Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 24 April 1894 — Page 2

April S4, 1804.

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TUESDAY, APRIL 1894.

liKPl'liLlCAN CITY TICKET.

KoH MAYOR,

FRED C. 13AXDEL. FOB TKKASIRKK,

AVI LI. I AM K. NICHOLSON". FOR CI.KHK.

JOSEPH D. TRACY. FOR MARSHA!., JAMES P. GRIMES.

FOR COL'NCII.MEX.

"First "Ward—TOI1X F. WILI11TE. Second Ward—GEORGE E.ROBINSOX. Second Ward—'H'M. A. VANARSDAi^L. Third Ward—\VM. N\ M'CAMPHELL.

IF the pending tariff bill ever gets through the Senate it will lie along somewhere in September.

Cor.. RICHARD \Y. THOMPSON. ofTerre llaute. now S." years old, has seen every President except Washington. He has only to live a little over two years to see another Republican President.

IF a man doesn't want an office it isn't the proper thing to force him to take it, especially when there are so many good men wlio are anxious and willing to serve and who are in every way just as capable as the unwilling citizen. No, we are opposed to using force.

Two prominent Democrats of Clinton county, John W. Adney and Edward Ryan, have carded the Frankfort Xcics asking to be divorced from the Democratic party without alimony. Each gives most excellent reasons for seeking a permanent separation. They are coming by twos, fours and [eights all over the country.

FRANK W. GRKGOHY. formerly local editor of THE JoritNAi,, has turned up at Springfield, Mo., as the editor of the Sunday Review, a bright, clean, fresh paper printed on enameled book with new type. Frank is a born newspaper man and with a publisher to manage the business they ought to make it an eminently successful venture.

THE receipts of the United States for the nine months ending March SO, 1894, show a loss of 870.000,000 as compared with the corresponding nine months of last year. And yet our local Democratic candidates are asking the people to cast their votes expressing their confidence in the capacity of the Democratic party to run the affairs of the government. Republicans cannot be deceived by any such glaring confidence game.

ACCORDING to Mulliall, there were $250,000,000 more silver coined than were mined during the fifty years between ls31 and 1881. and more than 5,000 tons of silver plate, fixtures, and ornaments had to be melted down to supply the deficiency. At one time 25 per cent, of the ocean commerce of civili/.ed nations consisted of gold or silver coin interchanges. Now the commerce in these articles amounts to less than 5 per cent, of the gross trade by sea.

THE outstanding interest bearing debt of the United States increased during the first year of Cleveland's administration. from March 1. 1893. to March 1, lt94, §59, liOo.GTo, being almost 85,000,000 per month. And yet the Democrats made some rosy promises concerning an "economical management" of the Government during the campaign of 1892. It will be an exact reproduction of broken promises and mismanagement should Jtlie Democratic ticket be elected in this city. The peoole are not in a mood to endorse a Democratic President and a Democratic Congress. They feel like voting a rebuke.

SMAI.I. POX is all around us—at Danville, Terre Haute and Indianapolis. It would be but the part of wisdom for our county and city authorities to take borne steps preparatory to its coming should it make its appearance in this city or anywhere in the county. It would be wise to act upon the principle that an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure. Should the disease make its appearance here there is not a place in the city where the patient could be isolated and be cared for in a proper manner. What we need is a pest house. It would cost but a few hundred dollars and might possibly be the means of saving many thousands of dollars. We might learn a lesson from Muncic. From one case in that city it spread to an alarming epidemic. It cost the city 825,000 in iiard cash to say nothing of the loss of business necessitated by the quarantine which followed. If we had a pest house where the first case could be taken and cared for the spread of the disease could be prevented and an alarming epidemic averted. Will our authorities act and act at once'.1

THE OLD MILLMYSTERY.

By Arthur W. Marohmont. B. A.

Author of "Mim Hoadley'. Secret," "Mad ellne 1'ower," "By lYhose Hand," "1sat" &c. &c.

ICopyright, 1892, by the Author. 1

CHAPTER XXI—Continued.

"Why?" asked tho girl. "Why serious or desperate? What is known to anyone? What is suspected except by you?" "You don't mean that unkindly, I hope: though yon are strange to me to night," ho said. "How can I be anything else than suspicious? Think for a moment. There was the quarrel with Mr. Coode, the breaking into the mill, tho finding of the neokeroliief, the taking of the papers, the discovery of that steel bar wrapped in one of the missing papers, the flight, and now the unwillingness to give any intelligible account of his movements." "I didn't say there was any unwillingness," said Mary, frightened by the staggering accumulation of facts. "No. you did not say 60, lass, I know. But can suppose you would not have been ready enough with the explanation if he had given you one? What I have said has frightened you and yo* are pale nt the mere mention of these facts. But I have not wished to terrify you only to try and let you see how other people will look at them when they are known."

