Newspaper Page Text
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fHE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
VOL-. XIV.
A LOST DIAMOND.
“And it was the most beautiful
stone that I ever saw in a finger
ring’. None of those paltry things
V oii can’t wear till candle light on
account of the yellow there is in
their.. So white, so clear, so brils
liant, pellucid as a water drop and
sparkling as n star! It was all but
big enough, too, to have a name of
its own, like those that the royal
diamonds have—“ Star of the Four
Points of the Compass,’ 'Light of
the World to Come,” ‘Glory of
the Middle of the Earth,’ ‘Mother
of tlie Moon.’ “Why under the
sun,” cried Mis. Torrance, the
pretty creature in a bewitching
gown, pouring coffee for her hus
band, the little butler having been
dismissed by Mr. Torrance—in
fear of the wiath to come, perhaps
—-“shouldn’t our diamonds have
names as well as those of kings
mid queens and—”
“Yours ought to have one/’ said
her husband, quietly. “It would
be suitable to call now; it’s in the
vocative yon know.”
“Well, I must say I don’t believe
any man was ever so undisturbed
.by the loss of such a thing as that.
Archibald, that stone was worTlTa
thousand dollars.”
* A **•** i y
“Reauy I ought to be aware of
the fact, dear, if anybody is. Y'ou
have offered to sell it and procure
that sum for my necessities evety
time. I have been hard up since ":e
married. And if I have Mildred
arrested for its theft, as you sug
gest, it will cost another ihonasnd
Exjfore we are done with it. Fgf
die would certainty be proved in
nocent, and then a libel suit would
be the the next in order.”
“But, Aichy, Mildred can’t be
proved innocent.' How can sko bp,
when I know she took it? And
theie was no mrc else to take it.”
And Mrs. Torrance paused with
snspcndqc.up, her great wonder
ing eyes, searching space for a re
ply. “If ever anything lay in a
straight line, it is the evidence
against that girl,” she continued.
“The other day when the ring fell
on the floor she was in the room,
and she asked me what a stone like
that was worth, and then gave such
a sigh that I said, ‘J suppose you
think it’s wrong for mo to wear a
thousand dollars on my finger?’
And she said, ‘I wasn’t thinking of
the ling; 1 was only thinking that
a thousand dollars can do a great
deal of good—in looking pretty on
my hand.” Indeed it does look
beautifully there,’ said she—she’s
very particular about the adverbs;
I wish she was about her catechism
—‘but a good deed done by a httud
is its most beautiful jewel to my
thinking.’ Just hear that! (Io her
mistress! Are you through? Why,
I’ve only just begun.”
“She is quite a missionary," said
Mr. Torrance picking up his news
paper. “And the worst of it is, xhp
is right.’’
“Now, Archibald, don’t for mer
cy’s sake, go to reading!” Baid his
wife.” “Ido think the morning
news might wait for once. It’s
nothing but dynamiters blowing
up the British empire, and Arabs
making mummies of the British
pXny—all abstractions; but my
ring is something positive, tangible,
hole at hand."
‘‘l wish it were!” said Mr. Tor
rance. “And then 1 could be al
lowed—” But as he glanced at
the lovely creature opposite, with
her reproachful brown eyes in
which stood two tears as big as the
diamond she had lost, her color
going and coming with her breath
as you might say, and the rose
colored ribbons of her morning cap
all a-flutter with her earnestness,
he folded his paper, and said,
“Well my dear?”
“Well, my dear!’ mimicked Mrs
Torrance, in derision. “I should
say its, any thing but well when U
man heays of a servant insulting—-
actually insulting—his wife, and
Bays she’s in the right.”
“Now, Janet, I will submit if to
your own judgement, if that’s a
fair interpretation.”
“You needn’t do anything of the
BOi t. It isn’t .fair to suppose I
have any judgment, if what 1 say
concerning Mildred—perfectly rid
iculous cognomen. Whoever
heard of Mildred for a servant’s
name?”
“Why not Mildred?’’
Wliy not Gwendoline, then, or,
Fredegonde, or Thusnelda? How
would it seem to be telling Gladys
to brush the dust off my shoes?
