Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 8 March 1890 — Page 5

Two liiuulreil woiiiiii) in I'olbv. Khm.. have ii iI ii removed from the windows of liiiliavd Imlls.

Tho Socialist party of 1.runny numlmra •OW nearly it iiiilli ni a«llu,r«nt'i—nut qiiitoum fiftieth of tilt) ttuipir«\i pnpulati'iii.

Do not' throw llm sp •nm1." Try tin? •Id Mandsinl rumi-dy, Dr. Hull's IMIIJIII syrup. Price 25 cmitu,

The A. B. Gatf.s .V. riTrc for nata by grocers, is of finely (litviijnaliij, and is fopular ever.v\vh«ie.

I'm a Slimv raw Iton't I..-an on Mc. So many people owe me, The kind who never pay,

S" dear they are to me, I cannot pay my way. To you I must appeal

To pay me what, you owe Art thou a friend and real, Is what I wi«h to know. Tou work m« hy Hi" I'ei'.d,

And churn mu up and down, Until I'm nearly dead, Tho poorit' man in town. Use Dr. Smail's Vegetable Liver Pills.

F15-61.

Imperial plows—we have the best plows made. TfNSLKY A MARTIN

N«'CfI I'«l

I have a fine lot or choice Karl.v Rose potatoes for sale, fall on W. II. Hardee, 10! smith •reel) street.

Money to loan at 7 per w'nt, annual interest TTithoat commission. riimberl.tud & .Miller.

For horse-colic Simmons Liver Regulator knowa to be the lew I remedy F22-4t.

If you have a cold, cough, (dry hacking), •roup, cankered throat, oattarrh droppintr, •r. Kilmer's Indian Cou:h-cure (consumption «l will relieve instantly heals and cures. Price 25c., 50c., aud §100. For sale by Lew JMshor.

Have you seen tl-e 5-A Five Mile Horse Blauket? If not, why not? If yon have a hcrse you nood it. N SO 8t.

San Francisco building: trades workers have decided to insist on an eifjhl-hour day next May.

Something for ewi' at Thompson &, •«t«n'secoud-lmnd st"ie.

SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE ia i«licious, safe, ell'ective. It will cure j®a. 15 cents and $1.25.

SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE is th« only universal cure lor Indig«3tfon, Dyspepsia, and W«rTou# Pros •ration. Druggists.

SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE is a remedy of unsurpassable value as a cure for Indigestion, Nervousness, and all Failing Health. Druggists

SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE •ures all cases of St. Vitus's Dance, The first bottle greatly benefits— always safe and pleasant to take.

I am aurpriscd at the truly wonderful powers of SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE to cure the Stomach and Nerves. J. A.

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HARDEE,

Ex-Treas., Montgomery Co., Ind. SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE is a sovereign i-euiedy for the aged and infirm. It imparts strength, and •igor, and secures sweet and refresh ing sleep. At Druggists.

SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE is warranted by far the greatest tonio and health restorative in use. It should bo used by all ages and •exes.

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Prrmanont positions guaranteed with Mlnry url expenses pnil ovory week. Great nilrantajios offered to beginners now. Fast soiling specialties. No experience! noodod with us. •utot sent free. Write quick ?.nl cat choice of territory, stating age. L)o not delay. HOOK Ell MTItKKKIKN, KndiCRtotr, N. Y.

AW to beat the sale of all other lioolcs.

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NO MORE OF THIS!

Rubber Shoes unless worn uncomfortably tight, will often slip off tho feet. To remedr this evil the

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THE. EIGHT STAGES.

Obly «. baby, Kissed and caressed, Gently held to a mother's bretLsu

Only a child, Toddling alone, Brightening now its happy home.

Only a boy, Trudging to school, Governed now by a sterner rule. Only a youth,

Living in dreams. Full of promise life now seems.

Only a man, Battling with life, Shared in now by a loving wife.

Only a father, Burdened with care, Silver threads in dark brown hair.

