hc dpotumbinn, AN INDEPENDENT JOURNAL, M rCIlUSllliU CVEltY gATCttDAV, IN niaomiliufg, Columbia Count)-, ln. -! I rr.n.us. Two Dollars n yrnr, In mlvimco. If not paid In etui vnncn, Two Dollnl & ntnl l-'lfty (Vnts. Address nil lrttora to arcman it, Moonn, HJItor of tlio Colu.miiiax, Uloomsuurg, Columbia County, l'n. For tho Columbian, CHILDHOOD'S DREAMS. 11Y I.K.NNA r , Loxa-rAtiEti visions of my childhood's years, Where hnve ve fled 1 jJT t search for yo nmld tlio wlldwood bowers ; v . 1 WOO c mid tho urlght-hued Hummer flowers ; " ijf I bow my head ' Krocntchyour Inspiration from tlio sunset's Ijcant ; -ft seek yo In tlio morning's enrly gleam ; I mourn yc with n lovo Hint will not deem Your beauty dciid. 1 uY were so bright, so Glorious once, vo lent r. A rlinrni your own ,to every rosebud by tlio jcphyrs bent iTo every lovo-tiota o'er by wnrblcr sent i To blrd-mnto flower. iVo enst it golden Jmzo o'er every fnr-otr hilt : (Found sweet-toned musla In tho gurgling rlllj ,-Anu conjured iirigiit-robcil fairy forms to flu Knch wnod.nnok tonp. iyX)li, Ircnms Ions vanished! come to me ngnlu Willi olden cheer. . jMy hend Is nclilnn with a venrnlni; rmln 'rfVTo Ami your whispered hoi'-words wero so vnln, Ami earth Boilrenr, ''it long to feel ngiUn iv child's uudoubtlng trust, jjllecm liumiin truth u thing lest frail thnii dust, ''And htiiunn Jove too pure to dim or rust - Willi lnpsn of years, j, . 11 KR, I'A., August, lfCO. . -JEAN UATIIBUItNE'S LIFE. ;' ASpiunq long and coltl,n short and .fervid Summer, nn Autumn bearing ''Recant fruit tliat was Jean llnthburne's jtf'llfe. Ami now sho is dead, and the long "tfwild grasses aro tangled above her . , grave by vagrant winds which wanton through them. . ' It was the will she left behind her which was thokoy-noteto her life, nnd hiatlo It significant a strange will, yet ' lierfeetly legal, and proved in court like tho rest of them. She bequeathed, after u few trilling legacies, all her fortune v Bomo three hundred thousand dollars . under tho supervision of competent 'trustees, to further tho happiness of seven young orphan girls. It was, of . course, the income which was to bo .'.used thus, the money Itself was to be a permanent fund, and those whom it en (.riehed, when they married or otherwise greased to need its aid, wero to have afthelr places tilled by the trustees. She 'Jchose the llrst board of managers her yself, and made provisions, when any of the number should die, for the election 'of others in their stead. She explained her intention minutely. It was not to make tho girls good merely, or respectable merely, or well ' clothed or well-fed merely; but, if pos sible, to make them happy, to indulge : their whims, and give their individual . pities a chance. For she said, and this voice from her very grave was tlio only 'complaint she had ever been known to Gutter: " One woman who has found life very -,r'sad, would like to make it brighter for "iomo of those who will live after her.'' That was all, a quiet, calm statement ht facts she had found life very sad ihut did any wall ever come out of bit tftcrer depths'.' f' Her parents had died before sho could ' ''remember them, and left her a fortune iand a guardian; left her, too, with a ''nature at once shy and .sensitive, with ;'a tendency to morbidness and hypoehon dria, which needed sorely tlio influence of a warm, loving, cheerful home. Instead of that Sampson Dredlife and 'his wife starved her and froze her. I do - fnot mean literally; thoro was lire and , Tfood enough in their great, comfortable 'house, and Miss Ilathburnc, as an heiress "J-should, was served with the best. Hut she was always Miss Ilathhurno yiever Jeanie, or darling, or mother's . blessing, or heart's delight, or any of 'those fond, foolish names familiar to the Hps of happy mothers. .She knew ' well enough that no ono loved her, and 'that strengthened her shyness, and "deepened her despondency. (So site grew up to twenty-one along, 'plow cold Spring, as I said. Then her fortuno caino into her own hands, and iwltha certain AVidowDredlife,aslster-Pn-Iaw of Sampson, to niatronizo the establishment, she went into a house of h"er own. Tho widow carried with her Itho old Drcdlifo intlupiico, nnd the new Shomowasat first scarcely other than a repetition of tlio old. Except that now kMIss Uathlmrno began to go into society, rand was enough of an heiress to bo re volved there with favor. Jf She was not pretty, yet her llguro was fltflin mirl ftlmiilpr. linr f.nmiihtvlmi mw nlnn. n.d trolw,l.n,l 1 .... t ! ..n ,,111,1 u miv jJiui u Ul ui-uil llllll!!,ui.'ll, iiiilght liavo been bright. Her eyes twero largo and