And Mildred is just as bad. If I
had my way all the cooks should
be Noras, and all the second girls
should be Ellens, and if they came
from England, then they should be
Elizas and Mary Anns, and it
wouldn’t sound as if yon were ta
king a liberty with your superiors
when your own name is just plain
Jane. I ought to have been Ros
amond myself, you know,” said
Mrs. Torrance, absently, twirling
the grounds in her’cup,” or Kath
erine, or Eloise, or something.—
But I’m &ure I have trouble enough
with these people without being
troubled with their names, And I
don’t believe her name is Mildred,
anyway. I believe it’s just plain
Martha, and she took the Mildred.
If sho took my diamond, she
wouldn’t stop at taking 4 name.—
Or maybe it was just Milly—”
And here Mrs. Torrance paused,
not for breath, but in amazement
to see her husband’s eyes twinkle,
and he himself lie back in his chair,
gs he pushed hjs plate away, with
a laugh he ppuld repress no lon
ger.
“If she took your diamond. —
Well, my darling, lam glad you
liavc arrived at the diamond once
more. 1 began tp think it had
been lost again. But don’t toll mu
about the inconsequence of a wo
man’s mind. Its workings are la
byrinthine, but the thought always
coinei at the place it went in.
Now, let us be ou£iii£§s )ike, if we
can. Janet. What makes you think
that this pretty Mildred of ours
took the Jip.mond?”
“Pretty Mildred! Weii, perhaps
because she is pretty,” said Mrs-
Torrance, looking like a satirical
sparrow/,
“Not at all impossfi/e* said her
husband, gravely.
“You don’t mean to imply that
I would denounce a person as a
thief because yo*t s#jd she was
pretty?” cried Mrs. Torrance, injf
rjsjng to her feet. I’ve as good a
mind to the table as ever I
had to eat. 1 would, if the buck
wheat cakes had come up.”
“My dear child!” *
“Vou. treat me exactly as if I
were a child,” crie4 the outraged
wife. “What do I care whether
jny maid is pretty or not? Being
pretty, apparently, doesn't keep hei
hands from picking ami stealing. I
know she stole my diamond just as
well as if I had seen her do it!"
“But what would she do with
it!”
“AVhat a question? As if that
sort of person didn't kqow where
to dispose of things easily and
take care of the proceeds! I won
der if Patricia is never going to
send those cakes up--”
“How in the world did our cook
come to be called Patricia?”
“I called her so myself when she
came. Iler own name was Han
nah, :i combination of soun is I
utterly detest, and wasn’t going to
have ringing in my ears all the
time. And she is so tall and erect
she justifies Patricia. Don’t think
so?"
“All right,” said Mr. Torrance,
thinking it best to make no refer*
ence to the Noras of a few minutes
since. “But we were speaking of
Mildred.’’
“I did think very well of Mil
dred, I will confess before this."
said Mrs. Torrance, with iudicial
calmness. .‘Sue is educating her
sister, who has a voire—such g. :
voice! —for a churcji sing**’, when
she will have a sal-.iry that will be
wealth to them, and give some les
sons beside. And she was wrapped
up in her, And I took an interest
in them myself, and gave her a silk
dre-s to make over, and got a new
clonk that I really didn’t need, so
as to give her my old one (and 1
_ Georgia, September,, IRBS . *
Ba s she had the good taste to take
off isomc of the trimming), an d lot.
of my old mus | c . And out of her
own wages Mildred has to hire a
room and a piano and pay for her
lessons: somebody gives her Jier
Loaitl till she can pay the debt, and
it takes every cent Mildred earns;
and you see it is quite natural that
she should look a I tout her to find
vhi ie she can turn a penny—”
“Ab honest penny,” said Mr-
Toi ratice. "A girl whois doing
that for another is not one that
wouk be likely to turn any other
sort ofpennv.”
