Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 4 October 1895 — Page 4
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By W. CLARK RUSSELL.
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o5. lv t:-.» Author.]
Tim .•
r. :""d the twr. i.of i.aiixci uto my presence, and we de•sirier it a delusion cm the .i ,uie, a phi'-'itori of Jus im-
thing ovi cidod rodi (?i rii'.. liiTxij.., a." !l.
Kiiiiiy Uv't Jiunc ilie man
swooned after he saw the thing, letting r^o the wheel so that the ship came up into the wind, and it was impossible to conceive that a .substantial object could
have vanished in the time that elapsed between the man falling down and the flap of sails which had called my attention to the abandoned helm.
However, nothing was said about the matter aft. The sailors adopted the doctor's opinion, some viewir.™ the tbnjg as a "Dutchman's" dougc to got a "night in."
A few days later brought us into cold weather. This was followed by the ice and conflicts of the Horn. We drovo too far south, nnd for a week every afternoon wo hove to under a close reefed main topsail for fear of tlio ice throughout the long hours of antarctic blackness. We were in no temper to think of ghosts, and yet, though no one had delivered the news authoritatively, it had come by this wild, bleak time to bo known that Captain Griffiths and Miss Le ("rand were engaged. Mrs. Burney told me so one day in the cuddy, and with a wicked Hash of her dark eye wondered that people could think of making love with icebergs close at hand.
It was no business uf mine, and seemingly I gave the matter no heed, though I conlA leisure ami curiosity sometimes for an askant glance at tho captain and his beauty when they were at table or when the weather permitted the lady to como on deck, and their behavior left mo in very little doubt that lie was deeply in love with her, but •whether she was equally enamored of liim I could not guess.
We beat clear of the latitude of roaring gales blind with snow, and mountainous ice islands like cities of alabaster in ruins, and seas ridging in thunder and foam to the height of our mizzen top, and heading north blew tinder wide wings of studding sails toward the sun, every day sinking some southern stars out of sight, and every •night lifting above the sea line some gem of the heavens dear to northern •eyes.
I went below at eight bells on a Friday morning when we were two months "out" from Sydney, as I very well remember. The ship had then caught the first of the southeast trade wind. All was well when I left the deck. I was awakened by a hand violently shaking my shoulder. I sprang up and found fiobson. the second mate, standing beside my bunk. He was pale as the ghost the Dane h: described. "There's been murder done, sir," ho cried. "The captain's killed.
I stared ar him like a fool and echoed mechanic and dully: "Murderdone! Captain killed!" Then, collecting my wits, I ta::iMed into my clothes and rushed to tho captain's cabin, where I found the doctor and tho third mate examining poor Griffith's body. It was half past o'clock in the morning, and the daylight strong, but none of tho passengers was moving. Tho captain had been shvAiul to tho heart. The doctor said he had been killed by a single thrust. The bofsy was clothed in white drill trousers and a white linen shirt, which wii'i .slightly stained with blood where the knife had pierced it.
Who had done this thing? It was horrible, unprovoked murder! Throughout the ship the captain had been the most •popular man on board. Tho forecastle liking for him was as strong as sentiment of any sort can find expression in that part of a vessel. There had never been a murmur. Indeed I had never .sailed with a better crew. Not a man had deserted us at Sydney, and of the hands on board at least half had sailed •with the captain before. "We carefully searched the cabin, but there was nothing whatever to tell us that robbery had been committed. However, a ghastly, shocking murder had been perpetrated. The man on whoso skill and judgment had depended the safety of the ship and the many lives within her had been foully done to death in his sleep by some mysterious hand, and we determined at once upon a course.
First I sent for some of the best and most trustworthy seamen among the ,crew, and bringing them into the captain's cabin showed them the body. I then, in my capacity as commander of the vessel, authorized them to act as a .sort of detectives or policemen and to search every part of tho ship, and all the berths in tho steerage, and 'tween decks for any clew to the doer of the deed. It was arranged that tho cabins of tho first class passengers should be thoroughly overhauled by the second and third mates.
