Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 May 1894 — Page 2
Zadies will find the Handsomest Stock of
SPRING GOODS
In the city at ISoston Millinery
Mf'm
f-
LOVE OR W10NEY;
One Door East of Postoffice.
AMU BffllB, Prop .MR3. STRATTON, Trimmer.
« a p lace 1 last t lass rust ewe
is stamped in the best watch cases made. 1c is the trade mark of the Keystone Watch Case Company, ol Philadelphia, the oldest, largest and bestknown factory in the world— 'i 500 employees,capacitysooo cases daily. Its products are .sold by all jewelers. It makes the celebrated jfas. Boss Filled IVatch Cases, now fitted with the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled oft the case—the
Pip
ih 3® Yfrit
isSs Ask your jeweler for pamphlet.
J M r i . M
m
11
m'&mi
o*
Ll!
* c
S PER CENT,
i
CALL OX
'jumii
11 nett*
No. 22 Soulti JacKson Street,
th
GREENCASTLE, IND.
li
Oas Filli ami Pliig
I will attend to nil orders for gas fitting and plumbing promptly. All work thoroughly tested and Warranted to Give Satisfaction And prices very low. Give me a call. FRED. WEIII.
URELY a vegetable compound, made entirely of roots and herbs
P„
1 gathered from the forests of Georgia, and has been used by millions «of people with the best results. It
Tie
CURES
AH manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil 0:1 your i.ose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism,
yy .«!!* atarrh and
‘ ' SKIN * OWCER 0*" Treatise on Blood and Pkin Diseases mail'd j J If* fere fcwiKr setciric Co., Atlmta, Ua.
■r. (J. OVERSTREET 0. K. OVERSTREET
oyERsm^rafflEET,
*1 attention given to preservinB the
teeth. Offiee in 'Viihamson Uloch, Ese i? .eite Firft Katlonal Berk
at on —r-- 1 -
TJeJyc, Neale. Veterinary Snrpn.
iduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, •a^niher of the Ontario Veterinary MediT,ociety. All diseases of domesticaninials , fully treated. Otflce at Cooper Brothere’
■» v \t’ry etatile, Oreeneaatle, Ind. All calls,
.tty and night, promptly attended. Hring
KJxrgjry a specialty. OP t
Hi s Ta*e A- Mathias, A ttys. Sheriff’s Sale.
decree to Putnam
E.
print ipt ] f , virtue of a certified copy of a 1 Thi* e directed from the Clerk of the „ e„ 1 ,Tuit Court, ill a cause wherein Anna h.
the SOU >th u p| a j n titf, and William A. Mchadden. Orlenns. :« H. McFadden, James H. Smith, C harles
Thin Prudence 8. Alcott. NN aflhington t. . 4 and The Western Improvement < om-
service to uf WeiJt Muncie, Indiana, are defend-
linc of sU. - -
the : i win pap 09 ^ 10 P ubIic 8ale t0 the hiKhe8t
rjidder, on
^«H0SDAY. THE TWENTY-FIRST DAY OF
Fuj*l*rr < dicatloiP*’'
a the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 m. of said day, at the door of the ■ofPutnam county, Indiana, the
for a term not exceed!
r 1
m r
‘iEO. L.C.„ veareo'f the following described rei A D « T v situated in Putnam county, S.atc of
tt “• Al “ Aja, to-wit:
H—The east half of lot number six l« in Janies n .. Uninu’s addition to the town of Bain-
X Ci dji;e f in Putnam county, Indiana.
o n, A PERILOUS SECRET.
BY CHARI.Fa r.FATIF, Author of ‘Tut Yourseif in II.s n.ice,"
etc., etc., etc.
And so at last the law ho had so dreaded raised what seemed a bag of hones; nothing left on him but one boot and fragments of a shirt, ghastly, bleeding. covered with bruises, insensible, and to all ajipenranec dead. After a short consultation, they carried him, liv Colonel Clifford's order, to the l>un Cow, where I.ncy. it may be remembered, was awaiting Ids trumil>hant return.
CllAI’TKtt X-XVt.
STUANOE TX'KXs.