dark, but tho lire in them tmnouldered rather than sparkled. Jf 'ho had had a little self-esteem, if some one had told iier now and then that she was handsome, she might have bccn.su ; .Jor many a woman seta up for a beauty K)n far less capital. Hut compliments faiover llowered In tho Dredlife soil, and ftfeau had grown up feeling horself hope fiessly plain, till tho feeling had airected tho very liuo and lineaments of her countenance. w Sho had no tasto in dress cither Womon sehlom havo who do not seo any charm In their own faces. Sho wore colors which made her look sallow or ftclark nearly always, and her gowns de iracted from tho grace of iier ilguro In . stead of being skilfully chosen to en 'Jianco It. According to somo creeds all this 8hoiild liavo made her good by making 'iier humblo, but It had Just tho opposite effect. It nourished secretly a bitter, 'cynical prido, a grudging sen.o of injus tice, a hard self-contempt noxious weeds which do not grow in that weet VaHoy of Humiliation whoro liunyan's rilgrlms walked, and " tho herb culled Iieartsoase flourished." , . Tii U was J us 1 1 he sto to sick of iierscl f, ;at oddi with tho world, yet desperately . cat on wringing happiness out of some VOL. I.-NO. 1G. thingin which Jack Urcvoort found Iter. Ho did not love Jean Ilathburnc you nro not to suppose that for a moment. At her brightest and best sho would never have been his stylo; besides, a little blue-oyed girl, at homo in his mother's nursery, a poor cousin, held so much heart its lie had, and was moro to him than any ono else ever would be. Hut the lacked money Just as entirely as lie did, and it is not In such cases that two negatives make an nlllrmative. Of course, lie could be much moro dangerous to Miss Ilothburno's pcaco than if lie had really loved iier, for his coolness would enable him to tako advantage of all openings. Ho sorely needed money, and he had settled It with himself that ho must marry it. 11c thought fate, Which should, of course, havo a special kindness for tho old Ilrevoort blood, hud placed her in his way on purpose. He meant to make her in love with him; so lie commenced, like a skilful tactician, by trying to make her in lovo with herself. For tho first time she found herself studied with unmistakable interest. Ho noticed her tastes, and showed quietly ids appreciation or them. Ho gave her hints about dress, and she grew handsome rapidly much to ids satisfaction ; for, though ho would liavo been ready to marry her In any case, it would be much moro agreeable to have a wife who furnished to spectators an excuse for one's choice in something be sides dollars anil cents. It was not altogether tho now colors that she wore which improved her. A subtle flame ran through all her veins, and kindled tho smouldering fires in her eyes, nerclieekswerepalonolongor, or her face spiritless. AVhen she looked In tho glass sho saw what seemed toiler, in contrast with Iier old self, a radiant vision. And when with this new Jean Ilathburue Jack Hrcvoortbcgan to fall in love it did not surprise or startle her. Tills was tho Summer of Iier life fer vid us short; it lasted three months. This time only, to her sad colorless ex istence, came happiness! Ilrevoort was an ardent lover. He was gifted in thoart of seeming to a de gree amounting to positive genius. Then Jean was too sturdily honest herself to doubt the honesty of others, and too delicately generous ever to remember that she was rich and ho was poor. So her Summer was warm and bright, and all her roses bloomed ! It was something to see her in thee days Iier old dead-and-alive self no longer; in its stead a sparkling creature, melting into tho unspeakable glory of loveand womanhood. How a man who truly loved her would have delighted in what Jack Ilrevoort watched with tho cynical coolness of Mophistopheles! He hurried on the preparations for their marriage when once .she had accept ed him. He could not do without her, ho said, longer than till Fall. It was the truest word ho had uttered since ho be gan his courtship ; but tho need ho had of her was of a nature ho would not have found it pku-ant to communicate. She thought It was the eagerness of love. It was to make some of the arrange ments which his approaching marriage rendered necessary that Ilrevoot went out of town for a couple of days ; and of course, in his character of impatient lover, lie must write each day to his be trothed. Tho first letter Jean ltath burne's first love-letter was full of subtly sweet words, tender phrases, al lusions which made her pulses beat fast. She read it till she knew it by heart, and then kept reading it over