. ., i,,V .t!:':.;.3tn. VOL. XIV. IsTEW BLOOMFIELD, 1JA., TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1880. KU 33. I I It W 1 I' .T.-1 nnnflf v m . i i n 9 ' ii r u - a, iv v ii. . jw a -vsr ' v -, ' I THE TIMES. 4n Independent Family Newspaper, IB PUBLISHED II VERT TUE9DAT BT F. MORTIMER & (JO. TEHMS t INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. One vear (Pontage Free) It SO Six Mouths " " 80 To Subscribers in this County Who pay In Advancb a Discount of M Cents wlU bemade (rom the above terms, making subscription within the County, When Paid in Advance, $1.25 Fcr Year. 9" Advertising rates furnished uponappll eatlon. A SAILOR'S YARN. ryHE Valeria was lying la the bay X at St. Michael's, one of the dullest holes we ever put into in all my experi ence. Harry Martin was first lieutenant and I was second. Crtpps was our cap tain a good old sort enough, only he bothered . us rather with reading out sermons on a Sunday, for he was a rigid Presbyterian, and was forever inveigh ing against the errors of Borne. Bather a queer line for a thorough-going sailor to take up, wasn't it ? " Of course I could get frequent leave when I wanted a run on shore, but I lidn't much care about taking it, for really there was nothing earthly to do in the place. I had a bad leg at the time,-1 remember, the remains of a frightful hack at foot-ball,when we play . ed the Excellent and beat them into fits, in this very place, the autumn before ; so I wasn't up to much walking, and couldn't visit the places beyond the town which Martin was always talking about and sketching. "By and by I began to notice that though he spoke of the general beauties of the island scenery he appeared by his sketch book to haunt one spot almost exclusively the Convent of Santa Agata, on the top of a hill just behind the town. There were pictures of Santa Agata from all points of the compass. It was only to me as an old chum, that he showed those pictures ; and it wasn't long before I got out of him, by dint of a little chaff and a little judicious sym pathy, that he was madly in love or fancied he was, which is just as bad, every bit, while It lasts with one of the sisters at Santa Agata. Why, you might just as well have been in love with the moon, for all the response you could get to your finest feelings, If you centered them on a Spanish nun. And so I told Martin, for I had been through the very identical case myself at Vera Cruz, aboard the Bapid. "But, Jim,' said Martin, quietly, looking quite shy and red in the face, for he was an awfully modest man and not half as well seasoned in these mat ters as I am ; ' suppose there has been some response?' v " 'You don't mean to say you've spok en or corresponded with her ?' For answer Martin pulled a little packet of letters out of the breast pocket of bis jacket, tied with a piece of brand new blue ribbon which the old duffer must have bought for the purpose. - By degrees the whole story was told. He had seen Dona Dolores for the first time three weeks before, when he had strolled into the convent at the visiting hour to buy some of the nuns' famous lace for his people at home. That was how the acquaintance began by looks of admiration on the one side apparent appreciation of them on the other. After this Martin confessed be was al ways buying lace every visiting day, until the old gorgoness who assisted at the lace selling began to grow suspicious and changed her companion for another sister more of her own calibre than pretty little Dolores. With the latter, however, our precious first lieutenant was by this time on, pretty intimate speaking terms, and by means of a mar ket woman or a mule girl or some such emissary, managed to carry on a cor respondence of frequent notes., "I stared In astonishment when be told me all this, but really, there are no lengths that a thy man won't go to when once he'a roused. " Of all lovers, I've heard a girl say,-, there's ' nothing to come up to a shy man when he'a vpi earnest. i " Well, so far the affair bad gone and there It had stuck, for who could say what would be the end of such a hope less attachment f Hopeless, In so far that there was no chance of the girl ever being released from the convent, which, she now intimated to Harry Martin, she cordially hated. She was an orphan and had a lot of money, and though she bad not taken the vow as a professed sister, you might just as soon expect a shark to leave hold of yonr leg when he had once grabbed it as the priests and sisters of Santa Agata to let poor Miss Dolore out of their clutches. There was nothing to advise Martin to do but to cut the whole affair ; not to see the girl again, but just keep close by the Bhip until we got our sailing orders, which most of us were hoping for every day. It's a thing sailors have to do, all the world over, for one can't marry everybody, and it's astonishing to find how in a short time you don't want to. " But you should have seen the fury Martin got into when I suggested this every-day course to him. He talked about honor and Christian feeling ex actly as if I hadn't got either one or the other. Upon my word if he hadn't been my senior officer and Buch