THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MED FORD, OREO ON, THURSDAY, OCTOBMtt 14, 1HK). h (Coutinued.) .... SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I Jack Hilliard, a wealthy New York clubman, hears a mysterious voice singing in the night under his window. CHAPTER IL OBJECT, MATRIVOXY. WINTER fojrs In New York are never quite so intolerable as their counterparts in Lon don, and while their fre quency is a matter of complaint, their duration Is seldom of any length. So by the morrow a strong wind from the west had winnowed the skies and cleared the sun. There were an ex hilarating tingle of frost in the air and a risible rime on the windows. Hil lard, having breakfasted lightly, was standing with his back to the grate in the cozy breakfast room. He was in boots and breeches and otherwise warmly clad and freshly shaven. He rocked on his heels and toes and ran his palm over bis blue white chin In search of a possible slip of the razor. Giovanni came in to announce that he bad telephoned and that the si gner's brown mare would be at the park entrance precisely at half after 8. Giovanni still marveled over this wonderful voice which came out of nowhere, but he was no longer afraid of it. The curiosity which Is innate and childlike in all Latins soon over came his dark superstitions. He was an ardent Catholic and believed that a few miracles should be left in the hands of God. The telephone bad now become a kind of plaything, and Hil lard often found him in front of it pa tiently waiting for the bell to ring. The facility with which Giovanni had mastered English amazed tils teacher and master. But now he need ed no more lessons. The two when alone together spoke Giovanni's tongue. Hillard because he loved It and Giovanni because the cook spoke It badly and the English butler not at all. "You have made up your mind to go, then, amico?" said Hillard. - "Yes, signor." SVell, 1 shall miss you. To whom s'jali I talk the tongue I lore so well when Giovanni is gone?" with a light ness 'vlilch be did not feel. Hillard had grown very fond of the old Ro man in these seven years. "Whenever the signor goes to Italia he shall find me. It needs but a word to bring me to him. The signor will pardon me. but he is like like a son." "Thanks, Giovanni. By the way, did you hear a woman singing In the street last night?" . "Yes. At first" . Giovanni hesitated. "Ah, but that could not be, Giovan ni; that could not be." "No; it could not be. But she sang well," the old servant ventured. "So thought I. I even ran out Into the Btreet to find out who she was, but she vanished like the lady in the con jurer's trick. But It seemed to mo that, while she sang In Italian, she her self was not wholly of that race." "Buonlsslma!" Giovanni struck a " noiseless brava with his hands. "Have I not always said that the signor's cars are as sharp as my own? No; the voice was very beautiful, but it was not truly Roman. It was more like thoy talk in Venice. And yet the sound of the voice decided nic. The hills have always been calling to me, and I must answer." "And the unforgetting carablnlerl?" "Oh, I must take my chance," with the air of a fatalist. "What shall you do?" : "I have my two hands, signor. Be sides, the signor hag said it I am rich.'1 Giovanni permitted a smile to stir his thin Hps. "Yes, I must go back. Your people have been good to me and have legally made me one of them, but my heart Is never here. It Is always so cold, and every one moves bo quickly. You ' cannot He down In the sun.. Your police, bah! They beat Juiire qf the By HAROLD MAC GRATH - & Copyright, 1908, by lh Bobbi- : Merrill Co. you on the feet You remember when I fell asleep on the steps of the cathe dral? They thought I was drunk and would have arrested me!" 'Stvrrbody must keep moving here. It Is the penalty of being rich." "And I am lureome for my kind. I have nothing in common with these herds of Sicilians and Neapolitans who pour into the streets from the wharfs." Giovanni spoke scornfully. "Yet In wartime the Neapolitans sheltered your pope." "Vanity! They wished to make an Impression on the rest of the world. It is dull here besides." There is no joy In the shops. I am lost In these great palaces. The festn is lacking. Nobody bargains; nobody sees the pro prietor. You find your wny to the streets alone. The bntcher says that his meat is so and so. and you pay. The grocer marks his tins such and such, and you do not question, and the baker says that, and you pay, pay, pay! What? I need a collar; It is quindicl fifteen you say! I offer quat tordicl I would give Interest to the sale. But. no! The collar goes back Into the box. I pay qulndlci or I go without. It is the same everywhere very dull, dead, lifeless." Hillard was moved to laughter. He very well understood the old man's lament. In Italy If there Is one thing more than another that pleases the na tive it is to make believe to himself that he has got the better of a bnr gain. A shrewd purchase enlivens the whole day. It