Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1885 — Page 7

THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SATURDAY MORNING MAY 2 1885.

COLD CONTORT.

Th Hop of tUrn ICrolatloalat. BY MAT KEM'ALL Alea &ar. in the course of the eraa fror lue data 'tis not eny w know. Bat we think we may fix it as near as A billion cf icon, or o That 11 our in'eiilKt-nt Aryant (The globe growing woefaliy coli) "Will loly rtvert to oarbaruni. Aui Leiter In carts, at of old. When colonies crumb! asunder, heu tbe empire of Eaxtanl H o'er. When eeteess snd Iunt have gone under. When savages cocao to tie fore, Whr: no longer historians )aazui.h To iutrk how the remnant raay strive. The Darwinian will fmntrur fill anguish lie know tLat the fittest survive '. When all that is woolen must perish, Cab, trim cars of happier day. And arc-Mvt! wtj holernnly cherish Are tirdied to f ural?h a blaze; When NlhilMs fail from tLtlr mission, An-i when. In the perishing Bute, Th? tit ad cf the Ht Opposition Arises in final debate. And ayt. "It's a national crisis; Let yirty dissension go freeze A hundred o? fee t when the Ice is Down yonder la tropical aas; If laxlug our cave-i la Intended, We take it our duty is clear: Ve vote for the bill, unamended," And the House is to chilly to cheer! Thea. Proipero, triumph no loncer. Then. Caliban, live and prevail. Then peed to the arm th.it U stronger, t Then woe to the ana that is frail! lint though Daty and Justice be fcleeping, t Though Plunder and Anarchy thrive. "Inl Ixrath takes the siare in ni keeping, As how, mall ihi fitttai survive! Lonsman'a ilajazine. IN OF A TUT. E7 EYELY THOKP. Hi am Couldock rnfgM hsve looked eome"xv hat strange to a civilized Eastern eve as tie made bis first appearance in the small, picturesque Maine town his father had left eight and twenty years before, when Hiram was a pick-faced infant in long clothes. It was difficult, at sight of his enormous chest and Titan-like shoulders, aod the full, short chestnut beard that framed the lower portion of his line countenance, to picture to one's self now that at any epoch of tima he could ever Lava answered to the above de Ecription, bat is ?afe tosiythat no feeling of atiaogsnesi of entbarrafsment hid dwelt 5n his own eoul, though he had so suddenly 2een transplanted amid conditions and sarToandini eo utterly opposed to those to which he had all his life bc.en accustomed, until Mabzl Trask, quickly crossing with the soft, direct motion cf a biid on the wins the lerth of her mother's pretty morning-rooai, f trMr hd oat a alioi hand toward him with a pretty cordiality of welcome, and spoils a Jew words in her low, vre:i-ajodu'ud; wellfered and well-trained voice. Then Hiram, for the tirt time in his life, lad a sadden and very disconcerting sensation ef being awkward, ooudarocF, out of place and ill at ease. Before this slight, delicate :i'ju in his eyee ethereally refinedlocking kill, with the black hair brushed leceeiy from low Grecian brow, and a pair cf woocVrfnlly deric and deep bice eyes lockitfr with calm self ponession at hiai from cat of her stiall, palo. oval fca, he felt himself a great, bulking fellow, witnout on erce. one merit, one pxcase for being. The üalnnnets cf the little parlor, ths hook?, the flowers in vase, the slight feminine needlework lying about, trie thousand and one indications of refined, womanly presence, impressed his tinworn sensibilities, lrh from the free. Western life of the plains, with a strange force. He had no means cf knowing, not beinj versed in the lore of women's looks, that while he sat there, filing himself to be like a bull in a Chinashop, Mabel Trask was telling herself in a reserved, maidenly fashion that ne was the most sunerb-lo iking man she had ever 3ten;so tall, so commanding, so simple, so manly and gentle withal; yes. she felt sure of bis bein? gentle. Not knowing this, as baa been said, Hiram Couldock was uncomfortable and disgusted with himself, exceedingly. And thus it came to pass that his first visit to Mrs. Trask. who had