Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1887 — Page 7

MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCES.

Two Cum in England of Historic Interest —The Man of the Iron Mask. Mysterious disappearances have been far more numerous than hasty readers imagine—some permanent, some temporary. I do not allude to modern ones within living men’s memories, says a correspondent of London Tid-Bits, but to some past ones of thrilling interest, and about which very many people do not know much, except those who study old ephemeral literature. The story of the “Man with the Iron Mask” most have heard of, but what is not so well known is that, though a general notion exists that this individual was Mattheole, Minister of Parma, there is very strong evidence that he was really the Due de Beaufort, with whose mysterious disappearance, in the letter half of the seventeenth century, we will commence our list. He was the grandson of Henry IV. of France and the fair Gabrielle, Duchess of Beaufort. He was a most adventurous man, and ever keeping Louis XlV.’s ministers in “hot water. ” He was the favorite of the fiery Paris mob, always an important factor in French government. Kidnaping political enemies was a common stratagem then on the continent. Beaufort went to Candia with the French troops sent there on an expedition, and was never seen publicly again, having been, it was said, killed. But a rumor grew stronger and stronger that he was the mysterious captive who was at the lie St. Marguerite, where he flung the silver dish out, which was picked up by the fisherman who owed his life to never having been taught to read. What made these rumors stronger was the knowledge that the prisoner was treated with all the honor and deference shown to royalty. Louis XIV. took great interest in the veiled captive, whoever he was, and who died in the Bastile just twelve years earlier than the grand monarch. But the brilliant Due de Beaufort, though sought for by troops of friends, disappeared from all public gaze from the time he reached Condia. Next we will consider a very different and much humbler person who mysteriously disappeared, and about whese disappearance as little is known now after immense investigation as there was 134 years ago. This is Elizabeth Canning, whose case set all England by the ears pro and con. On New Year’s Day, 1753, she disappeared in Bishopsgate street on her way to her mother’s shop in Aldermanbury, then a street of small, old-fash-ioned Jiouses. Kewards were offered, inquiries made, but the ill-lit streets, full of ruffians, and the absence of police, made any outrage possible. Nearly a month passed when, one night, a spectral figure tottered into the Aldermanbury shop, in whose emaciated face and form her mother hardly recognized Elizabeth Canning. She said she had been imprisoned in a lonely house at Enfield. Two women were tried, convicted, and, under the then Draconian laws, sentenced to death. A reaction came. England was divided into friends and foes of the girl. The women were pardoned, and the girl was tried for perjury, convicted, and transported for seven years, but it was a nominal sentence, for she married in the convict settlement, throve, returned home, and died early. Very many considered her a martyr; her principles and demeanor were uniformly religious, modest, and quiet, and her character excellent. Many controversies have been held, but of that mysterious disappearance we know just as much and just as little as did our ancestors in the reign of George 11., who, by the way, took a personal interest in the inquiries.

German Marriages.

German gentlemen, as a rule, I find, do not care much for beauty in their wives, unless accompanied by some enduring qualities that shall fit them to be helpmeets indeed. The very greatest caution is displayed by the Teuton in choosing a partner for life. Before committing himself too far with a young lady the gentleman will first ask her father’s consent to visit at his house, that he may judge from the young lady’s conduct toward her parents, and brothers, and sisters, and servants, if she will make him a good wife. He must also see that she is capable of cooking, ironing, dressmaking, and other little accomplishments. Should she come through the ordeal unscathed the pair engage themselves by exchanging rings, and the bride at once begins to make her wedding trousseau —no trifling affair, as it is incumbent upon her to provide not only her own wardrobe, but all the household linen, furniture, and kitchen utensils. The marriage is an occasion for great rejoicings, and extends over several days, during which much tobacco is smoked by the males and much chatter indulged in by the females between the hours of feasting. Stolid though they be, all German husbands do not appear to be great successes; yet the wives are evidently sweet, forbearing ereatures, as the following verses from the German will show: Oh, I have a man as good as can be, No woman could wish for a better than he ; Sometimes, indeed, he may chance to do wrong But his love for me is uncommonly strong. ' When soaked with rum ho is hardly polite, But knocks the crockery left and right • Aud pulls my hair, and growls again • ’ But, excepting that, he's the best of men. All I can say is, if the foregoing represents the average of German women, they are easily satisfied. What a treasure such a wife would prove, what an inestimable boon, to a Lancashire miner, or to a Yorkshire cotton-spinner.

