6 THE VILLAGE STREET. People say the street was run Long before a house was done. With a tinkle, tatikle, tinkle, Kre 'U" vesper stars did twinkle. Or trie night dews 'gan to sprinkle Thirsty grasses sweet, I'pward from the velvet meadows, Homeward through the growing shadows, Came the cattle's feet, And the path where they would wander, Winding here and wheeling yonder— That is now the street. That was years ugo, they say, Hut it runs the same to-day— By tiie clanging smithy sweeping. Past the gray church pillars creeping, Widening like a white pool sleeping Round the hitching poles Where the sunburned farmers dicker And old Hiss and Dapple whicker To their truant foals— Thence it passes downward swerving Toward the whisp'ring willows curving Where the river rolls. Changes come hut slowly here— One may see, this very year, As of old. a grandamc riding. To the stile her sorrel guiding. In her level basket hiding Homely golden store. And her newly-starched sunbonnet Has a small blue iigure on it, As had those of yore; Quaint is she, but wholly human, Like :t sweet, old-fashioned woman, Hack in fifty-four. More than careless eye may meet Visits in this quiet street- Here are dreams in open daytime, Visions out of vanished playtime, Youth and joy and budding Mayttme, Wo had fancied done: Yonder shouting barefoot lusty, Paddling down the roadway dusty. Little thinks of one Par away, who drops his trouble, And, in dreams, the barefoot's double, Shares Ills foolish fun. Aye, a-many ghosts go down This dim street of Haunted Town- Hearts that far a-fleld were roaming Hither turn them in the gloaming, Like the white-winged pigeons homing, Now no more to stray; And if longing could unravel Knitted life, and pilgrims travel Paths of yesterday. We, too, o'er the faded meadows. Homeward through the lonely shadows. Glad would wend our way. —William Hervey Woods, in Youth's Companion. Scoundrels la Co. 112 ByCOULSON KERNAHAN Author ol "Captain Shannon," "A Book oi I Strange Sins," "A Dead Man's Diary," Etc. Copyright, 1899, by Herbert S. Stone & Co. CHAPTER XXV. SCOUNDRELS AND COMPANY. I did think it over, with the result that when I sauntered up to the book stall at St. Paucras on the following morning, the button-hole of my tweed jacket was made gay by a spring of led geranium. Number Two looked approvingly at it, as he gave me "Good-morning," and Hubbock's little eyes leered meaningly at mine as lie complimented me obse quiously on"the lovely flower" I was wearing. A handsome tip to the guard hav ing secured a lirst-class carriage to ourselves, Number Two came to the l»oint as soon as the train was begin ning to move out of the station. "My friends," he said, "I have been through the accounts to-day, and I'm sorry to say there is a big falling off in subscriptions. The loss of that £5,000 may have done us harm in the way of shaking public confidence, but on the other hand if we had succeeded in our attempt upon Lord Cranthorpe's house, tir if I had not failed in my jubilee scheme, or Hubbock in his Ishmael club programme, I believe that our finances would have been as flourishing as ever. But we haven't much time to spare this morning, and the immedi ate question before us is, 'How are we to retrieve our position?' One big blow at tiie authorities will turn the tide in our favor again and bring the coin in. But this time we mustn't fail, and it seems to me that the only way to insure success is to back more horses than one. I have a plan for bringing off four different 'events' on the same evening. One or more may fall through, but if we have four run ning, we are bound to get home with at least one. If we should be so lucky as to bring off two or three, we shall have all the more reason to congratu late ourselves, for every extra score will mean extra coin in the way of subscriptions. But if only one out of the lot proves a winner, we shall at least feel, and shall make the public teel, that we have done something for our money. Here's my scheme. I have enough dynmiite still in hand to effect four big explosions. There is enough really for twice that number, but I want the explosion to be the sort of thing to set all London rattling, and I propose to double the quantity of the stuff. The next question is, 'What shall we blow up?' Well, my idea is that we have a go at New Scotland yard and three of the prisons, Hollo way, Newgate and Pentonville. I pro mise doing tiie business in this way. The infernal machines will be rather heavy, and not at £.l! convenient things to cart about London; so I vote that we engage a private brougham for the evening. One of us will have to be driver, and each of the other four will have to be answerable for an infernal machine, and for placing it where it can do the greatest amount of damage to the building which lias been as signed to him. I'll take New Scot land yard myself, as the most danger ous, and you can settle it among your selves who shall be driver and who shall take the other places. The driver will pick the four of us up at points we can settle on, and when the circle's complete he will drive to Holloway, dropping tiie first man with the box uul.ov.'