HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-5-23, Page 2HE EXETER TIMES.
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WIRELETS,
Rain and snow storms are reported from
North Dakota.
The Universal Peace Union is holding its
twenty-third anniversary in New York.
The British steamship Aberlady, stranded
sear Cape Lookout, will be a total loss. The
-crew were saved.
The difficulties between the striking min-
ers and operators in the Springfield, 111.,
r.districb have been settled.
A New York despatch says the English
syndicate has purchased the brewery of Geo.
Itingler & Co. for $9,500,000.
Edmund Yates cables to the New York
Tribune that the Prince of Wales is anxious
to take the position of Viceroy of Ireland.
The steamship Abyssinianwhich left
'Vancouver the other day had 1,210 bales of
cotton for Shanghai and 13,400 sacks of
flour for Hong Kong.
In the telegraphic report of the fire at J.
B. Smith & Son's planing mills, ab South-
ampton, the loss should have read $3.500
instead of $1,bCO.
The trustees of the Brooklyn bridge have
decided to double the traffic facilities of the
structure. Half a million dollars will beex-
pended for the improvements.
Sir E. B. Malet, Mr. Kaason and Herr
olstein form the committee appointed by
he Samoan conference to consider the gum -
on of the government of Samoa.
Fred Medley, proprietor of the Pueblo
oueeDenver, the other day shot and killed
is wife because she refused to give him
oney to purchase beer. The murderer was
rested.
Captain Smi• h, of the steamer British
rincess, just arrived from Liverpool, is the
ret to revive the sea serpent story this
aeon. The monster seen by him was ''0O
et long and had a head like a "beef bar -
Ie
The Yankee Sailor,
he Yankee sailor seems likely soon to
ome an extinct species. Seven•tenths
the seamen lost from the American war-
ps wrecked at Samoa were of foreign
h. It is said that when the Secretary
he Navy had occasion, a short time since,
o through the list of naval officers avail -
for positions of various grades on the
ships it was proposed to fib out in case
ouble with Germany, he found a large
eminence of German names. " What
kery it is,''t exclaims America, " to talk,
grand, new navy, each ship of which
cost $1,500,000, to be built in American
ards, of American materials, when ib
LADY
GDLSWU, i'i RITE
QUAKER x,
'Twos moonlight, and et. sea, The vast
ship cleaving through phoephoresoent waves
had all ratite set and swelled, by a favoring
breeze. From her oelestiel throne the white
moon smiled upon a group of travellers clus-
tered together under the leeof the shelter-
ing companionway. At mole a moment a
peace, assuredly nob of earth, seems to per-
vade the most turbulent spirit, Beisteroue
and unworthy passions are subdued. themes
of dissension are abandoned, and the cry of
" All's well !" from the outlook watch
arises like a benediction upon the silent air,
and awakes a responsive echo in every
earb,
Cincinnati, reclining in her deck ohair,
sat motio'iless, speeohleee. The incidents
of the days of the recent past vaguely re-
peated themselves to her quiescent mind.
Were they a dream ? Oculd they be reality ?
Inetinotively she toughed her wedding ring.
It was there, where Gilbert had planed rt
during the ceremony, There could be no
doubt of the marvellous feet. She was
married to an Englishman of title.
Previous to the date of this occurrence the
young girl's history has been a sufficiently
commonplace one. She was born in Cin.
oinnati, and the inventive powers of her
parents had been unequal to the strain of
devising any other name for her than that
of the spot upon which she first opened
her eyes, Her father was a merchant, who
died when his only child was ten years old,
leaving his widow in comfortable but not
sffinent circumstances. Cincinnati was sent
to a young ladies' seminary and obtained all
the education extant in suoh establishments.
Upon her entrance into social life her ad.
mirers became numerous. She was a very
beautiful girl—tall, dark and slender, and
endowed with a smile of mosb enchanting
sweetness.
Among the gallants of the fair Cincinnati
there was a certain Roderick Monroe, who
seemed to be more agreeable to her than
any other man. Monroe was a well favored,
tall fellow, with light curling hair, a fresh
complexion and a boyish, blond mustache.
