steathers leave Kingston at 6 pm @ally except Monday for Toronto, ar- riving 7 am. Returnin .m. daily except ngston 6b am On Mondays steamers leave at § p m. for Charlotte; N.Y., and Toronto. Woe ISLANDS--BAY OF QUINTR , Casplan leaves at 10.15 am. Wed- n ay, Friday and Sunday for 1000 Islands, and at & pm. for Char- Jotte via Bay of Quinte HAMILTON--TORONTO--QUEREC Weekly service by 88. Alexandria, Belleville and City of Ottawa ful water outings at reasonable rates Folders and loformation from B. KE. HORSEY, J. P. HANLEY, General Agent, City Ticket Agent, Phone 31. Phone 99. arriving Tires for Carriages and of connecting at Prescott with Montrea) leaves Toronto unday, arriving Delight. -_ CANADIAN SERVICE From Southampton. From Montred) © An 13, AN NTA ' ASCANIA ALAUNIA Steamers call Plymouth eastiound Rates--Cabin (11) $47.50 and up' 3rd- class, British eastbound, $30.25 up Westhound $30 up. . Apply Loeal Ticket Agent, or THE ROBERT REFORD CO. LIMITED, Gen. eral Agents, 50 King St. East, Toronto. Sept. 6 Bept. 10- WR GREATEST KIDNEY NNEDY "Fruit-a-tives" Have Proved Their Value In Thousands of Cases WONDERFUL RECORD OF A WONDERFUL CURE -- Only Remedy That Acts On All Three Of The Organs Responsible For The Formation Of Uric Acid In The Blood. Many people do not realize that the Skin is one of the three great elimina- tors of waste matter from the body. As a matter of fact, the Skin rids the system of more Urea (or waste matter) than the Kidneys. When there is Kidney Trouble, Pain In The Back and Acrid Urine, it may not be the fault of the kidneys at all, but be due to faulty Skin Action, or Constipation of the bowels. "Pruit-a-tives" cures weak, sore, aching Kidneys, not only because it strengthens these organs but also be- cause 'Fruit-a-tives" opensthe bowels, sweetens the stomach and stimulates the action of the skin. "Fruit-a-tives" is sold by all dealers at soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. or will be sent postpaid on receipt of - price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. , For Ottawa Every Monday, day, Thursday and Saturday at 6 am. Passengers going through to Ot- tawa may occupy stateroom the eve- uing previous. No extra charge. For Clayton avery Tuesday, aesday, Friday and Saturday at 6 p. m. One hour in Clayton; leaves Clay- ton at 9 p.m., except Saturday. Jones Falls and return, 50c, every Wednesday and Saturday at 6 a.m. PHONE 391. {than a yeal well | one flaw in your theory Pram memes | 8 REET. Rideau Lakes Navigation Co. :%. - of bogus jewels {4in life was to make ednes- | fact, much more | txailing. | tine" false Maharanee | ceive Wed- | been such a beautiful OFFICE FOOT OF JOHNSON ST. | quarters man BRITZ t: OF HEADQUARTERS : ™" BY MARGIN BARBER Exclusively in Canada by the- Limited, & Colonial Press, : Toronto. CHAPTER XV. At Ward's Island. "It's rather & remarxable coined fence, I'll admit," sald Britz to Fitch, as they stood on the deck of the litle ferry boat that bore them toward the island; "but it's possible your liftie old friend had something to do with the making of the imitation ahaa bee diamond. You realize thoroughly. I'm sure, the imporiance of u ink in our chain of evidence. If may bz difficult ' to fasten the responsibility for manufacturing all the o dulent dfamonds of the neck.ate upon the guiity person, ouds of that size can be in any one of several large cities; but the man who made the fake Mabaranee is a past master of his crafl; a man $0 skillful that even the mosi exver artificers of Europe and America d) not pretend they can eqn him" "What makes you thi tk dealer had anvthing 10 do w i asked Fitch. How could it i thought ihe Mararanve Ww quire recent.y"" "1 don't know how long it's lean' the detective replied. "It may fave been only a few 1m and the d.a- mond, it is possible, m copied any time within th That big office building has in "construction, and within the bounds of fact the curio dealer received the © sion for the work or possibly more." "Oh," sald the physician, 'thee | He was nat Information 1 glean him convinced he was not engaged in the manufacture His grind p real diamonds, ta hing else her fiau made as twelve months re All the me a rp ss said Britz It is than any to think be may persons ta ¥ crder Mrs. Missioner and a friends for so long a time, must have piece of work that it could not have been intend: d as an limitation? In otuer words, didn't the man who made the imi® tion Maharanee believe he was manu- facturing a genuine diamond The physician was struck by the foxce of the detective's logic. He rea lized instantly the possibiliidés of this new. clue. He glanced at ti.» Head with unmistakable ad- gmiration for his cleverness, as ne said: "Lieutenant, I owe an ayology to at least one member of the force-- youvself. For many years I'Ye had "Precisely," be iu urs u, that to de her that leads rae the employ of the [ Doesn't it occur in We maker's case, and seemed thoroughly to uederstand his delusion. "He is now in my. ward," he said. "He has been there six mouths; rather unusual 'c#se; . harmless but hopeless. Can't rid himself of the