'THE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MlSDPOltD, OREGON, P.R.I DAY, IWBKUAKY 1910. fj l AL rrzr OF ' Booth GUEST QLESNAY Tarking'ton which 1 felt t could III nlTortl 1 ronlst ed her kind hotipltiillty, mid thu out come of It wii tlmt I lion? iduuild be u kind of nrmlNtlco, to begin with my dining tit the chateau that evening, "Did, anybody over toll ynu," wuh hor surprising Inquiry, "that you arc thu iieorc8t man of those limes?" "No." I lumwcred. "Don't you thlnfc juu're a uiiecrcr woman!" 'Tootle'." she cried Kcoriifully, "Ho .'IV to your woods and your woodscap. the broad tot race below, with a big moon iImIiik In (ho sky, I iKwciuIhI tlu stci'H In ch.ue f thts pietty iiw allor, allowed hor to seat too at the most remote of the tables and accepted without un Hlliiviiess uthu , 'I.m trie. of hers In the matter of coffee and aroites. "And now," tdio said "now that I've done so much for your de.tr- cut. hopes atid comfort, tool: up at the milky moon and tell me all." she loaned mi elbow on the nimble railing that protected the terrace anil. shltldliiK her eyes from the moonlight with her hand, affected to giiviit at tile drauiatleally. "Who and what Is tne glorious Htningor 7" xhe askeil. Itoilstltig an Impulse to chime In Inc iter bay horse departed at n aniart gait. My work was accomplished after n fashion more or less desultory that day! I had many absent moments. was restless ami walked more than 1 with hor humor, I gave her so dry painted and returned to the Inn earlier ""d coinmonphice an account of my than usual. young friend tit the tun that I present While dressing 1 new word to Pro-' f,l"'l myself abandoned to solitude fessor Kerodec that 1 should not bei''1""- able to Join him at dinner that evening. "I d""""' oxv where to go." she Miss Kllsnbeth had the courage to complained us she rose. "Those other take tue under her wings when I nr t PihihIo tiro most palnrul to a girl or rived In acceptance, of- her Invltntlou, ! .v Intelllpeuce. but l cannot linger by placing me upon her left at dinner, but J"r ""I'- I'utruth long ago lost Its snrlKhtllcr calls than initio demanded . Interest for me. and I prefer to believe of knocking. addtl..K Amedee with a ' nvrtiy. George won't be back for an- - " - - " f , 1 "7" " , , ' v ' , other ten tlays, and I've been over- " ",uu "1 " lu.uun-mi : ; ,. , ' " . ", , ...... . lauy who oireivu a tine s ion iter nml 1 mu . nw -v"- ... .. . . . i.i i ii i o CF1APTKK VI. I HAD tlulshcd dressing next morn lug and was strapping my things together for the day's cnmpalgu when I heard a shuttling step upon the porch and the door opened "Louise nartnan," she corrected. "Didn't you know she was staying at Quesnnyr" "1 guessed it, though Atuedee got the uamu confused." "Yes; she's been kind enough to look gently without any previous ceremony 1 nftcr the place for us while we were breakfast tray, "Monsieur," be said, nodding in a panic toward the courtyard, "Mile. Ward Is qnt thcrel" "What!" But 1 did not shout the word. "Probably Mile. Ward has only come to talk with Mmc. Brossard." "I fear some of those people may hnxe told her you were here." he ven tured Insinuatingly. "What people?" I asked, drinking my coffee calmly, yet. It must be confess ed, without quite the deliberation I could have wished. "Those who stopped yesterday even inn on the way to the elintemi. They might have rccoguUed" "Impossible. 1 kuew none of them." u.ti.ltit nn nvrtlMtlrtti fiit- Mm It. don. Afterward I did n round of visits- rear wait or a coimr or penria ror ; '"' ' tlrvsome enouuh but tunomr neonlo it's m- observation throughout the evening , ' airs. Adieu, "Si to kec in wuch wTh o,S?Koi ns "" f"rw" talking cngerlp W tl, that she made mo so.em.i account " ' nle personage acres the ta- wnrti-jr and departed. pretty little "I see'" I Hd with n crimness whleh le. This was a prince ending In "akl." nut Uttn- In attractiveness, the isie, I saw. with n grimness which icrmltteil himself the slight vacarv ' strug moonlight, tinged w ith bb e probably escaped her. "liut how did I"l"w' nimsur ine stij. in agarj , .. ? , "J . , . . Mrs. Harnian know that I was at Les of wearing a gold