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this brought us to tho hour when the passengers arose, and tho ship was presently alive. The news swept from lip to lip magically. In all parts of tho ship I saw men and women talking, with e/ their faces pale with consternation and horror I had not the com age to break ©v tho news to Miss Le Grand and asked I ,- Iho doctor, a 'jiwer, genrlcmanl} man, to sfel-'Bpeak to her. 1 was on the poop looking SfSflfter tho ship when the doctor came £#tfrom the young lady's berth. pi®?! "How did she receive tho news?" I iV tasked. fife. "I wish it may not break her heart," -said lie gravely, ".-'lie was turned into
stone. Her staro of grief was dreadful —not the greatest actress could imagmo *uch a look. There'll bo no comforting Jier this Ride of England." "Doctor, could he have done it him-
"Oh, heaven, no, sir!" and ho explained by recalling the posturo of the Body and the situation of tho hands, not to mention tho absence of the woapon, "why it was impossible tho captain «honld hav/j.killed J.iimseJf.
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1 don know how it came about, but while I paced the deck waiting for the reports of the mates and the seamen and the passengers who were helping me in the search it entered my head to mix ip with this murder the specter, or vhost that lr\d. frightened the D°.:\e at fM liilu. r« tit, alouy VlUi t-tits memory of a sort of quarrel which I irnessed bnd happened between Captain (~riflll:iis and Miss .e Gia-n-:!. It Y.*aa a ::n-ro muddle of fancies at best, and yet they took a hold of my imagination. I think it was about a week before this murder that I had observed the coolness of what you might call a lovers' quarrel
betwixt the captain and his young lady, and without taking any further notice of it I quietly f-et the cause down to Mrs. Burner, who, as a thorough paced flirt, with line languishing black eyes and a sr.uey l-.-ngue, had often done her best to engage th-3 skipper in o::e ll: little as'tk-s which are as brimstone a^d tho undying worm to the jealous of their sex. Tho lovers had made it up soon after, and for two or three days previously had been as thick aud loverlike as'•v-.-ethea-'t -ought to be.
But what had the ghost that had
affrighted tho Dane to do with this murder? And how were Mrs. Burney's blandishments and the short lived quarrel betwixt the lovers to be associated with it? Xeveriii"less these matters ran in my head a- I walked the deck on the morning of that crime, and I thought aud thought, scarce knowing, however, in what direction imagination was leading.
The two mates, tho seamen and the passengers arrived with their reports, They had nothing to tell. The steward I and stewardess had searched with the I two mates in ilio saloon, or cuddy. EvI ery cabin had been ransacked, with the willing consent of its occupants. The forecastle and 'tween decks and steerage aud lazarette had been minutely overhauled. Every accessible part of the bowels of the ship had been visited to no purpose. No stowaway of any sort, no rag of evidence or weapon to supply a clew was discovered.
That afternoon we buried the body, and I took command of the ship. I saw nothing of Miss Le Grand for two days. She kept her cabin and was seen only by tho stewardess, who waited upon her. At the expiration of that time I received a message and went at once to her berth. I never could have figured so striking a change in a fine woman full of beauty in so short a time as I now beheld. The fire had died out of her eyes, and still there lurked something weird in the very spiritless and dull and vacant sadness of her gaze. Her cheeks were hollow. Under each eye rested a shadow as though it was cast by a green leaf.
Her first words were, "Cannot you find out who did it?" "No, madam. We have tried hard— harder for the captain's sake than had ho been another, for tho responsibility that rests upon the master of an ocean going vessel makes him an object of mighty significance, believe me, to us sailors." "But the person who killed him must bo in the ship." she cried in a voice that wanted much of .its old clear music. "One should suppose so, and ho is undoubtedly on board the ship, but we can't find him." "Did he commit suicide?" "No everybody is accounted for." "What motive," she exclaimed, with a sudden burst of desperate, passionate grief, that rung her like a fit from head to foot, "could any one have for killing Captain Griffiths? Ho was the gentlest, the kindest—oh, my heart, my heart!" and hiding her face sho rocked herself in her misery.
