OWKOON, FRIDAY. (KTOUKU lo. I'M)!). 6 THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE. MEFOKU. '.The Lure :.Mask lX J HAROLD j 2 Y 7 MAC GRATH X I Copyright. 1908. by the Bobb. X 1 Merrill Co. 1 (Continued.) .SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I Jack Hilliard, a wealthy New Tork clubman, hears a mysterious voice singing in the night under his window. II He inserts an advertisement in a personal ccolumu to find the singer. He receives a reply. CHAPTER III. HUE. A.NGOT. THREE uights Inter, as HlUard and Merriliew were dining to gether at the club, the stew ard came into the grill room and swept his placid eye over the groups of dluers. Singling out llil lard, he came solemnly down to the corner table and laid a blue letter at the side of Hlllard's plate. "I did not see you when you came In, sir," said the steward, his voice as solemn as his step. "The letter ar rived yesterday." "Thank you. Thomas." With no small difficulty Hillard composed his face and repressed the eagerness in his eyes. She bad seen; she bad written; the letter lay under his band! Who said that romance had taken flight? : True, the reading of the letter might j disillusion him. bnt always would I there be that vision and the voice com- j ing out of the fog. Nonchalantly he , M : T ! j Be sat Oicre staring. minutes to scrape off the makeup." turned the letter face downward and ! Merrihew put bis cue in the rack, went on with the meal. - He made off for the coat room. "I did not know that your mail Hillard laughed and went up to the came to the club," said Merrihew. writing room to fulfill a part of his "It doesn't Only rarely a letter destiny. He took the letter out and drifts this way." 1 read It again. He replaced the letter "Well, go on and read It Don't let 1" 'ts blue covering, and then for the me keep you from it Some charmer, . first time bis eye met the superscrlp I'll wager. Here I pour all my adven- tion. Like a man entranced he sat tures into your ear. and I on mv side never so much as get a bint of yours. Go on. read it." "Adventures, fiddlesticks'. The letter can wait. It Is probably a bill." "A bill In a fashionable envelope like ' that?" Hillard only smiled, tipped the cra dle and refilled Merribew's glass with some excellent Romanee Conti. "When there stood a brownstone' house, with does Kitty saH'r" he asked after awhile grotesque turrets, winding steps and of silence. glaring polished red tiles. There "A week from this Saturday, Feb. 2. was a touch of the gothic, of the What the deuce did you bring up that renaissance, of the old English mnn for? I've been trying to forget it." j or; Just a touch, however, a kind "Where do they land?" of blind man's bull of a bouse. A "Naples. They open in Rome the very rich man lived here, but for ten first week in March. All the arrange- months in the year he and his fnmily ments are complete." After coffee fluttered about the soclnl centers of the Merrihew pushed back his chair. "I'll j world. And. with a house like this on reserve a table In the billiard room his hands, one could scarce blame bim. while you read your letter." Twlce wcek durnB thlg abRence a "I'll be with you shortly," grate- caretaker came In; flourished a feather I duster and went away again. Society So with the Inevitable black cigar reporters always referred to this house between his teeth Merrihew sauntered , ..tne palatini residence." off toward the billiard room, while , tdIs morning a woman stood in the Hillard. Elcjied. up. Ijls jett?r jad alcove window, and. looked, down Into studied It." His fingers trembled slight ly as he tore open the envelope. The handwriting, the paper, the modest size, all these pointed to a woman of culture and refinement But a subtle spirit of irony pervaded it all. She would never have answered bis print ed Inquiry had she not lnughed over it, for pinned to the top of the letter was the clipping, the stupid, banal clipping: "Will the lady who sang from 'Mine. Angot" communicate with gentleman who leaned out of the win dow? 3. ' H.. Burgomaster club." There was neither a formal beginning nor a formal ending, only four crisp lines. But these implied one thing and distinctly the writer had no de sire for further communication "with gentleman woo leaned out of the win dow." He read and reread slowly: I am sorry to learn that my singing dis turbed you. There was a reason. At that particular moment 1 was happy. That was all. It was enough. She had laughed. She was a lady humor ously inclined, not