Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 July 1895 — Page 4

THE BANNER TIMES. GREEXCASTLE, 1M>; a r- -V TUESDAY JULY 0 I* 0

CURES THE TOBACCO HABIT

IN 4 TO 10 DAYS

OR MONEY REFUNDED.

Uso All t.lio "I'olDacco Till Your “Oravincj”

You Want, is Gono.

ADRIFT. By CHARLES B. LEWIS <M. QUAD).

(Copyright, ISl'5, by Charles B. Lewis. J At noou on the Htli day of June, 1853, the briR Welcome, loaded with corn, Hour and potatoes, was lying at anchor in the harbor of Plymouth, England, waiting for the tide to serve to set sail for the Orkney islands. The craft was owned and commanded by Janies Robinson, an uncle of mine, and I, a boy of 10, was then liv’fig in his house at Plymouth. Uncle Jim and Aunt Hetty were a couple past the middle ago and had no children. As the brig would not sail until 3 o’clock, tho captain was expected home for a bite to eat at high noon. At 1 o’clock, as he had not appeared, Aunt Hetty bundled up some things shu knew he would need, and we set off for the harbor. The brig was ly-

regularly lighted and “J "J sailor man could have added to the precautions adopted that we might not

copt tor the stumps ot the masts. Tho woman got ropes out of the forehold aud ran lifelines about, lighted a lantern and secured it to one of thestunipj,

and when we went below she figured av iu « --— . „ a f res |i out about what our drift would have twenty-fourth day, then , been and quietly announced to mo that breeze and there being tonsi “ ^

wo were at least 100 miles out upon the on, a

bt At To'o’clock in the forenoon of the

\ a lire rn r'lni: is the only remedy in the world that acts directly on the nerve- ami drives i lie nicotine ITnm the - \ stem in from tour to ten days. Ii loaves the paiii lit in bettor health than before taking, and i- warranted free from any injurious ingredients. Nahcoti-('rhk is popular heean-e it allows the patient to use all the tobacco be wants while under treatment, or until the “craving ’ and “hanke -ing” are gone. It i' then no -a rili to throw away tobacco forever \ u oii-t'i ui. is sold at the iiaifonn price of if.YAK) a bottle .tm! one bottle cures. Money refunded if a cure is not all'ceted when taken •leoonliug t > dlrcctions. Prof. W. N. WAITE, Of Amherst, Mass., Chewed Tobacco for 46 Years and was cured by Narcoti-Cure. Amherst, Mass., Fehriiary S. IS 1 .),'). The \nreoti < Tiemieal < T>., tSjiringfieM, Mass. • U.eiitleliif n •—Replying to yours of the 1st, would say that I have used tobacco for It; years, and of late have consumed a Itl-eent plug a day, besides smoking considerably. I commenced to use tobaVco when I was only 11 years old and have never bicn able to give up the habit until I look Narcoti-Cure. although i have tried other so called remedies without elVect. After using your remedy four days, all “hankering'’ for chewing disappeared, and in four <1 i s mo >• smoking became unpleasant.[ lia\ «• in 1 further desire for t he weed, and experienced no bail elYects, whatever. 1 am gaining in tlesb and feel better t lan 1 have for a long time. To all wiio wish to be free from the tobacco habit I w ould .say. use \ Aticoi i-t can. yon's truly. IV. N. M A IT'K.

If your druggkt is unable to ^ive y u full particulars about NARCOTI-CURE, send to us for Book of Particulars free, or send $5.00 for a bottle by mail.* TUB pm\ CUBiiai Go., spdgiem, iiass

VAN CAMP boston mm

j \ / V ’’:,; ii; y

to ‘'JL j _ k m »' r;w «t

have a delicious flavot tn. .. other brands haven’t. - ways moist, fresh and ready to lie eaten. Easily carri -i and greatly relished at picnics. In three sixes: io, .5 and 20c ut your grocers. 't5“ That's the trade mark. Remember it. Van Camp Packing Gompaiiy, [iidiaitfpQiis, liiri.

