Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 44, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 April 1882 — Page 3

iTHE MAIL

j.

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

On Kingston Bridge.

BY ELUS MACK AT HTTCHtSSOIf.

All Houls' Night lbe dead walk on Klngsou Bridge.—[01(1 Legend.

On Kingston Bridge tbe Rtarligbt gbone Through hurrying mists with shrouded

Urlow:

ing night-wind made its moan,

The mighty river crcpt below "Twaa All Sou la' N Ight, and to and fro (The

quick and dead together walked, The quiok and dead together talked, On Kingston Bridge.

Two met who had not mot for years— Their bate was once too deep for fears One drew his rapier as ho came— Tip loapt bis anger like aflame with clash of mall be faced his foe. And bade blm stand and meet him so. He felt a gravo-yard wind go by— Cokf, cold as was bin enemy

A Btony horror held him fast. Tbe Dead looked with a ghastly stare. And sighed, "I know thee not," and passed Like to the mist and left him there

On Kingston Uridge.

'Twas All Souls' Night, and to and fro The quick and dead together walked. The quick and dead together talked,

On Kingstoo Bridge.

Two mot who had not piet for years With grief that was too deep for tears They parted last He clasped her hand, and in her eyes Ho Bought I/ve's rnpturous surprise.

O Sweet!" he cried, "hast tbou come baok To sny thou lov'st tby lover still?" Into the starlight pnle and cold

Hhe gazed afar—ner hand was chill. thou remember how we kept Our ardenl vigils?—bow we klssea? Take thou these kisses as of old I"

An icy wind about him swept "I know thee not," she sighed, and passed Into the dim and shrouding mist

On Kingston Bridge.

'Twas All Souls' Night, and to and fro Tbe quick and dead together walked, The quick and dead together talked,

On Kingston Bridge. —[The Century Hag.

THE HAUNTED INN.

Many years ago, long before the day of riiilroalH, there stood, in the then wild mountain regions of Western Penn-sylvania--a. large, rambling, tumbledown building, which was used, at the time of which I speak, as an inn. It had been built many years before by a visionary immigrant from the old world, in imitation of his ancestral home. Why such an out-of-the-way spot had been selected for a home no one ever pretended to guess. But certain it was that the owner had expended all of his available means in its erection, and had toiled and starved, and iinally died of a broken heart, his utter want of practical training totally unfitting him for wresting a living from tho barren hillsides which he had selected for a home. His wifo soon followed him to the gravo, and his children scattered, no one knew where. And thus it was that the once pretentious miansion went to decay for want of a tenant, and would have rotted to the ground hud not the spirit of improvement and 'enterprise finally invaded the region in search of the hidden treasures of the earth.

When I visited the spot, a small village had sprung up around the old house, and that had been taken possession of, and the few rooms not utterly ruined by decay had been converted into a so-called ituvern.

The landlord might have starved, however, if he had depended on native custom, for the old house, during those years of solitude, had gained an unsavory reputation, and in the absence of oth«r tenantsiinany-tongued rumor had peopled it with ghosts.

It*-reputation had reached me before 1 vittTtcd the place, but as 1 had always felt u-n iiuexprussible longing to sleep in a haunted room and niase the personal acquaintance of some of the dissatisfied denizens of the other shore, I was not Mrry leacu that the haunted inn was the only placein the town where I could find a resting-place.

I wan Kimewhat taken aback, however, when the landlord informed me, in tones of broken Ktiglish and poor whisky, that every bed and every room in the house was full. I could not but admit the eternal litnessof things, inasmuch as he

was

full, too: but I beggwfl him to

set his few remaining wits to .work to see if he could not find a peg for me to hung tip mv tired bones upon. After grave consultation with the iamtladv.it was concluded that they could make me a shake-down, if 3 did not mind scaring my room with another gentleman who had already retired.

