Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / April 10, 1890, edition 1 / Page 4
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. . II oi-ta. n .a ; 1L "I- 'of U.a :,!. :. ,1 lira. ll OIC.S Tbe ' "OU i I 0. 1 : Oil- 7i, .Iju a .in. V is commenced Feb, tv N RY of a lawyer and this OK OF A KEPORTER. iBOLAY ffOBTH. 9. by 0. 1L Dunham, rublished igement through The American n-1 compare it id that, and 1 you have." latain desires to see Marian her he must come to No. , attic floor, at 11 sharp to- ie other slip from his ixxrk--ared the two; the writing ne disguised hand; he com ro scraps evidently they m the same piece of paper, uzzled. n hour before your time," en," said Fountain. "Let Oh, I saSTuow I made my i ben he continued: "This is - cms. You and I should 1 rstanding, Mr. Brvan. AYiil "e with me?" to the dormer window. , saia iountutu, "in obe li writing. Where you ob- . ler paper I don't know, pockets of that scoundrel uoor m the other room, re- II permit me, I will explain. I this dress because of the 1 o visit and the part of the - -a pass tnrougii. tor some 'iitained a relation with i in whose name was Marian rhis relation was continued : 11 the aOianced of a youii you doubtless know bv t v. ho should not be mentioned ice and in this connection. ; f ook place, the relation wit! J . v. alu ,3 tm lLuposaiuuuy. j. ne Iath it is a mild word for 3 to break up the rela te parted in high passion, a seourea certain papers Ixceedlng great value and of jje to me in any other per? ! I havt? tried again and again sm. She has sent me several h uius tina, ana it was to go ange places she led' me to J M this suit..! have never 'lough I have responded in I had little hone of see- night, but these documents 1 value to me that I did nut the chance. You have thea aracter of the papers. As tot i only say they were letters ter and a written statement ich -can now only concern ! ght he saw it alL intain," he said, "with this f yours now, I think I know1 the matter than you do. I through it all. I think I xU you the nature of your tesuent. You are the viol im plot which has the murdered ind the abducted girl for vic uches the effort to secure old w put his head in the door oma one is coming up tho Dack, closing the door after the qther room, Mr. Fou:i it Dtin't say a word sr i'.Utr ateiier you hear!" obeyed, impelled by Cie en- 3. .. is were put out, and Tomi aie Canute in the uaeii room it behind the door. 3 a-knock. a," said the chief in a cruiT, unlogked." opened and a man entered. old have kept the door loek-i! voice. "It's unsafe to leavej e ready r . led a bull's eye on the now-i Oh, I think you will have to prpv that. These gentlemen do not seem to be officers of the law. Perhaps you will 6how me your warrant for these proceed ings. -I am af raid, young sir, you will hid it difficult of protff that I have ab ducted any young lady. Tom was staggered by the coolness of Jlhe old scamp. It was true that the last man he expected to see there was Parker. Only that morning he had proved to his own satistaction that .ranter was no concerned in the plot, and had won Hoi- brook to his way of thinking. He had leaped to the conclusion he now enter tained on seeing Parker enter. While he was certain he was right, still the thought flashed across his brain that the wily old man had procured the abduc tion while covering his own tracks. lie rallied, however, in a moment, and "all the more quickly as he saw from the teneer and the look of triumph in the vicked old eyes that Parker had real ized what was passing through bis mind. "My old man," returned Tom,, 'Tmno at loss for reasons for taking you to the police. If not for the abduction, why .then for falsely personating a clergyman and marrying an assumed Mr. Fountain; if not for that, then for falsely person ating a clergyman again and marrying the assumed Mr., Fountain under the name of Simpson to another woman." "la the name of all the fiends, how do you know all this, boy?" screamed the old man. "And then," continued Tom, "there is the blackmailing of Mr. Pierson for years." - The old man glared at him. " "And then there is the fraudulent affi davit and subornation of perjury in the claim of Preston against the Pierson ;estate. ' V . i The. old man quailed before Tom.' The accumulation of charges was beginning to.telL i "Then there is the abduction of Mrs. ITeinpleton. "Stop, stop," cried the old man, "have tyou got her too? I "It was aa easy to find her," replied aom unblushingly, "as to find the (daughter. And then' i "Stop, stop!" cried the old man, ove Jwhelmed. "Have pity on a poor ml- 'guided old man." j ' "There is just one thing more I should like.to mention '.! "Stop, stop," moaned the old man. i "And that is the murder of Temple- ton." The old man looked up. "1 never did that. Heaven knowi that is the truth. I never did that. iConfcss the rest. I confess the abduc tion of Annie Templeton and her mother but Blood has never stained these hands. No, it was not until after the death of Templeton, not until after I had heard of it, and knew what its effect 'was, that I conceived the idea of seizing and concealing these women and presa ging Preston's claim. No, I'm not guilty of. that." . . , "You old rascal, don't lie to mew' cried Tom angrily. "I know the whole plot Why, you hoary headed villain, Ihe man could comprehends ihftinff f rifTc a T-it flirt tjxr men nt.l r i Jrough which .ho had entered i.r by the arms and bent themd iback. jved up ,i: 1 t,,.1 jewcomur Was. CHAPTER XXXY. ST FISH TO THE SET. ,l4 a. Ami lip 1 WAS- Oeorge' Parker, the attoiM1 ney. "Ho, ho," cried Tom, gavlv'. "Why, we are go-! ing to nave quite, a party to-night, i Good evening,: Mr. Parker. You see noy why. ! t 'iet you tliis evening. I had gement. lint since we i;avo us exchange our confiJencesI Parker." ir the name of all the fiecds' ean by this outrage" cried thej throuSrhly enraged. "Kelease ikid Tom, "we can't do that. glad to see yott We are afraid I. d f-ave u. Boys, to makesure; yihg and pendinthe ' evening -Hit, rairhf finnrlcnfTq fin him !H -". 1'""- v is done at once. '. ' said Tom with ineffable sweetr all we have our exchange of i. es Give the gentleman a chair, ike a seat, Mr. Parker. nfan fairly fumed with rage. iwn, "said lorn, ineoia man shed him. down, saying: I joiler courtesies to a kc'"U- .end he shall accept them. I am s ITnnie Templeton coul) not ' ur!; coming. She had prising !nt3 elsewhere. She ha 'fewio Holbrook. Ilad she only known jrj. solicitude you .rnani,V-r-J eri I am not quite cwtain hJt I have remained.'' . liijan v.-:is speechtes.wiih rago:'; '' -titer friend, is Ii-r2,- !.ttever Top Johnny. IJjt ju.-.t iuav he -oi of my (rit;nu.