Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 July 1883 — Page 3
THE MAIL
A PAPER
FOR THE
PEOPLE.
Black Birch.
UJTW there black birch trees agrowing in the far off woods. I wonder. With a wealth of balmy essence in their branches lithe and strong? tin the sprint time do the cLiidren reach with e*Ker hands to plunder.
While the quiet woodland arches ring with laugh and shout and song? see an old gray school house with a ledtre and wood beside it. And the rumpled, raoeey pasture land runs close up to it* door While, away back in Its greenness, with a tuft of fern to hide it.
can
And a flaab like purest crystal, a spring bub* bles and runs o'er.
r,"
in? bough close by
1
Whore the sunlicrbt comes In flickers and the shadows (rather dim.
Oh, the ru*h or childish footsteps when at reoess times they spy it, Oh, the flash of cooling water. Oh, the warm lips at its brim. Then the pulling at the birches, the delightful swish snd rustle, /And the crackling of the tender twigs, the noisy bursts of glee *when the sharp rap on the window calls—oh, what a merry tussle
In the filling out of pockets so that no sharp eye may see. The dark room grows strongly cheerful as the little smugglers gather,
And a cplcy, woodsy fragranoe penetrates its dingy nooks,
JAh,
how Bly the rodents nibble, while they make a vain endeavor To appear alsorbed in gleaning from the wisdom of their books.
When the daily tasks are ended, and with dinner baskets swaying All the little folks bound homeward and the house Is left In gloom. Then across the teacher's weary face a pleasant smile Is straying
As she brushes out the litter with her clumsy hemlock broom. [Tlo«tnn Transcript.
HEART TO HEART.
Drawing the soft fur of her wrap closer about her. Alice Howard pauses on the doorstep while she wafts a kiss from the tips of lier ploved fingers to the old gentleman who us standing watching her with such a pleased proud expression. 'Good-bye, napa dear. I do wish you were going, lint don't worry about me. Mrs. Grayson Is the best of chaperogs, and she will see that your little girl conies back safely. Good-bye."
Another moment and the carriagedoor has closed, and Alice is being whirled to the festive see no of which she will be the bright particular star.
It is not because she is rich that our beroine is the favorite that she is, nor yet because she is beautiful, although the most indifferent observer would pronounce her that, with the oueenly grace of her bearing, and her face with its brilliant sapphire-blue eyes, and her skin /as I rely fair and downy as the velvety 'petalef a white rosobud.
Hut it is something besides that attracts everyone to Alice Howard, for goodness and amiability aro stamped upon each exquisite feature, proclaiming unmhtHkahly thn existence of a noble character beneath that fair exterior.
She looks more than usually lovoly tonight, atul then is one whose dark eyes light up with a peculiar glow as they rest admiringly upon her.
It is two years since Douglas Rhodes Vand Alice first met, and their friendship »ince then has pursued an oven, uneventful course, until of late a change has come.
Alice sees that upon no other do Douglas's handsome eyes rest with such a gentle tenderness of expression, and that whet) he speaks the softest, richest tones of his voice aro for her alone. Why it is so is a riddlo not hard to read. That. Douglas loves hor she feels and hopes, for she knows that within her own heart the tendrils of her warm young a fleet ion have long sinco twined themselves about his image.
The hours glide rapidly and delightfully by upon pleasure's radiant pinions, amid sweet sounds and sweeter scents. ••My darling! my «jueOu!M the young man "thinks rapturously, "this night must not pass over my head without my telling iter how deeply, fervently love her. 1 can wait no longer."
Ihit ". Grayson prove* to be the most ri :id 1 elmperons, and no opportunity oivurs long enough for Douglas to uti«T the words that tremble upon his lip*. "Hnvs* you enjoyed yourself?" hi asks, as he stands with his hand on tht carriage door.
Alice draws a deep breath, "It hat been lovely!" she exclaims. "May 1 come to-morrow morning see how yon are feeling after your fati* gue?" he asks. "Do I liH»k fatigued nowP" she says, raising her lustrous brilliant eyes laugh* inglv to his. "t cannot truthfully say that you do." he replies with an answering smile. "But all the same, with your permission, I will call ia the morning."
The next tiny the Howard mansion ii the scene of two momentous interview* —one in the library with the master ol house, and another in the tapestry-hung drawing-room.