The Doctor’s Commission.

A druggist on Twenty-second street tells this at his own expense: “A man came in with a prescription, and I no*

ticed that the name of the physician was not on the paper. I called the customer’s attention to it, and he said he knew it. ‘Where is it? Who wrote the prescription?’ I asked. The customer said he’d cut the name off. ‘What did yon do that for?' I asked him. ‘lf you don’t know the name of the doctor,’ he answered, ‘I won't have to pay his commission.’ He got soda without winking for it”— Chicago Mail.

Royal Masks.

The painters having recently let the world see that they were not too much taken up with their palettes to allow them to divert themselves and their friends with a mask, there is nothing wonderful in the fact that the men of law should have followed suit and demonstrated that Gray’s Inn could hold its owu with Prince’s Hall. Indeed, when we consider that we are living in the year of Jubilee and that the lawyers have any amount of precedent to guide and authorize them in such matters it almost seems as if they had no other course open to them. Tbie Inns of Court may not be able to show such a dining record as the City Company’s, but they have made themselves a name for stately revels. Gray’s Inn, Lincoln’s Inn, the Inner and Middle Temple have severally entertained kings and queens and the great ones of the earth; but probably the most magnificent exercise of legal hospitality was that when, in the year 1633, the four societies combined to show their loyalty and duty to King Charles and his Queen by the outward and splendid visible testimony of a royal mask. The King had just revived his father’s declaration for the toleration of lawful sports on the Lord’s Day, and Mr. Prynne had just published his “Histriomastix,” a book against “Interludes” and women actors—a direct insult, so the court party affirmed, to the Queen, who had recently taken part in a pastoral at Somerset House. Thus the grave lawyers determined, by capering for the nonce in motley, to show their disapproval of Mr. Prynne’s intemperate satire, and a committee was formed to organize the mask. Mr. Edward Hyde and Mr. Bulstrode Whitelocke represented the Middle Temple, Sir E. Herbert and Mr. Selden the Inner, Mr. Attorney Noy and Mr. Girling, Lincoln’s Inn, and Sir John Finch, Gray’s Inn. The abovenamed Mr. Whitelocke tells the story in his “Memorials,” with satisfaction at the part he himself bore in the august ceremonial. “To me in particular was committed the whole care and charge of all the musick for this great masque, which was so performed that it excelled any musick that ever before that time had been heard in England. I made choice of Mr. Simon Joy, an honest and able musician, and of Mr. Laws, to compose the airs, lessons, and songs for the masque, and to be master of the musick under me.” All the Year Round.

Ye Storie of Ye Dogge.

Once in ye very olden tyme a merchant sayd too an Eddy tor, “I doan’t thynke advertizing paves. ” “Let me show yov,’’ saidyeEddytor. “I will pvtte one lyne in my Papyr and not charge yov a pennie. ” “All right,” replyed ye Merchantt, “and we will see.” So ye Eddytor pvtte ys lyne in his Papyr: WANTED— A DOGGE. JOHN JONES, 253 Olde street. Now yt happened that 400 Peple eache brovghte a Dogge on ye next dave thereafter, so that Mister Jones (whych was ye Merchant t’s name) was overrunne with Dogges. “Synce there are so manye Dogges,” sayd he, “I thynke I myght make some bysiness, and will give you a pennie for eache Dogge,” Ye people took ye pennie each for his Dogge becavse there were so manye Dogges, and Mister Jones skynned ye 400 Dogges and made bootes and gloves from ye 400 hydes and thvs mayd A Byg Eobtvne, and thereafter added to yt by advertizin ye Eddy tor’s papyr.— American Grocer.

Hunting Elephants with a Sword.