-f ia adjoin i. Tiiev are'engaged in an argu , -he value of silence. The argu-' r ife reed by my friends, and Jlr.. lobnfly is just now a living ex its truth. And also there is , ain Jie is here too:" : : uii at ,ten," said tho old man, : : r thrown off his guard. .... w';- I know," said Tom, with .: joliteness. "You wrote eleven, . ..oiild write more Mainly. He if we could eo back to the dark days of ' English vengeance, and not only hang ,but draw and quarter you, you would not . get" half the punishment you de serve." ' X Thd old man lifted his hands appeal- .ir-gly. : ! "Don't I know the whole story," con tinued Tom, ;" You were a tool of Pier- ison's; you knew his previous life, his : change of names; that the Templetons "iweie the rightful heirs; that by killin, "cno and imprisoning the othera the two defenseless women you could begin to make that old drunkard's claim good, 'and divide the property in equal shares, one-half for yourself. You old rascal, vou have the agreement drawn and signed now in your possession." " You are the devil incarnate, whim- 'pered the old man. "Then you feared that Mrs. Fountain i son could raise a good claim, and so you . i i , i a. !.l ai ; .emiceu mm uere u-niguj, witu juie m- , tention of doing him too. "No, no! Heaven hear and help me, jl have never committed murder. I only 'meant to confine him until I could get ;tlie matter settled and disposed of. . He 'was interfering" "Oh, that was all you" , ' Through the open door came the mu sical voite of a man, ascending the istairs, singing: '; VTlien girls are kind and wtne IB mrm, f "Oh, v. tere s the harm, oh, where's the harmf Jhair .-.vaUts to squeeze, their lips to press. I The old man lifted his head quickly SSI-, murmured: "The fool's been drink- in;; again." ' 1 He attempted to call out, but by rea son of his emotion, ox something else. jhis throat refused to give forth sound. ; lie! ore heer.uu CHir it, lome-nf:i him and placed his hand over his mouth. "Gas: him," he said to a man who Icamfi to his assistance. "It is my own son," said the old man. ! "He is 'not to blame for anything: let .huii go free." "We'll 6ee about that," 6aid Tom. "Trke him into the other room, while we receive the tiew visitor. Take that can tie back again." "when the papers announced the death of Templeton?' ? The young had recovered suffi ciently from t. a fright and consterna- :on into which e had been thrown on seems t ountam, and began to realize what he had been saying the confession he had made and so would not reply. - Tom repeated the question, bnt re ceived no answer. The chief, Hanford, Baid: "All right, my man, but you're "confessed, And si lence won't save you now." "Well," said the murderer doggedly, I thought Templeton was his right name and Fountain a false one he used among the girls." , "By Jovel" said Torn,"! never thought of it before. Dp you know, Mr Fountain, there is a strong resemblance between you and Templeton?" I have heard it noted before, said Fountain. "It is not strange; the same blood ran in our veins." The old man Parker had been strug gling and making unintelligible sounds in the other room. Tom ordered the removal of the gag. He struggled to his son. "XJnhappy boy t What made you oom- mit that crime?" "I don't know that your hands are so white that' you can afford to throw dirt." , "Oh, he reproaches me-rme." "ReDroaches vou. ves. Shut ud. ' WTe played a big game for a big stake, and we've lost. Well, stand game to the last" "But this murder, boy, this murder; that was not in the game." "No, it wasn t, replied the son with a bitter laugli. "It was a side issue of my own. That man Fountain, cur.- ".:i, stole my girl from me Marian !I had it in for him. ' That's all. !ww uiut I'm done for, I'd give every day I yet have to live to get at him once. Marian. What Marian? The Marian who lives in Hudson street now?" "The same," said the son. "What tangle is this?" moaned the old man. "she nas tne gin Annie s motner in her keeping now, and she herself is a daughter of Jamea Preston. The number m Hudson street, pleased said Tom. There's little use in concealing any thing now. It's No. ." "Let me handle that part of the case. please?" asked Fountain. "I'll guarantee to return Mrs. Templeton sately. "As you will," said Tom. "You will do well to take some of the chiefs men with you. We can spare two." Fountain departed with them at once. "Now, chief," said Tom, "I think it would be well to take our bag of game to the Ccatral office. The play is over and the lights are out" "The three'- prfHsoners would be fa more welcome if some one else than ourselves ere to bring them," sardon ically remarked the chief. . , 'Undoubtedly. But let us go. Hand- rcuff them all together.- Come, let as set out Shadow and one man in front You, I, and another man behind." As they moved out in this order, a dis appointed voice commented: i "Dey only hit him onct." At the Central office the three prison ers were arraigned, and Tom said briefly: "I charge this man Parker with hav ing murdered Henry Holroyd Templeton on the morning of the ISth of last Au gust, by his own cunfeseion. "I charge this man, George Parker, with having been the aider, abettor and instigator of the abduction of Annie Templeton and her mother, this day, by his own confession. . "I charge this man, Scar Top Johnny, other name to me unknown, as being the aider and abettor of the Cie results of the huinanizing and refin ing influences he id surrounded, by. In deed, the only time he showB any of his old savagery is when a rollicking, rat tling young man with a cheery smile end bright blue eyes, and who Is wel comed with great shouts and warm kisses, and who is greeted as "TJncle Tom," mattes his appearance which is was none. But at. covery that at or.. chamber wan a lou eating, doubtless amidst the inacoer clift This adihitxc rtnowledgeTHe came forward, not even . unaccomplished. . i wcwaD'8 uvw j i naneinr na jtih imuu uia vuva -j vnnmr rm aiuuaw auu vuww j vwuB sis.vav , last I made the cUa- end of the great gallery, communi th the outside world ible heights of the both air and light; sunshine could be but a brief visitant lam weaving together the results of AVUJ, i imn4 auv uj4ihivv. uku m i O O nearly daily, and wants Maurice to tell I exteiMed and leisurely examination. At whether v he has that day "wholloped I thd instant of introduction I was too as any one right up and down and gin him f tbnished to observe many details. The black eves. I goUvl" And Tom? , Oh, Tom fa still the old ' Tom of superhuman energy and intense j enthusiasm; still the keenest newspaper i man in New York as when he led the , search for the owner of "The Diamond , Button." ' THE END. I WHEN AM DEAD. When 1 am dead, my dearest, Sinjr no sad soring for ms; Plant them no roses at my head. Kor shady cypress tree; Be the green grass shore ma With slxiweri and dewdropa wstj And if thou wilt, remember, And if thou wilt, forget. I shall not see the shadows, I shall not fee) the tain; 4 I shall not hear the nightingale Sing on as If In pain; And dreaming through the twilight That doth not rise nor set, Eaply I may remember. And haply may