known his father Jong years ago, and, indeed, had been a sweetheart of his, and to her daughter, was a brief one; and, in one sense, an unsatisfactory one. New Hiram Couldock had come East on a peculiar mission. The death of a relative who left him a small sum in her will, had served as an excuse for the journey; but, in reality, he had far other thoughts in his mied when he eo eight his birthplace, than Ibis slim legacy. He had enough of his own and was doing well; in a few years more, if luck remained his friend, he would have a more than comfortable competency. Money, then, troubled hira not at all. Bat he wanted a wife, ard he had come east to look for her - to find her. This jourg fellow, with his Hercnlean exterior, had, though he suspected it not in the least, a great fund of ideality, cf hero-worship, and a gzeatcapactity for boudless tenderness and lelf-eacrilbe, hidden in the depths of his souL rncon:ciously he had Jor years loved a vague ideal semblance of a au1 an formed in his own brain and heart; the few women he had come in contact with about him western home had been very far Ironi reaching to the fail ßtitare of that perfeet woman the one woman in the world for him existed sorcewhere, that his life could never be complete until be had met her face to face, grew with time until, finally, this pretext cf his aunt's will serving him. be had started out with this half deLztH jdea of finding her, with an ardent w:jh to carry back to bia hearthstone that bii,msie whof-e presence would make b' for the first time not an empty word. "When he left Mrs. Trask's house a singalar thine occurred. He hid walked tns iength of the main idieetof the little ton still with that new, confesrd aod mortifying ienecf haviDg bsenata disadvantage upon him whea be found himeelf suddenly creeping from this mood and going over, "with jenricus and minnt intensity, every word Mabel Tra;-.k bad poken, every inflection cf her vofce and every look of her eyes. . Jc?r tten a little school girl passed him She be'dancaJl tucch cf violets in her hand. The pframe reached him and he remembered that the very rame scent had been wafted toward him when Miss Trask came frrw ard to greet him. 8be lud worn a few "violets in her die.is. The trivial coincidence n a aruall. snbtle thnll through Hiram -Cooldock. He stopped acd s:ood perfectly atill for the sjaceof a aoment. Then hs tcok one long breath and moved on. He had cddenly felt, as surely as though a fash from heaven had ben eent to illumine the fact for him. hat this was the one woman, trat she had been met at last. A day or two parsed, and then Hiram called again upon Mrs. Trask. He bad the privilege cf doin? so, owing to the long Jriecdibip and Intimacy of the two families, and he bad besides been t pecially urged to ccme again, and come soon. Miss Trask was In the room. Ah, how lovely she looked! In a light, trained gown this time, which to the poc fellow's eyes teemed gorgeous raU xaent fit for the queen that auo wM-thoujU

it wis only a bou?s drew, after all. 8a made him think of a dower s pars. 83 aweet, to delicately white ahe was. Ha did not know for some moments that thsra was acy one else la the room. Then a yoang man, a lieht and rather bsniione but somewhat effeminatelookirg young ram, en9rgei frcm the embrasure of a bay window where he had been aittinjr. with a large, strixiog yoang woman, and Hiram was introduced In turn to Mis? Rohbins. Mils Trask'a cousin, and to Mr Henr.ewav. Hirarn rever hsd a very distinct id;a of bow the evening passed. M'ss Fiobbins an in sharp, brilliant sapranc, and Miss Trik in a rich contra. to, and the languid yoang man. Mr. Heaneway, played acsompanirreDts. Hiraai was conscious of only one thing. Helondthis girl with the white face and the ejes like deep blue violets There wai no one like her. Ii i nal eesn women like Miss Robbias, her cousin. Bat lik e 2f abel Trask, no odo. Whan ha got oat into the still, crisp winter night he looted np once at the diamond bestudied heavens. Religious forms had never been