Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 May 1880 — Page 3
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"AX OLD-TIMEB."
GCOOESTB) BT A PAINTIK0 FROM TH* 6BITSH OP WALTER SIKS. Here where the wayward stream
Is resting w»dream, And where the banks o'erlook A peol, from eat whose deeps My pleased lace upward peep's,"
I mark tlie dragonfly Flit waveringly by "~'l With ever-veering flight And, in a hush profound, 1 BOO him eddy round
The flower he gave she'd press.
Yet blame her not, poetic youth, Nor deem too great the wrong She knew not Hawthorne's bloom, nor loved
Miicauley'B ilowers of song.
Her hymn book was tho total sum Of her poetic lortt And having read through Dr. yfaUs,
She did not ask for Moore.
But when sho ope'd lier book again. How gre^t was her surprise To find tbe leave!, on cither side, stained deep with crimson dyes.
.And that fair rose, his latest gift, A shapeleasf jrm she views .lis fragrance sped, its beauty fled,
And vanished all Its dews. *.Oh, Mary, maid of 8anJijidreae, Too sad was yoar mistake
Yet one, moth inks, tbftt wlBer folks Are vory apt to inakei,*
Who 'twixt these leaves would (fix the shapos That Love and Truth assume,
A
Will find they keep, like Mary's reee, The stain, and not the bloom. [Bret Harte.
c. A TRESS OF HAltt. 7 This tress of hair my sweetheart Bent me,
And so 1 bant above it tenderly, And kissed tne dainty bow That bound the wisp of sunshine, thrille® forsooth, Because her lips had nestled there—in truth,
She told me so.
,And I remember, reading that, the flush That fevefe 1 all my face, and tho heart's hu3h
And hurry in my ears
And how the letter trembled and «rew blurred Until my eyes could read no ether word—
For happy tears,
This tross of hair! Why I did hug and hold It hero against my heatt, and call it gold
jFT
I cast my hook, c,'
Sllchcc and sunshine blentj A Sabbath-like content Of earth and air and sky: A bit of landscape, wrought! Ol wimmei'fl orishtest thought
Most cunningly!
For here the light and shade Of coloring is laid With skill so rarely fine, The eye may even see *f The ripple tremblingly ,-f
Lip at.the line.
Tho "cork"—and—light!
And, with the boy's faith then Brimming my heart again, I know that, soon or late. The "nibble" yet Bhall roll ", Its thrills along the pole,
And, breathless—wait. J. W. Klicy
LINES IN AN ALBUM.
Sweet Mary, maid of San An Jreas, Upon her natal day. Procured an album, double gilt,
Entitled "The Bouquet."
JBut what its purpose was, beyond Its name, she could iiotguess And so between Its gilded leaves
With heaven's own luster lit.
And I did stroke and smooth Its gleamin strands, lAndpetandtfondleit
I went mad,
1
W'thfOOlJsh hands,
And talk to£U
now I pray God's blessing may alight Upon the orange flowers she wears toi: night.
S
Her features—kefip them fair
Dear Lord, bu let her lips not quite forget -E
:The
love hey, kindled onceisgilding yet This tress of hair. -IJ.W. Eiiey.
it J* wiU'^YBSULE x-lC: If it .•
JErolwen ma^—
4 Hot even Printer weather made me sad—'
1
dreamed, indeed, the Bkics were ne'er so doll That his smile might not make them beaati*Ui$i ful.
