THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, PA., DECEMBER 27, 1881. Jane, murmuring with touching earn estness the first words ahe lioil uttered for several days; "why should I grieve, for am I not going too V many and many a day you have led me by the hand, and the Good Shepherd will let me walk by your side In Paradise." "Jane! Jaoel" exclaimed the widow rising from her jilllow, with passionate energy, nnd.flxhi'ji her.eyes on those of . LeT stricken child with a power that re called the wandering Intellect flickering through them ; "linteu to me 1 there Is a weight upon my soul which pauses It to faint on Its pasBnge through the gates of death. It Is on yours, too, poor child, and if the command of the dying cannot remove it, your young head will, Indeed, be brought to the grave. You under stand me, Jane? Thank God I thank God 1 she Is herself again 1" She clasped the hands of Jane, with hers, and, for a moment, drew her to her breast," . "Now, dear child," she resumed, "bring me here the scarf which Lewis left you as his last love token. The truth is written upou It which, In your blessed love for me, you have smothered in your poor heart till It Is almost bro ken." The scarf was brought and laid upon the bed-covering. The dying woman un folded It with trembling hands, and pointed to the mark which had wrought the fulfillment of her own destiny, while Jane started back appalled and shudder ing at the sight. "That," she continued, "through the strange working of Providence, reveaied to me what my weak, humau nature has not been able to bear. Do not auswer me, for my time is precious, and I need to have nothing explained ; but when I have gone to the place where the guilt and sorrow of this world shall trouble me no more, let no thought of me prevent you from telling all that Is on your mind of the cruel crime that has destroyed the happiness of your young life. It goes hard with me oh how hard 1 to lay this charge upon you, but it must not be that the good perish, even in this world, and the wicked be allowed to triumph safely in his sin. Now God's grace be with you, my darling Jane, for having been nothing but ajoyauda blessing to me until this shadow fell up on us both 1 don't cry, darling, let me think of Heaven you will soon have your conscience pure from the knowl edge that defiles it; there, fold your pretty hands as you did when I first taught you to pray, aud let our supplica tions go together before me to the throne of God 1" Jane felt none of the agony of grief. She folded her pale bands, and leaning forward, rested her fair head against the bosom which had never throbbed for her but in tenderness, and thus, wrapt in prayer, she remained, until its cold ness warned her that its pulsations bad ceased forever. The general sympathy for the bereaved girl was redoubled. Every office of kindness and protection that her situa tion required was proffered to her, but though she received each expression of good feeling with meek thankfulness, her answers were often accompanied by the melancholy presentiment, "I shall not trouble any one long." Though it was remarked, aud with surprise, by the neighbors, that her new aflllction had removed instead of increasing her men tal disorder, yet all, with native prudence and delicacy, abstained from alluding in her presence to the tragical event which still was hourly discussed and deplored It was soon, however, 'decided where Jane was to And an asylum, at least, during the early period of her mourning. Immediately after the death of the widow, Sheriff Merrill, who had been nominated as an executor of her will, while an occupant of an adjoining farm, made his appearance, and begging her to consider him her guardian, offered his house as her home. Without hesitation she acceded to his proposal. Preparation was made for conducting the funeral of the widow with every mark of respect to her memory which her many virtues demanded. A notifica tion of her demise was sent to her son who was known to be in N , and on the morning of the third day, when the company had collected to attend the body to the grave, he presented himself among them. He was attired in a hand some suit pf mourning, and wore upon his countenance every proper sign of sorrow. Tne coffin was not yet closed when he entered the house, aud Jane eat at its head, her tears, for the first time, dropping fast from her colorless cheeks upon the beloved face she was to see no more. George Slade advanced toward her with expressions of brotherly greeting, and to those around them it was startling to witness the change which came over the afflicted young creature at his approach. Her white lips shrunk and quivered, her eyes dl lated and grew dim with some emotion which none could define, and bending forward In her seat, she covered her face with her hands, as if to exclude some external object from her view. The bold man seemed not to have perceived her agitation. lie looked calmly at the corpse, aocouuted briefly for the delay of his arrival, aud expressed himself ready that the solemn rites should begin. The oonoourse of people assembled was very large, and was composed of all classes of the community, for the widow had been honored equally by high aud low. The churoh-yard was at but an easy walking distance, and thither they proceeded on foot. The body was low ered into the grave close beside where the young pastor had beeu so . recently laid, aud In the address which followed, a simple and feeling allusion was made to the affection, as of mother