The girl hung her head and bit her lip in'agitation for a minute, yet thinking deeply and intently. Then she lifted her face and looked at her companion. "When they are known. Will they ever be known?" she asked, in a voice that was unsteady and low. "Why need they be known?" "What do you mean?" asked the man by way of reply. "Most of these things are known only to you," she said. "Why, then, is it necessary to speak of them?"

Reuben Gorringe rose from his chair and walked once or twice with hasty steps up and down the little room. Then he stopped by the side of the girl. "You would have me continue to keep all this as a secret?" he asked, and bent over her as he spoke. "You have said you are our friend— Tom's friend and mine." She looked up in his face, and spoke in a pleading, supplicating tone. "Can you not do this out of your friendship? I know he has never done what is said against him. I know it I feel it in my heart. I would not ask this if I did not know that Tom's heart in this is as innocent as my own. He could not do such a thing. There can be no harm therefore in not increasing the difficulty of proving his innooence. You are not bound to speak out what you think. Ah, Mr. Gorringe, do help us. For God's sake, help us."

She rose at this, and, standing by him, took his hand and carried it to her lips, and looked imploringly into his eyes. "Do you know all that you are asking me to do?" he asked, rather hoarsely. "I am airing you to help one who Is innocent from the dangers of injustice and wrong." she said. "What if he be guilty?" he asked. "Then think what I am doing. I am helping to set at liberty a man who could do such a deed as this—and to put you into his power." His voice sank to a whisper as he said this, and his eyes avoided her troubled gaze for a moment. "That is asking me to do what frightens me," he said. "If I know that he were innocent—if I knew it, I say if all were explained to me—it would be different. Hut the fear that you, whom of all women on this earth I would give my life to keep from danger, might possibly have to encounter fcucli a risk, stays mo. If he is not innocent. and my silence sets him at liberty, I am the instrument of putting you into the power of a man who could do a deed of this awful character." "I am not afraid," said Mary, with a smile which was eloquent of her confidence in her lover's innocence. "So you need not be." "You do not look at these facts as I do. No, Mary, it cannot be. Until I know that you would not be endangered I cannot keep silence. Listen my belief is this: He went to the mill wishing to convince Mr. Coode of his innocence of the other charge. They discussed it, quarreled, and probably in sudden fierce and violent wrath he struck the blow which proved fatal. I will not, even to save Tom Roylance, subject you to the risks which similarly sudden violence might mean." "Would you rather that an innocent man suffered?" "No, only I would rather that the whole case were fully inquired into and the truth discovered." "You are hard, very hard to move," she cried. "If I am hard, it is for you," he said, bending over her. "You know why I have taken this interest in Tom. It is not for him, or for his sake. He is no more to me than the click of a shuttle. It has been for you, and for you alone, my lass. You know how I love yon you know I am a man who never changes, and that that love I will never alter. It is my life. When I saw him neglecting you, I said never a word though I hated liim for the misery I knew he was causing to you, and I would have hounded him from the place. Hut I held my hand for your sake, lass. I hud schooled myself till I could wish and plan and scheme for your happiness, even with another man. I meant well by Tom and then that ugly business of the sick fund money cropped up. I smoothed it over —for your sake, lass, not his. Then the mill accounts were wrong, and I tried to make things right with Mr. Coode. It was never my fault that things went as they did. The moment there was a chance I meant Tom to come back and still it was all for your sake, Mary. I would have done fifty times, aye, five hundred times as much, if it meant your happiness. For I loved you, my lass, ah, as a lass has rarely been loved in this. ^orld_"

A HARD-TIMES REMEDY

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He stopped as though his emotion had overcome him. "This will be for my happiness, said the girl, awed by the strength of passion which had inspired the man's words. "Nay, nay if Tom has done what I fear he has, it might mean, not happiness for you but constant danger. There is but one thing that would let me do what you ask." "What is that?" cried the girl, a quick, eager light flashing from her eyes and illumining her face, as she rose and stood by his side. "If you consent to have his guilt or innocence left unsettled by keeping these facts concealed, you must bo ready to accept the consequences of leaving the issue in doubt." "What do you mean by con.seqnen ces?" asked Mary. "You must act as if he could not prove his innocence." The man's voice was hoarse and hollow with nervousness as he said this. "Well? What does that mean? "That in the first place you two must keep apart." Then came along silence, The girl broke it. "Vou mean that the price of your silence is to be our separation?"

She spoke in a hard, clear, cutting monotone. "I mean that if he cannot prove his innocence, I dare not trust you to his keeping," answered Reuben Gorringe. "Is there anything more?" "I love you, Mary," he burst out. "I love you with all my heart and strength and soul. I will give up my life to make you happy. If you are parted from him, I can offer you a shelter In my heart. Y"ou shall never know a shadow of care or misery. I will give up my life to you, my love. Trust tne, my darling, and I swear that you shaU never repent it."

He shook with the force and rush of his passion, and as he bent over the girl the sweep of her hair as it touched his face made him tremble with excitement. "Would you marry a girl who cart not love you, and who might grow to hate you for the manner in which you had won her consent?"