»ij^nd now, ltseemed, he had grown Oso fair V'ii'VVAnd straight and strong that,'when he smoothed my hair, eaJ'" *I felt as any Illy with drooped bur ,H
S
Wi(
O you may never guass what dreams 1 had Suoh hosts of happy things did come to me. .One time, it seemodAI knelt at some one's "1^ *1
knee,'| It I My wee lips ^hreaded 'with a str&nd 0 prayer, With kinks of kisses in it here and there 'To stay and tangle it the while I knit 'i .A mother's long-forgotten name ih it
Be sure, I droamed it all, bat 1 was glad —Ere I went mad! •. .Ere 1 went rna.1, 1 dreamed there came to me a fair-faced lad,
Who led me by the wrist where blossoms
In grassy lands, and where the skies were S: blue *1 As his owu eyes. And he did lisp and sing, ,t1, VjiAndi weave mo jrreaths where I sat marvel* ,, 1 Vi
What little prince it was thaterowneame queen And caught my face so cunningly between ^'",/4sis dimple-dinted hands, and kept me glad —Ere 1 went mad!
That leans, In fields of grain unharrested,:
,i t,Sy some lithe atock of barley—pure and glad -i —Ere I went mad.
)-1BWari
•JO
Ere I went mad, JEhe last of all the happy dreams haa
•Was of a peerless king—a conqueror— Who crowned me with a kiss, and tftroned me for
^.,f«ttor.uaone hoar! God of mercy! what a dream to «ajro tincture life with! Yet I made UD scream
As 1 awakened—with these eyes yon see, That may not smile till lore eemes baok to
fi
ne
&a$JK!*J!®to»ok to those old —Ere 1 went fis W 4TI --f -fJ.
—.
\k
dreams I had
"I™.,
THE CAPTAIN'S DAUGHTER, a mem A THRILLING STORY,
BY LAURA KEEN. -,i
"No," said I, "you shan't have him." "Oh, pa!" said she, "tyjJ I lo^e hirp so-— I love him so dearly." V~"I don't care," said I. "A common sailor like him!" and then she bellowed and piped her eye, as might have been expected of a girl.
My girl was a beauty, and she was the only one I had—the only one I ever had had—and I owned a boat, and I was known everywhere a6 Captain Parker, of the Ssiucy Jane,and all I had Jennie would have some day and was it likely I'd give her to Jack Blaze, as was before the mast? No!
Well, I set my foot down and I supposed she would obey. But, lo and behold what should I see one day when I came home from the river but a couple of people swinging on my gate.
It was that Jack Blaze and Jennie, and and his arm was around her Vaist! »i I bolted in between 'em like'a shell, and I ordered Jennie to h^r room, and I ordered Jack away, and told him what would happen to him if I saw him swinging on my gate again. "If you wern't her father, sir,"said Jack, "I'd not bear such words from you, but as it is, and as you're an old man"—
With that I fired a flower-pot at him and called him a confounded mutineer, and he sheered off. "Jennie," says I, "I've done well by you —your old father has done well by you, and what have you done by him? I've taught you to play the pianner,or had you taught, which is the same thing, and you have got one. You dress in silks, and I keep a servant for you, I've got you down in my will for all I shall leave, and how do you use me? While I'm away following the water, you mutiny. Now, I'm sorry to punish you. I dare not leave you alone, and I'l1. lock up the house and take you along with me on my trips. The cabin is comfortable and yiu'll not suffer, and if you don't like it you shall .lump it. Keeping company with a fellow like that! Ugh!" "Don't be cross, papa," said Jennie. I'll like to go, I'm sure. As for Jack, he?s the best fellow I know, and I'll Keep company with no orte else but, if you don't like it yet we'U wait." "Wait!" says I. «Waft! Why, if I wanted you to marry, Jennie, there's the captain of a steamer told me last week I'd the prettiest daughter of any man he knew, and that he was tired of single life. The captain of a steamer, Jennie think of that!" "I don't believe he is as nice as Jack," said Jennie and I love Jack."
Then I shook her, I'm sorry to say I shook her, and the next day I had her trunk sent down to the boat and took he* under my arm to the same nlace.
The cabin was good enough for a queen and the little state room a picture, and she seemed to like it.
You'd have thought I was giving her a treat instead of punishing her. She used to sit out on deck all the fine days, with knitting and sewing or a book, and she sang to me evenings.
But she didn't give up not even when she saw the captain—six feet three handsome as a picture*!
