Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 11, Number 11, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 September 1880 — Page 6
jTHE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
COUNTRY LIFE.
RICH ABO BEXSY STOOD AW.
Not what ire would, but what we must, Makes op tbe «am of living Heaven is both more and lea* than Just
In taking and in giving. Swords cleave to baaw that sought the
And laurel* mhB the soldier's brow. Me, whom the city bold#, who*e feet Have worn It* stony highways, Familiar with its loneliest street—
Ita ways are never my ways. My cradle was beside the Bea, And there I bope my grave will be.
011 homestead I In that gray old town, The vane Is seaward blowing. The slip of garden stretches down
To where the tide is flowing Below they lie, their sails airlarled, r, The hips that go about the world. Dearer that Utile eoantry house,
Inland, with pines beside it Some peach trees with unfruitful boughs, A well, with weeds to hide it No flowers, or only such as rise Self sown, poor things, which all despise^
Dear country home! Can I forget The least of thy wwee trifles 1 The window vlneewbich clamb-r yet,
Whore bloom* tbe bee still rifles? The roadside, blackberries growing ripe, And In the woods the Indian pipe? Happy the man who tills tho field, T^V
Content with rustic labor ,. Karth does to him her follnces yield, Hap what may to hi- !ialgt»bfr. Well days, sound nigh: -oh, can there be A life mow rational and free imSlf'' Dear couhtrv u. of child and man v*
For bo'fi I.U- "-C. tSKtfLrnngest, ThatwlUi ihe« nUestraft« began, v\t And i-if o-Mii v.d tbe longest. Their ols ^ed ago:
For Her Dear Sake OR, .... Saved From Himself.
BY SABA CLAXrON.
CHAPTER VUL—CONCLUDED. •You doubt, sir,' ssid the young man, calmly. •3o, I think, will the law, Mr. Somerset, until you can bring proofs.' 'I can bring proofs.'
Mr Moyle expressed his aatJsfftQllop, evidently out of politeness. -s •You disbelieve, sir?' 'No, Mr. Somerset, I do neither. I repeat, sir, I wait proof. That's the only thing the law and Its officers recognize.' •Then, one of my proofs is,' proceeded Charles Somerset, 'that Barry Lorrimore was alive In London on the very night of his suppose! death.' •You knew him, Mr. SomersetV demanded Mr. Moyle, growing interested.
The oth*r h»sltatod. He passed his hand downward over his faoe before he auawortui, aiaiply, 'Yea.',
That besita&itm destroyed the detective's dawning dVniauce. You SAW hUo •Ye» I»»w: him.' •I'm glad for hi# family's sake," remarked Mr. Moyle, dryly 'I'm glad for his own. I repeat though, as you must be aware, Mr. «S iruarsot, being a gentleman of intelligence, you are my prisoner until you prove this.' •Oa, Ouarlle!' moaued Ltura, clinging more closely to him. •Hash,darling! Why. may I ask, has ausplclou fallen on mot' 'iliauuao you wero first traced from Parklawn to London, where, Mr. Somerset, you o*"4h»d the ohetsk for six hundred pounds.' The husband felt his wife's hand olutoli hltn more tightly. •B3oause you were next traced to your ootta^e, Daisy Bank, and from tnere
What clew ha I you that I was the ®a*nr ... •First, tbe notes you changed, and the one you paid Mr. Jamieson for your rent, wete thoss you got from the bauk •eoondly, bo nun wbo w»s at Parklawn that night,, aud the tenant of Daisy Bank, Mr. ^tti"uas, wore, on the little finger of hU rU hand, this ring.' And abrubtiy, tout gently, he touched that on Liura's finger. 'I think, sir, I've proved
OQ'Ob!*Charlie,
Jooger,WMII
Charlie,' cn.d Ula wife,
greatly alarmed, 'what Is He looked fondly, pitingly, at her, saying, 'Would, doling, could have saved you from this? But It was impassible. All that wat done was done far yon. Listen, dear! I have ««*ked you to be brave I ask you now t- believe in me. You know me these people who accuse me do not v»n do not know them which, th*n, will you credit—these *tranger*4 w«»rd or your husband's I am innocent.'
