Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 5, Plymouth, Marshall County, 11 January 1901 — Page 6

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CHAl'TEIl V. (Continued.) oh! chai. knows a pretty face from a "Yes."' t'ervi.s -poki with a rem in i plain one." amount of stiffness. Ho had undoub:- j "I'm not so sure about that." skeppdly so'ht his youns wife and won i tically said the bride. "Why, I should her for her wealth; bat, apart from not 1p surprised if he has a wifo of that fat t. wu; dottrniiii'-d to nriKc ! his- own here in Montreal!" hor a loyal and k void hu-:and. AI- j "Wot he." carelessly paid Gervis. ready it hurt him that ino:u-y an.! j "ITc"s a woman-hater, I should im-safTc-fl name of v.ife sliouM be roughly . asin. His bride is science, to which oiacketc.i to-tlier. be srrnis to have given himself up '"And did yon know my wife. thou. body and soul. You should see his as Mi?s Fairweathrt ? " Gervi asked. j dipgins. Gladdy! Never saw such a iter a t-il.-n t. witiW tli two stoed ami collection of weird and extraordinary surveyed ihe limit.;-:-; expanse ot I inventions in my life. He took me

white w..ste around ti.em. wita its , boundaries of fort-i overeJ, bear-in- j it.-ieu mas. i "No; 1 never saw jier until la-t uight i In the raj fceenis to L that so? ' ewer. "I thin! hesitated. siih is very young, and '.ii,'b-st rung nature lu;l waited for an rf : an- i !ie is." Gcrv!.4 slighth J:t trnr!:. tho;:gi he would n!' s.- d it, G!addy"s naturo not h;iv e. wa. as j -t an unknown country to bun. "Very imaginai iv", and given to alternate fits of depression and gaiety?" Paul went or.. Then lie hastily added: "I ak your paidon. Yin s'm:. it is part of my tri de to an iv..- human character. I am a!wa doing it sometimes uru-onseiou.-dy. ! dare say you think me an ilF-condit un.d Goth, and I hard ly venture to request an iatrod' tiu11 j to Mrs. V l)-,;'.'tOI. Paul Ans ' 11 turii'. Iiis f.icr toward Gervis, and then- wa.- a new expres- i sion in it. The old si.e r had died out. : or had bevn smoothed .areti'Ky away. His dark, deep eyes looked straight iino mo iugiisimian s lace, and inere w-as a certain wisifulness in them. 'I have made up my mind already ' about you- -we ail have.' quickly said ' honest Gervis. holding out his hand in ail sinjplkii to th" other. "We owe our lives to you. and each one of U6 would ester-ni it an honor to call you friend." There was a h"a;ty Hritish ring ia the words tij.u spok for their gcuulnet)4,?s. "You an v ry good."' quietly ob.erv- , ed the scientist. Hut the stir had come inio !i is eyes once more, and he J turned the -on vernation aid-uptly to the siruarion in wliich the traiufal of iiwman beings fo.w.d tlumstTvcs. "If you had not Lcu in such a hurry to get back to England I could have Biiown vo i some pretty sport yonder." He pointed to the ro T. fastnesses in the distance. Tiie falling snow had stopped, and overload was a brilliant blue. A stiff wind had got up. howling and swirling the- suow into deep drifts. "Hears. I suppose?" said Gfivis. "Just what I should have liked if -well, untbu other ein umstan-'x. I dire i-ay you ould tll one some yuruabout the miz:-d.'es yiunb-r?" I'aul .::dfll r.(vdvb-d brie:!l;.-, ;,nd tho two men U oued to Ktra.e their sre;)s to tae iitlh' pra.irie station. "'Do you liv in M'ntr;-dl, tii n ? Is It your hono-?" "I have no home." v.. s tie" brief rejoinder. I siipjK i am what you i all a t'o.-moiKjlitaii ore vho makes a nest, in every one of the world's great cities. Hut her.- v. a.v Icick ;;f the prairie station. Ta- weather's clearing, so I .-oppose c.ir people will start on their way." In the station and round the cars there wa a stir of excitement, and people wre getting aboard the train. There is rr.y wife! .She is .-t in ling at the window of the car!" litres caugnt siurit or a nit.- iime in a pale -ron and gold bto.-ade tea- ! gown, trimno-d with yllmv he-. It wa.-i Gladdv. and her -mall rink I,;.,. Vow !,. I n ua unit' i . i . iui.ni"ii-it' i iuij. was now bent I o ward them as she gaz- j ed downward at the two men. ; She was waving :i little white hand j in welcome to her husbaud; but when ( she caught sight of his companion her j face blanched, and she shrank back j from the window, at which Paul Ansdell frowned at once. Two minutes j later, however, he was bowing before ' her as Gervis introduced him. j 'V had a jolly eood tramp. (Had- j dy, Mr. Ansdell and 1. over the hard I fcnow. It has made me as hungry as ' iU i i possible. And. if it had not been for your small ladyship. I shouldn't have come back. I'd hive gone alter th prizzlie in the mountain, yonder; but I warn you that next yar I shall come back to pot a bear or two. and leave you at Temple-Dene." (lervis laid a kindly hand on the slight little shoulder. (Iladdy looked up timidly, and. to br surprise. Mr. An.lsell had taken out a pocket hook crammed with Miap Bhots, which he proceeded to show and explain to Gervis. taking no further notice of her. if the stranger wished to restore the young bride's confidence, he nld not have devised a better mode of doing SO. Befeire the nd of the day Gladdy waj herself again, gav and lighthearted. She and her husband and Haul Andsell were the merriest, friendliest trio on board the cars speeding through the snow over the vast Canadian Pacific railway. And despite all their forebodings of evil, the train made a safe and speedy trip to its destination. CHAPTER- VI. Nothing build3 up a friendship between man and man like being thrown together in untoward circumstances. Ilefore their journey ended at Montreal. Paul Andsell had become almost intimate with the Templetons. Gladdy's strange shrinking and terror of the scientist had entirely worn off, simply because ho had ceased to bestow the faintest attention to her dainty person. Ilia eyes never by any chance rested upon her. "I mijht he a cow or wax doll for all the notice your fine philosopher gives to me!" the girl-bride said. "Oh, well, you can't expect to hav dry-as-dust scientific fellows in your train, mv dear," said Gervis mildly. "You must be content with ordinary men, such as your humble servant, for laves. I don't suppose Andsell, poor