Is talked about, laughed over and becomes the history of the day. Hillard presently left the house and hailed a Fifth avenue omnibus. He looked with negative Interest at the advertisements, at the people In the streets, at his fellow travelers. One of these was bidden behind his morning paper. Personals! Hillard squirmed n little. The world never holds very much romance In the sober morning What a stupid piece of fully! The Idea of his sending that personal in quiry to the paper! Tomorrow he would see it sandwiched in between samples of shopgirl ' romance, ques tionable intrigues and divers search warrants. Ye gods! "Will, the blond who smiled at gentleman in blue serge, elevated train. Tuesday, meet same in park? Object., matrimony." Hiilard fidgeted. "Young man known as Ado nis would adore stout elderly lady in dependently situated. Object, matri mony." Pish! "Girlie. -Can't keep ap pointment tonight Willie." Tush! "A French widow of eighteen, unincum bered." and so forth and so nil.. K"t. bally rot, and here he was un the way to Join them! "Will the lady who sang from 'Mine. Angof communicate with gentleman, who leaned out of the window? .1. II.. Burgomaster Club." Positively asinine! There was scarce one chance In a thousand of the mysterious singer's seeing the inquiry, not one In ten thou sand of her answering It. And. the folly of giving ills club address; That would look very dignified In yonder agony column. He would cancel the thing. lie dropped from the omnibus nt the park entrance, where he found his restive mare. He gave her a lump of sugar and climbed Into the saddle. He directed the groom to return for the horse at 10 o'clock, then headed for the bridle path. It was heavy, but the air was so keen and bracing that neither the rnau nor the horse worried about the going. Only one party attracted him, a riding master nnd n trio of brokers who were verging on embon point nnd were desperate nnd looked It. Hillard went on. The park was not lovely; the trees were barren, t ha grass yellow and sodden. "She Is so innocent, so youthful!" lie found himself humming the re frain over and over! She had sung it with abandon, tenderness, lightness. For one glimpse of her face! He took the rise and dip that followed. Yards ahead a solitary woman cantered easi ly along. - Hillard had not seen her be fore. He spurred forward, faintly cu rious. There was nothing familiar to bis eye In ber charming figure. She rode well. As he drew nearer he saw Mask that she wore a heavy gray veil. . And this veil hid everything but tbs Initio flash of a pair of eyes, the color of which defied hi in. Then be looked at her mount. Hit! Thorn wits only ou rangy black with a white throat from the Stiudford stables, bo was ioslUve. Hut the Smidfords were at this mo ment In Cairo, so It signified nothing. There Is always some one ready to ex ercise your horses, lie looked main at the rider. Tho tlash of the eyes was not repented, so his interest vuulshed. and to urged the uinro Into a sharp run. , So ho went buck to his tentative ro mance. She had passed bis window aud disappeared Into the fog, and there wits n reasonable doubt of her ever returning from It. The singer In tho fog thus he would write It down In his book of memories and sensibly turn the page. At length he enme back to the entrance nnd surrendered the iih or u jMilr oi eyit. the mare. He was alio tit to cross the square when be was hulled. Hillurd wheeled nnd saw Merrlhcw. He. too. was in riding breeches. "Why. Dan, glad to sec you. Wer you iu the park?" "Riverside. Beastly cold too. Come join me lu a cup of good coffee." The' two edtered the cafe. "How are you behaving yourself these days?" asked Merrlhew, "My hnblts, are always exemplary," answered Hillard. "But yours?" Merrlhew gulped his coffee. "Kitty Kilirgrew leaves In two weeks for Europe." "And who the deuce Is. Kitty Kill! grew?" demanded nillnrd. "Wrhat!" reproachfully. "You haven't heard of Kitty Kllllgrcw in 'The Mori era, Maid?' Where' hare you been? Pippin! Prettiest soubrette that's hit the town In a dog's age." "I say, Dan. don't you ever tire of that sort? I can't recall when there wasn't a Kitty Kllllgrcw. What's tho attraction?" Hillard waved aside tho big black cigar. "What's the attrac tion?" "The truth Is. Jack. I'm a jackass fcnlf the time. I can't get away from the glamour of the lu.;::Lu. I'm no Johnny. Yr-i k'imv tY:t. N'n bringing n round stage entrances u:iU buying wine and diamonds. 