idey that diamonds are banked up all around him, and that all be has to do is to make one with his own hands to possess the whole of that wealth in jewels. He does his best to make it foe. Unfortunately the chemicals, and of course he cannot be trusied to go pounding away with a pestle 'and mortar when his braia is si. Tar gone that he ls likely to for get the combination." The other medical men looked in- terested. "What do you do with him, doc tor?" asked Fitch. "Oh, | substitute harmless things-- & litle bismuth and sodium phosphate, and a dash of French chalk, and he ihinks he has everything he needs: All the stuff he wants that is not dan- gerous1 let him have. He is happy enough mixiiyx and mashing the pate and hammering away all day long. He rolls the mess into dirty little grey balls, snd thinks they are dia- monds." "let us have a look at him," said Fiteh "Sure thing! You wou't mind if don't go with you" | have an ampu- tation on in about ten minutes, and as there ls a green nurse helping me, 1't want to take auy chances in her monkey with the ethe: So you won't inind, will you ask you to run right alongs hy yoursalf? Stay as long as you like" jiritz and Fitch were glad enough of an opportunity to question the old man without an auditor, and with a brief, "So long!" to his colleagues the doctor piloted the detective through dreary stretches in that home of hopelessness to the ward where the curio dealer was found. In a sunny corner of the long bleak room. the barrenness of which was relieved slightly by a few boxes and pots of geraniums and fuchsias on the window sill, seated at a bench covered with odd-looking leather, was a little old man the physician and the Jlead quarters sleuth sought. y In the patient's face was a rept look that told them he was as far away from his present environment as if he had been in the little dingy curio shop where young Dr. Fitch first had seec him. His pliant hands had been plunged many times into. a dough-like lumyu plastic as a sculptor's clay at cue end of the bench. A row of jars at the back of the bench was flanked by a phalanx of vials. An earthen bow! half full of water stood at his right hand. Directly in front of him scaitered in workmanlike confusion were several palette knives and mix ing brushes. Ceasdelessiy his fingers plucked tiny pellets from the plastic lump, rolled and patted them, dipped then in the bowl of water, coated them with the many-colored conienis of the vials and jars, then trund'ed them upon the board with indusiry purposeful of performance, but pur poseless of achievement. At times a spectral smile seemed to glow upon his cadaverous features-- a faint gleam Hke the spe~ire of a corpse-light. The sunlight, refracte cone, it 1 ingredients "he demands include several dangerous | the most exquisite expression of crea- tive love we have. The only trouble is that we have not enough of them. It has remained for me--it has remained for the poor old student of umiysteries to find the key to the true jewel wealth of the universe-. For thcu sande of years men Lave been seeking diamonds ia the ground. I take them from the air In similiar vein he rar betraying 'ne strange clouded mind that in its i!me Lad been aearér the truth than most men's. There was something extraordinary about the little old feliow's brain. | had not cracked; rather, it had been attenuated Ly overstrain. It was after a process of patient questioning eover ing s0 long a time that it ended in twilight, that Britz led the tireles: worker back to days before his arrival fn the asylum. The protracied in quiry taxed all the detective's skiil «n word-haud:ing. for each ume he lifted the patient's prostrate intelligence above the Lorizou of sanity, it was only to se« it slip back in a few seconds. Fiteh, scientist though he was, long conversant oth the phecomena of the mind as he ud been, marvelled at the Headquarters man's adroitness. Long béfore Britz iad flulshed his task, the doctor, in sheer wearisness, dropped futo a chair and stayed there in silent attention. But the detective remain ed on his feet, immutable as the incar nation of will itself, and slowly, cau tiously, persistently piloted that dark- ened intelligence out of its depths back to at least a gloaming of co herent mewory. So gulded, so aided, and lifted along the difficult backward path, Martin's mind reverted to in stances that hung like stalactites from the cavern ceiling of retrospec- tion. It was in a flagh of intelligence, briefly eliminated as a twinkle of day- light seen from the recesses of a cave, that the old man recalled the great triumph of his strange craft, "l have made diamonds, yes, he said In response to a query from the detective, swift and searching as a rapier thrust, and beautiful enough to hang about the neck of a princess; brilliant encugh to glorify the hut of a toiler in the fields; but there was one--ah!" His recollection reveled in widening circles until its force was spent. For a long time, his hands motionless again, he sat gazing into the past. Britz) feeling that he was on the edge of an important disclo- sure, waited