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v ,. 0t t, Jv ,. mere lest evening, and you don t see me poin.q again to such a creepy place, j i'j . n iias pjt ins couiu. an t-pit-K and .-pan and ready for occupation, in one corner, and in the hall, instead ot a hatstai.d. he has actually got a skeleton. braeetl up with iron, on the arms of w hi eh the crazy old chap hangs his hat. There, my dear, I ought not to ' have told you that!" t Glaibiy had gone quite white. ! "Look here, I am going so take you to the ice carnival tonight, and tomorrow v. e start for old England. And did I tell you. Gladdy? An. '.sell has suddenly made up his mind to go with j us. There's something some elixir j to be got only in London from .some old j wizard of an cast end chemist, and I Andsell must have it to complete some marvelous scientific invention ; he means to patent. So I've asked him j down to tempie-uene to spend i,nnst- i ma We owe him some little atten- i tioil for an ne di(l for Us tbat :nvfui nicht of tlie fi'-e " I That (.vnjnK however. Gervis Tern- j pttm ,Yf,nt to thp irP (.arniVal alone. ' (Jladdv when quite ready to start out i with him, was seized with an unac- j cosmtivhJo chill and trembling. "You've taken cold." said Gervis j practically, "that's what it is. Now, J you just stay quietly at home and cosset yourself up, or we shall have to remain behind tomorrow." ; Gladdy, thankful enough of the rest j and quiet, lay back in a low chair in j the private sitting room the Temple- j tons had secured. Her eyes were hidI den under their soft, white lids; but ) ! Gladdy was not a.-deep. Strange visions and stranger thoughts were whirling j ! through her brain; and her small j ; hands lay limply in per lap. their wax- ! I en whiteness intensified by the violet ! satin of her evening gown, j it was net of her own simple past, ! ; nor yet of the wonderful ltappine.-s. j that had come to her so lately that ' Gladdy was dreaming. Instead, dai k. : fantastic sh.iin-s and visions came and I went, succeeded by grim forebodings. ! New r a strong girl. Gladdy, since j the night of the tire in the .snow Mied. ; ; had drooped strangely. It was. as if! ; ;he springs of life wiiiu'n her were . broken. The .-hock might or might ' not nave done the mischief; but it i vsas there neverthep ss. As she lay! t back with eio.-ed eyes and whitened i : cle -ks tlnie was a distinct change on J I the round young face. : So thought somebody who had com", j stepping of:l ov r the .hick, rich ar- ; pet. lose to thi little figure i e. lining ! j in the low chair so softly that Glad- . ; dy did not open her b!i. eyes. Indei.l. ; I the whir' lids closed down tightly over ; ; tii in. prhaps bc(.t;ie a hand with j long, thin fingers was waving slowly to ' and fro in fiont of them. ' In a f w sei onds Gladdy was in a i deep, motionless sleep, and standing ; t looking down upon her out of his dark, j ! unfathomable . cs, was I'.iul Ands-'dl, j ! who. on hearing from the black waiter j that Mr. Templeion had gone out to ; vi 'u -'liival, stepped upstairs to j pay nis respects to .wis. lempieton. j Pending close down until his lips I i.eared her pink ear. Paul in a mon otonous voice, recited a sort of statement, ile spoke in carefully measured tone,. as if anxious that not the mo.est. syllable should be slurred over. The muni was still and quiet, and Gladdy slept on tranquilly, while Paul looked round him for something he wanted. Reaching over, he drew towards him a Japanese screen, and fixed it partly between the sleeping girl and a little table, on which were writing materiThen he spread out a blank sheet. of white paper, and then lifted first a pen. then a pencil from tiie writing table. "No." he muttered, "I've something better still!" And from his waistcoat locket he drew a stylographic pen, which hr gently placed between the thumb and linger of the little limp hand of tiie girl. 1 ""(Iladdy. " he whispered distinctly j "awake. Gladdy!" The Kirl stirred uneasily. ' Write down word for word what you heard me say a few mintues ago." This time Paul's voice had in it a note of command, almost of menace; and instant I- Gladdy sat up straight, with the pen held firmly in her fingers. Her eyes were wide open and sleep had flown. Kdging the screen a little forward. Paul got it adjusted so that Gladdy did not see the sheet of blank paper, then he gently guided her hand around the i edge of the screen and placed it upon the paper. I "Write:" be paid, harshly,and Glad- i dy obeyed. Put from her position she could not see what she was writing. Presently, as Paul's dark eyes intently watched the motionless pen in the slim, small fingers, it moved. Gladdy was writing something carefully, and in a slow, painstaking manner, much as a child under the eye of a. master would do. And while sho wrote Paul watched her breathlessly. On, on the pen traveled over the sheet. Glady s handwriting was small and upright and unlovely, the handwriting of tho up-to-date girl of today. Paul's breath grew labored as he watched the pen moving. He could have dashed off the sentence In half the time: but then between Gladdy and himself there was at least a quarter of a century in age. At last the end of the page was reached, and the stylographic pen dropped from the limp, white fingers. "Sign it! Sign your full name!"