bnieclet. and ,,or. sn iniiit i ttu out m r tuoiui imtr ami Z 'ls this tlavor of romance drew the' ""hlng brightly among the -pic- "She nujt you once In the forest" "Twlcf." I interrupted. "She tnontloucd only once. Of course she'd often heard both Goorgo and mo ' speak of you." j "But how did she know It was I and ; where I was staying?" i j "Oh. that."' tier smile changed to a , laugh. "Your urn It re d'hotol told For lady. The Iwtuitiet was drawing to n close when Miss Kllsttbeth leaned toward, me nnd spoke. "Anne Klllott. yonder. Is asking you , n question." she rcpeatetl, nodding at CALL and see us in our New Quarters, 108 W. Main St, next door to York & Co. Realty Office, i 2sRex Market Huth a Pecii Props. Phne 3071 i ill llttif fttn Warif tlinf inll fll-M .. 1 . . M .... here witbout doubt." ""Why do ydu say so?" "Because she lias Inquired for you." "So!" I row at once and went to ward the door. "Why didn't you tell me at once?' He saw the menace colling In my ey and hurriedly retreated. "Monsieur!" he gapd! backing away i were at tne Inn.' "He dkir "Ob. but you mustn't be angry with hlin. He made It quit all right." "How did he do that?" I naked, try ing to i-itk calmly, though there was tlmt in iuy tnlml which wis tit have blanched the parchment cliaek of a grand lniihltor. from me, and as hh) lud, fumbling ; "He told Ferret that you were vory behind hltu, found the latch of tho , nnslous not to have It known You door, he opned it and scrambled out think Louls very lovely to look at, by a sort of spiral movement round ' don't you?" she asked. the casing. When I followed a mo- "Exquisite." I answered. mcnt later, with my traps on my ' "Every one does." shoulder and the packet of sandwiches I "I suppose she told you" and now in my pocket, he was out of sight. I felt tnysolf growing red "that 1 be- ' Miss Elizabeth sat beneath tho arbor haved like a drunken aerolmt when , at the other end of the courtyard, nnd she came upou me In thb path?" beside her stood the trim nud glossy , ""o. Did you?" cried Miss Elba bay saddle horse that she had ridden . bcth. with a ready credulity which 1 from Quesnay. his head outstretched . thought by no means pretty. "Loulae above his mistress to paddle at the sal1 ,bat ,,,e wished she could havo , vine leaves with n tremulous upper lip. ', nad a hetter look at what yon were ! An expression in the lady's attitude 1 painting." and air which I instinctively con-1 "Heaven bless her!" 1 exclaimed, strued as histrionic seemed intended . "Her reticence was angelic." to convey that she had been kept wait-, "ies " retkeuce," said my Ing. yet had waited without reproach, companion, with enough of the sumo and, although she must have heard me ' quality to make me look- at her quick- coming, she did not look toward me until I was quite near and spoke her ly. A thin line had been drawn acros.i I her forehead. "You mean she's still reticent with George?" I veutured. "Yes." she answered sadly. "Poor George always hopes, of course, in the silent way of his kind when they suf fer from such unfortunato passions, and he waits." -i some chords were soumlid ti ( . ti a pliiuu. whli U run on Into l.n Vi. u llohomv" uml out ut that mio in-- titit-f cMe, , I W!a Uoit ! . a li t revetle tlmt w.w llfee. n rhiile peiTti wIki troktt it. She .inof - I qo etly that I did Dot h""' lirr . 1 1 .-1 I she wits n I most box Me tue and -ini. to me. It wtt the second time ih.it l hud Imppeuinl. ) REAL ESTATE (To b continued ) Bargains For Buyers I MO ncret?, $125 per ncre, oi e miie , from station, nil cleared ; will Milttli- . vide. j .)3Vij acres, P-j tiiilot. from station,, fino-t ul t'nl fit nnd apple land; nt a lmrgnin. , CITY PROPERTY. New fivo-room houso nud four lots for $2500; witlt terms. 