VOL. Xlll. NEW BLOOMFIELD, IJA.., TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1871). NO. 30. THE TIMES. An Independent Family Newspaper, IB FUBLlflHBD BVBRY TUB8DAT BT F. MORTIMER & (JO. sunscniPTioN piuce, (WITHIN TUB COUBTT.) One Tear II 2 -Six Months TS (OUT 0 THB COUBTT.) One Year, (Postage Included) II M) 6lx Months, (Postage Inuludeu) 85 Invariably in Advance I Advertising rates furnished upon application. For The Bloiihfiri.d Timfs. WIND OF NIGHT. Oh, fuller benediction and delight, How gently, while the unfathoined heavens display Their tires Innumerable, thou lay Thy fingers on my forehead, wind of Night I Through her dim empire, with angelic lllght Thou com'st to me, and for the hurts of day Brlng'st balm, and, "Peace! peace!" thou dost soltly say. And soothed am t In Memory's despite. Murmuring, thou glld'st through odorous.blooiny bowers; Alike thou sway'st o'er lonely graves. And fan'st the fevered cheek and aching brow; Thou slng'st a lullaby to the drowsy flowers, And on the dark stream rotisest the small waves i To all a welcome visitant art thou. IF. L. Shoemaker. TRUST BETRAYED. "D" k ID YOU ever see a sadder face V That, sir,, is Mrs. Colby, and she has a deep trouble. It happened ten years ago, and she lias never gotten over It, and never will ; another case of ' trust betrayed.' " So said mine host of the Bright Star, a neat little inn in one of our thriving towns in Illinois. " Well, sir, ten years ago there was no more sociable fellow, or brighter or neater housewife than Frank Colby and his wife. They lived on the farm then, but have moved to town since their trouble. They never had but two chil dren, Harry and Cora ; but they raised a boy, took him a babe from his dying mother's arms, and done just as good a part by him as by their own son. " They trusted and placed every con fidence in John Williams, who was low-browed and dark complexloned, with eyes that always reminded one of snakes. But Harry Colby was the hand somest and bonniest young fellow you ever saw, and was liked by everybody. " Williams, although respected and trusted, was not a general favorite like Harry. Mr. and Mrs. Colby just idol ized their two children, and although John was fed and clothed as well as their own,yet it was impossible for them to love him as well ; it is not natural. John seemed to resent this, and,as soon as he reached his twenty-first year, he left them, going no one knew where. Mr. Colby gave him a horse, and one hundred dollars In money, before start ing. ' Harry was three years younger than Williams, and was never very strong, like him ; he appeared never to have any taBte for farm work, so his father never pressed him, but Indulged his taste for reading and scribbling. " Williams was absent six years, when he came back on a visit. He had grown into a fine looking man, and the girls around tried to outdo each other in showing him attention and getting up picnics for his enjoyment. 'Harry was ;at home from school, his health being so delicate that his physician advised him to remain out of school and travel. " Cora had graduated the year before, and was a beautiful girl and had a score of admirers ; but John Williams soon cut all the rest out ; her parents liked and trusted hlm and it was a plain case that there would be a wed ding Boon. "After about four weeks' stay Wil liams commenced talking about return ing to Texas, where, he said he had a store in the little town of M and in vited Harry to return with him. He had given such a bright and glowing de scription of Texas, its climate and facil ities for making money, that Harry had been thinking of returning with him before Williams proposed It. "At first Mr. and Mrs. Colby were much opposed to Harry's going; it was such a long way, they said, and he was so delicate. What should be do were he to be taken sick away out there so far from home t "John Williams laughed at their fears and reminded them that Harry was a man now, not a baby,and,as to getting sick, he would grow stronger and stron ger every day he traveled. That It was the very thing for him, riding In a wagon and "camping out;" roughing it a while would do more toward mak ing him a well man than all the medi cine he could take. " Well, they finally consented that he should go. Williams then proposed that Mr. Colby should put in one thousand dollars, and he would furnish a thou sand, and together they would stop at St. Louis and lay in a stock of goods, and convey them in their wngon to Texas; that they should both double their money. , " Mr. Colby objected, saying he would rather Harry would have nothing to bother him, when AVilliams replied that Harry ought to have something to rouse him up; some aim in life; that taking an Interest in his goods would prevent his getting homesick by keep, ing his mind employed. "All this seemed plausible enough,and as Harry seemed anxious to invest in the