Th command came In breathlesr syllables, as though the speaker vai greatly excited. The pen was instantly lifted. There was just room for the brief signature Gladys Tempkton. Then. with a low sigh of exhaustion, the girl slipped backward into her chair, and Paul Andsell, after carefully blotting the sheet of paper, folded it and placed it in his pocketbuok. "I must get the names of a couple of witnesses, and the thing's done! But that's an easy matter in Montreal." As silently as he came Paul Andsell departed. Down the wide staircase he sped, and out into the clear, white stillness of the starry night, his dark eyes blazing with a strange, triumphant light. "Is it you, Paul? You have cooi home?" A sweet, vibrating voice called out gently as his latchkey opened the door of the little suite of rooms or flat which he called home iu the gay city of Montreal. "Yes. I have come. Diana; and I have good news rare, good news for you." A large, golden haired woman, with a milk-white skin, came out of one of the rooms opening into the hall, where the skeleton loomed quaint and hideous. She was Paul Andsell's wife, Gladdy had been right in her surmise; but Mrs. Andsell was not a happy wife, to judge by her dejected, limp appearance. Years ago when Paul first saw Diana standing iu front of the little ?ew England homestead that nestled under the great maple trees, he had thought her the prettiest girl this world held. The poor, shabby, little house was dignified by the morning glories that climbed all over it, purple and pink and white, making a dainty background for the girl's fairness. It was a picture that stirred the man's imagination rather than his heart. Already vast possibilities were looming for the scientific explorer. Here, in this vision of womanly fairness, he saw a valuable assistant for his enterprise. Put Paul Andsell had made great strides since the days when his masterful will took Diana from her simple home, and from her first love, to make her his wife and his took No longer for him diel the humble provincial exhibitions of his mesmeric skill and his power over the minds of others suffice. Higher tlights were today his aim, and more than one abtruse work on hypnotism bore his name on ks title page. (To be continued.)

