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Oo SD KELLY'S & 6 * GROCERIES Are always to be dependel on.... vest kept Our cus.omers are satisfied If you want to be 6a groceries deal with * Try Ue TEA we sell. tion ware given to ite Optician Only the n stock. customers. tiefied with your Sy,ecial atten- selection. The tan e care 1s ¢€ red it AND BE JAMES KELLY & C0: St., near Lon fon Hcuse Corner. Queer are You? Preserve Jars las ; he same kind “ | itisfaction las W ave them in three nDintS Quart? al d gal. V I then: at a rig ht price f U uyipg al) other lines. | THE L.aiLY EXAMINER, CHARLO TLETOWN AUGUST 16 I>d4 MES REM | Chapin being th PM $838) a, vTWOR **Having thus rejected idea of criminal, 1 began to other means Burke might have met his death Were the suspicions of foul play, after all, war- rantable? Might not the death of Burke the consider by w hat have resulted from an accident’ The | more I considered this the more reason- able it seemed. Burke's money and oth- er valuables were not missing This seemed to prove conclusively that if he had been murdered the motive was not } rol be ry attributable to an accident having once The idea that his death was entered my mind, i was unable to dis- lodge it. At this point Professor Gilman cough- eda little dryly, but no one appeared to notice him, and the detective con- tinued: ‘‘Being possessed of this idea, it remained for me to discover through what kind of accident his death oc- curred. I think I have made the discov- ery, and, gentlemen, when I have fin- ished I believe you will agree with me that my theory is correct.” > Again the professor coughed a y little cough, and this time the ae looked at him curiously. But a Gilman was gazing out of the window with a faraway look, and his interes* in the detective's story seemed to wan der CHAPTER VII THE DETECTIVE UNFOLDS HIS THEORY. After a moment Fosdick resumed **] went over the ground that had passed over on his way home that night. I noticed the place where a search for some missing article appar ently had been made and agreed with the sheriff that Burke, probably having dropped one of the little steel rods that he bad with him, had spent a few mo ments searching for it) Then | crossed the river to the east pier and examined the boat. with its padlock and chain which had not been disturbed since th body of Burke was discovered Li Burke’s death had resulted from un ac cident. as I now firmly believed must have occurred neartheriver That was a fact admitting of no dispute This being trne, it was to have occurred either at the pier aite: alinost certaiy the boat was secured or between the pier and the top of the path passius over the rocky ridge near it, for }) beyond that point the path to the ob servatory turns eastward and does not again approach very near to the river This little stretch of path, then, was evidently the proper place for ptirsuing my investigations. My eariy ex: tions theré were in a mez thins sure dist “a } “SSATISFIED | pointing I found that the path passing over the ridge had on one side a preci pice descending to the water Astrange! passing in the dark might easily ma! a misstep and plunge down into t river That was conceivable enough But with Burke it wus different | was as familiar with the path as with Burke ’ the geography of his own room Uf be ny The lips may laugh 3 ees a? when the body itself .. Tae ‘iS crying out in an- 5 ttish. Vhen a wo in laughs it does not always mean that she is happy. Itisa ppy. . wotman’s province to please, and she will bravely en- _ 3) deavor to do th under the n sost harrowing cir- cumstances. Thou- women who are considered happy, and charm- ing, and entertain- ing, secretly endure suffering that would drive the av- erage man to a tmad- 1ds of! house. In aimost every instance these sufferings are due isord t] listinctly feminine or- ganism. They rob a woman of her health, hcr beauty, ‘:er amiability, her usefulness as a hous r, her capability as a moth- } er, and h ! 1 power in the social and r —s s world. There is a safe, sure, speedy and perma- | gent remedy for these troubles. It is Dr. "1 Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It acts di- rectly on the delicate at id important femi- | nine organs that | t] 1€ brunt of matern- | ity. It endows them with health, strength, ! vigor and clasticity It allays inflamma- tion, heals ulcerati soothes pain and | stops exhausting ns. It banishes the maladies of the expectant months, and ) makes baby’s advent easy and almost | painless. It insures the little new-comer’s | Health and an ample supply of nourish- ment. It fits fe : wifehood and mother- hood. Thousands of women wo were alinost hopeless invalids have testifi d to their recovery under this wonderful medi- cine. Medicin dealers sell it. Accept no substitute or inferior imitation. “Bor seven vears,’’ writes ae Louisa, Ar- Geare. : ‘t. Iredell. Co., N ‘I suffered ym fe wes ‘kness. a then com | kine Dr , ‘s Favorite _Pre- scriptio »proved very iast. It Saved my life.’ Only 31 on it st ; to cover ctistoms na mai @ : t paper-covered opy of Dr. Pierece’s Common nse Medical Advi r. Cloth bind: 50 “stamps. sen to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Bt iffalo, N. ¥. SON Pure Food Sellers ones had been intoxicated, he might have walked off into the w ater, but so far as we know Burke was perfectly sober Indeed a man who ceuld row across the river and secure his boat properly could hardly have been too intoxicated to walk straight. ‘*In ascel nding have suddenly over. the path Burke might grown dizzy and fallen I considered this, but the more J considered it the more improbable did it seem. It would be most difficult, if not wholly impossible, for a wound in the position and of the description of that on Burke’s skull to be made by the simple act of his falling off the cliff The descent is so sheer that a man los- ing his balance and falling would, in all probability, strike nothing in his pas- sage to the water below. At this time I could think of no better solution to