.sy a bj w.u.-U i ihmu the infernal machine, at the most con venient spot, and picking him up again, after the thing has been placed and the fuse ignited. By that means the dynamiter can get clean away from the neighborhood some time before the explosion occurs. Then we drive onto Pentonville to do ditto there. ; Thenco to Newgate, and after that to Scotland yard. There will be no cab- j man to come forward with evidence about their fares and where they got i in and out. I think the risks will be | fairly distributed. Perhaps the driver's j got the best, of it, as he hasn't got to place and light i lie machines; but on the other hand he must undertake to procure the carriage, and unless he can contrive to steal it, there is al ways the chance of the police getting wind of the way the thing has been i done, in which case his identity will be the clew they'll have to work upon, and he will be the first man they'll look for. Well, are you 'on' for my ! scheme or 'off?' Please yourselves. ' Hubbock's with me, 1 know, but what I do you other three say?" The other three assenting, Number j Two went on: "That's all right. Now j Ju H iK STALL. the next question is not, 'Who killed Cock Robin?' but, 'Who'll drive the cab?' I'd rather it were one of you three, for 1 want Hubbock to undertake Holloway prison. He knows it well. Too well, don't you, Hubbock? —the inside as well as the out. Can you drive, Number Four?" "I'd rather not, unless I must," was the reply. "I don't suppose it will be a case of 'needs must,' though it will be 'the ! devil driving,' " laughed Number Two. "What about you, Number Six? Can you handle the ribbons?" "No, I can't drive at all," responded the councillor addressed. "H'tn! Your education's being neg- j lected. How about you, Number ! Seven?" "I'll drive," I replied, promptly; "I'm ; quite at home at it, and I know London well." "Capital. That will do, then. Now , to settle the other preliminaries." The details of these "other prelim- j inaries" may be spared the reader. Before the train reached Southend everything was settled —the day, or : rather night, for the series of explo- j sious fixed, and the time and place of meeting. ♦ ****** It was nearing 11 o'clock as, with all my villainous crew inside, I whipped up the horses as we ap proached the gray wails of Holloway j prison. My. instructions were to pass the main entrance at a slow trot, and to pull up sharp when I heard Number Two tap twice at the carriage window. Outside tiie entrance a man was stand- j ing. His attitude was that of a lounger, but the queer way in which 1 he looked up and down the road, every now and then, belied the indolent air ; he bad assumed, and as we trundled | towards him. he started, took a step forward, and then, as if recollecting himself, stopped short, and stood stiff and still like a well-trained setter at sight of a bird. I felt that the man's eyes were upon me and upon the car riage, and raised my whip to lash the horses, lie saw the action and snapped j out the word, "Now," like an officer giving the word of command, and the j next instant we were level with 1 lie ! entrance. Jerking my right rein vio- i lenity, I switched the horses round at right angles, whipping them up merci lessly meanwhile, and dashed into the prison yard at a gallop. As the ponderous gates swung to be hind us, Hall, followed by Hubbock, leapt out, but, almost as their feet touched ground, the black shadows on j either side swarmed suddenly into men, who had seized and secured the four conspirators before the echoing clang of the closing gates had died away. The psychological moment for which I had waited so long had come. "What does this mean, Number Sev en?" hissed the now handcuffed Num ber Two as I got down from the box. "It means," I said, "that I have been a spy upon you all along, and that I told the governor of the goal why we were coming here to-night, and ar ranged with him that the waving of my whip should be the signal for the gates to open." "My God!" lie said, quietly, "and I mistook you for a gentleman." * * * * • * * The case lias not come on for trial yet, as the police are completing their investigations and their chain of evi dence. They tell me that what I know against the conspirators is but dust in the balance compared tot lie calen dar of crime of which the syndicate lias been guilty, and that, in effecting the arrest of Number Two, I have been instrumental in bringing to jus tice one of the greatest criminals of modern times. All the same, I do not feel very proud of my share in the matter. ITIIE li.s'D.l CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, "904 A COLLAPSIBLE STRETCHER. De3igned by a Swiss Inventor for the Comfortable Conveyance of Wounded Soldiers. "In time of peace prepare for war" is a motto which lias been quoted to na tions time out of mind, and has likewise been profited by, as witness the action of our sailors in their engagements a few years ago. Their marksmanship and dis cipline stood them in good stead when the hour of trial came, and possibly the result might have been different, or the struggle at. least prolonged, had the ene my also profited by the above good ad vice. It has been said that Japan went to war with China simply to secure the discipline and training necessary for the impending conflict with ltussia, which is but another example of a nation profit ing by the motto, though admittedly pe culiar in the manner in which it was carried out. But nations are not alone in heeding this admonition. The inventor has taken it upon himself at all time to strive for the improvement and advance ment of all that goes to make war terri ble, from the ship-burning mirror of Archimedes to the rapid-fire gun of the modern inventor. But if war has been made more horrible, the hospital equip ment has in a measure kept pace with it from the humane point of view, until the sick or wounded men can now be proper ly cared for until claimed by the grim reaper or restored to health, with the chances more in favor of the latter out- SW'lss INVENTOR'S IDEA. Rome than they were even a few years ago. In the matter of stretchers for car rying the wounded from the field of bat tle, the hospital corps may be interested in the idea of a Swiss inventor, as here illustrated. It consists principally of a set of lazytongs, with a canvas cloth ex tending from head to foot when the stretcher is extended. It will be noticed that the handles by which the carrier is lifted are attached to the lower section of the folding frame, serving to fold the stretcher when they are turned down against the legs, and to extend it. when in position to carry a wounded soldier off the field. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Sun Spots and Hainfall. The most obvious changes on the sun are those marked by spots, and it lias been long understood that the cycle of 11 years in which these spots occur, corresponds to a similar cycle in rain fall on the earth. More recent study of solar influence, says Lockyer, show that it is the prominence instead of the spots that are chieliy associated with atmos pheric and magnetic disturbances on the earth. The prominence cycle of 3.7 years is especially conspicuous in the meteorology of India, while a third cycle—3s years in length—has been traced recently in the climates of the whole earth, each 11-year cycle being different from that ii®mediately preced ing and that following. Tight-Rope Scorching: A Perilous IN AN article on "Perilous Public | Performances," an English maga- j zine, the Royal, describes the fol lowing: The incessant demand for novelty has led Edward Doan, a tight-rope ; walker, to perform his usual clever [ act under circumstances distinctly original and exceedingly dangerous. A wire is stretched on poles across 1 a motor-car. And on this Edward Doan goes through many clever evo lutions —while the car is moving at high speed! First it races around a track, 1 Doan's body bending in at an alarming angle in order to keep his balance; tiic 11 v.p a 3leep iaclmo, to da-ih down ( RAISING BIG BRICK HOUSE. This Undertaking Was Accomplished Without Breaking Even a Sin gle Pane of Glass. The picture is taken from the En gineering Record. This brick building was raised straight in the air ICO feet and then moved 300 feet along the top of the bluff without breaking windows or cracking the walls. The picture shows the building at the top of its lift. Tlie main sills were jacked up to lift the building clear of the foundations, which were then removed and the ground leveled to receive lines of cribbing under each of the main sills. Each line of crib bing was located on the center of the sill, and consisted of a continuous row of cribs made of six by eight-inch tim bers about 3*6 feet long. The bases of LIFTED OXE HUNDRED FEET. the separate groups were made horizon tal, but at regular heights, offset to cor : respond with the surface of the ground, j There were in all eight lines of crib ! bing perpendicular to the face of the j cliff, one under each main sill. Two 1 lines of cribs supported each end wall | of the main part of the house. Two more | lines were spaced at equal distances be tween them and two carried the end and center of the wing. About 300 five-ton jacks were set under the sills bearing on the second course from the top of the cribbing. These were divided into 30 groups of from eight to 12 each, from three to five groups being located under