Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 13, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 September 1896 — Page 6
6
III
CSTRANGEttEftT.
po, without orert. broach, we Call qitft,. Tacitly rande- neither 700 nor I Consciaai of one Intelligible why, And both, from severtmee, winning equal smart. So, with resigned and acquiescent heart, Whene'er your name on some chance lip ma lie ,, seem to see an alien shade pass by, A spirit wherein I have no lot or pari. 1 Thus may a captive in some fortress grim From casual speech betwixt his warders learn That Juno and her triumphal progress goes Through arched and bannered woodland* while for him -She is a legend emptied of oonoern.. ,v" And idle is the rnmor of the rose. jjg,' —'William Watsoa.'
A LOVER'S JEALOUSY.
"Robert," said Mr. Vyse slowly, gazing fixedly at the young clerk, "I have so doubt that it is yoa who bare robbed ma"
The bot blood flooded Robert Acland's neck and face as be took in the meaning of the word& "I swear to'yon, sf*i beh-ied* passionately, "that yoa wrong me—I swear it by my soulP' "I wish I could believe yon, Robert," Mr. Vyse replied, "far I like you bnt, unfortunately, appearances are too much against you. What, may I ask, were yon doing at 5 o'clock yesterday evening in my private room? You bad no right or business to be there." "Nor was I," rettzrned the young fellow proudly, drawing himself up to his full height "I have never been in this room in my life except when you have sent me. Has any one told yoa that I was here last evening, sir?" "Yes, Robert Your comrade, Richard 8tarkie, assured me of it not ten minutes ago?" "Richard Starkief" exclaimed Acland in great wonderment "Why, he must be mad. What can have possessed him to tell so wicked a falsehood? We have •always been good friends, he and Why should he thus try to ruin me?"
The words, the tone, were those of an innocent man. Mr. Vyse began to waver in his opinion as to Acland's guilt "Robert," he said more kindly, "will you swear to me before God that you are innocent?"
Raising aloft his right hand, "I call the God before whose judgment throne we both shall one day stand to witners that I am guiltless," he declared solemnly. "Surely, sir, you will believe me now?"
1
Mr. Wse held out his hand. "Yes, Robert, I believe you," he said, "and I beg your pardon for having doubted you. But what Starkie's motive in traducing you has been I am at a loss to understand." "So am I, sir," answered Acland. "Hia oonduot is quite incomprehensible." "Well, Robert," wound up the old gentleman as he dismissed his olerk, 'you must promise me one thing—that you will treat Starkie just the same as if nothing unusuql had occurred. It it) my wish." 'I will try, sir. But it will be a hard task," Acland replied as he quitted the room.
Left alone, Mr. Vyse, a bale, active man of 05, lay back in his chair and gave himself op to thought But the more ho puzzled over tto disappearance of his cnshbox tbo farther ho seemed from a solution of tbo mystery. It was gone, but by whose baud it was difficult to say.
Of course the news that their employer hud been robbed ran like wildfire through the small oommunity. It was Richard 8torkio who first made publio the ill ncrvva, for no offloial intimation of it was given, but to his follow workers he dnre not try to incriminate young Acland, fear Aclaud was a favorite with his colleagues, and Starkie know well that any remark suggestive of his guiit would bo reocived in stony silence—-the silence of sheer disbelief.
That 0 von nig BoB Acland went to see Elsie Vcnncr, the girl of his heart There was no actual engagement betvr $u tbom, but Elsie understood quite "w-cll th-vBoEwas only waiting for a rise of salary before asking her to be his wife. Ho had intended to tell her nothing about what had ooctyred at the of
tie hesitotiou on his part and a little firming on hors the whole story oann out 'I cannot think, darling," finished Bob, "what has indhaced Starkie 60 do it" "Shall I tell you?" said Elsie de tnurely. "Your* "Yes, 1 oan, yoa know." And then she proceeded to relate how Richard Starkie had a few days before asked ber to marry him, and, on her refusal, flown into a violent rage, not only heaping ftntfhmM on her head, but also on Bofc "Ana yoa believe he has attempted to lay tlx theft at my door to blacken my character in your eyes? What a scoundrel the fellow must be!" "If you had seen the look on his face when he left me," replied the girl, "you wbuld think, as I do, that he is capable of anything." xt day Bob Acland repeated to Mr. thf conversation be had held with
Vfnner.
