Orrville Crescent (Newspaper) - October 26, 1886, Orrville, Ohio of Lodge No. 212, K. of P. meets in Hall every Tuesday B. C. C. W. K. K. B. of the Ontario Veterinary Treats all diseases of domesticated Office and three miles south if PHYS CIAN AND on corner of Market and Vine reets opposite the Mansion an and and residence on Main O. al attention given to the treatment of chronic diseases and the diseases of women and H. A. North Market St. UI opposite new Lutheran Asst. N. Y. Ear WAYNE OCTOBER 26. 1886. 44 A. Editor and Tell the Truth and Make Per In IK BT A. HAMILTON OF SUBSCRIPTION i six columns of the brief conent editor will not hold himself Ux of Banking General Partnership and Individual K. H. AND THEIR BUSINESS Jacob J. F. Isaac John H. Jacob H. H. Dry Daniel Farming Bank O. K. Miller and Grain Money Loaned at low rates of interest and time paper We have a fire proof vault and burglar proof safe with time with the INDIVIDUAL makes our Bank as good security as any in the A. IST in Paul door to the post A. M. Physician and residence in property formerly occupied by Mrs. opposite the M. E. 0ER, Physicians and on East Market Office from 9 a. m. to 4 p. OP of meets on the anil third Tuesday of each in over shoe A. 0. 0. No. every n Odd East Market iS. council No. 2X8 meets regularly on the and fourth Tuesday of each K. Attorney Counsellor at Notary 1'ubiic. over Exchange Special attention given to col and commercial L. Fashionable Tailor and work In goods 31. Surveyor and give prompt attention to any calls to land or Civil Leave all orders a Banking I or vitalized air Office 8 to 12 afternoon 1 to 5. Booms in corner of Main and NELSON at promptly attend to legal business entrusted to his Special attention given to the business of and And promptly made in any part of stairs in the Swan BARBER AND HAIR Postoffice AND Renovated and largest and most quiet and genteel establishment in the MEALS AT ALL IN ALL Lunch ot All Wines and on hand at Fisclier West Main opposite A. and see W. Lost Man hood quickly and positively Send foi book mailed FREE to nil Address Hewlin Medical World's Tried and Fire with an absolute Guarantee of being Finest and most perfect goods of their kind ever MICHIGAN STOVE Chicago Buffalo Id by first-class dealers BO on hand it all limes and for all occasions a full supply consisting and Rye stock a full supply AND attention paid to supplying large for Baker's Swan's drug a few doors west and opposite here and and Consider what are It is a I sell the Homestead I sell more Homestead than any other brand that is sold in Wayne the Homstead sells on its own l. That the Homestead contains more or less money than any other phosphate sold in this 5. That who once used the Homestead will buy them again if left to their honest the will drill can be sown more evenly than mosi other phos farmers are better satisfied with Homestead than farmers can get Homestead at any at the Warehouse SALEM BONE kept in Also dealer Market MARBLE manufacturer and and Italian Marble and Grf Shop West of Town all kinds of including all the newest and most desirable styles and Come and see them before you the old stand Market a full stock of all kinds lit TU It i V Vit Cheaper Than Neatly on Short also keep on hand a full too I once went gone in thought I was in The pride of my heart was a musical With the musical name ot I as a sigh I are fairer than others And allow me to In love with And she can most confess that you charm and Won't you permit me to be your She tuned up her voice and said believe me. my my of only to you for And longs ro crown you queen of its She you got a soul and heart that are both your the frozen zones shall Or the frost congeals the torrid She shrieked and ihe girls in the world as nothing unto But in a provoking way she a don't you turned am I'd have you She and said in a crusty but only W. in Detroit Free wood was on his started out to Curious Places in Which Wealth is EYEBY SIZE are always ready to attend to undertaking in all its branches at low We have the finest ice casket in the Also having eai -ed the art of embalming we are prepared to preserve dead bodies for any length of time or without BEB learn the exact cost of any proposed line of in American capers by addressing P. Rowell Advertising 1 Spruce New Send for tre tint who write to A Co will receive full work which can and live at will pay them from to per Some have earned over In a day Either yoong or old Capital not required Ton free Those wbo start at are absolutely sura of little All Is Planing and Lumber Window and Door on Paradise street E IMI O .Au AN B. twelve years in on Market has been moved to bis Boom on Main of tbe Town where he hopes to meet all his old customers and many new As my expenses have been reduced I expect to divide the profits with the trade Can and see tbe finest stock of stoves and ranges ever ob exhibition in and Liniment is older than most and used more and more every all who are suffering irom the errors and Indiscretions of nervous early loss of I will send a recipe that will cure OF This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South Send a self-addressed envelope to the Joseph t. Station New York Kidney diseases may be prevented by and invigorating the blood with Ayer's through the action of the kidneys is these organs rob the blood of its needed which is passed off in the while worn out which they should carry off from the is allowed to By the use of Ayer's the kidneys are restored to proper and Ayer's Sarsaparilla also prevents Inflammation of the and other disorders of these Mrs. W. Forest Hill Jamaica I have had a complication of but my greatest trouble has been with my Four bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla made me feel like a new as well and strong as M. 46 Summer had been troubled for years with Kidney By the use ot Ayer's he not disease from assuming a fatal but was restored to perfect John Bridge and Third several years I suffered from Dyspepsia and Kidney the so severe at times that I could scarcely attend to my My appetite was and I was much but by appetite and digestion and my health has been by all Six Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver it U. Stored Away In Old Brick Ovens and Wagon Peculiar Ways of the Covetous and had a good deal of experience in hunting for money that folks have said a gentleman visiting at Park street in Lewiston the other I just as lief tell what I know about it as years ago especially the elderly took the utmost pains to hide Old brick old wagon china the tops of haircloth furniture used always to come in for a big share of investigation after the dear departed had turned up his toes and had been laid From that as you well the hunt and folks rummaged the house and pulled open the feather beds in search of the silver the beautiful yellow boys or the crisp bank notes that it was supposed the lamented deceased had left I suppose that this instinct of concealing wealth and of searching for it was bred out of a well founded suspicion of the safety of the old-time savings and they were rascally as I well Of course the hiding instinct was transmitted from father to and in my way of reasoning the war of the rebellion more to do with stopping this foolish plan of hoarding money than any other one It opened up more old stocking legs and old colonial gold than a hundred years of peace would have and I don't from that there are countless stores of gold buried in places in Massachusetts and Maine could count up any quantity of families who believe that a secret left by a mysterious deceased exists somewhere for I believe that Captain Kidd's treasure is awaiting the coming of somebody keen enough to don't And here the gentleman in the arm chair winked laughed at his own and funny in which I once came pretty near being was a stock company formed in where I was then It designed to make a specialty of hunting up concealed I did some work for them and a partner and I were pretty successful there and in New York do you go to it is hard to You have to be guided by Strange mental freaks exist in some You perhaps know people who are built the wrong I used to know a Lewiston family of extremely narrow and and yet would take no care of the hay in the field or the cattle in the We had to sort of learn human Get first at the habits of the man whose wealth you are seeking to It's the best clew you once was called by the friends of an insane man to look after his He had hidden it while supposedly in his right and when the symptoms of his came the money could not be and he could not be induced to The family began to suffer for want of and they tried to starve him into but that only seemed to please When I was called I was He wouldn't talk on the but the moment it was mentioned at once flew into a I laid in wait for and didn't discover him doing any thing that would lead to a I finally rigged a and one day I showed him suddenly a roll of paper with a around it so that it looked like a wad of remarking as I did stumbled on hidden pile the other gave one quick was directly into the corner of the room near the He then and laughed gleefully at me. I had him guarded that and while he was asleep we pulled aside the carpet and discovered a panel in the wall and in it his I was sure that we would find it in the for I knew that he would not be satisfied to stay in any place where he could not be in sight of his hidden was once sent to take care of a curious case in It was twenty years A wealthy man was stricken with He was about to deposit some twenty-nine thousand dollars in money and bonds when he was stricken The heirs were He couldn't recall a All that was known was that he was found sitting on the front hall bereft of mind and We couldn't make any thing out of He had no We made a hunt at random over the through the barns and We about made up our minds that he had been We stopped the and business and were hesitating whether or not to make arrests or search for some systematic For my as I I was confident he had been most probably after the stroke of and I was not sure that some attack from a robber had not precipitated the We sought the doctors and examined the man s A Jblack and blne mark was on his to A blue the the and every thing down in a barn cellar among boxes and barrels I came across an old the said I. We turned the thing out into the and there in a pile of manure we found the packet of money and bonds where the paralytic had fallen and where the packet had slipped from his partner and I divided two thousand dollars between us that you ever read Edgar A. Poo's tale about the search of the Paris Police Commissioners after a mysterious there is a good deal of philosophy in hiding I've often thought of the old it had been a bear it would have bitten The very hardest things to find are often the plainest before It's playing odd Yon give the opponent too much credit for too it is not I ' well remember another case where attempts of all kinds have been made the wealth of an old miser in and that after months and months of hunting it was brushed one day from a dusty old shelf above the with periodicals and worthless He put it in plain and nobody thought it possible that it was worth while to look sailor will almost always hide hia money about Irish women always sew bills Into their I once went into New Hampshire to hunt for the money of a retired sea captain who had