L*un%, drawing baaft, IOOK-MI earn* astly, ftx^ilj? Infc.hM yes As she did so, tbe pretty o.tim and resolute. Ttie oharaeter of the features ohangtvi ui' fly. •Charlie,* esaid In steady voice— •I do believe you. Whatever happens! will, I I eould -'u.ik myself
tullty than you K" »r for me no darling! I will bmve as you deerre as,--abd *he *la defiantly at the dete«tlve—your Inn »ceiwe merit®. •Than k-*, love,* be said, embracing her. *Now, taj, un be brave for anything. I beg vour pardv»u, Mr,—Mr.—' P# •Moyle, -r.'
it
•Mr. Mov for draining you for scene that can little interest you. I per* oeive yon are Impatieot. In return, I will gl*e vott no trouble. But will you first, before I WHU vou, grant me a low moments 1n private •is there any need, Mr.Somerset?' *i would gl?e you that I conld not have killed Mr. B^rry Lrrimore. Laura, love, leave osawhile.*
Without hesitation, tbe wife obeyed flrat, however, taking up the Great Mogul, and o*rrving hltn, perhaps for consolation, with ner.
The private interview between the detertlve aud his nria«)»er lasted about half an hour. Mr. -Moyle listened quietly His coontenanee was Impenetrable—if It did show any s»gu, it was incredulity, II not score*. •But do you mean roe to believe tbla, •Ir?' be JM»U1. in contusion. •It to the truth," rejoined Charlie Som•net *1 tf1 «•», I e*« wwily prove Ik* •You must could to England for that
«is that quite neceetary? To DM would be, perhsps, ruln «tt*s imperative,. cm don*t fancy, Mr, Homeraet, that Mr. MaUhew Lorrimore would be «*nr«*ot with your stating, or •van orovi'u hto wild story to meT* •It*s awl. isaid Charles SOOMMWM, otninc tbi Tyery. Bat yo »••-. Mr. Somereet, believe 1 t*keyoa to Knglat "You 'ninpt IV- ir 1 where tbe was commuted.
'"W
Is lif?
'Well,' said Charles, 1 suppose I most submit.' 'It would be wise if you took my ad•ioB si?*' •It wiiy said the young man, resoIntely. I swear I will go quietly, giving yoa no trouble.
AM
He had
a favor, put away
those and be pointed to tbe bandeaffs tbe detective held rather behind him. 'Yea swear this, sir asked the detective. 'By Heaven, and my honor as a gen tleman!' •Then, sir,' said Mr. Moyle, after a moment's scrutiny of tbe man before him, 'I'll trust you.' And tbe handcuffs dropped back with an unpleasant click.
ICHAFTER IX. A STABTLIMO SCBrBXSB.
The Brisbane, which a week later started on its homeward voyage, had Mr. Moyle and bis prisoner on board, also Laura and her baby boy.
It had been a severe mow, this arreet, coming in tbe midst of her happiness, but she trusted in her husband as she loved him.
Bald
1
Who the iiu.t fanners. wu know, Perhaps our Babels, too, will fall. j. If no,no lamentations, For mother earth will shelter all,
And teed the unborn nations, Yes, and the swords that menace now •Will then be beaten to the plough.
he was innooent of this
crime, hence it would have needed his own confession to make her believe otherwise.
Her fine faee may, during that long, tiresome journey, have been grave and thoughtful, but it never displayed grief or despair. For Cbarlle it always had a sweet smile, and the lips a kind, wifely word.
Mr. Moyle, who was anything but a bard hearted man, was touched by her brave fortitude, and made tbe journey as pleasant to tbe two as he was aHle. 'Now, look here, Mr. Somerset,' be remarked, when the ship was under way, 'You gave me your word that you would give me no trouble, and I am bound to confess you haven't. You've iroved yourself a gentleman, and I can ^egratefnl. If you or your good ladyshe's a prize, sir, she is—don't let out the position, I shan't. Nobody, then, will be the wiser, and we'll be the more comfortable.' 'I thank you,' isald the prisoner, grasping Mr. Moyle's hand. 'This is indeed a kindness, and I deeply appreciate it, sir.'
So when tbe crew and passengers marked the two pacing the deck together though they may have termed them •the inseparables,' they never guessed that one of them had been arrested for a dreadful crime, and that the other was the man who was to deliver him to justice.