to seo if she had forgotten anything. Tlio second she opened with fingers trembling with expectation. It-commenced with " Dear Hal!" Her deli cato seno of lienor bade her fold it up again, for sho understood at once- that it had been sent to her by mistake. Hut as she doubled it over sho caught her own name. Sho would havo been more than woman irsho had not read It then. It was simply tho letter of ono fast young man toanother.about bettlngand debts and horses. It shocked her tasto ; but she loved him enough to havo ex cused It but for this passage: "(lenrKc ciinnot wiy that I )im not unking eirtirt onouxh to pay him. I 11m to nmrry -Miss Italhburne In October. Splendid woman nsslio Is, sho is not it y (.tylc never would havo been. Ii nil- niiiio fur Nell's little llm;i'r. However, n mini who owes forty (Imusind dollars, mid has some, conscience still left about paying It, can't very el! iitU.nl to Indulio In the luxiirynf u heart. I bellevii I got rid of mine piclly clleetimlly miiiii' tbnongo," Those were words which no sophistry could ever beguile her Into forgiving. Her Hummer was over. The untimely black frost had come. Who " Nell" was sho did not care, or "(ieorgo," or "Hal." Sho had no curiosity at all. Enough for her that lovo had failed her. Sho looked in tho glass with sad, changed oyes, and lost forever all the fond self-complucenco of recent days. There was nothing about her to love, after all. Sho had been deceiving her self yet moro utterly than sho had been deceived. The very depth of her self abasement madoher patient. It was morning when tho letter came, and at night Ilrevoort was to return. So sho sat all day and waited, without knowing how long tho hours were, or feeling onco the weariness of delay. She felt us if her heart and her pulses were standing still, waiting also. Shu was too utterly benumbed to caro foriinvtliing. Through tho weary day tho only thing like occupation which sho attempted, was to draw up a check for fifty thous and dollars in favor of Jack Brevoort, and sign It. At last he came;. Kho heard the well- BLOOMSBURG, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 18GG. known ring, tho linn proud step in tlio hallhow sho had loved to note and re member every one of his peculiarities I Then ho opened the door, and caino up to her ns usual. She made a slight gesture of warning, and that, or (something in her face, re pressed tlio enthusiasm which would otherwise havo expressed itself in caresses. " I believe forty thousand dollars is the amount of your debts?" sho asked in a clear, metallic tone. For oncohlsseir-possesslon failed him. His knees shook under him, and he sat down. " Who told you V" ho gasped. " Yourself." She took out tho letter, and laid It in his hands. He looked at It, and knew Jean Ilathburue well enough to give up ids game. " I. haven't ono word to say, though I am not quite so heartless, perhaps, us that letter makes mo seem. 1 nhmttil have been kind to you. Hut you may as well despise mo through and through." " (. as well," she answered dryly. "Of cnurso I withdraw from my prom ise to marry you ; but your good inten tions about paying your debts must not bo frustrated by my troth-breaking. Hero is a check for fifty thousand dol lars. The margin tif ten thousand over your own estimate of your liabilities will cover any littlo Items you may chance to have forgotten, and make you a free man again, who can airord' to have a heart." " Do you think mo mean enough to tako it'.'" " I think you will take it. There is a kind of Justice in it too. I would havo given you several' limes as much freely, n you Had loved me as I thought. You deserve something for tlio weariness it must havo been to you to act a part so long." Her voice softened while sho spoke to a tender, womanly pathos. He looked nt her, with iier sad, downcast eyes, her heavily-falling hair, iier face that in its very woe was sweet, and lie came nearer to loving her than he had over come before. "You can't forgive me," ho said, " and I won't ask you." Then he took his hat and went away, leaving tiic check lying on the table. ' She sent it to him next day In an en velope, without an additional word. I'rido bade him return It; but his ne cessities constrained him. Jean Hatli burno smiled grimly when tho check caino back to her from the bank, punc tured, like a railroad ticket, with little round holes. Pride would havo kept some women, in her place, in the midst of the world. S'he was prouder still, and disregarded tho world altogether. Sho never was seen any more in society. She hud had her day her Summer was gone, with its roses. She chose to pass her Autumn alone. Sho pensioned oil' the widow Dredlife, and sent her away. Sho did not feel young or volatile enough to need matroni.Ing any more. If she suirered, no ono know it. As I said, tho only complaint sho was over known to utter was that sentence in Iter strange will. She died young. Natures like hers wear out fast, when no Spring of hopo sustains them. 