Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1913.
The Half-God
BY ALBERT DttRRUCGTON.
Author of
“THE RADIUM TERRORS,”
“CHILDREN OF THE CLOVEN
HOOF,” Etc.
(Cotinuation of Chapter II.)
He removed his glove to light a
cigarette, and she saw that the sleeve
of his coat was frayed and shabby.
There were grease stains on tUs vest
and shirt cuffs. The car in which he
sat was an old taxi, weather-rotted and
very dilapidated. In her brief, hurried
glance his circumstances and purpose
seemed clear.
“How long has Captain Engleheart
been in England?’' she questioned, her
brain alert now to catch some flaw in
his almost incredible statement.
He shrugged disparagingly. “A
month only. ..The loss of the Manhat
tan has eaten up his courage and nerve.
He shouts In his sleep about boats and
the shffting cargo that sent the Man
hattan out of business. Captain Engle
heart is now a very deplorable object!”
“Where do you live, Doctor Hamer-
sho?”
“About a mile from here, madame.
Follow me in your car and you shall
look up Engleheart!”
Hammfensho’s voice never changed.
She shrank from his outstretched hand
as though it held a whip.
“You must allow me time to con
sider, Doctor Hammersho. The news
you have brought is rather sudden.
You must wait”
“How long?”
“Until tomorrow. I will meet you
here about this time.”
He leaned from the mu<T-spattered
taxi, his restless eyes searching her
'closely.
“Your marriage with Kromer is un
fortunate, madame; but there is no
need for it to disturb your peace so
long as Captain Engleheart is with
me.”
His fingers searched among his pock
ets until a ‘‘greasy card bearing his
name and address was produced. “To
morrow, then, at this time and place.”
He handed her the card, and then with
a slight nod drove his car down the
narrow road in the direction of Twyford
town. She watched him depart, and
the fumes of his petrol stayed like
poison in her throat.
The whole sum of her past was now
In the reckoning. The sea had de
ceived her, as it had deceived thou
sands of others. It had flung into
being the ma? who had once appeared
to her as the ideal of all there was
good and noble. She had met Maurice
Engleheart at the house of a relative
in Calcutta, at a time when her father
was away with his regiment at Um-
balla.
Engleheart at that time was engaged
in the Hoogli pilot service. But after
their secret marriage he had accepted
command of a 2,000-ton steamer plying
between Calcutta and Japan. Bernice
had accompanied him joyously on his
second voyage to the beautiful home he
had prepared for her on the outskirts
of N^rasaki.
It was a small bungalow furnished
in native fashion and overlooking the
temple of Shoninaw. For a time Ber
nice imagined that her Japanese gar-
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den would hold her forever until the
thoughts of approaching motherhood
turned her mind .toward her own land.
Maurice was absent for a long period
and at each homecoming she detected
subtle changes in his manner. From
the young nimble-footed officer he be
came dull-eyed and slow moving, his
temper ^title and uncertain.
Bernic4 bad not lived ten years in
the east without attaining to some
knowledge of everyday facts. Even in
-India a sailor of twenty-seven, witn
the raw edge of youth unimpaired, does
not in a single year, sink into senility
and sloth. There must be a cause.
She found it one night in the little
jade green opium-lamp and pipe con
cealed under the thatched roof of the
garden house. The discovery turned
her cold and sick. As weil argue with
a famished wolf as try to wean her
sick-souled husband from the drug.
Only at intervals did he evince the
slightest interest in his surroundings,
for a while Imry, the-months’ old
baby, appealed to the little manhood
left in him. Yet, i n spite of her pity
and affection, Bernice was forced to
decide upon her future course of life
as Maurice’s opium habit Increased.
His one friend Nagasaki was the
husky-voiced student of medicine. HiogI
Hammersho. They were ' Inseparable
while Maurice’s ship was in port. The
cause of their friendship was made
manifest later. It lay in the fact that
Hiogi was dependent on Maurice for
secret supplies of Indian opium, smug
gled ashore under the noses of cus
toms officers. Hiogi Hammersho. be
sides owning a lucrative medical prac
tice, added to his income by renting
certain hasheesh houses in the foreign
quarter of Nagasaki.
She had appealed, in the name of her
child, to the little Japanese doctor to
assist her in reclaiming Maurice En
gleheart from the soul-destroying
habit. Hiogi very courteously pointed
out that an Englishman had a right
to form any habit he chose, providing
it did not interfere with his calling or
profession. The opium tendency, he
declared, was not so debasing as the al
cohol habit, which maddens men’s
minds and turned them eventually in
to howling monsters.
