Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1896 — Page 4
1
THE PAiLY BANNER TIMES, GKEKNC'ASTLE, INPIANA.
HAVE THOSE
PARTING.
My lif<* cloeed twice Ix/fort 1 * its close. It yet rcn.ains to eee If immortality unveil A third event to me,
Sr Sr ■
‘
MAGAZINES
So bu^e, so hopeless to contrive this that tw ice befell. Parting is all we know of heaven And nil we need of hell. —Emily Dickinson in Scribner’s.
TWO MEN AND A MAI I).
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Who can think, of pome simple thliirf to patent?
t your Ideas: thev may briiiK y*>u wealth JOHN WEDDEHbUHN & TO., Patent Attor
Vashing ton, D. ( ..for thetr $!.»»»
eve, Washington, D. r.,for their gl.Niin prl« nd list of two huudreil Indentions wanted.
iso offer
B. P. JOSbliX Handles tho Highest Onuk' lirnzil Block
ANDY SCHAFFER AND JACOB SCHUCK
Oi llHrtiiiHville, Ind.t K<‘Comm€*iMl Wrights Celt ry Capsules, M aktinsvii.i.i:, Ind., May 2S. ISDfl. To Cue Wrijjlit Meilioal Co., i.'oluintuts, <)hio.
Gknts—1 have purchased a hox of Wrighi’s Celery ('upsides from \V. B Tarleton, druggist, and used them foi indigestion, stomach trouble and eon'Cipation. 1 have been greatly henetltted, in fact almost cured with one hox. It is the best medicine without 'exception that 1 have used for my troubles. Yours very truly. Andy Schafkkr. Martinsville, Ind, May IS, 1S0G. To the Wright Medical Co., Columbus, Ohio.
And the Best I’tttshurifh amt Anthracite. Yard opposite Vandalls freiirht office.
All kinds of pot and bedded plants cut flowers and lloral designs a specialty
Gents—1 have purchased a hox of ; AVright’s Celery Capsules from W. B. | i'arletoii, druggist, and used them for I indigestion and constipation. 1 was ; greatly benefitted by using them and would not be without them
Very truly yours, Jacob Schuck.
AtyRS. Aty J. OHKP-REE Corni r Bloominy-n ..nd Anderson streets ,
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To Muncie Nov. 27 and 28, return
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“Why don’t you tell Louisof hiscousin's persistent attention to youf” asked Mine I Dupuis of her daughter Hortenso as they , stood opposite each other before theii ! easels copying two of the old paintings in ! the Louvre gallery. “Why should I annoy Louis, who is quite | jealous enough without any provocation?” | said Hortenso. “Jules ii a lazy, incongietent, unworthy ' fellow,’’ n marked the tv ither, “and will not earn all his life as much as Louis* makes In a year. ” “Poor Jules! lie cannot soil his pictures,” said Hortenso. “Louis had no such ambitions,” exclaimed Mine. Dupuis. “His mothci placed hint in tin otllco when bo was 15. Now he is only !36, and he is the confidential manager of Henri Constant & Co., with an income of 20,000 francs, the chance of making as much more with his own commerce and the prospect of becoming a partner. On the other hand, his rascal of a cousin never thinks of begin-J nlng a picture while he has got a napoleon j left from the sale of his previous one.” Hortenso merely said, “Poor Jules!” and went on with her painting. Mine. Dupuis was a widow Avith a moderate amount of rents, which she and Hor tense augmented by painting copies of tin old masters in the Louvre for English and American tourists, who were more inclined to buy such under tho empire than they seem to bo now that Franco lias a republican form of government, though why constitutional changes should act upon the Independent rule of art is difficult to say. A few mot ths from that morning, when Hortenso and her mother wore talking over their Averk, tho Avorld was to see tin beginning of that great crisis from Avhioh France has not yet recovered. The terrors of conscription are only truly emphasized when the hazard of the drawing is really o game of life and death, when tho augmentation of a country's soldiers is rendered needful by the Imminence of war. Such was tho case in France on the eve of the Franco-German struggle. All tho reserves were called out, and the empire prepared for the mighty combat with Its redoubtable antagonist. Jules Lemolno walked into the office ol his cousin Louis. His visits had been rare ( nough at the bureau of his prosperous relative, whose success imbittered