Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 18 October 1890 — Page 5
a'V
!.:
are
i.4-..iy white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the Ivory." They are not, but like all counterfeits, they lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for Ivory Soap .and insist upon having it. 'Tis sold everywhere.
DEAF!
A?Su-
•NE88 MEM I0ISES eilEBbr
1 Peclc'a INVISIBLE
TllBOlAI EAR
CUSHIONS. Whispers heard. Com-
forUbU. 8«(nHhivhertallB«H»'lMfUI. 8*14bj P. HISCOX* •alji KM Br'dwajj R»w T«rk* Writ* f«r t( ymh FKII*
A MTCNMENT°
W
S°
MY WARRANT
AIN I C.UKD NURSERY STP— Good pay weekly guuruuteod. O free. Writ.-for terms. E. O. Gra ."Nurseryman, Rochester, N. Y,
a)lan^
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PARKER'S
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CONSU MPTIVE
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EPPS'S CO€OA.
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"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the openit ions ef digestion and nutrition, and by a eareft'l application ol the line properties of well-se ected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage which mav save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such tu tides of diet, that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are lloating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame.
Civil Scrvicc Gazette.
Made simply with
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BEATTY'S PIANOS S'&J0
-catalogue address Ex-Alavor Daniel F. Beatty, Washington, N.J.
Salesmen on SalarY
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EN WANTED
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DISEASES
SWAYNE'S
ABSOLUTELY CUBES.
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BwnlSo^PUladelphUtPk
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DR.SELLERS'C*
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I
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THE GREAT WAR SYNDICATE.
BY FRANK R. STOCKTON,
AUTHOR OF
"RUDDER GRANGE:" "AMOS KILBRIRHT—HIS ADSICITITIOUS EXPERIENCES"THE BKBAIAN OK ORN "THE CHRISTMAS "WRECK:" "THE LADY OR THE TIGER "THE LATE MRS. NULL:" "THE HUNDREDTH MAN "THE CAST
ING AWAY OF MRS. LECKS AND MRS. ALESHLNE "THE DUSANTES:" ETC., ETA
Copyrighted by P. F. Collier, of "Collier's Once a Week," and published by special arrangement with him through the American Press Association. All rights reserved.
Once only did tlie crahe give the torpedo boats a chauoe. A mile or two north of tbo scene of action a large cruiser was making lier woy rapidly tou-ard tlxe rcpeller, wliicli vraa still lying, almost motionless, four milofi to the westward. As it was highly probable that this vessel carried dynamite guns, Crab Q, which was the fastest of her class, was signaled to go after her. She had scarcely begun her course across the o[cn space of sea before a torpedo boat was in pursuit. Fast as was the hitter, the crab was faster, and quite as easily managed. She was in a position of great danger, and her only safety lay in keeping herself on a lino between the torpedo boat and the gunboat, and to shorten as quickly as possible the distance between herself and that vessel.
CAERDAFF BEFORE THE BOMBARDMENT.
If the torpedo boat shot to one side in order to get the crab out of line, the crab, its back sometimes hidden by the tossing waves, sped also to the same side. When the torpedo boat could aim a gun at the crab and not at the gunboat, a deadly torpedo flew into the sea, but a tossing sea and a shifting target were unfavorable to the gunner's aim. It was not long, however, before the crab had run the chase which might so readily have been fatal to it, and was so near the gunboat that no more torpedoes could be fired at it.
Of course the officers and crew of the gunboat had watched with most anxious interest the chase of the crab. The vessel was one which had been fitted out for service with dynamite guns, of which she carried some of very long range for this class of artillery, and she had been ordered to get astern of the repeller and to do her best to put a few dynamite bombs on board of her.
The dynamite gunboat, therefore, had kept ahead at full speed, determined to carry out her instructions if she should be allowed to do so, but her speed was not as great as that of a crab, and when the torpedo boat had given up the chase, and the dreaded, crab was drawing swiftly near, the captaiu thought it time for bravery to give place to prudence. "With the large amount of explosive material of the most tremendous and terrific character which lie had on board, it would be the insanity of courage for him to allow his comparatively small vessel to be racked, shaken and partially shivered by the powerful jaws of the oncoming foe. As ho could neither fly nor fight, he hauled down his flag in token of surrender, tho first instance of the kind which had occurred in tliis war.