No, she 6tuck to Jack, and I stuck out against him as stiff as she, and so we sailed up and down the river, and summer went and autumn came and winter was a coming, but my girl was obstinate as ever. *i-.' vw:*?
It was my last tri#1 All winter after the river was frozen, the Saucy Jarie lay at the dock. "If you were a good, obedient girl," said I, "I shouldn't have to lock you up, but as it is I must.'\0»j0^ rqqs
So I kissed her—I was glad to remember afterwards that I kissed her—and I victualled the cabin and locked, the door and put the key in my pocket, and off I went.
I had to go a distance out of town, and when I settled my business there, I dined, and. it was evening before I got back to the Saucy Jane, or rather, to Poplartown, where she iay.
I thought to myself, as I came down, that I had never seen the place so busy, but as I neared the dock I saw that something had happened. xm'"Look here, man, what's the matter? What's the crowd about? What's happened?" i'1* "It's only" the fog: says I, but thei'ft was no fog. "It's dark," says I, but the darker it was the brighter the lights would have shone out.'
Then, all trembling and shaking like an old man'—like my old grandfather, who had the palsy used to do, I remember thinking—I caught hold of a man jyho was passing, and said I:
There was a crowd and people were talking and shaking their heads, and somehow I couldn't see the smoke stack of the Saucy Jane peer through the shadows as I might, nor the red and green lights at her head,' nor any sign of her, and a great fear crept into my heart, and I began to shake and shiver "It's the little steamboat down there,'' 6aid the man, "the Saucy Jane. She's been run into end -sunk by a coal boat She went down in 30 minutes. The captaii&was awav they say, and the men went on a spree. Ooij the cabin boy was there they picked him up. You can just see her smoke stack above the water. The coal boat was hurt a bit, too. She'* lying out th«r«A\ r.
smii
soon, and a crowd about me. some one saying softly:
cye' 1
THE HERE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
"Oh, my God!* said I. "My daughter 1" Then 1 aian 1 Know what nappened, but I found myself in the doctor's shop pretty and heard f'm jpl*
She went
"His daughter was on board. down with the boat" "I locked her in!" said I. "Wretched old brute that I am! I locked her in that cabin: I murdered ner—I, her father! Then the doors were locked and the windows small, and I locked her in to drown a a
Then I went off again, and it was all a horrible dream, until I awoke to find that it was night and I was alone in bed, and. I saw a man sitting beside me. "Who is lhis?"said I in a kind of fright, as I thought I recognized the face. I|\ "It's Jack Blaze, captain," said the man. "Do you find yourself better?" "Do you think I want to be better ?"said I. '-All I want is to die and go to Jeftnie. I murdered her, Jack!:'" "No, no, captain," said Jack, softly. You locked her up from her true love as loved her, but you didn't know what was coming/' "Oh, if I could die this minute!" said I. "Jack, if you've got a pistol put it to my head! My little girl!" i"Well, she's safe from marrying""me, captain," said Jack. "I suppose that's a comfort to you." "Oh, Jack!" said I. "Oh, Jack Blaze, if my Jennie could come to life again there's nothing I'd denyh?r! She might marry a chimney sweep, and I'd give her my blessing, let alone a good sailor like yOu, I know nothing against, but that he's what I was thirty years ago. Oh, Jack, if Jennie could come back to life I'd give her to you and be happy but it's no use, she's drowned." •**'. "Captain," said Jack Blaze, bending over me, "I don't feel sure of that."*5flf i-
E a id I "To be sure," said^he, "ff3 she was in the cabin, locked up as you left her, she'd have been drowned certain,but she mayn't have been." "Eh!" shrieked I again.
i5
Then I heard a dear, sweet voice crying out: "Jack, open the door let me come to papa." "t
tp
Vf
I own anotker now, and' Jack and I take ner up and down the river. Jennie goes with us very often, for she was married to Jack Blaze last Christmas, and I like the lad—yes I like him almost as well as Jennie does, I think, for if I had been left to myself and he had not set himself against me that dreadful dayT I should have no daughter now, and should be her murderer.