So far life had held fe w prizes for him. He
was bound to the bookkeeping desk and
only managed to earn enough to keep him-
self out of debt, with a decent coat on his
back. He was madly in love with Cincin-
nati, and no one who saw them together ab
one period could doubt that she, in some
degree at least, reciprocated his attachment.
Tris was the state of affairs when Lord
Helderswood came to Cincinnati as the guest
of one of the opulent families who live in
the lofty suburbs of " the Qaeen City," and
whose existence have little in common with
those of the toiling thousands at their feet.
Surrounded by every delight which boundless
wealth oan command, with cultured minds,
gracious manners and the warmest of hearts,
the "upper ten thousand" of suburban Cin•
cinnati may indeed lay literal claim to that
exalted title.
CHAPTER II.
In the series of fetes organized for the
amusement of Lord Helderswood Cincinnati
Smith was a conspicuous figure. The beau-
tiful girl was, so to speak, in society and yet
not of ib. Her own advantages of face, fig-
ure and bearing gave her incontestable right
of way, but her mother—ah, there was the
stumbling block ? The good woman had
never seen the inside of one of these exclusive
suburban homes until her lovely daughter
hadrown to womanhood. Gradually Cin-
cinnati had been assimilated by the dainty
maw of society ; necessarily the mother had
to be engulfed.
Nothing more instantaneous and complete
than Lord Helderswood's congnesb is on re-
cord in love's annals. Cincinnati did nob
dream of exerting herself to please him when
his passionate avowals came in thronging
sentences to her astonished ears. She was
flattered, but at first not otherwise moved.
A fledgling girl is often mercilessly critical.
The young lord was not quite so tall as her-
self, and in feature far less well favored than
Roderick Monroe. Cincinnati's mother was
enraptured at the distinguished conquest her
daughter's charms had achieved, and urged
the girl to accept Helderawood's proposal
without delay.
" But, mother, we really know very little
about the man," said Cincinnati.
" What ye call him t a man' in that con-
temptible way Ter, sis ?" retorted her poor
mother. " He's a lord ! Just think of it 1"
" A lord is a man, isn't he, mother ?" ask-
ed the girl with a laugh.
"I s'poae so. I never see one before this.
brow, don't be so pertic'ler aboub nothing,
sis. don't 1"
Rod. Munroe was, of course, informed of
the evident attachment for Cincinnati of the
English lord, who was the most luminous, if
the most evanescent, star of a sccial heaven
amid whose resplendent mazes the lowly
bookkeeper could not hope to move. The
situation filled his mind with despair. As
many another insensate youth has done, he
sought solace in the lethe of the wine cup,
and parading his swaggering disgrace before
the pure eyes of his goddess rightly en-
countered not her sympathy but her dis-
gust.
"We must ask the Wilmington what the
exact position of Lord Helderswood is," said
Cinoinnati, turning from the spectacle of
Munroe's degradation with a shudder.
Mr. Wilmington had met Lord Heiden -
wood on a shooting expedition in the West,
knew nothing of him of his own knowledge,
but there was "Burke." Why not consult
Burke ? Burke and figures cannot lie.
Burke's Peerage disclosed the lineage of the
visitor. The family was an ancient and an
exalted one. An ancestor was named in
Doomsday.
"But Helderswood is not, rich. I'm sure
of that," said the opulent Mr. Wilmington.
"In fact, he has told me so.''
Calling the next day at Mrs. Smith's house
Lord Helderswood, unfortunate in not find-
ing Miss Cincinnati ab home, was received
by Mrs. Smith. A conversation of con-
siderable duration ensued. At its termin-
b e manned, when completed, almost (ationanother appointment to meet was made.
sively by foreigners 1 The American i and at this interview, a brother of Mrs,
f to- day does not go to sea, because if
d be would have to sail under a foreign
n the company of foreign sailors, and
the flag of a foreign captain. There
ow few American ships,"mainly because
idiotic, shipping laws of this nation."
The Proper Dogs for a Barber.
Spicer had just settled himself in the
or a short out, when the artist in at•
ce threw over him a calico apron, on
were pictured innumerable little grey
5.
at is very appropiato," said Spien
do you call zee little dour' approbri.
r. Spizare?" asked the barber, as he
the apron into his victim's neck
is eyes bulged.
cause," gasped Spicer, i' greyhounds
d to catch the hare.
a silence fell upon the room that the
r dexo door looked in to see if any.
ed died.