usual or familiar to him. Yet there was an unspoken thanksgiving in this man's heart at tait moment. God willing, he had found his wife. The next few weeka went by in a sort of dream for him. He saw Mabsl Trask almost every day. And gradually a great hope bsgan to dawn in his heart a hope he s:arce dared acknowledge to his inmost soul lest it prove fallacions and vanish at a touch the hope that the love she could not but read in bis every word and look might be returned. Hiram Couldock felt that he had never lived until this last month. One day he had just left Mrs. Trvk's when, at bar doer, he met an old acquaintance who had recently returned to tae littlo town after an absence of some time. The conversation turned upon various inhabitants of the place, and finally the man eaid: "Nice people, thoae Trasks, out of waoje hcuse you were coming. Charming the daughter is. A pity she is going to thr.iw heisslf away on that effinimate fallow, Hen'Whatdo you mean?" inquired Hiram, with an abnormal quiet in his voica. ' Oh, they bave been engaged for years," said the other carelessly. A little farther along the street, chancing to glance at his companion's face, be jocoaelv exclaimed: "Heilo, Couldockk my friend! This Eastern air isn't agreeing with yon, do you know? You must get back to the plain mm You're as white as some interesting damsel.' Couldock never etn heard him. It was as though ten thousand bells were ringing in bis ears. Intbefi's: moment the hot blood surged to bis bead in a eudden fury. Had st e led him on only to betray him? Had she Djade agarnpof him? Almost the üext ir ttant he coold hive killed hiociself for bavins been guitt7 of the thought, fche Mabel the truest the purest ; no, there was eome mistake. She could not be engaged to that puppy Henne way ! And then the raln Cime, sharp as a knife, and the d:ubt. What if she were? what if ehe were? And all, ha had no right to think she cared . for him great, awakard, uncouth, lumbering fellow that ha was or even had caied. I'drfcapj it was oaly her kindness perhaps bis own love had blinded him. Well, he would go t'j her like a man and tell her of his love now and ask her, if this that be had beard wera true. And ttien hs the mv.lility of its bela true, int'e?d iissbed over hini'aialn, t'a poir fellow eet h;a teeth against bis lips so that the olood came. At night he resolved thesa things in his mind. And vradaally :ha conviction gr v it on him that be muse face the loss of her. Many trivial words and cccurreucas, unnoticed before, came to his memory cow, and eeemed to prove that that man, who had dealt bim the deadliest blow he could receive, knew well of what be soofee. Why phouldbenot? He bad lived hAre always. He knew Mabel and that that other well And so the onu woman the ideM vision bad been shown to Hiram Conldock's dazzled eyes, and placed for one short spacs of time within bis reach, only to ha snatched awsy. He sat down and wrote, to her. He had decided that it would he unmanly to ao to her ai d ask her if that report ho had heard were true He could not bat sea the pain it would cause him to learn its coufirmatiaa from her lips. And his pain would pain her. No, he would go away quietly. He would give no the bitter happinis) of seeing her again. He would refrain even from telling ier that he loved her, lest that knowledge, likewise, should cause her pain. And Hiram Couldock did not know that in tbe letter he wrote his love spoke out between every line as clearly to Mabel Trash's eonl as though it had been poured into her ears from his lips It was toward the close of the clear winters's afternoon when Hiram Couldock reached the station and began walking np and down in restless impatience. The train was not coming. But neither was it due as yet. He was fully twenty minutes in advance of it. Such a thing had not often happened to him He had too jest an appreciation of the value of time even to waste many precisus minutes In this wise. Bit now he was pursued with a goading feeling that he must get away quickly out of sight cf this quaint, quiet little Mam town which held all that wa3 on earth most dear to him before his reeolution gave way and be tried to see Mabel Trask'd face again. The station master and the two solitary travelers, both elderly fe-nales, sitting in the waiting room, looked every now and then with wondering f yes at this tall, broed shouldered young man who seemed 83 extr&crdiranly impatient f or the train t3 come up. Suddenly they saw Mm start as though he had been shot and then qaickl? step forward. A ycung lady had appeared at the clherend of the p!atform. 