ICYCLES.

PI IK KIUKI) tIKIi TOUCH. ing well down toward tho month, and j wo had to he set aboard by a harbor craft. Wo reached her docks to find that , Captain Robinson aud his mate and two men had been called to court to give ' testimony about a collision, and the brig ! was in charge of a sailor and tho cook. The cook went ashore in tho boat whiol) brought us off, claiming to have important business, and tho sailor left behind must have obtained rum from tho same source, as in the course of half an hour ho stretched out on the fo’castle and | wont to sleep. * I wish to explain that my aunt was a cool headed, self reliant woman and had made so many trips with her husband that slie was a pretty fair sailor. While wo waited for tho crew to come off she busied herself setting tho cabin to rights aud overhauling tho things in tho conk’s galley and pantry, and thus tho time passed until 3 o’clock. The day was very hot, with not a breath of air stirring and with never a cloud in

tho sky.

J ust at the slack of the tide and without a moment’s warning a squall burst upon the town and came racing down tho harbor. Out on tho prairies of tho west they would have called it by some other name. There was 110 rain, and instead of clouds there was only a thick- | cuing of the atmosphere until tho sun I seemed to have hidden behind a bank of smoko. The storm was entirely local, j having a breadth of only two miles, and ] in ten minutes it was all over or had

1 passed out to sea.

1 Our brig was riding at single anchor ! and was just swinging with tho

broad Atlantic, and still driving to the west. We then broke our fast for the first time since leaving the house at Plymouth. It was only a cold bite, but it cheered and strengthened us amazingly, and while I turned in to sleep my aunt announced that she would be up and down all night, hoping to he hailed by some inward bound vessel. We were right in the path of all craft plying between England and Newfoundland and tho United Litates, and though very low in the water there was every hope that our light would be seen. Up to midnight, as afterward related, nothing was sigiited. At half past 13 tho woman sighted a ship coining up from the west Sho got out porno old rope aud made a torch, and when tho strange craft, which was a large one *nd bound in, was no more than half a mile away she fired her torch to attract attention. The sea had now gone down, and the night was quiet, and the torch blazed so fiercely that the light could have been seen mill s away. It must have been seen aboard tho ship, which was under full canvas, but no attention was paid to it. Her name was never ascertained, but In r captain refused assistance simply because lie did uot want to lose an hour’s time and have the bother of shipwrecked people aboard. My aunt was highly indignant wiien sho related the incident in the morning, but that was only the beginning of snob an exhibition of selfishness on the part if seafaring men as can scarcely be credited by the average reader. On the second day out wind and sea were so light that we wore on deck all day long. From tho hold I fished out a scantling ll> t-et long. After a hole had been bored in one end and halyards rove we lashed it to the stump of tho foremast and ran up a signal of distress. I also got out some stones from tho ballast and bedded them on deck, and on these we built a five to do our cooking and make a flare at night. An old kettle and basin were found, and in one wo boiled potatoes and in the other made tea and coffee. At 1 O'clock p. m. of the second day I counted no less than five sails from the top of tho stump of the foremast, and though one of them came so near us that wo could see tho heads of her crow above her bulwarks

she passed us by.

We set up a signal smoke at 3 o’clock which ought to have attracted attention for ten miles around, hut at 5 o’clock the last sail had vanished from sight. That night the brig was left to care for herself. Tho breeze still held to the north, and sho had added another 50 miles to her distance from land. At 8 o’clock 011 tho morning of the third day a bark, bound from some northern port in the United States to Liverpool, and sailing close hauled, but

_ full rigged ship appeared iu the southwest and seemed to be making a straight course for us. She did not alte her course by a hair's breath until within two miles of us, when she suddenly sheared away and passed u:; by the distance of a mile. Our signal flag was blowing out at full length, and 1 would make a hundred affidavits that every man aboard from captain to cook had

their eyes upon us.

doubted that sho altered her course to avoid coming within hail. We dipped tho flag of distress and shouted as loud as wo could, but the ship held right ou and was soon hull down. My aunt was so mad that sho had a good cry over it, but when I began to lament and abandon all hope sho fetched me a box oil tho ear and said sho wouldn’t leave tho

hulk for the b"st craft afloat.

