The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, December 23, 1868, Image 1

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    Ell
i .WEYAND, Beaver', Pa.
,j ,Crards.
---
EglieloLlllllll IEI
Mai -----
44"4 401nth
Dee. - Is. 1816. ej, ming
. ,
I.43pKHART,
• dos, Ike;a mat,. Pa. All nits
i c , liapt:
IYIP I 4O4;* • / Ise .1101
1/1. emir.
landtect, Kedu,ualciaa atidltahu nch, !.f A seit rts
subettlors. iu?d•
00% • "
. . . . . ,
G.'` .. i
. .
. .
CIOI Inedede sad Surveyor, New Peaddoll.
Iht, damp, Nape ►g.ad !tones .iiMaim shows
.endlee, pans.
'
• -
AY. illAilllL
EOA:, li
Jttorariatiaw:l3eaes, I'o. OMlij the Ns.
WWI Bata 04110:ag.. -001 11 0 09as. 0 1 Z promptly
attended ttE • :, '- i :! • i
Gewalt ly. . ' • ' ' •:','
Tie. plus!likessasa.;
PrscOcing .Physlcsan.. Rob ter gag
LrrtMitatittfealsa."t',Rigid El"-
. •
sprigui,T.
—_ • _
itsaver Seraleta7 aad liasiltingh •
'aeon lyptlieil If.ptxmia
4•6•01.41 Nog and aucandully cooda
Taytar„vidnellislaimale, ears aztanidst.
as in um Clanks. English and Maur.Far Cat
alogues *darn, • ' ' t t,'FAILOIL
T F. onApiousia.*
1)..1.1241 . T10•_ 4 7 • 04,,, ,
44 o 434 e r
Once 4a Braver Ignition baildlul. All work tear.
ranted. ?Mee' moderate. Mtn as scan, •
NOT? 4, , ,
L aw Partneripilp,
M. CURNIPIGHAIC• , E. P. /1 1 1111 A•
CUNNINGILtiqh
JUllorairys as Law. thaw Taint
Pa. • • !
aperitly.
Amity stirliptig, MALE
I 4 W 11.1 tei 1
Miiiil
BARKER & C,Q.S,
a9•'Marliot INtroolk.
Pittsburgh,
Commenced Mirada'', Dec. 4th. every article
eadvaMll. .lltlre Whiter lelyelbAnust be eland
out In BM days. . _ • •..
Decl6 _
liekt."ll:,ll . ;
i patitgr
l ien*
John artto.l). - 11. - this ;eau einurinel - PrinCipar-.1
De was ibnnerly Principal of the Ulster lustltu•
lbnluf tArtyleafAdmli aud.the blind( 'Belfast: end
• ..41elt of the NettlinaLihrtlletion for the
' dear and dumb-of Leland Claremont Dublin; sad
- tenpin, Plen/dent colibeLinooln Unlverilty. WA
era ansurea that Dr. Martin Is a ripe echolar and a
anecessfel.lortracter. De ptirpowir to 'revive the
selicicONGO4nlll. 'Me but term will be short. In
oonsequebee of the lateness of Derlunlnc. The
tidilon'wlU correspond. A liberal discount will
".11&1410;w14,tolik orphans of soldiers and children
of clergymen. '
1). 1.. DICIIPSEI,
Pr T. LOISMPG.
eepatf.
111111111ki & naa lUfU N ,•
," I intolas'at.i'arn um' Bit.viiii.asto I
CLO THING,
txtft..B.:
. ,
rt • ,
AND
Gikailinknio " Furnishing Goods,
NO.4~B~,~Q~~T };; •~CLAIR STREET
coils'is.)
. 4 " 1 " 1 komiligtvireeditas
.44$414ii164to,Filler un ihoit notice.
towelt. , • ••
141 It ir,seepau!,. •','• •
• DCALIIIP2II'
TAILE4tOARSESALT;
INDVIITRY, BEA . yEIi CO., PA
ma
AU "II pa' a p grairlat.lanraciatru:n O warr ant"
to
Mt orders pro,ptly attended to
IL IL 11111610111,111A11•011‘. 7/I.IILIMMIEr• a .UU
•
B ono, wairrep k co.-
Lead Pipe Sheet .& Bar Lead
MAN LLACTIIIIIMS, ALSO
1 , .
Piglead, trim Pipe; Rubber hose, Swam
:Guages, Whistle,' at Volvo', Iron
. oppsar stop and Rath Tuba,
1 : - ~. , I'm Tutriph, 'firm
•
Puints'and Pond '
Ptiutpa. .
and ovary description otgoods for
Water, and Steam,
467.-41111T4FIE1.1)
Mood for Pries Litt
sprit&
U IIo orals. Largest & Most esseedmitsi
WHOLUSALE IEtAT HDITWES
I. tM old estetudveland rellabl• llou. or
Wm. Flemming,
„.
NO. iqw WOOD STREET,
PITTSBURGH, P
Our good. willba 'Old at NNW* Prices. and
will be 'nand BY coospatir in extent ad variety
with drat clue houses la New York. The stair
consists of Men and, Boys Far and Wool Hate.
wed Castihnere Usu. sod' hops Caps. Y e n.
WT. and ettiktnroaNtraw yew* lithe leaf Bata,
nitaker lloode,hundpwne. Todles•sadMisce• Hats.
, • grimed and ontiimtned. Vonntry Merchants aro
' turned to call and ; valita,ii Oar Btoch.
•
New hardware Blare.
•
l / '•,
IvirA T,s T n sower
f.; ; ..
Yminkrtris'arid 'dell*. In
119113
ILDwARE
-A DI 1)-
~CUTLERY.
. .
lottr•
th New Std
it p" optund *n4 rn - * Orer
11,1 to e trade Um.
LOW 8T .E ' ARMIN ;PRICIIig•
1 •
I/Edit - MON pßpar,
337 moo mungt
Aaa j~•~
4 1 1,,
XN. 4 7:141...i' •
• to
*be. Reading. I
4
ue-t:o
drctsi.
broad fiWit7E7 the ;old farrn-hotise '
kitchen, a cat and three kittens beak..
.odirts.the , ..warralli a
yellow dog, lying full .Ifi the
tion of the yellow blaze, wrinkled lib
trkmaleaPPrOvingly,fia he dirtied
hind feet Where Ids !bre feet ,lad
been. Over the chininey, hung sev:
outline hams and pieces otdried beef.
Airplefleere festooned along theca,:
lug, and crooked neck squasheit vhsL
with rod pempind slips .ofldrieti
punty4iii ishlng each will..
dow ere were plantsptoo;
on the tidy ledges—torss .shoe
lreXanivar ‘AINI deiw - VW% and
monthly rest!, knit blinding to
awthitw pots,pf,violpts that-pert.
*ritied the AwheitPtt:
tapit it intp,thel4Alds, to bloonx.4-
Mid floors Atria 'l.B.Mll,yri Swept, the
chairs had not a r of dust upon
• ear the
1 1 1 1 X3e til l if e f 11% Y: t ;been
vartiblhol ( It i t l id the ,Oiti • ,eliielq
lathe corner :hid its* face'
ly washed, and, seemed elk „r-
to tick the louder for it. Two
bluttntArertiAliawlktu_POAutKaY- ' l ' -
,tancefrorn the hearth and erittralibert
a aindle, u newspaper a pair of spec.,
taeles a dish of red e heeked apples
and a pitther of cider,fllltxlAetattle:
betweedthem In One of the chairs
=
sat a comfortable looking wonum .of
about fortaTAlte, with: cheeks : is red
as the apples, and eyes as Utak I=l
bright as they had ever
,been,- rest
ing her ,elbow on the. table, tutd. her
head' upon- her hands', l and looked
thoughtfully into thib lire._ Thlawas
the widow Cobbl-ireliet' of Deacon
Levi ,Cobb. who had , been ,ntouldee•
ieg,l9 thettustinthOlytewp elnutb-.
yard for more than seven - years.: She
wasthinking of her deed husband,.
properly—bemuse', her Work .being
done, and the servant gone to ,bed—
the sight of his empty chair at • the
other side of the table and the • si-,
ilence.of tbe. , rocumadi, hpg
lonely. •
• ‘,l3even years I" iv tbewldow's rev
erie ran. "It Seetifs' as if 'twas • wore.
than tiny—and.yet. I , don't look yo .
vorzold either. • Perhaps its not luiv
lag any children , td, bother my life
out, as otherpcople have. ,. ., They may .