Smith, one Napoleon Jones, was present,
Cincinnati knew nothing of the purport of
these discourses.
How beautiful she looked ase bride! Such
was the universal comment. The wedding
of the aristocrat and the lady of his love was
beyond all dispute the event of the Social
season in that locality, Those sad goasips,
the newspapers, babbled for a fortnight
about the interesting affair. The arrival
of Lord and Lady Helderswood was chron-
icled by the New York journals. The
steamer list was freighted with their patri-
cian name.
It was'of all this that the former Cin-
cinnati Smith was thinking as the great
steamer ploughed her way through the em-
erald sea and the refulgent moon oast her
brightness on these silent travellers outward
bound.
CHAPTER III.
She arrived in London in the early spring,
Who that has first seen L'ndon'et the Limo
can fail to understand her delight in the
wouderful plane, in its storied inonuments,
its abundantvendure, the quaint eharaoters
who throng the multitudinous streets) For
Cincinnati the experienoe was as novel as it
was int( resting. She was, for an Amerioin
girl, singularly untravelled. Untilah°went
thither to take ship she had never seen New
York, that strange oosmopolitan pity with
its oeaseleas, its surging expansion. Her
whole life until her marriage had been pas-
sed in or near Cincinnati. Her idea of the
buoy whirl of great cities was derived from
the contemplation of Vine, Walnut, Main
Third and Fifth streets ; her sense of beauty
of landscape was amply gratified by the
views from the heights surrounding Cin-
oinnati. The noble Ohio River, gliding
between luxuriant shores, the towering bluffs,
the deeply azure sky were combined in her
first impression of all that is fairest in a
nature' Lonna ; nor was this gloriouseon-
junction otsky and valley, ot stream and
mountain displaced from its positionof
sovereignty in her mind even after she had
contemplated the finest vistas which Europe
bus to show. As a metropolis, however, the
city of Cincinnati dwindled by comparison
with London and Paris.
Cincinnati's expectations of social eleva•
tion were more than gratified upon her ar-
rival in England, She was presented at
court by her husband's aunt, Lady Beaute.
more, a short, stout woman, bristling with
family pride. In appearance the young
American was well fitted' to figure as my
Lady Helderswood. Her tall and slender
form carried well her newly acquired dignity,
and her radiant face crowned by heavy coils
of dark glossy hair, was illuminated by a
smile of almost angelic sweetness.
" I must congratulate you, my dear, upon
the impression you have made to. day," said
Lady Beaulemore as they sat, still in their
courb trains, sipping tea in Ledy,Holders.
wood's tiny house in Curzon street. "I
have presented lots of girls and brides, and
never heard so many compliments as were
showered upon you to day."
These pretty flatteries, being rather loud-
ly uttered, bad ot necessity reached Cinoin
nati's ears. Nor was she unconscious of
the faob that the Princess of Wales had
smiled admiringly upon ber as she approach.
ed the circle of royalties. The Queen had
retired of ter a half an hour, as is the wont, in
these days, of Her Majesty, and the gra-
cious Princess had taken her place holding
court. Cincinnati was, indeed, beautiful in
her train of silver brocade, her veil, her
feathers and her ornaments of diamonds and
pearls.
"The Marchioness of Dewsbury said you
were most charming," continued Lady
Beaulemore, " and as she very rarely ad
mires anything or anybody I thought it a
great compliment."
" I ata glad if you were pleased," mus•
mured Cincinnati.
"Here's Gillie 1" exclaimed the elder lady,
as Lord Helderawood entered the room. "I
must tell him how greab your succes has
been to -day.''
" Will you excuse me, Lady Beaulemore ?"
said Cincinnati, rising. " I will go and take
off this dress and slip on a teagown."
"Let your husband see you as you are,"
cried Lady Beaulemore. "Gillie, is she
not charming?"
" Gilbert Helderswood took his wife's
hand and held her from him at arm's length,
the better to survey the picture. A wide
mirror naught the reflection of both within
its merge. How differently had they been
endowed by nature ? He was short in stature
and not altogether well proportioned; his
features were irregular, his complexion sal-
low. She was tall, superbly proportioned,
divinely beautiful. She looked as queens
would look, could they control the fates.
