m M I- ) '. i v V . 1 r j ? u .J V ? I iShe Gentleman From Indiana :: A i !: : 1 T V Copyright. I3DD. by Tioublcday Copyright. 1902. V YVW'?'f'fHiJ'.Oi...'.&'M'',?'?V,VVV,?V,J - w V W V U CI U If B V 49 U D V tt O O O F U C1 U 9 O . a - .:. . .:. .:. ,- . a .i, a a ,. .. , .-, ., ,, .-, .. ... , c .. .-. , CHAPTER I. W """""" HEX tlio rusty hands of the otlloe clock marked half past TOy-r- 4, the editor In chief of the raflftl Carlow County Herald took tils hand out of his hair, wiped Ills pen on his last notice from the White (.'up, put on Ida coat, swept out tho close llUlo entry and left tho sanctum for be bright Juno afternoon. He chose the way to tho west, stroll Ing thoughtfully out of town by the white, hot, deserted Main street and thence onward by the country road into which its proud half mile of old brick Btoro buildings, tumbledown frame shops and thinly painted cottages de generated. The sun was in his face where the read ran between the sum mer llelds, lying waveless, low, gra cious in promise; but, coming to n wood of hickory and beech and wnl nut that stood beyond, ho might turn his down-bent hat brim up and hold his head erect. Here the shade fell deep and cool on the green tangle of rag and Iron weed and long grass hi alighted on the platform of the station the corners of tho snake fence, al norti, 0f L'luttvllle and, entering the though the sun beat upon the road sc rickety omnibus that lingered there close beside. There was no movement necking whom It might rattle to deaf of the crisp young leaves overhead n03St demanded to be driven to the High in the boughs there was a, quick Herald building. It did not strike the lllrt of crimson where two robins hop- driver that the newcomer was pre pod noiselessly. The late afternoon, ciscy a gay young man when he climb when the air Is quite still, had come, (C(i i,,t0 the omnibus, hut an hour later, yet there rested somewhere on the. ia8 )L stood in the doorway of the edl quiet day a faint, pleasant, woody uce i,L, im,i indicated as his destination, smell. It came to the editor of the depression seemed to have settled Into Herald as he climbed to the top rail e marrow of ids bones. of the fence for a seat, and he drew ( piattvllle was Instantly alert to the a long breath to get the elusive odor stranger's presence, and interesting con more luxuriously, and then it was gout jecturos were hazarded all day long at altogether. the back door of Murtin's Dry Goods "A habit of delicacies," lie said aloud, Euinorluin (this was the club Anting addressing the wide silence complain- ingly. "One taste and they quit," he finished, gaxlug solemnly upon the shining little town down the road. It was a place of which Us Inhabit ants sometimes remarked easily that their city had a population of from 5,000 to 0,000 souls, but It should be easy to lorgive mem iur w;n uuw- monts. Civic nr do Is a virtue, 'xne town lay In the heart of that fertile stretch of flat lands In Indiana where eastern travelers, glancing from car windows, shudder and return their eyes to Interior upholstery, preferring even the swaj ing caparisons of a Pullman to the monotony without. I he landscape runs on Interminably level nnes-oieai; in winter, a desolate plain of mud and snow; not ami uusiy in .summer, mm-a on miles of flat lonesomeness, with not one cool hill slope away from the sun, The persistent tourist who seeks for signs of man in tills sad expanse per eelves a reckless amount of rail fence, at intervals a large barn, and here and there man himself, incurious, patient, slow, looking up from the fields apa thetically as the limited files by. Now" and then the train passes a village built scatterlngly about a courthouse, with a mill or two humming near the tracks. Tills is a county heat, and the Inhabitants and the local papers refer to it confidently as "our city." Such a county seat was Piattvllle. capital of Carlow county. The social and business energy of the town con centrated on the square, and here lu summer time tho gentlemen were wont to lounge from store to store In their shirt sleeves, and in the center of tiie square stood the old red brick courthouse, loosely fenced lu a shinty grove of maple and elm "slipp'ry ellunr-callcd the "courthouse yard.f When the sun grew too hot for the dry i goods box whlttlers in front of the stores around the square and the occu pants of the chairs lu front of the Pal ace hotel .on the corner they would go across and drnpo themselves over the fence and carve their Initials on the top board. From the position of the Miu the editor of the Herald Judged that these operations were now In progress, and he was not deeply elated by the knowledge that whatever desul tory conversation might pass from man to man on the fence would probably bo inspired by his own convictions ex-. pressed editorially in the Herald. He drew a faded tobacco bag and a brier pipe from bis pocket and, after ailing and lighting the pipe, twirled the noiieh mechanically about his flngtir, then, suddenly regarding it, patted 'It caressingly. It had been a giddy lltje I,,,, inn.