Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 3 October 1895 — Page 8
1
7 TD
By W. CLARK EUSSELL.
[C'lrvri'-.l
T+.
the names experipv.rf 4a]e^..i-'!v
12?}, l»y the Author.] ti:I bfate afc ouco that ivo in tiiis extraoiHliiuuT H'tit-ioT'?:. elate of the ii' iho i!i«%:! rw w£ \f
The largo,
v.'oll known Australian
liner White Star lay off the wool sheds in Sydney harbor slowly filling tip with wool. I say slowly, for the oxen were languid up country, and the stuff came in as Fox is said to have written his history—"drop by drop. We were, however, advertised to sail in fortnight from the day I open this story on, and there was no doubt of our getting away by then.
I, who wa.s chief ofileor of the vessel, was pacing the poop under the awning, when I saw a lady and gentleman approaching the vessel. They sjioke to the mate of a French bark which lay just ahead of us. and I concluded that their busirc. *V..H .RL.h lh.«r. ship, tili I su\V the rro!tch:!i.'::i,'with a flourish of his liat, motion toward the White Star, whereupon they advanced and stepped on board.
I went on to the quarter deck to receive them. The gentleman had the air of a military man—short, erect as a royal mast, with plenty of whiskers and mustache, though lie wore his chin cropped. His' eoinpnnioii was a very fine young woman of about six and twenty years, above the average height, faultlessly shapi d, so far as a rude seafaring eye is privileged to judge of such matters her crm'rtVxif'n pal -*, inclined to sallow, U:i. most delicate, of a transparency of ii ii that showed the blood eloquent in her cheek, coming and going with every mood that possessed her. She wore a little fall of veil, but she raised it when her companion handed her over the side in order to look round and aloft at the fabric of spar and shroud towering on high, with its central bunting of house Hag pulling in ripples of gold and bine from the royal mast head, and so I had a good sight of her face, and particularly of her eyes.
I never member the like of such eyes in a woman. To describe them as neither largo nor small, the pupils of the liquid dusk of the Indian's, the eyelashes long enough to cast a silken shadow of tenderness upon the whole expression of her face when the lids dropped —to say all this is to convey nothing, simply because their expression formed the wonder, strangeness and beauty of them, and there is no virtue in ink, at all events in my ink, to communicate it. I do not exaggerate when I assure yon that the surprise of the beauty of her eyes, when they came to mine and rested upon me steadfast in their stare as a picture, was a sort of shock in its way, comparable in ?•. physical sens" to one's unexpected handling of something slightly electric. For the rest, her hair was very blade and abundant and of that sort r? deadness of hue which you find amc .:, :!.e eoplo of Asia. I cannot describe her dress. Enough if I say that she v.as in ruourning, but with a large admix trim of white, for those were the hot weeks in Sydney. "Is the captain on board?" inquired the gentleman. "Ho is not, sir. "When do you expect him?" "Every minute." "May we stop hero?" "Certainly. Will you walk into the cuddy or !o the poop?" "Oh, we'll keep in the open—we'll Iceep in the open," cried the gentleman, with the inrietunsiry of a man rendered irritable by the heat. "You'll have had enough of the cuddy, Miss Le Grand, long before you reach the old co-mtry.
She smiled. I liked her face then. Itwas a fine, glad, .nood humored smile and humanized her wonderful eyes just as though you clothed a ghost in flesh, making the specter natural and commonplace
As we ascended the poop ladder the gentleman asked mo who I was quite courteously, though his whole manner was marked by a quality of military abruptness. When he understood I was chief officer, he exclaimed "Then, Miss Le Grand, permit mo to introduce Mr. Tyler to you. Miss Georgina Le Grand is going home in your ship. She will be alone. We have placed her in the. care of the captain. "Perhaps,"said Miss Le Grand, with another of her line smiles, "I ought to introduce you, Mr. Tyler, to my uncle, Colonel Atkinson."
Again I pulled off my cap, and the tolonel laughed as he lifted his wide
ff
"I ought Lo inlrou-tre j/ou, Mr. Tyler, to my uncle, Coionvl A tkinson." Btraw hat. I guessed he laughed at a certain naivete in the girl's way of introducing us.