6ne walked onward b:avely, but the color came and went nervcusiy in her cheek. And jet she hai not so for to walk either; f r the next moment the tall, dark-bearded young man was at ber side. Miss Trask!" he exclaimed. Mabel raised her eyes for one second keenly, eaarchingiy to his. That one glance was enoughs There was no mistaking the joy, the pain, the love the pcor fellow tried to repress, but could not. Her womanly intuitions had not played her fake then. "Mr. Couldcck," she b?gan, struggling hard to speak bravely and calmly. "I came here especially to see you. Yoa wrote me you were going away. I herd by chance at almost the same time that a false impression tad unwittingly been given yoa as to my relations with Mr. Henneway. You were civen to understand that I was engaged to him. I I am not" She broke o2, for, standing with his back to the waitiner-room and its inmates, so that bis broad shoulders screened her from their curious gas, be had re:z?d her hand in a clasp so tight that she could almost have died out. Yon are not engeeed to him? Not? Oh, MaVelT' ?rhe raised her eyes 8gain to h's. It was a lorg glance. A glance in wh'Ch everything was explained, everything understood. The Us re stocd thick on Mabel's lashes, for wt'h all her high minded courace, it had cost hr more than even her 'overwonld ever know to take Ibis step, to call him back, to clear up this misunderstanding, and all on the mere instinctive knowledge in her woman's heart that be loved her. And yet was it true that her lover would never know what she bad fought against and Buffered in those momentous minutes? "Mabel," he eaid, slowly, "yoa hira be?a

to me since tbe first time my eyes rested on yon, the embodiment of all that is most pare and high and aweet in woman. At this in etant, after this act of yours, which only a woman like yon would have the single-hearted courage to accomplish ah, dear! Well, I cannot say much, Mabel. I am only a lumbering fellow, bat you kno whsther I love and reverence and worship yoa. dear." Sae had his arm, and they bad taken the direction of the town fgiin. Couldock pat sed bis band once or twics over his brow. After all this pain, itU awakening he could hardly believe it. "And are you quite eure yon are not engaged to Henneway?' he taid aftär a molaent. .Sne leugbe 1 softly. "Quit sure. We were engaged in a way for yearp. That is why ou were misinformed. Oar parents had wished always that the marriage might be mai9. Bat a year co, when I came to realize what it all meant I knew I did not love the companion cf my school day?, aad eo it wa3 broken oiT. He is engeesd to my cousin, Kate Bobbins, now, dear." Jn3t then the train Couldock had been goIrs to take fic.s'aed by them. 'Ob, Mabel! ' Hiram exclaimed; "if you had been but a few minutes later" "Do cot remind me of my casa after you, sir," said Mabel, laughing Eoftly again. "I wish to forget that episode completely." Bat her eyes upturned to his did not s?em to say that there was anything she wished to fdrget. "Oh, after all," returned Hiram, falling into her tone and speaking airily, 'I doa't know that you did so much in coming to that station to find me. 1 came all the way from the wilds of the West to find you, you know. But no," he continued, groafing serioca again, "you did not know that I had ma !e ths journey in search of a wife, yet so it was. I think my good angel inspired me and led me here. I nave found my wire now, thank God!" A SILVER cLINCUKK.