From the twenty-fourth to the thirtythird day of our drifting we did not sight a 'sail, and but few incidents worthy of record took place. On the twent --eighth day we wore surrounded

Local Time Q,

Bl'i MJUH GOING KA.S'I

No. :tii* C'ucinnatl Night Express No it Imlianspolis Acc'm ... No. 4* Indianapolis Klyor No »* Mail No. 18* Knickerbocker. .

GOING Wfisr

No. as* St. L A tin. Night Ex No. «* Mad No. t." Southwestern Limited. No M Mattoon S'-o’ni No. d* Terre Acc'm

I 0,

- * ■; « I M;.*

S

< a.; 5:a 4., ’ -i" , .

Daily t Kxcoi>i*Sunday

No. !U, night express, hauls Ihroc..h Cincinnati. New- Y’nikaiid Hoxh.i,

nectswlth trains for Michigim ihv! ''" : ‘-

Anderson and for 1 incinnati ilivi.i,,,, Uix

connects for Cincinnati, si rinch 1,1 ,, -i

W.itiash, Ind. No, iH, "Knicknh , kl N

-inr 1111 hi con. tlnough sleeper lor N. V. ai.d li,, | ' ■ . apt.tin « Washington, l> via Cincinnati Indeed I have uev(r apmig ears. New- coaches ilhini'ln ,^ ,

gas on all trains.

tfiSiif'

- e _tcui VIH NtwAjjMl c,

In effect Sunday, Mir- 1: i-...-,

NlMITtl lUICI.'p.

No 4" ( hieago Mall No 8' “ Express No 44t bocal

S'U'TH BOc'.NP.

Mo 3* loulsvllle Mail

• hUnJ Ig;; -a;:

No V Koutborn Express. No 43+ isK'al

, . * Daily. + Except Siinda, for ail hour bv a school of whales, 0110 | l-i,liman sh-cprr» >n nigli: iralns.pario..^ of which dived under the hulk and 1 dining cars *1 day trains, bo,

raked her keel and fairly lifted her. On the thirtieth as we lazily drifted before ! a light breeze wo sighted a ship’s long- | boat with two dead men in it. For an j hour it was almost alongside us, and by j

goiin: to the top of tho broken foremast j Trains leave oreeneasur

i could see right down into the bout. O110 corpse lay in tho bows and the otn- No 1S the stern, and neither water keg ! No' 7

cards and full Inforimll'p.n iii'n'g, l , l |!| l ' l ''"' 1 '! j through cars, t*tc\, Htl'iress ~ ,,r # s E. J. liKKP, <1. P. AChicago." U '' A,fcnt - VANDALIA LINEJ

'tfeet Jti,j

ii.d. In

er In tno stern, on.. --o , No j provisions wero to bo seen, 'i ho |Xo21

nor

No .-> No 3

name Condor was painted on the boat, aud when we told our story ashore it was found that tho Condor was an English ship which had been given 11(1 for , No 8 lost months before. The boat had boou No 16 afloat over 800 days when we saw it.

No 2

ie, 11.

lit. ISdo

FOR TIIK WEST.