Tho colonel was disposed to chat. Out of England Englishmen are among the most talkative of the human race, lakely enough he wanted to interest me in Miss Le Grand becauso of my situation on board. A chief mate is a considerable figure. If any mishap incapacitates th® master, the chief mate takes charge. Wo walla the poop, the three ©ff •us, in the violet shadow cast by the jrmiing. The colonel constantly directed
Lis eyes along the quay to observe if the captain was coming. During this stroll to and fro the white planks I got these particulars, partly from the direct assertions of the colonel, partly from the occasional remarks of the girl: ','id-.mvi zViiJut--Vr! married her father's sister. Her father had been an Oiik-Oi in the army and had sailed from .v:r« vi.]i he ii'eii i/osvmor of J.v V? ait. After he hu'l Isc-iu in Sydney a few months he sent for his daughter, whom he had left behind him with a maternal aunt, her mother having died some years before. She reached I Sydney to find her father dead. His exI cellency was very kind to her, and she found very many sympathetic friends, I but her home wa.s in England, and to it I she was returning in the White Star under the care of the master, Captain
Edv.-. id :1it-hs. after a stay of nearly five hs in Sydney with her uncle, Colonel Atkinson.
Kaii an hour passed before the captain arrived. When lie stepped on board, I lifted my cap and left the. poop, and the captain and the others went into the ]j-
)Uv
Heads. We were a fairly crowded .--hip, what Avith Jacks ::nd passengers. The steerage and 'tween decks were full up I with people going home. In the cuddy some the e:. ins •emained unlet. We think, about 12 genpassengers, one of v. was Miss Georgina
mustered in all, I tlemo'i and lady Viioui,nectiies.S to Si Le Grand.
I had been busy on the forecastle when she came aboard, but heard afterward from Robson, tho second mate, that tho governor's wife, with Colonel Atkinson and certain nobs out of government house, had driven down to the ship to say goodby to the girl. She was alone. I wondered she had not a maid, but I afterward heard from a bright little lady on board, a Mrs. Burney, one of tho wickedest flirts that ever with a flash of dark glance drew a sigh from a man, that the woman Miss Le Grand had engaged to accompany her as maid to Europe had omitted to put in an appearance at the last moment, in perfect conformity with the manners and habits of the domestic servants of the Australian colonies of those days, and the young lady having no time to procure another maid had shipped alone.
At dinner on that first day of our departure, when tho ship was at sea and I was stumping the deck in charge, I observed. in glancing through the skylight, that the captain had put Miss Le Grand upon the right of his chair, at tho head of the table, a little before the fluted and emblazoned shaft of mizzenmast. I don't think above five sat down to dinner. A long heave of swell had sickened the hunger out of most of them. But it was a glorious evening, and the red sunshine, flashing fair upon the wide open skylights, dazzled out as brilliant and hospitable a picture of cabin equipment as the sight could wish.
I had a full view of Miss Lo Grand, and occasionally paused to look at her, so standing as to be unobserved. Now that I saw her with her hat off I found something very peculiar and fascinating in her beauty. Her eyes seemed to fill her face, subduing every lineament to the full spiritual light and meaning in them. till, her countenance looked sheer intellect, the very quality and spirit of mind itself. This effect, I think, was largely achieved by tho uncommon hue of her skin. It accentuated color, casting a deeper dye into the blackness of her hair, sharpening tho fires in her eyes, painting her lips with a more fiery tinge of earn:'. ion, through which, when she smiled, her white teeth shono like light itself.
I noticed even on this first day, during my cautions occasional peeps, that the captain wa.s particularly attentive to the young lady, in which indeed I should have found nothing significant, for she had in a special degree been committed to his trust, but for tho circumstances of his being a bachelor. Even then, early and fresh as tho time was for thinking of such things, I guessed when I looked at tho girl that the hardy mariner alongsido of her would not keep his heart whole a week, if indeed, for the matter of that, he wTas not already head over ears.
He was a good looking man in his way not everybody's type of manly beauty perhaps, but certain of admiration from those who relish a strong sea flavor and the color of many years and countless leagues of ocean in looks, speech and deportment. Ho was about 85, the heartiest laugher that ever strained a rib in merriment, a genial, kindly man, with a keen, seawardly b?uo eye, weather colored face, short 'whiskers and rising in his socks to near (i feet. I believe ho was of Welsh blood. This was my first voyage with him. The rigorous discipline of the quarter ck had held us apart, and all that- I could have told of him I have here? wi ii ten.
For some time after we left Sydney nothing whatever noteworthy happened. One quiet evening I came on deck at o'clock to take charge of the ship till midnight. We wero still in the temperate parallels, (lie weather of a true Pacific sweetness, and by day tho ocean a dark blue rolling breast of water, feathering on every round of swell in sea flashes, out of which would sparkle! the flying fish to sail down the bright, mild wind for a space, then vanish in some brow of brine with the flight of a silver arr w.