to say mischievous. A comic opera star would have sent her press agent round to see what ad vertising could be got out of the inci dent; a prima donna would have Bp pealed to her primo tenor for the same purpose. A gentlewoman surely; moreover, she lived within the radius, the official radius, of the Madison square branch of the postofflce, for such was the postmark. Common sense urged him to dismiss the whole affair and laugh over It as "the lady in the fog" had done. But common I sense often goes about with a pedant s strut and is something to avoid on oc casions. Here was a harmless pastime to pursue, common sense notwith standing. The vein of romance in him was strong, and all the commercial blood of his father could not subju gate It. He rang for paper and a messenger and wrote: "Mme. Angot There is a letter for you in the mail department of this ofBce." This time his Initials were not necessary. Once the message was on its way he sought Merrihew. whom be found knocking the balls about in a spiritless manner. "A hundred to seventy-five, Dan. "For whnt?" , "For the me.re fun of the game, of course." "Make it cigars. Just to add inter est" "Cigars, then." But they both played a very indif ferent game. At 10:30 Merribews ! eyes began to haunt the clock, unci II II- lard grew merciful for various reu- sons. "What time does the performance end?" he asked. . "At 10:.. but It takes about twenty there staring. The steward had brought the letter to him, and in bis first excitement this had made no im pression upon his mind. He bad seen nothing peculiar nor strange. And here It was, not bis Initials, but his name in full. She knew who he was! In a fashionable quarter of the city the gllsttMiing street. The Venetian rod of her luilr trapped the reflected sunlight from the opposite windows, and two little points of silver danced In her blue eyes. Ah. but her eyes wore blue blue ns spring water In tho morning, blue as tho summer sky seen through a cleft In tho mountains, blue ns lnpls laitull, with tho same tllwin of gold. And every feature and contour of the face harmonized with tho luar velous hair and the wonderful eyes; a beautiful face, warm, dreamy, engag ing, mobile. It was not the face of a worldly woman; neither wus it the face of a girl. It was too ctuotlonnl for the second, and there was not enqugh control for the first. But the prophecy of laughter did not come to pass. The little wrinkles faded, the mouth grew sad. and the silver points no longer danced In her eyes. The pnln In her heart was always shadowing. She had seen her fairest dream beaten and crumpled upon the reef of disillusion. Yet ngnln the smllo renewed Itself. She was a creature of varying moods. She twisted and untwisted the news paper. Should she? Ought she? Had she not nlways regretted these singu lar Impulses? And yet whnt harm to read this letter and roturn It to tho sender? She was so lonely here. It was like being among a strange people, so long ago was It that her foot bad touched this soli. Was It possible that she was twenty-Ovc? Was there not some miscount, and was It not fifteen Instead? Would not this war of wis dom and folly be decided ere long? She opened the paper and smoothed out the folds. "Mme. Angot There Is a letter for you In the malt depart ment of this ollice." it was so droll It was unlike anything she hail ever heard of a personal iuipiirv milium, where Cnpli! nr.fl IVyrln-s lilllci! mid cooed. The merest chiinit' had thrown the original Inquiry nmh r her iintlco. Her answer was an ImpuNc to which she bad given no second thought till too late. She ought to have Ignored It. But she was lonely; the people she knew were out of town, mid the Jost .might amuse her. This mnn was In nil probability a gentleman, since he was a member, of a gentlemen's club. But second thought convinced her that this prove,-; nothing. Men are often called gentlemen out of compliment to their ancestors. Still, If this man only saw the affair from her angle of vision, the grotesque hu mor of It and not the common vulgar Intrigue! She hesitated, as well she might. Supposing that eventually be found out who she was? That would never, never do. No one must know that she was In America, about to step Into the wildest of wild adventures. No; she must not be found out. The king, who bad been kind to her, and the court must never know. From their viewpoint they would have de clared that she was about to tarnlsb a distinguished name, to outrage the oldest aristocracy In Europe, the