“Go,” he said, “into the perfumed
seclusion of a modern opium divan
and look at what the cultured Euro
pean is pleased to call the Chinaman’s
dementalizing excesses. Contrast the
opium smoker’s quiescent state with
the brutality, ill health, the crime, and
poverty which spring from alcoholic
excesses!”
Bernice made no further appeals to
Hiogi Hammersho, but decided to re
turn to England with Imry at the ear
liest opportunity. Her runaway mar
riage had estranged her from her
father. She dared not look to him for
help. In the mean time Maurice had
become sullenly aware of her inten
tions. And in his sane hours, before
the opium fever assailed him in the
evening, he pleaded that Imry be left
in Nagasaki with his native nurse un
til she thought fit to return to Japan.
In this plea he was supported by
Dr. Hammersho, who pointed out that
in Japan a father was entitled to the
guardianship of his children. More
over, he intimated that any attempt
on her part to deprive Maurice Engle
heart of his child would bring upon her
the wrath of the Nagasakian authori
ties.
Bernice conceived a plan whereby she
could leave the country with Imry, un
molested. At the last moment she en
gaged her passage to London on an
outgoing steamer, and with the assist
ance of Nagiswara, her Japanese maid,
smuggled Imry into her cabin unnotic
ed. Then she went on deck ambng the
crowds of Europeans and natives wish
ing each other good-by.
At the last stroke of the bell- warn
ing all non-passengers ashore, she ob
served a *tout Japanese dame hurry
ing down the gangway carrying some
thing inside her large kimono. Only as
the gangway drew up did a suspicion
of the terrible truth leap upon her.
Her flying feet took her below to her
cabin to find Imry gone!
She reached the deck sick and fainting,
the sound of the steamer’s propeller in
her ears. A wild glance over the rail
showed her that they were moving rap
idly from the wharf.
The captain, a German of irascible
temper, batly refused to believe her story
or .even consider seriously her proposi
tion to put back to the wharf. The next
point of call was Singapo. Here a let
ter from Maurice, conveyed by one of
the fast Indo-Japanese mail packets,
awaited her, explaining that Imry was
quite well, but that on no account would
he permit her to take him from the
country.
“You have chosen to leave me,” the
letter went on. “So be it. At any time
the child is yours to have and keep con
ditionally that you return to your home
here.—M. E.”
Lack of funds prevented Bernice re
turning instantly to Nagasaki. Seven
pounds was the sum total of her world
ly wealth, scarcely enough to purchase
her return steerage passage among the
crowds of Mohammedan and Chinese
coolies who usually invade the for’ard
part of eastern-bound vessels.
At the last moment she vfas driven to
WHEN A LAXATIVE IS
Salts, Calomel and Cathartic
Pills Act on Bowels as Pep
per Acts in Nostrils
Take a Cascarct tonight and thor
oughly cleanse your Liver, Stomach nnd
Bowels, and you will surely feel great
by morning. You men and women who
have headache, coated tongue, can’t sleep,
are bilious, nervous and upset, bothered
with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach,
or have backache and feel all worn out.
Are you keeping your bowels clean
with Cascarets—or merely forcing a pass
ageway every few days with, salts, ca
thartic pills or castor oil? This is im
portant.
Cascarets Immediately cleanse and reg
ulate the stomach, remove the sour, un
digested and fermenting food and foul
gases; take the excess bile from the
liver and carry off the constipated
waste matter and poison from the in
testines and bowels.
Remember, a Cascaret tonight will
straighten you out by morning. A 10-
cent box from your dr.uggist means
healthy bowel action; a clear head and
cheerfulness for months. Son’t forget
the children.—(Advt.)
accept the inevitable. On arriving in
England she hoped to gain^the assist
ance of her father’s people before claim
ing Imry from the man she had aban
doned. Providence disposed otherwise.
On the steamer was Mme. Brunner, a
matron belonging to the Rochwarne In
stitute of Interlaken.* Interested in Ber
nice’s pitiful experiences a friendship
sprang between the two which ripened
into a closer bond before Hamburg was
reached. Madame had been on a visit
to Japan to study the new methods of
nursing adopted by many of the military
colleges and private hospitals.
At the last moment Mme. Brunner
prevailed upon Bernice to accompany her
to Interlaken, where she promised to use
her influence with the famous Dr. Rgch-
warne in obtaining a position of trust
in the household.