.say whatthey•like,Chlldnartimore
plague than profit—that's my opin
ion. Look at awed:as; Jerusha,with
her R 1 x: bo ys.
_ She ' s worn UP:a shad
ow—and Pm sure they fiave done a i l
'though she will never own it." •
The widtheolt nn *pie from the
dish, and began to Peel if.
”How- dreadful. fond Mr. Cobb
Used to be of these I graft, poor fel
, low; foul .don't suppose they lukYe.
apples where lie's goneto. Heigh° l•
rememherwellhoW I mei to throw
ipatinas oxe? my heti !when 4.•
was a girl, to see who I xaki'going to
marry."
rs.. Cobb stopped short and blush
ed. In' thetie days she did not know
Mr. Cobb, and rwas, always looking
eagerly to see If the peel had formed
a capital H. Iles ,meditation took
a new turn.
"rfuw hands ome Payson was;
and how much I used to . carslbrhim.
Jerusha says he Went away from ottr
village Just after I did, and no one
has heard of him since. And , what
a silly thing that quarrel was.
had hot been. for that"— - •
Rem mine a long pause, during'
which the widow Molted very stead
/880.y at the emptvi arm cludrufLevi
carelessly with the apple ng; sbe
drew it safely towards her, and look
ed aroung the morn. . •
"Upon my wordit is very ridicu
lous; and I don't know what the
neighbors wouldsay if they sulk me."
• ' Still the , plump lingers drew the
• peal nearer.
"But they can't :see me—that's 'a
comfort—and the cat and old Bowie
will never know what it. means. Of
course I don't believe anythingabout
it."
The polar hung gracefully from
her hand.
',But still
.Lsliould lid e.,to tiy; ft
Woukti4eem'llke oldJimesamd—' ,
Over head it went, and curled up
afiletly on the lidor at a little tbs.',
to old Bows, who always slept
with one eye open, saw it falli and
marched deliberately up to smell it.
"Bowes; Bowan, don't touch it I
cried his mistress; and bending over
It with a beating heart slw turned as
red as tire.. There was as handsome
a capital Sas one could wish to- sex.
A loud knock maw suddenly at - the
door. The dog growled, and the wid
ow screamed and snatched / up the op
"lt'S-Mr."Cobii ;: it's hisidritcorne
back ag ain because I tried thatailly
trick, she thought fearfully to her
self.., , . 1 T .
Another knock, louder than the
, tirst, and a man's voice ex claimed:
"Hello, the house!"
"'Who, is it ?".asked the widow
'obineatatrelleved te find that the
departed Levi W 11.4 still safe in his
give upon the hill-aide.
"A "stranwr," said the voice. •
• "What do you Want ?"
"To get lodging for the night."
The widow deliberated. •
"Can't you go on ? There's a 'lunge
half a mile further on if you keep to.
the right hand side of 'the road, and
turn to the left after you get by.—"
"It's raining ants and dogs, and I'm
very -deliude," said the stranger .
coughing," I'm wet to the skin. Don't
yott'tbi n Ityou can accouinnxiate me?
dim't mind sleepirir., on thefloor? .
"Raining Is it: I didn't know
that;" and the kind hearted
'man unbarred thedoor very quickly.
"Come -in, whoa' er you may be. I
only asked you to go on because I
ant alone Woman with only one ser
vant hi the louse."
The stranger entered shaking him....
self like a Newfoundland (log uggla
the stop, and scatterhig.alitfleiiilNlF
er of drops over his hostesS and: her
nicely Swept door.
"Alt, that looks comfortable attire:
:Man has been omit for 'hours in n
storm, he said as be caught tight of
.the are; andstridingainit toward the,
hearth, followed by Dowse,* who .
snuffed suspiciously at his heeli, he
stationed himself in the arm Chair
Cb66's arm chair-whichluad been
sacred to his memory for seven years.
The widow was horrified, but her '
guest was 80 weary andavoinout that
she,could not ask him to Move, but
busied herself in stirring up the blaze
thathe Julgtiti the,sootier. dry his
dripping clothes. A new ' thought
anti& her. 'obb had' Worn a
comfortable dressing gown during MS
Anneal, which ( till hung in the cliset
- ether right. She could not let this
poor intim catch his death by sitting
in that wet coati. If he was in Mr.
Cobb's chide why ((honk!, he not
be in Mr-' Cobb a *nipper? She
went nima MI the closet took it:
,Tiewn,ifiSh 'Oa a. pair of t slippera:
Ilomthe rack below, andbrought
thou to, 1141! •
-"think. yon had better-take off
ycstibat and _ you wi ll have
rheumatic, lever, or something like
11 , you • don't, Here -are so me !
thlugs for you to wear while they are!
drying -And you must belumgryl
tom t wUi go .into ; the pantry, and
get you somethltig titeat. •
She bustled away, 'Yoh it liable
thoughts intentip. and Ulu"
id al
marle the exchange with ti'ti n
smile playing , around his lips
was a Tan well formed roan, with ri
bidd but handsome face—suntinmed
but, heavily bearded, and**
eseldnirbat 'de/304k P:oughill
. :
Plttab tugh; Pa.
4
El
Mel
61115
ara
t 11..4 "- 1.11)1^'ttill:
1 I'd iil4 l 111=4C
I
' •
E= MEM Al
It
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~... •.''. ', 4 • --+ t - I . "!•:,,,
~., ,..; , , , ,; ;!.. i . ,,, , , riii, .; .„ I
. ...,•' ; ,l iil
~::,..C.,..1it1x: .;,,if 1 , , i ! '0...r.:1 , :•Iiii;•!. ,settiv
,eut,, $640"1 . 1 . 1 I n.
4 6 , W=197A6 I I I:1
feet
Ala I j j e .„
15,1 t ;7n.: viwm
tfl4 , ll l l ll OY 0-
tothp - mun, l 4 AA* Nast
tinioreii-boono,wonuip.., 811 A 18;
D.1M0 1 4 0 94;! , 1 1 #4# 1 4nlit
4°W*3loo44thq.. Ti ce Wow
taiiiging r m. .sttrulry .',gckgl.7, 4 thino;
lonked . i pleatterlathliiattealloti to, her:
dumb "lt'a w
1 - . On, ~ cl
. ett.-no
gelfefallY. does When
:teach Dc-r Me - how.
;Mtlie
4 4riterc
lr}icl torgou., Vie flan
iShe:
tigsnuid c iy4 not emPtY, and theist'
w" nal*lnelaltf9r , lhe gdagaShe,
Oat"-
apples_ ,and:,',Spa , celes (it *.
without a Jiltk - Pang 'that' •sho 'ma?
Alf titek
,t hp deacons' and ware Owed. 'each
t llkethearideldr,.nrniddltaF);
thigthera "on the settle.-.
..;tljatahle eleth ina'ata-A've
t'eCID3, of
• • , Youl itise , dishes;
MO toq ritayy..fo tlySo 111§4
iaindi,":,-the, wide*: blolied--"ripw:
pI aseeitdoWnWlth, Me, or ,l, taunt
eat a amnia" 1 ' ' •
hialkakier 1041141 o; bat -
Ithlrik I cua take something mere,"
atild Clips. Cobb, thawing 'her
racer the table. ,' ' " ' ' • .• '
- r9feourse you oat my &a:lady.
