JOE VISITS CHICAGO.
Joe found Millville a sleepy town
of three or four hundred inhabitants. There was
one main street containing two blocks of stores, a
blacksmith shop, a creamery and two churches.
When he stepped off the train our
hero was eyed sharply by the loungers about the platform.
“Anything I can’ do for
you?” asked one of the men, the driver of the
local stage.
“Will you tell me where Mr. Joseph Korn lives?”
“Joe lives up in the brown house
yonder. But he ain’t home now. He’s
doing a job of carpentering.”
“Can you tell me where?”
“Up to the Widow Fallow’s place.
Take you there for ten cents.”
“Very well,” and our hero
jumped into the rickety turnout which went by the
name of the Millville stage.
The drive was not a long one and soon
they came to a halt in front of a residence where
a man wearing a carpenter’s apron was mending
a broken-down porch.
“There’s Joe,” said the stage driver,
laconically.
The man looked up in wonder when Joe
approached him. He dropped his hammer and stood
with his arms on his hips.
“This is Mr. Joseph Korn, I believe?”
“That’s me, young man.”
“I am Joe Bodley. You wrote
to Mr. Talmadge, of Riverside, a few days ago.
I came on to find out what I could about a Mr. William
A. Bodley who used to live here.”
“Oh, yes! Well, young man,
I can’t tell you much more ’n I did in
that letter. Bodley sold out, house, goods and
everything, and left for parts unknown.”
“Did he have any relatives around here?”
“Not when he left. He had
a wife and three children—a girl and two
boys—but they died.”
“Did you ever hear of any relatives
coming to see him—a man named Hiram Bodley?”
“Not me—but Augustus
Greggs—who bought his farm—might
know about it.”
“I’ll take you to the
Greggs’ farm for ten cents,” put in the
stage driver.
Again a bargain was struck, and a
drive of ten minutes brought them to the farm, located
on the outskirts of Millville. They found the
farm owner at work by his wood pile, sawing wood.
He was a pleasant appearing individual.
“Come into the house,”
he said putting down his saw. “I’m
glad to see you,” and when our hero had entered
the little farmhouse he was introduced to Mrs. Greggs
and two grown-up sons, all of whom made him feel thoroughly
at home.
“To tell the truth,” said
Mr. Greggs, “I did not know William Bodley very
well. I came here looking for a farm and heard
this was for sale, and struck a bargain with him.”
“Was he alone at that time?” questioned
Joe.
“He was, and his trouble seemed
to have made him a bit queer—not but what
he knew what he was doing.”
“Did you learn anything about his family?”
“He had lost his wife and two
children by disease. What had happened to the
other child was something of a mystery. I rather
supposed it had died while away from home, but I was
not sure.”
“Have you any idea at all what became of William
Bodley?”
“Not exactly. Once I met
a man in Pittsburg who had met a man of that name
in Idaho, among the mines. Both of us wondered
if that William A. Bodley was the same that I had
bought my farm from.”
“Did he say what part of Idaho?”
“He did, but I have forgotten
now. Do you think he was a relative of yours?”
“I don’t know what to
think. It may be that he was my father.
“Your father?”
“Yes,” and Joe told his
story and mentioned the documents found in the blue
tin box.
“It does look as if he might
be your father,” said Augustus Greggs.
“Maybe you’re the child that was away from
home at the time his other children and his wife died.”
“Do you think anybody else in
this village would know anything more about this William
Bodley?”
“No, I don’t. But
it won’t do any harm to ask around. That
stage driver knows all the old inhabitants. Perhaps
some of them can tell you something worth while.”
Upon urgent invitation, Joe took dinner
at the Greggs’ farm and then set out to visit
a number of folks who had lived in Millville and vicinity
for many years. All remembered William A. Bodley
and his family, but not one could tell what had become
of the man after he had sold out and gone away.
“Maybe you had better advertise
for him,” suggested one man.
“It will cost a good deal to
advertise all over the United States,” replied
Joe; “and for all I know he may be dead or out
of the country.”
Joe remained in Millville two days
and then took the train back to the East. Ned
was the first to greet him on his return to Riverside.
“What luck?” he asked, anxiously.
“None whatever,” was the sober answer.
“Oh, Joe, that’s too bad!”
“I am afraid I am stumped, Ned.”
They walked to the Talmadge mansion,
and that evening talked the matter over with Ned’s
father.
“I will arrange to have an advertisement
inserted in a leading paper of each of our big cities,”
said Mr. Talmadge. “That will cost something,
but not a fortune.”
“You must let me pay for it,” said our
hero.
“No, Joe, you can put this down
to Ned’s credit—you two are such good
chums,” and Mr. Talmadge smiled quietly.
The advertisements were sent out the
following day, through an advertising agent, and all
waited for over two weeks for some reply, but none
came.
“It’s no use,” said
Joe, and it must be admitted that he was much downcast.
In the meantime he had seen Andrew
Mallison and the hotel man said he would willingly
hire him for the summer as soon as the season opened,
and also give Frank Randolph a situation.
“You had better be my guest
until that time,” said Ned to our hero, when
he heard of this.
“Thank you, Ned, but I don’t
wish to remain idle so long.”
The very next mail after this talk
brought news for our hero. A letter came from
Maurice Vane, asking him if he wished to go to Montana.
“I am now certain that that
mine is valuable,” wrote the gentleman.
“I am going to start West next Monday.
If you wish to go with me I will pay your fare and
allow you a salary of ten dollars per week to start
on. I think later on, I will have a good opening
for you.”
“That settles it, I am going
West!” cried Joe, as he showed the letter to
his chum.
“Well, I don’t blame you,”
was the reply. “I know just how nice it
is out there. You’ll be sure to get along.”
Before going to bed Joe wired his
acceptance of the offer, and in the morning received
a telegram from Maurice Vane, asking him to go to
Chicago, to the Palmer House.
“That settles it, I’m
off,” said our hero, and bought a ticket for
the great city by the lakes without delay. Then
he said good-bye to the Talmadges and the Gussings,
and boarded the train at sundown.
Joe was now getting used to traveling
and no longer felt green and out of place. He
had engaged a berth, and took his ease until it was
time to go to bed. Arriving at Chicago he made
his way without delay to the Palmer House.
He found the hotel crowded and had
some difficulty in getting a room. Mr. Maurice
Vane had not yet arrived.
“I guess I’ll leave a
note for him,” thought our hero, and sauntered
into the reading-room to pen the communication.
While Joe was writing, two men came
into the room and sat down behind a pillar that was
close at hand. They were in earnest conversation
and he could not help but catch what was said.
“You say he is coming West?” said one
of the pair.
“Yes,—he started yesterday.”
“And he has found out that the mine is really
valuable?”
“I think so. Anyway he
is quite excited about it. He sent a telegram
to that boy, too.”
“The hotel boy you mean?”
“Yes.”
So the talk ran on and Joe at length
got up to take a look at the two men. They were
Gaff Caven and Pat Malone. At once our hero drew
out of sight again.
“How can you get the best of Vane, Gaff?”
asked Malone, after a pause.
“There is but one way, Malone.”
“And that is?”
“Can I trust you?”
“Haven’t you trusted me before?”
“We must—”
Caven paused. “We won’t talk about
it in this public place. Come to my room and
I’ll lay my plan before you.”
Then the two arose and left the reading-room
as rapidly as they had entered it.