'Without doubt sho was thankful when "the life that had been so sad" was over. Sho did not know, there under the daisies, that the first tears Jack Ilrevoort had wept in years were shed above her grave. ANECDOTE OF COLUMBUS. Whi:n this celebrated navigator was crossing tho Atlantic, after his first dis covery of America, ho encountered a dreadful. storm. No prospect of deli ver eni'o appearing, tho sailors abandoned themselves to despair, expecting every moment to ho swallowed up. Tho feel ings of Columbus at the time aro best ex pressed in fine of his own letters. "I would," says he, " liavo been less concerned for this misfortune, had I been alono in the danger, both because my lire Is a debt that I owe to tho Supremo Creator, and because 1 have at other times been exposed to the most imiiii- nent hazard. Hut what gave mo in- llnito grief and vexation was, that after it had pleased our Lord to rrivomo faith to undertake this enterprise, In which I had now been so successful, that my opponents would havo been convinced, and tho glory of your highness and the extent ofyour territory Increased by me, it should nieaso tho Divine Malestv In stop all by my death. Ail this would havo been more tolerable, hail It not been attended with tho loss of tlioso men whom I had carried with nio, upon promise of thogrcutcst prosperity ; who, seeing themselves in such distress, curs ed not only thclrcomlug along with me, nut icar and awe lor mo which prevent ed them from returning, as they often bad resolved to havo done. Hut bosliles all this, my sorrow was greatly increas ed ny recollecting that 1 had loft my two sons at school at Cordova, destitute of friends in a foreign country, where It could not In all probability bo known that 1 have done such services ns might induce your highness to remember them." Trn: latest novelty in tho "feniliiiuo lino" Is patent eyelashes, now for sale in many city fancytoro.s. A horrid old bachelor says that tho way things nio going now, a man that needs a wife will only havo to step into a milliner's shop, purcliiiso a waterfall, 11 plumpers," Ailso curls, Cilso calves, etc., put them to gether, aud havo one without farther trouble. IP f w HI Jp f ft ll COUNTRY BOARD. 11Y MA11Y C. VAUdUAN. Am. the long Winter of 1S0.VU rumors of tho approach of that dire pestilence, the cholera, had agitated the public mind. It was expected hero at the opening of tlte Spring, and people pre pared themselves for the dreadful visi tation. Tlio common pcoplo wero distracted by tlio theories of it ventilated in tlio public prints. Many felt slight inter est in the question of contagion and non-contagion. Governed by their fears and their Impulses alone, they resolved at all events to flee, in good time from the impending danger. Profound and anxious thought radi ates. Excitements aro seldom akin to pent fires, but far and wide they range tho popular mind, producing consterna tion, atrright, dismay; arousing the pas sions, stimulating greed, and all tho baser tendencies of mankind. In tliis ease, country shared with city in tlio excitement. If tho city was to be emptied of Its Inhabitants, the coun try must bo prepared to receive them. Another necessity suggested Itself to llusticus. If Urban wanted a Summer home, and was afraid to stay in his own, ho would doubtless submit to a good deal of extortion. llusticus had some reason on his side ; also noincoiislderabloamountofshrewd ness, and more knowledge of human nature than is commonly supposed to belong to his habits. It was a very natural mistake lie made, but it was a mistake. There was ono thing not pro vided for his logic that was the abate ment of the excitement, nnd tho pre vention of tho spread of tho pestilence. Nevertheless, all drawbacks duly con sidered, I think ho lias made quite money enough out of tho public trou bles. A rati Dempster was driving along tho sandy road of a country town of unusu al rural! ty of habit, situated not more titan a liundred miles from New York. Arad was forty-live; but hard work, the tan of many burning Summers, and the hardening of many freezing Win ters, had made him what his boyscho-o to call him, an "old man." Ho was bow-backed, and rheumatic, full of strange angles and of curves, which nevertheless deviated from tlio line of beauty. Since leaving his homo a comfortable but unpalntcd farm-house ho had prog ressed a mllo or two, when a tail, gaunt female, who might havo seen the same number of years as himself, or more or less (for it was impossiblo to guess her age from her looks), came out of a low roadside dwelling, so tiny that it .seem ed hardly able to afford shelter to her self alone, and addressed him. "Ho! Arad! Arad Dempster! What's your hurry? Can't you hear nothing, nor stop a minute? Sa-ay !" This last word, protracted into a dis mal monotone, brought the reluctant Arad to bay. As he said afterward, "When ho heard that he knew he might as well give in. 