1 New fivo-room modern liiingnlo -v ' on KitiR street, for .?200C. 1 in .i:..: t:...s. , I IIP UUI l-S IKlJIMIilllK iiiu .",' lllilll-i, I for ?G00 tier acre. This in n Hpleudid , proKiyition for mhtliviiion. Farm Land Timber Laud Orchard Land y? 9 Residences City Lots Orchards and Mining Claims Medford Realty Co Room 10, Jackson County Dank Building "ITTio nnd what to the gtnrluuii itrnn- gcrT" wie athttl. I HUNTLEY-KREHER CO., 2M Fruitgrowers' Hank bldg. Phone 3-101. a very pretty girl down and uctobs the table from me. .Miss Anne Elliott's at tractive voice had previously enabled me to recogulzo her us the youug wo- 1 man who had threatened to serenade "She retained his name," I observed, j "Harman? Yes; she retained it. At REAL ESTATE SNAPS "I suppose that former husbaud of j Lcs Trols Pigeons, hers recovered." ; "I beg your pardon," I said, address- I "I believe he's still alive somewhere. J lag her. I Locked up. I hope!" she finished i "I hear you're at Lea Trols Pigeons," I tliajllj. , BU1U .11 IBM ,1I1UIU "Yes?" "Would you mind telling us some- all events she's rid of hlra." , thing of the mysterious Narcissus?" A bnrfain '11 acres fruit or nl- "It's hard." I reflected aloud "hard j "If you'll be moro definite." I return- falfa land, 2 miles from station, to understand her making that mis- ed in the tone of a question. ' Finost fruit nnd alfalfa ranch in f n l: P vniltll. nu bli .li u tVnn In 1, I t I ..l.nn n . t I ..I I ..(..( . " ' "7 . r, . v..a ,K .3.u Applegate ynlloT, diloh nnd witter b.inim.- ui uct i e liiu u Bin easy wun a wmie ue nnu wmte uair nnu , . . trM to see something of what she's llke-a I white flannels," she said. , ngbt WI,U p,acc; $C0 nn ncre' en85r fine. rare, high type." 1 "Oh." said 1, "he's not mysterious." IfJhuxa f nmt. ,nn "But you didn't know blm, did you?" , "Uut he Is," she returned. "I Insist ACl" of timber seen miles ,Mlss Elizabeth asked, with some dry- on his being mysterious, rarely. grand-,,rom Mt,dforI ,0'" 8a, or rn(1. ness. i jy. strancely mysterious! You will Threo tlmbor and homostead rolln- "No." I answered. "I saw him twice 1 let me think so? This young lady qulshmonts for salo cheap, once at the time of his accident that 1 had a whimsical manner of cmphasiz- Money to loan on city property. RESOLVED The bet resolution for yon to make is to come to n for your next suit, If you wnnt hornet lihig out of thu ordiunry. Wo do tho best work nnd charge tho lowest prices. W. W. EIFERT Tim riioaKbSBrvB tailok $llt Elizabeth sat beneath the arbor, and betide her stood the saddle hone. name. At that she sprang up quickly enough and stretched out her band to me. was only a nightmare, his face cover- ed with" I shivered. "Hut I had caught a glimpse of him on the boule- ; vard. and of all the dreadful" i "Ob. but ho wasn't always dreadful," she Interposed quickly, "ne was a , fascinating sort of person, quite charm- ' iug and good looking, when she ran I away with him, though he was horri- ' bly dissipated even then. He always I had been that. Of courso sbo thought t "Hun to earth.- she cried, advancing I hWd be a,e ,0 8traIghteiJ ,jlra outf a step to meet me "A pretty poor trophy of thu chase," said I, "but proud that you are Hh killer." To my surprise and mystification her checks and brow flushed rosily. Sbo was obviously conscious of it and laughed. i "Don't be embarrassed," she said. "1!" "Xa, you, poor man! I suppose I couldn't havo more thoroughly com promised you. Mmc, Ilrossard will never believe In your respectability again." "Ob, yes, she will," said I. "What! A lodger who has ladles calling upon him at S o'clock in the morning! liut your bundle's on your shoulder," she rattled on. Iiughlng, "though there's many could be bolder, and perhaps you'd let me walk a bit of the way with yon If you're for the road." "Perhaps I will." said I. She caught up her riding skirt, fastening it by a clasp at her side, and we pit sued out through the archway uud went blowjy Miss Kllznbeth slowly, nud, whether along the road bordering the forest, she could not further explain her ber horse following obediently at half doubts or whether she would not, that rein's length. was all I got out of her on the subject "When did you hear that I was at i t the time. I asked one or two mow Mmo. lirossard'sr 1 asked. ' questions, but my companion merely "Ten minutes after I returned tc 8hook her head again, alluding vaguely Quesnay late, vesterday afternoon."- . to her cousin's, "ways." ...Then she. "Who told you',', .. . i brightened suddenly and inquired "Loulkc." ' when i would h ive my UiingH sent up I 1-i.cuted tl.c ni.mc quest U.I.IUVI: . ,0t,1,t ' ";("" '(' '" , "Ytm..