Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 July 1891 — Page 7
MY » .ONE WALL. »t stands as it stood in “anlil long syne,* By the side of the lane that lends to the spring. Over it clambers the n:Eying -.iuo. And about it the brumal s and lichens cling; In the bnskes that flunk it on either band, The robins chirp aad the blue jays squall, While stnt ly cedurß. a fc'iMii h ml, Are standing guard o’er mv old stone vralL Men show me in triumph their fences white. Built by some vouth with a beardless chin, As mushrooms frail that grow in a night, Cr lilies that neither toil nor spin, And granite deftly hammered I see With iron crowned like an ebon pall; Bnt painters are rare who can match forme The hues of moss on my old stone walk What sounds it has echoed in bygone years— Perchance the savage war-hoop shrill, While the homestead blamed umid shrieks and tears, Or the cannons booming on Bunker Hill. The bear once haunted the sunny glade, The deer when he fled frr *u the hunter’s ball And the fox as by moonligiighe elvly s’rayed May have lurked in the shude of my old stone wall. I wonder sometimes what his name might be Who rolled togetbrr these massive stones, While his firelock leaned 'gainst the nearest tree; Was it fcmith? or Thompson? or Brown; or Jones ? Did he wear a cue and a three-cornered hat? Was hfe log but fashioned from spruces tall? Was he long or short? Was be lean, or fat ? This man who constructed my old stone wall. Perhaps he landed on Plvmouth rock From the Mayflower’s boat with the pilgrim bund, And wandered away from tbe little flock To make him a home in this rugged land; Perhaps he had children who climbed his knee When the shades of evening begau to fall, While he told of his childhood beyond the sen, And rested from building my old stone wall. Hundreds of winters’ snows since then Have whitened the hills of the still old town; The builder has gone from the haunts of men ; In the Vulley of Death ho has laid him down; Ho bard has emblazoned his deeds in song, His name tradition may not recall. But behold his handiwork, stanch am'l strong, This ancient relic, my old stone wall, —Boston Journal.
A LOST JEWEL MYSTERY.
James Blayne was a little out ot temper. For more than a fortnight he had unsuccessfully devoted all the opportunity at his comm and, to discover the whereabouts of Jiady Merton’s jewels, and of the man or woman who had stolen them. James Blayne was a promising young member of the detective force, on the lookout for the lucky-step- that should lift him above the level of his compeers, and when the Merton robbery was intrusted to his care he thought he had got his chance at last. It certainly was rather an interesting case. ■< < •• • •- i About three weeks before the day on which We record Mr. Blayne’s loss of temper, pretty Lady Merton, as might have been gathered subsequently from the newspaper reports, was spending a solitary evening in her house in Brock street. Sir Robert was dining with an old friend some little way out of town, and, not returning till the morning, my lady had intended going to the play with some friends. Bnt late in the afternoon she altered her plaus, dis-
patched a note begging to be excused on account of a severe headache from joining the party, and with a curious feminine idea of comfort and indulgence, told her maid that she would not go down stairs again, hut would have some dinner “on a tiay” in her boudoir at 7:30. At 10 o’clock she rang her bedroom bell, and saying that her head still ached badly and she should go bed, dismissed her maid, requiring nothing more that night. Be ore leaving the maid asked if she should go to the jeweler’s the next morning early, as had been arranged, to take there for repair a diamond brooch of her mistress. “Yes,” adding as her maid opened the jewel case to take out the brooch, “Oh. leave it till the morning.” The box.was relocked and the key put in its usual place in one of the dressing-table drawers. The butler stated that at 10:30 the house was shut up and every one went to bed. The next morning Lady Merton, finding her headache no better, kept her room darkened till after 10 o’clock, when some tea was brought to her by her maid. The latter then went to the jewel-case for the broken brooch, and finding the box unlocked with the key lying near it hastily opened it and cried out the robbery to her mistress. This was the story that in twenty-four hours was known to most newspaper readers in the country, and this was the story that about three weeks later was trying James Blayne's temper. Again and again he reviewed the few heads of the case. On July 25 Lady Merton went to bed between 10 and I0:30p. m. The jewels were then in their places, and she, seeing the box opened, told her maid not to disturb them till morning. The maid locked the box, replaced the key in a drawer, and shortly went to her own room, fastening the door—this last fact being attested by the housemaids, who slept in an outer room. The butler swore to turning out the lights and “shutting” up at 10:30. Lady Merton slept little and restlessly tiil 12:30, when she