When the director of Crab Q, through his lookout glass, beheld this action on the part of the gunboat, he was a little perplexed as to what he should next do. To accept tho surrender of tho British vessel and to assume control of her, it was necessary to communicate with her. The communications of the crabs were made entirely by black smoke signals, and these the captain of the gunboat could not understand. The heavy hatches in the mailed roof, which could be put in use when the crab was cruising, could not bo opened when she was at her fighting depth and in a tossing sea.
A means was soon devised of communicating with the gunboat. A speaking tube was run up through one of the air pipes of the crab, which pipe was then elevated s^me distance above the surface. Tluough this the director hailed the other vessel, and as the air pipe was near the stern of the crab, and therefore at a distance from tho only visible portion of the turtlo back roof, his voice seemed to come out of the depths of the ocean.
The surrender was accepted, and the captain of the gunboat was ordered to stop Ids engines and prepare to be towed. When this order had been given the crab moved l'ound to the bow of the gunboat, and grasping the cutwater with its forceps, reversed its engines and began to back rapidly toward tho British fleet, taking with it the captured vessel as a protection against torpedoes wliile in transit.
The crab slowed up not far from one of the foremost of the British ships, and coming round to the quarter of the gunboat, the astonished captain of that vessel was informed, tlirough the speaking tube, that if he would give his parole to keep out of this fight, ho would bo allowed to proceed to liis anchorage in Portsmouth harbor, the parole was given, and the dynamite gunboat, after reporting to tho flag ship, steamed away to Portsmouth.
The situation now became one which was unparalleled in the history of naval warfare. On the side of the British seven war ships were disabled and drifting slowly to tho southeast. For half an hour no advance had been made by the British fleet, for whenever one of the large vessels had steamed ahead, such
vessel |had become tho victim of a crab, and tlio vice admiral commanding the fleet had signaled not to advance until further orders.
The crabs were also lying to, each to the windward of and not far from one of the British ships. They had ceased to make any attacks, and wero resting quietly under protection of tho enemy. This, with tho fact that tho repeller still lay four miles away without any apparent intention of taking part in tho battle, gave the situation its peculiar character.
Tho British vice admiral did not intend to remain in this quiescent condition. It was, of course, useless to order forth his ironclads, simply to see them disabled and set adrift. There was another arm of the service which evidently could be used with better effect upon this peculiar
too
than could the great
battle ships. But before doing anything else, he must provido for the safety of those of his vessels which had been rendered helpless by the crabs, and some of which were now drifting dangerously near to each other. Dispatches had been sent to Portsmouth for tugs, for it would not do to wait until these arrived, and a sufficient number of ironclads were detailed to tow their injured consorts into port.
When this order had been given, the vice admiral immediately prepared to renew the fight, and this time his efforts were to be directed entirely against the repeller. It would bo useless to devote any further attention to the crabs, especially in their present positions. But if tho chief vessel of tho syndicate's fleet, with its spring armor, and its terrible earthquake bombs, could be destroyed, it was quite possible that those sea paraBites, the crabs, could also be disposed of.
Every torpedo boat was now ordered to the front, and in a long line, almost abreast of each other, these swift vessels —the light infantry of the sea—advanced upon the solitary and distant foe. If one torpedo could but reach her hull, the vice admiral, in spite of seven disabled ironclads and a captured gunboat, might yet gaze proudly at his floating flag, even if his own ship should be drifting broadside to the sea.
The line of torpedo boats, slightly curving inward, had advanced about a mile when Repeller No. 11 awoke from her seeming sleep, and began to act. Tho two great guns at her bow wero trained upward, so that a bomb discharged from them would fall into the sea a mile and a half ahead. Slowly turning her bow from side to side, so that the guns would cover a range of nearly half a circle, tho instantaneous motor bombs of the repeller were discharged, one every hglf minute.