-.in Mr. La?rubee Han... A M: lf JnlBunderstumllng poor glrJ! She tried for three years- three years It hurts one to think of You see. it must have been something very like u 'grand passion' to bold ber ' through a pain three years long." "Or tremendous pride," said I. "Wo men make an odd world of it for the 1 rest of us. There was good old George, i as true and straight a , llved"- "And she took the other! Yes." George's sister laughed sorrowfully. "But George and she have both sur , vlved tho mistake." I went on, with coufldence. "Her tragedy must have taught her some important differences. Haven't you n notion she'll be tremen dously glad to seo hlut when be comes back from America?" "Ah, I do hope so!" she cried. "You see, I'm fearing that be hopes so, too ' to the degree of counting on it." "You don't count on It yourself?" She shook her head. "With any oth er woman I should." "Why not with Mrs. Harman?" "Cousin Louise lias her ways," said ing words unexpectedly, with ti breath' lens Intensity that approached violence, a habit dungcrously contagious among nervous persons, so that I answered slowly out of a fear that I might echo it. "He's a young American, very at tractive, very simple." "But he's mad!" she interrupted. "Oh. no!" I said hastily. "But he is! A persou told mo so in a garden this .very afternoon," she went on eagerly "a person with a rake and ever so many moles on his chin. This person told me all about him. His name Is Oliver Kaffren, and he's in the charge of a very large doc tor and quite, quite mad!" "Jean Ferret, the gardener," I said deliberately uud with venom, "is fast man as ever acquiring notoriety in these parts ns an Idiot of purest ray, and he had his information from another whoso con- SiskiyouLandCo 206 Phipps Building, Medford, Or. 2 it i Medford Iron Works E. 6. TROWBRIDGE, Proprietor. Foundry and Machinist All b'n of Engines, Spraying Outfits, Pumps, Boilers and Ma- I 1. 1 i. I n 1 1 r A ciiinery. rtuenis in souinern urcyun tur I FAIRBANKS, MORSE L CO. tlnuanco unhanged is every hour more , miraculous." "now ruthless of you," cried Miss Elliott, with exaggerated reproach, "when I have had such a thrilling happiness all day In believing that riotously beautiful creature mad! If he Isn't, why does lie Imve an enor nious doctor with him?" "This is romance!" I retorted, "The doctor Is Professor Keredee, Illustri ously known In this country, but not as a physician, ami they are following some form of scientific research to gether." The windows had been thrown open, allowing passage to tt veranda. Mini Elizabeth led the way outduoni with the prince, I caught n llnal glimpse of Mrs. Harmau, which revealed tlmt she was looking at me with tensity, hut with tho movement of intervening groups I lost hor. Miss Klllott point edly waited for mo untl' I came round the table, theu attached me dollnilely by taking my nnu, at .ompunying her action with n d.i '.zllug hiiiIIo, Table libit coI.lv nc "mg on The JACKSON COUNTY REALTY COMP'Y 604 WEST TENTH STREET, OR 124 KING STREET. MEDFORD OREGON Office In residence, corner West Tenth and Wfifl Streets. Always prepared to show you (tie best Jack son county has In tho real estate line from the unimproved land to the best bearing orchards, farm land or stock ranches; also city property. The manager has hail ten years' experience In the county, which will aid the prospective purchaser. Seeing Is knowing We also have modern rooms to accommodate our patrons. Following are Some of our Good Buys 1C acres Newtowns and Spitz apples, $1G,000 easy terms; just ready to bear. 10 acres Newtown and Spitz apples, 4-year-old trees; $Z3000, easy terras. Several nice small tracts near town just coming in beaj'hiff. 300 acres 3 1-2 miles north of Eatrk I" .1 8,000, easy Lepras. 200 acrs soutk Eagle Point, $10,000, easy terms. Houbc, two lots, well locat ed; price $1700; terms. 293 acres near coal mines, $9000, easy terms. ALSO AGENT FOR TUN SNOWY BUTTK ORCHAKl). Two lots, fine location, $1500. Several acre tracte, fine lo cation to subdivj.' lots for sale. ma-.,. ...