Tbe passage was, owiug to favorable winds, a rapid one. Nevertheless, it was dreary enough to the husband and wife. No news was more welcome than that which met the former when, coming one morning on deck, Mr. Moyle informed him that they wei'e in the Channel. 'Thank goodnessl—here at last!' was the response. 'Do we touch at Plymouth?' 'For a brief space, only just enough to send a boat on shore,' replied the detective. 'That Is enough you have saved me from disgrace till now pray continue to do so,' said the prisoner. 'Will you do mo tbq favor I asked? Will you send the telegram?' 'I will—I promised and though I ain't gentleman, I can koep my word like one.' •You are a gentleman—one bearing Nature's stamp.' •Thank you, Mr. Somerset. I'll not forget that.'
So the Brisbane went on its way, and the shores of England came in view. (Tiice more the husband and wife, standing side by side, looked on them.
Then the bustling seaport of Plymouth appeared. The Brisbane for a space heaved to, and Mr. Moyle found means to dispatoh the promised telegram.
Once again the steam was got up the Australian ship pursued her course the land
droppsd
At almost the same instant that tbe BrUbaue dropped anchor a boat put off from the shore, and approached her. Mr. Moyle, by the aid of a telescope, inspected the siuele passenger. •It's hi ml' he muttered. 'He's come no-\ 'r the proof the passenger was on deck, rextu tig the lie weave's greeting. It was Geir,r** Lorrimore, •So,' he exclaimed, 'you h*ve, as you ssld you would, Mr. Moyle, brought back your prisoner, the man who slew my conslnl'
That Is »s It raaj- be, Mr. Lorrimore, My prisoner nays your cousin was seen alive after that night, and that he can prove It, as you can, sir, yourself* 'I? Your telegram, by the way, stated that he knew me!' said the stber. •Exactly audit's just to prove that, sir. that I asked you to come here. Will you please follow me, aud we'll have it ov«r.'
Saying which, he descended tbs comnauion. George Lorrimore going after, curious and perplexed.
Tbe prisoner was seated sideways at the table, his face fronting the door, A strange expression was on features it was neither doubt nor fear. Lsura, with the Great Mogul, the most exemplary of quiet babies, sat on a sola ratber behind. Entering first, Mr. Moyle ridd looking over bis shoulder at his companion, 'My prisoner, sir there he
l*Tbe
young man strode quickly In, then spruug back a* the other rose up, regarding him half shyly, half amased, from bis ebair. •Great Heaven!' be orisd. 'Barry Lorrimore himself I' "Exactly, my dear tisorge, responded the prisoner. 'Barry Lorrimor®, arrested tor having barbaroaaiy ataia blmself!' 'I'm bewildered!' ejaculated hlacoosin. •It esems a dream! Yon are alive—you never were killed, Barry?' •Never, my dear George.' •Tben, you—yon bavebeen doping oa all tbe while!' •I confess to having raised the Idea of my death by foul means, and leaving my family under that Imprewdoo. •And why? Why tkh cruelty— 'It eras not a cruelty—cay, If what I have heard be correct, I fancy to yon ant Rosalind It has beeo a kindness,' smiled Barry, meaningly*
George Lorrimore colored,smiling too. •You are right,* be said. 'But the neoessity tot this deception—'
Enown,
further into the horizon
and night settled down, There were many woary hours yet before port would be reached.
They, however, pa»sed like the rest. Tne Brisbane, entering tbe Thamesf glided up its broad bosom, and finally anchored lu front of the docks.
For half an hour previously Mr. Moyle had been leaning over the side, watching anxiously every shore boat that came near.