He knew from the words that she had seen his purpose. But he cared nothing for that now. "I love you," he said. "Such love as mine must find its counterpart. But I care nothing for that. I lova you. That is enough for me. Give me yourself. Let me have you with me always. To be able to see your face, to listen to your voice, to try and win your love. That is enough. My God, I would be content to marry you though you hated me like sin or shame."

Mary was silent. Not because she doubted herself, or doubted what her answer would be. But instinctively she began to feel that there was something she did not understand—something that was not on the surface. "I cannot answer now. Give me time to think, and leave me now," she said.

Keubcn Qorring-e took her hand and pressed it to his lips, and when she did not seek to withdraw it his heart beat quick with exultation.

(To Tic Continued^

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ANNOUNCEMENTS.

County Xuititnating Convention Saturday, June It.

Tou»iship Contention to Select Delegates, Saturday, May 10,

COUNTY TREASURER.

HicnAKD M. BIBLE Is a candidate for Treasurer of Montgomery county, subjoct to ttio decision of the Republican convention to be held on Saturday. Juno 2.

WII.I.IAM JOHNSON, of Scott township, will bo a candidate for Treasurer of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention. .IAMKS O. MCCOH.MICK, of Brown township, will be a candidate for Treafurer of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Kepublloan convention.

E. H. ONEAL, will be a candidate for Treasurer of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Kepublloan convention to be held June 2.

JOHN B. RICK, of Union township, will be a candidate for Treasurer of Montgomery county, subject to the decision ef tho Kepublloan convention. dAW

PROSECUTING ATTORNEY.

DDMONT KENNEDY will be a candidate for Prosecuting Attorney for tho 22d Judicial Circuit, composed of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

FINI.KY P. MOUNT will be a candidate for Prosecuting: Attorney for the 22d Judicial Circuit, composed of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

WILLIAM M. REKVES will be a candidate for Proseoutlng Attorney for the 22nd Judicial Circuit composed of Montgomery county .subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

SHERIFF,

CHARLES K. DAVIS IS a candidate for renomlnatlon for Sheriff of Montgomery county, subject to the decision ot the Republican convention.

AUDITOR.

JAMKS A. MCCLURE, of Union township, will be a candidate tor Auditor of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention, to be held on Saturday, June 2.

BRANSON B. RCSK, of Madison township, will be a candidate for Auditor of Montgomery county, subjeot to the decision of the Republican convention, to be held on Saturday, June 2.

GKOKQE W. WASSON, of Union township,will be a candidate for Auditor of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be be held on Saturday, June 2.

WILLAM M. WHITE, of Union township, will be a candidate for Auditor of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE.

WILLIAM BROMLEY is a candidate for Truetoe of Union Township, subject to the decision or the Republican convention to be held May 12

DANIEL H. GLLKEY will be a candidate for Trustee of Union township, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

WILLIAM A. RICE, of North Union, will be a candidate for Trustee of Union township, subject to the decision of tho Republican convention.

SAM D. SYMMES will be a candidate for the nomination of Trustee of Union Township, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

CAPT.H H. TALBOT will be a candidate for Trustee of Union township, subjeot to the decision of the Republlcau convention.

EPHRIAM E. VANSCOYOO will be a candidate for trustee of Union townshtp subject to the decision of the Republican convention. llEPRESENTATlVE.

CAPT. EDWARD T. MCCREA, of Coal Creek township, wilt be a candidate for Representative to ne State Legislature from Montgomery county, subjeot to the decision of the Republican convention to be held on Saturday,

June 2.

CAPT. ALEX M. SCOTT, of Clark township, will be a candidate for Representative of Montgomery county to the State Legislature subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be held June 2.

SURVEYOR.

HARVEY E. WYNECOOP will be a candidate for Surveyor of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention.

HERMAN MCCLUER will be a candidate for Surveyor of Montgomery county, subject to decls.on of Republican convention.

WILLIAM F. SHARPS will be a candidate for Surveyor of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be held on Saturday, June 2,

COMMISSIONER—1st District.

JOHN PETERSON,*of Franklin township, will be a candidate for renomlnatlon for Commissioner from the First District, subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be held une 2.

COMMISSIONER- 2nd lnstrlct.

WILLIAM M. DARTER, of Union township, will be a candidate for Commissioner of tbe Second or middle district of Montgomery count}', subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be held Saturday, June 2.

JOHN L. DAVIS will be a candidate for Commissioner of the Second or middle district of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be held on June 2.

ALFRED B. FLANNIOAN, of Union township. Is a candidate for Comlssloner of the Second or middle district of Montgomery county, subject to the decision ot the Republican convention.

HENRY W. HARDING, of Union township, will bo a candidate for Commissioner of the Second or middle district of Montgomery county, subject to the decision of the Republican convention, to bo held on Saturday. Juno 2.

ASSESSOR.

ITTA C. POWERS will be a candidate for Assessor of Union township subject to decision of the Republican convention to beheld on Saturday, May 12.

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