Ex. Sun.... e.Oi a m, for s, "»!!.V I2:»t a m t < r

12:i-. pm. l„r-t uSu hijn p in, f’.r ii“ ''

< utr. ni!*a

No 4 No-jn

On thu morning of tho thirty-third day before either of us were awake the hulk was boarded by the mate of tho ship Southern Cross, bound from Charleston, U. S. A., to the English channel. His footsteps on deck awoke us, and wo tumbled up to find his boat alongside and the ship not far away. She bud sighted us at daylight and changed her course three points to investigate. In tho 33 days and nights wo find drifted a distance of 1,400 miles aud wero sti I bound to tho westward. While the hulk was still sound, she was not considered worth towing into port. Aunt Hetty did not propose to lose all. however. Tho sea being smooth, she bargained with the Yankee skipper to get out the flour and much of tho corn, and when wo wore finally landed at Plymouth Uncle Jim had quite a hit of money to start anew on. Before leaving the hulk a dozen holes we.ru bored in her bottom, and tho last we saw of her sho was slowly settling down with the weight of tho water in her hold. At Plymouth we were looked upon as tho dead restored to life. Wo had

making no more than throe knots an been given up for lost, and Undo Jim hour, passed within a mile of ns. Wo was wearing a weed on his hat aud arcounted the heads of 13 men abovo her ranging for our tombstones,

bulwarks, and wo also saw one go aloft |

with a spyglass. This man must have 1 Voltaire ami Poilchinelle. brought us so near with his glass that j The first uso of tho word “marionho could have counted tho buttons on otto” in France (in tho sense of a pojiu-

when the wind struck hor. Aunt Hetty and L wero knocked down by tho first

, gust, aud as wo clung to the deck it w aiTnnteil Hupcrii ir to nay Bicycle built 1 seemed as if the craft was lifted clear

Are the HIGHEST of ALL High Grades.

Do not he induced to pay iiiorc money for an inf...

linvliiif tin W overly. Itullt unil io jiiinteei! hv tlic I lullumi Bicycle Co., .

million ih.ilui' concern, whose liniiil is us good as itnld. 24 LB SCORCHER, S>85. > 22 LB LADIES', $75 ANDERSON ti HARRIS, Exclusive Audits 1S1 it

out of tho water. Both masts went to leeward at tho same instant, being b oken off a lew feet above the deck, and they were scarcely in tho water when thu cable parted, and wo wero adrift. It

my jacket. As soon as he descended we looked to seo the bark take in sail, but not a ropo was handled, and sho contido tinned her course. The man probably reported to tho captain that our hulk was buoyant, and there wero only two of us, and as the weather was fine wo were left for somebody else to bother

with.

The bark was the last craft sighted for a period of 14 days. During this long interval tho winds werff mostly from the north or east, driving us far-

Dally. Daily..

Dally ! ':4t ii m, for St j', , Kx - >un S:8H p m. fm D r-, p,' FOR THE EAST Ul * Ex Sun 8:4iih m. for 'nrt.a,,

Daily 1:35 pm." " ,m .Polll

Daily .3:35 p rn, " ..

Kx. Sun 6:17 pm, “ 1 tally 2:35 a in, " Daily ap4:3na m “

Daily 6:03 p in " ..

I’EOKl A DIVISION

Terre Haute. !V.." r '>*.

I.PRV

N(> 7!> E.x sun. No 77 '• "...

For complete ,

and stations, and for fulT'lnt I’.ii'j, .' '

rates, thromrli cars, etc., addre ss W. K Britnnkk, "' ' "" ' 'er, Asst. Cvun’l Piuss v ‘'’* > ‘ t ' * -

Unie card, Vlv t.'j'V

‘‘ass. Ant, -t. Ixmis M,,.

mn f. fee. INSURAMCE AGENT PENSION : ATTORNEY AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Pension Vouchers Deeds and Mon. gages, Correctly and expeditious!) ej.j jcuted. Dfliee in Central Bank Building. Greencastle, Ind.

B. F. eJOShIN Han4 us the* Hlfftiost (*radu Brazil Block

And tho Best Pitt Rhiirvfti and Anthracite coii.; yard opposite Vaudalia I'roiifht office

G. 1

A FRIEND’S ADVICE.