the feelings of his needy and irregular cousin, but Louis had never quite broken off association with the painter. “Irood morning, M. Louis,” said Jules somewhat flippantly. “I havudarod to in trude upon your valuable moments to bio you good by. ” “Goodby?" echoed Louis inquiringly as he looked up from ids correspondence. “Have you some commission abroadi*" “1 have a commission to paint tho fields of Germany blood red,” answered Jules boastfully. "At least,” he added, “1 have no commission, being only of tho rank and file, but that is tho work I am going to execute." “Oh, yes,” said Louis; “you weredrawn two years ago. ” “Our corps is now called out, and I join tomorrow, ” explained J ules. “1 think you paid for a substitute.” “Yes,” answered tho other; “it was not such an expensive proceeding then as it would bo now. I am surprised that you did not study your convenience in tin same way.” “I hud no money to snare,” said Jules. “Besides, w. *it did it matter to mo whether I was handling a brush or wielding a rille;- A poor beggar witii nothing to livi for may console himself that he has a country to i. e for. ” “A country gains by a citizen’s life, not by his death. A man who extends the commerce of his fellow countrymen into foreign markets is more of a patriot than ho who writes hks country's name in blond
»»
hardly have been placed in a man Avho can so readily violate it.” Then ho turr *d his , back upon Jules, w. > nutted out with a tipsy deflanco a. d prop, red himself for his departure to join his corps by a few more farewell glasses with his friends. This, then, was the secret of llnrtens t with h ho had that nay le trued. Her love was f r Jules, but her mother had com IH'lled iter to accept tho rich co usin and re pulse the poor one. Should lie write to flortor.M and upbraid iter for her insincerity'*' How could lie do so when ho had hardly n , . ted himself in readingtho letter unadiircssod to him!' Each moment that bethought of the faithlessness of Hortenso augmented his anger and caused a dcsjierate craving for action. Tito next morning lie informed Constant & Co. that ho must retire frtim his office, as it was iiis intention to join the ranks of the French army as a private soldier. “My dear Lemolno,” said Henri Constant, “this is simply quixotic. The war is not one of self defense, but one of ambition. ” Louis was resolute, however, in Ids pian of action. “Well,” sighed Henri Constant, “if you are decided, there's ait end. Wo must give you a year’s leave, though goodness knoAvs how wo shall conduct tho business Avitliout
bocal Time Card.
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So. Ij Niulit Limited No. >t- B Aec'rn —•
you. Louis smiled bitterly.
translated especially for The Living A<;e. The same issue eontains articles by
Gladstone, < astiTar. Prof. Flinders Petrie.
Translations from tin* French and Spanish, with Essays and Reviews from ihe latest British periodical-. \Iso a Thirty-two Pavce Supplement as described above.
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On account of dediention of Temple A. A. Scottish Rites and excursion tale of $1.60 to Indianapolis Nov. 30, Lee. 1, 2 and3 Avith return limit Dee. 5, aviII be made F. P. Hdkstis, Agent.
You may fiddle and toot. Get nit and scoot, And hustle out for biz.• But sixteen to one You’ll be outdone And make a glorious tiz If you don’t look sharp Ami begin to harp In the Daily Banner Times.
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IlnlRtay Rates. On account of Thanksgiving holidays
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[You read this, others Avould read your advertisement if it was in tins place.]
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For all kinds of job printing at lowest prices tf
upon the stretiger’s soil.
“At any rate, in- life is more comfort able and remunerativo,” said Jules. “As for myself, Mute. Dupuis has made life
valueless for mo. ”
Leris' ey - Hashed for ono second; then tho lids fell, and he replied quietly: “I do not see how Mine. Dupuis can have affected your life?” “Do you wish to see, Louis Lemoine?” asked the other. “In the same way that you have done; you have blighted my life
ia thwortiui i*/ love.