I turned the conversation to sport, on which Zebhr is a great authority. Most, it not all, of the big game of Africa have fallen to his rifle, and he told me some wonderful yarns of his adventures with lions and elephants. He told me that his favorite method of hunting the latter was on horseback and armed only with a sword. His plan was to ride up alongside the elephant and, rapidly dismounting, hamstring him with a blow from the sword, and when the huge beast was thus put hors du combat he was dispatched with spears. It is necessary to have several mounted men, one of whom attracts the attention of the elephant while the others creep up and hamstring him. This method of hunting was reported on by Sir Samuel Baker as common among the Hamram Arabs; but Zebhr is the only Arab I have met who has told me he has practiced it.—Philadelphia Times.

He Lacks Information.

“Are you the cow!” asked the boarder from town, pausing before the pump. “No,” replied the pump, speaking through his nose like a true American, “I am the milk made. Haw, haw, haw.” And next morning the awestricken guest ate his gruel in s lence, nor once complained when he found a water-spider in the cream.— Burdette.

Testimony of the Nurse.

“Is there anything more dreadful than dyspepsia, Doctor?” asked Mr. Branbread. “There is,” interrupted Mrs. Branbread. “What is it, then?” inquired the doctor. “The man who has it,” said Mrs. B.— Burdette.

The Varieties of Caverns.

The class of underground openings known as caverns have, in all countries and at all times, been especially captivating to the lovers of the marvelous; their strange architecture, beautiful ornamentation, and peculiar inhabitants have combined to make them attractive. To men of science they have recently become extremely interesting, because they throw light on the early conditions of savage man, and make some startling contributions to the facts which bear on the so-called Darwinian theory. The open spaces of the underground may, at the outset of our inquiry, for convenience, be divided into several distinct classes: First, we have the caverns, or the channels excavated in limestone rocks by streams which find their way beneath the surface. These are by far the most extensive and the most interesting of the subterranean chambers. Next, the channels and chambers hollowed out by the waters of hot springs on their way from the depths of the earth to the surface. Third, come the sea-caves, formed where the battering surges have worn a way into the shore-cliffs along the line of some softer part of the rocks or of an incipient fissure. Fourth, the cavities curiously formed where a lavastream has frozen or solidified on the surface, while the liquid rock below has flowed on or sunk back into the depths, leaving the arch standing, until the matter which originally supported it has disappeared. Lastly, we have the rifts formed in the rocks which have been rent by the mountainbuilding forces, where the walls on either side of the break—or, as it is termed by miners, the fault—have been pulled apart from each other, leaving a very deep and long, but relatively narrow, fissure. In one or another of these groups we may place all the known cavities which occur beneath the earth’s surface— Prof. N. S. Shaler, in Scribner’s Magazine.

Cold Facts About Mary Stuart.

Some time in the sixteenth century there flourished a Queen of Scotland called Mary Stuart, linmor says that she was good-looking, but such detailed information as can be obtained tends to throw a doubt on the point. If she had lived in the present day she would probably have figured in the divorce court, and might have been indicted as an accessory to the murder of her own husband. She harbored designs avowedly hostile to the Government of this country, and the Government of this country, which was also a woman, having the luck to get hold of her, clapped her into prison. She continued to plot against the said Government and was put to death. The dowager Marchioness of Huntly is now running a woman’s tercentenary offering to the memory of this exemplary female, and invites subscriptions of from one shilling to ten shillings for the purpose. I don’t know why any Englishwoman of the nineteenth century should contribute to such an object; but, if any do, I hope, with the light of another woman’s offering upon us, the testimonial will take the form of a statue of Lord Darnlev.— London Truth.

Safely Landed.

It was a little kitchen party. She had grown about desperate, but suddenly a brilliant idea occurred to her. “Why are you like this corn?” she whispered, shaking the hopper impatiently over the slow fire. He saw the point, turned pale, and—popped.— Burlington Free Press.

The Beau Ideal of a Family Medicine.

A remedy which promptly and completely relieves ailments of such common occurrence as indigestion, constipation, biliousness, and disorders of a malarial type, is assuredly the beau ideal of a family medicine. Such is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which is not only capable of eradicating these complaints, but also counteracting a tendency to kidney troubles, rheumatism, and premature decadence of stamina. Taking it “all round,” as the phase is, there is probably not in existence so useful, effective, and agreeable a household panacea as the Bitters Nor is it less highly esteemed by the medical profession than by the families of America. Numberless testimonials from professional sources of Irrefragable authenticity evince its merit. The demand for it abroad, no less than in the land of its discovery, is certainly increasing, time and experience of its beneficent effects confirming the high opinion originally formed of it.