Hotv you do love to interrupt
me, M’. Torrance! It really seems
as if yea couldn’t bear the sound
of my voice! I was going on to
say, before you took the words out
of my Month, that recently this
sister of hers lias been advised to
take lessons of another master, who
asks all creation, but is really
worth it. And he says he can
make hei voice a fortune to her.—
And they have been dreadfully
cast down because they couldn't do
ii. And now you see wnere the
diamond comes in. If she can get
foi that stone any thing near its
value, her sister Mabel can take
her lessons. And her voice is de
licious— just perfectly delicious!”
exclaimed Mrs. Torrance, forgets
ting the diamond again. “Mildred
had her come here and sing to me.
And 1 can’t describe to you. I
never heard a lark or a nighten
gale, but a bobolink isn’t a whistle
to it, A l]ntej a trumppt—well it
was sweet and satisfying and pene
trating as theiodor of some flower,
and yet soft ns the velvet side of
the petal of thp fiower. Angers
would sing so, maybe, if there are
any. And I was just carried away.
I forgot all abput her sister’s being
my maid. I cried and I laughed,
and I felt as if I had found her.—
4 nt ’ fl!??’ ’ solemnly tell you.
Archy dear —she bent across
the pretty china service, transfixing
him with her radiant eyes—“l look
ed at my ring, and I turned it and
turned it, and I said to myself I
have had the good of it ever since
Grandfather De Peyser gave it to
jpe, and everybody knew I had it,
andjny position was pretty wpl|
established, diamond rings or not,
and when you were able to afford
a real grown up butler, you would
probably gpt me plenty; and if 1
sold it now, and gave this poor
dear girl the money to secure a
career, what a blessing it
would be to iiei, and what a joy I ;
would be giving to the world in her. ,
too; for of course she wouldn’t be i
confined to a ch.irch choir in that <
and if she yere, iu what a heavenly
fashion could those tones of hers i
swim out over 'a piayerfnl audis i
epee, apd just take the prayer qq
their silvery and lead it 1
up, up; and anybody who is the <
means of producing more of them <
and so brings do wn the prim a don- :
no in the market, is a pqbljc bene
factor, to be sure, anyway; and I <
was just on the point of saying that :
I would speak to you, and jf you ]
approved, as f knew you would, I <
could have a thousand dollars, or
thereabouts for them to-day, when 1
Mrs. Veasey happened, in, and so, ;
as I didn't want Mrs. Veasey to '
know anything about h\ and be I
taking the wind all out of my sails, 1
I just told Mabel to coma again '
to-day and I would have something
further to say to her! And so I f
shall!" cried Mrs. Torrance, taking >
breath with renewed vigor. I shall .
have to tell her that her sister has (
been arrested for a thief, and she '
may go sing to her in prison.” (
“Out robbery is a very harsh ]
term, Janet darling, when careless 1
ness may be the whole thing.’’ 1
“There it is again. My careless- .
boss, not their dishonesty. AV hen '
I Wont eo the washstand I turned [
the ring on inv finger again, and 1
there was the stone gone,”
“And how many ti?ces have I |
told you that the crcless habit of 1
washing your hands in your rings ■
wears off in fin? tesmal fractions of 1
the gold till the stones a ;, e loosened (
in the Getting, and drop out with*!
out your being aware of it.” <
ou are always so wi.-e after
the act ! How do you know I
wasn’t going to take my rings off*
You are so ready to find mo
fault! But I thought at first the
stone must have washed*ont—
“So it seems yon did y< nr
hands with the ring on?” Miid
the turning worm.
“Yes, I did. There! And J sent
for tnc plumber immediately, fo*r 1
knew if it had washed ont, it must
have caught in the first trap and
he took up the pipe, but it wasn’t
there. /Ynd he said if ho made a
real job of it, and down to the
main something, he might rind it
there; but I thought that would
cost more than the diamond itself
n
■“Wise woman," groaned Mr.
Torrance.
“And so, yo sec, I didn’t accuse
Mildred in the first place. I'
searched, and took every precau
tion. I didn t think of such a thing
till I saw her stand there turning
o
more colors than the lady in the
lobster—”
“Yon don’t say that you really
have accused her?”