In this cold autumn.weather,t people
Might to at twice as pinch as they de
ihwattn. Let me give 'yea a piece
of this lam—your Own Caring!' dare
-
"Yes, 'my poor husband was V•
ery.
fend oilt. He used to say . that nb
one anderidobd miring lump 094 . 04-
il m tof . bOttkr. Utah ", • •
rlole was a lutist saislble noun, I ani
Sure. And I will drink your health
Madam e - lit this 'elder." - .
Flie took 'a_ long.
,tlmagli, and, sat
(kiwi hiaglas4 - " '
1"11.7a likeneetar4 . .
rl`itewlibiwWita Waling Dowsioand
cat(Whiithoughtitiat they were"
canted to a Share of every- mad ate
tine liMise,)and did not quite hear
*Lit he said. ianey she would
hardly - have ,‘knoWu., what "nectar" '
Waa,,so was qtrlticas;Well.' ,
rFine, dog, anahun, and a very
pretty eat."
jeThey were my husband's favor-,
itin," and a sigh followed.
"Ah, your husband must have.
•bsen a very happy Man."
. 1 The blue eye-Joel:di at her so long
I .t at she grew Aiitthxl.
Is there anything more I can, get
for you sir?"..! she:said* last. _
"Nothing, thank you ; I have !JUL
islted."l , _
She rime to clear the things away.,
lie assisted her, and somehow • their
lautilS had at,queer, knack of touching
aS, they carried the dish& to theism-.
try shelves. Cooling leek to the
kitchen: she, put the apples and eider
In theft. pinek*,. and brought out a
cleat pine and be* of tobacco front
an arched mte4i law the chimney.
. I "My husband always said he could
not sleep after eating supper ;late,
tiakts-he smoked," she said.. "Per
haps you wohld like to try It."
I 'Not if it is going to drive you
aeray," he answered, for mho had a
candle in her hand. ' '
;smoke
4 tiibnepttiithrtgat °
time Mid suggestions about "pro
priety" . troubled fler. She glanced
at the old dock and felt rillsenexi; it
:Was only half past nine.
The stranger pushed the stand
•back, after the pipe was lit, and drew
her easy chair little nearer the fire—
tind hisown. • c
I "Come, sit down," he said, plaid-
Ingly, "it is not late; and when a
man Itas been knocked about in
and all sorts of places, for a
Score of years, he is glad enough to
get into a berth like this, and to have
a pretty woman to spea k to again.
I "California! have you been to Cal
-1 ifornim?" she exclaimed dmpping
into the chair.(Unconsciously, she
had Jong cherished the idea that
Sam Payson—the lover of her
Youth—with whine she had foolishly
quarreled, had pitched his tent, after
many wauderings, in that far off
land. Her heart warmed to one
who, with something of riam's looks
;aid ways about hint, had also, been
Sojourning in that country, very
possibly had met him—perhaps had
atrium him intinautely. -At that
moment her Mart beat quick, and
-She looked very gradonsly, - at'-the
-bearded stranger, who, wrapped in
Cobb's dressing gown, wearing
tr. Cobb's slippers, and sitting in
. Cobb's chair, betide Mr. Cobb's
Wife, smoking Mr .! Cobb's pipe, with
Such an air of: feeling thoroughly
end comfortably at home. •
"Yes, ma'am, I've been in Califor- '
ma for adz years.. And before that I.
Went quite around the werkl iii a
Whaling ship." t
"Good gracious I" •
-The stranger sent a puff of smoke,
oiling gracefully over his head.
"It's very strange my dear lady;
cow ofteuyou see one thing as you
wandering about. the world after
that fashion. '
"And what is that ?" :
"Men without house or h o me
above their heads, roving here , add
there, and. turning up in all aorta of
odd places—dtring very little for life
ma, general thing, and making for
tunes just to fling them away again—
:lntl. all for one reason. You don't.
ask tvhitt that is. No doubt you
know very well."
.!`.l thin not '
t airtu.: a woman has jilted ,
teHem Was a long pause, and Mr.
!Cobb's.plite emitted short pufla with
sarprising rapidity.; A guilty con
science needs no accuser the widoW's
cheeks were dyed • with blushes as
she tbotight of theabsentSiun.
"I wonder how women manage
I when :they get served in the. same
way," 'add the !stranger musingly.—
"You never meet them roaming up
l and down In that
'"Ne,"said Mrs. Cobb„ with some
spirit; "Li a women is in trouble, she
'must stay at home and bear it in the
best And there's more women
bearing such things than we know of,
I dare say:"
"Like enough. We -never know
I whose lumd:geb pinched in a trap
, uniess • they stream. And women
' are too shy or too sensible—which
you choose—for that." '
"1)1d. yott ewer, in all your wan
derings, Meet 'with any one by the
none of Samuel Payson ?" asked the
widow unconcernedly.
The Stranger looked 'toward her—
' she,wasrumaging at the table draw
er for, her knitting work, •and did
not notice Win. When it w 7114 found,
-and the needles in motion, he an
swered her.
"Payson:? 'Sam l'aysan 1. :Why he
was my most Intimate, friend. Do,
you know him?"
"A' Ittle-that"ls, Lased to when
I wash girl. Where did you Meet
him
• lice went with me on the whaling
z: rage I told you of—and afterward
California. - We bad a tent togeth-'
er, and some other fellows -with .us,,
and we dug In the wane : chilm for
more than six months."
"I supposehe was quite well
"Strong as Can ox,"- my dear -ler
dY• '
1
%,. , ..
NA
M=Mll
I,,tAnih-ana
widow, bendin
"Hiu!4l.4(
laTritteriehrmilherivor
1•11 18 aj o •Well Dr.! ,
bh.dhlhat'pairinichttitUil
thiA iiert er the story i Eirp'
Penu f net ltffished'.=-
.queat gat :ahe , was •.p
hahont'lier; next, one. 'At lost. :She
bromht Ilopt bgautitully. - •
• 'Wi11i... 1 4 Wu?: *Rh' , Pim celV
Oilder • • • •-• ••• • ' .
4 11br 4iite' MAIM 14e•
you he ; not got ' • .
N)11 thoUght-I ; ' I.
414w'
rerr Lerribir6d the tate et • and
Samiltra propAcippedshcirt reshe
.I,od sneh a traMeridorisfiN _ •
:"Whittever. Yti4 heartof
:4;ige, was all nonsense, car{ •
yep: I krio* him well, and' .•
no,thought of the kind about
SoMe or. the.boYsn to WWI hint
*bout' It; "hat ;•Made them
a e kv 'er' !
'" /10 jus t ield• therii• Werdcly; 'that .
the only, ,woznare,he Meer leved,Jilted'
.hirn'years &Tore; arid Married anoth-'
er man.., After that,. no . one • ever -
Mentioriol tite . trill to him ;again;
• -- • •• • .".
44 "1 0 . 13 W-.
••"He irks' another. spMnien of' thi
elate or men . I'' Was speaking r
haVe.seetildm farce death a Store , .of ,
times iis, quietly as I thee the:
'lt ;matters very little who takes' tne
off; he tiled to sty; ‘l've - iielliing to
live for and there's no one
shed :a tear for me *herr I am gi•Me: l
"It's a sad thought for ninon to Wire tr - • ... 0 t
• Dint' Cobb sighed as She said "aht., , ,
.Ilioug'ht•ltwas,_ ' • . •
_"Bott did he over tell' You theMmie
of Milady who jilted lihn?" t
' "I knew her first name."
uas it?" • •
• yhe pluiriP'• little widow &maid
jumped out .of her chair; her name
was spoken ken exactly as . Mani
would have - mid ". • '
• '934 yeti know her too ?" he nak
ed lookingiceenly at her. ' ' •
•
"Intimately?"