And yet tirs catastrophe roseout of a mistake. When the detective asked Jem Davies to watehthe lawn,he never suspected that the clergyman was the villain who had been concerned in that explosion. But Davies, a man of few ideas and full of his own wrong, took for granted, as such minds will, that the policeman would not have spoken to him if this had not been hi.i affair; so he and his fellows gathered about the steps alid watched the drawing-room. They caught a glimpse of Monckton, but that only puzzled them. II is appearance was inconsistent wit 1 ', theonty description they had got- in fact opposed to it. It was (trace Clifford's denunciation. trumpet-tongued, that let loose savage justice on the villain. Never was a woman's voice so fatal, or so swift to slay. She would have undone her work. The fury she had launched she could not recall. -Vs for Bartley, words can hardly describe Ids abject terror. He crouched, he shivered. he moaned, he almost swooned: and long after it was all over lie was found crouched in a corner of the little room, and Ids very reason appeared to he shaken. Judge Lynch had parsed him, but too near. The freezing shadow of Retribution chilled him. Colonel Clifford looked at him with contemptuous pity, and sent him home with John linker in a close carriage.
sus-
Luey Monckton was in the parlor of the Dun Cow waiting for her master. The detectives and some out-door ser-
vants of Cliffor 1 Hall bnvg! t a hurt ladder and paill v-'i s. and ■oiai tld:!'.’ I.ncy saw. but did not suspect the truth. They hail a murmured ceu-ult ition with tke landlady. During this Mark Waddy came down, and there v, .ts>omc more whispering, and soon the h dten d body w as taken up to Mark Waddy's room and deposited on his bed. The detectives retired to consult, and Watldv had to break the calamity to Mrs. Monckton. lied 1 / this as well as he could: hot it lilt ' matters how such blows are struck, tier agony was great, and greati r win n she saw him. for she resisted entirely all attempts to keep her from him. She installed herself at once as his nurse, and Mark IVaddy re-
tired to a garret.
A surgeon i ante by Colonel Clifford's order and examined Monekton's bruised body, and shook his head. He reported that there w ere no bones broken, but there were pro! ably grave internal injuries. These, however, he could not specify at present, since there was no sensibility m the body; so pressure on the injured parts elicited nogroans. He prescribed egg and brand.', in small quantities, and showed Mrs. Monckton how to administer it to a patient in that
desperate condition.
His last word was in private to Wnddy. ‘Tf he ever speaks again, or even groans aloud, send for me. Otherwise ” and he shrugged his shoulders. Some hours afterward Colonel Clifford called as a magistrate to see if (lie suffer laid any deposition to make. But he was mute, and his eyes lixed. As Colonel Clifford returned, one of the detectives accosted him and asked him for a warrant to arrest him. “Not in his present condition.” said Colonel Clifford, rather superciliously. “And pray, sir, why did not you interfere sooner and prevent this lawless
act V”
"Well. sir. unfortunately we were on
the other side of the house.”
Exactly; you had orders to be in one place, so you must lie in another. See the consequence. The honest men have put themselves in the wrong, and this fellow in the right. He will die a sort of victim, w ith his guilt suspected only,
not proved.”
Having thus snubbed the Force, the old soldier turned his hack on them and went home, where Grace met him. all anxiety, and received his report. She implored him not to proceed am further aga.hst the iii.in. itnti declared she should tly the country rather than go into a court of law as w itness against
him.
“Humph!” said the Colonel: “but you are the mil v w it ness.” “All the better for him,” said she; “then he will die in peace. My tongue has killed the man once; it shall never kill him again.” About six next morning Monckton beckoned Lucy. She came eagerly to him: he w hispered toiler, “Can you keep a sei rel'r” “You know I can,” said she. “Then never let any one know I have spoken.” “No, dear, never. Why?” “1 dread the law more than death;” and he shuddered all over. “Save me from the law.” “Leonard. I will,” said she. “Leave that to me.” She wired for Mr. Middleton as soon
The next day there was no change in the patient. He never spoke to anybody, except a word or two to Lucy, m a whisper, when they wen* quite alone. In the afternoon down came Lawyer Middleton. Lucv told him what he knew, but Monckton would not speak, even to him. He had to get hold of Wiuldy before he understood the whole
case.