'Twa'n't no use trying to git away from old Car'llne when she gotartcr you for a talk." "Hearn the news, Arad?" she com menced, as he reined tho old maro up to the fence. "No what is it?" quoth Arad, grimly. " Why, they'ro go'n' to have the cliolery down to York this Summer, sure as you live, and everybody's go'n' to leave the city. That nro paper't I saw down to Squire Muzzy's yesterday said as liow't the grass would grow in tho streets, and tho ' brown stono fronts,' whatever they are would bo covered with moss. An' it said, like wise, that they'd all go into the country to board, what didn't go over seas, and tho country-folks must bo prepared to 'commodate their distress-ed brethren and sisteren (they didn't sny notliin' about littlo children, but 1 reckon they wouldn't leave them at'lium to have the cliolery), and board them till cold weather comes ag'in. Now, how many you golu' to take, Arad Dempster, and how much you calcuiato to ask?" With this momentous question Aunt Car'llne paused to recover breath. " Dun know," answered Arad; "dun know; haint lieered notliin' about it, before. 'Sides, what do wo want o' 1 boarders?" I " Wal, you Just hear what the folks has to say about it down to tho Comers ! (1 liavo beenu thinking about it nigh up lon all the time since I read that aro piece j in the papers), and Jlst stop and tell mo when yo come back, can't ye?" she screamed after him as sho entered her hoti-e, and the old man drove away. Arad was a ruminating nulnial, not a man of words, and he had matter for thought as ho drove along after tills colloquy, or perhaps, moro properly, soliloquy, hong before ho readied tho Corners, tliis was the result of his cogi tations: "If all them city pcoplo that are so rich are u goln' into the country, why, they'll fill It chuck-full, I guess every house, an' maybe some in tho barns an' corn-houses. An' I don't s'poso they'd mind paying any price as much as four or five dollars a week, mebby, for their board. Guess wo can make out to 'comniodato some on 'em, and there's plenty of pork down cellar, an' n lot of potaters and Inyons that we'd a had to throw away. Guess wo can." Ho actually rode up to tho store with an erect and delimit air. Sundry round-about and unimportant questions at last Introduced the subject to the circle ho found at tho store, ami 1 he soon found that nearly every one hud been thinking about the very matter, but too shy to introduce It to his neighbors. Then followed a caucus of Elmvlllo leaders tho squire, tho parson, the blaekstnith.thcschooMcachcr in which 'It was unanimously voted, in tho lan guage of tho schoolmaster, that "In view of tho anticipated exodus of tho inhabitants of the great seaboard cities, these distressed people, fleeing before tho presence of tho pestilence that walketh at noonday, should bo welcom ed by the kindly hearts to hospitable homes, nnd all the houses in Elmville be opened for their accommodation." And furthermore, "that it being neces sary in time of such universal distress to fix upon a tarlir of prices to keep grasping people from being extortion ate, ten dollars a week for grown peo ple, and half price for children, should be tho sum uniformly charged. " An' heow much for dogs and nusln babies, Mr. Cheerman?" squeaked a voice from a dark comer. Nobody re plying to this pertinent question, tho meeting adjourned sine die, or, as the blacksmith observed, "sence died." "Ten dollars a week! Ten dollars a week!" ruminated Arad, us ho rode homeward. " I must stop and tell old C'nr'line, in course, though how It con sums her I don't see, nohow. Her house holds her, but nobody else couldn't squeeze in there. They might cat out 1 under the old apple-tree, and sleep with their heads Inside tho door at night, jlst liKeiuatnre mni I've liearn tell or in Aisy, or Africay, or somowlicres that puis his head under thesand and thinks he's covered up. He's a fool of course," pursued Arad, " but mebby some of them city folks nlnt no smarter than ho Is, if they