"She'll do, aunt, will she not ?" he queried,
with a triumphant smile.
Cincinnati' ea' hexed up her gain and laugh-
ingly ran off.
" She is exquisite, Gillie," said his aunt.
" Now I do hope you have cast all old fol.
lies behind you and that your marriage with
this young American will bring you both
happiness."
"Thanks awfully, aunt," replied Gillie
with a supresaed yawn.
" Be careful of her ; you know our
world."
He arose from his semi•secumbent posture
and looked at her anxiously.
"And above all be careful of yourself 1
You know your world 1"
So saying. Lady Beaulemore gathered up
her train and departed in her carriage.
CHAPTER IV.
Gilbert Helderswood, having returned
from escorting her to the poach door, mused
on the suggestions she had thrown out.
Could it be that the future held another con-
dition of affairs than that which now existed
between himself and his wife ? The mere
insinuation of any change made his cheek
blanch.
Hurrying up t"'e narrow staircase he
knocked lightly at the door of his wife's
room.
Her Ladyship's maid—a rosy cheeked
Devonshire lase—opened the door.
"My Lady is lying down, My Lord," said
she, with a blush and a courtesy.
" Tell her I am here."
Cincinnati heard his voice and arose, com-
ing to the docr.
"You may leave me, Margaret."
Thank you, My Lady," quoth the
Devonshire lass, with another blush and
another oou-tesy, as she quitted the room.
" Are you tired, Siesy 1"
"Never toe tired to welcome you, my
husband."
"Jove !" he exclaimed, "you are as
beautiful in your tea gown as you were in
your train. Doesn't it make you happy
to know yourself so lovely ?"
Lt It makes me happy to know myself be-
loved," she answered, " You do love mo,
Gillie?"
" That I do, wife," he answered, heartily.
" And you love me ?"
"You—and only you 1"
" Have never—will never love another ?"
There fell a silence,
" Will never love another," she present-
ly replied.
He folded her tenderly in his arms.
CHAPTER V.
Yes, it had come to pass that Cinoinnati
-loved Gilbert Helderswood with every throb
of her warm young heart. No one except
herself was aware to What extent her fancy
had been engaged to Roderick Monroe. The
physical fineness of the young Cincinnatian
was so pronounoed as to awaken universal
admiration. What wonder, then, that the
girl of whom he was so deeply enamored
should have been struck with charms which
oven Monroe's enemies did not dispute. The
young man had enemies, of course, His
very oomelineso would bring them among a
set like his, where toleratioe of either good
or bad, gnalfties is hardly prevalent, Not
into the nigher social circles, to whrell the
beauteous Ciueinnat.i had been galled, was
Monroe admitted. He was a man of no for-
tune- and no taste for music. Any one of
these drawbacks would have been en impedi.
Ment to his social suooese in e modern lash.
ionable community. In Cincinnati the test
named was of itself an all sufiaient bar to
h'e advancement,
The matter troubled him very little in-
deed, not at ee.11. He bad his own circle, in
which he made merry. His life of business
had begun es an errand boy in'Smith's store ;
into hie eat 'rest days Cincinnati had shone
like a sun, He loved her fervently ; she at
least had oonfeased to him thatshe, loved no
one else.
The exhibition of himself as a drunkard
made Cincinnati recoil in dismay from the.
prospect of passing her life with him. It
often happens that men, reckless with pass.
ing anger, succeed in terrifying women by a
display of aelf•abesement of this kind. "To'
this state will I habitually desoend,"is their
implied threat,"unless you do as Idesire."
The woman's natural instinct ot aheltering
love is appealed to. "I must save him from
himself,' she argues, "it is my duty,"
Cincinnati was nob thus to be cozened, She
r igarded drinking men with abhorrence. Of-
fended beyond measure at Monroe's vulgarity
in Doming into her presence when intoxicat-
ed, she resolved to cancel all ties with him,
even those of the ordinary aquaintanoe. Her
oonfirmed belief was that the inebriated man is
one afflicted with an incurable disease. She
would have declined to serve as Hebe to the
gods, Eiger to chill thelove which had been
warming in her breast for Monroe, anxious
to place an impassable barrier between her
past and her future, she accepted Lord Held-
erawood'a proposal without delay. The mir-
acle of wedlock almost instantly wrought its
blessed work. Roderick Monroe's image was
effaced from her heart and the love which
Cinoinnati bore her husband became the ab.
sorbing passion of her life.