Waddy was in Monekton's secret, and, indeed, in everybody's, lit* knew it was folly to deceive your lawyer, so he was frank. Mr. Middleton learned Ids
j client's guilt and danger, but also that
I his enemier l ' 1 '’* ! 4 '
K. K. Poxev'Hen r »o much thereof as may be *u D
O. it. K., Mobile,.,p.arKe unhi decree, . in | ttl T 8 * ‘f."'!
, PL. will be made without reliel
jJ|or appraisement laws
For sale, a
at office ol' Sm D-
...men —
■wtil be
ANCI9 M. GLIDEWKLL, Sheriff of Putnam County.
oveicl
. tin* mnnv tor tv* —
his enemies had flaws in their armor. The lirst shot he tired w as to get warrants out against a dozen miners, Jem Davies included, fora murderous assault; but he made no arrests, he only summoned. So one or two took fright and tied. Middleton had counted on that, and it made the ease worse for those that remained. Then, bv means of friends in Derby, he worked the
I’ress.
An article appeared headed. “Our Savages." It related with righteous indignation how Mr. Bartley's minersAad
burned the dead body of a miner peeled of having tired the mine, and put ids ow n life in jeopardy as well as those of others; and then, not content with that monstrous act. had fallen upon and beaten to deatli a gentleman in whom they thought they detected a resemblance to some person who hail been, or was suspected of being that miner’s accomplice; "but so far from that,"said the writer, “we are now informed, on sure authority, that the gentleman in question is a large and w ealthy landed proprietor, quite beyond any temptation to crime or dishonesty, and had actually visited this part of the world only In the character of a peacemaker, and to discharge a very delicate commission, which it would not be our business to publish, even if the details had been
confided to us.”
The article concluded with a hope that these monsters “would he taught that even if they were below the standard of humanity they were nut above
tbe law.”
Middleton attended tbe summonses, gave his name and address, and informed the magistrate that his client was a large landed proprietor, and it looked like a case of mistaken identity. His client was actuallydyingof his injuries, but his wife hoped for justice. But the detectives had taken care to be present, and so they put in their word. They said that they were prepared to prove, at a proper time, that the wounded man was really the person who had been heard by Mrs. Walter Clifford to bribe Ben Burnley to lire the
mine.
“We have nothing to do with that now,” said the magistrate. “One thing at a time, please. 1 cannot let these people murder a convicted felon, far less a suspected criminal that lias not been tried. The wounded man proceeds. according to law. through a respectable attorney. These men, whom you are virtually defending, have taken the law into their own hands. Are your w itnesses here. Mr. Middleton?” “Not at present, and when I was interrupted, I was about to ask your worship to grant me an adjournment for that purpose. It will not be a great hardship to the accused, since we proceed by summons. I fear 1 have been too lenient, for two or three of them have absconded since the summons was served.” "1 am not surprised at that,” said the magistrate; “however, you know your own business." Then the police applied for a warrant of arrest against Monckton. “Oh!” cried Middleton, with the air of a man thoroughly shocked and scandal-
ized.
“Certainly not.” said the magistrate; “I shall not disturbthecourse of justice; there is not even an <x park ease against this gentleman at present. Such an application must he supported by a witness, and a disinterested om*.” So all Hie parties retired crest-fallen except Mr. Middleton; as for him. he was imitating a small hut ingenious specimen of nature—the cuttle-fish. This little creature, when pursued by its enemies, discharges an inky fluid w hich obscures tiie water all around, and then it starts off and escapes. One dark night, at two o'clock in the morning, there came to the door of tin* Dun Cow an invalid carriage, or rather i innilnis, with a spring-bed and every convenience. The wheels were covered thick with India-rubber: relays had been provided, and Monckton and Ids party roll" I along day and night to Liverpool. The detectives followed, six hours later, and traced them to Liverpool very cleverly, and. with the assistance of the police, raked the town for them, and got all the great steamers watched, especially those that were bound westward, (in! Hut their bird was at sea. in a Liverpool merchant's own steamboat, hired lora two months’ trip. The pursuers found this out too, but a fortnight too late. “it's no go. Hi 11."said one to the other. “There's a lawyer and a pot of money against us. Let it sleep awhile.” The steamboat coasted England in beautiful weath'T; the sick man began to rt vivo, and to eat a little, and to talk a little, anil to suffer a good deal at times. Before they had been long at sea Mr. Middleton had a eonfalential conversation with Mrs. Monckton. lie told her he had been very secret w ith her for her good. “1 saw.” sa : d he.“this Monckton had no deep regard for von. and was capable of turning you adrift in prosperity; and 1 knew that if l told
installed him m a grand sml of apartments as an invalid, and let nobody
come near him. Waddy was dismissed w ith a munificent present, and could be trusted to hold his tongue. By the advice of Middleton, not a single servant w as dismissed, and so no enemies were made. The family lawyer and steward were also retained, and. in short, all conversation was avoided. In a month or two the new proprietor began to improve in health, and drive about tiis own grounds, or be rowed on his lake,
lying on soft beds.