patiently. Fiteh scarcely breathed "I mind me," the one-time- curio dealer resumed, "of the oue great dia- mond that came as the grand reward of all my labor. Ah, that was a dia mond! But though it was a wonder- ful achievement, 1 dishonored myself in the making of it.for--" and a faint flush deepened on his parchment face, "I fashioned it for gain!" Without an instant's warning, he pushed away the bench, dropped his face into his hands and gave way to grief that moved equally the man long hardened to dissection of the body and the veteran crime hunter accustomed to vivisection of the soul. Few things are more terrible than to see an old man weep. It is a dual surrender, for tears are the prerogative of youth and womanhood. Brits snd Fitch with difficulty controlled their own emo- on, his words gropiug of a for tears And make him return the dlamona t~ me. He thought he left nothing fo tell meé who he was. He thought I never would be able to find him in this big wn. He feit sure the old curiosity ealer would not venture far enough, Away from his stock to track such a fige gentleman. Put he forgot one thing. I have kept it all these years, and through it I will find him vet!" Abstractedly he thrust his hand into an inner pocket and fished out a bit of cardboard. front of the detective's eyes. Britz resisted for a moment the impulse to gnatch it from his grasp, but he grip: ped himself sharply. Awaiting de velopments was one of the detective's ptrong points. As he expected, the old alchemist was in a state of mind to share his knowledge with anybody. After a few more flourishes, Martin ald in Britz's hand a man's visiting card, face down. Studiously avoiding any appearance | of haste, Britz turned it np and read the single line engraved upon it. Without the tremor of a muscle, and with only ene swift significant look he passed the card to Fitch. The doctor, a little less gelf-re- steadily at a drawing on the back gazed earnestly at the inscription on the face, then wonderingly, before the card fluttered from hig fingers, he read the line aloud. "Mr. Bruxton Sands." CHAPTER XVL The Assistant District Attorney While Britz was struggling with the tangled threads of contradictory cir cumstances that constituted the fab- ric of the diamond mystery, the Dis- trict Attorney's office was not inac- tive. With the slow stealthiness of a cat approaching its prey it combined the disconnected fragments of evi- dence gatheged by the police into the semblance of a perfect case, and pre- pared to present it to a jury. The Grand Jury had indicted Elinor Hol comb, and again she was dragged into the glare of a courtroom, this time to plead to the indi¢tment. 'There re- mained only the verdict of a petit jury to open the gates of State Prison for her. Her lawyer was served with the fateful notice of trial, and she was made to realize the great struggle was about to begin. Assistant District Aftorney Mott was [aking a last survey of the deposi- tions' In. the case, mentally picturing thé curtain of guilt he would weave before the jury. To his mind the evi dence was conclusive. It pointed irre sistibly to Miss Hol¢tomb as the thief Experience had taught him that it was not an easy task to convict a woman on anything but the most direct evi dence, yet he felt that the net of cir cumstances had drawn about her so tightly as to:leave her helpless in its meshes. It was a compelling picture of sordidness that the assistant dis trict attorney would draw in the courtroom. The central figure, a young woman, beautiful, accom- plished, refined, impoverished in an environment of pleniy. In her bosom angry passions of resentment and dis- content seethe and boll into fury against the conditions of her exis: tence. She longs for the splendor and social position in which she was reared, and of which she feels she has Excitedly he waved it in} PATENTS Herbert J. 8, Dennison REGISTERED ATTORNEY, 18 King Street West, Toronte, Pat- ents, Trade-marks, Designs, Copyright, protected where; eighteen years' fence. Write for booklet. Talcum Powder --is the most refreshing ~and pleasant of all talcs Ite elusive fragrance, cook nese and antiseptic qualities have placed it foremost ameng talcumes and made it the favorite of many users, The high quality of the bg pfs i Xorg the | fume that gives it ae rasce are not rowed in any talc you cam buy. Al Druggists, age. tins, tions just for a moment, streamed over the ashen countenance of the broken amateur alchemist, and his wasted form writbed and rocked in convulsive sobs. > "1 have Nad my punishment," said Martin when at last the tempest had 'the fea that the last thing any po | licemar! required to ceed his {'work was real inteilige |ted the popular conception | force, including the Detective Bureau ! which is that "the finest" are men of prawn and little eige. I now perceive botiles our from the of jars and played queer tricks with of his fs i a ghostil poo tittle man, the dr been robbed. There is one way to break from the ruins of her early prospects." It is a dangerous wa: The diamond necklace, valued at half a million dollars, looms as the bea- con out of her perplexity. She ylelds to the temptation, but, with the inex- the « FOR HARVESTING IN WESTERN CANADA "QOING TRIP WEST." 