CHAPTER XIX
THE TRAIN-ROBBER IS WARNED
Mr. Myron Addicks returned home
rather later than usual that afternoon. Although
he had knocked about the world a
good deal during his twenty-seven years, and had
put up with a good many discomforts, he had been
telling himself of late that his present domicile was
about as dreary and unsatisfactory as any he had
ever endured. The best thing he could say of it
was that the rent was cheap, cheaper than that of
any other room he had been able to find in Clearfield.
But there was little else to be said in its
favor. There was no view to be enjoyed, the building
was silent and lonely after dark—save in the
basement, from whence a strong odor of baking
arose every night—and a bath was almost an impossibility.
Unfortunately, until his income had at
least doubled itself, he could not afford to pay more,
and this afternoon, tramping along a country road
outside of town, he had reached the conclusion that