- nun. urnv with embroidery ff!i tho colors of the editor's unlversl ami. although now it was frayed to t verge of tatters, it still bore an air l)f m-lstliie iaunt mess, an air or wmcu nn-nin 111 nowise Dlirtook. Ho looli from it toward the village In the ch fllstimen and sighed softly as ho i: nio uoiich back In his pocket and, ret liur his arm on his knee and his chin n Us hand, sat blowing clouds of smo; o ,ut or t he s.auu m '"- rfent v watching the ghostly shadow ... f h,. uiimio into the sunsmnc, a :.::...., .,.. ,.r l. mnrl IUU 1YMIIW v.uv - ! t 4 ! 2 4 $ t ? J -1 4 4 t J' C t oto0fftieoh J i f $ $ 't :::. : f f O to.;. tf f l ZS.K TiOOTH TA'RK.lUGTOH ... M .4. .1.0 k McCture Co. br McCiare. Vhiltipj SSI Co. I ;..,- iv v U U1-? (V (? V ? U V U l? CI V V W W V W W I? V V -- a .-.& .' .. . .-... little carter snake crept under the 'cjw beneath him and disappeared In tlii underbrush: a rabbit, progressing jc Its travels by a series of brilliant flashes and terror smitten halts, came within a few yards of him, sal up with quivering nose and eyes alight with fearful Imaginings and vanished, a tlasli it fluffy brown and white. Shadows grew longer; a cricket chirped and heard inswers; there was a woodland stir of breezes, and tho pair of robins left the branches overhead In eager (light, va cating before tho arrival of a flock of blackbirds hastening thither ere the eventide should be upon them. The blackblids came, chattered, gossiped, quarreled and beat each other with their wings above the smoker sitting on the top fence rail. But he had remembered. A thousand miles to the cast It was commencement day, seven years to a day from bis own commencement. Five years ago, on another June aft ernoon, a young man from the east had Q,e day), and at supper the new ur- rival and his probable purposes were discussed over every table in the town. Upon Inquiry he had Informed .Indd Bennett, the (driver of the omnibus, that he had come to sty( Naturally such a declaration caused .a, sensation, a8 pL.0ple did not come t,p Piattvllle to Hye except uinuigii iiu! umuvcricuc.v ill being born there. In uddindirtho young man's appearance and attire wero re ported to be extraordinary. Many of the curious, among them most of the marriageable females of the place, look occasion to pass and repass the sign of tllu (,u.uw County Herald during the ovemg. Meanwhile the stranger was seal-it in the dingy otllce upstairs with his head bowed low on his arms. Twilight stole through the dirty window panes and faded into darkness. Night filled the room. He did not move. The young man from the east had bought the Her ald from an agent had bought It with out ever having been within a hundred miles of Piattvllle. The Herald was an alleged weekly which had some times appeared within five days of Us declared date of publication and some times missed 'fire altogether. It was a thorn hi the side of every patriot of Carlow county, and Carlow people, aft er supporting the paper loyally and long, had at last given It up and sub scribed for the Cazette, published in the neighboring county of Amo. The former proprietor of the Herald, a surreptitious gentleman with a goatee, had taken the precaution of leaving Piattvllle forever on the afternoon pre ceding his successors arrival, 'ine young man from the east had vastly overpaid for his purchase. Moreover, tho price be had paid for it was all the money he had In the world. The next morning he. went bitterly to work. Ho ldred a compositor from Rouen, a young man named Parker, who set type all night long and helped him pursue advertisements all day. The citizens shook their heads pessi mistically. They had about given up the idea that the Herald could ever amount to anything, and they betrayed an Innocent but caustic doubt of abil ity in any stranger. One day tho new editor fort a note on his door: "Will return In fifteen min utes." Mr. Rodney McCune, a politician from the neighboring county of Oalnes, hap pening to be