got np and stirred the fire—this fact attested bv the cook, who slept in an outer room above and was aroused by the sound of the poker. At 10 o’clock the next morning the jewels were missing, and the jewel-cam stood in the dressing-room within, and only approactiable through Lady Merton’s bed-room. from without, Blayne •rejected after due examination as an impossibility. From within, by a man, well-nigh impossible, owiug to the position of the jewel-case and to Lady Merton’s restless state during the night It seemed a case of cherchez ia femme, and Blayne had sought ceaselessly; among the women of the house, of doifrse, though here also the great difficulty of crossing Lady Merton’s bedroom unperceived by her was with him more strongly in their favor than their excellent characters from their employers. The ladv’s maid seemed his only chance, as, of course, she was fully : acquainted with-the situation in all its •eases; and her footfall, which he proved-to be light which, of course. Lady Merton was accustomed, would distui b her less than any of any other visitors. Bnt the lady, while suggesting no other solution of the problem, rejected this la't theory with some indignation, declaring that she had the utmost confidence in her maid, and that she had; scarcely closed her eyes before midnight, after which hour the housemaid pronounced it an impossi-
bility for the lady's maid to have crossed their room unnoticed. So Mr. Blayne was a little out of temper with his lagging luck, and he decided to get two or three days’ leave, and then, having rented his riddle a bit, to start afresh at reading it Thus he found himself on the afternoon of Aug. 13—his request for leave of absence having been granted—talking to a pretty, neat-looking girl in a small semi-detuched villa on the outskirts of the new and fashionable watering place, Stonelav. “So you’ve been getting on pretty well, eh, Nellie?” he asked. “Oh, yes, Jem, very. The air here seems to be quite Betting me up, so I fancy I bad been working a bit too bard, though I always said it was mother’s nonsense. It’s true it's rather dull here, but then I often go into Stonelay and have a look at the smart visitors; so even if Aunt Sarah is snappy at times I don’t mind. She’s kind enough, really." "She couldn’t have got any one ebe to bring her fiere, so she ought to be. I bet the beastly water pats an edge on a temper like her! Yes, I expect it’s prettr dull alone with her. Poor Nelly!” “Oh, I don’t mind; and we’ve got a new neighbor.” “Old Mrs. what’s name —you told me of, gone?” “No. She’s got a new lodger—aman —good looking, rather. She brought him in one day to tea, and we meet him now and then on the road. But he doesn’t go out much. ” “Oh, biding on some account, is he?" asked Jem rather snappishly of the pretty dressmaker. “Nonsense, Jem, he isn’t hiding. He is drinking the waters, he says, and he has a very pretty sister.” “ Sister ? Then they both lodge next door?” “No. She comes to see him. She is a lady’s maid staying at Stonelay. The husband of the lady she is with is drinking the waters.” “Ughl lady’s maid?” said Blayne spitelully, thinking of his recent trials, with which his fiance was acquainted. “Really, Jem, I believe your failing to fix the stealing business on the poor lady’s maid has made you hate the lot. And, talking of your jewel affair, I find while you lose " “How do you mean?” “ Why, yesterday I found such a lovey button on tbe path just outside here. It was sparkling in the sun and I picked it up and brought it in. I went in to old Mrs. Brown to ask Mr. Martin (her lodger) if he knew anything about it; but he was away for two days, she told me, coming back to-night. Auntie says I’ll have to make it known, perhaps advertiso it if no one claims it, for this morning I showed it to Mr. Frazer, the jeweler at Stonelay, and he said it was a very good button, and uncommon, as the stones are beryls.”
“What!” “Dear me! berylp, Are they as ex traordinary as all that?” “That depends. Show us the button. Nellie?” “Here it is,” she said, taking it from the mantle shelf. “Twelve gold filigree buttons jeweled with beryls," Blayne murmured to himself. “I should like to see your neighbor, Nellie, and his sister, the lady’s maid.” “Why, Jem, you don’t think—oh, I remember now, that description yon sent me of the lost jewels! But this can’t be. She is such a dear little thing, and so pretty.” “Yes; what sort?” “Oh, middle height, dark hair, pretty eyes, nice figure " “That’ll do, Nellie. It would fit almost any one. I say, who’s that coming up the path to the house now?” “Why, that’s Mr. Martin,” said Nellie, as Blayne instinctively got behind the muslin window curtain, from which post of vantage he could easily see without being seen. “He’s good-look-ing, isn’t he, Jem? Looks like a gentleman, rather?” “Ye-es, just that last. I think Iv’e got his measure.” “And oh, therein his sister just behind him —see ? Now. that’s not your lady’s maid, is it ?” “That!”exclaimed Blayne, with eyes nearly starting through the lace of the curtains. “Is that your lady’s maid and that man’s—sister?”