forget. Christian BossettL . TII GEM OF THE MINE. ( The claimant to peculiar respect on the score of sanctity of life varies in va rious lands, or, for that matter, in any habitat . He may be a hypocrite, or a fanatic, deceiver or dupe--a man of gen uine worth though, perhaps, for rea- sons he would scout or a loafer win ning, on acquaintance, deserved con tempt I shall put my old friend. Moung Eo, without a second's hesita tion, in an upper grade of "holy men." He walked consciously on high levels of his profession. Not a phoonghie in all Burmah was better versed in the lore, not merely of the pagoda, but of nature and of life. His fame for charity was just, and I at least have never been able, since the occurrence of the events I pro pose to relate, to hold that - the wild hill men of Anapoora were wholly mistaken in calling Moung Ko a seer as well as a priest I shall have to show that he, too, ! had faQed where, verily, popes have : failed. And it" may be that the weird gift, never a joy to its possessor, was linked in hidden depths with the ro niance of a strange career and the pain of a long fight for repentance. To be coherent, and even to compass conciseness, it is generally well to begin at the beginning. Moreover, my first meeting with Moung Ko is an integral part of my tale. A hint was offered even then which I was slow to seize, but which later was bathed in revealing light The existence of the cipher must be divined before an interpretation can be supplied. I had penetrated a new district and I encountered an accident. A luckless; slip on the shelving ledge of a remote 'gorge had nearly sent me to my doom, i I escaped through the circumstance that the thick scrub of the wilderness strag- gled down the cliff side to wherever: Aiere was a layer of earth to support . amazement mirrored inevitably upon my cduntenance was noticed. "This is a poor wanderer's occasioual home. Its existence is a secret which , you will not betray," Moung Ko said. . "You are the first stranger I have had the j honor to welcome here; and when I youj are strong enough to go- with me , down the valley to the monastery 1 shall i ask j that you keep strict silence as to j where you have been. You can say that ' you have rested in a cave man's haunt ! It will be true, I am sure my secret is ! afe." : j ' The calm expression of complete cer i tainty struck me as singular. ' "I am flattered by your faith in. my j gratitude, and I hope and believe that it i is not misplaced," I answered; "but is ! there not a risk? I may disappoint 'you by some unguarded word." Do you not fear it?T , I was smiling; but it was no smile that . came on Moung Ko's face. A light was ' in the deep set, neutral tinted eyes that touched my spirit almost to awe. "No, I do not," Moung Ko replied, in deep, resonant . tones. "It is on the scroll of -the future that I shall not suffer through yon. My own people they will mete out the punishment that has tar ried so long. But what am I saying? , Yes, I can read the language of the face. . I know that I may trust you." The light was gone, and I could have fancied that I bad not really heard those words of weird fate which, nevertheless, I was to remember after many days. While we talked Moung Ko was deftly preparing and applying a cool compress to the swollen joint. It was patent that he possessed' not a little surgical skill. Suddenly I spoke of the strange figure I had seen while waiting for the fiat of fate; and I surely felt Moung Ko's fingers tremble. His head was bent down, and this was my one warning of the phoonghie's uneasiness. His reply was evasive. yThere is no village In that direction; it is all waste and barren j there are no paths, either. The hill folk talk like you ofjhings that it is ill to see. They are cowards. But I say that bushes take wonderful shapes; and sometimes they move in the wind." It sounded like satire, and Moung Ko was a clever diplomatist He had nearly persuaded me that I was the victim of a delusion. A man recovering from a swoon may easily be cheated by shad ows. I let the subject drop. It occurred to me later that Moung Ko was relieved to find that I did not insist on the reality ef the experience, I had fallen into capital hands. If a tie j of kinship or 'creed had existed, 1 could not have been better cared for. And at the end of a week I was able to move giagerly about with a crutch. ' My host now suggested migration to a zyat, or hostelry for travelers, hard by his pagoda, in a village of the lower plateau. I was perfectly willing to move. It ;to CHAPTER XXXVL; AT LAST. I I Fountain had ' come from the adjoining room, and his usual im passive -face bore the evidence of his agitation over the marvels he had heard. The Shadow, In giv ing the warning of the approach' of another closed the door after him. the musical voice was not (comer, hail The ovner qf 'disposed- to knock, much less to use his hands to open : vicious kick Tho error on n; " man saw lie had his prt was made a fatal He revenged hijnself by say- Ibu for an impudent dog." ink you, thank you," returned ', ng. "You are entirely too oppiR'gk bantering tone,,ha . p your hanaTyouwfjte haired know your wholo game, t ja.-d.-ai to answer for, but ; jth'is consolation, that "your :.t! for the gTeater crime Vill for the rest impossible." hied!" the old man at laft je to say. - "You:;;: .fir, v.f U . i why you maltrer.t .: t'i:s ;Jj' u? Yes, if you w iii tell lie naltrcated Annie Templeton g her." the door, for he gave it a The losk was a good one 'and did not yield. 4 "Open the door!" he cried; "Open . it yourself," responded the hi' f; "and .come in. j The door was pushed open and a young man strode in. i As soon as he stepped within the room ; he was seized by the two men stationed at the door. i With an oath, he tried to strugglo free, 'and was nearly successful, for he was a Cytry powerful man. . . Tom turned the light upon him. He Mid not know him. - It was not to be wondered at, but he lvas. in fact, the young man who had ichlor. "formed and abducted Annie in the !ioi'iiing. r --Good evening, Mr. Parker,' Jr.," said f. "Who in great God! Alive!" Tom had been startled by the look of . i i 1 terror and horror that 'came over :h young man's face, and he saw that ? ;: caused by the sight of Fountain. : ?D the dead rise again? - Alive! Yon rA::;iui:i, alive? Am I dreaming or Aiive! I kiiied you Jn Union .j !are, and yet alive!" - ''.Tlio mini was evidentlv horror stricken ' ni not know what he was doing. i'u:i!ilain replied: ' . i ! am alive; you did not kill me." ' 'But they buried you!" ' ut the handcuffs on him," ordered Wo have the murderer at last" ou r.re a exeat man. Tom." cried BJl'K'f i i-r; ford, jubilantly. "Once more , . ... . . iuni i.;;.i;. u.-p Keenest newspaperman w Vi ' It end Hanford's Detective 5:gi---v, -t-:t the regular police," '.'