In a small cabin sat Ltufft with her husband, also seemingly waiting. There was a great change in the latter. He bad discarded his rougher Australlsft garb, and was now attired in tbe tweed suit he used to wear at Daisy Bank. Tho bronze hue had worn somewhat off his face, and the big black beard and mustache had vanished entirely. Mr. Debenham himself oould not have made a cleaner
TTCRRTP. TTAllTbl 8ATUKDAY -UiVENINQ MAJUL
•Was. perhaps, an absurd, 'a cowardly, be exclaimed. 'I must see her. She must sn over sensitive ides: or whatever you be good and fair to look epon, for she, I msv nlesse to call it. The reason, how- am sure, is the sun that has germinated ever I can give to no one, before I have these seeds of manliness snd good in told my uncle. As it is he whom I have yon.' ... most wrongod, It is he to whom is due 'You ere right uncle. A msn withont my first confession. Mr. Moyle,'be ad- a pure woman's love is like a ship withded »sm I longer your prisoner?'. out a compass he is almost certain to •Not exactly as it appears that yon drift to the bad. Laura is staying at a were tbe dead man, and that you have hotel in the town. I will bring her, and never been dead at all, Mr, Somereet-I —yes nncle' (be laughed), 'and our boy, beg pardon—Mr. Lorrimore. At least,' the Great Mogul! be laughed,'I can take the responsibility of letting you go on bail, sir, your Ten years have gone by since tbe surety being your own word. I heartily mystery of Parklawn. oongratulate you, my dear sir, and this Msttbew Lorrimore has paid tbe debt brave lady, too she bore up wonder- of nature, and George Lorrimore resigns, fully.' with his wife Rosalind, master of tbe •Ah, Mr. Moyle,' aaid Ijsura. pleasant- estate for though the uncle had forgiven ly, 'that night, after my bnsband's ar- Barry, he had been just to his elder rest, be told me bow ah this had come nephew. about.' The younger, however, was not allow•So he did me, ma'am but, as a detect- ed to return to Australia—to which both ive, I didn't believe him.' bis and Laura's heart inclined—pen•This lady is—' queried George Lorri- niless. He went out the owner once more. again of three hundred a year. •My wire!' answered Barry, proudly, The sheep run so coveted became bis encircling her with bis arm. 'When yon and when Matthew Lorrimore, dying, have heard all, George, you will con- left bim one out of tbe three thousand gratulate me as I do you. Now, when year, Barry didn't want to take it. may we go ashcre? I am impatient to be At the end of those ten years he came at Parklawn.' over on a visit to tbe old country, and •I think, Barry, I had better precede only a visit. His home, as his wife's and you, and break the news of your com- children's, is Australia. His energy ing,' said bis cobsin. 'Your unexpected has borne fruit, for be now counts his appiearanoe might be too great a shock income by tbousanns and is a Member for our uncle.' of Parliament. He talks little, bo1 does 'True.' a good deal for tbe improvement of the
Thus it was arranged. George was to colony. start at once: Barry was to follov? witbia The mother country is always loved, an hour bat never regretted. Indeed, Barry a a •Uncle, all you can say in blame of aettou In his life, nay, not even the dark my sonduct will not equal what I say of hour, for he openly affirms that he did 1 1:— It whit fho DOSt myself. Can you forgive me?'
Barry was the speaker, He stood leaning on a chair back, confronting his uncle, wbo was seated in the dark, oak library. •Forgive you, sir!' exclaimed Matthew Lorrimore, angrily—'forgive you for nearly breaking an old man's heart—an old man who had shown you nothing but Kindness?'
The listener repressed a smile. His uncle's heart, be knew, was not of quite so brittle a material while his kindness had been rather of tbe srbitraro patron description. Yet he had owed him much—very much and it was in all truthful sinaerity that he answered, "Uncle, It was that very kindness that led me to take the step I did. I was selfish enough, besides thinking.it would to you be less pain, to wish you to mourn me as dead (a transient grief) ratber than to have your affection taken from tne—to offend you—to live under the bann of your anger—under tbe stigma of ingratitude.' •But why—why this?' broke in Matthew Lorrimore. •Because, uncle, I oould never have married Rosalind. I did not love her as a wife should be loved while something whispered that, if she wedded me, it would not be from affection, but to please you. I should never have her heart.' •You knew of her love for your cousin George?' •No!1 cried Barry, throwing his heal up quickly. 'Uncle, bad I been aware of that, not the present of twice your fortune would nave made me a party in forcing Rosalind to do violence to the
urest t'eeiing of a woman. Had I I would have come forward, and, by my own act, have freed her, whatever might have been the conse.quenoe.' 'Then you have no objection to yonr cousin wedding her, and taking youir plates as my heir?'" •No objection whatever, uncle,' smll«(3L Barry. '1 have learned tbe value of the healthy luxury of work. Forgive me the past, and leave to' me the future. I am content.'