One of the most appalling characteristics of the motor bombs was tho silence which accompanied their discharge and action. No noise was heard, except the flash of sound occasioned by the removal of the particles of tho object aimed at, and the subsequent roar of wind or fall of water.
As each motor bomb dropped into tho channel, a dense cloud appeared high in the air, abov\3 a roaring, seething caldron, hollowed out of the waters and out of the very bottom of the channel. Into tliis chasm the cloud quickly came down, condensed into a vast body of water, which fell, with tho roar of a cyclone, into the dreadful abyss from which it had been torn, beforo the hissing walls of the great hollow had half filled it with their sweeping surges. Tho piled up mass of the redundant water was still sending its maddened billows tossing and writhing in every direction toward their normal level, when another bomb was discharged another surging abyss appeared, another roar of wind and water was heard, and another mountain of furious billows uplifted itself in a storm of spray and foam, raging that it had found its place usurped.
Slowly turning, the repeller discharged bomb after bomb, building up out of tho very sea itself a barrier against its enemies. Under these thundering cataracts, born in an instant, and coming down all at once in a plunging storm into these abysses, with walls of water and floors of cleft and shivered rocks through this wide belt of raging turmoil, thrown into new frenzy after tho discharge of every bomb—no vessel, no torpedo, could pass.
The air driven off in every direction by tremendous and successive concussions came rushing back in Bhrieking gales, which tore up the waves into: blinding foam. For miles in every direction tho sea swelled and upheaved Into great peaked waves, the repeller rising upon these almost high enough to look down into tho awful chasms which her bombs were making. A torpedo boat, caught in one of the returning gales, was hurled forward almost on her beam ends until she was under the edge of one of the vast masses of descending water. Tho flood which, from even the outer limits of this falling sea, poured upon and into tho unlucky vessel nearly swamped her, and when she was swept back by tho rusliing waves into less Btormy waters, her officers and crew leaped into their boats and deserted her. By rare good fortune their boats were kept afloat in the turbulent cea until they reached the nearest torpedo vessel.
Five minutes afterward a small but carefully aimed motor bomb struck the nearly swamped vessel, and with the roar of all her own torpedoes she passed into nothing,
The British vice admiral had carefully watched the repeller through his glass,
'i
r~~••
and ho noticed tliat simultaneously with the appearance of tho cloud in tho air, produced by tho action of the motor bombs, there were two puffs of black smoke from the repeller. Theso were signals to the crabs to notify them that a motor gun had been discharged, and thus to provide against accidents in case a bomb should fail to act. One puff signified that a bomb had been discharged to tho north two, that it had gono eastward, and so on. If, therefore, a crab should see a signal of tliis kind, and perceive no 6igns of the action of a bomb it would be careful not to approach tho repeller Crom tho quarter indicated. It is truo that in caso of the failure of a bomb to act, another bomb would bo dropped upon tho same spot, but tho instructions of the war syndicate provided tliat every possible precaution should be taken against accidents.
Of course tho vice admiral did not understand theso signals, nor did ho know that they wero signals, but ho knew that they accompanied tho discharge of a motor gun. Oneo ho noticed that tliero was a short cessation in tho hitherto constant succession of water avalanches, and during this lull ho had seen two puffs from tho repeller, and the destruction, at the same moment, of the deserted torpedo boat. It was, therefore, plain enough to him tliat if a motor bomb could be placed so accurately upon one torpedo boat, and with such tcrriblo result, other bombs could quite as oasily bo discharged upon tho other torpedo boats which formed tho advanced lino of tho fleet. When the barrier of storm and cataract again began to stretch itself in front of tho repeller, he knew that not only was it impossible for tho torpedo boats to send their missives through this raging turmoil, but that each of theso vessels was itself in danger of instantaneous destruction.
Unwilling, therefore, to expose his vessels to profitless danger, tho vico admiral ordered the torpedo boats to retire from the front, and tho wliolo line of them proceeded to a point north of tho fleet, where they lay to.