goods, his father finally gave him the thousand dollars. Ah, sir, If he had but known! But I'll not antici pate. "Although Mrs. Colby gave her con sent to Harry's going, yet it was with very unwilling lingers, and with a heavy heart that she prepared his out fit. Her mother had Bent some flue blue jeans from Kentucky to make a suit of clothes. He never seemed to want it made up before, but now he told his mother that she could make up thehlue jeans for his traveling suit. He had a fancy of having his blue Bult trimmed in brass buttons a very peculiar pat tern, a round button w ith a suake coiled up on top. " Mrs. Colby was a good cook, and she prepared enough of such things as would keep good to last them until they reached St. Louis. " Harry was to drive his own faithful ponies, Mrs. Colby was so scary about horses that she would not permit them to have any others, well knowing those were safe and strong. "It was with many misgivings and gloomy forebodings that the mother saw her loved one drive away ; he looked so handsome and bright In bis blue suit, and bade her good-by with many bright anticipations of future enjoyment. But his gayety and cheerfulness at parting only seemed to make her more gloomy. She could not throw off the deep weight that was pressing on her heart, she had a presentiment that she would never see her boy again. " Cora laughed at her, and pointed out different boys In the neighborhood who had gone away from home, and whose mothers felt the same way when they started, and grieved over them, and thought sure something would happen to them ; but they came back for all that, safe and sound. " But it did no good. Then Cora would try reason her mother out of her gloomy forebodings, telling her there was nothing to harm him. John had come and gone over the route several times and had never been molested ; she would chide her mother for her want of faith in the Great Father, reminding her that He was able, if it was for the best, to bring their loved ones home safely, and they must put their trust in Him who doeth all things well. " The first letter received from Harry was mailed at St. Louis. They made the trip in less time than expected, and had enjoyed the traveling ever so much. They expected to purchase their goods and take a good look at the city before pursuing their journey. " Well, Harry was faithful to write, and letters were received from different towns along the way. " Finally there came one, in a cramp ed hand, saying that they had at last reached M . That he had met with an accident injuring his forefinger nothing very serious, but It was awk ward writing. He was much pleased with the country and hU trip thought it had benefitted) him greatly. He was glad he had brought thq goods along they would keep him employed and he would not have so much time to think of home. " I bare neglected to tell you that the boys were to be gone a year, and at the end of that time, and upon their return, there would be a wedding. John Wil liams was to wed' Cora. He was of good family, and Mr. Colby had raised him, and thought he knew him well, and he would have trusted him with every dollar he had, so great was his confidence. " So the days which dragged so slowly and wearily to Mrs. Colby fairly flew with Cora, who was very happily and busily engaged on her wedding finery, and also getting her things, sheets, pil low cases, and such like, you know, ready for keeping house. " The boys left In the fail, so the win ter passed away, spring came and went, and summer was almost gone, when, one evening, about sunset, the well known ponies were seen coming up the lane. But there was only one man in the wogon, that they could see, and that was John Williams. Almost breathless with excitement Mrs. Colby ran out to meet him, Inquiring for Harry. Wil liams begged her not to be alarmed ; Harry was safe had left him in Mis souri; they had sold their goods sooner than they expected, and had started home. " While coming through Missouri, they passed through a little town, where a herd of cattle was being sold for a mere song ; so they, thinking it was a good investment, bought them, and, as one had to remain with them, Harry had very generously offered to stay while he came on for Cora, when they would relieve him In the spring. " Mrs. Colby did not appear very well pleased over this. She thought Williams might have stayed and let Harry come home. " Well, in due time, Williams and Cora were married and took a long bridal tour. There was no wedding given them. "In the meantime, Mrs. Colby had re ceived several letters from Harry, prais ing Missouri mightily ; the grazing, where he was, was so much superior to that in Illinois, and there was but little mud; his father always hated mud bo ! Finally, he wound up by proposing that his father should sell out and move out in the latter part of winter or in the early part of the next spring, saying