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All sizes in the lot. | that brain is an essential to a real gietective, and I am free to admit {hat you display not only intelligence, but a high order of intellect." Britz's features relaxed into his in- scrutable smile. "It's well not to generalize, doc "The Lexow in and other legislative probes, as the newspapers are so fond of calliug them, have ceriainiy put the force in a bad light in many wavs ,[hen, t00,-the periormances of some of my colleagues are not calculated to inspire the thinking portion of the public with any great confidence in our ability: but we are not all dubs I'm glad you recognize my endeavor to thresh out this case along logical lines. After all, successful detective work is only applied common sense." The little boat grated her nose against the |siand pier, and the two jnvestigators sprang ashore. As soon as they entered the asylum grounds. Fitch became the mentor, Britz the willing jpupll, for in that abode of darkened Tegson were medical men whose hour 1y association with that phase of ex- them welcome gladly from the outer world---es- pecially members 'of their own pro- fesdton. Fitch, as he ran up the steps of the visitors' entrance, Was re | gafved royally in -the office by three jor four physicians and surgeons who {pad known him in his Bellevue days. | here was ho jealousy of his success among them. He had shot ahead of sqveral of them, and It was pretty sell understood among the Island doc: {vars that Lawrence Fiich was rapidly forging to the fore as a fashionable hysician. What was more Import in their eyes was the fact that he ned real distinction in his pro- fy Q. Several minor but helpful discoveries of his had bien recorded graityingly in the "Lancet" and more than once his name had been mentioned with flattering recognition at meetings of the County Medical Bociety. : Fitch was now In his element. He ped warmly the hands held out do , clapped two or three of his closer" cronies on the back, and pre sented Britz to the little group with a few words of introduction that won respect \ for the man from Mulberry Street. " "Got & fent here, Larry?" they asked him jokingly. { "No," said Fitch, "not exactly a pa tiem; but it's possible you bave a case here I'm a little bit interested in." He recited the history- of the curio 'dealer, with an urgent request that everything in connection with the old man be revealed to him. Brits, accustomed as he was fo glean his fadts * toflsomely, was unmistakably surprised by the readiness with which each of Fitch' promised aid. "Bastened to put thelr promise into normal ann a distinguished ore looking him pictured greed of galy no preience him as pos of belug ow ned e ben h he firmy re oid to Go'conda nme The old man appeared not to hear. Brits and Fitch exchanged glances, and the detective took up the attempt to awaken a response from the aged in- mate's menial vacuum . "Prettn busy man, eh?" sald Brits, He had touched the right chord. Any refereuce to the industry that ab- sorbed his fading Senses was sure to arouse the intelligence of the old curio dealer. He nodded briskly, and went on with his work more zealously than before. "Cot to finish a contract on time?" the Headquarters man pursued. Another vigorous little nod, follow ed by a swift search of the detec tive's face the part of the old man's sunken eyes. "Rather interesting work you're do- | ing.' pursued the detective. Thereupon Mr. Martin rejoined: "It is the only work that cen Inter est me. | have given my life to ir." "Find It profitable" inquired the sleuth. > For an Instant those. gray fingers paused in their manipulation of the clay pellets. "Well, it depends on what you call profitable, young man," anéwered the ward of the State. "There are things more important than monetary in." "Oh, yes, i know, | know," zaid the detective hastily. "I suppose your work is purely scientific?" "It 1s more than science," answered Martin. "It is art. philosophy, philan thropy--everything. It is the crys tallisation of the beauti'ul. Love is beauty, and beauty is lite. All man kind neegls is beauty in greater mea sure and higlier degree to attain per fection of happiness." "And you are engaged in forward ing that theory? "Yes," said the' old man simply *"] bave taken upon myself ihe task of glorifying every home in the world with the prisohied sunlight of the cen' turies. Every abode of man, however humble, should be Hluminated by the light of diamonds. The diamond is member ie doctor. on | the temptation the stranger held out you so much. spent itse¥; "but, oh, the long years --the long years of remorse! Urged by poverty, that enemy of seekers after truth and beauty, I succumbed to to me. 1 made the great diamend as he desired--and I gave it to him for his gold!" * The "doctor glanced swiftly at the detective and started to speak. Britz raised a warning hand, and Fitch checked his exclamation. Seating himself for the