[To BE CONTINUED ]
Oklohoma Society.
GUTHRIE, Oklahoma, May 11.—There was
great excitement here yesterday owing to the
efforts of the City Government to open
streets in accordance with the newly adopt-
ed plan. The police force went from point
to point removing houses and tents wherever
found to interfere with the opening of streets.
Property holders thus molested held meet.
Ings, and exerted a great deal of opposition
to the course pursued. Mayor Dwyer and
other cflioiale were hung in effigy. The mob
then paraded over the city and circulated in-
flammatory stories about the violent action
of the oflio ale. By noon immense crowds had
collected upon the proposed streets to op-
pose the police and the surveyors' corps.
John Williamson, a gray-haired veteran ot
the war of 1812, who held a lot in the middle
of the street, took an axe in one hand and a
piece of scantling in the other, and shouted
he would kill the first man who touched his
tent. A large force gathered to assist him,
and the police were forced to move back.
Several times pistols were drawn, and fatal
encounters seemed imminent, but the with-
drawal of the police was the signal for a dis-
persion of the mob, and no,further trouble oc-
curred. Early in the day Geo. P. Wright, a
prominent citizen of Dodge City, was lying
in his tent, when the officers lifted a frame
house near by and threw it up against his
little canvas house. The timbers fell with a
crash and fractured Wright's skull.
The withdrawal of the police la taken as
an evidence that the Mayor cannot enforce
bis proposed street making system, and the
mob congratulates itself that there will be
no further attempts to molest the claims.
In the present state of affairs tra f e is cut off
in all directions, there being no well-defined
streets. Gamblere have taken positions in
the middle of the road leading to the depot, 1
and defy the authorities to dislodge them.
Judge W. H. Clayton made a speech be-
fore the city council last night and urged it
to stand by its plans and clear the streebe at
any cost. He advocated the use of four com-
panies of troops camped in the bottom. The
city is in great disorder. Bonfires, speech.
making, and a general jubilee was the pro.
gramme of the mob. Seventy four gambling
joints are running in full blast. Gambling is
apparently the chief oct,upation,
Miss Nennita Delay, the Oklahoma lady
boomer, was shot through the arm yesterday
by a Santa Fe engineer named Stafford,
Miss Daisy was making a visit to her claim
after filing it and was met by Stafford,
who fired three shots at her. She is not seri
ously injured.
Joseph T. Platt, who had taken a fine claim
six miles from Oklahoma city, was fired upon
aV ednesday by some person concealed near-
by, the shot taking effect in his arm. He
says a man tried to take the claim after ho
had begun improvement, and he supposes this
was the assailant. The fellow will ue lynch-
ed if caaght.
A Frank and Manly AIo'.ogy. •
A Western paper in arecent issue contained
the following acknowledgment of its short-
comings : We apolog'ze for mistakes made
in all former issues and say they were in-
excuaable, as all an editor has to do is to
hunt news, and clean the rollers, and set
type, and sweep the floor, and pen short
iteme, and fold papers, aid write wrappers,
and make tho paste, andmai'thepapers, and
talk to visitors, and distribute type, and car•
ry water, and saw wood, and read the proofs
and correct the mistakes, and hunt the shears
to write editorials, and dodge the bills, and
dun delinquents, and take cuseings from
the whole force, and tell our subscribers that
we need money. We say that we've no busi-
nese to make mistakes while attending to
these little matters, and getting our living
ton gopher -tail soup flavored with imag 01 -
tion, and wearing old shoes and no Dollar,
and a patch on our pants, obliged to turn
a smiling countenance to the man who tells
us our paper isn't worth $1 anyhow, and that
he could make a better one with his eyes
shut,
Holds True With Babies,
Deacon Cloudy—" Permit, me to congrat-
ulate you, Mrs. Washington, on de blondish-
ness ob your new baby."