•
• '
•
'"And,where Is she now? Still
happy with her husiamd; I , suppose,
aml never giving, a thought to the_
poor fellow she drove out' into the
world." '
_"No' ith „,' said Irs. 3 Cobb, shading her
thee w her hand and speaking tin
. Btlt D ;. b . u7s7il i l t s .r h i e ti ;;c l • 4 4r d t i l m ihl del k i s d. o 9 f
Sulu I"'
There Was a dead silence.
t.grioutahe ?"_ •
"Tilfeat'qatil. tt.11?" - -
`"Are you still friends?"
"Then you ought know, and
you do. Tell me. "
"Lam sure I don't know why I
Shbuld. But If Ido yon must' Prom-
Ise me, ou'you honor, never .to tell
itiou ever happen to meet him
g?lu•
.73.Iadame, what yent say to inc
never shall be repeated - to any mor
tal man upen horir."'
"Well, then, she:does reinember
him." - '
"Hut how?"
"As kindly 1 - think as he could
wish." . -
"I am glad to hear it for his sake.
-You and I are Hui - friends of both I
parties wo • can. rejoitm . with each
. ••
He drew his chair mud; nearer
hers, and took her hand. One mo
ment the widow resisted, but it was
a magic touch; the rosy palm lay
quietly In hisi and the •thrk beard
bent so low that it nearly touched
her shoulder. It did not matter
Was he not Samuel's dear- friend ?
If he cases not the rase, had he
.not
dwelt very near it for a long; long
time?
'lt was a foolish quarrel- that
parted them,' said thestranger softly.
he tell you about it ?' -
'Yes, on board the wiuder.'
"Did he blame her much?" ,
"Not so much as himself. He said
that his jealousy and ill temper drove
her to break off the match; but 110
thought sometimes if he had only
gone bock and spoken kindly to her
she would have married him after
all." •
"I am sure she-would," said the
widow piteously ; "she has • owned it
to me more than a hundred thrum."
"she was not happy then with an
other?"
"Mr.—that was to way her husband
—was very good and kind," mid the
woman, thinking of the lonely grave
on the hillside rather penitently and
they liyed pleasantly together.
Therenr.rer wasp hard word between
them."
• "Still, might she have been hair
jher with Stun': lie honest, and say
ust what you think.".
y„,."
"Bravo ! that Is what we wanted td
mow at. And now I haven secret to
;tell you; and you must break it to,
her."
• Mrs. Cobb looked rather seared.
"What is it?"
"I! want you to go and see her
..Wherever she may be, and say to her:
nDinrhs'' Flat makes you start
to?"
"-Nothing, only you spea k so like
'Selene one I - used to , kuow. '
"Do I? Well, take the rest of the
- :sege. Tell her that Sans loved
her through the whole • that is, when
he heard she Was free,' he began to
'work hard atimaking a fortune; he
has got it, andlieN coining to share it
,with her, if she Will let him. Will
yen tell her this?".
The widow; did not answer. She
freed her hand from his and covered
her face with it. By-and-by she look ! .
ed tip again. He was waiting pa
tiently.
"Well?"
"I will tell her." •
He rose from his seat and walked
up and down the room. Then he
came hack, and leaning on the man
tle-06r, strolicii the yellow. hair
of Bowse with his ((limn • ..
"Make her quite understand that
he wants her for his wife. She may
live where she likes, only it must be
with him.
, will tell her.'
, 'And what do you think she will
say?'. he Naid in an altered tone.
'What can she say,'hutecune?'
'Handl r •
The stranger caught her out of
chair as If she had - lun 41 Child • mid
kissed her.
~, 'Deal—Don't!' she cried out..
am. Sam's Maria.'
"Well, I am Marl 's Sam !"
Off went the dark wig and the
black whiskers; there I smiled the
dear face slid had not fortten. I
leave you to imagnie the "*Weau,—
Even the cat got up to 10014 1 and
Howse sat on his , stump of a tall and
wondered if he was on his he& or
head. The widciar gave one little
scream, and then she-- •
But stop! Quiet people : Ai. you
and me, who have got over all-thme
follies r and can do nothing but turn
up`their noseset them, have no bust
nee here. I will only add that, two
hearts were very happy, that BOWSti
conclude(' after awhile that all was
right, and so laid down again, and
that one week after there wean wed
ding at the houae that made tne
neighboring farmers stare.. The
widow had married he "first love."
MEI
wee
TY.
,g,lie
buteso
Avid bf
ear been
•ted,by I
!well uj
t
not its It
Li: one
AVM/4N
*WA gi
0 01 4 1 P YS
4:af inatae
SRVe
waa
3.lanfortai
a"
heir:new . .
young nri.
"solid,!' us
This rule
by the
Beauty,
dow nub
ry blessb
brinatehe
IV or corn
ty, age wee
.ty, genius - a
paired with
Mr. liort
daughter's.
her uncap
enee Of
aphoriva
one, 8111.
him not a
and mold
counsel its to;
lustonS to
"solid!' nil
her.
green".
the tro
ry to st
ed that,
plentif bh ul
twrem
She conf
away tu
and to
vy
In till , .
tertulned
The smr
returned
wealthy
lookir
Arty and we. .io remove one
theseobJections; Mr. North resolv
etitind Arthur Langdon should play
the part' of a "pour young man,"
while he himself would enact the
purse-proud, indignant parent. It
was almost certain, in such mute,
that Katie would fall dtsperately in
Jove with her father's choke, if she
could overlook his' advanced age.
Mr. Langdou, therefore, was invited
to the house and
.prevalltsl upouots
a joke to appear before • Katleas ono •
of her fathers deiks.f
At dinner time thatday Mr. North
Informed Rath:Butt one of his clerks
would all on him in the .evening in
relation M business, and that he pre
ferred she Would absent herself fmm
the parlor on that . occasion. "Ile ,
what you Srililgi rlsiatll a fasinating
man, and 1 have no desire that my
daughter should be fascinated by a I
poor, beggerlyelerk!"
Anti Mr. North ruse very grandly,
and turued away, in order. that- kate
might not see the twinkle in his eye, ,
which her rebellious pout had
brought ;bete. Mks Katie had in
tended- ta •chilt a dear friend that
evening, but now he determined to
postpone the visit in order to catch a
glimpse of this dangerous clerk.
- That evening 31r. Langdon came.
Katie 14111 A him as hesc.o.nded the
steps, end was pleased with his ap
pearance, end determined _to see
more of him. Ha was ushered into
the parlor, and-was soon engaged
with his host in a Pleasant conversa
tion, when the.door suddenly open
ed and the dutiful daughter entered
as if unconscious of the presence of a
stranger. When she saw Mr. Lang
don she started as though she would
retreat, but hqr father called her in
and introduced her in a still, ungra
.
emus yammer tohis guest :
"My daughter, Mr. Langdon,"
and then sat -down, as- if annoyed at
the interruption.
Katie bowed and took a seat.
Lawton, startled by such avision
of lovelincas,waedumb fora moment,
then rising gracefully lie made his
most elaborate salum,and, in spite of
the old gentleman's mock frown, was:
soon engiged In a sparkling inter
chantrt of -thetpglit with the Mir:
daughter.. Arthur was as agreeable
elite it how to and Katie' .
was charmed with him, as she had
predetermined to be. !All went mer
.ryas a rnarriagebell, until Mr. North
thinking mutters had gone quite far
enough. for a favorable first impres
sion,,heunnedi hewed, consulted his
Watch, andlinally remarked:— •
'Mk. Laagdem and I have' much
to say. to each "'other. Katie, have
you ordereittireak&istr
'Longdon looked stul. Katie pouted;
but she took }lithint and withdrew.]