I tried my rough, seafaring best to soothe her. Certainly until this moment I never could have supposed her lovo for tho poor man was great.
The fear bred of this mysterious assassination lay in a dark and heavy shadow upon the ship. None of us, passengers or sailors, turned in of a night but with a fear of the secret bloody hand that had slain the captain making its? presence tragically known once more before the morning.
It happened one midnight, when we were something north of tho equator, in tho calms and stinging heat of the in-
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PIinitjed iL onc.c, dcc]) 'mil liard. tertropic latitude.1?, that, having como on deck to relieve the second mate and take charge of tho shin till 4 o'clock, I felt thirsty and returned to the cuddy for a drink of water. Of the three lamps ono only was alight and burned very dimly. There was no moonlight, but a-plenty of starshine, which showered a very rippling of spangled silver through the yawning casements of tho skylights.
Just as I returned the tumbler to tho rack whence I had removed it, tho door of Miss Le Grand's cabin was opened, and tho girl stopped forth. Sho was arrayed in white. Probably sho was attired in her bedclothes. She seemed to see me at once, for she emerged directly opposite, and I thought sho would speak or hastily rotiro. But after appearing to staro for a little while sho came to the tablo and leaned upon it with her left hand, sighing several times in the most heartbroken, manner, aijfl nowJE saw bv
the Jieip or the dun lampngnc tnai her right hand grasped a knife—the gleam of the blade caught my eye in a breath "Good gracious!" I cried 'to myself instantly, "the woman's asleep! This, then, is the ghost that frightened the Dane. Ann." mis.
TOO. \VJJS I NO
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ixili tvi'-J.i tt.'JiJ vUijJlUlLl I stood motionless, watching her. Preso?-t!v, taking h?"'*b-i".f! of? the raMe. tunu C. r. «. r. .. v. .'•.! rs wonderfully subtle, stealthy, sneaking gait, reminding one strangely of the folding motion of the snake, she made for the captain's cabin.
Now, that cabin, ever since Griffith's
death, I had occupied, and you may guess the sensations with which I followed the armed and murderous sleepwalker as she glided to what I must call my berth and noiselessly opened the door of it. The moment she was in tho cabin her motions grew amazingly swift. She stepped to the side of tho bunk I was in the habit of using, and lifting the knife plunged it once, deep and hard, then came away, so nimbly that it was with difficulty I made room for her in the doorway to pass. I heard licr breathe hard and fast as she .swept by, and I stood in the doorway of my cabin watching her till her figure disappeared in her own berth.
So, then, the mystery was at an end. Poor Captain Griffith's murderess was his adored sweetheart! She had killed him in her sleep and knew it not. In the blindness of slumber she had repeated the enormous tragedy, as sinless nevertheless as the angels who looked down and beheld her and pitied her.
I went on deck and sent for the doctor, to whom I communicated what I had seen, and he nt once r^pnired to Miss Lo Grand's berth, accompanied by the stewardess, and found her peacefully resting in her bunk. No knife was to be seen. However, next morning, the young lady being then on deck, veiled as sho always now went, and sitting in a retired part of the poop, the second mate, the doctor and the stewardess again thoroughly searched Miss Le Grand's berth, and they found in a hollow in the ship's side, a sort of scupper, in fact, or the porthole, a carving knife, rusted with old stains of blood. It had belonged to the ship, and it was a knife the steward had missed on the day tho captain was killed.
Since the whole ghastly tragedy was a matter of somnambulism all points of it were easily fitted by the doctor, who quickly understood that the knife had been taken by the poor girl in her sleep just as it had been murderously used. What horriblo demon governed her in her slumber who shall tell? For my part, I put it down to Mrs. Burney and a secret fever of jealousy which had operated in the poor soul when sense was suspended in her by slumber.