do wear his feathers." " Ten dollars a week ! exclaimed Aunt Caroline (sho was an 'everybody's aunt'). " Why, the land sako! You don't say! Wal! I'm just a-goin' to send word down to York to Sophy Mur phy (Sophy Drown it used to bo) to conic up hero and board long o' me this Summer. Guess I can 'commodate her slick. She can sleep 'long o' me, and I've got plenty of chickens and garden sass coming on. Besides old Crunimie's calf'll be old enough to kill by that time, 'n I can cliango round with the neighbors so's to lias'c veal a considera ble spell, and " " And what ye goln' to do with Mr. Murphy when he comes?" interrupted Arad. " Murphy I Why, for tho land sake, I never thought of him ! Ho can't come here, o' course. No man has ever entered my door senco I lived hero. I won't have 'em, tho ugly creturs! When I'm dead I s'pose they can take mo out to bury mo, but 3 won't have ono on 'em in hero before." "Wal," replied Arad, coolly, "I reckon my old woman couldn't go any wheres to live witbouten I went too, and I guess Murphy nlnt a fool, nor his wife uuther. But I've told you tho price agreed on, and you know better 'n 1 whether you can make hay while thin sun shines or not. Geo up' Patty," and oil' ho drove, leaving Aunt Caroline to finish her remarks to empty air. Elmville was all commotion from the Corners to the Green a space of fully four miles. At tho unanimous request of his neighbors, tho schoolmaster pre pared for tho squire (who was also the merchant) a letter which ho forwarded as a sort of circular to the firms with which lie dealt in New York, and which set forth tlio fact that he, and all tlio hotter class of tho Inhabitants of Elm ville, were prepared to open their doors as places of refugo for tho pcoplo of that city, driven from their homes by the horrors of the pestilence; and that in consideration of tho hardship nnd dis tress which these unfortuuato persons wero undergoing, they wero willing to iiccommodato them for the paltry sum of ten dollars a week, " children half price." In tho cohl days of early Spring sev eral New Yorkers, deluded by this high-sounding document, sought tho classic precincts of Elmvlllo in search of board. Tho exterior was by no means promising, for Elmvlllo lias to make many strides ero sho overtakes modern civilization, but tho interior was a thousand times worse. Tho best bedroom was usually u placo of deposit for all tho bandboxes and best bonnets of the family, all the hanks of woolen and linen yarn unwoven, besides mis cellaneous odds and ends innumerable, while littlo by way of furniture, save the high post bedstead and mountain ous feather bed, could bo seen. The blue-edged table-ware, brown, home made linen, two-tined steel forks, and utter want of tlio unknown luxury of napkins, made New Yorkers staro; as also tho fried pork, swimming In its own grease, sodden eggs fried in the same, potatoes in their Jackets, etc., which formed tho chief staples in the feeding department. Hy the first of Juno all fears of chol era had subsided. Mesdames Brown, Jones, and Hobhison had each and all developed a sudden and keen apprecia tion of homo comforts and privileges, and hud each guthorod her flock together and departed. Not a boarder remained in Elm vilhyind the magical ten dollars a week which ICImvIllians had hoped to charm into their yawning pockets, hud di-uppeured like tho vaguu fancies wrought hy a conjuror. Every ono was gone, nnd only Aunt Carollno had high hopes, for bur board er was yet to come. On the first of Juno arrived Mrs. So pliia Murphy, ncn Brown, a ponderous woman, onco Aunt Caroline's contem porary, but now h-r Junii.r by indnllt- PRICE FIVE CENTS. slinal years, If looks wero tho test. In her shadow meekly followed Mr. Mur phy always Murphy nnd not so meek ns lie looked. Mrs. Murphy had received Aunt Caroline's invitation to board witii her, a little wondering nt its phraseology, and tho nnxlety It evinced that she should leave tho city nt once. "Ten dollars a week! How very cheap, when wo should have to pay forty or fifty, at tho very least, at any fashionable place!" Thus said Mrs. Mur phy to her husband, nothing doubting, worthy spouse, that tlio invitation was Intended for tho matrimonial unit, and not to that fraction of It which she com posed. He assenting, she forthwith ac cepted tho proposition, and arranged to bo with Aunt Carollno on the llrst of June. What was her dismay at sight of the tiny cage before whoso gate they alight ed. " Why, the whole house Is no larger titan my bedroom at homo," she said to her husband. "We never can live here." Hut a pair of bony arms encircled her neck, and a