The faseinatineclerk held the door
for:her, and, tut he bade her good
evening, he =et. a look which
haunted her
. Katie was smitten, and Langdon;
was no less so. The old gentleman's
k about buitinegi scented very in
Phi, and Arthur soon took his
ve. Ma calla were 'frequent after
Fand whileKatle wondered why.
ather -should tolerate his pres
ence, she became More and more en
tangled in the silken meshes of love.
Luton finally, declared the state
of his feelings tohf.r. North, and re 7
quested him M . -become his father-in
htw.: Hts stilt was gladly accepted,
but hp was told that his success de-:
petaled upon his maititaining the
! character of a. remarkable genius In
romantic poverty. He accepted the
situation, and. went many times to
see Katie when her father was out.
They soon plighted undying faith to
each other. Landon painted the'
; picture of a pretty cottage,where love
6/10U14 be the household deity, in col
ors as bright as, Claude 3felnotte em
ployed to deeoratehis castle by the
lake of C0m0,.; and Katie • vowed to,
wed with hlm; and with no other'
with or without parental consent and
bletsing.
. But how was the matter to •be
brottchedto the stern father. Arthur
UMlC=rffill
~ n '~°U~vl'•i~
01112g1
e ttlt4, l i;Z
tmd In
tf i i r sti r i4llB
Fl. ...
r i,i4ii - s:rir.w.4,y2, l „ i tiL t rie r t d ,
eat,-1440N Y. •,
, , .
I _'
4 4 ,941;i0e 1 41gh- 11"
.111 . . I...if44 l gOniii '6 1 411 are. ,
m ;.• nci,expected Is hon
,,,Tho, .
a gifincY , YAt 'WO& 114
Duly appred , ;but, a.440w Me ,to
fqgq o SP,nikht;" - :_,,,ii ' 1 . ,
tt I . R9_v.ett.tr4t,` 4 er:ttno in. Your .
eyes, ' I t your uaughtOr liana h 4
top,"itts,sakl.Artl i ir, strUtlng a dt*'
lAtiid . 0 :- IlinderS4 4, `Yout
' , , , ,4 1 4 1 , 4- 11 ,0 1 -tlepit ttra.',
t
r )Rseizedlaallefint (1 fur
.. n i*r. 14, .and ! '„diirted Po 1" :the'
ikouslat , :sue- 14 WO hPflt exTing bed;
Manage L ecply,in. luve tha - ever
1 trAtlihe,r Moved .Artitur. .Tlin the.r.t
daY dm ..reneivkia note - through A
i.unfident!p Vil eltaturei, 014 1 12 An .
interview." Longibut. (Kati • lent
MiasKatie, met himj titleiNcli, and
i t4terhiututy ithn ' stolet inter
tNfovl 1.10444Pa'
,awctl ~that they wont eldpe,' Arid
trust to= receive papa's forgiveness
ia! I was over. Arthur saki he
•. 1. 6 . e her to his 'aulat's house,
'w . ire the ceremony could be per
.formed, and so the time was appoint
ed, and, everything arranged. •
, part day Katie was more than ev
er tender to , her old Either, who
seemed in extrernely good humor.
pre penned a little penlten*l note
And - Jell it. oil het father's Mlle, and,
ai . overunif aPm i tialfd,! she, g rrar
herself, and, and - tn. dil nit,
!ntured • to tile rendezVotta._ 'Arthur
was there with a carriage, itt' which
,be plat.* her, and she' was whirled
,rapidly away,. They stopped in
nunt of a splendid mansion,T which
was briillantly-illuminated as if for
sornikgrcat 'Occasion- Into this Ai-
Attar led ItAt half beWildered, and pre-
Itental in* to an' elegant larly„ his
:aunt, vartiook Iter.up stairs to a pri
vate brow, and, calming her , testa ) ,
dee..kedbe.r for her bridal.
- Nirlien all. waa ready,Arthur led .
`her into the parlor, where' WaS they
clewman end a Mall company, 'at
Which the :liride hardly glanced.
The marriage service was soon ended
'and Katie felt herself receiving inn
ruerable limes and good wishe s , and
then is ie felt her father hand, and '
heard bet Aither's coke, and saw her
fathers smiling face.
"Well, Katie, you have' married
your choice In spite of your father ;
bat I forgiVe you, and give you my
blessing.,l
"My dear Little wife, am you not
Etfelg your, Sour ne-),'
"My home!" said Katie, 'complete
/y bewildered. "I thought"— • 1
"You thought," interrupted her
father,
Moeda" . heartily,. "that it
was ly:as to be small 'cottage with ]
a leaky roof, but. it all ends happily,
after all, like a shilling novel. The
prat. young lover has not been left
a, large fortunely a rich taut India
uncle, but 11'4 UN a fortune of his
own, which Is Just as well." .
' "ForgiveMe, Katie, for this decep
hen, and it shall be the last," pled
Arthur. "This Is my house '
and
onare its mistress. .I am not poor,
but hope you all love me as . well
as ILI. were," -
Wet! to forgive
ei th tiefill t Uirill'Thb - itifeceig
tion they had practiced, and finally
became as happy a woman as the un
fortunate wife of a wealthy man tan
reasonably hope to be.'
The Minister's Wife
The following is from an English
journal, hutdoes not loseall its point
by coining across the water:
Must a minister never lose his
heart ton bright-eyed woman whose
;, , omineas, and sense, and humor, and.
grace take his fancy ? Must he al
ways inquire, first whether she is
clever at managing a Dorcas society
and can hold her own Ina committee? ,
Must he ask her to spend. a mouth
on trial among his people, and get
n majority of two-thirds of the ladies
in her favor before he ventures to
pmpt*e? lie , may cordially admire
and honor women who have the es
pedal faculty, as well tIN the relig
ions earnestness, for taking the lead
in every kind of religious work ; but
he is unfaithful to the church and
to his Master if he thinks it good to
take for a wife a woman hf a shy
vied timid spirit, who' would be ill
Tor a month if she had "to take the
chair" at a' Indies meeting, but who
knows how to charm him tooblivion
of his anxieties, can win his wearied
mind away from incessant thought
about his work, andenn wander with
him in the pleasant paths of reading
and speculation which refresh and
regenerate the exhausted strength.
A doctor's wife owes no duties, to
her husband's patients; a lawyer's
wife owes no duties to her husband's
clients; but a minister's wife i 4 re
garded as a kind of lady-bishop, or
at knit, an unordained curate. who,
by virtue of her position: is bound
to discharge innumerable services!
to the congreption. She may be a
young girl, with no experience of
human life and church business; but
khe Is expected to become the active
president of all benevolent institu
tions supported by the ladles of her
husband's charge. She may haVe
three or four children, whom she
has to tench herself, and who-e dres
ses must tornado and mended by
her own hands ; but site ii expected
to visit all the sick and poor. She
has her natural sympathies, and how
ever warm her heart nuty be to every
one who likes her husband's preach
ing, she cannot be the Intimate and
confidential friend of every lady that
belongs to the church ; but people,
who themselves are far from being
distinguished fora universal charity
are indignantf if she finds one house
more , pleasant than 'another, and If
she naturally associates with Indies
of her own age and kindred tastes.
Who •Wlll flare Influence
. With • Grant t
There is a great deal of speculation
on this subject Just now: Some peo
ple think that 34. r. E. B. Washburne
will control him; some say that he
is in frequent and confidential cor
respondence with A. T. Stewart, the
dry goods niatt; some say that Gen
eral Rawlins is all powerfal with
him, and others that Generalliadeau
wields a wonderful Influence. We
have been frequently asked what we
think about the mallet, and to save
the trouble of further inquiry we
may as well state our views. On one
occasion when
,General Grant was
riding with us behind Pecriem, t he
quietly remarked; "I should like to
take hold of the reins." Now, we
rather think:General Grant will hold
the reins himself-the next Mar years.