We tried to keep the thing secret, taking care to lock Miss Le Grand up every night without explaining our motive, but the passengers got wind of tho truth aud shrunk from her with horror. It came, in fact, to their waiting upon me in a body and insisting upon my immuring her in the steerage in company with ono of tho 'tween deck's passengers, a female who had offered her services as a nurse for hire. This action led to the poor girl herself finding out what had happened. God knows who told her or liow sho managed to discover it, but 'tis certain sho got to learn it was lier hand that in sleep had killed her lover, aud she went mad on the selfsame day of her understanding what she had done.
Nor did she ever recover her mind. She was landed mad and sent at onco to an asylum, where sho died, God rest her poor soul, exactly a year after the murder, passing away, in fact, at the very hour the deed was done, as I afterward heard.
THE END.
Treatment For UghtniDg Stroke. Place the subject on his back, head down and bent backward, arms folded over the head, and under no conditions raise the head from the ground or floor. Place beneath the chest a hard roll of clothing, with the shoulders declining slightly over it. Open the mouth, pull the tongue forward and wipe out saliva, loosen the clothing from neck to wraist, but do not leave the part exposed, as it is essential to keep the body warm. Kneel astride the subject's hips, with your hands well opened upon his chest, thumbs pointing toward each other and resting on the lower end of tho breast bone, little fingers upon the margin of the ribs and the other fingers dipping into tho spaces between the ribs. Place your elbows firmly against your hip and using your knees as a pivot press upward and inward toward the heart and lungs, throwing your weight slowly forward two or three seconds, until your faco almost touches that of your patient, ending with a sharp push which helps to jerk you back to your first position. At tho same time relax the pressure of your hands, so that tho ribs, springing back to their original position, will cause tho air to rush into tho subject's lungs. Pause for two or three seconds and then repeat these motions at the rate of about ten a minute, until your patient breathes naturally or until satisfied that lii'o is extinct. If there is no responso to your efforts persistently maintained for a lull hour, you may assume that life is gone.—Nov/York Press.
LIMA,
(_)., Oct. 5.—A sensation has
been created among business men by the wholesale swearing out of atlidavits charging grocers, druggists, dairymen, saloons, etc., with selling adulterated articles, 'lhere have been a large number of arrests, many pleading guilty and being heavily lined.
On llit First Trip.
VALPARAISO,
Ind., Oct.
Bice,
25,
ijescenn a sicrp in
5.—Fred
a Chicago and Erie brakeman,
iell between the ears at Hurlbert last night and was ground to pieces. This was his first trip.
CIIUUMJIH
mo'.yit a step in choosina a friend.
i8S»
COUNTERFEITERS CAUGHT.
Agents of he Government Secret Service Make a Haul. NEW YORK,
They were arrested at different times on Thursday. Most of them were on Stanton street at a barbershop, which seems to have been their rendezvous. For months the Italian and Hebrew quarters of the city have been flooded with spurious coin, and Detective George R. Barrg of the secret service, with four others, were detailed to trace the counterfeiters to the responsible parties. An accomplice, Angelo Posted, was finally induced to turn state's evidence.
The prisoners were secretly kept in custody until late in the afternoon, though some of them had been more than 24 hours in custody before arraignment, as the law requires that prisoners shall be arraigned that time after their arrest.
The counterfeit .coins and bills are of excellent workmanship. The bills are of the same make as the ones which were circulated in this city in 1893.
Tho officers recoveretl $150 in counterfeit i.oiu in bills, aud a quantUy
0f
Struck by a Passenger Train. OTTAWA, Ills., Oct. 5.—Corridon Phelps, for many years the leading 6tack buyer and shipper of this ciiy, and Henry J. Rigden, a painter, were struck by a passenger train on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad here and instantly killed. John Heiser, who lived close to the scene of the accident, was sick and sat at his window overlooking the track. Ho was found dead by his wife a few moments later, death evidently having been produced by the shock of witnessing the accident.