If you w i-h to xave 10 to 'JO per cent on the dollar then buy your Dry Goods,

Notions,

Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes,

Groceries, Tinware,

Glassware, Oueensware, Wooden ware at

Cushman's

MENTHOL INHALER

Curps nil troulduH of the Head and Throat. CATARRH, HEADACHE, NEURALGIA, LaGRIPPE,

WILL CURE

sneezing, snuffinu.

DA( UK.

on. First In-

itiation

stops

cotiKliins,

Con-

ti n ii ed ii *** eflee is

SUKK

B CTKK.

ENDORSED

highest

. . W ii tgm mr

B liiolis SlPie

COR MAIN ^N D OH IO STS

MW tf

New Scheme to Defraud Farmers. Vandaua, Ills., July 9.—In this and neighboring counties a new trick to defraud tho farmer is being practiced. Two men paint a sign on a farmer’s fence and t"nder him a few dollars to guaranteo I’min that no one else will he permitted to paint a xign over them. The farmer is asked to s'gn a receipt ackuowicd.ing the payment of the money. Thu riceipf wh eh lie signs turns out to be a j . 'in sory note fur

$J00 or iJloOO. First to Arrive.

MA''ON, (la., July 'a.—William F.. Quid, of C4. A. R. col my to bo sottled iu Irwin and Colfax uounties m th.s statu, under thu au pn . it the American Tribune of lniii"iia)Kil:s, ai rived here yesterday with his v. ife aud children, having come in a wagon from Knox county, Neb, in nine weeks. Four wagon follow him closely.

II u; Offer For Player*.

8t. Lons. July I).—President Von Dur Abu refused the sum of $35,000 for three of the Browns best players yesterday. Connie Mack, Pittsburg manager,

by

I In*

medical au-

of Ku

ca

Throat j

ay Fever, Bronchitis. La GRIPPE. The most Refreshing and Healthful aid to j HEADACHE Sufler-

cr-*. Brin^ Sleep to the Sleepless. Cures Insomnia ■iu'1 Nervous Prostration. Don’t befooled «ith worthless imitations, l ake only CUSHMAN S. Price. 60c. at all Dnik'^ists, or mailed free. Agents wanted. ( l sHMAN s

MENTHOL BALM

Cuts, oundn. Burnn. FroRtblten. Kxcvlx all "IIh-i rentrdivs f-’r PILES 1'rit,' 25c. Bt Iirurci.ls. I: k-.ii Mi-ntlml ncv. Aililr," Cushman Manurncturirig Co., No. 3?4 Dearborn Street,

Mlitlnii . CHICACO.it VIMKX.WkS I Ml.

was perhaps a quarter of an hour before thor out to sea. 'I here were two days of wo could gut upon our feet, and wo perfect calm, followed by a two days’

were then clear of thu harbor and driv- ] ing out to sea, while the town was hidden by a smoky, smudgy cloud. The | first thing my aunt did was to run over j to tho drunken sailor and arouse him | with vigorous kicks, while at tho same j. time she shouted to me to look about for an ax. Tho man was roused after a bit, but in bis intoxicated state ho failed to comprehend the situation. Ho must have thought us in collision, for he staggered to tho bow of tho rig, flourishing j his knifo as ho went, aud tho first thing

’. SMYTH E. M. !>.

No. 35 V i ue St.

\\J W.TP KKR. ’IJ.| ' v •.•IK) K. Y\ adiiiigtoii DBS. SMYTH K &'IT t KKK, ’ Physicians and Surgeons,

No. 17 Vine St.