Only a graybeard, .... Toddling again, Growing old and full of pain. Only a mound,

O'ergrown with grass. Dreams unrealized—rest at last. —Boston Traveller.

MY STRANGE PASSENGER.

We were on our way from Bong Kong to Foochow on the coasting steamer Namoa, writes Ernest Wilkinson, U. S. N., in The Washington Evening Star, when Cupt. N., my "fidus Achates" of the voyage, looked at tho gathering clouds to tho westward and remarked: "I hope it won't rain before we get into Amoy we are just thirty miles away." "How do you know the distance so exactly, captain?" "Look at that rock, and over beyond it you can see through a rift in the clouds a little speck like a pin point on the top of that black mountain. The pin point is a tall pagoda on that high cl ff, and the pagoda is as good a signboard for this town as if that whole black cliff were painted in white letters a mile high and half a mile wide—A-M-O-

Y. I never see

either the pagoda or tho city that a cold chill does not run over me." "Will you tell me why, captain?" "Certainly, but it's a long story well, here goes:

Amoy was one of the first treaty ports in China open to foreign commerce, and for a long time the noted hatred of the Chinese for foreigners was more intense than at any other port. I was then captain of a steamer on the flrst line plying between Amoy and the English colony of Hong Kong, some two hundred miles away.

One cloudy evening in November 1 went ashore in Amoy to make a few final preparations for my ship's departure the next day. While on shore I noticed that my footsteps were dogged by a disreputable looking coolie, who approached me with great earnestness in his manner as soon as we had renched a comparatively open spot, where the growing darkness shut out the teeming hordes of a Chinese city. I saw that it would be impossible to avoid an encounter if this strange follower should prove to be a highwayman.

So carrying my hand to my hip pocket, where I felt the friendly "grip" of my revolver, I waited for the man to come closer. I then saw that the coolie was in great distress, aud moved by his earnestness, I stopped to listen to his tale. The man explained, in Chinese aud "pidgin" English, that he had a brother in jail who was to be beheaded in two days more for capsizing in a sailboat and drowning his passenger, a mandarin's son. The mandarin,' bent on revenge, had thrown the boatman into prison, where the farce of a trial had been gone through with, and the innocent man had been doomed to (lie. The coolie said that his family were all wretchedly poor, but that they had managed, by the sale of most of their belongings, to raise money enough to bribe the jailer to allow the prisoner to escape, and all that was necessary to save his life was to get him away on some vessel to the nearest foreign colony. Tho poor creature fell on his knees and implored me to save his brother's life.

He wnnM qive me anything—everything to plvo the hunted creature a ave a fellow being from the

he liai hiiiip

E S ME

All this was muttered bebs, and tho poor man wept himself who was only to see rise before tho earth would blood. Sympathies intensely excited, ••v the treachorous nature of the the danger in interfering with

ami Chine

their ideas of justice, and, wishing either to test the truth of his story or to prevail upon the coolie to choose some other means for his brother's escape, I said: "I'll stow him away and carry liiiu down to Hong Kong for five hundred taels" (about Are hundred and fifty dollars), thinking that such a price would bo utterly beyond the coolie's means. Tho poor man seemed staggered at the enormity of tho sum, a large fortune to one of his class but he rallied in a moment and said he supposed ho would have to pay it that it was a fearful sum, that he was very poor, and to raiso so much money his family would have to sell all they owned but he must save his brother's life if tho captain insisted he would have to pay it.

My sympathies wore now still more keenly aroused, and seeing that the unwelcome passenger would be sent, and not caring either to break my word or to profit by the poor wretch's misfortunes, I said: "Well, I'll do it for the regular fare (about ten dollars) bring him down to the wharf at 11:30 I am going off to my ship then."

Tho coolie seemed overpowered with joy, and was still "kow-towing" his thanks as I moved away and he disappeared in the darkness.