“Well, what if I have? I must
lose my diamond that my dear
grandfather gave me when I was
married, and that I treasured so,
and endure it all in silence for fear
some little hussy’s feelings will be
hurt! My feelings are of no con
sequence at all! It isn’t to be
reckoned to my account that I was
ready to give her the
and I loye fliamonda, I don’t think
there’s anything so beautiful in the
whole world.”
“But, Janet, you arc always go
positive, 5 ’
“How can yon say so? What am
I ever positive about? You would
not have me distrust the evidence
of my senses? And if I ever saw
guilt on any face—
“ There is m/tbiug more fallible
than the evidence of your senses?”
“I beg your pardon. I can see
as far, and can hear as quickly,
and taste a§ fieenfy as any one alive.
And for you to try t"> run down
my eyes now—perhaps they are
not so bright as they have been—
but I never thought— to hear yoq
twitting me of growing old—in
this way. all of a sudden,’’ (trying
hard to swallow her sobs) —“bes
cause —you’re interested—in—my
servant
“For iicavcn 2 s sake, Janet think
what you're saying!”
“I do think what lam saying,”
she cried then, in a fury. “A n d f
whatever the evidence of my
senses may be, I havp every evi
dence that you care nothing at all
for my fpelings* ;pid can see me
robbed without lifting your voice,
and-—and—oh, a husband t-Q
Igyp l|i. wife, and protect liej-j and
take her part.” And l’e re j^ rg
Janet r«^ e hurriedly and pushed
(>ver her chair; an | was running
from the youm,
But Mr. Torrance was not to be
outdone by any such sleight of foot
and hud caught her in his arms be*
tore she reached the door. “And
do you think,” he exclaimed, “that
I don’t love you, you abominable
little mass of contradictions? Do
you suppose that 1 won’t protect
you with my life itself? Do you
fancy for a moment that I won't
take your part, when you decide
what your part is?"
“Let me go! Ix-t me go, sir?”
she exclaimed. “Or else at any
rate, let me find my handkerchief.
And she struggled for her hanker
chief. that the kisses her husband
gave her might not be too salt, and
pulling it from her pocket, some
thing in a great arc and stream of
lustre whirled out with the violen*
tly wrenched hankerchief, sailed
through the air like nothing so
much as a flying rainbow, and fell
at her feet.
It was the lost diamond.
Mrs. Torrance stopped in the
midst of her tears, blushing dis
heveled, as pretty a sight as a rose
bush in a shower, and held back
herskirts with both hands while she
looked at the great shining eye there
liefore her on the carpet. “The hor
rid thing!” she said. “The horrid
unwinking, accusing thing! It is
calling me all sorts of names.
I shall never want to see it again.
Only think if I had denounced
f l I had on this very gown when
J Mre. Veasey was In. Hx»w stu
pid of me. Now, 81l take this
‘ | dowe to a diaifond broker’s to-day,
I ftnd, Mikl red’s Mabel shall have
* l‘Ci • thousand dollars’ worth of
lessors. I dare say she’ll sing at
our parties by-and by. She’ll be
j our particniar prima donua.-
I And by that time I shall have im
t proved Mildred into a companion,
j Oh, I should think yon would de
spise such a ridiculous, wicked
I littlo wife as I am!" she cried turn
ing to her husband. “You ought
Ito have married a saint. What a
good man yon are, Aichy!”
“My dear,” said Mr. Archy,
“life with any other woman who
didn't arrange these little circuses
for my morning entertainment
would be too stale, flat, aud unprof
itable to dud u re. I should run
away from the saint, and take to
the flying trapeze and won.' r —liar- •
per's Bazaar. X-
AN IRISHMAN’S : LOVjS-MA4<(s|Cr, (
I
The Rehson Mrs- Maguire Wantcj '
Ret Donovan Fumsh£d.. f *
Chicago Ledger.
You say this man has ugwi ’ ,Jk- 1
ing love to your daughter, Jiri.- ‘
Maguire?”
“I doj soi.”
“And that he has ag gtnxl A
asked hcrla marry him?”
Jo, ;
“On what do you base your cm
jecture?”
“Is your honor spakit ’ tc n. ,
S('l
“Yes; on what do you ton id
your surmise?”