In Piattvllle on an errand to his henchmen, found the note and wrote beneath the message tho scath ing inquiry, "Why?" When ho discovered this addendum, tho editor smiled for the first time since his advent anil reported the incident in his next Issue, using the rubric "Why Has the Herald "Returned to LlfoV" as a text for a rousing editorial on hon esty In politics, a subject or which ho already knew something. Tho political district to which Carlow belonged was governed by a limited number of gen tlemen whoso wealth was" over on tho increase, and honesty in politics was a startling conception to the minds of ' the passive and resigned voters, who n .,,,, ,. ilVl ot,.nnr iumyu UlU UUllUHUl un. .. j.. corners ami in the stores, tne next week there was another editorial, per sonal and local In Its application, and thereby it became evident that the new proprietor of the Herald was a theorist Who believed In general that a polltt l bin's honor should not be merely of Hint middling healthy species known as "honor among politicians," and in particular that Wodncy McCune should not receive the nomination of his party for congress. Now, Mr. McCune was the undoubted dictator of the district, anil his followers laughed at the stran ger's fantastic onset: but the editor was not content with the word of print. He hired a horse and rode about the coun try and (to his own surprise) proved to be an adaptable young man who en Joyed exercise with a pitchfork to the farmer's prollt while the fanner talk ed. He talked little himself, but after listening an hour or so he would drop a word from the saddle us he left, and then, by some surprising wizardry," the farmer, thinking over the Interview, decided there was some sense In what that young fellow said and grew curi ous to see what tho young fellow had further to say In the Herald. roll tics Ib the one subject that goes to ttiv vitals of every rural American, and a lloosler will talk politics after he is dead. Everybody read the campaign edi torials and found them Interesting, al though there was no one who did not perceive the utter absurdity of a young otranger dropping Into Carlow ami Involving himself In a party light against the boss of the district. It was1 entirely a party light, for by grace of the last gerrymander the nomination carried with It the certainty of elee tlon. A week before the convention there came a provincial earthquake. The news passed from man to man In awe Btruek whispers Mc 'tine had with drawn his name, making the shallow est of excuses to his cohorts. Nothing was known of the real reason for his disordered retreat beyond the fact that ho had been in I'luttvllle on the morn ing before his withdrawal and had Is sued from a visit to the Herald olllcc in a state of palsy. Mr. INirker, the Itoticu printer, had been present at tho close of the Interview, but he held his peace at tho command of his employer. He had been called Into the sanctum and bad found McCune, white and shaking, leaning on the desk. Turker," said the editor, exhibiting t bundle of papers he held In his hand, "I want you to witness a verbal con- Mr. Jiutliicu McUmtc )nind the note. tract between Mr. McCune and myself. These papers are an allldavlt and copies of some records of a street car company which obtained a charter While Mr. McCune was hi the legisla ture. They were sent to mo by u man I do not know, an anonymous friend of Mr. McCune In fact, a frleud ho seems to have lost. On consideration of our not printing these papers Mr. McCune agrees to retire from politics for good. You understand, if ho ever lifts ids head again politically we pub lish them, and '.he courts will do the rest. Now, In case anything should happen to me" ".Something will happen to you all right!" broke out McCune. "You can bunk on that, you black" "Come," the editor Interrupted not unpleasantly. "Why should there be anything personal In all this? I don't recognize you as my private enemy not at all and I think you are getting oil! rather easily, aren't youV You keep out of politics and everything will bo comfortable. You ought never to bavo been in if, you see. It's a mistake not to go square, because In tho long run somebody is sure to give you away, like the fellow who scut mo these. You promise to hold to a strictly pri vate lire?" "You're a traitor to tho party," groan ed the other; "but you only wait" The editor smiled sadly. "Wait noth ing! Don't threaten, man. Go home to your wife. I'll give you three to ono Bho'll lie ghul, yon are out of It." "I'll