Cltvi iMpage at ¥assar. The VaMar girls have, we understand, adopted the following glove language: op a glove—You
Set.
Drop a glove m^love the left hand—What are
Half
you givinrus? Tap the [chin with the glove—Chew your own wax.
Crumple the glove In the left hand —Never! Crumple the glove in the right hand —Well, hardly ever.
Turn the glove inside out—Wipe ofl your chin. Fold the gloves neatly—I regard you as a bald-headed snipe of the valley.
Put on the left glove—I'll put a head on you. Slap the back of the head with the gloves—Look out I cany a razor
:v "THE NAVE OF MOTHER.'"
There are words that speak of a quenchless love, Which burns in the hearts we cherish, And accents that tell of a friendship proved,
That will never blight or perish. There are soft words murmured by dear,dear lips, Far richer than any other But the sweetest word that the ear hath heard
Is the blessed name of Mother.
Oh, magical wordl may it never die From the lips that love to speak it: Nor melt away from the trusting hearts
That ever would break to keep it. kWas there ever a name that lived Kke this? Will there ever be such another?
The angels have reared in Heaven a shrine For the holy nam el Motherly
He Didn't Make It Pan.
A smart New Yorker went to Philadelphia and started an opposition post office, delivering sealed letters at one dollar a hundred and circulars at seven dollars a thousand. The government pounced down upon him like a wolf on the fold, and gave him to understand that it had a monopoly of the postal business. Everybody who patronized him can be, fined $50 foi* each offense.
Home Kale.
While the home rule need not be made of |ron, it should be sufficiently firm to make itself known and recognized. It would be as well for parents to bear in minu that their .children are to be future men and women, who will gire tone to politics and society and that they are now the seeds which may spring up
the good or ruin this great Republic. .. ,JT
V-3
.Ul ,.jW n'c At ifils Ji
lyiJi to IV t* iil it
.-.5'. ..
fill
Allcock's Porous blasters
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Sold bv all Druggists.
—20tHr
Papular Mrawlnj off the
CuaaoHoltii Diitribstioi At Macauley'8 Theater, In the City of Louisville, on
Monday, May 31. 1880. These drawings, authorized by act df the Legislature of 1869, and sustained by all the
Courts of Kentucxy occur re kularly en the last day of every month Hun days excepted AND ARB SUPERVISED BY PROMINENT CITIZENS OF THE *TATE.
The management call attention to the grand opportunity presented of oht&lning for only $%, any of
THE FOLLOWING PRiZ«.S. £*4-1 Prise ...^ f.~... *30,OCO 1 Prize.........
10,559
1 Prize M*® 10 Prizes 11.000 each 10,000 20 Prizes $£00 each 10,000 OOPrires $100 each 10,000 2900 l'rizos $50 each 10,000 600 Prizes 820 tach 12,000 1,000 Prizes tio each 10,000 9 Prizes $800 each, Approximation
Prizes 2,'00 0 Prizes $200 each. Approximation Prizes 1800 9 Prizes$100 each. Approximation
Prizes f. 800
1,960 Prize*, *112,800 Whole Tickets, 1|8 Half Tickets, II, 27 Tickets, $50. 65 '1 ickets,*100.
All application for club rates should bo maieto the homo office Full 11st of drawing published in _Louisvile Courier- Joumaland New York Herald, and mailed to all ticket-holders Remit money by mail or express. Address R. M. BO Alt DM AN. Courier-Journal Building, Louisville, Kv., or at No. 307 and 809 Broadway, New York. Or, SOS Main street, Torre Haute, Indians.
THE READY FAMILY SOAP lAKER.
'3
"Indeed,"said Jack,"l kyw she warn't," "Oh, God, help me! Don't torture me!" said I. "Speak out." "She warn't, captain," for fifteen minutes after you left I went aboard, burst open the door—there was no one there but the cabin boy—and I.took her out. We went to the circus together and we had a lovely day. The Saucy Jane's cabin was stove in the coal boat walked straight into the cabin, captain, and its God's mercy I took her out.