and son, which had subsisted between the two in life, and to the mingling of their dust in death. As the service closed, Jane with drew from the arm of Sheriff Merrill by which she had been supported, having repulsed that offered by George Slade as the procession left the house, and knelt silently by the grave. She was allowed to remain undisturbed until the coffin was hidden by the first layer of fresh clods, and then George, to whom the duty seemed with propriety to belong, stepped forward to draw her away. She elevated her hands for a moment as if in prayer, and then fixed her eyes upon him with an expression of solemn re buke, which none who beheld it could ever afterward forget. Ills countenance changed, but, as he retreated to his place, ho quickly concealed it with the white handkerchief, which he had been using with the lugubrious gestures suitable to the occasion. 'Help me, O Father I to relieve my soul of the burthen which, in thy myste rious will, has been cast upon it l" such were the words, which In broken mur murs were heard to escape from the lips of Jane, and arising from her knees, she added, in loud, clear tones, as if her ad juration had won her the strength she Invoked ; "stand forward, George Slade! here above the dust of him whose blood was spilt by your hand, I pro. nounce you a murderer I" The handkerchief dropped from the grasp of George, and his face grew ashy pale; but commanding his voice, he Bald, in his blandest tones, "Poor girl 1 poor girl I her mind is still unsettled 1 "Not so, George Slade," responded Jaue, in the same manner of lofty reso lution which sent conviction at once to those who, all their life, had known her timid and truthful character ; "my mind did, indeed, fall me for a time, for, train ed as It was to fear the commandments of my Maker, how could it remain firm under the secret knowledge of a crime so black and gilevous V when I knew that to betray it would send to the grave the being I loved more dearly than my own life V but now it is restored to me with a power it never before possessed, and lu good season to work out the retribution which a just Judge demands, and Ire- peat the words which I never could have spoken while her body, even though lifeless, was upon the earth I accuse you, George Slade, of the murder of Lewis Walton I" . The guilty man looked wildly about, and moved backward a few paces through the crowd, but when he felt the strong arm of the sheriff upon him, and saw that the assemblage pressed closely round, he knew that it was as Impossible to escape as It would be vain to resist, and made a show of voluntarily surren dering himself a prisoner. The sensation created by the scene in the cburch-yard fully equalled that fol lowing the discovery to which it was consequent. The most anxious curiosi ty prevailed throughout the county, for the details which had been expected from Jane, were, according to the advice of Sheriff Merrill, reserved for himself, and for such functionaries as were requi site to prosecute the case. Yet notwlth standing this precaution to prevent any unfavorable bias of the public mind against the accused, his conduct since he had appeared in the country had been so reprehensible, and the character of Jaue was so much above suspicion, that no one seemed to have a doubt of his guilt. Ji.ven had it been otherwise, a new and unexpected testimony, corroborating her assertion, would have gone far to Bettle the question. The blood-stained hand kerchief found with the key of the par sonage, was identified by a storekeeper of N as one which he had sold to the reputed criminal, a few days preceding tne murder. The prison to which aeon Slade hal been consigned, was the architectural boast of the district to which it pertained and, in its size, strength and costliness. corresponded rather with the wealth of me community that had erected it, than witn tneir well deserved reputation for sobriety and good morals. It stood at some distance from the village where the courts were held, and, based upon a per pendicular mass of rock of treat helffht: and boldness, it looked with its mural ornaments, not an Imperfect imitation of some castellated fortress or euard tower of feudal times. At the foot of the bluff was the residence pf Sheriff Merrill for he had obtained permission to occu- py a pretty tenement there situated with Its gardens and pasture lots, a part of the public domain, instead of the suite of apartments allotted to the Inoumbent of his of lice within the prison walls; though to them he had ready access by a flight of steps rudely cut in the precipice and terminating at a minor entrance, which was ordinarily used in preference to the grand gateway facing the village. Amidst the comforts of his quiet an d pleasant home poor Jane found a kindly welcome, but neither the fatherly atten tions of the good sheriff, the gentle sym pathy of his wife, nor the cheerful socie ty of his young family, ever banished, for a moment, her mournful dejection. Her bodily health soon gave way under her mental suffering, and though no complaint ever escaped her Hps, and she was Btlll able to move about the house performing such little domestic duties as she fancied, Bhe declined so fast that It was feared she might not Burvlve until the term of court, during which she was to act so conspicuous a part. The thought of a human life dependent upon the word of this frail woman seemed ever present lu her mind. She would gaze silently upon the grated windows of the jail and turn chilled and trembling