As the daughter of a prominent British
army surgeon the instinct of nutsing
was almost inherent in Bernice. Indeed,
while accompanying her father through
the various hill -stations of northern
India, it fell to her upon more than one
occasion to take her place in the hos
pital ward and field tent.
At Rochwarne’s Institute, with Mme,
Brunner as head matron, her services
were soon required for the most serious
and delicate work. Her'salary was fixed
at a rate which made possible her return
to Japan within eighteen months, at
least. It was not a long time to wait.
And the thought of again meeting her
little son added zeal and nerve to her
lightest undertakings.
In a very short time the great physi
cian and specialist, Rochwarne, decided
that Mme. Brunner had provided him
with an invaluable assistant whose serv
ices could not be overestimated.
It was about this time that news of
the Manhattan's wreck reached her,
together with the story of Captain
Engleheart’s drowning along with forty
passengers and thirty of the crew. A
week later she received a letter from
Nora Engleheart, Maurice^ sister in
Calcutta, informing her that Irmy was
in her keeping and would remain until
something definite could me . arranged.
The boy’s health was excellent, Nora
concluded They had both returned to
Calcutta after a visit to Simla.
Bernice found relief from her over
strained nerves in work, incessant
work. The great Rochwarne protested
smilingly one day against her repeated
attempts to fulfil the duties of six ordi
nary nurses. When F"abian came to the
institute she was detailed, during his
period of convalescence, to attend him
until his departure.
Free to begin life again Bernice had
accepted the young American’s offer
of marriage with some hesitation. Of
her past life with Maurice she held
nothing back. It was Irmy who weak
ened her honesty of purpose. Some
dread instinct warned her that the
oversensitive, Fabian would revolt at
the admission of the child’s existence.
The omission brought its own punish
ment. Surrounded by modern luxuries,
undreamed of in her wildest fancies,
she had endured five years of inesca
pable torture. Irmy could never look
upon her again. He would pass his life
with Nora Engleheart, Inhaling the
fetid ordors of a tropical city, to die,
probably, at the end of some hot sum
mer, unloved and neglected.
She had endured this self-imposed tor
ment unavailingly. Maurice Engleheart
had drawn his enfeebled body from
the waves when stronger men had
drowned.
The future faced x her like a flaming
sword.
* * * * •
Fabian returned from his visit to
Caleret’s laboratory, a strange elasticity
in his gait and manner. He found
Bernice in the library, an open book in
her hand, her head bent sligjitly for
ward.
He had brought her some flowers
'from town. Scarlet and yellow Iceland
poppies, interlaced with arctic moss.
She inhaled the cold fragrance feverish-
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ly, for the day had been hot and the
grounds still held the heat of the al
most tropic sun.
“I thought you would enjoy them,
dear.” He took the book from her list
less fingers tenderly. “They were
packed In srufw when I got them.”
“You saw Calaret?”
“Yes, over the heads of three world-
famed specialists. He’s besieged night
and day with callers, medical cranks
from every part of Europe. They want
his^half-god. or some of It, the fools.
And they talked and gesticulated as if
he stored it in casks.”
Her mind strove to follow his words.
All interest in Jean Caleret’s wonder
ful discovery had evaporated. ■ Her
thoughts centered again on Imry and
the sailor husband whom the sea had
refused to drown. Fabian was too full
of his theme to note ll£r mental pre
occupation. His mind was aflare with
the events of the day. The French sci
entist had showed him the tiny bulb
containing the sen. the miraculous ex
tract of a radium which, even in its
imperfect state, pointed to the extermi
nation bf the most dreaded of human
scourges.
Bernice sighed as she contemplated
Fabian’s illumined eyes. How inter
ested he was In the welfare of human
ity, she thought. Oc was it that his
own past sufferings had keened his
sympathies, causing him to pour his
stream of gold into the various labora
tories of phyesical research?
Her mind was slowly recovering the
shock of her meeting with the Japan
ese doctor. Numbed and ’shaken, at
first, by the sudden tragedy of her po
sition, her thoughts grew clearer with
each passing hour. After all. she had
only the doctor's word that Engleheart
had escaped. And Hiogi Hammersho’s
past ad<J^d little weight to any state
ment lie might make. She must see
Engleheart herself* she must look at
the man who alone had escaped the
quick death which had overtaken the
Manhattan. Two of Fabian’s friends
called i n the evening. There was a late
supper in the mairf hall of Holmwood
house, where Fabian discussed the po
tentialities of zen with a ferver that
threatened to test the patience of his
traiwi Atlanic guests.