Matthew Lorrimore's keen eyes gazed scrutinizingly at tho frank, honest lace. Then ho said, 'TQO cause of that past you havo not told me yet.' 'A woman, uncle—my present wife. I met her I loved her. Her greatest fault was poverty her greatest charm her goodness. Not often does man come across such ft priza. No wealth conld have compensated mo for the loss. Under the name by which I had introduced myself I married her in secret. Almost at the same time, yon, justty angered by my coolness in fulfilling my promise to wed Rosalind, stopped mv allowance, snd I had to raise a loan. at welvemonth I managed to pull through. After that tho money lender would no longer be appeased. I hadu't any mouey, in fact, to appesse him. I was threatened with arrest. I thought of my young wife, and was desperate. I was ready to do, to risk anything for the wbman 1 loved. I came up to town, and made a last appeal to Jonas Moss. I need not say to you, uncle, a man of the world, that the usurer was the snore obdurate tbe less chance ho saw I had of settling bis demand. I left him, promising payment within the week.'
How?' Ah! how? Now, uncle, come the sad part of my life that must forever be a
naft A[ mV 1110 tUav ujUOb lOulVlu
•Verv well
Snow
for
black stain. In my frenzied despair I horse before its progress
it with the best" intent, and would reckon him as BO man wbo would not do the same, and as readily renounce indolence and a fortune for the woman he loved. [THE END]
THE HIDEOUS FACE OF WAR.
SOME AWFUL HORRORS COMMON TO THE BATTLE FEILD.
Detroit Free Press.
In the excitement of battle the fall of a comrade is scarcely heeded, and half of a company might bo wiped out and tho other half fight on without knowing of it. It is only after the loud mounted cannon and the umrderous musketry have ceased their work that the hideous face of war shows itself to make men shudder and turn away. Soldiers who have not gone over a battlefield or been ono of a burial party have missed half the griinness and awfulness of war.
After Gettysburg, one of the Union burial parties buried eighty Federal soldiers in one trench. They were all Irom a New York regiment, and all seemingly fell dead at one volley. Tt»ey were almost all lu line, taking up but little more room than live men. All of them were shot above the hips, and nst one of them had lived ten minutes after being hit. Here lay then what was a full company of men, wiped out by one single volley as they advanced to the charge. Some had their muskets so tightly grasped that it took the full strength of a man to wrest them away. Others died with arms outstretched, and others yet had their hands clasped over their heads, and a never-to-be-forgotten expression on their white faces.
At Fair Oaks, tbe Third Michigan had its first real baptism of fire. The boye bad been held back on other occasions, and now when given opportunity they went for the enemy pt-3t«d In tbe edgo df the woods ou the double quick, and with yells and cheers. A part of the regiment bad to swing across a glade, and In so doing lost fifty or sixty men in tbe space ofsixty seconds. One company lost twenty men who wont down together in one spot and scarcely movod a limb after falling. Details of five men were made from each company to advance as sharpshooters, and of these fifty men who pluneed into the woods as a skirmish line only six came out alive, and every one of these was wounded from one to three times.
At Cold Harbor a shell exploded In an Ohio regiment advancing against a battery, and sixteen men wero wiped out in an Instant. Of these nine were blown to fragments and the others horribly mutilated. Tbe battery was firing thirty or forty shells per minute, and this was the work of a single one. One discharge of grape in this same fight kilied fourteen men in a Michigan regiment, and aNew York regiment which went in witb 703 men in line came oat with only 360. On one acre of gi-onnd tbe burial party found ov?r 700 dead men. In a bit of woods where the hattln lines bad clashed more than 2,00J dead were found in a space no wider than a square in a city and no more than three times as long.