away. So distressing had the subject become to her after the conference with her legal advisers, which followed her publlo accusation, that It was necessary to avoid It in her presence. Meanwhile George Blade had preserv ed his reckless bearing, boldly asserting the continued Insanity of Jane, and professing to treat the evidence of the handkerchief, of which he had been informed, as one of those strange coinci dences for which there Is no accounting. But when the time of trial was near at baud his demeanor changed. He be came restless and morose, and on the evening of the day preceding that on which the session of the court was to commence, he was remarked by the subordinate, whose duty It was to see the prisoners Becured, and to deliver the keys to the sheriff, pacing his cell with a pale face and his brow contracted as if from pain. That night came upon him the utmost agony of terror at the fate which seemed inevitable. Midnight found him still busy with the troubled meditations that allowed him no thought of rest. The light of the broad, full moon lay silvery white upon the floor, checkered with the shadow of the heavy grating, that would have made hope of escape a dream of madness. He walked to the window it Becured and opened the sash to catch the cool breath of the autumnal air, and he clenched with painful force the rusty bars, as if to vent in physical actlou the unquletness of his spirit. Suddenly his eye fell upon an object moving in the shade cast by the wall into the jail-yard. It advanced Into the moonlight, and presented the outlines of a female form, but so spectral with its white dress and gliding step, that his flesh crept with a sensation of superstitious dread. It paused opposite to his window, and for an instant a thin, pale hand was raised, and a death-like face turned toward him. The gesture must have been intended for his eye, for of the few inmates of the prison, he was the only one occupy ingthat side of the building. How could any living being find entrance into that strong inclosure t He drew his hand across his eyes to clear his vis ion, and when he removed it the strange visitant was gone. Ho tried to assure himself that in his excited state, an Illu sion had deceived him, yet he leaned his face close to the bars to be satisfied that It had quite disappeared. But now his ear could not be mistaken ; there was a sound, scaroely more distinct than his own breathing, at the door of his cell, and that of a key applied to the lock. The hinges faintly creaked, and the same unearthly figure stood in the doorway, in strong relief against the darkness beyond. The moonlight shone full Into the large sunken eyes, and upon the long, fair locks that bad escap ed from the snowy head-covering, aud he doubted, scarce leas than before, the evidence of his senses, that it was Jane. : Without giving him time to recover himself, she stepped backward into the passage, and whispering the single mou osyllable "Cornel" she beckoned blm to follow her. Hardly conscious of his own movements he obeyed, and guided by the moonbeams, which through the open door, faintly lighted a long vista felt himself breathing the free air once more. The tremulous hands of Jane fell to her side as she attempted to turn the key in the massive lock of the en trance door, signing George to secure It she preceded him to the gate from which the steps descended. "Why, Jane, Jane that's a brave girl 1" he exclaimed, for the first time feeling his liberty was real, when he stood on the bare rocks with the gate barred behind him ; "this timely rescue will make me forget all the injury you have done me, and I shall love you better than ever 1 you have proven that you are my friend, at last." "No, no, George Slade I do not for a moment believe that what I have done is for your sake!" responded Jane, with nervous rapidity; "for nothing leRs than her memory could I have acted this base part toward the good man, who would have cherished me among his own children, her whose last hour was hurried on by your wickedness, and filled with the bitterness of earthly grief Instead of the triumph which should have ended her Baiutly life. With her dying breath she bade me make known the dreadful secret that clouded my soul, and I obeyed; but when it was done, all that you had been to her returned to my mind. I remem bered that in her early days of trouble, bIio had poured upon you all the tender ness of her nature, that you were the only thing In the world that could glad den her heart. I remembered how fond ly ,forgettlng all your late unworthlness, she used to talk of your childish ways, and to tell how much dearer you became for every trial she endured for your sake and I could not, Oh I I could not bear the thought, that by my means any thing she had so loved should perish 1 I rembered how careful she was of her good name, that no stain should rest upon it not through worldly pride- but that not a BcofT,fof her error, should fall upon the faith she professed, and I could not endure to think, that, as borne by her son, it should go abroad, blacken ed by a most hideous crime, and be pre served with the record of a shameful death. Oh I it is for her memory I have done this I that I deceived the kind confidence of my protector, watching every word and action that could show me how you could be set free. My brain almost grew wild again, George Slade, when I crept into his chamber, where I had always been trusted as freely as a child of his own, and stole from it like a base th lef, these instruments