LACK REPOSE. Fault Mil Knrjlrnh I'rofeitHor Find with , inerU uu. Professor Kustaee H. Miles, formerly lecturer at Cambridge university, Kngland, and tho head authority on athletics in that in.-titut'on.vontributes to the Saturday Hvening Post a leading article on tho "Fallacies About Training." In tho course of it he writes: "A serious evil in tho modern training system is the constant tensdion of the nerves and muscles. At Cambridge I us.vl to watch my athletic pupils and none of them seemed to have ae quired the power of repose. They were always on the stretch. When the time carne nenr.for instance, for the university hoar ra e or the football match, the tension reached an extreme and tiie men sr eninl quite unable to be at their ease. It Is strange that while tlie trainers perpetually teach them, how to e.ei( i.-o. they never teach them to re.-t. The whok; of natur? seems to work on the principle of alterations; first work, then rest. Wo see it in day and night; in breathing out and breathing in. I need not givo other instances, many of which tan bo found in one of Ihnerson's essays, i What I wish to insist on here is that, while we teach men to exert themselves and to strive and to tie themselves up into knots, we seldom or never teach them to relax themselves, to be at rest and to undo their nerves and muscles. It is Americans especially who need to relax, to smooth themselves out, and. for example, to let their arms and hands ban"; limp and heavy. If the business man were to give up only three minutes each day to standing with his knees bent, and with his arms hanging down quite loose and limp and with a contented smile on his face, and with his mind empty as possible, the difference in his state of feeling during the day would be almost beyond relief." FIRST "T" RAILS. Mutt in (ardilT. Wilf, fur the Camden In recognition of Mr. Andrew Car-nog-ie's gift of 10,000 for a new -building for 'Stevens Institute of Technology, in Iloboken. X. J., it has hcen decided to present him with a section ot an original uti-pound "T" rail from tho Camden & Am boy railroad. Inclosed in a .-uitable receptacle. Tlie incKlent has a local interest, inasmuch as the rails were rolled in the Dow lata works in 1831. and were tlie first "T" rallü designed or made, although the Vigno'.es rails produce! in France several years later have generally been red ited with being the earliest. Tho former was designed by Robert I. Stevens, who was sent lo Kngland to have them made, there being in America at that time no mill capable of doing the work. Arrived in Kngland, he called for bids on the job from various iron works, but at first none of them ventured to undertake It, says the Cardiff Kvening Mall. After a while he persuaded Mr. (subsequently Sir) John Gtiest to attempt the task, not, however, before guaranties had been given rgaiinst damage to the machinery In performing the mijrhty task of rolling a litl-pound rail. Finally the rails were satisfactorily rolled. They were sent to tiio United States In a good many different vcxselß, a few tons at a time, for they were regarded 04 a perilous isort ot freight. Dr. Mopton has facsimiles of letters, speclA cations BJid bills connected with talj matter, which arc to bo Inclosed in th silver box which Is to contain tho section of ralL The Eiffel tower, Paris, 1,000 feet high. Is the highest tower In th world. The Washington monument at Washington. D. C, ranks next, being Ciü feet In bight.