Ile has been elected President, and
he will be President. It is true that
he has said that he should only carrrtyy
out the will of the people as declared
the laws of Congress, but then be
will (wry it out. We shall have lin
administration. Hewitt &his duty,
and the men under him will have to
do their duty. Thereforeveronelude
that the most influential man with
the administration for the next four
years will be Ulysses Ek Grant.
—2l - ruz York Ledger.
) 1 , q 1
I=MIMMI
.'i
~lz
tat
I ldirrl l ,it. :SAW 7 . / ' 4l olii I . C -1% )
• .... , .0 .. ourress .k 1 zzi,l Fri::
L . t , i ,444, - ,141-.i , 'l.- - /, :t, 1.
euriadtycomtneueei iriAite • ~
With the d. hAlit.9f' • .. '
=P I ,:4 -.. i l l ' ...!, A.*: '
everYthint, laid ire '.
iror , knowWdge•theyi treadtimiCt s
very•,l aWkwardriangh: tee
*au:quark:l:4_4lm tank:ali%
4 11 b
woven In the Itind of every , "and
[ 'daughter i3fit've: ' Divest u s earl+
ositYmarthe tribal , would , •fun
evero ilukWer saYkr "4 , °us
i t o
fer.r,. that desires to o! dt.
there a gnet, deal 451 fe . hoe=
ityWhidi in mitt) t ) lint.:: nom!
Dr: Johnson sold
edge is then of in • IS ; $4
tha child a. v tn , "Curicialy . Aa
kind oflikh:for o glide tit
'of othkie people. ~S omoz . =and,
*lnnen c ton,T , Iniisti ask i. , :• i• , -
Klemm lo h em.; :
• :. ,
arethfunoals Orconve •. on;
.qy teedrVe lidt.ln"pet .... .
i lAieetairSeOfleetaYe;
Mr:
- tentlifided NIS Wearers pf al nuntbar - ht
iiitiobtericeit Th e ! now oFies_ I were
good•and the old . ones were vPid in
such a gnat nt . and - original ner 1
•
hat't they .were'tequally using.
-By the way of Apology for me
a itaak" edilch was trunw centuries
old when *led to the collection' of
4 11: . 1g u V i st a ggr. Jiic t illii, -se ,
stories now•manirlmu , make them,
amt when you del,neSice one, other
people take it and swear ypu stole it.
We are all more or Tess curlew as to
the More. 'A few weeks ago poll-,
Minns were in a great state of excite
ment as to who was tot be the next
President -of.-- the United . .States.
Many, young ladles put pleees of bride
011 , ,under their pill'ows in lbehope;
ofdtsiuriing ofthe "conling i roan.'
Igrmraneeand varies* arc the pa
rents of superstition. -Ne head is a
.pericet vacuum ;• ;there twist be 9CPME ,
thing in it, and the mote: roomtaked
up with solid things the lees room
:tbr the ghosts of things. •Our thought
rhn haven.° itdluence ea the Illtnre,
tit our actions will. A. man's life
ould be Measured by . his notions,
not by the number etyma. in con
cluding, the:lecturer addreisied him-
Nel f eqszelally to , yowngr mak, exhor
ted them to dir t their, curiosity ; to
wardthe acquirement of usehd knowl
edge. j'he man who lives in idle
,neks jiym in torment. He may Ban.
'ln the 1 iiirrtis' /Of .1 -Wilton's Lucifer,
"which way- I fly is bell—myself am
hell." , . .
a
ant% lrleltaberg, and-Five Fork eatabs ,
netted ;at a lielails. iatahetiPai, eakaal
1 ilatti- 1 wide1...71 aet rt . gag • au! , &jogai
still more trimly es it may;fioat hiereat'.
Mr. thUre le, ilp3rOcin' 'henceforth lav)
no fettered aleiii:llr.rompr
an TarMr; WriflffridatliFtleaWil:'
may still idikitt but the Federal Consti-
i tiMon 1.1 , 110 f InogErthetr *Wahl, and the
folds of mu flag no !enter, emblavin nor (
seek - to • opnceal a lie. •• The humblest
Asuerlcso, uo brig as he vielatem no law,
Lt master of his own ltinba and the mole
owner of all be ears ; honestly earn.
Of these !Ulmer's!, Mintier; the Wiper
ham and the beneficently will bemuse
more palpable With'eriney• added year.—
Distance Is requlrod to Enable us to mew-,
sure andiarpreclate the magnitude of the
pyramid of Four Millions of atsacklee,
!stricken from the scarred limbs of our
countrymnii, which form the enduring
monument of our struggle and our tri
umph. New arta, new Industries, new
developments of mound wealth,.too long
unheeded and 'unvalued, will pet . * by
year stand lbrth in attestation that none
of use haslet adequately realized themag-.
abode and the benignity of our National
. victory.- •
•No groat good is ever achieved without
effort or without cost pour years of
fratriotic struggle and sacrifice, Half a
Million of men slain in battle or dying
of the privations 'and exposures of War,
Millions of bersimaiones, Five Billions
of property destroyedquid nearly Three
Billions of Debt busurred, sated the neg.
. 1 nitude of dm contest and the unyielding
[Front the Atlantic Monthly fur Den] I valor of the combatants.
,
What. might t ie' avoided If
illoasekeepeti , Accumulated
Capital. - '
, • llow often do we see women -who
have lived for years in liberal comfort
and wedded state—the mistresses of
gitealarittionacii;,wlsiati variedrange
of noon; and apbxtoients Mole thern
little worlds' hi themseiveNcand with
the assured and dignified position in
society that nothing but one's " own
house' our give—suddenly stripped
by widowhood of all their ample
surroundings, and portioned off Into
one room, or at themast tWO; in some
some son or daughter's house there
to live as a impernumertiry all the
rest_ of their days. No doubt these
grandmothers, saintly- and subdued,
often exercise a precious influence on
all the members of the :families they
live with. But it Is not the leas
hard far theta ; and if woman. could
WA) and. Invest all the profits on the
and consurzei ro l4
Zr= t ;14 vlah o
cry who are marching ruled
such a li.Zsend us this would be spar
edits deprivutious and humiliations.
ill My . opinion, a woman that has
once had a house of her own, in
which she has borne and reared chil
dren, regulated servants, and played
her part in society, should never be
thrown out of it Into the corner of
somebody's else family except from
choice, and I wonder that woman are
not oftener apprehensive of this than
they seem to be.
It may be said, that as men fur
nish all the means for our housewifery
so, if we are able to save anything,
it ought properly to return to them..
-This is the doctrine of the Roman
law in regard to the peculiuSi s or sav
ings of the slave from the allowance
made him by his master. In law it
belonged to the latter, because it was
his in the first place, and the slave
was his also; hence he could at any
time nsume it. And, In my opinion,
this would be tenable ground in m
eant to the savings of co-operative
housekeepers ; if. men insisted upon
giving such savings to them we.
could not . help . ourselves. • But this
is so opposed to the indulgent Amer
ican spirit toward woman, that is
more than; 'probable they would pass
a law making such savings by any
housekeeper her own: Of course, the
contrary action would crushall inde
pendence of enterprise among us, and
thus injure masculine business inter
ests as well as feminine. But, this
aside, would it not be almost an
amusement to men -to see how wo
men would go to work° I think
therewould be no lack of something
to talk about every day at .the table
between the husband and his wife
and daughters, or in society between
the gentlemen and ladles who now
Ore so often at a loeifor some common
in tenet upon Which to enterchange
hi etc; and experience 4.
Mow a Farmer' may lose Money.