E
leanlrhile Richard Starkie was in a unlappy fmmo at mind. He had just sufficient manhood left to be able to Appreciate the unutterable oorrishness of bis oca conduct Bat that did not tezii to toake him sorry for what he had it rather imbittered htm still xnoro agftinst his rival. A mania fear muhblliw. inherited from ha father, who bad bet away a large estate during hiAile/dying only i*«t hiJselljtrom instance made him short of
vet
mctiey
retrieve his position he
betofstill' more heavily, and again lost Ill luck pursued him from day to till at l*t. unable to meet ttodwMands xaa&e u|* hint, «*pcsw»
V—
fee iace, and exposure, he knew, moani prompt dismissal from Mr. Vyse's aervice. In this dilemma he 'stole the cashbox, and it was only when gloating over its contents that' the idea of saddling Acland with the theft oocurred to him. Irresolute in this, as in everything else, he wavered some time .before finally deciding to commit this last pieoe of villainy, but his evil genius as always, prevailed. "Curse the fellow!" he ground out between his clenched teeth. "If only I wm ruin him. If only I oan make Elsie despise and loathe him! What is he that be should steal her from me? I'll win her yet in spite of him."
It was Mr. Vyse's custom to go for a walk, unless the day was very wet, between the hours of 19 and He usually went down the high road straight out of the town for a mile, returning home over the fields and through a small plantation. A few days after the loss of the cashbax be took the accustomed path. Dot, his favorite dog, half pointer, half retriever, acoompanied Mm In the middle of the plantation Dot suddenly sniffed the air, then bounded in among the brushwood and pointed. "Dot! Dotf" called his master. "Here, good dog, come bock!" But Dot bad evidently found something and refused to be shouted off.
Mr. Vyse made his way" to where"the dog was standing. Up sprang a
nOf
fine
rabbit and dashed away. Dot in hot pursuit But Mr. Vyse heeded neither rabbit nor dog. His gaze wad riveted on the place from which the rabbit had jumped. Thus for a moment or two he stood then, with a peculiar smile on his face, he wheeled round and walked briskly home. Some three days later Richard Starkie was summoned to his chief's presence. He went, trembling, fearing be knew not what "Starkie," said Mr. Vyse, ''you have been in my employ longer than any other of my clerks therefore I think it only right to make you my spokesman to tbem. I wish yqta, then, to tell them on my behalf that I attribute the disappearance Of my cash box to none of them that I am quite convinced of their innoocaoe.'!
Ricbar3 Starlrfe paled slightly. Had his scheme to ruin young Acland failed miserably after all? It seemed so. Bet he replied, with apparent frankness, "I am very pleased to bear that Robert Acland has cleared himself, sir." "He has done so ipost completely," rejoined Mr. Vyse. '*1 have a very high opinion of Acland, Starkie^" "So haw sir," be returned glibly, while he inwardly cursed the man of whom be spoke thus landingly. "It has caused me great pain to think that he could possibly be a thief." "Is it possible that this man is innocent after all?" wondered Mr. Vyse. "If not, his hypocrisy is simply astounding. But I shall soon know the truth." And a grim smile passed over his face. "Just one thing more'" continued Mr. Vyse, looking straight* into his olerk's eyes, whioh met his own unflinchingly, "and thif is for your ear alone, Starkie. In the theft of my cashbox I have sustained a far greater loss than any one but myself is aware of. It is a box of peculiar construction—in fact, it had a false bottom, and in that false bottom, 8tarkie, there were note* to the value of £700. I bad plaoed them there only two days before I was robbed."
course, you have the numbers,
sir?" "Why, yes, I have the numbers, Starkie, but an expert thief—and I imagine from the ooolneta and audacity of the robbery that I have been the victim of pne—finds no difficulty in changing stolen paper. He knows where to take it and obtain a good price."