There was nothing for it but to accent the situation, atul I «iid so in good faitn. lty the time the shake-down was completed I had finished my supper and announced my desire retire immediately. The landlord wan by this time to© far gouo to render atiy assistance, and as the landlady weighed not less than •hree hundred pound*. I excused her from attendance, and meted as mv'own uslx'r. She furnished me with the remains of a tallow di]^ and giving me a few gene nil directions concerning the location of the room, bade me goodnight.

I fortunately stumbled into tiie right place, for a hasty glance revealed the shake-down. 1 had just time, however, to bolt the door when the light went out, and it remained for the moon, which shone brightly into the window, to light me to bed. nnd to reveal the location of the other bed, on which the stranger slept.

I aiu not naturally nervous, but I eon•fes* that I would much rather have known who my room-tunic was and the thought of what he might be kept me awake for some time. To adtj to my nervousness the wind had risen, and it wjitslled through the cracks and around the gables of the old mansiM| with a weird and mournful cadence vUlch was any thing but soothing to my tired and already overwrought nerves

As I !»y titer* the sounds momentarily increased in hideousaess, I thought of all the rtoties 1 had hoard of tbe cursed old rookery, and as I did so tho sounds became more and more like the shrieks of the damned, or the wail of a lost soul. 1 finally became so nervous that I resolved to "arise and go below.

But now, as I rose in my bed for this

punnxse, I fouml mvsolf subiocUHl to now sourvo of annoyancc. The mock- j^c

came at length upon my ear, distinctly charged with tones which could not be mistaken. It was the hard, suppressed breathing of a man. I listened stiO, and it came anew, stronger and more folly upon my ear. It was like the thick respirations of an apoplectic. Whence it proceeded I knew not bnt that it was near me I was certain. A suspicion of robbeiy, possible assassination, flashed upon me, but was instantly discarded as foreign to the people among whom I was traveling.

The moonlight now fell upon the curtained bed opposite to me, and I saw the tattered drapery move, as if the frame upon which it was suspended were agitated. I watched, I confess, with more peculiar feelings of interest. I was not alarmed, but an unaccountable anxiety crept over me. At length the curtain parted, and a naked human leg was protruded through its folds the foot came with a dumb, dead-like sound to the floor, resting there, it seemed to me, at least half a minute before the body to which it belonged was disclosed to my view. Slowly, tnen, a pallid and unearthly-looking figure emerged from the couch, and stood with its stark lineament clearly drawn against the dingy curtains behind it. It appeared to be balancing itself for a moment, and then began to move along from the bed. But there was something horribly unnatural in its motions. Its feet came to the floor with a dull, heavy sound, as if there was no vitality in them. Its arms hung apparently paralyzed by its side, and the only nerve set "rigidly in the framcf appeared about its orow. The eyes were dilated and fixed with the expression of ghastly horror, and the petrified lips moved not, as the hideous moaning, which came from the bottom of the chest, escaped them.

It began to move across the floor in the direction of my bed, its knees at every step being drawn up with a sudden jerk to the body, and its feet coming to the ground as" if they were moved by some mechanical impulse, and were wholly wanting in the elasticity of living members.

It approached my bed, and rainglod horror and curiosity kept me still. It came and stood beside it, and, childlike, I clung to my couch, moving only to the farther side. Slowly, and with the same unnatural footfalls, it pursued me thither, and again I changed my position. It placed itself then at the foot of my bed, and, moved by its piteous groans, I tried to look calmly at it. I endeavored to rally my thoughts—1» reason with myself, and even to speculate upon the nature of the object beifore me. One idea that went through my brain was too extravagant not to remember. I thought, among other things, that the phantom was a corpse, animated for the moment by some galvanic process, ia order to terrify me. Then as I recollected that lh#ro was no one in the village to carry such a trick into effect—supposing even tho experiment possible—I rejected the supposition. How. too, could those awful moans be produced from an inanimate being? And yet it seemed as if every thing about it was dead, except the mew capability of moving its feet and uttering those unearthlyje.xpTessions of suffering. The speotue, however, if so it may be called gave one tout little opportunity for reflection. Its ghastly limbs were raised a»ew with the same automaton movement, and, placing one of it* feet upon the bottom of any bed, while its glassy eyes were .fixed steadfastly upon me, it began tilowly-stalking towards najr pillow.