This night the moon was dark, tho weather somewhat thick, tho stars pale over tho trucks and hidden in tho obscurity a littlo way down the dusky slope of firmament. Wind sails were wriggling fore and aft like huge white snakes, gaping for the tops and writhing out of tho hatches. The flush of sunset was dying when I came on deck. saw the captain slowly pacing the
1
(V.y C.r departure came round,
and not a little rejoiced wa.s I when the tug had fairly got hold of us and we were floating over the sheet calm surface of Sydney bay. past some of the loveliest, bus of scenery the world has I to offer, on our road to the mighty ocean beyond the grim portals of Sydney
weather side of the poop with Miss Le Grand. He seemed earnest in his talk and gestures. Enough western light still lived to enable me to see faces, and
I observed that Mrs. Burney, standing I to leeward of a skylight talking with a gentlem-.:', I- pianos at th* with a satirical smile whenever the*," came ubrea-ht of her.
Brio 11 0 liigat came down in d.i-'L—...: "yt-. ics deep, the J«»u "uitw damp out of the dusk in a long moan over the rail, heeling the ship yet by a couple of degrees the captain sang out for the fore and mizzen royals to be I clewed up and furled and shortly afterward went below, first handing Miss Le
Grand down the companion way. I guessed the game was up with the worthy man. He had met his fate and taken to it with the meekness of a sheep. He might do worse, I thought, as I started on a solitary stroll, so far as looks are concerned, but win?! of her nature—her character? It was puzzling to think of what sort of spirit it was that looked out of her wonderful eyes, and she was not a kind of girl that a man vvnH care to leave ashore. So mneh beauty full of a subtle endevilment of some sort, as it seemed to me, must needs demand the constant sentineling of a husband's presence. That was how it struck me.
By 11 o'clock all was hushed throughout the ship—lights out, tho captain turned in, nothing stirring forward save the flitting shape of the lookout under the yawn of tlie pale square of fore course. It was blowing a pleasant- breeze of wind, and, lost in thought, I leaned over the rail at the weather fore end of the poop, watching the cold sea glow shining in the dark water as the foam spat past, sheeting awav astern in a furrow like moonlight. I will swear I did not doze. That I never was guilty of while on duty in all the years I was at sea, but I don't doubt that I was sunk deep in thought, insomuch that my reverie may have possessed a temporary power of abstraction as complete as slumber itself.
I was startled into violent wakefulness by a cannonade of canvas aloft and found the ship in the wind. I looked aft. Tho wheel was deserted—at least I believed so till on rushing to it, meanwhile shouting to the watch on deck, I spied the figure of the helmsman on his face, close beside the binnacle.
I thought he was dead. Tho watch to my shouts came tumbling to the braces, and in a few minutes the captain made
'd
mMmm
lie Ian on the dci'l
his appearanee. Tho ship was got to her conrso afresh, by which time the man who had been steering was so far recovered as to ho able to sit on the grating abaft the wheel and relate what had happened.
Ho was a- Dane and spoke with a strong foreign accent, beyond my art to reproduce. He said ho had been looking away to leeward, believing he saw a light out upon tho horizon, when on turning his head he beheld a ghost at his side. "A what?" said tho captain. "A ghost, sir, so help me"— and here the littlo Dane indulged in some very violent language, all designed to convince us that ho spoke tho truth. "What was it like?" asked the captain. "It was dressed in whito and stood looking at me. I tried to run and could not, but fell and maybe fainted. "Tho durnod idiot slept." said the captain to mo, "and dreamt and dropped on his nut." "Had I dropped on my nut, should not have woke up then?" cried the Dane in a passion of candor. "Go forward and turn in," said the captain. "Tho doctor shall see you and report to me."
When the man was gone, the captain asked me if I had seen anything likely to produce tho impression of a ghost on an ignorant, credulous man's mind? I answered no, wondering that ho should ask such a question. "Huw long was the man in a fit, d'ye think?" said ho, "that is, before you found out that the wheel was deserted?" "Three or four minutes.
He looked inio tho binnacle, took a turn about tho decks, and without saying anything moro about the ghost went below.
The doctor next day reported that the Dane was perfectly well and of sound mind, and that he stuck with many imprecations to his story. He described the gho." as aiigin in white that looked at him with sparkling eyes and yet blindly. Ho was unable to describe the features. Fright no doubt stood in the way of perception. He could not imagine where the thing had come from. He was, as he had said, gazing at what looked liko a spark or star to leeward when, turning his head, ho found the ehano close beside him. [CONTINUED.]
