Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 36, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 February 1896 — Page 6
6
"THE- TSOLATrON OF ENGLAND."
The •wind is hashed the darkness grows The fainting moon is lost in flight Death lifts a somber hand and throws
4
His clouds across the face of night. "With parted lips and haggard stare, That strives and strains to pierce tho gloom, Each nation crouches in its lair
And, breathless, waits the coming doom.
Dim, shapeless shadows pass like ghosts Along the trembling earth they feel The distant tramp of marching hosts -4. And hear the smothered clash of steel,
Till, reaching out for friendly hands To guide them through the gloom, they press To where one silent flgurd stands
Serene in lofty loneliness.
They hnrl their taunts, their oaths, their I prayers, The snarl of greed, the growl of hate
They ^it upon the cloak she wears Or grasp its hem to supplicate. But still, as though she heard them not,
Her anxious eyes are fixed afar Among the clouds, on one pale spot, Where faintly gleams a single star.
tou
£1
t"
lac?
T:
ft
By that same star she chose her path For every night in vanished years Though screened by mists of doubt and wrath,
She sees it still, as if through tears q, Then, glancing at the fretful horde Who call her now to bend the knee,' She lays her band upon her sword
And turns hpr eyes toward the sea. —St. James Gazette.
A TEEASUKE.
The visitor, being for the time an idle man, had taken to dropping in quite often of a morning at Doris' garden. Sometimes she laid on him the task of beguiling tho hours before lunch with stories sometimes, more greatly condescending, she would tell him her own pretty secrets, while he lounged at ease and lazily looked down upon the harbor and the quiet bay that lies beyond it.
On this particular morning Doris had demanded a tale, and he had promised obedienoe. But he did not desire to at tempt a story, having no imagination at all and memory only for certain private Borrows of his own. His opening was therofore an unworthy subterfuge. "Once upon a time. Say, Doris, wouldn't
like to come out with me on a real hunt for buried treasure?" "Is there nnyf" asked Doris doubtfully. "Well, if it comes to that"— he began. "But I should think we stand a very good obapoe. Don't you know that the Span lards landed hore long ago and burned the place? 'You may depend the village folk hid their treasure when they fled, and three of them were killed. It is quite likely that to this day their plate and money lie hidden somewhere olose at hand." "But lb would be no good finding it," said Doris. "We should have to give it up to gover'mont. Gardener told me. What is gover'mentt"' "Government?" said the visitor. "It's jou and me and—a—everybody else."
41
Then we should get some of the treasure?" It was tho visitor's turn to be doubtful. "Some of it, I suppose," he answered. "At any rato, we should have tho fun of finding it."
Doris hositated, deliberating. "That would bo nice," she admitted. "Should we got so muoh as £1?" "At least that," said the visitor. "Then I think I'll come. Ellen's mother is very poor, and sho wants to buy a mangle. But •he's
short in her money, and in
these hard times you can't get trust, not llko you used to when Ellen's mother was young. There's so many rogues about that even honost folk must pay oash. Ellen's mother told mo I could give her the pound."
Tho visitor groaned within himself, foreseeing that ho would be altogether out of favor if tho expedition ended fruitlessly. Yet there was nothing for it but to go ahead. "Aro you ready to start at once?" he asked. '"Quito ready," said Doris. "Now, don't forget your pipe. Where are we go-
That was more than the visitor know. "We'll just look about until wo find a likely place," he said, holding the gate open, "or would you rather go into town and got somo chooolates?" "ChocolatesI" oxolaimod Doris," scornfully. Then returning to tho subject which was of importance, "Did you over go on a troiwjuro hunt really?" "Not exactly," answered her slave— "that Is, I 'mjo knew a man who did."
You'ro not going to keep your promise alltl toll mo a story?" "It's not much of a story," he answered. "A man I know got hold somehow of a map of an island lying thousands of miles away, out there where the sun sets, with a mark on It showing where a pirate had hidden boxes and boxtis of gold, sliver and jewels long ago. So ho got a boat and sailed away to that island, ho aud two or three friends. You would have seen him pass if you had been watching in your garden. Perhaps you did, but of course you wouldn't kriw." "I remou ber a boat," said Horis. "It went right out toward thosunsot. It was long tlmo ago—before you o&me. Perhaps that was his boat."