At the battle of Savage Station, during McClelian'a change of base, a solid shot fired from a Federal field piece Into the head of an infantry column marching by fours, killed twenty one men
v"
accused you of being the cause of all The first ten men were reduced to mv trouble. I said you had brought me bloody pulp, *nd ^t^h^ime un without a profession as your heir, and
then Suddenly had flung mo penniless' battle a
•In fact I got mvnelf up to fever heat, tangent, and killed a second lieutenant thinking'of my dear little wife at home, of infantry who was eighty rods away, and the letter your solicitor had sent At Fredericksburg, as the Union until a elan came into my head I infantry m*rcb*»d in solid masses up the wottld go down to Parklawn. I would valley bejond
nretona to yield to all vour desires— ati» opened fire from behind a stone mark me! Idid all this, feeling, know- wall. The fighting alon*1^ liae was In* that I had not Rosalind's love over in ten minutes, and 5,000 Federals finally, I would borrow money of you lay dead within the reach of each ther. to pay some debts, then mysteriously A shel' from gun on the hill exploded rftaannear leaving sn ides that I had in the midst of some New Hampshire beet^killed and robbed. Your gener troops and killed a sergeant, a osity sir—ah, you cannot tell bow keen sod twelve privates, and wounded six a reproach it was to me !-made my task nthem. Befor* the fSE? eaay. I would have liked to confess all. the river, and while Celling I was a ooward, and dared not, I left a shell struck a house and you to smoke my cigar by the boat a room where there were five soldiers jbouse. I had made my preparations— and a cltiwn. AH were blewn to pleoee, tbe false beard and mustache, tbe means snd three citizens in a room directly to make it appear that a death-struggle overhead were also
lmd taken place. I used them and, Perhaps, the most destru«tive w'ork node, to-day is tbe result,' made by a shell »mong_ troops occurred
F,D,"y
wa®
bruised
to death. At this same
re^ln^eand
on tbe world to starve—to go to tbe Federal gon killed four artilleryr.,, men, dismounted the gun, wounded Matthew Lorrimore winced. two men,
Lin^f ^,i? artlHerv
ancle but I bope witb workiog close together, and e«eh bwl fired a shot when tbe gunboat opened
«Of what value would that be?' witb a sixty (oar pounder. Tbe shell •To mess much as money is Httl®,' struck between
wife such as mine. Give roe killed outright,
your affection I ask no more. Uncle,
had been lying
rat the question to yourself, a self made just as tbe csirson nun—which {«tbe grandest, which is fifteen, eleven wers tbe happiest, to bravely work aud make three wounded, and a fortune for yourself, or to idly live hurt, but so da®sdtbst upon thai toiled tor mod made by an- waited to be captured by a pulled asborew Two of tbe wounded 'Baity!' exclaimed tbe old man, rising died tbe next day, tece* alive of tbe thirty three wbo bad
l'P0,!!,?.1?
1^
-jl"
nij^-
..
4
tf*®
responded Barry. 'Onele, I have tbe ploded. ^i^ra^retbro^btghhi nower of work I have energy. Yon air and came down a wreck, rne
not bow strong they become when eighteen mem »roanJ hT^Vbn used
^i^,
under wwrnsbed op
approached. pmd the !*italic». Nothing ws. left
•Baxr*and Maxtbew Lorrimore, of tbe gun carriages! but taking tiii hand, looked at him with the gun* themselves were terribly bsiI mneb emotion—'forgive you?—why, tered. The only remains of rather, do I love you somucbT And be that ^,1*^J*" MoS fei| nr, his nephew's neck. Tben, after a wheel BUed with broken ppokea. mom tew^MMntK 'But where is you witsT )ol ue dead bad Item* tor
com-
ments, snd tbe bushes were covered with shreds of flesh. When tbe caisson exploded the head of one of the victims wss blown high in sir, snd fell into tbe water within a few yards of thegtinboat
THE CAMPAIGN IDIOT. Philadelphia Times. The campaign idiot is not so common a commodity nsw as before the day of railways and newspapers and telegraphs snd free schools, out he is stlii abroad in the land, snd i« beard from daily as the Presidential contest progresses. He is the man wbo knew front the start that Garfield and Hancock would be nominated, and he believes every scandal against the candidate he opposes, every wild prophecy of interested persons as to party victory, and rejects every doubt cast upon the character or success of his favorite.
It the regulation campaign idiot is a Republican, he believes that Hancock wanted Lee to win at Gettysburg that he pulled down tbe flag to dine with Beauregard that he executed Mrs. Surratt entirely of bis own motion, when the President and all the authorities wanted her reprieved that he never fought battle or wrote one of his own orders that hs is a dress parade soldier and a bummer politician tbat he spruug from ancestors wbo were never born at all, and that if elected .President he would pay the rebel debt and pensions, make beer gardens snd circuses of our national cemeteries and treat heroism on the Union side as a crime in dispensing his patronage.
He believes that Maine will vote Republican by twenty thousand, Ohio bv forty thousand, Indiana by ten thousand, Virginia by thirty thousand aud New York by fifty thousand. Ho believes that Garfield never heard of Credit Mobilier until after all the suams were sold and the purchasers wtro denying their own contracts that if he hadn't made tbe De Goyler appropriations tbe streets of Washington would have bred pestilence, and that if be ha-in't voted for the back pay the wheels oi government would have stopped.