There is a great bow-window at one •nd of the apartment, and there, with no other listeners than the lilies, that lift their snowy heads from the jardinierts, and the maiden by his side stately fair as they, Iouglas tells his story and receives his answer*
A month slips away, and it is a changed Aliee we see to-day. with the carnation gone from checks and lips, and great in the sapphire-blue eyas. "Be brave, my own it will not be foi
Douglas, cannot be brave! it
has come so unexpectedly, and you art going so far, so very, very far away. What if something should happen to part us from each othwrF'
Douglas draws her ck*»r to him and kisses tier tear-wel face.
•What eonld happen, mv darling? ami influence in theoountry. What could ever come b«twpo as save! "I imprisoned. Though, of
death Surely ywi know, Alice, joatm, 1 was not certain, I suspected that could have induced me to! whosewere the machinations thai had go so far from ywo were it not that I felt that it would be tempting Providence to reject sneh an advant
•o far from yon were it not thai I brought me into wdi strait*
opening. A year will not be long passing, and ti** my dear. I can retarn with the wings of We to vour side."
So they part, and Douglas goes
distant country whither bright
of a certain fortune
to the
prtx
have
allured
try reading Douglas's frequent tors. But suddenly they cease to come, and months intervene, and still she hears •naught of the lover who, by this time, was to have been once more with her.
Then the maiden's heart sinks within her tender breast as she remembers his emphatic words: ••Nothing can come between us save death alone."
Twelve months more of anxious waiting fail to bring any news, and then one day a servant brings to Alice a card upon* which is engraved an old foreign name.
As she enters the drawing-room and her caller rises, Alice thinks that never before have her eyes rested upon beauty so dazzling. ••I am from Russia," the stranger explains in correct English, though with a decided foreign accent, "and am wintering here in England with some friends. On hearing your name I recognised it as one I have often heard upon the lips of my betrothed, Mr. Rhodes. When I left home he asked me, if by chance I should meet you, if I would give this to you from him."
Here she hands a sealed envelope to Alice, who has been listening, scarcely crediting her own powers of hearing. Who is she, this darkly handsome stranger? And what does she mean by speaking of one she has taught herself to think of as no more among the living as her betrothed?
Mechanically Alice breaks the seal and reads the letter placed within her hands, .tnd signed "Douglas Rhodes.'" There is silence in the room but sud denly it is broken by a plaintive heartbroken cry, and the readers slight figure sways forward and falls prone upon the floor at her successful rival's feet.
Ringing a bell to summon a servant, the stranger only pauses to give one glance down at Alice's white, stricken face then, with a triumphant smile upjn her own, she trails hersilken draperies from the room.
elapsed. Is this somberlv-dressed
Three years have Alice this quiet, voting woman bending her sad face ovet her needleP
Yes, it is she. It is the old tragic story of a father's failure and sudden death, followed by the flight, like swallows before a frost, of the friends whose name during her days of prosperity had been legion.
Alone, poor, and friendless, too proud to sue for help, Alice had left her native city, and here we find her in the humble position of companion to an invalid lady.
A gay voice sounds in the hall, and the tloor opening, there enters the young daughter of the house. "Ah, Miss Howard, here you are. I have been seeding you to ask of you a favor. It is this: Will you play awhile this ovening for us to clance? Cousin Hal writes that he is coming with a friend—the one-armed hero he is always talking about—and I'vo invited a few others to make it lively*. Now please srfy •yes.' I know your distaste for meeting strangers but the piano can be moved into the alcove, and you will be quite secluded."
The ovening has come, and the guests have assembled. Alice has been plying until she is tired, and now she sits, her fingers idly resting upon the keys.
The piano stands within a lace-draped recess adjoining a small conservatory and just as sho is about to begin the opening bars of a favorite waltz, voices fall upon her ears, and a name is uttered that causes the blood to rush in a startled flood through her veins. "Here, Rhodes, is a quiet cool spot Come, let's sit down an have an oldtime chat," one says. "1 didn't half want to come this evening but had I known I should meet you. Ishould have felt difForeutlv. I didn't even hear you had returned. When did you arrive? And where is vour wife?" "My wife? Montague, are yon crazy?" "Why. didn't vou marry the incomparable Olga. after all? low, don't pretend ignorance.
Now, old fel I chanced
to meet in society the handsome creature whose faneiuations cau you to remain so long in that frigid Russia, and when she found out that I knew you she confided to me all about your engagement. Of course I supposed, if betrothed then, you would be married by this. What broke it off?" ••Stay, Montague give me a chance to put a word in'edgeways, and, as you know part of the story, I will tell you all.