-;." :J Tom, not heeding the chief. ' W.i iiid iiot kill Fountain, but you did Templeton. But how can you have con- . tiuuc I to believe that it was Fountain v.ou -killed." Kjid Tom. much refused. ;..! Yo CHiuctiun oi Annie Templeton, and of haTngkept her in confinement contrary to her wilL" "And I," said Chief Hanford, "charge him with being the abductor of a child in Hartford, and claim the reward of $2,500 offered for him." "But," said the officer, "what are the details?" "Lock them up, fjppector, and read The Sol to-morrow morning," said Tom. "I can't wait;r it's after 11 now, and I've a long story to write." . Tom enjoyed his "beat" hugely, and was for several days the hero of his office, the wonder of his competitors, and the envied of the detective force, , One thing, on the morning of publica tion, marred Tom's full enjoyment He had announced the rescue of Mrs. Tem pleton without knowing it to be an ab solute fact Accordingly ha early sought Holbrook to learn the result, and was told that Fountain's expedition had bee i crowned with success. He had also recovered his papers, the girl Marian having delivered them over as the price of her liberty. "Tom," said Holbrook, "the regular police had the true theory after alL Templeton was killed under the belief he was some one else." ' "True," replied Tom; "but we caught the murderer anoHhey didn't; they had no conception of the great story behind it alL Yet, Holbrook, your theory was not so far wrong after all." " Except in the essential thing," laughed Holbrook. "The motive of the murder had nothing to do with Pierson's property." "What a queer case it was!" com mented Tom. "If those two women hadn't been conveniently abducted, we wouldn't ha ye hit on the murderer after all. To tell the truth, it was a lucky stumble, as most great discoveries are. Then to think that Fountain's ' chere amie, Marian, should have turned out to be his cousin. "The sins of the father shall be visited," etc. Do you notice that not a clew proved worth a snap?" "I say, Tom,, what about the diimond button?" , j . "Ah, what? How much we expected from it, and how little came of it! Ken Noble, the owner, eays that on the night of the murder he was passing from Fourth avehue to Broadway, through Twenty-sixth street, and when midway of the Madison - Square Garden a man rushed across the street, grasped him by the arm and pulled him to the light and then dropped it. saying, 'You're not the man.' Afterwards, when he found his button gone, he thought it was rob bery." ; "It was young Parker watching for Fountain. The button was probably de tached in the .struggle, to be carried vegetation. For long hours I remained in a precarious situation, lodged, with a , wouia give me opportunities for becom sprameaanKie, amongst DramDies; aDove acquainted with the inhabitants of me, frowning rocks; beneath me, the the district and with local customs and abyss. The outlook was black. If I. characteristics that were hitherto only stirred, the odds were that I should go . matterg 0j hearsay over the brink and be dashed to pieces; ; wbo had laid mo under if I stayed where I was, I must starve. ; obligation was more and more Again and I had plenty of space to; a marvei and a mystery. His life, as think the thing through-if I shouted i grady disclosed, seemed full of con myself hoarse nobody was likely to come; toanctions. It was abundantly deal and if the improbable became a fact, and j that he was held in extreme reverence by there Was.a response, I had no insurance , the brethren cf his order as well as by 4.1 A - . J J A 1 A 1 X 1 J 1 I : . uiub atu uuu iiut a uruei lurust woiuu ue em But a queer portent perplexed! property.; i had what 1 mind. From where I was lying the had Perhaps I lingered in the dis- away unintentionally in his clothes, to be lost in Union square." "Probably." . v Four years have passed since the events occurreu recorded in our narra-J live. Mrs. Templeton is dead. She never recovered from the exposure and the nervous shock received on the day of the abduction of herself and Annie, fol lowingso closely upon the murder of her son. But she did notdie until she had faithfully carried out every expressed wish of her father. James Preston speedily realized the be nign hope of iiib Lrothc-r, and drank himself to death in six months. Young Parker was never brought to trial. Five days after his arrest lie was found dead in his cell dead by poison supposed to have been supplied by one of his brother members of the U. S. Ts, of which he was a popular member. His father and Scar Top Johnny are serving long sentences in the state prison. Wessing is still living in Philadelphia, prosperous and respected, and does not dream that he was ever suspected by Holbrook and Tom of having committed a murder or that he was in danger of arrest. ' The origin oi the birth of Fountain has never been made public. He and Flora- Ashgrove were married two years ago, and his friends and acquaintances have ceased wondering over his mysteri ous accession to a fortune. They count Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook as their dearest friends. ' So Mr. Holbrook is married? To An nie? Of course. Could there have been any other result after the scene at the rescue in Mott street? Married, too, be fore Mrs. Templeton died. Two children, a boy and a girl, make music in the house. The name of the boy is Thomas Bryan Holbrook. There is another boy in the house whose name is Maurice McNulty, whom Mrs. Holbrook loves with all the wealth of her affectionate nature. There has been some diffioulty in civ- I Minna the bov. but he beerins to show the result It was all uncertain whether friends or enemies were in the neighbor hood. , In the retrospect it seems to me that my energies suddenly flagged and that I passed info a stupor of despair. ' Surely there was excuse. But as the weary day wore on my faculties regained their edge. I determined to have a east for dear life. With much of the gambler's recklessness and fever I cried aloud at intervals a full score of times. The silence remained un broken. my opposite bend of the valley was distinct- 1 - . j j l : .i l iy in v iew, uuu twice across me line oi vision flirted a grotesque,, undersized figure in a costume certainly not known to me as favored by any Burman, Shan or Karen, male or female. The draper ies were flowing and dark, scarcely dis tinguishable from the color of the rocks. I shivered involuntarily. Did the creature belong to the realm of honest, practical pvistpnee? Or tma T delirious? T ninchpd myself, as those do who cannot be sure j if they are awake or dreaming. The dwarfish apparition did not vanish. It went on to the head of the defile and was finally lost in the shadows of the teak trees. Another idea, belonging to a state of weakness, came to me. Was it a warn ing that I must expect the worst? "Softly, friend; have courage. Move not I will help you." Sweeter words I never heard spoken in any vernacular than those I thus