Case of Suicide.
CAMimiDGifi, Mass., Oct. 4.—The autopsy on the body of Elliott F. Rogers, the instructor at Harvard, who was found dead in a laboratory at Harvard, shows it was a case of suicide, Medical Examiner Durrell having found a large quantity of poison in the stomach.
HARRY WRIGHT DEAD.
The Veteran Kttse Tiall Manager ami empire Passes Away. ATLANTIC CITY, Oct. 4.—Harry Wright, chfaf of umpires of the Na-t.ic** -AJn :m A^soeiatiwn of base ball ciubs, and manager of Hie Pmladelphia bepe ball club, died Te.-ter-a ii a a
1
tua/i....i i•:•. II• i.e'iia, uu eavs. -.if. Wright was taken ill in Philadelphia about 10 days ago, and thought the trip to the sea would be beneficial. He grew worse and an operation was deemed advisable by his physicians. He rallied for a time, then sank rapidly.
Mr. Wright has for many years been prominently connected with base ball, and has doua more, perphaps, than any ofciwvJ man to make the great national game.
HAKRT TV1UGIIT,
Years ago he was a player himself, and was manager and c..pin in of the famou.- ('inin at Red] Stockings in 1863, the year the team did not lose a game,
When the Cincinnati team
disbanded
he went to Boston taking many of the Cincinnati players with him. He had control of the Boston club for II years. I In 188-J he went to Philadelphia, and took charge of the club there. He managed that team until he retired from the active management of base ball clubs.
When he retired he was appointed chief of umpires in the National League, a position especially created for him, with $2,500 a year attached to it, as a murk of recognition for the honest, and faithful manner in which he had always discharged his duties, both as a player and manager, and, indirectly, as a life pension for the services he had rendered to base ball.
WESTERN OIL FIELDS.
The Standard Company Kxt.encliiig Operations in California. Los ANGKI.ES, Oct. 4.—James C. Harvey, local agent of the Standard Oil company, was interviewed in regard to the rumor that his principals were about to descend on Los Angeles and gobble up everything in the oil line in this section.
Harvey said: "I have received word from headquarters that our people will soon be in the field as purchasers of crude oil, and that aiTangements are now being made to provide facilities far moving it to points of consumption. This does not mean that the Standard Oil company is about to buy up oil territory or that it will lease oil lands or that it will be in any sense a producer of oil. It means simply that onr people have become convinced of the sufficient extent of the lopal oil iield and of its permanency and that they propose to engage in the shipping of oil to the points of consumption. "The Standard Oil company will not control anything here. It will be a bidder for crude oil, and tho latter will bring more nearly what it is worth than it does now." ".
LIGHTED MATCH IN POWDF.R.
Three Men Horribly l:iiigle«l at Lemont, a Suburb of Chicago. CHICAGO, Oct. 4.—At Lemont yesterday afteruoon three meu Were eating their dinners in the shade of a powder box on beorion 5 and began to smoke. One man thrust a lighted match in the crack of rho box, and exploded tC pounds of powder.
The meu wero blown £0 feet away and frightfully burned. une man, whose back was a sheet of flames, plunged into a pool of water. When drawn out the flesh from his back remained in the water. The ribs of another were bared, and none of the men can recover, They were taken to the county hospital.
»oue With the Money.
ZANESVILLK, O., Oct. 4.—A large number of old soldiers residing in Madison township are mourning the loss of their hard-earned dollars. Several weeks ago a man giving the name of P. D. Rockwell, representing himself as a comrade, solicited subscription for a soldiers' organ called the Cleveland Centennial. He offered in addition to the paper a set of knives, forks, spoons or spectacles. Rockwell has gone with the money aud neither paper nor premium have come.
Uxoricide Gibbeted.
JERSEY CITY, Oct. 4.—John Czech, otherwise known as Fish John, was executed in the county jail in this city yesterday for the murder of his wife on June 3. Jealousy was the motive of Czech's crime.
Kase ISall.
AT CLEVELAND— It E
Cleveland 3 0001210 x— 7 11 3 Baltimore 0 1000100 0— 3 5 3 •batteries—Cuppy and Ziminov HofTfer and. I larke. Umpires—McDonald ami Keefe.
Indications,
Fair \ve.i:her easterly winds no change in temper., a re.
MARKETS.
Review of thi
in and Uvvijtock Markets October 4.
J'i I llll-Jf.