Mrs. Washington—" Oh, thanks, but I
regrets it ain't darker."
Deacon 0.—" What makes you talk so?"
" Mrs. W.—" Well, because" de yellow
children shows dirt lots wua un de black
ones."
George's Suggestion..
"George," said the beautiful girl, as the
blushes chased each other over her eloquent
face, "papa has ordered just the loveliest
floral decorations for our wedding next weak
There will be one piece representing a wed-'.
ding party of six persons, the figures all lif e -
size, The florist nays that will be perfect.
but he thinks the bride ought to be holdinrt
an enblem of some kind—an anohor, or a
motto, or a book. Can you think of some.
thine' appropriate, George ?"
"An emblem to go With silt figures ?"
"How would a dollar mark do'?" suggest.
od George, witha respectful cough,
\\\\t\\\ tenn,Ate\\`teSeseiness. t\\neon.\ne\�\senay\\\,See\\\needs
enge
i
i
\\a
for Infants and i
n Children.
ren.
"Casta;iais so wen adapted to children that
1 recommend it as superior to any prescription
Imown to me." H. A•. Asuman, M. D,,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
I Qastorla cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarnccea, Eructation,
Kills. Worms, gives sleep, and promotes 01-
gestion,-
Without injurious medication.
TEE CENTAUR CoiZPAsx, TZ Murray Street, N. Y.
oZat
A BULLET IN HIS BRAIN.
There for Twenty Tears ilnlcuovvn to Him of
Ills I'hystclans.
The remarkable instance of Anton Merob,
the Philadelphia veteran, who lived twenty-
five years with a bullet imbedded in the
tissues of his heart, has parallel inthe
a a p rake
ease of Abraham Delong, a prominent, farmer
of Ohio, who carried en ounce of Confeder
ate lead on his bruin for twenty years before
it caused his death, the strangest feature of
the circumstance being th'80 the presence of
the bullet never was known until the autopsy
brnught in to light.
Datong received his wound at the battle
of Stone River. The bullet struck him
squarely on the nose, well up between the
el es, in such a way as to split the bone,
which, cloainir up again, left only a slight
wound that the Burgeon declared had been
caused by a ballet coming from a side direc-
tion and clipping off the skin as it sped by.
Delo. g kept hie feet, suffering very little,
and in a few days was again in fighting trim.
He served to the olose of the war and re-
turned home to his little family and his
plough. As the year passed Datong exper-
ienced painful sensations in the head, at first
slight, but more and more severe at each
recurrence, until' his sufferings finally drove
him crazy. He was taken to the Insane
Asylum at Dayton for treatment, where he
regained his mental faculties, but received
no relief from the terrible pain and pressure
in his head that made life almost intoler-
able.
Some time before hie death, which took
place in 1882, Delong got the idea that the
bullet that struck him at Stone River had
indeed entered his head, and proposed to
submit to a surgical operation that would
determine whether he was right about it.
This opinion was not shared by his physi-
cians, and, as the operation must neoeasarily
be a dangerous one, they declined to search
for the suspected missile. He then reques-
ted that after his death an examination be
made, in order that his widow and children.
should it appear that he had died of injuries
received in the service of his country, might
receive a greatly needed pension, his long
period of illness and inability to work haw -
int? quite eaten up his little fortune.
Accordingly au autop?y was held. To the
surprise of the doctors, and as Delong had
predicted, they found a bullet, or rather two
jagged pieces of lead in his head back of the
frontal bones. One portiere had lodged just
over the brain. where, together with a frag.
ment of bone that had been broken MI by
the bullet as it tore its way into the cranium,
had become Lusted with a bard growth,
which, extending year by year, pressed
harder and harder against the brain, cau4ug
that terrible pain of which Delong complain•
ed, and resulting in derangement and death.
Had it been known that the bullet which
struck him at Stone River fnund lodgment
in his head surgical skill might have availed
to prolong the viutim's life for many years.
As it was, it was looked upon as moat
remarkable that: D !long should have
survived as long as he did. Mrs. Delong
applied for and received a pension.
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OFFICE on. CRARLER A. SNYDER,
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