“She’s an honest gerrel, yer hon
or, if I do say it mcself that’s her
mither,”
“Yes—but why do you conclude
that he Las been making love to
her?”
“Sure, an’ didn’t she till me so
bersilf, yer honor?”
“What she told yofi is .not evi
dence to the court, Yon must tell
only what yon know to be so of
your own personal knowledge. Did
you hear him make love to her?”
“No sor.”
“Did you see him?”
“An fhat‘s that, yer honor?”
“Did yon see him kiss hey?-’
“Devil flip wanst, yer honor.—
Let me see the loikes av that, and
sorry the bhone he’d have in his
body, barin’ the wans that,
broke, sor.”
v.Did yo sec him embrace her?”
“An’ fhat‘s that sor?”
“Did he ever hug her in your
presence?”
(‘Mary Ann?”
“Yes.”
“Himsilf, sor?”
‘A QS, Did he ever hug her to
your kgowedge?”
“To me face SQi’f 5
“Yes: in your
r ,2 ’ - presence?
“In ,
..ie own shanty, are ye man
in’, sor?”
“Certainly—to be sure. There
or anywhere else when you were
by.”
“Mesilf, sor?”
“Yes. Has he ever hugged her
before your eyes?”
“Whin I was lookin’, sor?”
“To be sure, woman. Answer
promptly, and don’t take up the
time of the court. Has this man
ever hugged your daughter when
yon were present?”
“An’ wide awake, sor?”
“Certainly, ma’am.”
“Don’t you see for yourself, sor,
that his head an’t broke at all, at
all?”
“Yes; but answer the question.”
“Is the hair av him missin’ sor?”
“Did he hug your daughter?”
“Mary Ann, sor?”
“Certainly. Did he hug her?”
“Himself, sor?”
I said so. Why don't
you answer?”
“I did, sor.”
“No you didn’t, and 1 want you
to know without any more beating
around the bush about it. Did he
hug her?"
“An’ where- was 1, sor?”
“That's what I want to know. —
Did you sec him?”
“Did I say so?” •
“Can’t you answer a question?”
“An' why not?"
“Then why don’t yoti do it?”
“When, yer honor?”
| “Now—this minute. Did this
Iman ever bug your daughter with
your ’
“Do ye rfoc the marks av me
finger nails upon him, sor.”
“Can’t you say yes or no?”
“Why shouldn't I, sor?”
"Then in heaven's name why
don't you do it?”
“Fhat, sor?,'
“Did you ever see him hug her?”
“Mary Ann?”
“Didn’t I say so?”
“Sure, an' I don no, sor.”
“Did yon over see him hug Marv
Ann?”
“Pat Donovan, sir?”
“Yes; did you ever se Pat Dono
van hug Mary Ann?”
“An shat would 1 be doin’, sir?”
“Did you ever see him hug her?”
’* “Av coorse not, sor”
“Then why didn’t you say so
long ago, and save all this non*
“I did, sor. Ye said ycrsclf, sor,
ye wouldn’t see so much as the
mark av a finger upon him, an’ I
tould ye wid me own tongue that
n i
“Well, never mind that now—
How do you know he made love to
her then?”’
“Don't you see for yerself, yer
honor, that, the besht pairt av her
re missin’, sor? ’
I “Well but what ’has that to do
“Tfiat's.the wairk av Fat Dono
|l van,’ yer honor. It was at Kirbey's
wrfkp sor, as he’ll till ye himsilf, if
iie’s the gentleman his faither was
was before him. 1 won‘t sav, sor,
but shat the craythcr got into his
head, yer honor, for sure he vas
full av the same to the very eyes av
him, sor, an’ by that same token
ye‘ll know sor, that Mary Ann
spiled her tathe by the loikes av a
chair leg that was flyin’ about in
the hands av Pat Doonovan, sor,
whin sheintcred Hie roenn, an’ there
ye have it, yar honor, as plain as
the bile on the ind av me nose how
it was sor. An’ now, yer honor, if
he didn‘t loike the gerrel, an’ in
tend to marry her, why did he be
have loike a swateheart at all in
toirely, sor, by putting the weight
of his fisht upon her, yer honor?