first time the Central Office man--the prober of mysteries-- laid his hand encouragingly on the dia- mond maker's shoulder, acd said: "There, now; don't let it distress Other men have done things far worse than that!" "Nothing could be worse," screamed Martin, 'springing from the low stool on which he sat and facing his visitors in an agony of abasem-nt. "I sold the delight of my eyes, the light of my life, the star of my soul--the queen of all jewels, the purest, truest, most beautiful diamoud the world Has ever known!" "Yes." said the detective, "but don't forget it was yours to sell. You had a right to do as you pleased with i." *"l had no such right," cried the al chemist. "That diamond was the pro duct of my laboring hours. I brought it forth from the wir, the sunshine, the silver water, the milk of the moon, as au Aphrodite is fashioned of dew and mist. It was not a mere stone; it had thought and sense and soul; ft was a wicrocosm of the. marvel ous!" » Fitch could not hide his astonish ment at the learning and poetry the fearfully agitated old man displayed. Britz himself, had not his thoughts been focused rigorously ou his pur pose, would have stopped to wonder at them. As it was he struck the-iron of the alchemist's reinorse at white heat. "What did the stranger want with it?" demanded the detective. "1 don't know." said Martin. His voice still trembled. his" features worked, "his bands fluttered and knotied themselves in the intensity of his emotion. "He came to me a stranger; he went away the.same, and with him went my queen of jewels, my beautiful. beautiful diamond of di wmonds! Bat 1 will find him," he shrieked. "For centuries I have been upon his path. He thought all things between us when he lured me into parting with my treasure. He said because he had suggested the outline and color of the stone he had a righ! to make me give it to him for his money; but if was II who 'thrust into the glorious gem the fire from heaven. I penned the sunbursis in the priceless priem, and it Is mine! It Ie mine by right of creatica!" This oufburst excited the old man bye in a little while thpre was an other outburst of his ehotjons He fairly shouted: "I 'will have him 'thoggh. 1 wil' come a with him yet, god whem do, I wil give give him perience of the amateur, falls 10 cover her tracks. The evidence gathered by the detectives points In only one direction, and the prosecutor feels certain the twelve good men and true will not shirk the stern duty that jus- tice calls on them to perform. The evidence massed in Mott's mind seemed fo bulge with the weight of Elinor's guilt, And vet, the prose- outor feit there was something strangely lacking in the structure; something that made it appear hollow and unreal. No other reasonable ex- planation of the disappearance of Mrs. Missloner's necklace offered itself, and still it was hard to conceive Miss Holcomb as the thief. Mott knew that the same uncertainty in the minds of the jurors would inevitably result in a verdict of acquittal. The benefit of any reasonable doubt as to her guilt must go to her, and he rea lized he had yet to eliminate that last slim possibility of a verdict favorable to the prisoner. Were it an ordinary larceny case he would be content to offer the testimony at hand and leave, the verdict to the conscience of the jurors. But this trial would fll thou- sands of newspapers columns. The press of the entire country was on the alert for it. It means much to a strug gling assistant to obtain a eonviction in s0 famous a case. To lose, he feared, would reflect on his own coms petence. The éntrapce of Brits brought the prosecutor out of - his absorption. "Just the man I wanted to see," he greeted. "Apd I'm equally glad to find you in," the detective returned. His eyes lingered on the documents piled on the desk, and then sought the face of the assistant. "Haven't got the case quite clear in your mind?" he ques- tioned. « "I've got the evidence down pat," Mott responded. "It seems complete; and yet, somehow, I feel that it is not entirely convincing. | want to get something to clinch it. It's a pretty tough proposition at best to get a conviction on eircumstantial evidence when the defendant is a woman of good appearance, and I'den't want to | slip up on this case. We haven't got much time left. The case is on the calendar for next Monddy." "That's what 1 came to. see you about," informed Britz. "I want to get you to the trial & month." "Another ad ment!" burst forth Mott in irritation. "We've put the case off twice without gaining any- thing. What do you expect to get in the next four weeks?" "Conclusive evidence of Miss Hol comb's imnoceunce," solemnly an nounced Britz. Mott eyed him inered- ulously. "You really don't believe her inno- cent?" he asked. "I do," came the swift retort. "Is that just a guess, or ia it based on evidence?" bis money There are tions of this fly killers. ® Ask kifoe Wilds, be | disappointment. many imites. best_of (all WOMAN SICK FOR YEARS Wants Other Women to Know How She was Finally Restored to Health. 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