1 might he reck less enough to buy a bunch of roses when I'm not broke, l'.ut 1 like 'em--the bright ones. They keep u fellow amused. Most of 'cm speak good Eng lish and come from belter families than you would suppose. Just good fellowship, you know. Maybe a rab bit and a bottle of beer after the per formance or a little quarter limit ut the apartment, singing nnd good sto ries. What you've In mind Is the chorus lady. Not for mine!" HUlard laughed, recalling bis conver sation with the policeman. "Go on." he said. "Get it all out of your system now that you're started." "And then It tickles a fellow's vani ty to be seen with them at the restau rants. That's the way It begins, you know. I'll be perfectly frank with you. If it wasn't for what the other fellows say most of the chorus ladles would go hungry. And the girls that you and I know think I'm n devil of n fellow wicked, but Interesting, nnd all that." milord's laughter broke forth again, and he leaned back. Merrlhew would always be twenty-six; he would al ways he youthful. "And this Kitty Kllllgrcw? I be lieve I've seen posters of her In the windows now that you sprat k of it." "Well, Jack. I've got It bad this trip; I offered to marry her last night nnd was refused." "It seems lo me that your Kitty is not half bad. What would you hnvo done had she accepted you?" "Married her within twenty-four hours." "Come, Dan; be sensible. You are not such an nss as nil that." "Yes, I am," moodily. "I told you that I was a Jackass hnlf the time. This is the half." "But she won't have you?" "Not for love or money." "Are you sure about the money?" asked Hillard shrewdly. "Seven hundred or ?even thousand, It wouldn't iimtter to Kitty If sho miido up her mind to marry a fellow. What's the iimtter with mo anyhow? I'm not so badly set up. 1 can whip any man In tho club at my weight. I can toll a tory well, and I'm not afraid of any thing." "Not even of the future!" added Hil lard. "Do you renlly think It's my mon ey?" pnthetlcally. "Woll, seven thousand doesn't go far, and that's nil you bare. If It wore seventy, now, I'm sure Kitty wouldn't reconsider. What's she like?" asked nillnrd, with more sympathy than curiosity. Merrlhew drew out his watch and opened the case. It was a pretty face. More than that. It was a refined prottl ness. Tho eyes were merry; tho brow was Intelligent; the nose and chin were good. Altogether It was tho face of a merry, kindly little soul, ono such as would be most llkejy to trap tho wandering fa,ncy of a young man llko Murrlhew. "And she won't have you?" Hillurd repented, this t.'mo with more curiosity than sympathy. 1 : "Oh, she's no fool, 1 suppose. And now she's going to Europe! Some manager has U ho Idea In hla head that there Is money to be made In Italy and Germany during the spring and summer. American comic opera in tbose countries can you Imagine 115 He has an angel, and 1 suppose money la no object" "This angel, then, ha cut out a One time for his bank account, and he'll never get back to heaven once be got! tangled up In foreign rod tape. Every large city In Italy and Germany baa practically Its own opera troupe. Poor 'I long to get my hunt! around her throutl" angel'! Tell your Kitty to strike for a return ticket to America before sho leaves." , "You think It's as bad as that?" "Look on me as a prophet of evil, if you like, but truthful." "I'll sec that Kitty gets her ticket" Merrlhew snapped the case of his watch and drew his legs from under the table. "I lost a hundred last night too." "After that I suppose nothing worse can happen," snld Hillard cheerily. You will play, for all my advice." "It's better to give than receive- that," replied Merrlhew philosophical. ly. "I've a good tiiltid to follow tho company. I ve always had n hanker ing to beat It up at Monte Carlo. A last throw, eh? Win or lose and quit I might win." "And then again you mightn't But the next time I go lo Italy I want you to go with me. You're good company, and for the pleasure of listening to your Jokes I'll gladly foot the hills, and you may gamble your letter of credit to your heart's content. I must be off. Who I riding the Knndford' black V "Haven't ' noticed. What do yon think of Kitty?" "Clm rmlng." "And the photo Isn't a marker." "Possibly uot." "Lord. If I could only hibernate for three months like a bear! My capital might then readlust Itself If left uloue that length of time." ' "See you at the club tonight," laugh ed Hillard. They nodded pleasantly and took their separate ways. Merrlhew stood very high In Hlllard's regard. Ho. was a lovable fellow, and there was some thing kindred in his soul aud Hlllard's, possibly the spirit of romance. What drew them together perhaps more fh'tn anything else was their mutual love of outdoor pleasures. Take two men and put them on good horses, send them fortli Into the wilds to face all Inconveniences, and If they are not fast friends nt I ho end of tho Journey they never Trill be. For nil his it version to cards there was a bit of the gamester In Hillard, ns once In his office bp decided on tho fall of a coin not to withdraw his per sonal from tho paper, lie was quite positive Hint. ho would never hear that voice again; but, having thrown his dice, ho would let them lie. - Now, nt 11 o'clock that same morn ing two distinguished Itnllnns sat down to breakfast In one of the fash ionable hotels. The one nor tho other had ever beard of HUlard. They did not even know Hint such n person ex isted, nnd yet serenely unconscious one was casting his life Hue. ns the palmist would, sny, across Hlllard's