Cattle—Prime, :.'•.!«£, 40 good. £4 0!)@ 4 25 good buu.-her.-.'. §1 0tH^4 bull.^ Jttags and ocwa, $i uu rough tat, 'ibdit'd lo fresh cow.i anil springers, $]«*
Hog.j Prime li,-. at and medium weights, £4 70(^1 75 ct.-imnou to fair, 45(i54 05
roughs,
1
$3 Oil. Sheep-
Ex port, 00@:» 10 extra, $3 lo good, £1 10 iV.ir, ID C.OJJIinon, 5uo(c:$l 00 spring lambs, 00(^4 50 vealcahes, ?(5 U(K&U 50. .ji Cincinnati.
Wheat—CTJ..J(£OHu. Corn—33@o5V£c. Cattle—Selected Imlehers, $4 15(rfH 75 fair to medium, $3 25(t§4 10 common, jW 25i 3 00. Hogs—Selected and prime butchers, $4 30@4 35 packing, $4 30(g4 35 common to rough, $3 50@4 05. Sheep—$1 00@4 00. Lambs—fcJ 5U(U!4 00.
Chicago.
Hogs—Selected butchers, |3 80@4 35 packers, $4 0U(f(t4 3*). Cattle Poor to choice steers, S3 (iO($5 25 others, $4 00@ 6 00 cows and bulls, $L 25@3 00. Sheep —?1 50(ffl3 35 lambs, $2 50($4 (50. ix'* sk" Xew l'ork.
A
a
Cattle—SU 75@o 50. Sheep—$1 75@3 50 lambs, $3 7o(jeb uo. iJLr
1895 OCTOBER. "1895
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917-019 ChestiratjSi Philadelphia.
ICxcursiou Atlanta Kxpo*:(ioii. Round trip ticket to Atlanta, Ga., account the Exposition now on sale via PeuuHylvaairt Lines at reduced rates.
Persons contemplating .a the South during the fall aud winter will find it to apply to ticket, agents Pennsylvania Lines for details. son to see at Greenfield is Ticket Agent W. H. Scott. '58tfdw
The author of Ik-lru's Kibies," has written a number of other tales that are quite as good as that popular story. One of them is
What Was He Made For
i\ delightful short story which Idll be published in this paper.
Other Splendid Stories by Famous Writers
Clieap iCxcursioiiB to the West. Bountiful harvests are reported from all sections of the west aud north-west, and an exceptionally favorable opportunity for home-seekers and those desiring a chwcge of location is offered by the have yed by the Is on h-Western
v'.
1 i.-
been ar .'••cketF lo. :h. -i
12
Pnrif
25c per month 5c per month
83.00 per year 4.00 per year
trip to comin profitable of the
The per-
with
if-.vf-r ca, we sold on 1 August 29th, September 10th and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and MichI igan North-western Iowa, Western MinnI esota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado,
Wyoming, Utah and a large number of other points. For full'information apply to agents of connecting line?, or address A. H. Waggoner, T. P. A. 7 Jackson Place, Indianapolis, Ind.
The ltocky .Mountains.
Along the line of the Northern Pacific Haiboad abound in large gam- Moose, I ri-t-r,jM-H.r, elk, moutain JIOJ.S, etc., can jet be found there. Tne true sportsman
1
is willing to go there for them. A little biol: cai.^d -•Kaiu/al Gtiiuc Pi eserves," publico by tbe Northern Pe.cutC Kailroad, will be sent upon receipt of four cents in stamps by Charles ii. t*e. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf
Indianapolis Division
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r,d li!) '•onrwt at, T'ohnnlnis tin Kast, and at Kidmioml ai.i aiul Springfield, and 5c.
ii 111 t! 1. I'\avc :-2 00:
Cambridge Cit at-17.20 a. i" U'lsliville, Mn-ibyville,
ind intoi'tn.'d-ate stations. AiviV 'ibrirtge City f!2 30 unci 16 35 P- ni. PH. WOOD, A. FORD,
G(r. rai Manager, Genval Passenger Ag»w
I'ITTSIIL-KOII, PENN'A.
Fur time cards, rates of fare, through ticket* ha-^ai^e checks and farther information re--)f 'iina the running of trains apply to any
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if
$500.00 GUARANTEE. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will n.t iniiav h.i:uis or fabric.
No Washboard neotled, Can use hard watc same as soft. Hnl Directions on everv package. An b-oz. p.ic Ita-v lor =, cts. or lor cts." *joIci by ret.'.il rrctirs everywhere.
VXhon t,u Hour Points to Nine, Have Your W.ishing on the Line."
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A •». P.\I I I' L'.M 1 J'.M 1 I'M Flag Stop.
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