When Richard Starkie went back to his colleagues to give them their employer's message, bis breast was torn by two emotions—baffled spite and greed of further gold. "Y wTH destroy him yet" He thought of Bob Acland. "He's escaped mo for awhile, but it shall not be for long. Elsir Venner shall never be his wife. I am 0 good plotter, friend Bob, and tboug! you wriggle out of my olutobes a hun drcd limes, I will have you the hundred anA first. "JWoof old buffer—" his mind revertto (he man whose presence he had juet leit—"you little guessed that in making a confidant of me you wero telling tli ihiaf how to further enrich himself I Well, 600 quids will come in very handy just now, and, I suppose, the ooAmission would not be more hat) £300. Markhy's getting very restive for his money, and I oould pay him and still have a rtioe little balance in hand You're in lack's. way, Dick, my boy Fortune favors you."
If to be standing in the dark on the brink of a precipice without knowing it is to be in tack's way, then Richard Starkie was indeed in an enviable position.
Bending down amid the bramble, and brushwood which formed the undergrowth of a small plantation, groping among the briers and grasses Richard Starkie was searching for the cash box. "I.know I flung it somewhere bete be muttered fiercely. "Where con the thing be? Ah," and his band at last alighted ou .xuae metal, "here yoa are! I was just beginning to think that jodish fortune had served me a scurvy trick. Wei'*'— clasping the box to his bosom—"yon've been a good friend to me, and I'll treat yoa as lightly as possible. Come, let's aw*y—merciful powers, what's that?"
Pour stalwart arms bad seised him from behind and were holding him with a viselike grip, and, before be knew what was really taking place, be felt the cold steel on his wrists and realised that be was a prisoner, a detected thief who bad blindly fallen into a skillfully laid trap.-Tit-Bits.
Often the elements that move and mold society are the reaal* of the fbter's.counsel and the mother** prayer
ilBBll
W
TOR LITTLE FOLKS.
s®
itable institution. Willie's mother is dead, and hisfatheris a helpless cripple. Willie had a little rubber ball, and, with a merry laugh, he threw it when and where be pleased. First it was a policeman that caught it find returned it to him, then it was a prisoner. Again and again he .pitched it here and there.
Just as the bqy threw his ball at a burly prisoner, arrested for writing policy, and the latter kicked it back with a smile. Magistrate Deuel signed the papers which sent the child to St Joseph's asylum.—New York World.j f? 1
A Pretty Experiment,
Take a poker in the hand and point it to the north, dipping it to the horizon at an angle of about 30 degrees. Give the poker several sharp raps upon its higher end with a hammer. This will cause vibration in tho molecules of iron and the poker Will become faintly, magnetic. The best test for a weak .magnet is a needle floating on water. Perhaps you do not know that a needle m&y be made to float, but it is very simple. The needle must be dry and the water still. Then, if the needle be laid upon the surface flat, it will float readily. Now take the poker and hold it close to the needle and you may draw it all over the saucer, but the poker must not touch the water. If it should, it would raise by adhesion a little hill of water all about it, down whioh the needle would slide, thus producing a deceptive effect of repulsion. Real repulsion instead of attraction may be seoured by rubbing one end of the needle on one end of the poker.—Philadelphia Times.
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The-queen was muoh amused at this petition, and though she was unable to grant it she could send a new doll to he little girl, and this she proceeded to
A Twelve-yeop-oM Poohess. An interesting little personage is the Archduchess Elizabeth, the 18-year-old daugbt of the Grown Princess Stephanie of Austria. While staying in Steirmark, a pretty Austrian village, she wished to make friends with the children and take part in their games. Her .mother offering no objection to the 'plan, she joined them one day and asked if she might play with them. The result was, as might have been expected, awestruck silence and a gradual edging away from her little royal highness. Elizabeth was much distressed and said pleadingly, "I am only a little girl, and I want to play with little girls." Finding them still ill at ease, she got them to sit to her in turn, while she made sketches, and thus the shyness gradually wore off. The next day, and daring her stay, she romped and played with the village children like one of themselves.—New York Times.