LEWIS'
ii
£ti!
im
I hadn't cried before flogged at school, but 1 cried like a baby then aud how could I help it? For Jennie had come out ot the grave, as it seemed to me, and was holding my head in her arms, and kissing me and calling me her darling. wae so happy I thought I should Hie, and I never remembered that I had lost the Saucy Jane until the next morning, though the boat was the apple of my
since I had
been
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Because toe alio these great organ* I to become (Hogged or torpid, and I poisonous humors are therefore forced I into the blood that should be expelled I naturally.
IBILI0C8WE88, Plira, COHCTIPATlOK, KIDNEY COMPL AIXTJC 5JRIJU BY DISEASES, FEMAITK WEAK-
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Before Takingeasee that foi.^f^ Tayng, low, as a sequence of ?elf-Aousc as lost of Memory, Universal Lassitude, Pain it the Back,I)imner8 of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead tc Insanity or Consumption and {a Permaturt Grave. particulars In our [pamphlet, which we desire to scad free by| mail it everv one. JgyThe Specific ..Medicine it said oy ailldiugglsts at $l per package, o, six pacaages for $5, or will be !sent free mail on reoaipt of tie money by ^addressinj
Tbe Gray Medicine C«.
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Dr. BwWi—Hae all
.Adviser on diseases r®,
saltinjc from impure seraa! associations, and on self-abuse—tM IMt baUi «r wilt aad iu «A«i slier tiftt eaa^ag NigkUy Caitw b«, IM Vtoer. el^. usi makiftff «arrta« \mv~ym Mp** trea**jat a»d nian vsHeble teeelpla. A beek (tv yrTvaif awl eeesKerate IVMTM AMU«• adah
fMrnrnm mstHrima
S)SMMh|M*i«M
vllWai, aa Hum tm* «W«I wmn, WW4I asi ia a«y eaWr beak, aa4 tea AOi^fea, wfekrm K» PteM Kagrarta^ a«4 WwMlrala. $ea« etaWd
ftwfl.
ft— B0PTl?»« liha iMr aamaaV
a«S aAbei^ead aMras tU« tky wtt leam ta UseU a4taa«age.^
11. MTTr IIIPtilABY. So. 19 W. Slh !M. r.nK
PRESCRIPTION FREE
rt Deraetlve Msmory, and all uis it oa by Seeret Habits and Excesses. U| st lias the lagredteats. Address,
OR. JAQUE9 A CO.j^
llOVMt Bizth at, CttHOIHUATI, OjQDL
N
•O^WitlPTIO
i. ,v i.oro»mutt's i.tu-ti^^Sios pltate |,(-t Ci i'. tiu. ... oui?h% ,-u. r.'Hfc Sur.taltaa. drnssV* r-r l,c iiiic hr, i' ho ha* r.ev^oti .cr° on r.veii)* «n jfli.
C:*AS, OSMUAT 4
13 Si'.i'i'.i*" Ket* torts.
DEBILITY
Vital Weakness and Proa, tration from over-work at
and pi Been In use 20 years, —is the most success-
cured by lb
fnl remedy known. Price fTpervlx or sQlalsan4 nargovial of powder for $5,sent post-freeonte iielpt of price. Humphreys'Homeo. Med. Co*
Mnst. Ostalogua.free.1 lv9 Fulton St.. Jf. Y.
O E S O W E
RATEOFMAGNESIA
AI ASRIEAIIE APMItNT AND REfRIQERANT. 7n!« well-known preparation Is hi^lilr rccmumcnded for Dyisspala, Headache, KlcknrM or She •tOHUMm,andall complnintnnrisinKfroin Acidity, BUIoMnm, anrt JHalnrial Fever*. It coola tbe blocd and regulatea the bowels. It ia a favorite medicine for children. Prepared by A. ROGERS' SOUS, Cbemiata, 281 Bleecker Street, New. York. Superior to Mineral Waters, Seidlitz Powders, eto, fog BALE BY ALL DDIIOOISTfi.