But in the fifth month of his resi-
vou everything ynti would let it out to liim. and tempt him to piny the villain lint the time is come Hmt 1 niustspeak. in justice to you both. That estafe he left your son’ half in joke is virtually his. Finn teen years ago. when he last looked intothe matter, therein rceleven lives between it and him: hut. strange to say. whilst he was at Portland the young lives went one after the other, ind there were reallv onlyiiveleftwhen he made that will. Now comes the extraordinary part; a fortnight ago three of those lives perished inasinglesteamboat accident on the Clyde: that lo>t a woman of eighty-two and a man of ninety be! v.<-f-n j'in;i hurd-uiei and the estate. The lady was related to the persons who were drowned, and she has since died: she had been long ailing.and it is believed that the .'.hook was too much for her. Thesurvivoristlieactual proprietor, old ('arrutliers;but I am the London agent to his solicitor, and he was reported to me to be m exhtniix the very day before I left London to join you. U’e shall run into a port near the place, and you will not land; but I shall, and obtain precise information. In the meantime, mind, your husband's name is Cairuthers. Aiiy communication from me will be to Mrs.('arrutliers. and you will tell that man ns much, or as little, as you think proper: if you make any disclosure, give yourself all the credit you can: say you shall take him to his own house under a new name, and shield him against all pursuers. As for me, I tell you plainly, my great hope is that lie wifi not live long enough to turn you adrift and disinherit your boy.” To cut short for the present this extraordinary part of our storv. Lewis Carruthers. alias Leonard Monckton, entered a fine house and took possession of eleven thousand acres or hilly pasture, and the undivided moiety of it lake brimful of lish. He accounted for his change of name by the fit ors Carruthers, deceased, had shown him. Therein lie did his best to lie, but his present vein of luck turned it into the truth. Old Can’iithers had become so peevish that all his relations disliked him. and lie disliked them. So he left his personal estate to his heir-at-law simply because lie had never seen him. The personality was very large. The house was full of pictures, and China, and cabinets, etc. There was a large balance at the banker's, a heavy fall of timber not paid for. rents due.’ and as many as two thousand four hundred sheen upon that hill, which the old fellow bad kept in Ids own hands. So, when the new proprietor took possession as Carruthers nobody wassurnrised, thoiurh niqny vere.lui'iotss,. Lucv
deuce, local pains seized him, and lie began to waste. For some time the
precise nature of the disorder was cbMHire: but at last a rising surgeon declared it to be an abscess in the intestines (caused, no doubt, by external
violence).
By degrees the patient became unable to take solid food, and the drain upon his system was too great for a mere mucilaginous diet to sustain him. Wasted to the bone, and yellow as a guinea, he presented a pitiable spectacle, and would gladly have exchanged Ids fir-e house and pictures, his heathery hills dotted with sheep, and Ids glassy lake full of spotted trout, for it ragged Irishman's bowl of potatoesani Lis mug of buttermilk, and ids stomach.
CUAFTER XXVII. CURTAIN.
Striking incidents will draw the writer: but we know that onr readers would rather hear about the characters they can respect. It seems, however, to lie a rule in life, and in fiction, that interest Hags when trouble ceases. Now the troubles of our good people were pretty well over, and we will put it to tin* reader w hether they had not enough Grace Clifford made an earnest re-
KEARSARGE'S CHAIN ARMOR.