With suspended breath, and hands clasped tightly together, Alice listens. "To the 'incomparable Olga,' as you term her," Douglas goes on, "you will perhaps be surprised to hear that I owe the injur}- that lost me my arm, and ten dreary months of suffering in a Russian prison. ••To be brief, I met her through visiting her uncle and guardian, aprominent official, who seemed bent on friendship with me. His niece I was polite to. as I would be to any lady,, although what saw of her character and domineering disposition would have rendered me impervtms to the attractions of her beauty kad I not already possessed the safeguard of as pure ana faithful a love as ever a man was blessed with. "In the course of time her uncle formally tendered me his niece's hand in marriage, offering me. should I consent to his plans, a position that would enrare wealth beyond my most sanguine expectations. "You know how hasty and passionate the Russian temper Is. Well, my decided and prompt refusal angered both the gentleman and his niece to such a
agent of thai secret society that in name ol Justice exerts such a terrible
iegree that another month had not pass- must have been turned into a river at ed over my head before I found myself tears.—H. If. Kitfer. 8L Nicholas. arrested, charged with being a foreign j. "ety that in the
••Bat the love of life within tm wta1
«neh an advnnte geota strong to alloy ma to remain quiets,
ly and unresistingly in my boadage*Twke I attempted to cseaftt when opportunity oecatrfud. T&«* titwt tin*! 11 received the bullet which shat^red my am and maimed me for life.
/ntt TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENTNCf MAIL
"The second effort—made with the assistance of a keeper whom I had bribed —was successful. ••I came to my own country to the being I loved bel all others lost to me. It was then ta.a I learned, for the first time, of the :. ?earance one season of the handsome Russian lady, who had so boldly asserted the fact— which was, of course, believed—of her betrothal to me, and of the forged letter, which, purporting, to come from me, had been the means of almost breaking my gentle love's heart. "No wonder my friends were indignant, and until I explained, had only the coldest, most averted looks for me. "Do you know, Montague, I have never known a really happy moment since then for though I have searched unceasingly, 1 have never found a trace of my Alice, whose trusting heart was so cruelly bruised."
Unheard, Alice rises,and gently draws aside the lace draperies that part the alcove from the flower-filled nook where the friends are conversing, and now, as Douglas concludes and glances up, his eyes rest upon her face. With a cry he springs to his feet
One long questioning gaze, and then, surroundings, anotberS presence,all else forgotten save the unexpected bliss of their meeting, the long parted lovers are clasped Heart to Heart
Lost Oitj Betaken. 'l
The Chilians have at prseut several thousand men advancing from different directions into the Araucunian territory. Up to DOW they have met with slight opposition, although past events have led the government to anticipate that stubborn opposition would be encountered. Among a number of letters from correspondents accompanying the different expeditions is one descriptive of the newly discovered site of the city of Villarica, a popumus and opulent city, which, after a siege of two years and eleven months, fell into the hands of the Araucanians in 1692.
The writer states that he has walked among the ruins, now thickly studded with well grown oaks, and among them has traced streets which were fully one mile in length, and which had been divided into blocks of lOOyards square, as was customary in most of the cities founded by the Spaniards. The city had been surrounded by a wall, which is yet in a fair state of preservation from three to six feet from the ground—a sufficient defense in former days against any ordinary Indian attack. Tiles were found which have hardened to the consistency of stone, and which are in better condition than when they were the mute witnesses of the destruction of this inland city so many years ago.
In the vicinity "there is a very extensive lake, in which an island is situated which is reported to be swarming with the descendants of the domestic animals belonging to the Spaniards who were here sacrificed by the victorious Araucanians. The description given is brief in the extreme, but it will soon be supplemented by fuller and yet more interesting reports of this and other cities which were destroyed at the same time.
All the districts now being explored —and notably that surrounding villarica—abound in mines, which returned large sums during the Spanish occupancy. These mines will again be worked under different auspices, and will lend their assistance in promoting the rapid settlement and development of Araucania. so long occupied by the scattered bands claiming dominion over it, but which now promises to become one of the richest provinces of Chili.—Panama Star and Herald.
An Odd Firm.
Camp Curt in was not properly camp of instruction. It was rather a rendezvous for the different companies which had been recruited in' various parts of the state. Hither the volunteers came by hundreds and thousands for the purpose of being mustered intc the service.