JOHN A. DODGE A CO.,
BANKERS AND STOCK BROKERS, 12 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks bought and sold on ths New York Stock Ex* change, on 3 to 9 per cent, margin. Stock PrlrW leges aecnrsd on responsible parties at farorablo rafea. Full information on all mstters relatfeig to ikly
H.PUB.
BY ALL STATIONERS.
Can It made IMOM bj uj active maa or viman, boy or lirl.
WE'WILL START YOU WITH an OUTFIT WORTH $4
If yoa an employed daHaf the day yoa eta make from tl to.U dariag aa eveaiac. Some of oar agents report a prott of ast ia a riarle day. Write at oaee for fall parttcalara cTo. RIDCOUT A co., sst RNI«IMU
WANTED,
ion on all matters relatfeig to
Btock speculation furnished on application. Weekly Report of more menu in the Block market nen'. free.
Wae
Book of nearly 100 large octavo pageafor tne sick
Mm IK•
AriiCD
li Hi Full of valuable notes, by
BOOK.
athing organs Diseasesof Men Disei6es of Women aches and pains Heart Troubles and, a great variety of chronic diseases, with evidence that in most cases these dfeeases are enr able. Sentfor a three cent
Address, MURRAY CO. No. 129 EoJt
Street. New York City.
NO CUUGinO. I/CAII .\o PAYI DK.IVbAN 178 South Iirk Street. ifl alia.uliri^ hriva'c, Ner.oaa, Chrome and :ii l)iteaM«. hntrLiatorrhei, ImpoteBCjr, -(.Tual incapacity.) Tunai. Disc us, «M visual ion, pertkraaili'" by letter, flreat (.n tn Soak, i!l«trated,M)ct. Fineft iUna.
••SHwBSA t»K,k extant, SOS una, poM paJd, tlf 0.7* Dr. Kean lie only pbyiiciin in tne city wbo
Itir at oo H(. All laucuurx
You will not t»
•bli|*4 to leava your ova town, be away from home over, •ifht. Aay caa conduct tbe buioeu. II reqoirei as
On 30 Days Trial
We will send oUr ELXCTRO-VOLTAIC ann other Electric Appliances jpon trial for 80 days to those suffering rrom Nervous Debility, Bheumatism. Paralysis or any diseases of the liver or kidneys, and many other diseases. A Sure Cure guaranteed or no pay. Address, VOLTAIC BELT CO.,
Marshall, Mich.
Prescription Free. For the speedy Core
ot1
Seminal Weakness. Iios* of Manhood, and all d:»-
utrisn
brooshton by indiscretion or exesess. Any nggist has tho ingredients. IJAVIIMON t" VNATHU|St,.Y.Address
.STOVE PIPE SHELF
SUMMIT
—AND—
iflt' wHPi
^UTENSIL STAND*
Hf A.OEXTS WASTED Fcr th« meit convenient article «vef aflbred to Housekeeper*. One Agent made flMLCB in IS daye another 0» 9 dajrs another |U In 1 dav. Bexing and freight ehsrgas toagents Free. Toe «ta*al»s«jarMsJ
WATERS' PIANOS AND ORGANS. {i 3^ v, r.: :+z Best made. Warranted six years. Herf Flanos, Stool and Cover, |lW,t ward. New Organs, 45,160, ISO. $75, upward. Illustrated Catalogue free. Agents Wanted. SecondHand. Instruments at Bargains. Horaea 38SrB.oadway N"
Cards, Sew
Chr
TDU.-WTE M.
fnd.
Send
rome, 10c-
^'QiltEdge. *c., with i» ipiing, B. Wallingford, Ct
Bame,
»hal G.A
very inseniou
r.i* '-J 'i.t ^3 f.%
C.fJ
'(UN