I had no sooner reached the wharf, about 11:45 p. m., then I was touched by the same coolie, who now offered himself as "sampan" man. I followed him to the boat, and there saw another man as poorly clad as his brother. When we shoved off I noticed both were very clumsy with their oars, but as my ship was close to the wharf wo were soon alongside. ilere I handed my overcoat to the boatman and he picked up a bundle tied Chinese fashion in a large handkerchief, ami we went on board, leaving my new acquaintance In the boat. I sent my steward forward on an errand that would detain him for a few moments, and then had tho coolio deposit his bundle a small closet in the cabin and told him that that must be his brother's hiding placc until we put to sea, and that he must bo quick to get into it.

At a motion over tho side the condemned man sprang out of the boat, which lie had made fast to the gangway, and slid noisolessly aft, through the cabin and into the closet. I turned the lock and put cho key in my pocket.

But as he passed the cabin lamp, curiosity had led me to take a searching glance at my •trange passenger, and, in spite of his unkempt hair aud soiled and tattered clothes, bis light complexion and refined features revealed in the coolie's brother a Chinaman of the higher classes.

I then tried to scrutinize the boatman, but tba man's back was to the light, and, tha Steward returning just then, I paid my sampan fare, and my strange acquaintance departed.

I turned in. wondering who my mysterious

THE CRAVvr'v iiiiSv'ajlLE WEEKLY ilEVIEW

passenger might bo, and my thoughts were not without vague misgivings of the noted treachery of the Chinese.

I woke early, and had hardly begun dressing before a herald came to inform me that the viceroy of the province desired to see me at his "yamou" at 10 that morning. This strange summons I at once connected with my harboring an escaped prisoner, and, full of vague distrust, I had almost decided either to put to sea two hours before the advertised time, noon, and so temporarily avoid any explanations, or to plead press of business, and refuse to obey an almost royal command. Disturbed by such doubts, I hardly felt relieved when another herald came to say that the viceroy hnd concluded, as ho desired to see the ship, to visit the captain, and that my presence at tho "yatnen" would bo excused.

Such a thing as a viceroy visiting in state a merchant vessel was almost unprecedented, and I began to fear that I was implicated in tho escape of a political prisoner of high rank.

Now the customary official messengers began to pour in—first, two clad in robes of state announced that his excellency would arrive in half an hour then four more that ho was corning in ten minutes then four horsemen, gaudily caparisoned, rode down to the wharf, whero 1 was now waiting, to say that their master would arrive in five minutes then a procession of lis'ty.-led servants, bearing aloft on high po.es red sign boards, on which all tho virtues under the Mm were ascribed in Chinese characters to their lord soldiers with flags and swords and spears, men with whips and gongs to clear the way mavdarins on horseback lictors with long pheasants' tails in their caps, and a largo rabble on foot—all proclaimed that his excellency had arrived. Alighting from a gorgeous green sedan chair, borne by sixteen men in livery, he greeted mo most politely and accepted my invitation to take passage in my gig off to the ship. A large portion of his escort followed, occupying a small fleet of sampans.

The viceroy was ushered into the cabin, and, strange to say, selected a chair immediately in front of the door of the closet in which the refugee was concealed.

After a few courtesies had been exchanged, I was informed through an interpreter that Prince Ichang, the leader of an insurrection, who had been captured and condemned to be beheaded, had made his escape. Suspicion, they said, seemed to point to his being secreted on board my ship a sampan had been teen to go alongside of her the night before about midnight it reached the ship with two boatmen and one foreigner, and returned to the shore with only one man, and he made off in great haste as soon as he had landed, leaving the sampan adrift "Of course the captain knew nothing about the escaped prisoner, and so he could have no objections to allowing the ship to be searched."

This was subtly put. To refuse to allow it would be equivalent to acknowledging that the man was on board, and would cost me my place in a company whose interest it was to placate the unfriendly Chinese. To allow the ship to bo searched involved the possible discovery of the man, and in that case his recapture ar.d certain death, as well as ray own dismissal from the company.