When tliis liad been dono tho repeller ceased tho discharge of bombs, but the sea was still heaving and tossing after tho storm, when a dispatch boat brought orders from the British admiralty to tho flag ship. Communication between tho British fleet and tho Bhoro, and consequently London, had been constant, and all that had occurred had been quickly made known to tho admiralty and tho government. Tho orders now received by tho vice admiral wero to the effect that it was considered judicious to discontinue tho conflict for tho day, and that ho and liis wholo fleet should return to Portsmouth to receive further orders.
In issuing theso commands the British government was actuated simply by motives of humanity and common sense, Tho British fleet was thoroughly pro' pared for ordinary naval warfare, but an enemy had inaugurated another kind of naval warfare for which it was not prepared. It was therefore decided to withdraw tho ships until they should bo prepared for the new kind of warfare. To allow ironclad after ironclad to bo disabled and set adrift, to'subject every ship in tho fleet to the danger of instantaneous destruction, and all tliis without tho possibility of inflicting injury upon tho enemy, would not bo bravery it would bo stupidity. It was surely possible to devise a means for destroying tho seven hostile ships now in British waters. Until action for this end could bo taken, it was tho part of wisdom for tho British navy to confine itself to the protection of British ports.
When tho fleet began to move toward tho Isle of Wight the six crabs, which had been lying quietly among and under tho protection of their enemies, withdrew southward, and making a slight circuit, joined the repeller.
BRITISH OFFICERS WATCHEFO THE EFFECT OF THE MOTOR BOMBS.
Each of tho disabled ironclads was now in tow of a sister vessel or of tugs, except tho Llangaron. This great Bliip had been disabled so early in tho contest, and her broadside had presented such a vast surface to the northwest wind, that she had drifted much farther to the south than any other vessel. Consequently before tho arrival of tho tugs which had been sent for to tow her into the harbor, tho Llangaron was well on her way acros^ tho channel. A foggy night camo on, and tho next morning sho was ashore on tho coast of Franco, with a mile of water between her and dry land. Fast rooted in a great sand bank she lay week after week, with the storms that camo in from tho Atlantic and the storms that came in from the German ocean beating upon her tall side of solid iron, with no more effect than if it had been a precipice of rock. Against waves and winds sho formed a massivo breakwater, with a wide stretch of smooth sea between her and tho land. There sho lay, proof against all the artillery of Europe and all tho artillery of tho sea and tho storm, until a fleet of small vessels had taken from licr her ponderous armament, her coal and stores, and she had been lightened enough to float upon a high tide and to follow tlireo tugs to Portsmouth.
When night came on Repeller No. 11 and the crabs dropped down with the tide and lay to some miles west Of the scene Jf battle. The fog shut them in fairly well, but, fearful tliat torpedoes
jvV
might bo sent out against them, they showed no lights. There was little danger of collision with passing merchiuitmcn, for tho English channel at present was deserted by this class of vessels.
The next morningthe repeller, preceded by two crabs, bearing between them a submerged net similar to that used at the Canadian port, appeared off tho eastern end of tho Islo of Wight. Tho anchors of the not wero dropped, anil behind it tho repeller took her place, and shortly afterward she sent a flag of truoo boat to Portsmouth harbor. Tliis boat carried a note from tho Aniericur war syndicate to tho British government. [TO UK CONTINUKD.L
Consumption Surely Cured. To Titn EDrron:—Please inform your roaden that
1
havo a poslUvo remedy
tor
tho
ISpotash,
aboTO-named
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V.
A. SL0GUU, H. 0., 181 Pearl fit. N. X.
CATARRH CURED, health and swoot breach scoured by Slilloh's Catarrh remedy. Price 50c. Nasal lnjoctor free. For side by Moffett, Morgan A Co,
WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyspepsia and Liver complaint? Shiloh's Vitalize!Is guaranteed to cure you. For sale by Moffott, Morgan «k Co.
Children Cry forA PltcherV:CastoniL
CATARRH OTJBBD, health and sweet breath secured, by Shiloh's catarrh remedy. Price 60 cents. Nasal injector free. Moftett, MorganA Co-
THAT HACKING COUGH can be so quickly cured by Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee it. For sale by Moffett, Morgan & Co.