died very He had been a queer sort of very always taking trips out of town after his He wasn't a j miserly and I concluded that he | hadn't buried it. He slept in no one particular and so I was pretty sure that there was no place in the house where he felt better contented j than So I his We went over The binding on one of them was and his wife as I tore it always sewed his clothes up He as handy as a woman with a She he always wanted to wear that suit to the Poor and she dropped a In the meantime I had pulled out an oiled silk holding six bonds for one thousand dollars and we found eighteen more in the same His trips to town meant you course there are men who bury Such men always have its hiding place marked and ten to they want it buried where they can as soon as they can see any thing in the that some thief has not discovered its hiding place in the night and made off with it. You can put it down that men who conceal money like to have it as near at hand as I have known money to be concealed in the clock in the and so arranged that no one could touch the clock without alarming the If a man who hides his money has any special idiosyncrasy it is safe to look it The more ignorant and crafty your the safer to go by his sort of places have you known of money being In the upholstery and under behind the door between or behind the wall in the old family behind nailed to the in false in false bottom in linings of old steam radiators bottles marked vest and coat tomato tea powder old stocking and in every other con ways of the covetous are many and their tricks are dark and and at the Concord Wo met one summer's used no logic I guessed what she would very with a sun that shines from sa d and pointed to the rolling toward the told her that it must be At least it seemed so there was I did not knoir Of tbe Whatness of the the only thing I she was standing that the skv was much more blue In the of the and said perhaps 'twas well Those pretty themes to asked me if the rule I'd tell Of the of the told her that I d d not know That but then I rule that just as well would Oneness of ttio blushed and looked down oa the And can tbe then the whole earth turned For my heart was full of the of my I now shail comprehend The of my J. in WA Boso in and What of were walking down in a chattering procession with laurel-wreathed young men bearing shawls and a matron or last of all Stephen a child on either side of and in his arms little Nanny Forsythe half Wherever Stephen went children led by attraction irresistible as that which draws iron filings to the Grown people could not understand this but the little ones never mistook about it. Sleepy as she Nanny's small hand kept patting his shoulder as they wont and her voice cooed words of drowsy endearment which made Stephen gloomy as he felt that Each cheerful reply to the children's questions cost an but he spoke cheerfully all the and tried to keep his eyes from wandering forward to where Captain Hallett walked by the side of Milly with his handsome head very near and his voice murmuring low sentences inaudible to the rest of the Many glances were sent back at this couple from those in for Neal Hallett was the novelty of the a hero and a and the who were only too well-disposed to pull caps for thought it too of Milly to absorb his attentions as she had done all after what could what could any when an all-conquering Captain takes up his position at her side in early morning and never leaves it until late It is uot in girl nature to resist such and Stephanie De in partly justified in calling it desperate although I fear the pout with which she spoke due rather to amour propre than outraged But on Milly's side it was not all For all her saucy she was a credulous just the woman for and stake her all n that unequal barter so common Could Not See the Bat the Shores of a Better little train boy was On his the sufferer his emaciated tace and hands exciting pity and No mother's hand smoothed his no mother's tears and sobs marked the going out of his young brother and sister fee had A waif upon the from tenderest had made his own Alone had he waged the battle of and from newsboy and to he had worked his own accident in which he had lost his leg placed him in the The amputation proved far too much for his and slowly his life flickered and was going A brave little he bore all his sufferings without save that he was anxious to get up and take his as he called it. No one told him that his days as a were at an A fever set and he became Train talk he constantly indulged in during his and made many imaginary into St. Paul on the Milwaukee and weaker he The nurse and physician watched beside his His brow was covered with the dew of His last on earth was soon to box is on said the dying addressing an imaginary yer can't start any too soon ter suit bathed his these nurse and the and listened to his strange just one exclaimed the little as if talking to a I should get kilt on ary of dese here dat silver you know my to yer t yer know Why Cully's my old Him and me done worked together too long for me ter forget he as if on his I'll take der peaches frough fer it's no Der won't buy of me. I'll try der orange Taint no and here we is at mist is I can't see der he said here we is at St. Paul was Paul Don world of misunderstood fair cheeks wore flushed and her blue eyes full of shy excitement as they walked talking what do people talk about when they are young and of different Captain Hallett's fine eyes said more than his his martial mustache to give point and value to mere He carried a lithe little cane with which he emphasized his now cutting the now beheading a in a way which Milly thought And then Love lane was such a