t i rei-iii-a-die. lit

Monnn Hull

can tfivc. She gives a now, ^ clear and Roft ono to those who \ use Dr. Hebra’s Viola Cream. It is not a paint or powder to cover defects. rid of thi tUy by Nature’s own pro cesft renewing the vitality i»f the skin ; banishinii all roughness, redness, Deckles, moles, pimples, blackheads, sunburn and tan. It does this surely and harmlessly, because naturally. Its use means both skinbeauty and skin-health. Viola Skin-Soap hastens the process, because it is a pure rnd delicate soap. It should be used in connection with the Cream. It should be used in the nursery, too. Ordinary soaps are not fit for a habv’s skin. Viola Cream, 50 cents. Viola Skin-Soap, 25 cents. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. Send to ti. C. BITTNER CO.. T<-LEDO, O- gj -/ ^

There was no sea to speak of, the I wind being too strong for that, but the j vessel was flung about like a chip as the wind caught her, and had there been 20 j mi ! men aboard tho sailor could not have been saved. 1 did not find the ax, which | was secured in buckets at tho forejnast, i but the woman did, and sho used it to clear most of tho wreckage away, which was drifting along with ns. This was j tho first time I had ever been aboard of ! a craft larger than a punt, aud it was not to bo wondered at that 1 was too much upsot to render any great assist-

ance.

As soon as tho ropes holding tho wreckage were severed tho mass drifted away from us, and then my aunt ran to tho wheel and got tho hulk before the wind. While tho squall lasted only a few minutes on either land or water, it was followed by a gale which did not loavo us for 34 hours, and every breath of it hurried tho hulk farther out to sea. For 30 hours she was tho plaything of tho waves. My aunt tacked mo into the mate’s berth and lashed mo fast, while sho took possession of the captain’s. The

bin

i.\i

olliim

lar show) occurs in a book of stories by 0. Bouchet, which appeared in 1584, J but neither Polichinello nor Dame Gigoguu seem to iiavo established them- ' selves upon thu boards of tho puppet stage before l(i4U, though living rep.i'0fcontativus of both characters had long been popnlar. Puloinulla, transformed into Poliehinelle, becomes a typical little Frenchman of the Gascon type, boastful, jovial and vivacious. Tlio repertory of puppet plays perj formed at tho fairs seems to have bei ti ! ul a highly ambitious character, such pieces as “Lo Ravissement Helene,’’ I “L’Enlevement do Proserpine,” and even a parody of Moliero’s “Medecin Malgru Lni,” being favorites with thy public. Such writers as Favart, Piroti aud Lcsago did not disdain to dovoto th"ir talents to tho service of the murion j ettu theater, which gradually became a permanent feature of thu boulevards. Thu puppets were also welcome guests in both aristocratic and literary circles. Lveu at Cirey wo find them performing let ere M. Voltaire and the intellectual

Mine, du Clmtelet.

Mine, do Urattigny, while staying at (’iriyin 1738, writes to a friend that, she has just been present at a performance of marionettes, which lias made her die of laughing. Voltaire had solemnly declared that ho was jealous of the ^ittle actors, and that their piece \ was very good. Tho lady is charmed to find that a great philosopher like Vol-

1 faire can appreciate such trifles aud ob- . serves that hois a good fellow os well j bought. N'otitnclikutiie pn-ent. ) |c

us a sage.—Comhill Magazine. ‘ ’

m

Hi

Don’t insist that the old ratllf-H your grandfather bought and tl' ! 1 ' 1 come down to you as an heirlonin* good as the modern piano. Iu tlifhvj "f your grandfather there weir oil about a dozen piano in:miil;i<‘hi rfl * with only about a dozen iilr:i*<'( eonstruction. Now there air Iniiiir"* and iis many modern ideas. Tin l'r:iii ,v - keen'and inventive men wlm uiT' !*: SAT ITH <5c is IXON PIHNS compel the prejudiced public t<'3 | l 11 ^ Die superiority of fhi> Musics Beauty. Itisbetter, infinitely H ter, than the old fossil your gmiHlf*'^

WK lU ll.T A F1KE.