In an old book written at the beginning of this century a man who had a great deal to do with horses makes an assertion which one would like to nee verified. He says that while a horse always lies down in its stall to sleep, if the groom, as sometimes happens, lies down there first and falls asleep, the hone never disturbs him, but invariably stands patiently all through the night and allows the man to slumber peacefully, no matter how war the horse'* l^gs be may be or how tired the animaL Another interesting point about horse* is the way they are trained to beootue showy, high stepping animal*. A horse *hot steps high, yoa know, presents a very dashing, spirited appearance. He is trained.,to do this and ?o act showily by being driven along a path on which rails are set cross wine. Ho steps high to avoid stumbling,'and in time always steps high.
ni 11| -n'lmiiilftL5.
TEBRE JT AtTTE SATURDAY JfiVENlNG KAIL, SEPTEMBER 19, 1896
PLAYEO BALt'iN CjlKjflV.
A little Kew' York Boy Who War Osood. seloaa of Bis CoHt&itlon. .f The policemen in Jefferson Market court could not maintain strict order, for, while Magistrate Deuel signed commitments for a large assortment of disorderly characters, they allowed one youngster to do just as he pleased. He was 4-year-old Willie Phelan, and he Was in court with his grandmother, who to have him committed to a ohar-
1
A IJttle Girl's Letter.
Recently Queen Victoria received a petition from a little girl which was quite irresistible in its way. The letters addressed by unknown person* to the queen do not usually meet her eye, as their number is great and their character often indicative of unsound minds, but the epistle from this child the queen *8 secretary deemed worthy to be brought to her attention.
It began thus: 'Dear Queen*—I let my doll fall into a hole in the mountain, and as I know that the other side of the world belongs to you I wish you would send some one there to find my dolL"
The little girl believed the hole went clear through the earth and that the queen could easily have the doll hunted up on the other side.
"*y 11m Winter Shirt WilstT ^A young woman stood in front of a mirror, viewing with satisfaction "her freshly starched shirtwaist She fastened the neat belt and pocketbook at'her waist, then gave a last lingering little it to the crisp tie at her neck. She :hed as she turned to join her friend and said: "I was not admiring myself it was the waist Was there ever
any
thing like them? I simply cannot live Without them. I feel better and lock better in these stiff standing collars than anything else. The higher they are -"the better I like them. And, do you know, I've decided to wear shirt waists all winter. I am going to make them ct some of these inexpensive dark silks, blue stripes, etc., and wear my linen opllar and cuffs with them. Won't that be sensible? There's no way a woman looks as neat as in these belted waists, and," here she arose, picked up hex gloves preparatory to going, "aren't they the most blissfully comfortable things in the world?"
Her idea was greeted with much enthusiasm by her companion, who said: "All right we'll just look at 6ome silks while we'ro out Everything is so cheap now." And they hastened on their expedition.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Wont Hake Bloomers.
Mandy, the famous Paris modiste, refuses to make bloomers for his customers. Asked to give his reason, he said: "The quantity of cloth makes the bloomers unbearable in hot weather, and it is impossible to keep them clean. The dirt and dust come in between the plaits and folds, necessitating incessant brushing, and they never look really clean, especially when made in dark oolors. On the wheel they neither improve a bad figure nor show off a good one. The rider with small limbs and hips looks ridiculous in them, while the rider with large hips, who takes to the bicycle to reduce her weight, dressed in bloomers, is a bad advertisement for her tailor or dressmaker and the laughing stock of people of good taste. No woman with a good figure should hide it in bloomers, and there is hardly a first class tailor who would willingly undertake to make them for figures good or bad.