translate. I knew their meaning, for I had picked up not a little of the native tongue. They were whispered literally into my ear. The new comer had ap proached so silently that there was dan ger even In his announcement of kindly purpose, . -I The sharp surprise made me start I tried to look the speaker in the face, and, in the effort, swayed towards the preci pice. A swarthy, sinewy hand gripped me and held me back. "Did I not say 'softly,' friend?" expos tulated the stranger, with gentle reproach in his accents. "Thanks," I answered; "but my ankle is twisted. How will you get me out of this?:' Moung Ko was not a man of unneces sary words. For reply he drew aside, with his arm, a bush immediately to my right. A natural recess was disclosed, and, as there was lhfht beyond, I sur mised the existence of a tunnel or pas sage. It was doubtless in this way that he had reached my ledge. And now he proved the wonderful muscular strength that resides in the Burman .frame. Stretching himself on the uneven ground he grasped with one arm a buttress of rock, and, with the other, he lent me a support which was entirely adequate for my deliverance. The pain of the injured limb, made ma wince at every movement; but I set my teeth together, and, trust ing to the directions acted rather than uttered, I was released from my position of peril. : ' ; - Then I saw that I owed my safety to s phoonghie oi priest I have already in dicated my impression of Moung Ko's character. 1 repeat that he was genuine in spite of alL In person he was short, stoutly built , and with features wrinkled, sallow and inscrutable. He was old; but I fancy did not count nearly as many years as his looks gave him credit for, and as the truculent tribes with whom he had settled believed. The question : of, concern now was place of refuge. "You must stay with me. Can you walk at all thus, leaning on my shoul der, using my staff?" t And Moung Ko whose 'name I had ascertained led me ' Slowly 'down the winding passage; ' Was hia monastery near; I wondered? I had seen no signs of such an edifice as I entered the gorge But it -proved unnecessary to. put 3m question into words. There was a cun ningly hidden opening in the rock -walk We squeezed through, and within was a wide and airy cave evidently a place of habitation. Nature had shaped its wall and stretched its roof, bat art had tran formed the rude mountain eyrie into palatial halL . Evidences of wealth were on every side. The finest Oriental fab rics Were the garniture of shelving floor and lofty recess.. Soft rug were here ia the villagers. But, with innate skepti cism. I declined to think that there was anything in his common fame as a seer. Still, he accepted the homage, and it was equally hard to believe him an impostor. Your vulgar trickster does not devote himself to the wants of a poor and primi tive people as Moung Ko did. ' Without- fee or reward, he was always at their service. He was strict-none more so, I learned in fulfillment of the ritual 61 the pagoda. Yet, by the law, binding on ; phoonghies, he could possess no per- trict longer than I should otherwise have done because I wanted to fit an answer to my enigma. Tragic circumstances supplied it The tribesmen of Upper Anapoora were tur bulent and headstrong, and it was one of Moung Ko's most difficult and delicate tasks to maintain peace. "There has always been a strife be tween mountain and plain. Two races touch in these hills," he said. "The feud will break out afresh one day in spite of me. Yes, and soon. I have heard the sound of the disnal wind of the war wind sighing in the air v.-Wre no forest trees are. It will come, and ;hen the' vengeance falls and I go." The sad eyes were gazing through the veil we all seek to pierce but may not Moung Ko was in bodingcontemplation of issues that as yet were below? the ho rizon of his fellows. I frowned at myself, for again I was conscious of a certain eerie impression, produced in defiance of reason, upon my mind. And, to an outsider s judgment the sky had no clouds. Although 1 was a guest, r - I not a prisoner, and although Mo?4-. ." had expressly stated that he tr:.-. - i it was a notion that grew i;: :,v:igth -as the Idays went by that I was watched, and: that Moung Ko preferred that I should not wander far afield. Call it ingratitude, or the mere spirit of contrariness and self assertion, as you please, the fact remains that, one fine morning, I secreted -my revolver and a stock of ammunition upon ny person and managed to elude the sis"illance. I got up once more into the heights, and in the exhilarating sense of freedom snapped my fingers at the cautious old priest. The day was better chosen than at the first, moment of my revolt I guessed. While I was continuing and extending the j exploration previously Interrupted by my accident the storm broke. The peace had been treacherous after alll Some spark fell on the combustible ma terial of race passion and tribal jealousy, and there was a disastrous outburst of sanguinary fury. But of this at the time, as I say, I was in ignorance. The care that came to me was of different sort When a declining sun warned me to work my way downward if I did not wish to camp out, I made a blunder and took my bearings so indifferently that I was lost. . Instead of striking the track I looked for, 1 1 had strayed into a desolate gulch, strewn with the debris of mighty rocks shattered, no doubt, in some remote nat ural catastrophe. How to escape I knew not,, except 'by the. weary expedient of retracing my steps., A wall of adamant blocked the path in front Suddenly I halted, in the cover of a huge bowlder. A mysterious figure, which I instantly recognized again, was at work amongst the stones a little distance ahead, appar ently burying treasure. I saw bundle after bundle pushed into a yawning hol low With stupefied gaze I watched. What genius of Desert Mountain was this? Uncouth, dunrobed, dwarfish; I do not wonder that for a space, I be lieve in a being of other lineage than the human But when the strange, squat figure moved off, I was sufficiently daring or sufficiently magnetized to fol low. - . Pursuit was unexpected, and stealth ruled my conduct I was led by winding ways into yet another place of bewilder ment Of Burmese ruby mines I knew a little by report and reading. Now I was in one. On every side were tokens of the fact, abruptly realized, that caprice had brought me into one of nature's no table treasure houses. Astonishment in duced carelessness. My foot overturned a stone, and my presence was discov- knowledge. He came forward, not even , pausing as he heard the click of my weapon, drawn against eventualities. Closer scrutiny revealed a deformed Burman boy, with the stamp equally of intelligence and suffering on his pinched, prematurely old countenance. And it was a startling thing that he called me at once by my name, without prefix or ex planation. "What do