Will .Knter Haitian's Crew. TORONTO, Oct. 5.—A special to The Mail anu Empire from Winnipeg says: Haekctt. the Rat Portage oarsman, has decided to go to Toronto to enter Hanlan's crew as fourth man. The crew will be Banian, Durnan, Ilackett and Peterson. They leave for Austin next Monday.
Extent of the Kiot.
LONDON,
8psp«i§§i§p^ llfeSSIllllsfiiSg
Oct. 5.—Another big
haul of counterfeiters has been made by M_.r t'\o service. Six Italians were arraigned before United States Commissioner Alitfrernoon c'asjxed .. I nr.xi.i possession a number of counterfeit standard silver dollars and obligations of the United States in the form of silver certificates of the denominations of $5 of the issue of 1886, with the Grant head on, and signed by W. S. Rosecrans. register of the treasury, and E. H. Nebaker, treasurer of the United States. The prisoners are Angelo Posteri, Joseph Carlise, Charles Carlise, •Joseph Costello, Sarto Lazaro and Salvatore Macchione.
plaster paris, metal and
other material used in making spurious coin. The seizure was made in the barbershop of the two Carlises, who are supposed to be the wholesale dealers who sold the bad money to trusted agents for some 85 to 40 cents on the dollar and the latter passed it on trades people.
Lazaro, Macchione and Costelli were each held in §58,000 bail, and Posteri and Charles aud Joseph Carlise in $5,000 bail each for examination Oct. 19.
Cruisers Ordered to Cuba. MADRID, Oct. 5. The unarmored cruisers Alphonso XII and Marques Ensenada have been ordered to proceed to Cuba immediately. The Alphonso is a steel ship of 3,090 tons and 4,800 horsepower, carrying six 16-centimeter guns, 10 smaller guns and is provided with five torpedo tubes. The Marques Ensenada also is a steel ship, with a partialiy protected deck, tonnage 1,030 tons, horsepower 1,600, carries four 12centimeter guns and nine smaller guns. The speed of the Alphonso is 1? 1-2 knots and of the Ensenada 15 knots.
Oct. 5.—The Berlin corre
spondent of The Standard telegraphs to that paper that he learns privately that the number of Turks killedMonday in the riots of Constantinople was 48 and of Armenians 111. The number of wounded on both sides was several hundred.
Stone Fell on Him.
BEIJLAIHE,
O., Oct. 5.—At their coal
mine on McMahon creek, one mile west of this city, Otto Schahill, aged 20, son of Patrick Schahill, coal operator, was killed instantly by a fall of soaps tone.
TELEGRAPHiC TAPS.
Condensed News by Wire From Different Tarts of the Globe. Congressman Watson (of "Whore am I at?" notoriety) of Georgia was defeated for re-election by J. C. C. Black, Democrat.
Senator Squire has come off victorious in the suit involving the title to more than $1,000,000 worth of property at Seattle. \uir Edwardsville, Ala., Farmer Humphreys knocked Farmer Bryant into a caulron of boiling sirup. The murderer escaped.
Koi!,inglias been hoard from Dr. Donaldson. smith's African expedition si.'iee last December, ami there is much anxiety among' scJ.'Ut-ists about it. 'K'%' 1 iniicai ions, (Jenerally loudy w-)tlier possibly light local showers in southwest poition easterly v»ind:?.
THE MARKETS.
liuvicvi' of tlir :iti«1 Livestock ."Markets I' OI- Or 5
1'jl I jslill If.
-Cal le—Prime, t« t,ood, $1 00^ 4 good butchers7, t-1 bulls, stags and cows, 1 Uu rough lai,
ri.\
1 resli cows and springers, $1,
(to Hi. Hogs— L'rnne light and medium weights, I common to iair, !p-l Uoui. 1 J5 loughs, (SOux Oil. fihecp— Import, *vi !-i 10 extra, 0U((/:{ 10 good, ?i 40 lair, $1 f)0(fi^ 40 coniliion, rjt.'isft&Sl 00 spring lambs, 00(O(4 50 veal calves, OUC^O 5u.