pretty the very place to be eloquent in. Its winding turns were hedged with fragrant sweet fern and Overhead the trees met and clasped in shady Here and there a pink honeysuckle glinted in the network of or a train of shimmering The pure primrose light of a cloudless sunset sifted lown through the canopy of a light breeze full of delicious It was like an evening in a turning brought them to a fern-clad against set in a frame work of tremulous stood one rose of perfect wild wood poised at tip of a cluster of vivid It was like an enchanted Milly she but even as the words left her lips the restless cane flew through the the rose from its and sent it into the dusty a little whirlwind of broken leaves accompanying its a said only a wild you don't you like wild but there are so them that it is hardly worth while to waste sentiment on a single and the Captain showed his fine teeth in a smile that was the least bit and cast a regretful look behind Her gentle nature felt for the fair despoiled after there were plenty of wild as Captain Hallett and presently she forgot her sympathy and its Another turning in the lane brought them to the village and to Squire Allen's where the rest of the party were There were to divisions to Mrs. Allen was intent on securing to each person his or her own Kitty Felton was counting Stephanie hunting for a missing In the midst of these researches Stephen came up with the He looked and put Nanny into her mother's arras with an air of disregarding the drowsy protest which she a lovely said some of the did you find the replied had switched it from its stem and left it to so we picked and Mr. Felton it to treat flowers put in a little Captain listened but Milly gave a glance at the was just like softly and Stephen brightened first time that seemed looking that his love fov Milly had begun when he was a boy oi five and she was a V dying out among j in the He could not the negroes in the the time when he did not prefer v by gospel j ail other At school he was her I his his in a music after the I ballad lady had I Were a great excitement was created by a stalwart miner in the audience I were popularity of the old tion songs is at her Stephen taught her to to It was he who brought her the first the first he who took her en and walked home with her from church and the village tea Milly absorbed these services not but as a matter of She had been used to them from her and could have almost as well dispensed with sun or air out of her but sun and air never are rarely or alluded eood old she called Now it is not well for a man to lavish himself on a woman who thinks of him only as old now Stephen was doomed to stand by and see a stranger appropriate the object of this He had and another was to reap his Day by day all that summer long the glamour grew and Captain Hallett's leave of absence seemed of the most elastic permitting him to stay the entire season at His his his were spent with Stephen sickened at the inevitable gold-banded cap that met his eyes whenever he entered the and proved his rival in possession of the Milly greeted Stephen kindly but there was a sense of he felt himself a third Then he tried staying but that was worst of for his love did not notice his absence beyond a careless age it is since we saw This state of of set people to but Milly was blushingly was she a girl couldn't have a pleasant friend without having such things Bather pretty ana made little ana it was generally understood that the if not an absolute amounted to whatever that may m last the lovely summer came to an as summers Scarlet flamed in the burned along the the birds and with them Captain Hallett prepared for His orders had come to report in and his were The last moment was and though no one knew the exact situation of it was taken for granted that another year would bring orange blossoms and a Milly's own expectations were not so No definite promise had passed between her and her but she trusted him and waited brightly and Letters came and the scarlet boughs burned into ashes and fell to the ground in pale then came gnow and the to be in turn scourged away by the whip of the fierce New England Still Milly but not so brightly for the letters came less regularly than at By and by they Weeks passed without a with visions of yellow fever and Indians chasing each other across her tired wrote aud wrote but no presage of the real danger which threatened glanced over till one opening the this met her by the Rev. Pierre St. br the Rev. Thomas Captain Edward U. S. and Blanche only daughter of the late Pierre St. of No Graves upstairs heard no but when she went down Milly lay on the white and the newspaper still clasped in her cold It was long before her senses came Her mother flamed with but the girl hushed her with a weary were never really you But Milly turned her face to the wall and said no was stirred to its depths next day by the news that Captain Hallett was married to a Southern and that Milly Graves was down with typhoid Every one wanted to help to above to know the Such masses of blancmange and jelly were sent in that poor Mrs. Graves was at her end to know how to dispose of But no one could readily not even poor who scarcely left the house day or or ate or till the crisis and Milly was pronounced out of of but it was weeks before she could sit and weeks longer ere she came down mere shadow and wreck of blooming little beauty who walked so gayly up Love lane at Ned Hallett's side not quite a year She was patient and but she did not often Perhaps Stephen won these infrequent smiles oftener than any ono and he counted them as precious payment for all time and all trouble spent in her Only once did he see her shed This hoping