court of Italy. But she had her own opinion; what s! proposed to do was in Itself harmless and Innocent. But this gentleman who leaned out of the window? She had seen the match flare In the young man's face. Was It the face she bad seen In that flash of light that Interested her sufficiently to risk the note? Against the dark of the night If hnrt npnraird . for an In stant, clean, crisp, ruddy us a tamco. The face warranted confidence. She had sung because she had been happy, happy with thnt transient bnp plness which nt times was her portion. Could she ever Judge another mnn by his looks? She believed not. flow Bbe bad run! The man. bareheaded, giving chase and the burly policeman across the street! She stepped down from the alcove, wound the gray veil round the riding crop and tossed them Into a corner. I Somehow In the daylight the magic was gone from his face, for she bad recognized hi in thnt first day In the park. He rode well. She touched a bell. A mnld nppearcd. "Bettlnn. you will go to the office of this newspaper and Inquire for a letter addrewed to Mme. Angot. And ti quick, for I may change my mind." The maid was back in a half hour. "There was a letter, then?" The points were dancing ngnln In the blue eyes. "You may go. Perhaps." and Bettl na's mistress smiled "perhaps 1 may let you read It und answer .lt nftcr I am done with it. That would be rather neat." , The slight nod wns a dismissal, and the maid went about her duties, which were not many in this house. Meanwhile the liuly with the Vene tian hair toyed with the letter. Club paper! Evidently he wns not afraid to trust her. But would he amuse her? The contents gave her n genuine sur prise. She ran to the window. Ital ian! It wns written In Italian, with all the flourishes of an Italian born. She turned to the signature Hillard. So .be hnd signed his name In foil? She ruminated. How came such a name to belong to a man who wrote Italian so beautifully? She looked at the signature again. John Giovanni. She would call bim Giovanni. She bad been rather clever. To have bad the wit to look In the library for the blue book and the club lM-n.Pl woman. tteshl njjve thought of that. Then a new Inspira tion came to her. She sent liettliia for tho card basket. She scattered the contents upon the floor ami sat down Turkish -wise. . Sho sorted tho cards carefully, and, lo, she was presently re warded. She held up tho curd In tri umph. He hnd called nt this houso on Thanksgiving day. lie wns known, then, to tho master and mistress. Very good. She now gave her full attention to the loiter, which she had not yet perused: To the I,nly In tho Fog: To bourn with, let me say that I, too. hnvo luuKheri. Hut there was some ilettree of chnurln In my ImiKhter. On my word of honor. It wus a instinct slinrk to my sense of ttlKnlty when I snw that trilntlo Itersonnl of mine In the paper. It Is my first olTunse of the kind, mul 1 am roitlly ashnmi'il. Hut the situation was not ordi nary. Ordinary women tlo not sins In the streets nflvr mWlnlKlit. As you could not possibly be ordinary, my offense has Kreater nmirnttudo. To Indite a personal to a Kenttuwomnu! A thousand pardons! I doubted thnt It would come under your notice, and, even If tt did, 1 was sure that you would Isnore It. To find a woman with an appreciable sense of humor Is rare. To find one who couples this with Initiation Is rarer still. How you found out my nnme confuses me. "Indeed!" murmured tho lady. Doubtless you have tho club list In your house. Do you know, when the lottor was brought me 1 saw nothlnic uuusuut about the address. It was only when i began this letter that I comprehended how clev er you woro. Thore are half a doxon J. It's at the club. 1 tell you truthfully over my own nume that your vole star tled me. 1 was startled because my thoushta wero far away. 1' was dreaming of Italy, where I was born, though there Is no more Italian blood In my veins than there Is In yours. "What made him think that, I won der?" ! therefore wrlto this in a InnirunRO fa miliar to us both, certain you could not sins Lecocq's koiiks In Italian If you did not speak and undurstnnd tt thoroughly. 