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6 (i The century lately closed gave us the age of steam. One of the pathfinders in this direction was .lames Watt (173'Mftl!)). In 17t'.:i he constructed thfirst steam engine that would v,.r satisfactorily. Next to stiani it is eUvtrieih Michael Faraday NTt'l-IM'.T ma. be call "Ml the 1,-st eh . t; ician. and well i'ka electricity was possessed of a chemical quality had not even been suspected nntii his experiments in what has since been known .is electrolysis. John Kricssou ! ''-'.-I w as a competitor of Slcphr.nson In the trial of locomotives in J but his work was to be connected more with the development of locomotion by water than on land. Tlie Urs;. vss 1 to which he applied this oiigina! device was the Princeton iu ist. His place in history will be always connected also with his conception of the. Monitor. Natural science progressed marvelously In these 100 years and it is to the mind of George Cuvier (17C9-1S32) that much of it is dti. Cuvier established the history of th animal kingdom in the 11 slit of comparative ap:tomy, and laid the foundations cf tho study of prehistoric animal life by his wonderful restorations of extinct species from ingle fragments. Charles Darwin (1803-18S2) furnished the key to many problems of zoology which had been considered wi5olvable before his time. His work crowned that of Cuvicr. Louis Pasteur IS22-1S'.C. succeeded in solving more than one d I 'lieu It problem in chemistry, interesting th world of science by his discoveries in Ihe field of bacterial life. He devised a method of filtration of water which has stood I hp best tests, based as it U upon olid scientific principles. ili.s work best known to the public, however, is his discovery of the virus by which rallies Is prevented. Sir Joseph. Lister, born In 1S27. in 1S63 suggested the valuable method f guarding against danger from the use of chloroform in operations by noting the breathing of the patient. Klias Howe (1819-181:7), the inventor of the sewing machine, may seem to have only substituted mechanical slavery for manual, but the possibility of cheap clothing arose with his inven tor a "Battleship. The silver service for the new U. S. battleship Illinois, will cost $10,000 and will consist of two punch bowls and ladles, a tray, candelabrum, epicurean diah and two fruit dishes. The pieces will bear the coat of arms of the United States and Illinois. Kvery piece except the ladle will contain an inTHE PUNCH BOWL. leription In raised letters setting forth the fact of the gift. Tb punch bowl, which will bo twenty-two Inches in diameter, eighteen Inches high, will have a capacity of tweWe gallons. The tray is twentyflrt Inches In diameter and Its circu

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tlon. .no! if tin- machin" has le-en abm-.ed ir is not the fault of this mos: fu! iuv .' iiiion. A discovery which has doti much k . for science as weil as .luring th' : century is that of photography, due to Louis .laci;;i- .. M.;;;d.' Dagu-rre ( ITS."-1v-.ii. 1 : .- (!v apay t'i. rt-ut ary's advauc

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The memory of William Wack. the novelist, is to be commeimoratd by a lighthouse which is being erected at Duart Point, in Mull, a most dangerous part of the dangerous Scottish lar edge has tho coat of arms with j . . ... 1 1 t ..-r t uuttng and restoons. 1 ne canoeiam um has seven lights and stands eighteen Inches high. The main standard "is the same as the punch bowl, with six Hutid arms radiating from the center and shooting upward. The epicurean bowl is a laige open oval dish. lis edge Is fluted and decorated with festoons. 7o 'Roads Troposed. A recent editorial in the Engineering News objecting to federal aid in building country roads is followed in the current issue of that journal by a letter approving the editorial utterance and advocating the building by towns, under state supervision, of toll roads. Tho correspondent also announces that an enabling act for this purpose will be Introduced into the next legislature of Illinois. Under his plan as proposal he would have tho money for such improvements raised from bonds, to the payment of which the tolls collected should be solely devoted. He would, however, limit Fuch collection to a period of not less than ten not moro than fifteen years. The chief objection to this plan Is pointed