Shortly after our arrival in camp, Andy and I went to town to buy such articles as we supposed a soldier would bo likely to need—a gum blanket, a journal, a combination knife-fork-and-:n, and so on to the end of the list our credit I have it to record thatwt turned a deaf ear to the solicitations of a certain dealer in cutlery, who insisted on selling us each a revolver and an ug
^-looking bowie-knife, in a red moroccc
shcath. "Shentlemen, shust te ting you fill need ven you goes into de battle. Ah, see dis knife, how it shines! Look at dis ven- line revolfer!"
But Moses entreated in vain, whilt his wife sUxnl at the street door looking at a regiment marching to the depot, weeping as if her heart would break and wiping her eyes with the corner ol her apron from time to time. "An, de poor boys!" said she. "Dert dey go again to the great war, awaj from dere homes and dere mfitters and dere sweethearts and vives, all to IK kilt in de battle. Dey will nefer any more coom back. Ab. it is so wickcd!
But die drums rattled on, and tht crowd on the sidewalk gazed, and Moses behind his counter smiled pleasantly as he cried up his wares and went on selling bowie-knives and revolvers tc kill men with, while his wife went on I weeping and lamenting because men! would be killed in the wickcd war. and ••nefer any more coom back." Tits firm of Moses and wife struck us as a T« an many revolvers Moses sold, nor bow many tears bis good wife shed but if she wept whenever a regiment marched down the street to the depot her eye*
ry strange combination of bnsines* yeT cnseV id sentiment I do not know bow
Signor Mario Kaggi Beaoonsfield. recently unveiled in wodon by Sir Stafford Nortbcote, is of
of tin-
'is
statue of Lord unveiled in Lou-
colossal size, nine feet high, and stands a pedestal of high. It cot
a
led granite seventeen
In Sight of the Gallows.
An octoroon named W. H. Fink, who was sentenced to be hanged for a double murder at Fort Smith, Ark., recently, addressed the court as follows: ••May it please the court: I know not which weighs the most upon me—wonder or grief. Both weigh heavily upon me. I must first call to mind the occasion for which I am called upon to make my appearance before the court to-day. This to me is most solemn and serious. It is as the sadness of death itself— death which, in a brief while, will come to me with sickle and terror. Alas! alas! for such unlucky stars that beamed at my birth. But I am not possessed of that obstinate stubbornness characteristic of one who is about to have sentence of death passed upon him, or, more generally speaking, a hardened criminal. Being truly sensible of the singular and serious position in which I am placed, I cannot help bnt shudder, and I must say that these are the saddest moments of my life. ••Death is the destiny of all men and, being a debt of nature which must be paid, I do not fear to meet it in its natural form. But I shudder—I fear—the best of us do so, to die a disgraceful and ignominious death. I do not make this talk an effort to save my life. It is an effort to seek justice and to save the reputation of my family, whose honor is dearer to me than my life. For what is life? It is but a vapor it appears but a little while and then it vanisheth away. It is but a spark struck out of nothingness and expires in darkness. Nay, it is but a flash out of darkness, soon again to return. As the old Siaxon imagination pictured it, it is 'like the swift flight of a bird from the night without through a lighted chamber filled with guests, heated with the breath of passion, back into the cold night again.' Tfcv strange uncertainty of life is but a mock theme of pathos. No description oan touch all the sorrowful tenderness which death in me excites, now become so tragic and so bitter. Oh, ignominy! thou art far more bitter to me than the
Seath
ail which Socrates drank. It is not I fear it is the form of death— its ignominy and the shame of the gallows. Under my present circumstances I can bnt fill my mind with the gloomy images of death, and so torment the present by apprehensions of the future. "But religion does not countenance any such morbid anxiety. She comes bearing in her hands the flowers of hope, and, like the angel which she is, whispers of the crucified Christ: 'He is risen.' The star of hope that first beamed upon men like me shone from the murderer's dying faith, as he hun^ upon the cross, a champion in deathJ with Christ and that same star of hope scatters its rays in my heart. Yet I find it bard to banish the dread events from me. Yet why so? I have always been honest, and stand guiltless to-day of the crimes for which I am about to be sentenced. I stand here and boldly say, and with a clear conscienee, that I did not kill those* two men. If I speak falsely, miserable or happy souls, whoever you are, make your appearance upon the threshold of this room and cry out 'Thou liest!' And from you (addressing the Judge) whose duty it is to be tender as well as just, I ask all clemency you give. And now farewell, earth, made wet with tears and blood, farewell to my enemies, farewell. Time's brief work in the face of eternity, a ray of celestial joy falls upon me and takes away ever fear, and I know how easy it is to die."