he did not know but what he would buy some land and remain there perma nently. " Whjle Williams and his fair young bride were on their tour, there was no letter came from Harry and Mrs. Colby was getting very anxious Indeed, when they returned, and, shoi tly after, John received a letter, Baying that he, Harry, had not heard from home for some time. Harry always wrote in a cramped hand; sometimes they could not make out near all the words. " Cora and Williams joined their en treaties to the urgent appeals that ap peared In every letter Harry wrote, so that Mr. Colby finally began to talk of going. His wife did not want to go ; they were too old, she said, to be trans planted; they had made themselves a home for their old age, and there was no use in leaving it. " But Williams represented Missouri as being a much older country than this and that they could buy a nice farm al ready improved, and they would be with their children. " Harry was too delicate for the changeable climate of Illinois, and so they kept on until the old lady gave up to go, the main reason being the hope of seeing Harry sooner by moving out. Oh, sir I no mortal knows what that poor mother suffered in the separation from her only son. " So, directly after Christmas the farm was advertised for sale, with all of its stock, household and kitchen furniture, to come off the 10th of February. We were sorry to have them go,and felt that it was a very foolish trip for old people like them. " Mr. Colby had five thousand dol lars In the bank, which he often talked of as his wife's portion ; sheshould not be bothered with farms, he said, after he was gone, but could live on the inter est of her money he would just leave it in the bank ; it was as safe there as anywhere, - " By the way, though, Cora, who al ways confided everything to her moth er, told her that John acted very strange ly in his sleep ; would start up in bed and mutter and talk, and one night he said : "'Oh, Harry! if I could only bring you back!' " Next riiornliiB. when tolil nf It., tin r said he was uneasy about the cattle. But somehow this made an impression on Mrs, Colby; she was fearful, and she could give no reason for that feeling. " Harry's letters came regularly, and she would often chide herself for being so troubled and gloomy ; but she could not throw off the unhappy feeling. So she hastened the preparations ; she was anxious to be on the road, although the weather was cold ; the sooner they started, the quicker they would be with their boy. " One day, Just three days before the sale, Mr. Colby stepped into the bank to deposit come money, when the cash ler said : "'I thought you always Intended to let that five thousand remain with us.' " ' Well,' replied Mr. Colby, ' and so I shall.' "'Why, you talk strangely; if you are intending to replace, it why did you take it out V " ' Take it out ! I have never drawn a dollar of it!' ''Why, sir, you are surely very for getful ! The money was drawn yester day by John Williams, according to your written order, and here, sir, Is the check !' " This was a stunner to Mr. Colby. As Boon as he could regain his speech, he pronounced It a forgery and a very clever one at that. " Wei!, the old farmer was so indig nant that he had Williams arrested on the Bpot, and brought before the mag istrate. Williams put on a bold face, and declared the order was genuine ; there were no witness, and Mr. Colby swore solemnly it was a forgery, and held him under arrest until futber de velopments. " Everyone was greatly astonished, for Williams was highly honored,and many thought there must be some mistake. Mr. Colby was well known and honored also for his truth and sterling worth. He would bring bis own son to justice if be had done wrong, bo of course there was great excitement about it. " About this tlme,a young man living in our town had gone out to the little place in Missouri where Harry was sup posed to be, on a visit to relatives, and returned about the time the forgery was committed, and upon being questioned by Mrs. Colby concerning Harry, said that he could hear of no one of that name around there; there was no cattle being fed there ; that it was as poor a country as ever he saw. " Here was another surprise and mystery. Why should Harry wank to deceive them so ? They wrote to. him about it, but received no answer, and again, and still no reply. Williams being in jail during the time, was waiting for Court to convene ; so Mr. Colby grew bo uneasy that be hired a detective to go out and hunt Harry up. His wife was so troubled and anxious that she could neither eat nor sleep :. the sale did not go off as advertised, and the whole family were in grief. " Cora was almost Inconsolable at first, but, putting many little things to gether that had not been noticed at the time, she was forced to believe some thing was wrong with Harry She be lieved he had died, and