How It Was Afterward Used to Protect m (ierman Man-of-War. The history of the Kearsarge has been so many times told, says the New York Herald, that it seems like ‘’taking owls to Athens” to attempt to say anything about her. There is, however, an item of history connected with this famous vessel which, so far as I am aware, has never appeared in print. A number of years ago while stopping in a little mountain town in Germany 1 became acquainted with Chief Engineer A. Gebhardsbauer, of the imperial German navy, lie recalled to me that when the Kearsarge fought the Alabama off Cherbourg anchor chains had been placed on both sides of the Kearsarge in order to better protect the boiler and engines from the enemy’s fire. A long time after the battle, when the Kearsarge was lying off the Azores islands, the anchor chains which had done such good service were delivered over to the care of the United States consul at Fayal. They remained in the consular store house until July,
1ST0.
At this time, just at the outbreak of the Franco-German war, the German
renutoa bl.l.iir.vment*. Washington, May a.—The pension! d U burse me uts for ten months of tha | fiscal year amount to $117,30A, 1M. against 9183,678,343 for the same peri*d4 last year.
A Foreign Prophecy.
London, April 30.—British papers s««; danger to the American republic in thaj commonweal movement. A war be-; tAeen capital and labor is prophesied.:^
V r
The Strike Ended.
St. Paul, Minn., May ‘A —Through ( the efforts of the business merf of tltta, city and Minneapolis the Great Nortaeru railway strike has been settleiL
It is -aid that Maryland produces one third ' of the world's supply of oysters.
In the British Museum there is a collection of musical compositions, both vocal and Instrumental, attributed to Henry.
They Want Names.
The Russell Art Publishing Co., of 92S Arch Street, Philadelphia, desire the names atd address of a few people in every town who are interested in works of art, and to securs I em they offer to send free, “Cupid Guides the Boat," a superbly executed water color picture, size 10 x 13 inches, suitable for fram* ing. and sixteen other pictures about same
size, in colors, to any one sending them at
wooden 'frigate'Arcom't arrived at Fa- ° ce ‘ he and a,Wre88 of tl ten pe , r80 " 8
quest to rolonel Clifford and her father never to tell Walter he had been suspected of bigamy. “Let others say that circumstances arc alw ays to be believed and character not to he trusted; but 1, at least, had no right to believe certificates and things against my Walter's honor and his love. Hide mv'fault from him. not for my sake hut for his; perhaps when we are both old people 1 may
tell him.”
This was Grace Clifford's petition, and need we say she prevailed? Walter Clifford recovered under his
wife's care, ami the house was so large that Colonel Clifford easily persuaded his son and daughter-in-law to make it their home. Hope had also two rooms in it. and came there when he chose: lie was always welcome; but he was alone again, so'to speak, and not quite forty years of age, and he was ambitious. He began to nse in the world, whilst our younger characters, contented with their happiness and position, remained
yal. The Areona was one of the old type of wooden war vessels. Mr. Gebhardsbauer, who was chief engineer of the Areona, was ordered by her commander to rig up something to afford protection for her engine in ease the Areona should fall in with a French ship, it being the intention to proceed
to Germany at once.
In a search for material in the storehouse of Mr. Dabney, the L'nited States consul, he found the old anchor chains of the Kearsarge and immediately secured them. They were placed on the Areona exactly as they had been on the Kearsarge, and in a short time she was ready and sailed for the Father-
land.
The Areona met with neither adven-
ladmiror. of line picturesi together with alx^ two-cent stamps to cover expense ofmailinf etc. The regular price of these pictures ii 9 $1.00, but they can all bo secured free by any nerson forwarding the names and stamps
promptly.
Note—The editor of this paper has :ilre»dv received copies of aliove pictures and consi Jers them really “Gems of Art.” 412^
Walsingham, England, claims to be the luaithiest place iu the world.
KnifjhfH of the Maccabees.