If tbe campaign idiot is a Democrat he believes that General Hancock it a son of John Haucock, who signed the Declaration of Independence tbat be was planning great war campaign* when he was puking in long clothe* that he fought every battle of tbe war tnat was won, and would have won every battle that was lost that he never toid a lie or yanked marbles from his chums that be was out in an Indian campaign when Mrs. Surratt was executed that bo settled reconstruction by bis civil rule in New Orleans that be never held or sold a share of oil stock In his life that he makes his own fires, oleans his stables and grooms his homes at Governor's Island, and dines ou hard tack and mess pork and wasues them down with whiskey straight.
He believes that Garfield invehted Credit Mobilier for Oakes Ames that he was the DeGolyer pavement contractor tbat he
wat*
tbe author of the bank pay
grab tbat ike is an infidel, aud never was a boatman beyond pitching pennies or playing all-fears witb the colored mule drivers and cheating them out of their earnings. He believes that Mancock will carry Maine and allofNewEng land but Vermout, and shake the Republican power of that State that he will sweep Ohio aud Indiana like a whirl wind that Garfield isn't runnii gin New York, New Jersey or Pennsylvania: that Hancock will be elected by a million majority, and that the only man certain to get ail office from the new tiriininistra tion in the campaign idiot himself.
This seems like an overdrawn picture of the campaign idiot but who does not recognize the character, even among comparatively intelligent people, in the daily intercourse between men and women? Indeed, goneral ignoranes is not, as a rule, one of the chief qualities of the campaign idiot: (or every com munity can point to men of clear and correct judgment in all other matters who are dwarfed Into idiocy by partisan bigotry.
Their devotion to truth, to family and even to religion perishes before their devotion to party, and they hear and read the vilest partisan scandals, the wildest predictions of party success and the feob.'est anologies for tbe errors of their political friends tvlth th« blindest credulity. They would be keenly offended if told that they were mere feather# in the nostrils of unscrupulous partisans and Chat tbev are made to believe the most palpable falsehoods by those who Inherently hstetrnth but every locality has its campaign idiot* In whose judgment, if it can be called, their party is never wrong and their candidates never juslly censurable. And tne more ren pectable and intelligent tbey are the more idiotic tbey make themselves, and the more pointedly they prove tbat while there are podtical organizations tbe campaign Idiot will ply bis vocation.
IfowThey Feel at Adrian. Mich. Reed, Beach & Smith, drugclsts of this city, say that DAY'S KIBNEY PAD is giving the very best of satisfaction. One of tbelr customers says be would not take two hundred dollars for tbe one be has if he could not get another.
¥*KMALE weakness, caused by deranged kidneys, permanently and positively cored bv tbe oee of Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pads. All druggists sell them. Sold by J. J. Baur.
ettflWKB SYRUP
Tfce Only iteally Reliable Remedy —FOR— Wasftac antf Diseases.
Attee nomeroos experiment*, Mr. Fellows succeeded in producing U»M combination of Hjrperhospbites, which bs* uotouiy Restored him health, hat has since been found ik siesesftful iu the irea: m+-ut of every other diwwe emanating from las of nerve power, and consequently muscats? relaxation, viz.: Apboela. Apparent Aqonla, Ansmlt, Angiitis Pectoris, Chronic Diarrhoea, Dyspepsia,
SSeurslgfs." Ifervou* Debility, St. Vita*' IMtnee, Whooping Cowan, Congestion of Ltn Emaciation,
PAD
A DISCOVERT BT ACCIDENT, Which supplies a want men of eminent ability have dsvoted years of study and experiment to find—A Specific for Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Urlnarv Organs and Nervous system—and from the time of U8dlscovery has rapidly Increased in favor, gaining the approval and conftdeuc& of medical men and those who havo used it it has become a favorite with all classes, and wherever introduced has superseded allother treatments. In short, such Is its Intrinsic merit and superiority, that. It is non the only recognised reliable remedy,
DISEASE" OF THE KID3ET8 Are tbe most prevalent, dangeroNS and fatal affections that afflict mankind, and so varied and iusidiousln theircharacter.that persons often suffer for a long time before knowing what ails them. The most characteristic symptoms are gradual ws sting away of the whole body pnin ltt the back, side or loins a weak, feeble, exhausted feeling: loss or appetite and dreu' of exercife scanty and painful discharge of variously colored urine inability to etaln or expel the urlue minute shreds ov casta in the urine and, when the disease is of long duration, there is much emaciation ana general nervouM prostration.