Williams, in or der to keep the one thousand, had con cealed his death. All this she kept to herself, and urged her father to send some one to hunt him up; but yet they received letters all the time from him, and surely he must have been at P , in Missouri, for there were letters direct ly from him. So reasoned Mr. Colby. "The detective was a very shrewd man, and had his own views about the matter ; he oalled for all the letters re ceived from Harry, and, after reading them over, took his departure, and in a short time started for P or near there ; it was, as bad been stated by the other young man, a very poor country around P ; the town'or village was a very small place, and the people were all, with a few exceptions, of the common order. " When be could fiud no trace of Harry he went to the postofflce and the postmaster was questioned ; he said he remembered frequently mailing letters addressed to Frank Colby, and letters came to the office addressed to Harry Colby, and they bad always been receiv ed by a young lady ; he remembered her, because she always hesitated when fulling for a letter. In a small place like that many things and people are noticed that would be passed in a larger place ; he did not know who mailed the letters to Frank Colby, as they were gen erally found in the letter-box. " The detective then related to the postmaster as mueh of Harry's history as he thought necessary, and asked his aid in helping him find the woman who called for the letters. The post master replied that she would likely come In for the afternoon mall, and he could come Inside and watch for her. " That afternoon he was on hand,and, sure enough, she came, and called for a letter for Harry Colby. Itecelvlng a negative answer she walked out, and the officer followed to a small but very neat-looking cottage and boldly knocked on the door, and as she opened it walked in, without waiting to be invited. He found her to be a really pretty, young looking lady, with a child about eigh teen months old playing on the floor. She seemed surprised, at the intrusion, but he hastened to tell her he was try. ing to find a young man by the name of Colby. Could she tell him of his whereabouts t She seemed a little startled at first, but soon regained her composure and replied that she knew of no such person. ' " ' Then,' replied the officer, ' why do you receive letters addressed to him i" "How did you know that'i" she asked,. quietly, forgetting herself in her surpnisei ' " ' I know that you do and that Is suf ficient. See here,' displaying a badge, I am a detective, and unless you desire to board a while in the county jail, you had better tell all you know concerning this matter. The young man is missing and it Is believed that he has been foully dealt with.' "The woman was frightened, and said that she had but little to tell ; her name was Johnson ; her husband was a carpenter, and had a friend named WUllaoas, who lived in Illinois; that he . bad given her ten dollars to watch the mall and receive all letters addressed to. Harry Colby, which she enclosed In. other envelopes and returned to Wil liams; that he would then send a lettes all roady to be put In the post-office there, to go back to Illinois. The letter to be re-mailed was always addressed to Frank Colby, and in a cramped hand. "Her husband, she said, had often speculated about these letters, and was afraid there was something wrong , but she said they had every confidence in Williams, and he told them it was a joke they were playing on a young man. But they were suspicious, and thought he paid rather dear for a little fun ; they were poor, and the money received did them a great deal of good, so they made so fuss about the letters. " This was all she knew about it ; the detective had hoped, for Mrs., i'olby'e sake, that Harry would be found around there somewhere; but this ex change of letters was proof positive that he had never been there. He re turned to P as quickly as possible and related all that he had discovered. Mrs. Colby was almost frantic with grief ; she knew he was dead had felt all the time that something was wrong and, attended by the detective, visited the jail, and begged John to tell her where her boy was, if he was livhig or dead. " ' Oh, John !' she said, where is my boy? Think what a mother I have been to you and tell ie, if you have a spark of human feeling in your heart tell me where my boy U.' " But the fiend in human form only turned up bis nose and told her she had a detective employed to goand find him ; be had nothing to tell ; that her husband bad Imprisoned him on a false charge ; now she had better go and look for her boy till she found him. " The detective started the next day and traced them as far as St. Louis, and from there on through Missouri, and clear on into Texas about one hundred miles. The route they had taken was through such a very thinly settled, tim.