The State Commander writes us from Lin-
coln, Neb., ns follows: After trying other
medicines for what seemed
to he a very ub-
-lina’.e cough in uur two children we trie/?. Dr. King's New Discovery and at the end ot two days the cough entirely left them. We will not be without it hereafter, as our expcrience proves that it cures where all other remedies fill."—Signed K. W. Stevens, State Com.—Why not give this great medicines trial, ns it is guaranteed and trial bottles are
ture nor trouble of any kind on her | f ree Albert Allen’s Drug Store. , , , , i • i • Regular sue 53c, and fl.00. homeward voyage, but she remained m
service, and tin* chains were kept on ] Every year 23.000 tons of candy are con-
her until the close of the war, after-' sumed in the United States,
ward beinjr tnrncd over to the navyyard at Kiel as old iron. They were
It Mat/ Dans Much for Von. c Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, 111. writes that
still there in ,,n,l several indents' Mv. f reu .uliter, oi irving, ill. writes mat still tin n in 13 s, amt siverat muc nts. h e had a Severe Kidney trouble for many made by the shot from the Alabama years, with severe pains in his back and alsi
could still be seen in them.
1 v i . , vsiiii nsjit. it piaiiizi in 11 i .i • ■ ci v- r» <a ti vi cai du tli.it his bladder was affected. He tried many
without any goiH
1 he loff book of tile Kearsarge uoes result. About a year ago he began use of
.1. ... not show that the chains rvere disposed !^ e trie Bitters anil found relief at onc^ stationary. Master of a great mil..*.' of as I have stated. No mention what- ® “.HKLfney'Snd L. ver“\ ruu'bliT'an d° X able HOW to curry out his in\options, I ever j s ma< j0 of the disposition made 1 Kives almost instant relief. Oue tria will
member of several .scientific associa-1
eu'.?i,p s!io\\T>waiin h .T pphlic'and’ i-mL state department contain nothing on
of them. Further, the records of the ; r.^houle' 1 At I'ltnV^L
nent maiujic was consulted on great public works, and if In* lives will be one of tin* great lights of science in this island, lie is great on electricity, especially on the application of natural forces to* the
urge bottle. At Albert Allen's Drug Store. The w ills of B ibylon were 350 high and 10i_
the subject.
The facts remain, nevertheless, and . feet at thl ' hl,se - niuv that the old ship has gone it B/tcMen’s Arnica Sa/itk would seem highly proper that every- ] The blMt 9llv( . in thc world forCuU , Brui.es, thin" in the way of relics of her ( Sores. Ulcers, Suit Rheum, Fever 8ore«, Tet^
llm cith's'lLu allow ^vSnl'^imi ^ould be in the possession ,./ this gov-11-, ^ n PP£« 8 " 0 d8 : ^^'“^Uv^r’cu^ to run past them and not work a silliflc ernment * I ortugal courteously re- Piles, or no pay required. It i* guaranteed i . • . , . i, . i .. .1 ♦«iv*«..,l rwim ••T/.i.<w r I'. >m M . . f ‘O 1T1 V*» nf* F ! I‘<lf • *- — C
electric light. But he goes fiirlhcr than (urned the gun “Long Tom” of the r *
that. lit* ridicules thc idea that it is i brig Armstrong and Germany would i A H)ert*AUen. ‘ lySi 3 ^
beyond the resources of science to util-j undoubtedly do the same with the) iz.c thousands of millions of tons ot armor of the Kearsarge.
water that are raised twenty-one feet
SMUGGLING ENCOURAGED. Customi oniuiil* Who Are Too Lazy to
twice in cvcrv twenty-fourliours by the tides. It is thc skill to apply the force that is needed: not the force itself, which exceeds thaL of all tin* steam-en-gines in the nation. And lie says that
the great scientific foihle of the'day is passing through the custom house is
Headquarters for butter, eggs, and all kinds of country produce, at Broadstreet & Son’s. 3t2
Ilxumiiin Travelers* Trunks.
One of the most humorous phases of j
IIA II. II .1 F TIME TABLE'
the neglect of natural forces which are connected with the fact that itsofllc'.als
SfsiJisS'S!. ; t* ”7 » u r m r' 1‘i'ii'tvi' , u „l t'.ir n.,il. .Vl.ii'l,not t„ f, ‘. r i tlu ;, v '.'P'
last forever. He imnlores capital science to work in this question.
BIG FOUR.