The effect on the Judge and audience was marked. The prisoner was impassioned -in his utterance, and was more than ever pathetic and-touching.
"The Verdict will Stand." A tailor had brought a suit against a delinquent debtor for the pay for some worn-out-and forgotten clothes. When the case came up for a hearing, one of the attorneys asked for the continuance upon some frivolous pretext, and, of course, the other opposed it A wrangle followed, the result of which was a written stipulation, signed by both attorneys, that the suit should bo tried on a certain designated day at 2 o'clock and this stipulation was filed with the justice, so that there might be no further delay.
At the appointed hour tlrt^defendant and his counsel entered the court room and found his honor on the bench. "Why were ye not here this marnin' inquired the Justice, looking over his spectacles. "Because I had no occasion to come until now. Will your Honor please call the case of Tailor vs. Blank? said the attorney. "Oh, ye had no bizni^s to come this marnin', is it? Ye think ye're dom shmart don't ye? It's loikely ye had razors for breakfast this marnin Ye'd loike to have me call the case of Tailor vs. Blank 'if I plaze.' Well, I don't plaze. It plazed me to call it this marnin', and as it didn't plaze ye to be prisint it plazed me to give a vardict aginst ye, and ye'11 plaze pay the same and me costs at yer airliest convanience. if ye place." "But your Honor, the case was set down by stipulation for 2 o'clock this afternoon!" "I'll bet ye the dhrinks it wasn't!"
Done!"
The court drew out the stipulation from drawer of his desk and discovered his error. ve lost the dhrinks, bnt ye've lost
But I haven't lost my case, your Honor! By that stipulation the case couldn't be tried until 2 o'clock. Your Honor verdict is illegal!" "It's illegal. Is it? Well, it'll stband }ost the same'" "But, your Honor, the case was set down absolutely for this hour. It conld not be disposed of before, and must be disposed of now, I ask for a nontoit" "Oh, ye do! Well, ve'll ask a long time before ye git it! TDidn't I tell
contains about a ton and the vardict' mil stand? PVaps understhand roe. FU brw
metal—nine parts of copper to didn't tindersthaod roe.
and was cast at a temper** -r
aboqt
1000 dg. Fahrenheit
ft
represent* the famous leader standing in his diplomatic dress. the robe of an Earl, aad the decorattoas ol the Order of the Garter, ibe faos wears a thoughtful expression.
0
The Prophet Honored in Hli Own Country, even In His Own Hoase. THE honeat, simple narrative of Mis. .v .1. WHII*P, trho reaidee at No. 177 WiK.auu St., Providence, R. i.:
Daring the past six or seven years I h.ive been severely afflicted with kidney disease, causing intense backaches, disziness, and other severe pains through my body and limbs, rendering uie to weak and prostrate that at times it was impossible for me to do any part of my housework. I have had also a flattering of the heart, and was terribly distressed for breath. 1 was very miserable, and completely worn out and discouraged 1 had no ambition to undertake to do anything, and barely sufticieufcstrength to render existence desirable, having failed to find any relief from the doctor's prescriptions. At this trying crisis a friend persuaded me to obuiij a bottle of Hunt's Remedy, and now 1 rejoioi that 1 followed this friendly advice, for th« Remedy acted like a charm in my case. Aftei I had taken a few doses, my health began t* improve I felt better every way. The flut tering of the heart, the intense backaches^ and terrible shortness of the breath speedily disappeared, my strength and ambition soon returned, and before I had taken two bottles of the Remedy I was entirely well, and able to wash and Iron and do my housework. Once in awhile I am troubled with the headache, and as soon as 1 am taken 1 resort to Hunt's Remedy, and a few doses fix me all right. I shall never be without it in the future. I have frequently recommended the Hurfl's Remedy to my friends, and they hare experienced relief from the first dose. 1 heartily recommend it to all who are afflicted with kidney disease or diseases of the Liver, bladder, or urinary organs. 1 think no family should be without it.
MRS! S. J. WHIPP,
No. 177 Williams 8t., Providence, R. I."
Acts Like a Charm.
I HAVK. used Hunt's Remedy for kidney troubles, and recommended It to others, and always found it to net liken charm."
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723 Carson SMret. Plttrburg, Penn.
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