Perhaps," answered the visitor. "At any rate, thuy sailed away into tho west, thousands and thousands of mllos. Storms cnino, and their boat, whloh was quite a smau ono, was often on tho verge of being vnrxjked. But at last thoy came to tho island and found a quiet harbor. Thero was not a living soul on the island, only goats and seagulls." "I love sea .gulls!" cried Doris. "I should llko to be a treasure hunter all the time." "I don't know about that," said her companion. "I don't know that it is tho best thing for a man. It la wiser just to bo content. Mere broad and butter would not be interesting all the time, but one gmws used to things, and one wouldn't mind it muoh, I suppose, if sou day it wore lacking, whereas, after a week of birthday oake— But I was forgetting roy friend's story. For a whole week after reaching tho island they hunted for the plaoo that was marked with across on the map. Then they found it." "And did they get the treasure?" "Just three golden coins and a few small silver ones I Some one elss had heard of the cave and got a boat and oome and plundered It. These few coins had dropped out of the groat boxes they oarrted down to their boat. My Wend was very muoh disappointed." "Well," .aid Dorfs emphatically, "I Should think he was. I hope that won't happen to us. Have yon seen a likely plaoo yot?"
The visitor perceived that all the temporizing in the world would be of no avail. Above the road thuy had been following the land rf"es very steeply, and in one place the hillside had been quarried. No one works there now, nor has any one done
jo
for a long tipae. Bramble and bracken.
,wii
willow- herb and yellow ragwort, fill the place, and in autumn it echoes fKSm dawn to dusk with the voices of the children who cores in companies to gather its blackberrifs. There are also butterflies, birds and other things about which a man may con verso, if it be necessary to talk, and in fluent conversation lay the visitor's one hope of salvation. "I think we might have a look at the quarry," he said. "It's just the sort of place that I should choose if I had treasure to hide."
So they walked oir rapidly. Doris was so set on the quest that she did not want to talk. Her companion had his own troubles to oonsider and was glad of the respite. They reached the quarry and stood at the roadside looking into it ouriously. It was anew place altogether to Doris now she had realized that It might possibly be the hold of hidden treasure. She did not observe for a moment the sudden change which had come over her companion. But presently 6he was aware of the silence which had fallen upon him and turned to look.
Along the road a beautiful lady was coming, with tho sunlight in her hair and in her hand^a great bunch of daisies dancing and swaying upon long stems. The visitor was watching her. When she had drawn quite near, he raised his hat and murmured some few words of salutation, but in such a manner that Doris had to suppose (though very muoh against her will) that the beautiful lady was not so nice as she appeared.
But the lady did not pass on. On the contrary, she came closer and spoke, her face all rosy. "Isn't the morning lovely? And won't yi)u introduce me?"
The man paused for a moment, and Doris saw that he was a little embarrassed. Then, "Doris," he said, "this is Elsie. I should like you two to be friends."
The lady stooped and kissed the child. "Is it a bargain, Doris?" Then before Doris had bad time to say how glad she would be to have it so the visitor spoke again. "The faot is," he said, "Doris and I had not muoh to do this morning, and so we thought we would come out on a treasure hunt. The villagers, you know, must have hidden their valuables when they fled before the Spaniards all those years ago. We thought the quarry was a likely spot. What do you think? Shall we find the treasure?"
The lady hesitated. "At any rate it's worth your while to try," she said at last. "It is always well to try if you want a thing." "And you will help?" said the man eagerly. "If Doris doesn't mind," said the lady.
So they all went into the quarry and Bout fe vigorously for the treasure. It was rather a big quarry and much overgrown. Once or twioe Doris lost them for awhile, but they were always ciose together and answered when she called. After along time, during whioh no traoe of what they sought had been discovered, Doris suggested an adjournment. "It's a big quarry," she said, "and we can't go all over it in one day. And I'm sure'it must be lunchtime."
The visitor looked at his watoh. "It is, nearly," he answered. "But I think we'd better search a little longer. It would be a great pity if we fared like my friend and other people came before us and got the treasure." "We'll hunt for five minutes longer," said Doris. "I am hungry, and they never wait for me at lunohtime."