•iii.l writer in the Outlook says that she Kis , had bought a dress pattern of lodcn, a 1
11
various scliemes for using tin* tides in', sort of woolen goods made only in the the creation of motive power will doubt- Tyrol, and packed it in the top of her t
less come before the world in a more trun k for the in pcctioa of the Italian " Diny'^UauPc^ceut Hundiv"’• 12:4# “• appr(.priaechann.d than a work of he- ; offidaK ()n , after anotho-the trunks j No ^connecU thnfug1, n to“ } Cincinnati, Lon. If he SU, (.veils U Mill be a glon- j uuU)l ., ce(1 cl ,, se(1 affain unt n n-velund. Dayton nml Benton Harbor. No! oils, as it must bea difiicult. adnevu-1 UIIUH 1 1 ‘i 11 1 ‘ag-am unm • 1M „„4V«» i ™—
18, S. W. Limited . s, Mall 10, Nigh* Express
WEST.
... 8:45 a. m. ...1:52 p. ra. . 5:15 p. m. ... 2:33 a. m*
No, 9, Mail .
•• 17 8. W. LiraiteJ... .
Mai toon Local,
rht I
. 8:45 a. m. . 12:44 p. m. 6:34 p. m.
ment.
His society is
valued
grounds; his well stored mind, his powers of conversation, and his lineappearunce. make him extremely welcome at all the tables in the country; he also accompanies his daughter with the violin, and. as they play beauties together, not difficulties, they ravish the soul and interrupt tin* torture whose instrument
the pianoforte generally is.
Bartley is a man witli beautiful silvery hair and heard; hecultivates.nurses, and tends fruit-trees and (lowers with a love little short of paternal. Thissentiment. and tin* contemplation of nature, have changed the whole expression of his face: it is wonderfully Benevolent and sweet, but with a touch of weakness about the lips. Some of the rough fellows about the place call him a “softy,” but that is much too strong a word; no doubt he is confused in Ills
nothin;- was left but an unpretending social Bttle straw one which had been over-
18, coaches to Hu Halo and sleepers to New
looked.
"You have nothing in it—nothing, signora?” asked the officer. "Yes, I have,” was my unexpected reply. "It is just here on top." I opened the trunk and displayed my uncut goods. The train whistled, officials grunted, people jostled past us and glared at me. I knew he wanted to say: "Why do you bother me by declaring it?” lie wrenched the loden out of thc trunk and started toward the inner office, bidding me follow. There I was greeted by another official in these words, spoken with excitement and much gesticulation: “How is this? Just now at the last
ideas! Ind lie reads all the great Ameri-! ™ onu : nt , a . ml . thc truiu rL ‘ a,1 >' to Ko*
...i i: .. t ... .* •. ■ 1 I 1« t m i iz >
can publications about fruit and tioweis. and executes their iustruciions witli tact and skill. Where lie breaks down—and who would believe this?—is in the trade department. Let him sue-
liow is this?
One man was weighing the goods, another poising a pen in his hand,and half a dozen looking on. Why is this?" repeated the chief of-
trees weighed down to the ground with choice fruit; h*t him produce enormous cherries by grafting, and gigantic nectarines upon his sunny wall, and acres of strawberries too large for the mouth. After that they may all rot where they grow; In* troubles his head no more. This is more than his old friend Hone can stand; he interferes, and sends tne fruit to market, and fills great casks with superlative cider and perry, and keeps the account square, with a little help from Mrs. Easton, wlio lias returned to her old master, and is a firm but
kind mother l<> him.
Grace Clifford for some time could not begot to visit him. Ferhaps she is one of those ladies who cannot get over personal violence: he had handled her roughly, to keep her from going to her father's help. After all, there may have been other rca'ons; it is n d so easy to Penetiate all the reivsscs of the female Iieart. One thing is ccrta n; si:-* would not go near him for months; but when bhe did go with her father—and he had
CONTINUED NEXT WEEK
very last moment?" ‘‘Perhaps it would have been better if I bad n.rt declared it at all,” I naiil, in my suavest tones. "But to come at the last moment.” “Surely it is not for my pleasure, Mr. Officer, that you ransacked my trunks,” I reminded him. Then he looked at me with the air of childlike helplessness so characteristic of Italians. “But there is no time now to look over your other baggage and see what else you have.” I laughed. "I put this on top and declared it,” I said. “There is nothing else, I assure you. But bo tranquil; next time I pass the frontier 1 will smuggle everything and declare nothing. I promise never to put you to so much trouble
again.”