an old chum, and such a big fellow, too, I should have knocked htm down for what he said. At the same time I was sorry for him, for by this time I saw he was in earnest in the affair, so when he had quieted down a bit I said to him, ' What do you say to a rescue ?' " He jumped as if he'd been shot, and seized me by the hand. ' Do you really mean it, Jim V Will you lend a hand to help her out?' " 'Are you going to marry her!" I asked severely ; 'for it's all very good fun rescuing the young lady, only good ness knows what we're to do with her afterwards. You may be sure St. Michael's will be rather too hot to hold her or us if our share in the matter gets wind. You won't be able to marry nearer than Lisbon, and I don't exactly know how you're to get her there, either, unless the boss gives ber pas sage, which perhaps is a little too much to expect. It might interfere with the efficiency of his first officer. "Poor Martin stood speechless, for though he had jumped at my suggestion and evidently had considered the possi bility of rescuing Dolores from her prison, his plans had here evidently stopped short. He had not reflected that the English Consul would never marry them in the teeth of the Spanish authorities, who would probably tear us to pieces for meddling with one of their ewe-lambs. ' Well, Martin may be a very smart officer Indeed, there is no doubt about that and he may have been a redhot lover, but he certainly was not much of a strategist. ' So while I was maturing the plan, in which I was now almost as much interested as he, I set him to write to the lady and formally offer her marriage, to be arranged for and carried out as soon as ever she could be convey ed safely to Lisbon ; always provided that she herself could elude the vigilance of the sisters and join her lover outside the convent walls on an appointed even ing. Back came her answer through the medium of the old Carmen of the market, a friendly old hag who carried vegetables up to the convent every day. The escape would be difficult but not impossible. Carmen was to leave cer tain doors and windows of the back premises unlocked, and Dolores was to slip out at the time appointed. But, Oh I were the English eenors certain that she would not be caught Afterward, for she knew that if she were the penalty would be death or next door to it. ' " Meanwhile I bad been laying out the whole plot, and very prettily I had dovetailed one thing in with another. There was an old Irish woman married to a Portuguese Jew fruit merchant who lived in the Jews' portion of the town. I bad heard her tongue going one day like a mill clapper, aa I passed by, and there wag no mistaking her accent. I often used to stop and have a chat with her about the beauties of Queenstown, which she upheld against all : comers. What ber religion was I , never discov ered, for she held the priests In as great detestation as Captain Crlppi himself; while she spoke with : high " disdain of her Jew husband and his religious exer cises, though she allowed he had more religion than a 'Protestant' But she was a good old creature In the main, and her house, though rather an unsavory retreat, was the only safe asylum I could think of where Dolores might be concealed until the Lisbon steamer could carry her off from St. Michael's. "Once safe in Lisbon the girl could be placed with the friends of Martin's (we had been hanging off and on thereabouts for six months or so, and knew all the English residents In the Portuguese capltol) until the marriage could take place and Mrs. Martin be sent home to England. We did not anticipate any further trouble would be taken about her if she once got clear of St. Michael's, and Martin, unlike some other poor fellows that I could mention, could afford to marry whom he pleased. " Every thing was well in train. The night arrived and Miss Dolores was appointed to make her exit from the convent at half-past eight precisely. Martin and I were to be in hiding out side with mules to carry us down the hill by a circuitous route to the Jews' quarter, a deserted part of the town, where Mother Zachary and her fruit merchant lived. " But at the last moment came a terri ble hitch I When Martin and I applied for leave on shore for the evening, old Cripps told us that he Intended dining and sleeping on shore himself, at the Consul's, and he could not give leave to both his senior officers to absent them selves the same evening. We could de cide between ourselves which was to remain, but one must certainly do so. " We dared not show the Captain how dreadfully we took his sentence to heart, but withdrew with our usual bows, look ing unutterable things at each other. " You must go,' whispered Martin ; ' I'm no good at all ; I should lose my head and spoil it all. You must go, Jim, old fellow, if you're still game for it, though goodness knows how I shall get through the time till I know you are safe I ' " There was nothing for it but for me to go as Martin said, for he was so excit ed he would have ' boshed' the whole thing. So, by and by, having given the Captain, in his full dress togs, the pre cedence by about half an hour, I was rowed ashore just about