Either course might endanger the lives of tho foreign community in Amoy, against whom the hatred of the Chinese needed only a pretext to begin a general massacre. I felt the color come aud go in my cheeks, and for a moment I thought of delivering the refugee up to certain death, saying that when I took him on board I was not aware of tho naturo of the offense, and then revulsion of feeling came over me. I thought "this man has trusted his life in my hands and, hunted criminal that he is, I will not betray him."

All this flashed through my mind in an instant, and when I turned to the viceroy I felt the same spirit of helpless yet indomitable defiance that every true sailor feels in the fury of the storm. I said quietly: "Certainly, your excellency my steward will turnover the keys to your servants, but they will find no such man on board my ship."

The search party went all over the ship, directed by the crew, and after probing into corners and peering in amongst the bales of silk and boxes of tea, no stranger was found. This was reported to the viceroy, who said: "You have not searched this cabin do so." I was wild with excitement and alarm, but my relief was intense when my furtive glance showed me that the search party did not dare to ask their master to move from in front of the door. This relief was of short duration, for h9 again asked if they had searched everywhere. "Everywhere except in that apartment behind your excellency's chair. We wiii look there, too -where is the keyf" I now became thoroughly frightened, and fumbling for some loophole to escape, I told the viceroy that that was a locker where I kept my wines, and—I was ashamed to confess it to so high a ruler under the "Son of Heaven"—that I sometimes hid opium and other contraband articles there. Would his excellency forgive me if I begged that that place bo left unopened, as my peccadilloes, if discovered, would cost me my post as captain. "In that case," said the viceroy, "1 will save you from trouble by inspecting myself the key?"

Doubtful whether to confess

The viceroy unlocked the door, opened it, and closed it hastily behind him. My nerves were then so wrought upon that I could almost have beard the dew fall, and I fancied I heard a word within spoken very low. Then the door opened again, and there was a rustlo of silken robes, the door closed, and the viceroy said in Chinese, "No one there 1"

I felt my heart throb with one great bound, and things seemed to reel around me. When I recovered my composure enough to look up with pleased and grateful eyes I saw an expression I thought I rc- Mgnized, and in an instant I knew what my own unstrung nerves ai'1 tho regal robes had before concealed— tho miserable coolio of the night before was none other than tho 'eroy of the province of Fuh-kicd, tho absolute ruler of twonty-flve million ol people. I had no longer a doubt that my mysterious pnssenger and the royal fugitive wcro tho same, and that tho viceroy himself was conniving .-.S his escape.

Tho ship sailed on ie, and Princo Ichang was landed safely in i:ong K#ng, where ho lived und. English protection until a severe illness let him have that privilege most mortals enjoy—of dying with his head on.

Subsequent developments jwinted to the fact that the viceroy was influenced not only by personal friendship, but by un enormous bribe with which tho rich prince bought his head, and that, fearing the treachery of any of his subordinates, he had planned and executed the escape eutirely alone. Of my betraying him he had no fear, as tho word of a "foreign devil 1" would then weigh nothing in a Chinese court.

Two years afterward I received from the viceroy of Kwang Tung a gorgeous pair of vases and some magnificent embroideries, "in gratitude for past hospitalities," and I found that my coolio friend hn-l been promoted to the government of one of the largest province# of the empire.—True Flag. wra:

Dr. YVALTEI

Formerly of the

Great New York Hospital

Now Surgeon of tho IXTKK-«TATI-:

ASSOCIATION SPECIALISTS,

Will be nt the Nutt House, rau fordsville, Saturday, March 15. Consultation ami examination free and strictly confidential in his primfci parlors at the Nutt House. Dr. Walter itvotes his entire attention to diseases of tho eye, ear, throat, lungs and to all chron'.e, private and nervors diseases and deformities, as granulated lids, cross eyes, deafness, disuherge at the oars, brownchitis, chronio ooogh. goitre [big neck], fever sores and ulcrs, Bright's disease, rheumatism, all diseases of the kidneys and bladder, heart, stomach and nervous diseases, chorea [.St. Vitus Daneo], epilepsy [fits], general debility, scrofula, skin disease and all diseases due to bad blood.