How Senator Jone Knocked Out a Group of Oold-Ung. fCarson Index. 1 Senator Jones told a good story the other evening on bis arrival in Nevada on the subject of the standard dollar. It illustrates the incidents and questions which surround the struggle for bimetallism. A few days ago the Senator waa In one of the cloak rooms of the Senate, chattoring with his confreres oa various topics, when, as usual, his own Senatorial htiboy cams to the frout, Senators Hoar, Morrill, Ekmucd3 and others callel tiui to account for being tb advocate of a silver dollar of the allied value of only eighty-fivft cents. Tha Sanatoria quite capable of taiicg care of bimsulf in a ronu-acd-tuuible encounter on th9miin question, but an Incident cccurred which wai as timely as effectual. A page from the Senate Chamber handed him a telegram, wita the information that the messenger was standing without a waitina the fifteen cants charge, This was the opportunity. Assuming a most important attitude the hanator produced a silver dollar and direc-ed tha psg j to ssttla the bill ia the followirg manner: "Yoa will inform the messenger thit theie is a silver dollar vh!ca the majority of the Sanators present claim is worth o.ly eighty-five cats. If he agrees with them I s-hall only expaet seventy cquj chaoe If he supno its valuo is 100 ciats, I shall expict eighty five centa in cbine " 1'he pa-e went on his errand aad returned wit!i eighty-five cants change; whereuro.i tn Senator naei an explanation. "Itll in, boy." Ba'.d he. "what that meeDper toy said. D-d you do a3 I to'd von?" The pge r plied: "Yes sir. 1 told him about th caaoge and what the Senators thousht about that eilver do'lar tie eaid that 'tueni old dutlers were the bitget fco's he ever beard of.' He was willirg to take th silver for a dollar, and bia only trcublo wa3 th&t Ls coalda't get tnoagh of tLera." The coterie of Senator Jones' Senatorial companions had awaited the denouement, And bad tacitly consented that tbe telegraph b sy 6hould decide the discussion. When tU3 reinlt was announced, they were speechless, and incontinently gave up the game. Senator Jones had won hip point. He delivered to them a lecture, which wa3 to the eßect that sliver is the money of the poor, and that tbelr faith in it could not be broken by any of the refinements of Wall street financiers. While comical, it waa nevertheless a most impressive incident, and confounded the grave and reverend seigniors. One fact is worth a thousand theories. Oar people may become mere peasants, but they are not foo!s. Even effete old Italy accepts sliver as a precious metal. A Frolic at a Girl' College. Pittsburg Comroercial-Gazr.te.j The students of the Pennsylvania Female College of PitUburg had a ball the other n ght. We are informed that half the ycucg gentlewomen present were dressed in rralea'tire that if, they wore the regulation d?es3 coat and waistcoat, with knee breeches and black silk stocking. No gentlemen were present. One of the students said: "Oh, all the er'rls wanted to be boys. It's such fun, you know. I had no chance; was too little, and all the other little girls were put oil in the eame way. Then the big girls drew lota, and that's how it was fixed." Old Aunt Grievous Makes everybody miserable, bectu93 Bhe is so gloomy and disagreeable. Probably it ccnies from dysperei, combined with a touch of liver complaint. Is her case hope Usi? Not at all. Give Aunt Grievous a bottle of Brown's Iron Bitters and see it brighten her np. Thousands cf ailing ladies have conquered tLeir troubles by the usa of this valuable ineäicine. Any druggist will tell you it is good for weaknss?, djspe?3'a, malaria, etc. Good for a Snoozer. INe.v York Tribune.! A gentleman who will giv? up his pew in a fashionable up town . church was aked ve$terday by a lady whether the pew was a dea;r4ble one. He rep ied: "Well, there are two small objections to it. One is hat you can not see the minister; the other, that you tan not tear what ho says. With these xcepticns. however, the pew is