you do here, Ho-Ton?" he asked In a shrill, troubled voice, "I want the path to the lower village," I answered. "I have missed it" At last I got a clew to much that was puzzling. , "You are far out of your way. Tou can not reach the zyat to-night It will be better to stay in father's in our cave again. Come. " I obeyed the word and gesture, and a very few paces brought us through a steep descent on to my old ledge.'and thus once again into the familiar quar ters of Moung Ko's secret home. My geni of the mine, then, was Moung Ko's son? "Hark!" said he. And a terrified look came upon his countenance. ' I listened, but could hear nothing. My senses were less acute than his. "Yes, yes; it has come, as he said it would," the boy cried, smiting his breast And his eyes dilated with fear. "What is your trouble?" I asked, though I could already guess. "Hark. I say. again!" he answered in an agony; "the wailing is louder! There is fighting below in tne valley, vn, wm thev kfil him?" , Kill the loved and revered phoonghie, of whose lapses from orthodoxy there seemed no current suspicion! 1 thought jit very unlikely. Yet the foreboding words of the seer echoed in my memory, The eventide went in anxious watch ing and waiting. It was marvelous how the one touch of nature made us tin. But the boy spoke no word of his past When the morrow dawned two anx ious faces watched from the friendly veil of the bushwood the bend of the great valley. A solitary wayfarer came into view. Relief, ringing into exube rant joy, was in my companion's accents: "It is my father. He is safe," the poor lad aajd. Alas! the gladness was doomed to a speedy eclipse. I thought that Moung Ko orept upwards slowly, and staggered as he walked. And once within the mountain fastness it was plain that his somber forecast had not been so false as we would willingly hare believed. Moung Ko looked at me first with con sternation and then, I was almost sure, content I know that, with genuine un selfishness, he wished me welL : A man was a man and a brother to Moung Ko, whether he were Burman or Briton. It is the glory of the world-bond that in all lands there are these hearts loyal to hu manity. But the phoonghie reeled and sank upon the floor. To the boy's horror and my own we saw that his coarse robe was dyed crimson at the side he gripped, so tightly. Moung Ko was wounded. It was my turn to play the surgeon, aided, as to appliances, by the devoted, desDairing . son But my skill was in finitely below Moung Ko s. it was tne patient's suggestions that I had to follow. And it will be in vain," the old priest gasped, wearily, "the time is at hand. I have known it from the first It is my fate, and I deserve it listen, and I will make the dark thing clear. The law of the pagoda allows neophites to go back to the world if they like not the life of the solitary. I was sent on a' mission soon after I became a priest; and they lost me. In an other province I broke my vows for a woman's sake. I loved and married. But it was an unhappy match. My wife deserted me, and I understood that our babe was dead. Then I returned to Anapoora as if nothing had .happened. It was my great transgression. The story I told was true, but only half the truth; and so, in another sense, a lie. And I could not rest I wandered muph, and I found the mine and this cave. It was occupied by would you guess it? my wife! She was hunting me to my dis grace, - and death had overtaken her here. I could not save her. But we were reconciled, and she confessed that our son lived. I sought the child and I brought him here. We have been much together. Now I go." -. There was a long breath, and then the story reached its end. "The? hill men rose, as I knew from my visions they would do. . They came against the village. Many houses have been burnt the zyat among them. You escaped in time. I went into the fight a man of peace, to stay the hand of the fratricide; and, in the concjusion, the blow fell. It was not struck of intent, and I triumphed through the fact I pointed to the stream of blood, pleaded my works for their welfare. Then I got away by a secret path and it is alL' Only care for Dara Maillu my poor boy!" . j The voice died into silence. There was a soft sigh. I looked again, and Moung Ko's eyes, open as they were, saw no earthly scene. He was dead. -. I kept the phoonghie's charge, and lived a cave life for many months, subsisting oh the-stores hidden where first I had found Dara Maillu. It seemed that tra ders came into these hills at certain sea sons, and then rubies were exchanged for necessaries. But Dara Maillu never recovered' the shock of his father's loss. Before a year had passud . around he had rejoined Moung Ko in the land of shadows. It was a gentle, painless fading away. And thus I only was left with ' the se cret of the Anapoora mine. All the Year Round. Unaccomplished. .. i Young De Trop Too bad that young Th, Hummer doesn't know more than he- does, isn't it? Vnnno- Blase Why. 1 tnougni ne wmo rather an intelligent fellow. , Vfiuno- De Trow He may be, naturally, bat his educatioa has been sadly neg lected. Why, ae cant even ne a piam four-in-hand so Inat It looks anyhow. Drake's Magazine. j The Alphabet in a Bible Verse. ' "And I, even I, Artaxerxes, the king, do make a decree to all the treasurers which are beyond the river, that what soever Ezra, the priest, the scribe of the law of the God of heaven, shall require of you, it be done speedily." Ezravii. 31. FOR 1890. Some'people auree with The Stin's orjinion about men, and things, and Borne people don't; but everybody likes to get hold of the newspaper whicn ia nev nr dull' and never afraid to speak its mind. . Democrats know that for twenty -tears The Suu has fought in the front line for Democratic principles, never wavering or weakening in its loyalty to the tru) interests of the party it serves with fearless intelligence and disinterested vieor. At times opinions have differed as to the best means of accomplishing the common pur pose ; it is not The Sun's' fault ifithaseeen further into the millstone. Eighteen hundred and ninety lis the year that will probably ! determine the result of the I Presidential election of 1892, and perhaps the fortunes of the Democracy for the rest of . the century. Victory in 1892 is'a duty, and the beginning of J8R0 is b v- best time to start out in comi auy with The .Sun. Daily per nicuth ..-$0.50 Daily jier je.u, ............. .......6.00 Stun! ay per ear, ."....2. 00 Daily ami Sunday wr tar...'