sunset, and told my men to be ready to take me off again to the Valeria at ten that evening. I went round to the plaza and hired a mule, avowedly for a ride into the coun try ; and a miserable brute I got, for all the animals were out except this one, at the consular dinner party. I dawdled about the town for a while, then, after theAngeluB had finished siugingandthe dusk began to creep down, I turned my beast's head up a narrow side street, which led to the very wall of Santa Agata. " There was scarcely any one about, for the natives have an idea that the hour after sunset is unwholesome in the outer air ; so I made my way up the street unnoticed by any one, except that at a turn of the road I saw ., the sharp eyes of Carmen, the market woman, glancing at me, first suspiciously, then knowingly, as she descended the hill with her empty baskets piled cn her back. Very Boon I was safely landed at the appointed spot, a thick clump of coarse elder bushes which grew close under a small stone window belonging to some outer buildings of the convent kitchen department. The window was a good bit above my head, and so deeply imbedded in thickness of the wall that it was only by standing well out from the building that I could see into the aperture, which was secured on the inside by a screen of wire trellis work such as Is often used over larder win dows. . " This was the opening which Carmen was to have loosened, and sure enough, after a short spell of waiting I could plainly hear a rustling and rummaging inside. Then a hand pulled back the screen and a minute after something soft and black, of no particular outline whatever, filled up the window frame and came creeping outward toward - the edge of the walL 'Are you ready I" asked a soft voice, almost before I could reply something jumped bang into my outstretched arms. , I declare to you she was not much bigger than a good sized kitten. Such a little bit of a thing as. Mai tin's Dolores I never saw , in my life. For my part I like them tall, and broad too," observed the Lieutenant in the confidential rather than the narra tive strain ; "but this Dolores was a wonderful beauty, though there was so little of her. " She was a bit frightened and shy at first, especially when she discovered,. by catching hold of my whiskers, that I was not Martin, who shaved clean in those days. But very soon I had got her on the mule and explained- matters in my best Spanish, and we were creep ing stealthily down the hill the best of friends, and Dolores, who was not more than seventeen, apparently in childish high spirits at the success of our enter, prise. "But though she had done her part so easily I didn't feel at all sure that the adventure was ended. There were lights moving to and fro at the upper windows of the convent, and at any moment her presence might be missed, while the open window, with Its stools and boxes on the inside, would declare which road Bhe had taken. " Just at this juncture the confounded mule, that up to this had behaved him self pretty decently, began to tack about in a manner simply fiendish. He was all over the road at once, and you never knew whether his bead or his heels would be uppermost. I suppose it was the girl's clothes that excited him, unless the beast was In league with the priests, and was doing his best to stop the affair those Spanish mules are art ful enough for anything. Added to this, Miss Delores was frightened, and I could hardly keep her from screaming out;; and my leg, which had not done so much work for a long while, began to ache and throb bo that I could scarcely keep up with the mule's vagaries. " In vain I dug my dirk Into the hind-quatters of the mule; we could not keep the pace, and soon cries and noise behind us in the darkness told us that our pursuers were-close upon us. At the top of the steep vineyard path I seized the end of the nun's black cloak and wrapping it round her head to prevent her cries being heard for she was by this time quite beside herself with fear I jumped off the mule and dashed with her into the vineyard which edged the road on either side with stumpy thick bushes. "The mule, released from restraint and maddened by a last prod from my dirk, galloped with astonishing clatter down the narrow road, followed almost Instantly by a shouting mob of people, all in pursuit of what they believed to be the heretic and his captive. I could not help chuckling as they tore by, the old jackass leading the way at a speed to which I had been vainly urging him all the evening. . " But there was no time to be lost, for the road which the pursuers had taken was the one that led straight to the Jews' quarter, and it was clearly impos sible to try and make that port. I had not a moment to reflect, or probably I should not have dared to do what I did. Balsing and disentangling Dolores from her heavy cloak . I half dragged, half carried her across the vineyards down to the seaboard, and thence, by the quickest and quietest road, to the steps where I had told the men to meet me with the boat. It was lying in waiting, for the big clock of the cathedral had Just struck ten, and without ceremony I tumbled my living bundle into