So the three plunged once more into the Innermost recesses of the quarry, seeking with renewed vigor. Doris found nothing, but presently when the visitor was a few yards distant from her, he uttered a sharp cry, and she came eagerly toward him through the tall bracken. ^"Have you found It?" she cried. 'iA
He turned upon her with a serious face. "Doris," he said, "we should have been content with bread and butter. They've been before us. Lookl"
The ohild came through the fern to his Bide. At his feet a golden sovereign lay on the ground. 'Why, it's like your friend's story," she cried. "So it is," said the visitor. "Well, it's so use searohlng any longer. I say, we won't say anything about this to government. I think it will be all right if Ellen's mother gets her mangle. You take the money." "May I?" she cried, and then she danoed gayly along the sunny road, the visitor on one side and the lady on the other. They would not come in to see the joy whioh this poor remnant of a treasure was to bring to Ellen, asid when they started down the bill together Doris wutched them for awhile from tho gate of her garden. Something about them seemed to show that they were quite absurdly happy. 'They look," said Doris as she entered the garden, "they look as if they had really found the treasure."—Black and White.
Invented the Inclfer Match.
Who invented the luclfer match? Sir Isaao Holden had the first idea of it in England and stated It at a lecture, but took out no patent, and thus lost a ohanoe of finding a fortune. The jubilee of the German luolfer match was kept In September, 1882, at Vienna. Three Austrians were then credited with having invented it.
M. Jean Benaud now says the luolfer match Is due to Obarles Sauria, a fellow student of M. Grevy at the lycees of Pollgny and Dole. Sauria vainly tried to obtain 1,500 franos to work his invention, whioh he communicated to M. Nioolet, the professor of chemistry and natural philosophy at the Dole lycee. Benaud often saw Nioolet use at his class lectures phosphorus and sulphur to strike lights. He gave Sauria credit for the invention. In 1831 Nioolet was sent on a scientific mission to Germany. He was instructed to see to what aooount chemistry had been turned in arts and manufacture. There his tour •mbracod the industrial cities of Austria and Hungary. What, asks M. Renaud, is more probable than that he should have spoken here of Saurla's lucifer match? It may be that the three Austrians, Sauria and Sir Isaac Holden thought out the matter independently of each other.—London News.
Nlslft Work.
It haa always been said that the engineer of a railway train has a great deal of unpleasant responsibility but, acoordlngto a little incident told by an engineer, the wife of a man in his oooupation has her trials as well. "It's trying work on the mind, sir, is engine driving," said the engineer in us--ply to some friendly questions, "and it ain't all over with when I go home, either. The switches and signal lights and side tracks get into my head, sir, and they bother me when I'm asleep. "And they bother my wife, too, sometimes," he added. "The other night she waked me up crying: 'Murder! Murder! Are you trying to kill roe, Henry?* And there I was, sir, polling her arm almost out of its oookat, with my foot
against the footboard, trying
'—Youth's Companion.
hraoed
to reverse."
German Women Agitating.
A great agitation is, a Berlin correspondent says, being carried on among women in Germany, having for its object the issuing of a general protest against different clauses of the new civic oode which has just been submitted to the reichstag. As regards the oivil law, women in Germany have ocoupied a rather inferior position, and the hopes that the new code would redress their grievances have proved fallacious. A married woman, for instance, has, if no special contract has been made, no right to dispose of her own fortune without the permission of her husband. Moreover, the latter is solely entitled to administrate and to have the usufruct of her money, even of that which She earns. Every financial transaction entcf-' ed upon by a woman without the knowledge and consent of her husband can be oanceled. Except in a few cases, women are unable to act as guardians. They are also ezoluded from family oounoils and so on. All this has led to a petition to parliament, but it is doubtful whether it has muoh ohance of being accepted.
Women Advocating Cleanliness.
The Women's Oivio league of Cincinnati has attemped to bring about many reforms in the manners and oustoms of the Queen City. Last spring the league made an urgent appeal to the board of administration for sand piles to be scattered over the city that the children might play in them. Later the league suggested to the mayor that ouspidors be placed along the edge of the sidewalks so that men might expectorate into them. Beoently one of the members of the league, while riding on a street oar, saw a polioeman who was chewing tobacco and spurting the saliva on the floor. This lady reported the incident to the league. The women addressed an appeal to the mayor, and his honor Mayor John M. Caldwell issued an order to the police force, forbidding expectoration either on street cars or on the sidewalks. The Women's Civic league is becoming a powerful political agency in municipal affairs.—Chicago Chronicle.