I confew that I was now in an agony of terror. I sprang from the couch and fled from the apartment. The kcensightedness of fear enabled me to discover an open closet upon the other side of the halL Springing iirt© at, I closed the door quickly after ine. lit had .neither lock nor bolt, but tbe closet was so narrow that by placing my feet against the opposite wall I could braoe back against the door so as to hold it against any human assailant who had only his irms for a lever.

The perspiration of mortal fear started upon my forehead as 1 beard the supernatural tnesul of thai strange visitant approaching the spot. It seemed an age before its measured steps brought it to the door.

It struck it the blow was sullen and hollow, as if dealt by the lrand of corpse. It was like the dull sound of its own feet upon the floor.

It struck the door again, and, to amy intense relief, the sound was more feeble than before. Surely, I thought, tbe hand of no living man could produce such a sound.

I know not whether it struek again* for now its thick breathing became so loud that even the moanings, which wen mingled with the respiration, became inaudible.

At last they subsided entirely, becoming at first gradually weaker, and then audible only in harsh, sudden sobs, whose duration I could not estimate, from their mingling with the blast which swept the hillsides.

The last sound that I remember of hearing was the most terrible of all—the sound which once heard can never be mistaken for anv other—the death-rat-tle in a human tfiroat* It came with a horrible distinctness: it seemed in my very ear. It appeared to me that the accumulated horrors of the whole night had been concentrated in that soun that audible connection between life and death.

What might have been heard of that I know not, for insensibility came to my relief.

When I came to. I knew that the morning hatl come, and, scarcely knowing whether or not it had been a hideous tfream. I arose and opened the door.

What words can describe the awful horror of that momentP Before me stood the spectre, with the full light of day revealing its revolting features in all their hideous deformity. The face was swollen and livid, the tongue protruded from the mouth, and its eves, bursting from their sockets, glared at me and froze the blood in my veins.

All this is impressed upon my mind with a terrible distinctness, although the view I had was instantaneous, for the next instant the apparition, whose arms were extended forward, fell upon

8

ins*- wind, which had anixwivd to me lr?w* luoro than once km Uahle human sounds shriek and fell, with the ghastly thine tioon mrt

Once mor§ insensibility came to my relief. The rest of my story is soon told. The household of the inn heard my cry, rushed into the hall, and released me.

It was the dead body of a guest of the inn. He was afflicted with some organic affection of the system, and was subject to grievous fits" of nightmare,.during which he still preserved sufficient

Eis

owers of volition to move to the bed of servant, who, being used to his attacks, would take the necessary means to relieve him. The servant had that night remained out late, and when he returned found his -way in the dark to the wrong room, and occupied the bed intended for me, whilst I had stumbled into the room occupied by his master, and got into the servant's bed. The poor man had fallen a victim to his malady and my cowardice.

3 Ghosts on the Trail,

Wells. Fargo & Co.'s express car No. 5 is said to be haunted. The messengers on the run betwwen San Francisco and Ogden have been exercised over the fact for some time, and when the car was sent to Sacramento, several weeks ago, to be overhauled and repaired, they all expressed much satisfaction, and were firm in the belief that the car-builder would kill the ghost and return the car to the rail free from all demoralizing influence. In this they were disappoin for the messenger wlio left San Francisco one night recently was visited by the unseen power, and put to a deal of trouble. The ghost came in and tumblfed the box-es-of freight about, tolled bells and made sweet music, and called the messenger by name. On the last trip the car made before it was taken from the track the messsnger heard strange noises on the roof. His thoughts were on his duty, and he came to the conclusion that robbers were waiting an opportunity for entering the car. He opened the door, ant took a look at both ends of the car, but found everything quiet. He could see nothing unusual, and returned, closed the door, and was walking back to the mailing table, when down came a box of cooked shrimps and a bandbox.— The freight was pushed about, and finally left in the same place. The mysterious din was indulged in until the train was nearing Terrace Station, in the eastern part of the State, and the messenger had about made up his mind to take to the sagebrush, when all was still again. (On one occasion, when they had a corpse in transit, the head and trunk of a man's body was seen to rise up from the casket take a good look around the car, calling the messenger by name, and then vanish. The car was in the' train several years ago, when an accident occurred just west of Truckee, killing Conductor Marshall and an express messenger, and since that time these mysterious noises have been frequent, much to the •discomfiture of the occupants. The express boys say car NOL 6 is known to all the company's employes, and they all tell the same story for the truth.—Beno •Gazette.