A Steel Petticoat.
'"Many fashionable dressmakers shocked by the appearance upon the scene bf a steel petticoat This tormentor comes from Paris and is made of the finest material. It is destined^ to be .jjrorn With the widest of the new skirts Jd keep them well spread out Though the modistes are aware of the presenoe of the steel pettiooat, also the bustle and the hoopskirt, yet they decry all knowledge of their use and anticipate a decided movement against all such artificial and unhealthful aids to eooentric fashion ifi America. There is no doubt that the metropolitan dressmakers are doing all they oan toward off the hoopskirt and its annexes. As a rule, they are personally against their adoption, according to one of their number here. —New York Letter.
A Woman "Foreman."
It is quite uncommon to find a woman "foreman" in a pressroom, but Mis3 Rena Ohallender of Manistee, Mich., holds that singular distinction. When only 16 years of age, she began her career at the case on the Luther Lance. At one time, while the editor was away, she did tho entire work of the office—editing,typesetting and presswork. After a consolidation of the paper with another she worked at typesetting for a year and then was made foreman and intrusted with the management of the mechanical department She was last year elected a member of Typographical union No. 39. She is also a member of the Woman's Press club of Michigan.
1, Patents In Canada,
1
During tho first year of a patent granted in Canada the patentee may import the article into the Dominion ready rbade. Within two years he must either begin the manufacture of his device in Canada or arrange that Canadian importers may bring in the article on terms as advantageously as though it were made there.
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So a few months ago when the news came to his old associates on the Board of Trade that Mr. Shepard had received a stroke of paralysis and that the probabilities were that his days of usefulness were over, and that perhaps, his hoars were numbered, the deepest sympathy went out to the smitten man and his family. It seemed to all his friends almost impossible that this rugged old man, always so wholesomely hearty tod eheerAil, always a picture of health for HIS CHEEKS WERE LIKE THE ROSE
IN THE SNOW
could have been so suddenly laid low. Bat it was true and many weeks passed before his well-known form and kindly fhee returned'to his former business haunts. His re-appearance was made the occasion of a hearty welcome and the story of. his illness and recovery is well worth the telling. "I was taken sick," said Mr. Shepard. on the 17th of August, 1895. As I had all along been of the opinion that I was made of iron, yoa may well beHeve that it was hard for me to entertain the thought that I was to be laid up for more than a day or two. I am 68 years old, and for 40 years up to the time of this attack, I had not hr.d a day's sickness. The doctors who diagnosed my case saw at once that it was something serious. They at first said that it was lumbago then sciatio rheumatism. They finally came to the conclusion they did not know what was the matter with me. I experienced no pain, my head was clear, my appetite good, but I lost the use of myself from my hips clown. This was a bard stroke to an active man who has always had an easy going pair of legs. My brother-in-law, who is a physician, came from a neighboring city to see me. He pronounced my affliction to be locomotor ataxia. I am or the opinion that he diagnosed the case correctly for I was absolutely paralysed from the hips down.
Before he came, however ,a day or so before I had begun taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale' People. That was on the 20th day of last October. I read an article in the Indianapolis News
CURED OF PARALYSIS
Carlos F. Shepard, a Member of the Indianapolis Board of Trade, is About Once More^t"
A Case of Weighty Interest to Anyone Suffering With Nervous Complaints, for the Patient was Cured by "Feeding" the Nerves. This is tf 'V
New Term In Medicine.
Oae of the best known men abont the Indianapolis Board of Trade is Carlos F. Shepard, who for several years has been connected \rith the hoose of H. E. Kinney, grain broker. Mr. Shepard is a bluff, hearty, old gentleman of medium height, gray-headed and with a mustache like a French veteran. He is a man of very decided views on all gubjecta and is especially orthodox in politics and medicine. Notwithstanding his firmness in his convictions and the vigor with which he maintains them he isaman of many friends for manly men, even though sometimes obstinate hi their opinions, have the force of character that win adniiration and friendship.
jnrom th« y«w, Indianapolis, Jnd.
and saw testimonials de
scribing cases cured that were similar to mine. It struck me that the remedy could not do me any harm and I began to take the pills.