Cigarette Habit Growing.
A manicure who is a close observer reoently told me that she could vouch for the truth of the statement that the cigarette habit is on the increase among women of the supposed to be sensible and well to do class. A large percentage of their patrons call once a week to have the inside points of the thumb and index finger cleansed from nicotine stains. And these foolish maidens no longer puff those dainty Turkish fads of the not so very long ago. The small vice has led to a larger one, and now they prefer the opium tinctured oriental cigarette, the consumption of which is surely on the increase.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
Supplied Her Has brad's Pulpit.
Mrs. George B. Frost, pastor of the Congregational church in Littleton, N. H., came to occupy her position in rather an unusual way. Having supplied her husband's pulpit for a year, she was found so well fitted for the work that she was subjected to an examination by the ecclesiastical council, and afterward duly ordained. The arrangement is found most satisfactory, both to congregation and minister.
The X*nd of Ho Divorce.
South Carolina has for a long time held a unique position as the only state in the union which refuses to grant divorces for any cause whatsoever. It is exceedingly interesting to note the fact that the new constitution does not alter the state's policy In this regard. Marriages between the two races are abso lately forbidden. Married women are aocorded full rights of property.—BosJon Transcript.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, FEBRUARY 29, 1896.
oh ansa Ambrosias.
The Prussian peasant poetess Johanna Ambrosius will soon be enabled to have her small house, which threatened to collapse, repaired. A subscription and several entertainments held for her benefit realized almost 7,500 marks. Originally it was proposed to build a new and modest but solid building for Frau Ambrosius, but this intention was abandoned upon the urgent request of the poetess herself. She does not wish anything for herself, she says, arid her greatest desire is to have her two children enter the world under more favorable conditions than fell to her in her own private life. She will, therefore, be satisfied to have the thatohed straw roof on her present small homestead simply repaired. This will take but a comparatively trifling amount of the sum raised for her, while she will invest th& balance in a way to have a little fund for a rainy day and for the future education of her ohildren. The committee having the funds colleoted in charge decided to agree tti this unselfish and reasonable request of the peasant poetess.
She Attracts Birds.
Among the many peculiarities of that beautiful woman the empress of Austria one of the most romantic features of the present era is her strange influence over birds, which, were she of more humble rank, might prove a perfect gold mine to her. This power, never heretofore described in print, is known to few outside the court oirole of Austria-Hungary, yet nothing is more wonderful than to see the birds flocking from every quarter around the empress the very moment she sets foot in the gardens of Lainz or Schoenbrtm, but especially at the latter place. There are many ornamental pieces of water at Schoenbrun, and all sorts of valuable birds, such as Australian swans, Chinese ducks, Tibetan pheasants and birds of paradise, are permitted to roam at will through this splendid domain. They all know the empress and are subjeot to her power, as are also the wild birds, even down to the ordinary sparrow. They gather around her, each uttering its own peculiar ory, while the pigeons and smaller birds alight on her shoulder and arms.—San Francisco Chronicle.
In Johannesburg.
Long before daylight the square is full of ox wagons, some from distances occupying days to traverse, an^ the buyers of forage, oats, corn, mealie meal, firewood, poultry, eggs, etc., are busy as soon as they can see. Here the middleman makes a good profit, often riding far out on the roads to get at the illiterate Dutch farmer before the latter reaches the market. Here is an amusing instance of a bargain reoently overheard on the square:
An English trader purchased a wagon load of stuff from a Boer, and by means Of a few figures and calculations easily tossed off with many flourishes makes out that the amount he has to pay the Dutchman is about half of what it ought to be if correctly reckoned up at the price agreed. Oom Paul oannot reckon much, but has a Ready Reckoner and points to and wants the larger amount. "What's that?" says the other. "Let's look at it." Then, "Why, that's last year's Ready Reckoner. Look here, man, it's marked 1894. It's no good now." "Allamachta," says the Boer. "I did not notice that." And he plods off home, wagon and all, content with the lesser sum.