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TO YOUNG, MIDDLK-AGKI) and OLD UN. Dr. alter stakes his honor and profesional reputation upon the suitement that he has discovered a speed? and positive curs for all tho*1 sufferings from spermatorrhea!, impotoucy, loss of manhood or from weakness brought on by errors of lndiscreation in youth, or over Indulgence in late years, such as organic weakness, involuntary vital losses with the long list of penalties laid by nature for crimes against her most sacred and important laws are cured in a short time. Holief permanent and absolute cures guaranteed All cases strictly confidential. .X-.-Al! Tinner.*, ('Hiieeas, WartK, Moles, Ktc removed without acids, knife, pain or scar. New method, electrolysis.

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It you aro going to the Free Farms of the Milk Valley, take tho

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February 1st, 1890, §j§

The St. Paul, Minneapolis & .Manitoba l{y. and its branches became the

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mm To Great Falls, tho Future Industrial Center of the North-west, to'io tho

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my

complicity

or to brave it through, I thought of the mysterious nature of the whole affair, and hoped that'the strange passenger might in some mysterious manner have escaped. This straw of hope that drowning desperation clung to saved tho day. I reached in my pocket, and with trembling Augers pulled out tho key.

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T&fIADIES'Hwve

JOURNAL

I

The MARCH Number contains: Mrs. Harrisonin the White House. A. J. HALFORD.

Savedfrom the Poorhousc. (Illustrated by Copeland.) How a Boy's Library was Made. In Literary Circles. Words to Youug Authors. Latest Fashions.

!Artistic

With portrait and interior views of White House. A Man's Ideas of Home Comfort. PRRCY VERB. Diana and the Hunt Ball. KATBTANNATT Woons.

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Hints on Home-Dressmaking. There's No Time Like the Present. Poem. Things for Baby's Wear. The Best Influence for Children. Sunshine, Baby and I. (Poem.) (Illustrated by C. J. Budd.)

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Illustrated by H. Winthrop Pierce. Home and Haunts of Scott. Illustrated by W. L. Taylor and F. S. Guild. I Ascutney Street. Part V. ADELINE D. T.WHITNEY.

Illustrated by W. St. John Harper. Woman. (Poem.) ROSE HARTWICKTHORPK. Experiments in Wage-Earning.

O. M. E. RoWE. f/^

How to Marry Well. TUB DUCHESS, Phillida. Chap. XI-XII-X1II. MAUDHOWB. Illustrated by H. Winthrop Pierce, IT-

The Editorial Desk, March Winds. FELIX L. OSWALD, M. D.

T.

Under My Study Lamp. DBWITT ith Letters to Beth. IV. KATBTANNATT WOODS. Keeping Store. (Poem.) NELLIE K. KELLOGG. Four Bright New Games.

Side-Talks with Girls. RUTH ASIIMORE.

TALMAGB, D. D. \L±

MARY CATHERINE CROWLEY. LAVINIA S. GOODWIN.

Ready Made Mothers. ANNIE HAMILTON DONNELL. All About Flowers. (Illustrated by W. Hamilton Gibson.) EBEN E. RBXFOKB. Practical Housekeeping. Mrs. LOUISA KNAFF. Sixteen Uses of Potatoes. ANNIE C. STEAJINS.

Cookery for Convalescents. MARY FISHER BOSSOM. How to Serve Spring Chickens. ELIIA R. PAXUK. Needlework. (Illustrated with Drawings and Patterns.) M-ARY F. KNAFF. What Constitutes Success. FELICIA HOLT Questions and Answers. March. (Poem) Louisa CHANDLER MOULTON. Words of Potted Wisdom. A Practical View of Marriage. MARION HAKLANB. Hints on Canvassing. .• Miss M. H. VALENTINE. Fancy Work for Odd Moments. EMMA M. HOOFER.

JEAN HALIFAX.

ANNIB R. RAMSEY. EDWARD W. BOK. Mrs. JOHN W. BISHOF,

EMMA M. HOOFBK. EBBN E. REXFORD. CLARISSA POTTER.

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