Y r is, sor; it‘s braohe av promise, as
yer honor well knows, sor, an’
Mary Ann, the poor, swate gerrel,
will die wid a broken hairt, sor,
anliss yer honor—the kind soul that
ye are — takes pity on the colleen,
an’ makes the bla’gard aither mar
ry her, or rcsthore the lathe at his
own ixpinse, sor.”
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Wagner, the murderer, the first
man hanged in the Ohio peniten
tiary, left a touching temperance
sermon behind. The leaves in his
Bible were turned at every place
where drunkeness was referred to.
It had been the root of all evil to
him, and he seemed to hunt up all
the passages on it.
A hungry man doesn't throw
Bread out of the window because
it isn’t pie.
A dollar decreases in size in the
same ratio that a man’s heart gets
bigger. •
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PROFESSIONAL AND LAW CAMS.
W. C. ADAMSON,
Atto’noy a,t XaA'W*
CARROLLTON. OA.
Proniptlj’ transacts all business confided t«
him.
Holding the office of Judge of the 'City Court
does not interfere’with bls practice tn other
courts. s-ts.
ICe. growT
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.
MONEY loans negotiated on improved larma la
Carroll, Heard, aud Haralson counties, at
reasonable raje*.
Titles to lands examined and abstracts tar
nished.'
Offiiee up-stairs in th house,
33tf Carrolltoa, Ga.
J. W. JONES,
Attorney /xt
JOEL, - - GA.,
14-17-ly, t //
A. J. CAMP,
ZkttOX*XXO3T at
VILLA RICA GA.
WM. C. IIODNETT,
ATTORNE Y-AT-LA W,
VILLA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA
over Dr. Slaughter’s
Diuig store. Prompt attcntic~» •
cn to all business intrusted tc»4» n
W. L. FITTS,
r*3txy«ioia.xx <Aj Hnryftn-n
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA,
Will, at all times, be found at W. W, 2 Fitts’ drag
store, unless professionally absent. 88-ts
W. F. BROWN,
Attorney ZVt Liarv,
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
C. P. GORDON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
CARROLLTON. GEORGIA.
W. W, & G, W. MERRELL,
Atto’ncys atLaw,
GARROLLTON, - - GA.
Records and land titles examined. Will
collect claims, large or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of managing
estate by Executors, Administrators, Gar
dians &c and othe'- business before the Or
dinary. Wil] practice in all the superier
courts of the Coweta circuit, and always at
tend at Haralson court- JPill practice any
where and in any court where clients may
require their services:
DR. D. F. KNOTT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and tenders hie
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
to the citizens of Carrollton ana
vicinity.
Office, Johnson’s Drug Store.
Residence, Seminary street.l-tf.
BARGAIN
IN
AN ORGAN.
We have for saledand can sell for less than tae
tory prices, an ESTEY £ CAMP organ, * ata ya
knee swells, height. 5 feet 11 inches ; width, 4 fert
2 inches , ddpth, 2 feet; weight, boxed, 850 Iba.
This organ is unexcelled tor purity of tone, <■
rability, aud beauty, and is fully warranted fw
five years, Apply at once to J. B. BEALL.
DR. D,W.D OTtSETT
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
TEMPLE, G-A.
Raving permanently located at Temple 1 of«r
my professional services to the eitizcßS of Car
roll and adjoir.iug counties. Special attcatloa to
Obstetrics and diseases of women. Office at
Campbell & Bell's store. All calla promptly aa
gwered day and nght—All night calle anawerod
from B. J. McCain’s residence. I—ly,
Wright s Indiah Vegetable Pills
FOR THE
LIVER
And all Bilious Complaints
Safe to take, being purely vegetable; no art**
u ing. Price 25 cts. AHDruggiato,
FREEI
SELF-CURE
A favorite prescription of one of
most noted and successful specialhts in the
now retired) for the cure of „fni i oire HehfWM.
L>oat Jfan/ioort, WenJcneoo and Vooesw. Befit
® plain sealed envelope /tree. Druggtetacaii
Address DR. WARD & CO., Louisiana, Mas
NO 36.