Children t**v lor Pitcher's C>oHs^
To Cure Kidney Troubles
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-root Kldnoy, Liver and Bladdei Cure." It relieves quickly and cures tho most chronic and complicated cases. Price 60o. and $1. Pamphlet free. Blnghampton. N. Sold, recommended and guaranteed at Nye's drug store.
To Cure a Bad Cough
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Cough cure (Con sumption Oil)" but relieves quickly, stops tickling In the throat, hacking catarrh-dropping, decline, night-sweat md prevents death from comsumptlou. Price 25c. Pamphlet free. Blnghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by Lew Fisher.
McElree'8 Wine of Cardul
and THEDFORD'S BLACK-DRAUGHT aro for sale by the following merchants in this county:
Craw fords vllle, Lew Fisher. D. C. Smith & Co. Moffett, Morgan & Co. New Ross. Dronaugh & Mclntyre.
L13 Graves
Laloga,II. D.Diddle. ... N mv At arkel S W ray. Waveland, W Robinson.
W II Fulienwider
Alamo, N.W. Myers. Waynetown, W Thompson.
S
NOT one of the old worn-out. mercury, sarsaparilla, thousand doses for a shilling medicine. It Is a remedy which never falls In Blood Diseases, and always builds up the general heatth of the patient.
Cured Herself and Her Child, S. S S. has relieved me of a terrible scrofula from which I had suffered for years. It affected my nose first as catarrh, then caries of the bone, and continued to eat until it destroyed the soft -strove bone in the right side of the nose, then went to my throat and later on to my lungs, and it looked as if I was doomed. S. S, S. has cured and
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my throat and later on torn as if I was doomed. S. S.
has also cured my little daughter of the same disease. MKS. N. RITCHEY. Mackey, Ind. Treatise on lilood and Skin Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC Co., Atlanta, Ga.
The greatest improvement in
Corsets during the past twenty
years is the use of Coraline in
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It is used in all of Dr. Warnei
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The advantages of Coraline
over horn or whalebone are that
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Dr. Warner's Coraline Corsets
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Sold everywhere.
WARNER BROS., Mfrs., New York and Chicago.
I. Its the best,
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And the best lamp ever made, like Alacldin'sofold, a "wonderful lamp!" A lamp nbf*oliitly nonexploitive and tutbreakable, which (rives a Hour, soft, brilliant white light of 85
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Only flvo yours old. and ovor two million* In •INC. It must, bo a gooil lump to iiinHu MUUII tellIUK siiccusH. Indeed It ta, for IniupH nmy cumo and lumps may go, but tlio "Rochester" shines on fi..everl Ovor '.2,000 avilmlc VUI'IOIICH IlungiiiK nnd
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ROCIIKSTKII."
It'LIE hns
n't
the urnIIInI Itochcxtur und Llie style you waul, orU there Is no lump-store nour, send to IIH direct for free llliiHtnileil cntiiluimu Imiil reduced prlce)lsl and wo will liox nnd send you uuy lump nufeiy ty express, rl«ht to your door.
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ManuJ'trlurm. niul note Onnurn ofIlnchoter The hiiryrst T.nni/t Store
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extrn llwhti'rs'ecnt'prepnld^for'si ""if
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pii|*r, will tellyouhov/
to «ot one for uotlilni Adilreas Itctnli Department of Rochester Lamp Co., 37 Barclay fitreel, New York.
LADIES' Comfort.
Tho greatest known Female Remedy. Recomraends itself
wherever used. Pleasant to use. Not injurious or painful. Many Doctors use it. Cures leucorrhoea or whites, ulceration, inflammation and congestion of the womb, falling of tho womb, cancer and all diseases peculiar to women. Used at home in your own privacy. 40 days' treatment, $1.00. Sent prepaid, free from observation, on receipt of price. Send for circulars. Lady agents wanted. Address
N
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ALESME
WANTED! Local or Traveling.
For to soil our Nursery Stock
Salary, Expenses and Steady Employment guaranteed. Chase llrotliora Co oct Ac dee Rochester, N.Y.
SJNRHTH
BYUSING ALIEN B.WRISLErS
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