8lKnora or signorina, whlchevor It may be. have we no mutual friends? Are you not known to some one who knows me some one who will speak for me, my character, my hnblts? "It Is rather a dull letter so far," snld the lady. You say you sang because at that mo ment you were happy. This Implies that you are not always so. Uurely with a voice like yours one cannot possibly be S?i held wd the card in triumph. j unhappy. If only 1 mlKht meet youl ; Will you not do me thai honor? Isn't . there just a little pure, healthy romance i waiting to bo given life? Your voice ! haunts me. Out or every silence It comes to me "tihe is so Innocent, so youthful!" JOHN H1LLAKD. The letter fluttered Into her In p. Sho leaned on her elbows. It was not a bud letter, nnd she rather liked tho boyish tone of It Nothing vulgar peered out from between the lines. Did he really love music? Ho must, for It was not every young man who could pick out the melody of an old, forgotten opera. Rather than tempt fate she decided not to answer this letter. It would be neither wise nor useful. Romance.' The word enmo back to her. With an unmusical laugh she stood up. shaking the letter to tho floor. Romance! She was no longer a girl. She was a woman of five nnd twenty, and what should a woman know of romance? Ah. there had been a time when all the world was ro manceromance: when the night breeze had whispered It under her casement window, when tho lattice climbing roses had brenthed It, when the moon and the stars hnd spelled It. Romance! She hated the word not less than she hated the Italian Ian gunge, the Italian people,' tho country Itself. She spurned the letter with her foot and fed the newspaper tothe Are. She went downstairs to the piano and played with strong feeling. Pres ently she began to sing a haunting, melancholy song by Abt. She was mistress of every tone, every shade, every expression. The door opened gradually. Crash! The music wus over. "Bettlna? llettlnn, are you listen ing?" "I nm always, listening." Hcltlna squeezed Into the room, "It Is beauti ful, beautiful! To sing like that! There will be kings and dukes at your feet!" ."Enough!" "Pardon, slgnora, I forgot. But' lis ten, 1 bring u message. . A buy came to say that the rehearsal will be at 4 this afternoon. It 1 now after I'J." "So Inter We liliiMt lie olT.' "And the Idler upstairs on the flour?" "Some day. Ilctiliia. you will entei the forbidden clininlier, and I shall have to play Mluebciird. Till I line, however, I do not mind. I .cave II there or burn II." Indifferently. itetiiiin knew her inlHircHH, She thought -liisl to leave the teller where It lay, forgotten for the tlmo being. (To ho continued.) TAXIDERMIST AND FURRIEM Send your trophies to me. for mount ing. Hig giuno htmilx, fish, hii'ils mid miiiiiniiils mounted truo to tint tiro by improved niothmhi. I do tanning, make fur rugit, nuikn, remodel mid elenii fur garment. Kxpress and mail or ilora proiupllv attended to. C. M. HARRIS. 405 Washington Street, Portland, Or. Telephone Main 31100. CRESTBROOK ORCHARD TRACTS 5 10 Adjoining Hillcrest orchard and con tain unexceled deep, rich soil. Rea sonable prices and generous terms. OREGON ORCHARDS SYNDICATE SELLING AGENTS ROGUE RIVER VALLEY SALEM BEER SALEM Is the most popular beer In Northern California and South ern Oregon. It Is acknowledged to be the equal of the very best east ern product. All beers are Gaud, but some beers are liked better thai, others. The proof for this assertion lies In drinking Salem brtr. If you wish to be convinced, ask for Salem beer and drink It. SALEM BREWERY ASSOCIATION, Medford Depot: Medford lea & Storage Co. When we suggest that you Toast Your 'Bread On Breakfast Table We tlo not mean that you should eat off the stove toast With an Electric Toaster and have crisp, brown, delicious toast costs 1c per meal to operate. We have the best toaster on the market for - sale at $4.50. Clean, appetizing, sanitary . 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C) I 1HI lien. inn lli'im., tho wulillo mid har ness maker, desire In iiniioiinco to the trmlu Hint they urn not only iru pured to fill nil orders nt short no tice, hut curry the most ronile!! lino of harness, Huddles, bridles, wlii', robes, blankets, wagon covers, (outs, te (hut rntl he found in southern Oregon lit prices I tint dilinot fail to please when quality "f flock and workmanship is considered. Don't forget tho plneu, 1)17 K. Seventh street, Medford. 20 Acres HIGHEST ATTAINMENT IN SYSTEMATIC BANKING SERVICE Tho Ja.-ltson County Hnnk rospoct fully solicit ypur account, suh.ject lo your chock, with the strongest guarantee, of safety and efficiency. We offer the highest attainment in systematic bunking service, which assures tho grontost enro in every financial transaction, with this oblig ing institution. W. I. VAWTER, President. G. P. LINDLKY, Cashier. the Tribune