strident voice, with something of tlio old melody yet ling ering in the tones produced by genuine emotion, assured her that this was the home of tho ancient spinster. Hut "Who's this man?" cried Aunt Caroline, when theflrstsalutatlons wero over. "Mr. Murphy, my husband. Of course you remember him." " Oil ! Wal, you'll only have time to get to the ears. I'll take care of your wife and her tilings you needn't mind." " Hut I am not going back to-night. I am intending to remain liereawliile." "Here! where? I never let any man into uiy house. Besides, thereaiut no room for you. Why, tltero nlnt morc'n dishes enough for two, and there aint no place for your wife to sleep only 'long o' me." Mr. Murphy gave a rueful whistle, which changed to one of amusement. " 1 perceive," lie said, "you are very disinterested. So you meant to charge my wife ten dollars a week fortheprlvi- I lege of being exceedingly uncomforta I bio here. I think she still prefers liv ing with me eh, Sophy? What do you say, my dear shall wo return at once ? The carriage can take us back to the station for the down train." And so ended Miss Caroline's specu lation, and all Elnivllle's magnificent hopes of .Summer boarders. JYeic York Ledger. S I AN OBLIGING DISPOSITION. It is several years since tho following capital story made its last circuit of the papers, and we start it onco moro on its travels. It will find somo new readers and many old ones who will enjoy It. There is nothing like an obliging dis- ' position, I thought to myself one day j when travelling in a railway car from i Boston to Worcester,.seelngagentIcman put him-elf to considerable trouble to 1 land another gentleman, who had fallen I asleep, at his destination. "Passengers for West Needham?" cried out tlio conductor" tho car stops but one minute." " Hallo!" exclaimed a young man in spectacles, at the same time seizing an old gentleman by the shoulders, who was sleeping very soundly, " here's Captain Holmes fast asleep, and this is West Needham, where he lives. Come, get up, Captain Holmes, hero you are." The gentleman got upon his feet and began tomb ids eyes, but the young man forced him along to the door of the car, and gently landed him on the roadside. Whiz went the steam and we began to fly again. Tlio obliging young man took his seat again, and said with a good ( ileal of satisfaction to somebody near him : " Weil, if it hadn't been for mo Captnin Holmes would have missed his homo finely. Hut here he lias left ids bundles;" and the young man picked up a paper parcel and throw It out. Well," ho said ngaln, " if it hadn't been for mo Captain 1 lolmes would have missed his bundles finely." When we stopped at tho next station, a lady began to rumniago und3rtlieseat where Captain Holmes had been sitting, and exclaimed in great alarm : "I can't find my bundlo." " Was it done up in a pleco of brown paper?" 1 asked. " Yes, it was, to bo sure," said tho lady. "Then," said I, "that young man yonder threw it out of tlio window at the last stopping-place." Tills led to a scene between the oblig ing young man nnd the old lady, which ended by tho former taking tho address of tho latter, and promising to return i tlio packago In a few days provided ho (.should ever find It. I "Well, "said thoobllglug young man, ("catch me doing a good-natured tiling again. What can 1 do for that poor woman, if I cannot find her bundlo ?" Whiz went thesteaui,dlug,diug,ding went tho bell, tho dust flew, anil the cars flow, as they say, like lightning, till we stopped again at tlio next station, 1 forget tho iiiinio of It now, but it would bo of no consequence if 1 could remem ber It. An old gentleman started up and began to poke under tho seat where Captain Holmes had sat. "What nro you looking for?" I in quired. "Looking for?" said tho old gentle man, "why, I am looking for my bundlo or clothes." " Was It tied up in a yellow handker chief?" 1 asked. " Yes, mid Hothlnir eKe," said the old hKIl). cni,!i of gitwrlisinjj. One Kqunrc.ntie or three Insertion SI CO Knch mibseiiueiit Insertion less than thlitccn. One Hipinro one month , 2 to Two " " , 3 (n) Hirco " " iw four " " o 00 Ifnlf column loin) One column ' ..15 CO Executor's nnd Administrator' Notices .1 00 Auditor's Notices , SCO Kdltorlnl Notices tncnly rents per line. Oilier ndvcrtlscments Inserted according to epo- clnl contract. "Good heavens!" exclaimed theobllg ing young man, " I threw it out of tlio car at Needham ; I thought it belonged to Captain Holmes." "Captain Holmes!" exclaimed tho old fellow, with a look of despair, " who is Captain Holmes? That bundlo con tained all my clean clothes, that I was to wear nt