How Booth Died.

As Herold left, Booth made a movement as though to raise his carbine, and Boston Corbett fired. The ball struck Booth just behind the ear, in about the same place where he struck the President. The bullet lodged in the vertebrae of his neck, and this part of his anatomy was afterward cut out, and the bone with the ball in it was kept in the medical museum at Washington. Just before Corbett fired, the straw at the back of the barn was fired by a detective, and as the blaze leaped upward I rushed in and seized Booth, throwing my arms aro ;nd his waist under his uplifted arms, and dragging him out of the burning barn. We carried him to the porch of the Garrett farm-house, and he died within a few hours, — Lippincott’s Magazine. When a sermon is too long, the end makes one forget the middle, and the middle the beginning. — St. Francis de Sales.

“Not Bulk, but Business!”

Is the way a Western man put it in expressing to a friend his complete satisfaction in the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purga ive Pellets, fc'o small and yet eo effectual, they bid fair to supplant entirely the old-styls pilL An overready remedy for Sick and Bilious Headache, Biliousness, Constipation and all blood disorders. Mild in action, wonderful in effect! Put up in vials, convenient to carry. Their use attended with no discomfort! The3o sterling merits account for their great popularity. It isn’t called high mass on account of steep pew rents; that is a mistaken idea.— Merchant Traveler.

She scolds and frets, She's full of pete. She's rarely kind and tender; The thorn of life Is a fretful wist- —v - I wonder what willmend her? Try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Ten to one, your wife ie cross and frettul because she is sick and suffering, and cannot oontrol her nervousness when things go wrong. Make a healthy woman of her and the chances are you will make a cheerful and pleasant one. “Favorite Prescription” is the only remedy for woman’s pecular ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case or money will be refunded. See guarantee on bottle wrapper. Large bottles, 91. Six for $5. As for the ballet-girl, whatever enchantment there may be in viewing her is lent by distance.— London Truth

Humbug.

B&mum said “the American people like to be humbugged." This may be true in the liue of entertainment, but not where life is at stake. A man with consumption, or any lingering disease, looking Death in the face and seeking to evade his awful grasp, does not like to be trifled with. So with confidence we plaoe before our readers Nature’s great remedy, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, a sure relief for that long train of diseases resulting from Impure blood, such as Consumption, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Liver Complaint, Kidney Disorder, Dyspepsia, Sich Headache, Scrofula and General Debility. Time-tried and thoroughly tested, it stands without an equal! Any druggist The missing links will arrive when the sausage season opens.

How to Gain Flesh and Strength.

Use after each meal Scott’s Emulsion with Hypophosphites. It is as palatable as milk, and easily digested. The rapidity with which delicate people improve with its use is wonderful. Use it and try your weight As a remedy for Consumption, 'ihroat affections, and Bronchitis, it is unoqualed. Please read: “I used Scott's Emulsion in a child eight months old with good results. He Mined four Sounds in a very short time.”—Tho. Pbim, L D., Alabama. It’s curious how affection and confection seem to harmonize.

For Bronchial, Asthmatic and Pulmonary Complaints, “ Brown's Bronchial Troches” hava remarkable curative properties. Hold only in boxes. In a Parisian barber-shop: “How shall I cut your hair, sir?” “Without speaking of Gen. Boulanger.”

A Popular Thoroughfare.

The Wisconsin Contral Liue, although a comparatively new factor in tho railroad systems of the Northwest, has acquired an enviable popularity. Through careful attention to details, its servioo is as near perfection as might be looked for. The train attendants ■eem to regard their trusts as individual property and as a result the public is served par-excellence. ,Tho road now runs solid through fast trains between Chicago Milwaukee, St. Paul and Minneapolis with Pullman’s best and unequalled dining cars; it also runs through, solid sleepers between Chicago, Ashland, Duluth and the famous mining regions of Northern Wisconsin and Michigaa

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c - N - P- No. 44-87 WHKN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS, ■ J P lea * e say you saw the advertisement mb this paper.