/ Continued in Vest XflSue.)
Hi.■ ■ .
August Schieber, of Memphis,
Slain in Apartment of
Another Woman
MEMPHIS, Tenn., March 11.—August
Schieber, president of a lumber com
pany of this city, last night, was shot
and died shortly aftrewards, and
a yoiyig woman who gave her
in the same apartment in a downtown
flat building, was slightly wounded.
Mrs. Schieber was arrested charged with
the shooting. She refused to make any
statement.
One of the five bullets fired struck
Schieber near the right -temple and
passed through his head. Another
wounded the young woman in the arm.
Mrs Schieber was arrested at her home
in a fashionable residence section short
ly after the shooting. According to the
arresting officer, she did not appear per
turbed and, after inquiring whether
“she” was dead, turned over to him a
pistol with five empty shells in it. When
told that her husband'would die, she is
said to have replied:
“Then it was for nothing, after all.”
Schieber, who was reputed to be
wealthy, ca'ine to Memphis several years
ago from Mount Vernon, Ind. He was
about thirty-five years of age. Mrs.
Schieber gave her age as thirty-five. Mrs.
Howell is said to have formerly lived in
Vincennes, Ind.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY GETS
VETERINARIES TO HELP
This Is Latest Advance to Aid
Live Stock Growers Along
Its Lines
To give practical aid to live stock
growers along its lines, the Southern
Railway company has secured the serv
ices of two experts in animal husban
dry: Dr. Walter Sorrell, who will be
stationed at Greensboro, N. C., and will
work in Virginia, North and South Car
olina; and Dr. C. D. Lowe, who will
be stationed at Chattanooga, Tenn., and
will work in Tennessee, Alabama, Geor
gia, Kentucky and Mississippi. They
will be known as assistant live stock
agents and will report to F. L. Word,
live stock agent, who has headquarters
in Atlanta.
Both Dr. Sorrell and Dr. Lowe have
had years of practical experience in
animal husbandry work. Both have
been in the service of the United States
government and are thorough conver
sant with conditions throughout the
southeastern states.
The duties of these men will be to
advise farmers as to feeding, breeding,
and caring ’for live stock under condi
tions that exist in the territory along
the Southern railway, to assist farmers
in organizing live stock clubs and as
sociations, to give practical demonstra
tions, and- to be at the service of far
mers without any cost to them, giving
any information, rendering assistance,
and co-operating in any manner that
will tend to aid and encourage the
raising of more and better live stock.
METHODISTS HOLD
MISSIONARY MEETING
BARNESVILLE, . Ga., March 12.-
Rev. S. E. Wasson, the pastor of the
First Methodist church, has arranged for
an important two days’ missionary meet
ing here for Sunday and Monday, March
16 and 17. He and the missionary com
mittee of the church, Messrs. C. J. Les
ter. W. G. Jackson, S. E. Dusenbury,
J. E. Howard, John Blackburn and J.
H. Pitts, are already making every prep
aration for the meeting. They expect
a large attendance not only from the
city and community, but from the sur
rounding section. One. of the chief fea
tures of the occasion will be a banquet
for men of the church, which will bring
to a close the important event, v
The following is the program for the
two days’ meeting:
Sunday, 11 a. m.i—Sermon by Rev.
George B. Winton, D. D., editor of the
Missionary Voice, Nashville, Tenn. Dr.
Winton will also preach at night.
Monday, 10:30 a. m.—Devotional exer-
icse by Rev. J. O. Holland, of Barnes-
ville.
11 a. m.—Address, “The Church,” by
Rev. H. M. DuBose, D. D-. pastor of
the First Methodist church, Atlanta.
12:15 p. m.—Address, “The Church Pa
per,” by Rev. R. F. Eakes, business
manager of the Wesleyan Advocate, At-
laifou
2:30 p. m.—Address, “Our Forward
Movement,” by Rev. John S. Jenkins,
conference missionary secretary, At
lanta.
3 p. m.—Address, ”Our Women and
Their Works.” by Dr. Winton.
4 p. m.—Address. “Griffin District Op
portunities and Obligations,” by Dr.
Fletcher Walton, presiding elder, Grif
fin.
7:30 p. m.—Address, “Mexico and Cu
ba and Our Duty to Them,” by Dr. Win
ton.
9 p. m.—Banquet.
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