galo, which kept ns confined to the The ivy** i'(,ix„n. cabin, but though tho bulk drifted in Tho active principle of tho poison ivy the tronghof theseaabecontinued ti"bt La : , i by a rman physi and buoyant, aud th re was nothing to oiogist to hr a substance called by him frighten us. On tho s •venteouth day of tixiCodcudrio acid. But Dr FranzPl iff

was'in consultation with the boss presi- rntmlar"V

dent for over an hour trying to persuade him to part with the services of Breitensteiu, Peitz and Ely, but he left without even a promise that his offer would

be considered.

ble house. Salary $i80, payuhlu $15 werklj ! and expenses. Situation purirninunt. Itoferi*n ct'8. Enclose self-ad dressed stamoed envelope. The Dominion eompany, 318 Oinah Kuildiutf, Chicago. 20lto0.

our bein^ blown away we wero over hauled by an Italian 1 rig, and tho mate came off to us in a boat. Ho could not speak English, and we could not hold any conversation with him. As near as we could make out he wanted tho cargo, or at least his pick of if, for taking us off, and when my aunt refused her consent he returned to his ship. For ten minutes there was an animated conver-

sation between captain and mate, and

galo was blowing as hard as ever when then the brig swung her yards and pro- tiou of lean icot'utiT

daylight came, and it was high noon needed on her voyage. Her name was before any signs of its (lying out were tho Ricardo of Genoa, bound to some observed, i.t 3 o’clock it had faliou to | port in tho west with coffee, but shu

never completed the voyage, nor was any clow to her fato ever diseovered. Like many another craft, she probably went down with all hands in inidocean.

From tho seventeenth to the

and Mr. .S, B. Orr have reported to thu I American Physiological society that tins [ substance proves to bo not poisonous. I •lint that Uiu ell'ccta of poison ivy are | r"aliy due to a nonvolatile oil, which I they have isolated. This oil produces tliu well known eruption on the skin. As preventive treatment they reooin--tnetid cleaning the skin Irom tho oil by thorough washing with soap and water | or, better , ill, with an alcoholic solu-

urn ideas predominate in the Wonderful Smith cV Nixon F'-^j * <nne in and see them whether ' j wish to buy or not—we’l! iie:d

courteously.

P* CL. Newhouse. j Waieroom. 17 S. iiieiaiia •

Y^/i. ,N it ooutuxes tbe _• to read thH t. v ' ik! tho faoo, you !.sd better *o l-"• V- Y* ^ yoT r *T->5 fiftertwlth ■ usirof fln<*c*»e •

a gentle breezo, but it was sundown be-

fore we dared to open tho cabin slide

and go on dock. Tho sea was still wild, but fast going down, and there was every indication of a fair night. When it was safe to vuuture out, my aunt proved her title as a sailor’s wife, uho hunted up tho pump brake and shipred it, sounded tho well, and after a quarter of an hour’s (lumping wo cleared

ihe brig of what water bad drained into

her The decks wero ujrfectlv clear, ex-

Meredith.

Owen Meredith rested his fame on ‘Lucille,” but could never be induced to contradict the charges of plagiarism that were made in connection with it

twenty , .. What 8 he said. "If ! deny k w th I In 111 ' • Pe0 ? le wil1 b, ’ liev « ^ero is some-

the weather generally fair. As a rule, ! '.he'bonk wdT' be^uld^ud^he^ i' aU ’ my aunt stood a watch on deck until Ignored or fi rentr....'' d the charges I midnight, keeping everything ready to | , hc poem, and i.uhe cireTeYhTs i^ 1

fourth day the ocean was a blank, with thing in them.

Ever brought to the Count)' Do not trust your eyes to P i

diets or Jewelers.

make a flare should a ship heavo in | limn+e fri Y . C r< ' 10 of hls iu ' ' ^ Sight, but she would uot permit me to from it -mri !i S 'i ^ f l uo,fcd passages N *1 t.t R TClNj G - T1 ’« I (J ’ w - BJ±i -V

‘■Ku-lyr-e. c. >v.

—41-lyr-e. o. w-