“House ito not talk nonsense.” said Louis. “Do you think that your love was hindered in us lullillnieiit by either Mine. Dupuis or myselff Do you think that a young lady like Hortenso, whoso existence has never bean in discord with the retlnjmeiits of her social surroundings, could ally herself with"— Ho was about to say "a vagabond,” but ho corrected himsell ami added, “A bohemian like you?” “She may not have the jame contempt for ino that you have for your father s nephew,” said Jules. “Well, it does not matter much now, at any rate for the present. We shall see if 1 return with my shield or upon it. Meanwhile do not think that you know all tlie secrets of Hortousc's
heart.''
Then ho strode out of the office, leaving hie cousin with another sudden accession j of passion, which only cooled down into I suspicion and discontent. What secrets did Hortenso confide to ' Jules which she did not tell her lover)* Thus she lias enabled this man to boast of an intimacy which she ought not to have accorded to him. He would have questioned Hortenso on tho subject that very day, but she anti her mother had gonti to England on a visit ai a relative wito hud made that country his home. He eld not care to write to iter on such an indefinite statement ns that sug gested by Jtiles, who, after all, might Ito only bragging and lying. Then Lemoine | applied himself to tho details of commerce I once more and tried to forget his previous ' annoyance. The next morning Jules, decked in his regimentals, entered his cousin's office again. He was flushed and excited and laid evidently Iteen pledging his friends of the studio in bidding them goodhy. ’’I have brought that letter from Hortense, ” ho said as ho iluug a paper upou Louis’ table. For a moment Louis was about to return it to Jules unread, but his jealously clteckul Ills good impulse, and he opened and read t he note which Ills cousin had brought. As Louis grasped tlie meaning of the words he turned pale; but, controlling his feelings as he handed tho paper back to his cousin, he merely said: “.Such a confidence, 1 think, should
In the last year of tho empire, os in tho final days of the previous one, haste and precipitation took the place of care and caution. The soldiers were rushed through their drills with as little attention as was applied to their kits, the one object in view being that of having a large army to take the field as soon as war should have Iteen declared. The provisions indispensable for the campaign were considered as duly suitplied on the strength of those official returns which were accepted as unimpraeliahle, the supplies of the ammunition itself being almost taken as a matter of course. All tills was too soon realized before tho fatal month of August had hut little niore titan half run its course, each day bringing tho outnumbered Frenchmen nearer to their doom in the disastrous year of ls7(l. Tho defeats of Gravclotte and Kezonvillo had compelled the retreat of the forces into Metz, leaving many of tlie wounded to the promiscuous attention of the victors. Without assorting that they were worse cared for than were those wounded on tho conquering side, it is certain that the) French soldiers who were left on the field had a very had time cf it. In the crowded shelters which were improvised as hospitals tho dangers that were not the least terrible arose from gangrene and pyutmia, and the symptoms of those fatal developments quickly doomed their sufferers to tho inferno o’er which might have been written tho dread warning, “Abandon hope, all ye that enter here.” Among this crowd of tho doomed victims of tho lust of empire and the pride of power were two French soldiers hurried in with the rest. One had suffered amputation of both his legs; the other had Iteen the victim of a breast contusion, caused from tito fragments of an exploding shell, and was in peril from tho shock rather than from the gravity of tho effects of the wound, which could not ho considered se-
rious.