GOD BLESS THE WOMEN! Tho best interest of all humanity depend on the good health of our women folks. Women's best friend for relieving the painful- weaknesses with wbicb so many are afflicted,end as a general family medicine for warding off bilious attacks, and curing stomach, liver and kidney eomplaints,ss Brown's Iron Bitters. It contains just «nch lifegiving properties as are needed so female diseases, and is superior to all other preparations as a true medicinal tonic, for giving health, strength aixS vigor to every part of the body. If you are wealk, nervous and debilitated,-or suffer from ^dyspepsia, Brown's Iron Bitters wilionrely cure you.

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TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.

S

searcher:

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N SATURDAY,

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8T. JOSEPH, MO.

OPIUM"""

Bfaay Free. r.KKT.TR JjJ,

C(/KEI with DOUBLE

CHLOKIOK

of

GOLD.

T/U Morphine I'ter

*200 pp. $1.00

KJMILEYTM.U.,i)WIOHT,LLL.

REED'S

18 A THOROUGH HE.MK1A'

In every

cow

of Fever and

AK'»',

while for

inwmlerN of the Hlonineh, TorpUIHy of the Live.r, IndlKestlon and dlsturhiiiircn of the Anlmnl forcec, which ilehllltnle, it haa eqtilvalrnt and cuft have no tmlintitul". It dliould not be confounded with llie triturato compound* of chenp fpirllw nnd r**fnilnl oils often nold under the name of Hitter*.

Foi Sale hy dnigttlBti nnd general denier* everywhere. Wholmiilt si

JOHN COKFAKK. Terr«- Haubo, Ind^ IHKRE IH A HAI.M I."V «II.K4I

'For all Nerve and f!r iiri

ui-

'•J ifeetion* nre InvaluahU-. (They nre prompt, wife and effectnal. 'DIP

I«-1

known

I remedy In «ll KtHK'"* w«-ak-e.ninKofthe memory, IXWH (f liraln, i'ower, Nervous [DeblHty, IxM Knerjcy, bowl [HopeM, I at prudence* of

Br.

I'Youth.

EXCJSH

in matnrer

yearn, nemlna! wenkne»«», and general lorn of (tower In fjeriiniltive oivai.--. To thow KiifTerinj? from IIOTVOUK

ln*uku:he, nervous irritability, iier%*on**ho^k. tiorvotm pro*trntiort, nervoim exrelief 1- -iro dod. In many otiw*

narks

!haustion,

c.f female

weaku«!M they a«t like a jfUarm. The Hlu-'cnt, the Itertchcr. the elerKynian, ttie ,editor, the buniiit^ man, .can all be benefln-1 by their rise. IJfe i« t» «hort to iwaste away irt 'ull torpid 'manner, when txjx jwlll benefit yon, nnd «lx botjtles will cure ai.d n*tor«l b-ou to health and happljne* forS7/0. A*k yonrdrugjel«*t for them. T*i:e ho otlier.

Pllia. 0r send direct to the manuIfaetnrerH, who will aend them by mail, w,Ued,on recclpt of price. AdUress

1

$^f»

Dr. C. If. CJjirke.

f*&i

liroAdway,

Sew

York.

Send 3 cent xtamp for clrcu-

A week. #12nday at borne eaaUymadet *tly Outfit free. Addrew Trne A Oo^ 1 Augu»la, Maine.