...8 00 Daily and Sunday ier mouth....0.70 Weekly Sun one c.ir.... 1.0C Address THE SUN. New. York Never mind the wind to Bh the shorn lamb to raise the wind. Puck. vbout "temperjng ui lamb" 1 Wjbat after is some way For upwards of fllty yeai Wixslows Soothing c- been used by jmill.ous cf Disease lies in ambush for the weak:: a feeble conaruuiiou is 1.1 adapted to encounter a malarious atmosphere and sudden changes of temperature, and (ne least roousi are nsnallv the easiest victims. Dr. J. H. McLean's Sarsaparilla will give toae, vitality and etreDgtb to IDe enurtsuouy. A boy who wted to learn the soap-making buies was boonced because he could uot tell a lye. New York Journal j Distress after i ating, heartburn sick headac-he, ar.3 indigestion are cored by Dr. J. 11. McLean's Liver and Kidney Pillfts (little puis.) Ueth Mr? me- for, their children while wun never-iaiiing safety; and cess. It soothes t he child, soft..,,. the gums, allays all pain, remi1ntC3 the bowels, cures wind colic and i, the . best, remedy for din nice' "Mrs ; Winslow's SooTniNe SYRUP" is fori-ale by d rue gist every part of the world. 1'iu e 15 cen's bottle, ' Intelligent Eeaders will notice tkt Tntt How manyrth:ngs there are to langh at in thlfj world to the girl who has prettyteeth and dimples. Atchinson Globe. 1 e ;.-.. s ri.;t nnt "warranted to cur" r disease, but only sncUi , froolssusruru Vertigo, Headacha, By spspc- Fevers, uosisv Cclic, Flatulence, e For these they sresotwnrrcv.,. fallible. '-- "C-ly !: ; - ibl to suAttc remedy. it li e. --O. If you feel nn able to do your, work, and have that tired feeling, take Dr. J H. McLean's Sarsaparil la; it will make you bright, active nd vigorous. I The most popn'ar liniment, is the old reliable, Dr; J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Liniment. . For a safe ar-l certain remedy for fever aDd ague, use Dr. J. H. McLean's Cbill ud Fever Cure; it -8 warranted to t'u re Mauy people habitually endure a feeling ot lassitude, because they think they have 10. If thev would take Dr. J. H. McLeans Barna paiilla this feeling of weariness would give place to vigor and vi tality. I CAUTIQH Tnke no fhne. "W, L. lonRlH. n-,, ,1! Ill?o ni-p laiti;i t ,1.. bottom. If tln !.-iler rutin. ! h.i .,,T send direct to factory, e,i:oli:(; aivtf.iiiJj who says, ,G,t SSututi" Hnai 'ten with the assnraiu-f that Satan will gettheie with both ff-et. Park. Many a man three behind n. Now is tie Time to Sili'scrilJB TO THE NORTH AMER 3 v-1 ,4 W. L. DOUGLinS SHOE 3 ICAH REVIEW Arrangements have been mide for the coming year which will maintain for the Review its un rivalled position among period icals, and render.it essential to every reader iu America who desires to keep abreast of the imes; Ffom month to month topics of commanding interest in every field of human thought and action will be treated of in its pages by representative wri ters, whose " words and names carry authority with them, j The forthcoming volume wijl be signalized by the discussion 01 questions oi jiign public in terest by the foremost men of the time, notably by a contro versy on Free Trade and Pro tection in their bearing upon the development of American Industry and Commerce, be tween the two most famous liv ing statesmen of England and America. Hon. W. E. Gladstone , AND Hon. James C. Blaine. This discussion, embracing the most important contribu tions ever made , to an Ameri can periodical, will begin in the January number. xi is a simn?ant tact as ebowing the uoparalleled pop ularity and usefulness of this periodical, and its wide influ ence upon public opinion- that the circulation of The .North American Review is greater than that of all other American and English Reviews com: ined. Subscription price, postage prepaid, nve dollars a year. THE KORTH AMERICAN KEYIEW, SEast Fourteenth istieet.New York No liniments 1-. iu betttr repute or more widely known than tl. H. 70 McLean's Volc:'iie Oil Liniment. it is a wonderin' jemedy. Perons advap -ed iu years feel younger and s'ionger, as as treer from the niuuin-s ot ag-, t taking Dr. J. Til McLe-iu'o Sainaha- niia. ' 1 One ol Dr. J U. McLeaD's Little Liver aDd Kidi t- Pellei, tak u tt nigh', before going to.bed.will move the bowels; the t fleet will aetomsb. yon- I Pimples, boilH -inrt other humors are liable to &, ar when tbe blood gets heated Th best remedy is Dr. J. H. McLf-an-- Sarpaparilla,- Sick headaciie . the bane of FOR CENTl-EfflEN. V(lTrMf. V ;4- -:i in ih- worM. Kifinrtiif hi, ;( OKNTlNE ll N I-M l !! -.!!(. iMNM-SCH'KI) VI t.! :'. roi.U'K AMI l'Ai:,ll MKIK. i wnKKI'N'iKI-'.N'S MKIC-i. 1,1 IMVN SflKMl! !H(i. ;nl.' iu Contuc-i-, ltttlttm an.! (.Trr,. CM? m SHOES (i..r.nioi'ii''OK 4- Slylr.J . r nidi many lives. T'j plaint may be cQied and prevented W. H. & R. ' 8 is annoying com- TfJOKER' & CO GENERAL EXHIBITION OF FALL MPORTATIOHij AJ!D PURCHASES. WE ARE REA . BU Y FOR A LARGE INESS. Truck Farnicrs' Special By fnr the most ATTRACTIVE LjOT OF DRY GOODS Ever withiu our walls. In every departn all and Winter n t are displayed the e latest elties. From tho thous- ers will be sure to find confrenisl to iiueir tastes and means. bestowed in the selection tmt Fall and Winter nov andsef styles purohj tnose confrenisi to The trreateift care ip of all sro-d9. The tall season of tatsv Drintts to ovir counters unusual t.tiractions in 'OLORED SILKS Black Faille. Francaise, Satan Rhadan e. Roy al Armure, Gros Groins and Black and White Novelties. Brocades ;m new and elesant de signs, Sstln and Brocade Stripes and a full line ofjancy weaves, 1 MAGNIFICENT- EXHIBIT OF 'OLORED SILKS. Special 1 church an new and Silks, em sia Broo large si signs an The 1 richest 1 up to tht it 1T 17 THE BEST FERTIIJ.F.R ! ' iR I'd TATOES AND OTill .K Tkl'tk CROPS EVER SOLD ' Tntroduced-s cvcn yrars ayro. am! t - x t r .ri ve used since py tadint 1 riu-Kerp aldip Uir from Norfolk ' Vs.. to 'J am pa. Flu. - North Carolina Trurkcrs will fciiiiuit iliir Interest by (civmp it a trial at least. Address for catalovu e, irivinv priicj. 0 -rti cate, etc.- THE WiLCuXi UlHUSiH AN CO., Charleston S C. IMPORTANT Iff y bewildering profusion, and furniture aJod pieces' of' brio-a-brac that woold- hft ered. fetched fabulous soma in Wardour etreeU it was an instant of My eves caught also tne nnmisUkable j gleam of the preciou metata.--Vv-r.