give you three to one," said Mc Cune, "that tho White Caps will get you If you stay In Carlow. You want to look out for yourself, I tell you, my smart boy." "Good day, Mr. McCune," was the answer. "Lot mo have your noto of withdrawal beforo you leave town this afternoon." Tho young man paused a moment, then extended his hand as ha Bpld: "Shako hands, woirt; you? I I M haven't meant to be too hard on I hope things will seem easier and gay er to you before long, and If If ltny tiling should turn up that I can do for you lu a private way I'll lie very glad, you know. Goodby." The sound of the Herald's victory went over the state. The paper camo out regularly. The townsfolk bought i It, and the farmers drove In for It. Old subscribers came back. Old advertis ers renewed. The Herald began to sell in Amo, and Gaines county people sub scribed. Carlow folk held up tlult heads when Journalism was mentioned. Presently the Herald announced a news connection with Uoueii, and with that and the aid of "patent Insides" began an era of three Issues a week, appear ing on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur days. The Piattvllle brass band sere naded the editor. During the second mouth of the new regime of the Herald the working force of the paper received an addition. Ono night the editor found some barroom loafers tormenting a patriarchal old man who had a magnificent head and a grand white beard. He had been thrown out of a saloon, and tie was drunk with the drunkenness of three weeks' steady pouring. Ho propped himself against a wall nnd reproved his tormentors In Latin. "I'm walking your way. Mr. FHbee." remarked the Journalist, hooking his arm Into the old man's. "Suppose we leave our friends here and go home." Mr. I'lsbee was the one Inhabitant of the town possessing an unknown past, and a glamour of romance was thrown about him by the gossips, who agreed that there was a dark, portentous se cret Ir. !' life, an opinion not too well coullrmed by the old man's appearance. Ills line eyes had a habit of wandering to the horizon, and hN expression was mild, vague ami sad, lost In dreams. At the first glance one guessed that his dreams would never lie practicable in their application, and some such Im pression of him was probably what caused the editor of the Herald to nick name hhu, In his own mind, "the White Knight." Mr. Klsbee, coming to Piattvllle from nobody knew where, had taught In the high school for ten years, but lie proved quite unable to refrain from lecturing to the dumfounded pupils on archn ologyv neglecting more and more tho ordinary courses of instruction, grow ing yeur by year more forgetful and absent, lost in his few books and Ills own reflections, until at last he had bceu discharged for incompetency. The dazed old man had .no money and no way to make any. One day he dropped In nt the hotel bar, where Wllkerson, tho professional drunkard, favored him with his society. The old mini under stood. He knw It was the beginning of the end. He sold his books In order to continue ills credit at the Palace bar, and once or twice, unable to pro coed to ids own dwelling, spent the night In a lumber yard, piloted thither by the hardier veteran Wllkerson. The morning after the editor took him home FIsbee appeared at the Her ald olllcc In a new hat and a decent oult of black. He had received his sal ary In advance, his books had been re purchased and he bad become the re porlorlal staff of the Carlow County Herald; also he was to wrllo various treatises for the paper. Kor the llrst few evenings when he started home from tho olllcc his chief walked with him, chatting cheerfully, until they hnd passed the Palace bar. But I'"ls bee's redemption was complete. The editor of the Herald kept stead ily at his work, and as time went on the bitterness his predecessor's swindle had left in him passed away. But his loneliness and a sense of defeat grew and deepened. When the vistas of tho world had opened to his first youth ho hud not thought to spend his life In such a place as Piattvllle, but he found himself doing it, and it was no great happiness to him that the Hon. Kcdge Halloway of Amo, whom the Herald's opposition to McCune had sent to Washington, camo to depend on Ids In fluence for rcnomluatlon, nor did tho realization that the editor of the Car low County Herald had come to be Mediae's successor as political dicta tor produce u perceptibly enlivening ef fect upon the young man. The years drifted very slowly, and to him it seem ed that they went by while he