to give her he brought in the first wild roses of the season and held them before Suddenly a spasm passed over her she gave a turned and struggled for Stephen dropped the flowers as if they burned his fingers and hurried out of the A hot anger shot through has ruined every thing for he a rose reminds her of Coward that he is. They hang a man for poisoning the water why not hang though hanging is too good for such a villain as processes of cure are It is in their depths that wounds begin to Gradually as months went by the renovating principle worked in She resumed her place at the little duties and and took up again the burdens of She was pale but the a sweat serenity was no less lovely than her girlish Graves was real improved since her certain severe old ladies and they were not far from Stephen adored her more than Two years later he told her so. To his was neither astonished or but looked in his eyes with a smile which was sad and tender and sweet all at she is just like Do you recollect the day in Love and the rose you picked up out of the You are doing the same thing but I am not worth not worth the picking said trembling with never was day since I first ana that was years when I love you beyond anv other living Pick you my rose of all the I am not to touch your my or handle one of your but I five with the whole of my Can yon not love me a little hit in I and the fair litth fingers closed over body in the world like I knew It's others are so much yon and might make yon happier than I You're quite ion really want Then Til do my how py you I should think when I've got every thing I ever wanted ia my cried about Definitions from Not Dictionary oX of the most famous kisses in history is that of Duchess of when she was canvassing for Fox's A said he would vote for Fox if the lady would kiss which she thereupon thereby making the the and herself immortal in Thi Duchess of in recruited a Highland regiment in the same the great was once met by a lady on the streets ol who said to him that she had just seen his likeness and had kissed it because it was so much like did it kiss you in it was not replied the gallant Hood once wondered in his if Hannah that prim and very respectable maiden we all was ever kissed by a Probably but the humorists of Rejected in one of their famous Morgan behind the vestry aoor Horace was matching a kin From the lips of Hannah the testimony is not fairly and we must fain conclude that she went to her grave Puritan forefathers were not at all in favor of It was not permitted to young and even a man could not kiss his wife on Winwood in his book of travels in Equatorial says the negroes do not know how to and he admits that he frightened one or two maidens by attempting it. In New Zealand lovers do not but simply touch but the South Sea Islanders understand kissing to according to some They may hare learned it at an early day from the first finding that it was kept up the the dictionary of which has never yet been are found some to * Pluribus to kiss aQ Syllabus to kiss the hand instead Ot the to kiss the wrong times unexpectedly pleasant Omnibus to kiss Erebus to kiss in the Incubus to kiss some one you Harquebus to kiss with a loud was a hark I we kiss a lady against her will is an punishable under our law by fine and So gallants must have a care how they yield to rosy Rare who was wishing He might die also the immortal lines to to me only with thine And I will pledge with Or leave a kiss but in the And I'll not look verse is almost kind kiss before we Drop a tear and bid Though we my fond heart Till shall pant for sam's Exploits In and Horn An old trapper and hunter known a9 is doing a business killing huge mountain sheep for their heads and These he ships to New York to fill the orders he is constantly and there they are Sam's best customers are wealthy and many an English hall bears witness in mammoth heads and antlers of the sheep magnificently to Sam's prowess as a For many years has buried himself in the most remote recesses of the Big Horn Here he is in the very hidden and of the big horn or Rocky mountain Sam's way of capturing his wily quar peculiarly adapted to his needs He rounds up the wild sh of the mountain peak and pre 3ipu:e with pack numbers and they are a pure cross the bloodhound and and these noble add to the natural strength and sagacity of their blood strains a marvelous endurance and a No snow no roughness of no steepness of no loftiness of no remoteness of locality can stop the mountain dog when on the track of the mountain pack works in an organized way when the trail of a band of is The dogs break into little bunches and wide and careful circuits are The sheep are hurried torward a common center and they will soon be bunched with twenty-five crests and tails moving about them in an endless and eager pack has been known to two hundred and fifty head of and to hold their watch aad guard fot over six hours waiting the coming of their who has been kept baok by the difficulties lying in his It sometimes occurs that the dogs bring the game together on a spot that ft utterly inaccessible to human feei Then the hunter gives his notice of the fact by a peculiarly and The pack at once dash into the midst of the seize and slay the and by dint of tumbling and falling from from declivity to bring tne carcasses within reach ol their These dogs trace their pedigree toe pair brought into this region manj years Ago by a rich who made old Eort Stambaugh his hunting When the Englishman left mountains he gave his worth he had proved in many a hard day's to who was well known as a a coupla pups from the first litter to his ole who thai came Into possession of the nucleus oI this magnificent