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of the i ;:d :. in this work was David Livingston-- 1 l':l-l73'i. who brcran a-. ;i medical missionary to Africa and ' nd-l by a .Ming wide a- as of the i';irk Continent to tin map of th11 v''"'t'ik The lili.-.Ti;;'.! was a :i.;irv.c'; c nlury " m.:r Iou mcji. ! oast. The light will be supplied by j compressed gas contained in a tank, ; which will be tilled periodically by th" J lighthouse steamer which attends to the west coast islands. out by the Kneineering News namely. the cost of maintaining toll collections. Other consitleiat ions, particularly th memories of private toll roads, make it unlikely that th' plan will meet with much favor. Moses Coil Tyler. The death of Professor Moses Colt Tyler wa announced last week. He was the vi.e presi dent of the American Kconomle association and Historical society, and a member of the facility of Michigan university. IT held the chair of rhetoric and Knglish language and liter ature from 1S74 to Mose Coit -iyu 1RS1. Said President Angell. on learning of hi death: "I know I voice the sentiment of the entire university when I say that we held Moses Coit Tyler In the highest esteem as a scholar, teacher and a writer. We reffret exceedingly that he has passed awaj."

IIn(lnt. t jrion.ono. Stored away In the vaults or N'-w York tanks cn the last day of the '. year was 51.vJ.000.OoO, estlmatcj .y bankers as th" :ui:o-jr.t rciuir- d to vr." disburs'nu-nts .Paring January. On t: first day of the lupines.-; year t!pi ?. tual paying out of this great sum o:r. meneed. Hankers 1: ,,1 'been prejiarit: for it for some tin;;-, and t'n.e bulk the money v-. r.t for the payment. dividends and coupons. Temporarily there Avas r stringency in the monr-y market. The transfer of J i. ..) j is not s;irh a simple thing 'v r: for t'lbig institutions of that great city.

m Of the U.S. Treasury Rcomm:c2j Peruna. V isvc..wT; ..V. 7 - m I- I wp 'yi. .'t(trtI';. 1. ''?',!. 1 .1'.'..' . .Mt- i. :.: Lurc.pr of C S. 'I reasK I)ep.o-;w;rf.t. r.ouatr r.f ( o.iitnü:a V!r. a:..; w i.o vri thrM yr at .; lw .:. i.is th tu iow'rjc to ay of Perm. a: Allow tne to express my zratltud to you for the benefit derived from your wonderful remedy. One short montli has brought fortli a vast change and I now consider myself a well man after months of sufftrinc. Fellow sufferers. Peruna will cure you. (.t3rrh ij a. -:n!.- (i.au ri-rah' or.'y by m :ni;.i;- :!. at.t. A !-,n:f iy that cures t atarri !i.u k.n- .:.re-t! it tkf d4presfii ? et e itt ti r. I f . s w hit Peruna üce. lVr:.'d i.n j : , v.v.foratfb ;he reivr- c ir - 1 . t . a lit : ti he ;r.iivc;: es. T .-.'.-ndi I I ".". I h'-r otat: r. ( : r: : ':.' cut cl. I 'e: "Vir. a eure rjthl ri j ? r '. c.isl. Tti r ' a r,. i .-- kt. ,!: a .-r.t- ;t is nr. ib"."'.:-f -:. ... A :- lVn-r;a ha r.o v .. . - r . r vj . !r uptja hd'. ,i.5 lru;.., . A free book w ritten by Dr. Hartman, on the subject of catarrh in its different pbascsond stages, w ill be sent frco to any address b I lie Peruna .Medicine Co., Colunibu, Uiiio. Circs a'l Th; f. l.;irt - 1ca:...ris. SYRUP Grtf crauii-'-. K'-e"s.i,.r"v.tcs. ES SURS 5altIon Oil cures khtj:.iutjm. 15 ü 25 et BUITY. Cenuine arter5s Little Liver Pills. Mutt Dear Signature of 3e Fac-Slmtle Wrapper Clow. Tory all a ad rj to tak an sttxivr. FOR HEADACHE FOR DU2IKCSS. rcR BiurusxEss. FOK TORPID LIVER. FOR CDKSTIPATI0K. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FAR THE COMPLEXION CARTERS IVER PI us. MMWal CURE SICK HEADACHE. LüKlo kll im .Ail Bc3tCXUKh t-yrup. Tw (itxiO. C

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