of your release I but go I go I all that will be left for me in this world, is to coness this deed, to be accused of falsehood and In gratitude at best, to be dealt with as a maniac, and then to die 1" "But, Jatfe why should that be'? withdraw your charge against me; deny the truth of what, it will be readily be lleved, you uttered from a deranged mind, and you may go again to your old home and be happy." "Happyl-happy in sight of the ground that I saw wet with his blood I here, at every step, I would fancy her eyes look ing after me in pity for my load of sin I man, man, it is you who are mad!" "Yes, Jane, you may be happy, why not V the heaviest loss can be forgotten, if we take heart to bear it bravely. Could my mother look back, would she not rather see you keeping down useless sorrow, and making the best of your llfeV had Lewis Walton thought he should die in his bed and leave you a widow, could he have reasonably asked, that, with your beauty and young feeling you should remain so V no, no, Jane you conld be happy yet, and might make me so. In the home my mother's labor earned by her, we might spend our days together, for, if you would, you could love me as well as you did Lewis Wal ton." "Love you, Qeorge Slade I God knows how bard I strive not to hate you with a hatred equal to my horror of your utter wickedness." "Lower your voice, Jane, and answer me truly," said George assuming an air of regretful concern ; "doyotf,lndeed believe me guilty of the act of which you accused me? though, through my love for you.I felt no grief for the death of one I looked upon as a rival, and did not affect it, could you really have thought that I had taken bis life?" "Did I not see you do all but plunge the weapon into his heart?" exclaimed Jane ; "did I not see you spring upon him like a wild beast, and see your arm fell him to the earth ? did I not see you drag his body to where you thought It could He, without betraying you to the world, which has no tortures terrible enough for the crime? did I not bear upon my own person the print of your guilt which sent your mother to the grave?" and her manner grew wild and her voice shrill at the recapltu lation "Hush I hush, Jane ! you will raise an alarm, your mind is wandering again poor girl ! come here into the shadow or you will petray yourself and me ;' and he stretched out his hand to draw her into the darkened recess of the gate way, for she stood in the open moon light, and a few feet from the edge of a precipice along which the wall extended "Did I not see it all, and, Ob, God I I can Bend this man forth in safety, who had no mercy on my own ! my own I does not his spirit cry for vengeance ? yet vengeance is mine thine, Lord ! she continued, with increased vehe mence; off! off I dare you lay that hand again on me?" and as he forcibly caught her arm, she sprang backward to escape from his grasp. For a moment she struggled, with the instinct of na ture, to regain her foothold, and the next she had disappeared over the preci pice. In his surprise, I know not if I might use a stronger word, George Slade forgot his fear of discovery. He stepped hastl- ly to the spot from which she had fallen. He could see, far below, a heap of white drapery without foim or motion. "Poor fool I she will raise her voice against me no more, no living creature could sur vive that tremendous fall. Poor, pretty fool I yet I loved her as I never did any one before, and, I think, I am sorry for her now. But she Is out of my way, and shall I brave this trial ! If I were sure tne law would make me the heir, I would take my lodgings again within the walls. To have scorn ed a chance of escape would be more than a trifle In my favor. I believe I'll go back yet that handkerchief that cursed handkerchief It may after all, be better to fly ;" aud flinging the keys over the precipice, he turned his steps toward the most secluded road which led through the settlement. The next morniug the body of Jane was found caught upon a clumu of arbor vitas in the sheriff's garden. She must have been senseless before her fall was thus broken, for the limbs hung with a relaxation that evinced neither effort nor pain. Her white dress was stained with blood, and a crimson stream which had flowed from her Hps across her bosom, proved that her life had ebbed from some internal source. That her fate was con nected with the escape of the prisoner no one doubted, but In what manner it could have been so, was a mystery. And a mystery It remained for long, long years, but it was revealed at last. Many, even now, remember the execu tion of a noted criminal for an atrocious crime upon the high seas, a man whose character was marked bveverv trait that could dishonor humanity. In his revolt ing confession it was easv to recognize tne history or ueorge Kiarto, while one of Us episodes supplied all that was want ing to complete mat or "1'retly Jane." THE GREAT Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of tho Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Swellings and t Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Fczi and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on arth qua1i St. Jaooiw Oit. a 1 ar. Mimpim and cp External Remedy. A trial cnlaili but the comparatively trifiinr outlay of 0 and evert one atifTerlnir with jma can taava chaap and poaltlve proof of lu claims. Direction In Eleven Languages. BOLD BT ALL DSUQQI8T8 AND DEALEBS IS MEDICIKE. A.VOGEXXR & CO., Jtaltimor; Md., V. 8. A. 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