-i f: '- It was a riddle at first where the Bub-' dued light came from, for window there curious crisis. And I fancy my unwilling guide was as uncertain of result as myself. But 1 was in tight just then, and he was in shadow, and it eave him tie advantage of aniok - The Hamilton-Burr Duel. Of the last' hours of Alexander Hamil ton the following is told: Mr. Pendleton raised his prostrate friend. Dr. .Hosack 'found . him sitting on the grass,' supported in the, arms of his second, withl the ghastliness of death upon his countenance. "This is a mor tal wound, doctor," he gasped, and sank away into a swoon. The doctor stripped up his clothes, and saw at a glance that the ball, which had entered his right side, must have penetrated a mortal part. Scarcely expecting him to revive, they conveyed him, down among the large rocks to the shore, placed .him ten derly in the boat and set off for the city. The doctor now used the usual restora tives, and the wounded man gradually revived. "He breathed," to quote the doctor's words; "his eyes, hardly Open, wandered without fixing upon any ob ject To our great joy he at length spoke. "My vision is indistinct," were his first words His pulse became more perceptible, hii respiration more regular, ms signt returneo. soon after recover ing his sight he appeared to cast his eye upon the case of pistols, and observing the oe that he had had in his hand lying on the outside, he said:' "Take care of that pistol. It is undischarged and still cocked; it may go off and do harm. Pendleton knows" (attempting to turn his head towards him "that I did not intend to fire at him." Then he lay tranquil till he saw the boat was approaching the wharf. He said: "Let Mrs. Hamilton be immediate ly sent for; let the event be gradually broke to her, but give her hopes." Look ing up we saw his friend, Mr. Bayard, standing on the wharf in great agitation. He had been told by. my servant that Gen. Hamilton, Mr. Pendleton and my self had crossed the river in a boat to gether, and too well he conjectured the fatal errand, and foreboded the dreadful result Perceiving as we drew nearer that Mr. Pendleton and myself only sat up in the stem sheets, he clasped his anas together in tne most violent ap prehension; but when I called to him to have a cot prepared and he at the same time saw his poor friend lying in the bot tom of the boat, he threw up his eyes and burst into a flood of tears and. lam entations. We then conveyed him aa tenderly as possible up to . the house (to Bayard's house, "at Greenwich). T distress of his amiable family was such that till the first shock had abated titer were scarcely able to summon f ortitud enough to yield sufficient assistance to their dying friend, i f Faille Francalf e tor street. Ption wear, including ever? e phade. Handsome Brocade ) ng-it ana uaru effects," aud a Pia.ds, Stripes, &c.. In new de inirs. I .oods Department displays the es tl .if have appeared in Paris ent t:4:.e. as well as-sn eleizHnt assortment of all thei leading: colors, in French Henriettas, Import.!. 1 Whip Cords, French iBsnm ere Serjres, Ladies Broadcioth and Tai lor oui ti ngs. These fshionaele bor- ln greater variety than .nuviCT,. xue ujHsea v ery jaunty suit. ior ear- e this season showing an velties and a'tractiye Side Band Sprees dered Roods are her. ever, and are looke.i Kim. (JXSST8IXC0KD P. COATS iLX-dORD SPOOL COTTON CARPETS! We 1 ud usual disn av of pattern In Royal Wi'tons, Velvets. Moquettes. uoay Brussels, TaprMries (including- English and the best American makes,) Ingrains.Srcyr na and Velvet Kujrs Art Squares, &c. We are prepared to furnish iiouses or single rooms at tne Bhortost notice, and at prices that cannot be bettered. : Tho Upholstery department disjilays the most extensive assortments, consisting in part of 1 apestries, Porti-res. Draperies, Lace cur tains. Chenille and Turcoman curtains. Plush es, Tnmminirs, &c. Su-all forming- the most ...... i iu ue luuna in tne ooutn. W. ii. & R. s. rUUKER .is OO . ! xisjeign, v.. BBSOrOKBAMPliESI and Whisker Hb Its cured at home with ontpaln. Book of par. ticnlsra sent FKE. B. M.WOOT.T.H V. M.n. OffloeaWs Wultali&u et, Merchants. Manufacturers, l.n'vjjnt-s, M icin- irai's, )uiiiy ojiu-t-iH. anu miMnf-s.-i Men Generally, who may wish , PIUNTISG OU RINDING' V I of any Rind, will And that wo have th- larii and besfi i.tUippcd houau ol the kin-1 in ih Stat. 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The ringing blows which have been struct the gateway of popular favor, have rtssundd throughout the entire land, and to-day Ufp - cott's Magaxin stands in the front rank if monthly publications, and is the most widilf read-and-talied-of publication of its kind in tlu world. For full descriptive circulars, aidrea JJPPINCO TTS MAGAZINE, Philaddphit $3.00 per year. 35 cts. single number. The publisher of this paper will receive ytn pibscription. Vl g . V CTTACQUArNTBD WITH THE GEOGBAFHii C.V MUCH VALUABLE INFORMATION r?tr,'. . mar cr this YOTJ CAN BUY IT OF J. & J. Oettinger, J. D. & S. O. Wells, J.T. Wiggins. PRINT1 KG OFFICE f OR SALE, I offer fr sale a good PRINTING OFFICE - complete. The larger portion 01 the type, etc., is entirely new, hav ing been used only a few times. This is a good chance for any one wishing to go in . the nowspappr business in a live and growing town; Call on or addrt n, O. H HABIiiS. Rocky Mouiit, N. O. r. trat an 1 fpmanf.ntlt CURK, Or NO l-.AY; all t HKOX- IlISKASKS, liKt-.HSlITlK.S. , and Suioic'Ai, t'.ir. Sex ual Diskas:vs of Mkn. Wo. MBS, and t HiLDEEN the re sults of )? led lMncliipncn.1. EvilllabU&iiT Exceate, (jp um and. the II i.ixki it,.H.t . Inre and maenifleent s . mtapiti pnd Privatk Lying-1n Hosp r 1, in coi.ne;-- -tion. Hook of Life, with particulars fix Home Cure, Free. I)k. ;mi:krh"s !-d- ICAI.A SUROICAl, ISKTIT THj-lMJj.AVtt Spruce Street, 1S"asuvji,i.s .'i'tsx. FOB ITllaJiIrl mn onlv! Tor LOSTorTAimra KAKH003); kbLaGt. Hob'.' -1 f r Y?ittM of ody &ad Kind, Efftota 1 DLuru; vnUi3B rllTHOf MIDI lncv.'li 1:; in City to LA i,cr;vr towfi, LT.nns eiiort, riireot JrtuifcAiile, I KehiE3 City, It traver5S3 world, formi;.a transportatic. crado and t.-e Kansas City end Caldwfcli .so, m mim&nmmz: lir.oc branches and ! r. iints East , iz, St. Puul, end latorvMirtr tonn ai-.-' In oiioectton wlKi liuoa iro" t-. -t'. . torn and &.it.y..,-T. aiso constitutes THE SHORt- LSKET CEFiVER AKD V' Gt areas of ths rioheat ftr-slni nrd -.jo ana tt-oQi a,l cities, towns and sic; -tilyilll-OVIJ iillU SJO. 3 i- fulace aieox'ju-T Utira tn iT-ri f -rr, ai.y.n-.. 1 rf. ; .- r?ACRpriceT. vestibule exisress yx?-' Leaa;:: a:, r --nbotttore in tsplendor of Equipment cof-i v " """"' bv Bt6un,frot the. locomotive in winter, weU vcUiTt?A'Vrr '' - t..-'o anc a 1 City ood St. Joseoh dallv. on Xiu.!,t1?Slfcnit -O '' ' itu , -.iitnpa-r.iwicfa eicerant Dav CoarV. .fJt.V.r?5-' trcnv Denver r-lin: Ira Baak, r: asUotl tm Ink ulM InW) Mk 1 . 1 j 1 iif 1 t .r,r-tr,o.u . i. . L.i , . wrvBmuisc juo in Kansas gia coiora.iD. SS.jnor-i-, t-X.V "-J , vemnt eiatiorij wc-at of Kansas Ctyend St Jot&?f, r,T-Wf, - at eeusonablfc Mmsz and At moUeatw prices t'epu 'Wnujii UeUciO". )- THE ROCK ISLAND IS TJSE FAVOF33TE TOUrT 5 , reverts, hunt;r;ancl taat can aa- -t sejrjfcv. ennven n y uiooe'3 irrTr:- Tiiey also me-.:jk;!ase connections at fopinliiiJ?1 lirioU3 cr.jc : Depots) witb Denver aud Bio Grand Colo8-,00101 ' 1 ' . ' Denver Texa.- and S ort v; jrti, and all otfiVlF.fWland, Union i'-acUlSi - Tlckera, Maps, Time Tables Polder r88r Une8' (issued montiJyl, r furtner tlaaired lnfortS0' tho " Western TraU E. ST JOI- IM "md, address Bss.Triius ro equipped ?l,S0,,i. ' : V. tv in lit v ri G m ee oJ v; tl A tl &1 E c: n- P U o (1 v i) t I r y t a f n t a c c s t t t 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 "C.3 J' 1-
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 10, 1890, edition 1
4
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