A quiver of a smile crossed his lips,
but he growled
Buckingham Palace, exclusive of its con- "But the train is waiting.” tents, represents an expenditure ot fiio oo.. "Yes,” 1 replied, "an,lit must still
wait until you are pleased to return | my goods and allow me to relock my
i trunk.”
Thc end of it all was that I was
OOJ.
Hood’s Cures.
In saying that Hood's H.irsapariila cures,
its* proprietors make no idle or extravagant . * * i ' I 1 u ’ , ‘ ‘' ,,aL ‘ \' ari claim. The advertising of Hood's Sarsapu- bowed out of the office after paying rilla is always within the hounds of rea-on, one dollar duty on a four-dollur piece
because it is true; it always appeals to the goods.
sober, common se..se of thinking people, and it is always fully substantiated by endorse-!
Voracity of Fish.
The voracity of the fish is indeed
be*accepted^Hlmut*agnoment's"h > eslt'atTon.' t * wonderful. A huge pike caught in an
7 » IIIM’UU u liiiMiiuni a i iui iu 11. 1.' rl * 1 1 . . Read the testimonials published in behalf 4 , ' , *^ 4 ' ' ’ . ,
from reliable, ach a ch ‘ ld s tin to >' "■"W™- * »«i>le-
•ord, probably
hrios, a
of Hood’s Karsaparilla
grateful people.
spoon, u short Uomat^
wsr,
They tell the story. Hood's Sarsaparilla lost by one of t Cures v V j hammer, aif 1
York and Washinirtou, D. O. No. 8 connects thriuiKh to Walmsh and Cincinnati. No. 10, coaches for Cleveland and Cincinnati anil sleepers to Cincinnati and New York.
F. P. HUESTIS, Agt.
U 1 . IOI8S''IUi:.>lLWtl3«'<YtCl-irACO ffY.CO. p
Goinir North—1:27 a. m., 12:05 p. m.; local. 12:05 p. m.
Goinit South—2:47 a. m., 2:38 p. ra.; local, 1:45 p. m. J- A. MICHAEL, Agent.
-MiMS.PA MA, ik'N tic, Ind., FOR THE WEST. No. 21, Daily 1:52 p. in., for St. Louis. 1, Daily 12:53 p. m., “ “ 7, Dally 12:25 a. ra., ' •> “ 5, Ex. Sun 8:56 a.m., “ •< ” ni., “ Terre Haute. Trains leave Tern* Haute, No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., “ Peoria. .1, Ex. Sun 3:2> p.m., ** Decatur. „ _ „ 1 ' 0n TUE HAST. “,?• *°- P.' 1 *.;-' . ’*• -' I*- for Indianapolis. 8, Daily 8:35 p m., “ •- F “ 6, Daily 3:52 a. in., “ •• “ 12, Daily 2:23 a. n-., “ .• “ 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p.m., “ •• “ L Kx- Sun 8:31 a. m., “ “ For complete Time Card, Rivln* all train* and stations, and for full Information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J S. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or J. M. CHEsnnouou, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
idiiiiiii.stratnr's Sale of Personal Proper! i/.
SATURDAY, THE NINETEENTH DAY OF MAY, 1S94,
T'trrr' , ’aT r U' 0f 8a,d ^"te, consist-
TERMS OF RALE.
All will he sold for cash in hand, exceut the tlra'^.---*^ 1 - I ’'' 8,1 '■' l on ’'x months
Ar
on I
aynneuishing to examine the piano call • !• i t.!.i’ rl8lle ’ at ’ is 8lloc store, in Green-
cast!?, Ind.
3t2
ELIJAH GRANTHAM, Administrator.
DR. C. C. SMYTHE,
Physician and Surgeon
Office sn;l residence y, ne Mreet< betweer
ftHhin#ton and W alnut streets.
’fommanilpa
si* » .
,<07'L
I’ - '. II. JLninmerM. L. jbc.Tfi-.sfr
4 ‘ Of f*