Before I began taking them I could not stir a peg, but nad to be carried from place to placc. I had not got fiir into the first box when I felt that deliverance from my enforced inaction had come. Before I finished the second box I was able to walk alone
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3ANT O. DAVIS.j,"*, FRANK J. TURK.
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TWICE DAILY STEAMERS TO
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!.m, CMcago—9:301id 11:30pm
fcxtrfl pi Milwaukee leave Sfc. a»d Friday eventnps. Ti... ecElpiccutuf tlti*Hrfilnclwejthesfdr a a S to
tmd CM* »f
mnioos with *U V*wiail» train*. Ticket* ..•1 «»!eataii V&ttdtilialiae*«atlona. Chicago i.jck frwtof WnJiwsth urtnur.
J. 11. GK.t AM. Prwldent, Benton Harbor, M'ch.
ji&*
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with the aid of a cane. About home I do not use a cane now but when I come out on the slippery pavements I feel that I need little support to make my footing sure. "I am still using Williams' Pink Pills, but I have reduced the dose to one after each meal. It seems that I have been able to throw some discredit on the predictions ol my doctors thanks to the pills. They said oould never walk again but here I am, and I think the credit must be given to the pills. It is said the pills are stimulating, but I canthat they rive me any sensations that I am aware of. They merely cure and that is quite enough for me. "Since I nave been out I have been a walking advertisement for Williams' Pink Pills, suppose I have recommended them to at least a hundred.persons. Whatl You want to print all this Why, my dear sir, I nevelr gave a recommendation to any proprietary medicine before in my life. Perhaps it may not be a bod thing to do so thii time if it will help any sufferer to regain health and bodily activity."
not say
Carlos F. Shepard has been a resident oi Indianapolis fbr over twenty years. He live* at No. 720, East Ohio Street. He has alway« been an active, enterprising man and his many friends will rejoice that he has literally been put upon his feet again. He it not' only well-known locally but to grain shippers all over Indiana and Illinois.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills fbr Pale People are an unfailing remedy for all diseases arising from a poor and watery condition of the blood, such as pale and sallow complexion,
feneral
muscular weakness, loss of appetite, epression of spirits, lack of ambition, anaemia, chlorosis or green sickness, palpitation of the heart shortness of breath on slight «£kertion, coldness of hands or feet, swelling oi the feet and limbs, pain in the back, .nervous headache, dizziness, loss of memorv, feebleness of will, ringing in the ears, early deteay,' all forms of female weakness, leucorrRapa, tardy or irregular periods, suppressioa 01 menses, hysteria, paralysis, locomotor ataxia, rheumatism, sciatica, all diseases depending on vitiated humors in the blood, causing scrofula, swelled glands, feyer sores, pickets, hip-joint diseases^ hunchback, acquired deformities, decayed bones, ehronid erysipelas, catarrh, consumption of the bowels and lungs, and also for invigorating the blood and system when broken down by overwork, worry, disease, excesses and indiscretions of living, recovery from acute diseases, such as fevers, etc., loss of vital powers, spermatorrhoea, early decay, premature old age. These pills are not a purgative medicine. They contain nothing that could injure the most delicate system'.' They act directly on the blood, supplying to the blood its life-giving qualities by ygen, that great suppoi
it to absorb ox organic life, ing "built up and being supplied with its a" lacking constituents, becomes' rich and red, nourishes the various organs, stimulating them to activity in the performance of their functions, and thus to eliminate diseases from the system.
In this way the blood, becom
These Pills are manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and wrapper, at 60 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.60, and are never sold in bulk. They may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company. The price at which thexe pills are sold makes a course of treat* ment inexpensive as compared with other remedies.
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