In any case he had been brought to that pesthouse hastily and improperly, for there was no sign of gangrene or blood poisoning in bis symptoms. As the former rolled bis head from side to side upon the straw spread over tho earth of the shod where ho lay, bis eyes fell upon the form of his neighbor. "Heavens!” he exclaimed. “Ain I ntndi Louis Lemoine, for he you must be, how do I find you a comrade in this accursed place?” For a moment the other was struck silent in hi.; astonishment. “Jules," he at last gasped, “do wo meet under such a cloud of misery? What you revealed to mo made life unendurable, and tlie day after you left mo I volunteered in the service to which I had already supplied a substitute. I wanted to die.” Tho heaving chest of Jules, who was past all physical suffering, betrayed a mental torture. “Louis,” ho stammered, “forgive mo. I shall soon have to plead for pardon elsewhere. I was envious of all your good fortune. I felt that but for you Hortenso might bo mine. When I saw you so safe and prosperous and happy, the devil got possession of my heart. I went away and wrote the letter which I showed you. It was not written by Hortenso. I used one of her notes to me to copy iter writing. It was a fc irgery.' ’ As if suddenly electrified, Louis sprang from the straw with the impulse of vengeance in iiis soul. But its he looked at the poor, dying wretch, who was of the same blood as his, compassion conquered anger, and stooping down ho kissed him and whispered, “I forgive.” It was only in time. The excitement had exlmuscd the little strength of the moribund soldier, who sank down in Ills wretched bed, closing his life with penitence and confusion. Like a dreaming man, Louis left this Walhalla of misery, where tlie heroes changed their shouts for vaterlund and la patrio to dying groans and shrieks of agony. No ono took much account of those hoiteiess men, and thus Louis emergixl from tho place unnoticed and mixed with others Avho tvore prisoners like himself, wounded and hors do coinhat, awaiting the outcome of events which they could no longer influence. If till hud such heavy grief at heart as he had, lieu von help them! Mnrothana year had passed when Mine. Dupuis and her daughter returned to Fans to find their 'tome wrecked during tlie rule of the commune and at lust to put themselves in communication with their own countrymen. They had heard front Henri Constant, in reply to their inquiry, that j>uuis had joined the army, but tho disorders of tho year had prevented any further communication with hint. “Iregret, .adios,” said Henri Constant, “that we have no news of Lemoine. Ho tvas missing after Gravclotte, and i fear that ho must have been left upon the field of battle.” As Hortenso heard the words that doomed her life, the color left her cheek and she would have swooned on the floor had she not been caught in the arms of Louis, who entered that moment. “Ah, Louis,” she said, “where have you been and why is it that you have kept silent so long a time?” “Dearest," tie whispered, "it is a secret of the dead. M. Constant,” he went on, “I have tioen a dour^e prisoner, held by illness and the enemy. I have exceeded my leave, I am afraid, but 1 woi.’t ask for another until I am married.”—Spare Moments.
GOING " EST
.. t'.’JJ a. it .. U ii.
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VANDALiA LINE. Trains leave-jicencastic. inn in effect Nov. 15, ISUtl. roil THE WEST. No 7 Dnity 12:2+a T., for M. I on is. No 15 Daily s ; ;il a m. for st. Uoula No 5 Dally.. sjoa m. forSt. Lou'.s. No 21 Daily 1:45 p ni, for St. Louis. No 8 Kx. sun 5;IT)p in, (Oi Torre Haute No 11 Daily S;iKi p m. for St. Louis, FOR THE EAST. No ii Dally Gitlam, for lodiKnnpolls No l Dally Kx sunS:4Ha m " No 12 Daily 12:15 Noon" No20 Dally. 1:35pm, •• No 8 Daily 3:15 pm, “ " No 2 Dally tl:0i p in “ PEORIA DIVISION Leave Terre Haute. Kx sun 7:05 a m, tor Poor!a. oo*7 ' " 3:55 p in. for Decatur lor complete time card, giving all trains an l stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc.,address ., , „ J.8. Dowlino, Agent u, a. l*ohl, (ireencastie, oen I Pass. Agt. St. Izmis .Mo.
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The only line running Reclining Chair Cars between Cineinati and Jackson, ville, 111.. without change via <’. H. ^ D. and Wabash, passing through Indianapolis, Ind., Decatur, Springfield and Jacksonville, Ills. Two daily through train' with perfect accommodations ea't and west. .Ino. S. Lazarus, Oen’l hit. and I ki. Agent, Indian a poms, I np
TIM K TABLE.
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