all that can be wished." When Tried Always Preferred. YTb.en they once become acquainted with it, ladies invariably prefer Parker's Hair Sa'sam to any Eimilar preparation. It makfsTbn hnir soft and glossy, arre3ts its falling ctf, promotes new growth, restores the rriglnal color, and has no rival a3 a dressing. Not a dye, not oily, highlv per(uined. Only 50 cents at drcgists. Pad for the Mandl. INew York World. Ordf ring General Wolaeley to ra'um to England looks a if vigorous warfare miIit be intended in Egypt after all. It behooves everyone to guard aga!n3t the many maladies to which the hnma l syst2Ui Is subject, and which are incident to the ssasors of spring, summer and autumn, each as intermittent fevers, öysenteryd'arrhjea, etc. The study of medical tcience reveals a multitude of remedies for pievalent diseases, and yet bv universal coneent it i acknowledged, that for the cure or prevention cf such, there is ncne eo efficacious as Mishiet's Herb Bitters, Try iu

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Pneumonia, Consumptiom

Dyspepsia ' and Weisung JLsiscascs. rositivtl'j Relieved and Srntttri assisted in restoring Vital nofrerC fi'HE INDIANA 1885 M W m 1885 Newspaper oi tlio State. 8 Pages 5G Columns The Largest, Best end Cheapest Weekly in the West at only As hsrstoforo, an uncompromising enemy yf Monopolies In whtsver form appearing, and especially to &s nirit oi tuhddy, w mbrdied in tha PßESEST THIEVIKG TAKIFif, TO UiVUMX CEMOCSAT-e: Bluoe lauüvp OUX lasi annusl prosjecius you have ueMeved a gloncas viciary In jcr Slate and titled materially la trgnsierrlng the Kationel Goveminent once raore into Democratic tanrts. Your triaxaph Lu bec-j m corapiete asyocr falthiuii:e3 through twentyfour yt ars was bcroic In tho late carc9'.:i, ta In former oas, th Sentinel's kt r3 bss een baxbd in the fi,;at- Na sttx) KüoulClcr to fLou.der, as brothers, la th confüct: W3 now c.x your Land for tha coming rear in our celebration of tbe victory. Our coiu.'ans that vera vigorous with fiht whea the ficht vis on will cow, emce Hie couteil la over, te devoid to the arts of peace With Its ealarr.ed pairouAce the ärri-viL wiii te better enabled ta&n ever to Iva ts kviizi Mi and Fgüiü? Paper, The proeeedinzs of Conjrre anl of our reno ratlc Lecisiatnre and the dcin of our IV-jjo-tatlc National and 8Ute adniiniatrationsi will Ua duly chroulcied, aa well aa ha curreut evenu oi tae day. Its Conmerciad Reviews aad Mark3t Report will bs reliable and complete. Ita Affrtcnltcru! and Heme Deprtraöaj ara 1 the bot of hauda. Pithy editorlaLj. elect literary brtrntlea and entertaining ralscsllany are assuted features. It ahall be fully the equal lu eural laforiaatlon cf any paper in the laul. while la iu repot oa Indiana a&aln It will tave no eraal. It l lata Paper, and will be devoted to and rcpreeeu; la liasa t latereets, political, Industrial nd &o."!l, a.s uo foreign pa per will or can do. Wlii you n.t Kar thla inmlcdwhen you come to Uxe lutrrtr-tiosf and raaxe up cluts t A copy of the Sentinel Snppierzeat. cTli.g ruU proceeding in Blaine iibel eiit, firsts.".: new or renewinz sabwriter when drlre-l. Nov? is the tirno lor every Damcorat ftho in Ctato to eubscribe for the Sentinel. TBBMS: einöle Copy without Proxaiard .-.i 1. it Clubs of 11 tor.....,.... 1 0.itQ Clubs cf 83 80.ttJ Qlcbior 50.. 9..: Ona Copy, One Year Slc.s Oue Copy, tx Slonthi ".t On Copy, Three .Mouth? I ."JO One Cop7 On Xtritli.-. (ÜWÜAY 8KMINK5., 1JV MAIL, i Agents making np CInl e,:iil ia ny information desired. BPtClKCf FBB3S. ndianapolie Sentinel GOLD PAH 13, 1573, GERMAN hp Sweet Clocolate. Tho most popular eweet Cbocclato in tbe market. It is nutritious and palatable: a particular fa von to with children, and a moat excellent article fcr famdj use. Thr genuine is stamped H Genianf Dorchester, 21as, lit ur are cf imitations. SoU bj Grocers fTCrjTihcre.

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ONE DOLLAR,

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W. BMER & CO., Dorctestsr, Mass.