“Yes,” answered Nellie, as her neighbor and his sister, nodding and smiling to her, entered the next house. “Does she stay the night there?” inqnired Blayne. “Oh, no, nothing more than an hour. Her lady couldn’t spare her. But what is the matter with you, Jem, laughing in jerks like that?” “Ob, nothing. I say, Nellie, is there a visitor’s list in the paper here ?” “Yes; but Jem—now that wasn’t your lady’s maid, was it? “No, dear; now—the paper.” Blayne wandered steadily on through the list of “fashionable visitors” till he came to “Victoria hotel. Sir Robert atm Lady Merton.” Then he folded up the paper, saying: “Well, Nellie, I’ll go into Stonelay with you to-morrow morning to have a look at the fashions. Here is Aunt Sarah coming to see after us,” as that respectable lady entered the room. “And there goes Mr. Martin’s visitor,” said Nellie as a woman hastily closed the door of the next house and hurried away. “She must be late.” “Rather,” said Blayne. The next day the detective and his intended walked into Stonelay and after a few minutes’ private conversation with the manager of the Victoria he astonished Nellie by insisting on buying her different trash in all' the shops that commanded a view of the hotel. At length, on his offering her a pink glass mug decorated with the ! legend “In Affectionate Remembrance,” in forget-me-nots. she. began protesting- . “All right, dear, we’ll take it to Aunt Sarah,” he said, with his eyes fixed on a gentleman who was mounting a horse that a groom had been leading up aud down in the front of the hotel. As soon as the eject of his attention had ridden out of sight Blayne said to his companion: "Do you minu walking on home, Nellie? I have a little business at tbe Victoria which I must tee to at once:
then rn come oa after yon with the ” “Jewelry ?” “Yes, and the mug.” Blayne walked iuto the hotel and sent a written message to Lady Merton, asking if she would cee him at that somewhat early hour, as he had to catch the next train to town. He was shown into a sittiug-room where a very pretty woman in a soft morning wrapper was lying on the sofa reading tbe paper. She rose as he came in, and he thought of the lady's maid whose description would “fit almost any one.” “Well, Mr. Blayne,” she said, with a smile, “yon came about tbe jewels, of course ?” “Yea, my lady, I do.” “There is no news, I suppose?” “Your ladyship will be plea-od to hear that there is news.” “Ah!” she exclaimed, starting;“what —what news ?” “A small, very small portion of your jewelry is in my hands.” “Indeed!” said Lady Merton more calmly. “Are you sure it is mine?” “I think, my lady, that beryl buttons, such as yours,” pausing to note her pallor, “are extremely rare.” “Ah! and ” “And this button that I hold in my hand”—he showed it to me as he spoke—“was found in a small semi-de-tached villa at some little distance from this town during the absence of—the thief.” He watched the blood, rush to her face, her brow, and, thoughtfully looking elsewhere, said: “The rest of your jewels, my lady, must be recovered by me or by—you.” “Really,” she stammered, “I—l don’t see “I beg your pardon, my lady, but we waste time. I know that in a case of this sort my instructions would be to avoid the chance of scandal and I look to you to help me with this, for your own sake. You must return to that bouse this morning with me.” “I can’t! I can’t” she gasped, clinging to the side of the sofa. “My lady, you must!” answered the detective, “if you go with me I shall find only the jewels, but if I go alone I must find the. thief. Nov. will you come and recover your property, or shall I discover ” Thanks to the exertions of that able officer, James Blayne, Lady Merton is an exception to many less fortunate ladies in having recovered her jewels, “never again,” she declares, “to lose them.” And the detective, now steadily advancing in his profession, nevei forgets that anxious aud trying fortnight, during which he gave too little consideration to latchkeys and headaches.—London World.
Cabin Cipher Codes.
The ingenuity exercised in devising cipher codes is astonishing to veteran travelers. These little volumes fire now published in convenient form to be carried in a traveler’s pocket and contain a list of five or Bix hundred English words selected more for their telegraphic euphony than on any other consideration, arranged alphabetically and each with its meaning in’ plain language set opposite to it The number of words, phrases and sentences which a single cipher word may mean when flashed under the ocean is astounding. For instance: In Low’s new pocket code the word “scamper” means “Telegraph in cipher as soon as you receive the copy of the pocket cable code which I send you for that purpose.” The word “euarched” means, “Check book has been lost or stolen; please stop payments ou any checks bearing the number of my check book.” When telegraphic euphony is alluded to an expert will readily understand that the object desired in cipher words is a collection of letters, the telegraphic symbols for which are most readily intelligible to the ear of the cable operator, the telegraph sounds, for instance, for “m” and “e” are so nearly alike, it is said, that certain unions of those letters have been avoided, as far as possible. The system on which a code may be arranged is well shown in this series of three definitions: “Liberties,” means “in replv to your;” “Libertine,” which means “in reply to your letter;” “Liberty,” which means “in reply to your telegram.” —New York World.