THE ONLY CURB.
We *av positively, and without fear of contradiction, tbat DAY'S KIKNXY PAD is the first and «nly lnfallivv* :m for every form of Kidney diseas t. i* the bfst remedy yet discovered ror tbls complaint, and more effectual iu its oiiettMion than any other treatment. By u- OR falthjully ami persistently nocase witl lu sound so Inveterati v© as not to yield to Us jvo vverful remedial virtuea.
IS NTROStlLY ENDOB'iKI). We have the moat unequlvocul v. Hl lmony to its curative powers from many in-rsons of high character, intelligence »n: responsibility. Our book, "llowa Life wtta Saved," giving the history of this nowtlistcovery, aud a large record of most rtu.iarkable cures, sent free Write for it
DAY'S KIDNEY PADAnreSold by druggists, or will be went, by mall (frepof postage) on receipt of their price: Uvular 92 Special, for obstinate cases of long stnndinc. ''hildren's, $150 Address DAY KIDNEY P\D tX)., I'oledo Ohio. '41TWIAV Owing to the many 1 worthless Kidney Puds now t»erkiit# a «,iW on our reputation, we deem it due the aflileted warn theni. Ask for DAY'S KIDNEY PAD take no other and you wilt no' be deceived. C-Aug 21.
A Trial Will Insnre its Popularity Everywhere.
CHANGED.
ngs,
ly«rthereile Prostra-Palpitation of Heart, lion. Internapted A Feeble Epl eptlc Fit*. rtmr and Ague, Leooorrixea, Marasmus, Mental Depression, liability to NervoasnM*, rlsge,
Hypochondrias*#, etc.
Viwasss produced by overtaxing tbe mind by grief and anxiety: byjrapld growth by child Marine by insufflcleut nourishment by residence in hot dlmstea or unhealthy toealHies: by excesses «r by any irrsgnlantlss of life. 3G&£ BV Aix XatceeuKO. VJ& rz^
-THE-
ELDREDGKE
SEWING MACHINE OFFICE
Has been changed to
W. if. reiucr's Shoe Store
Southwest corner of Fourth and Ohio streets
It is Warrranted,
W'W'
"Ilk
rj -I,
white"''
Shuttle .icwing Machine
Whan once used will retain Its place forever.
Theshuttle tension Is adjustable without removing the shuttle from the mtu'iilne. Tne great popularltyof the White 1» the most convincing tribute to «ts excpllf nee aud superiority over other machines, ana In submitting it to the trade we put it upon its merits.a.iu In no Instance has it ever yet faliedto satisfy any recommendation iu its favor.
The demand for the White has Increased to suck an extent that we me now compelled to t«.rn out A €*»«n»lete «ewlnir Machine Every
Three KfInntes In «iie l»ay to Supply tbe Demand
Every machine is warranted fo: A years, aud sold for ca»h at liberal discount*, or upon easy payments, to suit the convenience of buyers. J. N. Hickman, Gen. Agt. aw Main street. Terra ilauU-. Jnd,
?r
It is celebrated for its advantages, lu that $ It is one oi the largest Netfiiu machines &* nnu'HCiureil—adapted alike to the use of the family or the workshop. It ha« the largest sliii tie, with a bobbin that holds almost a spool of thread.
&
I
**4:
Mw-
fM-ja
14'
-Jim
i*
-1
WW*
It Is the most complete, desirable ma- 4 chine ever offered to tbe public. Being tbe latest, it has tho advantage of having very desirable snd new ftnprovements.
a
Don't buy until yoa see it. 4 Hairy Metaaker, late eolicftor for the White, will be glad to see hi» old costotners. Office, southwest corner Fourth end
Ohio streets,
W H. FISK,_Agent.
Ti*
Arundel Tinted Spectacles
For As relief and cure of
Dim,
Action of tbe Heart Melancholy. Fear of Child Birth. Dancers of Child birth tjllltv to Misear-
Weak
mnted
and Falling Sight,
Enabling tbe wearer to lead sod work either by day or night- with perfect esse and comfort. Protected by let^swwf patent
by tbe government of the United
Mates. England and the United Kingdom. For sale by S.R. FREEMAX, Agent.
DBS. BARTHOLOMEW 6 HALb, DENTAL PAKL0KS, 34aia trw Xsrrt Hsu*.:, laiiaoft