By not biking one or more good
papen‘. ,
Keeping no account of farm oper
ations; paying no., attention to the
maxim. "A stitch in time eaves
nine," in regard to the sowing of
grain and planting of seed at the prop
er time.
Leaving reapers, ploughs, cultiva
tors, &c, unsheltered from the rain
and heat of the sun. - More money Is
lost In this way annually than mast
persons would be willing to believe.
Permiting broken implethelds to
be scattered over the farm until. they
1 1 are irreparable. By reparing broken
implements at the proper time many.
dollars may be saved--a proof of tbe
a..sertion that timeis money.
Attending auction sales and psi`'
shasingall kinds oftrurnpary,, because
in the woolsof the vender, the arti
cles are "very cheap."
Allowing fences to remain unre
paired until "strange" cattle are
found glazing in the meadow, grain
field, or browsing on the fruit trees;
. Disbelieving the principle of a to-
tatiou of crops, before making a sin
gle experiment.
Planting fruit trees with theexpee-
tation of having_ fruit without giv-I
ing the trees half the attention iv);
(mired to make them profitable. •
Practicing economy by depriving
stock of shelter during the winter,
and feeding them unsound food,such
as half rotten and mouldy hay or fod
der. , • - •
Keeping all innumerable tribe of
nds'on the premises, and two or
three big lazy dogs- who never molest
the vermin.
Spending rainy days in aTocerieei
and bar-rooms, Instead of being .at '
home putting things to rig hts when
yen have leisure.—Rural World.
In Goa* It Lisald that Queen Vic
toria islz no moans averse to MST
rberVsisige wlste ko Ernest, Prince
lish-
Al
lbrotDuher n mod accomp
ed and sUil very fine looking. gentle,
rasa.
ELSIE
ki
of ~i r U rR
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ot ifoiKetildbiss; l " , !. . .
init. am intstaitikly iSit D o
NalotiLirtsttehi OS : ilfii . < 4. D 0
pat anittielidheamml dr Ali:Wick 9pim4
dation toTheiletagdiarri 601)1111113rul!t,
stitborty,io , • ~•
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:The rOatit oftitAPPP,.. 7 •7*!o4e i4l4*
. 1 4irtit or ; o n 4 ! 4ti ' '
I;xe United. Elt'air", , the (kat atoms
:oe"me;libeAY and ilia rDClfilt !DT'
p,liidaii' %nt* . tiersur ityrtimiv.e.siebt
beiiittneigiati isdisioasedlab holow
I insißlivArkithistlom • bay i tiallarri.rimft
theekV(l, hirt.taltitrillir NAT •P•P•A*94, 3
. . • thoW43.4oo;is. rt., Lift..to,u• to
fivto.l.i4,l:o4olro#!4:CiAb!ireiX.'`f
,4l,4,c4ll a. If.b 1 4 9 1 - .•00 I,3 m 4) ei
o f. lirkila 1 4 1 ri"ii errlD4ID 4
wan abstrattioft; itiliWiinoti•of Mar
_ __ _ . __.
At lerigth the smoke rises front the
hard-won field, - showing that the hat in
trentinnent has been tarried. The eke.
Hon of. fluartr and ICOUPALS. gives Amu
wanteCttid --{i.at' th
Bove of Promisearebes the sky." There
are still obstacles to surmount, perils to
avert„ noble ends to be achieved: but the
ship of state hae ridden out the tempest.
indhisherhavenfnlitnriew. Thsseren
Staten . reconstructed under the recent
sets of Congress will stand, and sill, he
followed by the three that have hitherto
stood aloof; the rights of the Freedmen
will be upheld and respected, and 'lm
partial Suffrage throughout the lindWill
soon plant them on foundations that ten
pin Terermit will contend, in the
tare an in Rio past, for Universal Am
nait*?ef w eli as Ise iSugrifig•
of blood Otherwhei than Ili setter and In
necessarywar. "There la a thiseeihrWar
and a time ibr Pew ;" sad the Miter *di
lows swiftly on the heels Of the Ibrnme.
Whenever those who fought against the
Union shall have in good faith given up
the contest, they are no longer our foes
but our countrymen.
In the joyful trust that Grant's eleser• - •
tionshas given the death-blow to Au-
Klux-Mum, and all manner of outrage . ..
against Unionists andireedmen as such,
and that Impartial Suffrage will no long
er be seriously resisted, we hope to we
the next four years signalized by an un
precedented expansion of the National
Industry and a consequent increase of
the National wealth. We hope to see
new cabins dot the praire, new clearings
chequer the Owed, new mills, factories,
furnaces, erected, North, South, East
and West, until our annual product
shall be Hundreds of Millions greater
than at present, while Mines of Iron and
of Coal, of °old, Silver, Copper, do.,
shall.be opened and worked, with an en
ergy and to an extend that defies preCe
dent. Beiturvlng that -the sysianalio,
ticient Protection of Home Industry is
the corner-stone of a wise, benignant
National Policy, and That it is essential
to the rapid development of our latent
resources., to the prosperity of our coun
try, the maineenace of her Credit, and
the honest payment of her Debt, we shsU
give it our most earnest and active sup-
Port.
has been eo long known as the loading
political newspaper of the country, that
its special features need no elaborate de.
aeriptlon. It contains the Wield and: l
most accurate reportsof the proceedings
in Congress and the . State- Legislatures,
careful surtumiries
,of news- from all
quarters of the globe, correspondence
from all the principal centers of Intelli
gence at home and abroad, letters • from
travelers in foreign lands, review, of new
books, dramatic, musical, and dile art
criticisms, literary, scientific, said aeilll -
tous nilseellardea, and all the multitude,
of items which make up a
. A.rd-class
daily paper. It is printed with bolter
and clearer typo than any other daily
Journal in dulerica. It is published ev
ery moming,Sundays excepted; Teeing,
$lO a year ; =5 for elx months.
TUC tVEXT-WMEKLY TRIIIUNT4
is published every Tuesday and Friday,
and contabw ' all the editorial articles,
not merely local In character; literary
reviews and art criticisms; letters from
large corps of foreign and dot:need°
corruddents; special and Associated
Frees telegraphic;. dispatches; a' careful
and complete summarylk •fartign and
domestic news; ezclnalvo reports of the
proeeedings of the Farmers! Club of the
American Institute; talks. about fruit.
said other horticultural and.niticultund
infortias - ; dock. Ananebd, tittle, dry
goods did pawing risirketrewts,whifit
are publidwal in Tax Diana faxeutts.
Tax Eisau-Wincix.r Tarmac auto gives.
in the course of a year, three of 'four of
the best and hied popular noreler 4 7
living anthems. 'The cad of tbesoldone
If bought in book Amin, would be ORM
six to .eight dollars. If Purabidld
the E ni abb ewelidaws. ft ( !in T / *
'
/boy are csre mity aelmeel; the met
wo uld be throe or. four *nett that
r.towbere chat can se Much arr.
rout inudligenee and permanent Weedy
;orate? bildd at so cheap p. rip se In the
Tzumwe. Thome lwho
believe In the principals did approve of
the character of TIM Tetteents can In
crease Its power and inlittenos bF pin
ing with their neightsate in , lbentlng
clubs for the Tea filtdi-ifilittdr edi
tion. It will in that way 144490 W to
them at the lowed Mai fee WM* melt
Olger alin he EOM/4
En
BE
e ",, ---
,M 141747" im op
11111 , ~: •"I G . , 1 lac , j 1 7 .
a ard. flood ind lilli ntl i 0 --",., ? :•: 61 = 4*
Ainnetairaniellitligi Sit 'r !/" IQ :,. \
10101474 0 41nr4 1 5 ', ' s'.
1 44FITSIR,T,W1 1 015. Will
P.1•14•; 11 V?:t • ;,' , 'l O . p .
poi PS we wII . , • r • • 110 -
lea and the Daily TribitnlP J.• " • • •
' ? • • • • :........! ,, 1 ViZI. - . 131 , 7 9.1 1
1 .... .!.. ' 1011 149 96 .