No expense is spared in high living. A special fruit train is run daily from Natal aud fish is brought enormous distances. All South African fish, however, are either tasteless or of a milk and water or insipid flavor. The vegetable market opens each morning at dawn. At 8 the lots are all sold at auction, and Malays pile up their carts and pannier baskets to sell their stuff from house to house before the midday heat. In England meat is dear and bread and vegetables cheap. In the Transvaal bread and vegetables are dear—a small roll not large enough to be dignified with the name of loaf costing sixpence—and meat is cheap.—Chambers'. Journal.
Usefulness Preferable to Brilliancy.
Dr. C. H. Parkhurst says that a lightning flash is brilliant to behold, but he would rather have a candle to read by. There are few lightning flashes and many candlee in the world. A "bril liant" young man or woman isn't such an acquisition as some people would have us believe. The plodding habit of dogged toil can accomplish more than spasmodic freshets of enthusiasm.
The work of the world is done in its workshops, not its talking shows, con ventions and "enthusiastic" gatherings, whose enthusiam never, by any ohance, percolates into the adjoining street or slum.
v.,*.
The girl who is plain in face and homely of figure, but kindly of heart and tender and true, is to be preferred by an honest man for wifehood before her dashing, laughing sisters, rare and handsome, whose dainty fingers never baked a pie, whose hearts never bore another'e burden. The light of the home is generally the quiet, humble, unobtrusive sister or brother who is not cursed with the waywardness of genius.
Beauty and talent have unequaled op portunities when combined with directing character. But the plan of nature never intended that the many should trust to them, so they are given to the few. The majority of us depend on our power to be useful—determinedly useful—for our life's value. And the daily effort thus to live has made this world and our national heritage muoh what they are and give to us.—New York Ledger.
How Mines Are Bought Nowadays.
The time has passed when mine prop erties are bought on assays. The higher the ore goes the more suspicious the investor becomes. A mining proposition, to receive attention in these days, must have a reasonable assay value, and must stand the test of expert examination. A 'low grade camp, it is said, is better in the long run for the mine owner, and infinitely better for a community in Which such mines are situated, as more
Jinen
are employed and more money is taken out than in camps where the mines are narrow and rich. This is shown in the Cceur d'Alenes, where over 60,000 tons of ore are mined monthly to produce 10,000 tons of concentrates. Every one is benefited where such conditions prevail.
Mine inveators have become suspicious because in the past they have been most unmercifully worked by unscrupulous mining men and promoters. Mine experting has become a science, and it is a difficult thing to improve upon a mine expert of national reputation, and only men of this character are employed to pass upon a raining proposition the purchase of which involves the expenditure of large scms of money. —Spokane Spokesman-Review.
Patronizing Infants.
A characteristic instance was given at a dinner party lately of the present day tendency for children to patronize their parents. At a preparatory school the children were told to write down what they thought to be the object of education. One small boy wrote, "The object of education is to be able to talk for your father and mother when you go abroad," and another boy, doubtless remembering the oft repeated reflection at home, when he had fallen into some scrape, that "the holidays would soon be over and he would be safely back at school," wrote, with unconscious cynicism, "The object of education is to get you out of your parents' way."—Gentlewoman.
InquiflitlvAi
Tommy (in search of information)— Is a streamlet a small stream? His Father—Yes, my son. "IB an owlet a small owl?" "Yes, Tommy." "Is an egglet a small egg?" "Yes, yes, yon might call ft that" "Then what is a bullet? *Tisn't a small bull, is it?"—London Tit-Bits.
A Shook to His Complacency.
Jaggs—Why Is It every one laughs at ft fool? —They don't. Some one was trying to humor you.—Adams Freeman.
pepsia, or Indigestion, Dropsy and many other maladies are successfully treated and cured without personal consultation with the physician.
Nervous Debility, whether resulting from over-study, worry, disappointment, or from exhausting drains upon the system caused by prenicious secret habits contracted in youth, through ignorance of their ruinous consequences, is successfully managed, through correspondence, the necessary medicines being sent by mail or express. Write for question blanks, or describe your case, send sample of urine for analysis and enclose io cents for postage on ^treatise, which contains reproduced photographs and full names and addresses of vast numbers of people who have been cured in this way. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. PIERCE'S
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Successsors to Clift, Williams*Co.
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For steam and domes* tic use. All Coal thoroughly screened.
Office 122 S. Thlrd St.
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