the mystery than that, in a sudden fit of dementia, Burke, insanely dashing his head against the rocks above the path, had made the wound in his head and then toppled over into the water and drowned. I did not believe this to be a true solution, of course, though I did propose to inquire if Burke was subject to attacks of mental derange- ment. Happily I did not have to. ‘‘Having examined the ground in the locality of the east pier, I went up to the observatory and talked for an hour or two with Professor Gilman and others. Among other things I learned that at half past 10 on the night of Burke’s death a brilliant meteor was seen in the sky, and that so eminent an astronomer as Professor Gilman here shrewdly sus- pected that a meteorite had fallen in the vicinity of the river, not far from the pier. I returned to my hotel and chewed gum that afternoon. The next day I made another examination of the rocks near the pier which proved en- tirely satisfactory. I went to the city that afterncon, and the following morn- ing I had a submarine diver at work under the cliff over which the path from the pier passes. The diver bronght up several things of interest. This is one of them. ’ The detective took the slender steel rod in his hi ind, and holding it up to view said ‘This is one of the rods that were sold to Burke the evening cf his death, or, if not, it is exactly like it in every respect. There is no reason to suppose that it is not one of the very surie. The presence of the steel at that spot in the river convinced me, beyond all question, that tkat was the point where fell into the water. This dark piece of rock or mineral’’—the de- tective lifted the larger of the two pieces pose ‘tis I am told by Professor a meteorite. I was reasonably ies fies Burke as he s Gilman, certain of it before, but his statement sall the confirmation that is needed It is one of the things that the diver brought up from the river bed under the path on the cliff ‘‘Now, then, let me review some of the facts known tous. Burke said good- by to Mr. Dobson at the hotel at almost exactly 10 o’clock that evening. There is no doubt about the time, for Mr Dobson remembers setting his watch by Burke’s just before the latter left He recalls the time with great distinctness because, he tells me, the town struck 19 just then, and he remarked to Burke that it was a minute fast. So we | ir Ci0CS know that at almost precisely 10 Bur ke left the hotel. The distance from it to the west pier is about a mile. An or- dipary man would walk it in 15 min- utes. Burke, being something of an hlete, may have walked it in a little less time. We know he stopped to hunt for something. The evidences of this, however, would indicate that it was no very protracted search Probably it consumed not over two minutes, or at the most not mre than five. Suppose we say it took 18 minutes for him to reach the west pier, ten minutes would be about the time required for rowing across the river and two more for se curing the boat at the pie rand starting to ascend the path to the observatory That would bring us to half past 19 That night Prot x Gilman and Mr Arnold and also two other observers at rvatory saw a brilliant meteor flash across the sky The proiessor and Mr. Arnold, noting its course, thought it probable that a me tteorite fell into or near the river not far from the east pier Now at what time was this? Fortunately we know almost to the second. Just after the meteor disap- Mr Ingraham of the Urania university was thinking of going out with Mr. Aeaaid to search for the me teorite that they suspected had fallen but, upon consulting his watch, fo und had only nine minutes in which the 10:40 train for the city know that the meteorite fell at almost exactly half past 10. The spot in the river w here this meteorite was found is approximately the spot \ wh here it fell, | ut My examina tion of the rocks on the however. me exactlv where it struck. csSt n . the ovse nears : k al ‘ that he to catch Thus we not exactly ridge, showed ae poe This spot is almost direc ctly | in 1 the path of a person coming up from the pier We have figured out that a person was coming up at the very moment the metecrite fell. Is it unreasonable to suppose that this strange visitant from outer space struck poor Burke on the head at the instant he was passing that dangerous point in the path and that the blow knocked him off into the river ?”’ Professor Gilman uttered a little ex- clamation, but no one noticed him, for the sheriff had sprung up excitedly. ‘‘Yes, sir,’’ he cried, ‘‘it is unreason- able. If that thing fell out of the sky, as you assume, it could never have made the wound on Burke’s skull. The wound is in the wrong place for that. In order to have it occur, Burke’s left ear must have been turned toward the sky in a most unnatural manner. No, sir; that theory is knocked in the head at the start!”’ ‘‘But suppose,”’ said the detective, quite undisturbed, ‘‘that the meteorite struck the cliff first, and then, rebound- ing at an angle, struck Burke on the side of the head. Surely you will not deny that that could happen. Now, as a matter of fact. the cliff shows that the meteorite did strike it at a point about as high as a man’s head, for a piece of the rock there was broken off. This is it,’”’ touching lightly the smaller piece on the desk, ‘‘and it was picked up off the river bed by the diver, along with the other things. Now this corner of the meteorite might have made a wound almost exactly like thatgin Burke’s skull At least, such is my judgment, after a very close examination of the wound and of this portion of the me- teorite.”’ The sheriff interrupted the detective again and this time in even greater ex- citement than before: ‘‘There is one thing you seem to have forgotten. That meteorite must have been intensely hot when it fell, hot enough to burn human flesh and bone. But did the flesh and bone around the wound show any in- dications of having been burned? Cer- tainly not. 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