Ma nonttnnedire:
_. o Mn
1.
ag. .- ate.
ber of copies than any other newspaper
di the muntay.• • We eliarrealneatbis *on
ildenistabor to retain IL Its
tirritothf dibititimisiefilkinPlontlnned
misindetnitel.l Tim.rednineiM.of our .
3 Ftelat atilttneliesdotiOlArutm '
Isilalseseetd the , . blest
Poßuff*o o f l 4ll,A l 37} , • /gm '
l as imadoispirdil
at i creeme
itilittriltre; ' ' ' puma.
nisi ft - Axle* gib ' tie !wort
'el; in'ffiiiecialt.rtider *ii*Aiebounral
topitn i eoritritittisd frpo Islo7lcatt writers.
No fertnecwhodidepatottittliinsdl with
mai; and to 'hada , . the assoyese con
dandy made IA the milinomdbitcsillng,
ma afford to Aegi•O UN IFll•qtait• of •
• ,I. :. Aikolir . i .W,• 11 3 1511 • 11°, . 0 ' • .....,
pecidly.when It tutattSWltt ligiteulture -' -"P
rdber,feetures#Llntereatisdpront. The
Weekly TribUnticoptelzuft stailmaty of
all that appoint In the , Deify and Ewa-
Weekly editlohi;vriiihe id sildeLkon It to
made to address Undf llolliernints of tars
gran diradnif this ';Reifilties 041 the
nese pnbliontomiondri, elllisit Is new .
In mualossuLthe Eno arMf win 1 • 0 • 1
'all peonsof thr enrrhil-4~1114 argil of •
rareintsrat In, Via Anse, na• ,abowing
Use proviso/ wic!*it,rll,4nothertotus
tri*a 3-editorial , onerS, tln i E of
home and foreign IrVti with
full and mrefolly're ottaw .
markets Will bettliniatid lona week to
1 44044,4 !ma lirkiiiintt that of
1- 47'A 11 • 1 ,04 4 i ilk A•4• 4 4 11 :..,,,,,_,
_' 21 7 Puna'
lacuna pater **flag 710bIne ben '
sletadyettsined lie pfailisOinisandbli
intlunwo add eirtdedistorigigly• Inter
Upon the new: yeerrylatiltainillia.o• ID
ear reader, that noppaillishnespenes
willbe spared to PlFfris allipiiimer use-
Munn Cud poinirolo3lliielte newel-
come traitor :loltlff Hittites in the
land. • • U . ;.'' ",:_. ' •
The editor "eat* vii,rore pivoted to
write, during Mover, VA ,an elemen
tary wept. on Fidilkid EcOnorny; where-
In the polic4ofFrotection to Hone In
dustry will ISsipianedicad ; iindlatted.
Tide workirlll finitbti glint to the pub
lic throuith sontseetewimaintafTribruse,
and will appal/kit ailletednhine--Ddly,
s ons poprailly and Wiellthe'..l
sv• wi/Ithamk:lbliersitm.Olak that -
the lonuesce ef the Tribune aenduess to
she walls wet well ipetait of the people;
to aid In astending iti circulation. i
. mins or rug wit-raiz riii sums
• !:,, (To Mail Submiribent(
One copy one year, 52 lamas 7200
Firesoples to neaneeot 114111ribire
4 one post-oinco, 9co
limiroples to namee of 'subscribers.
.Mono. peat-oillce ' 1800
Ana,,ne copy emit to the Metter-spot
the iqb; • • ' ' ' •
Ftfty emirs to names of salscribers at
arta poet-oille• • ' • as so •
Teh'eopka, to one addicts lb one
) order : • -.%41 IiSA
4 1 d 14 Me 00,1 1 1 1 0 1 , 6 r. 'W,..1.4 ,
4011, '
• - ~..- -! 4 r-4/
Ant Lone colito me kte - ii . M . -up of the
1 ,
Fifty, copies to one widows,. In one '
• ' order • 50 00
Otis hundred replan to one eddsre
In one order - lOO,OO
IM3
TILE DALLT TIUilt:111
a.
osinnti l s HISTOMT or 111/1 WAX.
The Tribune has ofthn been applied to
'for copies of Mr, areely's history of the
late Civil War, entitled The. American .
Conflict. Many evidently meanie that
it Is published by us, sothst we can give
copies at pleasure. in several once ,
Union soldiers have written us saying
that they were unable to pay Its full
price, but were tievertheleas anxious to
poseces the work, and asking us to '
them by, what means hey. play obtain
• ,
IL .
In. deference to these representations
the publishers Of the Triblumbar/swede
arrangements with llama, O. D. Ore&
Co., publishers of thstAxnarteanConitict,
whereby they are tumbled tat offer that
waticto mu* persona Nassar MO At to
obtain' Mall eubstwitOultu fp, the Tri.-
buns as follows; •.7
One copy of the MehYry7; In * two rol
umea, will bo sent bleach of the follow
ing clubs :
The money for eieh club to be sent at
ono time *Admit papers Ibittiesarseolub
to be addressed to ens post-ofboa, •
For VI, too copies Wookly Triboaio,
to mimeo of subscribers. ,
For $33, twelv”opheiaiegdy Tribune
to alums of subsoribeiv:':
For s6l,Aft7 copierorW4!.iWy Tribune,
to names of subscrilscs. '
•
For sli one hnnpred copies Weekly
""15'limns to nsinediof subscribers.
VoffPD, ten eopkis Weems Tribune to
ono emdree7►•- • '
• For twenty oopl Weekly Tri
bune, to, ormaddrees.
For ssB,llfty . coples Weekly Tribue to
one address,• , ; • •
For $lOO, one 'hundred copies Weekly
Tribne to one address.
ter re, ten copies Ilsod.Weekly Tria,
bune,:to one pootofilles: •
Tor fitly twenty eogiles
Tribune, to ooe post-odes. •
For PK Mir copies gesni-Weekly
Tribune, to one vat-nape;
Friends wishing to secure the If lino., •
ry on those terms Must: sad the Clubs
precisely as we harestatoi them. Sera-
Weekly and Weeldy subscriptions must
not be mixed In eat Chat. ,
The Amerlosi 'Conflict lei History - of
the late Ctntl War, its Omni and inci
dents, in two lards ma wen Printed 00 .
Woe at de amille• pugs respeotirtdy,
and is sold Ow •:ft is abundantly
and adrubisbis I,4oFlitot Pk= of
battles and. ate portrets of Prod.
dents, Generals; Gko'to l o o % &0-, who
were prodfnent the sregigle, and with I
$ very large mlO Of w• of war. It
hal received boa all gnaws the high.
est c o i nnssodedionellseasbaracy of state
otentstdralissis It is sub
stentislift bouzsda Ong as* be deemed a
eshedrieto4oloP• I, &V /Pm , ' ' 11 " ••
-Teillauitt!et. 3 4biliOnedise wa y seboid
DiatOgaybeary bt l'°4 and each
school contains imihilars who can, with a
'ibtiltientietatteietion, robe a Tribune
Cob and seesistlie Isiory. Absbet
. .
egyonetrbe wasisalm Myyr °Mein it by
fristasa Spar. boars Sp, obblahnt sub
scription em Tilltane among his
hien& end neigh'borsomprehoperoany
will, be incited todo eq: • The work will
be promptly tbrwarbbil b azprese or by
mats, prepaid on tee** of the required
- ..! f•
sabrrrtptloaa
Teems, emit iitabiltear
Drafter= New Tcirik; postftlee or
ders perible to thionlarof the Tribune,
bin maw, are prellitabie to any other
made otranittaboa Mira&
TEL 13011=111 1 ftw York.
ME