stood far aside and could not even see them move. He. did not consider the life he led an exciting one, but the other citi zens of Carlow did when he undertook a war against the Whl(e Caps, deni zens of Six Crossroads, seven miles west of Piattvllle. The natives were much more afraid of the White Caps than he was. They knew more about them and understood them better than be did. . There was no thought of the people of the Crossroads in Ids uiliid as he sat on the snake fence staring at the little smoky shadow dance on the white road In the June sunshine. On the contrary, he was occupied with the realization that there had been a man Iu his class itsmidCOj in stamps, and it will bo for at college whose ambition needed no winded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co, restraint, bis promise was so great in yt Luuis Mo. .the strong belief of tho university, a be- ' ' lief ho could not help knowii.g-and UIIBUMATI8M uiiui) in a DAY. that seven years to a day from his com- n , , , ' ' mencement this man was sitting on a "J"1"0 c,,ro for ' and Kouralgia fence rail In Indiana. J radically curcHlul to sdnys. IU action upou Down the piko a buggy camo creak- tho ayntt-m U remarkable and myatorfoiiH, It lng toward him, gray With dust, old removes at onco tho eausp and the dlet-aso Inl and frayed like tho fat, shaggy gray mCdlaioly dUappcnrs. The flmt dose greatljr mare that drew It, her unchecked, de- bonoum. 7ft cent and It.oo. Sold byU.lt eppndent head lowering .before hnr, Thousands HaYO Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it How To Find Out. Till a bottle nr common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four bouts ; iiscduncnlorKcl tlingindicatesnu unhealthy con dition of the kid neys: if it stain- your linen ilis evidence of kid ney trouble ; tow frequent dcsiie to pass it or miu iu the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys mid bladder are out of order. "What To no. There is comfort in the knowledge w often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's ' Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, and scalding pain in passing it, or bail elTccts following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes Unit unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go oftjin during the day, and to get up niauy times during the night. '1 he mild arid the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most dis tressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drilg I'istsiu fifty-cent and one-dollar st.es. ' You may have a sample bottle and a book that tells an about it, both sent free bv mail. Address Dr. I'ilmer & Co., lltng- hainton, N. Y. When itomoof Hwnmivnoot. writing mention Ibis paper and don'L make any mistake, but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Hinghainton, N. Y. whlTe her Incongruous fall waved In cessantly, like the banner of a storming party. The editor did not hear the flop of the mare's hoofs nor the sound of the wheels, so deep was his rev erie, till the vehicle was nearly oppo site him. The red faced and perspir ing driver drew rein, ami the Journal ist looked up and waved a long white hand to him hi greeting. "Howdy" do, Mr. llurkless?" called the man In the buggy. "Soakin in the weather?" lie spoke hi shouts, thougk neither was hard of hearing. "Yes, Just soaking," answered Hark less. "It's such a gypsy diiy. How to Mr. Bowlder?" "I'm glvln' good satisfaction, thank you, ami all at home. fih&H In town." 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Thai this kind f a news paper is popular is proven by tho fact that the Weekly Blade now has over 170,000 yearly subseribeis, mid is cir culated in nil parts of (lie U. S. In ad dition to the news, tho Blade, publishes short and serial stories and tunny de partments of matter suited to every member of tho family. Ono dollar a year. Write for free specimen copy. Address THE BLADE. Toledo, Ohio. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Itching, blind, bleoiling or protrud ing Piles. Driiguhiri rulutid inonoy if lV.o Ointment fails to euro any case,, no miiUor of how long standing, iu G to- M days. First application gives ease and rest. DOc. If your druiigiht hasn't Gnco Diugtcut. Hod cloud fulfills everv wish in cuciiuirjiuuiiiimniii, pain in the mck, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of tlfe Miliary' passage, it .irr.ii iimliilitv to hold water .. ... r. -A 9J L .bi? k t. ' & JVJ ijJ'f .tfMcjl!w(iiii V .. ... - -I'' timriudBgi iWrfiiBifcMpg--:, , a ?Mim .tsKZJ