my son's wedding to-morrow morning. Dear me, what can I do?" Nothing could bo dono but to give his nddress to tho obliging young man as before, and console himself with tho promise that tho bundle should be re turned to him, provided it was ever found. Tho obliging young man was now in despair,and mndoanothcr solemn vow that he would novcr attempt to bo obliging again. Tho next station was his landing-place, and ns ho went toward tho door of tlio car, ho saw a silver-headed cane, which lie took hold of nnd read tlio inscription on it, " Moses Holmes, East Needham." " Well," again exclaimcd.tho obliging young man, "if here Isn't Captain Holmes's canol" " Yes," said a gentleman, who got in at tlio last station, " and tho old man is lame too. Ho will miss Ids stick." "Do you know him?" Inquired tho obliging young man. " Know him ? I should think so," re plied the gentleman ; " he Is my uncle." " And does hollve at East Needham ?" asked tlio obliging young man. " Of course ho does. He never lived anywhere else," " Well, if it don't beat everything," said tho obliging young man, " and I put him out at West Needham, a milo and a half tlio other sldo of his home." A BOY STRUCK BLIND FOB BLASPHEMY. Tiik vengeance of tlio Almighty was visited on a youth named llichards, re cently, in tho most awful and sudden manner. It appears that the lad, who is thirteen years of age, and the son of parents in very humble circumstances, was playing in the street with four or live other lads about his own age at "cat and dog." llichards and his companions had been playing for somo time, when a dispute rose among them ns to tho notches or jumps he had made moro , than twenty, and ills opponents protest ed that he hud not scored so many. High words and bad language were freely used on both sides. Each boy accused thu other of falsehood, and at length llich ards, failing to convince his companions of the truthfulness of ids statement, flew Into a violent rage and fiercely shouted : " May God strike me blind if I liavo not made more than twenty!" Ho had scarcely uttered tlicadjuration before lie let the "dog" fall out of Ids hands, nnd throwing up his arms, ex claimed : "Oli, dear, I cannot see !" His companions ran to him, and find ing what lie said was true, nt his request led him home, where on examination it was found that a thick film had over spread each of his eyes. In tliis miser able condition the unhappy youth has remained ever since, and wo are inform ed that there is little or no prospect of sight being restored. Brighton Ob server. NOT DEEP ENOUGH FOR PRAYER. A fioon story is told of two raftsmen, who were caught in the lato big blow on tho Mississippi, at which so many crafts wero swamped and so many steamboats lost their sky riggings. Tlio raft was just emerging from Lake Pepin as tlio squall came. In an instant it was pitch lug and writhing as if suddenly drop- petl Into Cliarybdls, wliilo tho waves broke over her with tremendous uproar, and, expecting instant destruction, tho raftsman dropped on his knees and eom- nienced praying with a vim equal to tho emergency. Happening to open his eyes an instant, ho observed his com l.l.Vfll, llJb lll'iH1-" 111 i X'V vl t I'usii- ing a polo in tlio water at tho side of tho i,,,, ,,.,1 1 1., i,,,f..,,ti. raft. " What's that yer doing, Miko?" said ho; "get down on yer knees now, for thoro Isn't a minute between us and Pur gatory !" " Bo aisy, Pat," said the other, as ho coolly continued to punch with his pole, "boalsy,now ; what's tho use of prayin' when a fellow can tech bottom with a pole?" Mike Is a pretty good specimen of n largo class of Christians, who prefer to omit prayer as long as they can " tech bottom." Mu.v do not leap tho hill of virtuo In a moment, nor do they descend into thu valley of death or pit of vico in an in stant. You took up your newspaper this morning, dear reader, Tho cruelty you shudder at tlio wife-beating, tho mur derthink you these havo a sudden in spiration? No! they arc the outcome of habits, of thought, action, of long and sternly preparation. You see tho volcanic flume ; you seo the smouldering embers ; you seo the broken bridge; you did not wo the little madrepores eating into tlio timber. Even In these great sins it lias been "hero a littlo utid theiv a lit tle." I'.vsiiioN-Aiiu:, Tho latest stylo of bonnet has turned up. It Is diueribed us conslstlngoftwostraws, tied together with a bluu riblxm on tlio top of tho head, and red tassels stisju'iided at each of the four ends of the straws. "A btethoscoi'K," says a yoatig medical student, " Is a spy-glass for look lug luto people' '.'htet" with your own t.'i.r