Cinriiuiiit i.
Wheat—()8@()S)j/yc. Corn—33@iJGc. Cattle—Selected butchers, $4^00(34 75 fair to medium, f:$ !25@4 00 common, &5 i.T j) 00. ogs—Selected and prime butch* $4 g5§)4 85 packing, $4 20&4 25 comn to rough, $.J 40($4 00. Sheep—$1 00@ii .v Lambs—W 50(o*4 00. 'ft
Chicago.
Hogs—Selected butchers, $3 75@4 30 packers, $3 8U©4 25. Cattle Poor to choico steers, $3 25(^5 35 others, $4 00@ 5 00 cows and bulls, $1 25@3 ()0. Sheep —$1 50@3 35 lambs, $2 50($4 60.
Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th.
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1895 0CT0BEE. 1895
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The Record Publishing Co., 917-lM!) CheslnutjSt.
Philadelphia.
Excursion Atlanta Exposition.
Round trip ticket to Atlanta, CxR., account the Exposition now on sale via Pennsylvania Lines at reduced rates. Persons contemplating .a trip to the South during the coming fall and winter will find it profitable to apply to ticket agents of the Pennsylvania Lines for details. The person to see at Greenfield is Ticket Agent W. H.
Scott. 38tfdw
John Habberton
The author of "Helen's Fabies," lias written a number of otlier tales that are quite as good as that popular story. One of them is
What Was He Made For
(V delightful short story which Idll be published in this paper.
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Pennsylvania's Foremost Newspaper.
Daily Circulation
(iermantmvn" Coutreville Ricfmond... N'
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Cheap Excursions fto the West. I Bountiful harvests Hre reported from all sections of the west and north-west, and an exceptionally favorable opportunity for home-seekers and those desiring a change of location is offered by the series ui 1tiLe excursions wliicii have been arranged by the North-Western
-U. for these exi arsior.s, with -j. Iliiiiti, vvilj. uw wild on August 29th, September 10th and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan North-western Iowa, Western Minnesota, 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 Itaiiioau abound in large ganu-. Moose, dri-r, bear, elk, montain liot, tic., can vet be found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for them. A little ,..U ca'led Natural Game 1 reserves," puU..sl:e-! by the Northern I neiuc Kailruiii, will be sent upon receipt of tour cents .stamps by Charles S. ce. Gen'3 Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf
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Paris ...
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'Waver 1 III
General Manager, VI
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ennsulvania jnRR~:
Schedule of Passenger Tras.it.-v0 I •_ jej.
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,1 Flag .Stop, "•'.'1 coivieet. at. ColumV.-.s 1. 1 hf KMM, and it Richmoml 6 nia aud Kpi ingtieWl, and io.l 1 j11t i. Ii-nii lenvo (.'ambridiro City ot -17.20 a.
GO 11 "i. !'*r Ku^hville, Shelby villi'. and intermffliata stations.
AN
..bridge City 112-30 and t6 35 1». m. 1 I-KI'H WOOD, U. A. roitn,
Ginsral
Passenger AJOU
-:9-0.")-R. riTT.suuimu, PKX.N'A. For time cards, rates or faro, through tickets, r.-ii.'"a"e checks and further in formation re-irn'-dins the rnnninsr of trains apply to aaj ot tna famutylvuuia iautts.
1 ii h.in.is or fabric.
No W.islibnai-.i ni'cili'd, can use hard watei same as soft. i:l! 1' iv ii--ns on every package. Ai
8-0,:.
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Other Splendid Stories by Famous Writers I In Preparation
p.u U.iCt' tor 1 cN o: !or cts. Sold by rot.iiii "ocor everywhere. "When Ilio Hour OMii I-'cints to Nine, Efcw
Have Your VV.ish -, -, on the Line." ,(.
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