He Was Off.
He was getting a shine on his boots as he leaned up against the postoffice building, and, observing that the bootblack had a black eye, he remarked: “I am afraid you are prone to belligerency, my son.” “What’s them?” asked the lad. “You have been engaged iu a physical contest.” “I don’t catch.” “In other words, you resorted to muscular force where argument would no donbt have been far better.” The boy rubbed away for awhile and tried to straighten the kinks out of the several expressions, and then suddenly looked up and queried: “Oh! you mean my black eye, don’t you?” “Of course I do.” “You mean that I’ve been in a fight?” “Yes.” “And got licked?” “Perhaps. It is very sad to see one so young walking in the path which leads to sin and disgrace.” “You’re off, old man —way off!” replied the lad with a good deal of spirit as he chucked his brushes into his box. “I wasn’t scrappin’ wid none of de kids. Seven big fellers was a robbin’ of a man on Second avenue de oder night, an’ I jumped iu an’ saved him an’ his boodle, an’ got dis eye for me reward.” “Oh, that’s it! Then I’m sorry to have said anything. I hope I didn’t hurt your feelings. Here’s a nickel extra.” “My feelin’s was burted, sir, but dis makes it all right Scrap wid a kid! never, sir!” “That’* right, my boy! A brave boy will not fight when he can avoid it” “Ho, sir, and besides, it was his elbow he hit me wid, and all by accident, and de way I did lam de stuffin’ outer dat messenger boy and make him holler would hev made all your hair climb right up! Thankee, sir; I’m alius open to advice !”—New York Sun. Common brown sugar may be sweetest, but loaf sngar is u>'>re refined.
REAR ADMIRAL JOHN IRWIN.
Recently Promoted from Commodore to Rear Admiral. Commodore John Irwin, who has just been promoted to a Rear Admiral in the United States navy, has been in the service for forty-four years continuously. He was born in Philadelphia, Sept. 15,1832, and was appointed
from that State Sept. 9, 1847. He served on the Cumberland, St. Lawrence, John Adams, Fulton, Savannah and Wabash, from 1847 to 1863, and was at the capture of the forts at Hatteras Inlet, Walker and Beauregard, Fort Royal Ferry and Fort Pulaski. Commanded the Newbern, Gettysburg, Yantie, Sabine and the Pensacola, in the North Atlantic and Pacific squadrons from 1868 to 1870. Was in command of League Island Station in 1872, Mare Island Navy Yard from 1879 to 1883. President of the Board of Inspection, California, from 1834 to 1888. He was promoted to passed midshipman in 1853, commissioned lieutenant in 1855, lieutenant commander in 1862, commander in 1866. captain in 1875, commodore in March, 1886, and rear admiral in May, 1891. He is now in command of the naval forts on the North Pacific coast.
THE ENTERPRISING BURGLAR.
Tbe burglar on entering beholds a dress, very quick To appear an a mendicant Is the sly old dog’s trick.
Discovering that a mistake he has made, He dons boldly the garb of the chambermaid.
When caught by the lady ot the house who comes in, He says that he Came u position to win. —lnter Ocean.
They Had Rather Go SloW.
The varied tastes of humanity add greatly to the spice of life. ’While we think that apparently every one who crosses the Atlantic is pushing to take passage ou the fastest steamers, there are many who are just as anxious to dawdle over on the slowest boats. There are enough of these to keep the crawlers going year after year. Such passengers are those who love the sea voyage best of all, or who are iu poor health, and need the complete rest of a long vovage. Passage on the slowgoers is cheaper by far than on the fast ones, yet it is not by any means the poor or the economical who use them. Some very rich New-Yorkers travel that way by preference. *
cheap Baths.
The ideal public bath-houses are in Birmingham, and are from eighty to one hundred feet loDg and from three to five feet deep. The poor bathe for a penny, or two of our cents, while the well-to do get towels and a dressingroom for twelve cents. These bathhouses develop swimming classes, and from these expert swimmers are made. Even tiny children are to be seen suspended in slings and supported, while they learn to strike out for themselves, by men who hold the slings at the end of long poles and walk around the sides of the tanks with them. Men who take a whole lifetime to choose an occupation end by deciding to do nothing.
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