it, and, jumping in after her, gave the word to be off. " Not a minute too soon, for the quay was all at once alight and alive with people and lanterns. The news of the escaped nun had just reached the town, and I saw my old enemy, the mule, being dragged into the Plaza and sur rounded by a crowd of gaping Spaniards who seemed to expect he would open his mouth and tell them what had become of the runaway. Our boat did not escape. notice, for some one ran along the quay with a lantern and cast a long bright flash across our course ; but we had pulled through it before any one could have recognized that the dark mass in the stern of the boat .was the lost lady, ". My men pulled on in steady, stony British silence, just as if their officers were in the habit of making a dash for . it every two or three evenings a week, with some young lady or other. ,But I was beginning to feel horribly uncom-i fortable as to the reception , Captain Cripps would give me and our fair visit or, and I reccollected with relief, that for this night at all events, he wasBafely disposed ot I thought it best to give the men my version of the story so, before we reached the Valeria, I told them, in the most businesslike manner possible, that the young lady was de tained against her will in a convent, and had appealed for protection tthe British man-o'.war. ' Where she'll ftud it, lads, of course 1' I ended, with a confidence which I'm bound to say I was very far from feeling. "Wasn't I glad just to. find myself safe aboard the Valeria again, handing over Dolores, who by this time was quite frightened and cowed into silence,, to my superior officer, as iu duty bound, and retiring a bit aft until their first greetings should be over. Then I came forward and explained briefly how . it was that the plan of boarding Mother Zachary in the Jews' quarter had fallen through, and exonerated myself for tak ing the dangerous step of bringing the girl to the Valeria, which would in all probability be searohed the first thing next morning by the local officials with a warrant from the British consul. " Naturally the presence of the lady could not be concealed from, the other officers and the ship's company, of whom were already agog to know who was this mysterious female, who had suddenly appeared on the quarter deck. Martin called the men together, gave them much such an explanation of the affair as I had made in the boat, keeping his own and my special part cleverly out of eight, and leaving each of bis auditors with a pleasing Impression that it was in consequence of his own re markable honor and gallantry that the poor, distressed Spanish girl had flown for protection to the men of the Valeria. " Martin then conducted Dona Do lores to his own cabin, where she was entreated to make herself , as much at home as possible, for though an un toward accident had marred the comple tion of our plans for her safety, there was not a man on board the ship that night who would not prevent her return to the convent If necessary with his life. Martin was to turn in along with me, but though I was almost dead beat, it was along time before he would let me get to sleep for discussing a hundred different ways of concealing the young lady during the search which we knew was inevitable next day, and for appeas ing the wrath of the captain, a rigid disciplinarian and martinet, which was only one degree less terrible. I fell asleep in the middle of the discussion, and Martin, I believe, went up on deck to star gaze, or else stationed himself on guard outside his own cabin door, within which he had cautioned the girl to re main until something was decided for her safety. " I was roused out of what seemed only like half an hour's sleep by the knock and entrance of Mat, oue of the mesB waiters a clever, handy chap, whom i had several times thought of taking into our confidence when our rescue scheme was at first undeveloped. Having coughed and hemmed once or twice, and fidgetted about with my things, which lay in a heap on the floor, as I had kicked them off at night, Mat looked at me very knowingly and said, pulling his forelock : " ' If you please, sir, don't you nor the first officer be in any taking about the young lady. With your permission me and some of the other chaps have a plan whlchU beat the Paplshes hollow. Just you give us leave, sir, and the things's done, and the young lady as safe as a bird, sir.' , " ' But what's your plan ?' said I, for I was beginning to feel I'd done enough in the concern, and would willingly shove off the rest of , the responsibility upon Martin or Mat or any one who liked to take it. ." ' Music, sir,' said Mat, coming confi dently nearer, and chuckling bo that I could hardly make out what he aaid. ' We'll receive the gentlemen or deputa tion or what not with all the ropea manned and the colors flying, and the band playing on deck just as if it was the Admiral or the Dook himself . .'t'Well, and what then?' I asked rather crossly , for I couldn't quite tee the point of .his wonderful, reception, nor how. It, was to release us , of anxiety on the score of Dolores' and our own Bafety. " .' Why, the big drum, sir 1' said Mat,