The knots and tangle wero to coinu litter. "The eoffeo In this country is abom inable!" growled one. The waiter smiled covertly behind his hand. These Itnlliiiis and these Germans! Why, there Is' only una place In the world where both the nro uui nnd the Haver of coffee ore pre served, nnd It Is not, decidedly not, In Italy or Ut'i'iiinny, And If his tip ex ceeded 10 rent he would be vastly surprised. The Italian never wastes on necessities n penny which can be applied in the gaming tables. And tilt-so two were milling about Monte Carlo nnd Ostein, The younger of the two was a very handsome man, lull, slender nud tiurv ens, the Venetian typo, bis black eyes, keen mill roving, suggesting n hasty temper. The mouth, partly hidden un der a graceful military tnustuchn, was thin lipped, the mouth of n man who was always master of his vices. From his right cheek bone to tho corner of his mouth ran a scar, very well heal ed.. And tho American Imagination might readily have pictured villas, ma Ids In durance vile and sword thrusts under tho moonlight. But the waiter, who had served his time In a foreign army, knew no foil or rnpler could have- mndu such a scar; .uinro probably the tnber. Ills compaulou was equally pictur esque. With white head and Iron gray beard, ho wore In his buttonhole a tiny bow of ribbon, the badge of foreign service. "I'm afraid, Enrico, that you have brought me to America on a useless adreuture," said the diplomat "She Is hero lu New York, and I shall find her. I must have money must! I owe you the Incrodlblo amount of 100,000 lire. There are millions un der my hand, and I cannot touch a penny." "Do not let your dobt to mo worry you." "You are so very good, Giuseppe!" "Have wo not grown up together? Sometimes I think I am partly to blame for your extravagance. But a friend Is a friend or ho Is not." "But he who borrow from his friend loses him. Observe how I am placed. It Is maddening I have had a dozen When we suggest that you Toast Your Bread On Breakfast Table We do not moan that you should cat off the stove toast With an Electric Toaster nnd have crisp, brown, delicious toast costs lc per nioal to operate. We ' have the best toaster on the market for sale at .0. Clean, appetizing, sanitary ROGUE RIVER ELECTRIC CO. Successors to Condor Water & Power Co. APPLES AND PEAKS AND ALL KINDS ut' FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES. YAKIMA VALLEY NURSERY Largest Commercial Nursery iu the Pacific Noita west. Not in the combine. Competes with all first class nurseries. L. E. HOOVER, Agent MEDFORD, . ORE tl ON A MEDrOBD, OBEOOK . State Depositary Established 1888 Capital nnd Surplus $125,000 Kniourcoi f7lu,u(0 Advertise in opportunities tit mnrry" riches. This millstone I eternally round my neck. I bnve genu through my part of tli fortune Vhlch was left u Indepimd-. eutly. She bit all. of bvr. and that Is why shu Is so strong, 1 nm nnsoiuieiy helpless." "Poor friend! Theso American wo men! They all believe that a mnn must have no pocctidlllos once bo hns signed the marriage' contract Body of .Bacchus! . Tho siicrnuieiit doe not make, it man leis human than he wuh before. Hut this one Is clever. She might be Italian born." "Her mother was Italian, It I the , schooling In this country that hns miido ber so clever. Tho ouly thing Italian about her Is her hatred. She Is my countrywoman there. Without ber consent 1 can touch nothing, and If 1 divorce her poulTI all goes to the state. Sometimes I long to get my two blinds round her white throat One mistake, one little mlstakel 1 am will ing to swear that she loved mo In the beginning. And 1 was a fool not to profit by this sentiment Glvo me pa tience, patience. If 1 ay to her, 'So much and you may have your freedom, there I always that cursed will. The crown of Italy will never withdraw It hand. No. With hi wife's family ou his hand, especially her brother, tho king will uever waive bis rights." "And, remember, we have but ten dsys." "Wo sha.ll not find time heavy. 1 know a few rich butchers end grocers wbo cnll themselves the aristocracy, t And sotno of them play bridge and carte." i Tho diplomat smiled In anticipation, "1 bsve followed her step by step to the boat at Naples. She 1 here. Bbs will not be hard to find. She bss wealthy friends." "You say alio Is beautiful?" "Yes. nud n beautiful woman cannot bide. Think of It! Chateaux nnd vt. las nud splendid rents, nil walling to be gormimlied by the (date! Let us get out Into the nlr before 1 become excited and forget where 1 nm." The waller stepped forward with the coats and hats. (To lie coutinued.) HIGHEST ATTAINMENT IN SYSTEMATIC BANKING SERVICE Tho Jucl.-Mon Oounly Hunk respect fully solicits your necoiinl, subject to your check, with llm s rongest Kiuii'.iiilee of safety nud olTiciimey. We offer llio highest iittiiiiitneiit in systematic lmiikiii(r service, which fissures the (rrontaHt euro in every ftiimieinl transaction, with this oktig ' ing institution. W. I. VAWTKH, President. 0. n. UNDUIY, Cashier. m the Tribune