each sill. At a signal given by blowing a whistle, one man started at the end of each group and gave each jack in suc cession one-half turn. After all the groups had been turned, another signal was given and the men returned to the starting points, screwing each jack another half turn, and so on back and forth, simultaneously screwing the jacks so as to raise the building uni formly about one-half inch at each round trip. The building was thus raised about 14 inches ia less than two hours. A new course of cribbing timber was then laid in the space between the last course and the sills, and the jacks were simultane ously slacked off sufficiently to lower the sills to bearing on it. The jacks were then screwed down, set one course high er, the building raised another 14 inches, and so on. As the building was raised the lines of cribbing were ex tended so as always to reach beyond it to the gradually receding face of the cliff where new cribs were started on successive footings leveled to receive them. In every eighth or tenth course longitudinal timbers 20 or 30 feet long were used to bind the cribs of each line together, and the next course above them usually contained several long transverse timbers reaching through, and built into the next line of cribs to bind the two together and insure their lateral stability. l on the other side and swerve sharply I to the left; and all the time Doan | kneels, dances, stands on one leg, while i every moment, the audience look to see him dashed to the ground—truly a ; perilous display of reckless daring. The "thrill artist" does not always bring off his feat. A Prof. Leon tried j to astonish the natives and visitors by an attempt to ride a bicycle down the steep water-chute at the Cork ex- I hibition. Before he had traveled very I far, however, something weu.t wrong. ! The bicycle began to wobble, and in a ! moment the professor was thrown heavily from the machine, and traveled alone down the chute for the rest of tho , journey. Miss how she was cured' of Fallopian and Ovarian Inflammation— and escaped an awful operation by using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound "T)EAR MRS. PIXKHAM: —I suffered for four years with what tho doctors called Salpingitis (inflammation of the fallopian tubes) and ova ritis, which are most distressing and painful ailments, ati'ecting all the surrounding parts, undermining the constitution, and sapping the life forces. If you had seen me a year ago, before I began taking Lydia E. 11 ms Vegetable Compound, and had noticed the sunken eyes sallow complexion,and general emaciated condition, and compared that person with me as I am today, robust, hearty and well, you would not wonder that I feci thankful to you and your wonderful medicine which restored me to new life and health in live months, and saved me from an awful operation." —Miss IIIENE ILU'UOOD, 1022 Sandwich St- Windsor, Ont. ' Ovaritis or inflammation of the ovaries or fallopian tubes which adjoin the ovaries may result from sudden stopping of the monthly flow, from inflamma tion of the womb, and many other causes. The slightest indication of trouble with the ovaries, indicated by dull throbbing pain in the side, accompanied by heat and shooting pains, should claim your instant attention. It will not cure itself, aud a hospital operation, with all its terrors, may easily result from neglect. "DEAR MRS. PIXKHAM : I can truly say that you have saved my life, and I cannot express my gratitude to you in words. " Before I wrote to you telling how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady and spent lots of money in medicine besides, but it all failed to do me any good. My menses did not appear in that time, and -Msf I suffered much pain. I would daily have sf&l fainting spells, headache, backache and bearing down pain, and was so weak that MS to was hard for me to do my work. " I used your medicine and treatment wi $W as directed, and after taking three bottles Ulsi & » - of Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Corn «y igp pound, menses appeared, my womb trou pf bles left me, and I have been regular ever since. I used fourteen bottles of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable ** Compound and Elood Purifier " S together, and am now restored to //. 112 perfect health. Had it not been for you, I would have been in my grave. "I will always recommend your wonderful remedies, and hope that these few lines may lead others who suffer as I did to try your remedies." — MRS. T. C. WILLADSEN, 11. R. No. 1, Manning, lowa. Such unquestionable testimony proves the power of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound over diseases of women. Women should remember that they are privileged to consult Mrs. Pinkkam at Lynn, Mass., about their illness, entirely free. 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