Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, June 21, 1877, Image 1

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    TEINS OP PI7IILIVATION.
JllPAs tiling In all cases exclnsir of inbaerip.
,tiona to the paper.
dr FCIA.!. NOTICES inserted at ri trawl CENTS
per line, for the first insertion. and Mir UINTA
6 . :.er 'Me for sobsequent Insertions.
• f,OCAL NOTICES, same style ae roading mat-
TWicNTY CIICNTS A LINL
Ait ERTISESIENTS will be inserted according
to the follhwingtable of rates: ,
Thne.... , ... 1 7 w 1 4w 2m 1 am ) em 1 lyt.
. _ _ ____ I
incb -14 , 1.5016 M 6.00 1 B.di 1 10.00 1 15.00
. .____ _____ -
2 inchem...„. 4- 2.00-1 5.00 8.00 1 70.00 1 15.00 1 20.0
3 Inches._ 1 2.50 1 7.00 10.011 13.C411=0171 - 30:60
4 ine‘hes..7. 1 a.ob 1 8.50 14.00148.25 125.001 7k5.00
1.1 column :71 5.00 1 12.00 18 . ..00 1 D... 00 180.00 1 45.00
. .
Ike column.. 110.001 20,fd 30.00 1 40.001 55.00 1 75.00
._
1 colinnit.:. 120.001 50.i10 60.(t0 180.00 100. ( It&
-..._ —
AIO,MINTSTRATOR'S an.l \:Executor s s Noticed,
I%oo' A udt for , s notices. 12.50: Business Cards. die
1 new. (per Tea 1) ts.oo, attitutoual 1ine...11.00 each.
YEARLY dvertleemeata are entitled to guar.
~/.
terir ehangos.
TRANSIENIP adrertirefoenta must be paid for
1 N ADVANCE. : \
ALL Resolutions or Afrpodatlons. -Communica
tions of limited orAndivldnal interest - and notices
of Marriage: anti Deaths. exceeding live lines, are
charted TEN CENTS PER LINE. ,
JOB,. PRINTINCi„ of every. kind, in Vain and
fancy colors. done with neatness and dispatch.
Ifindbills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphleti, Billhewls.
Statements, he., of every vailetv and style. prialted
. att•the shortest notice. Tod RIMMITIKit Mere II
Well supplied with power preneS, a rood 'assort
moot of now tyre, and everything in the Printing
line can lei execu,44 - In "the most artistic manner
and at the lowest rates. .
TROIS INV ARIAIIIN CASH
Professional and Bti4ness garb.
TAMES WOOD, .
inr„). . ATTOBN F.T i •-
_2 4
oor
A T l.A A ll' st;;
i 7,
A. PA.
. • . _—
JOHN F. SANDFRSON.
ATV )11.).: EY- AT -T.” IV, ' •
OPP) PE.-31 cans Building (over Powell's S tore)
nvelto4S • • Tow Asn o s, PA.
HALL,
NnTAFT PUBLIC.
Fire and tire In sti r'ari In nr■t-ctsae entnpanleti
0111... , e with Pat rirk & Foyle, Towlindit, Pa. 4 fob:7.)
Sw. & Wm. LITTLE,
~ArroRIIRFB-.tT-LAW Ti 314 kn.i. PA
°Mee over Perker's Provision Store, Male Street
ri„ April 18. 'in. .
GEORGE P., STROUD,
A rrnny El A Y.l) rn mvs Rib( T ATV.
mho, -Itain-'.+t . ; fotrr - inoflo.:orth of . War 4 House.
Praril,4,l,lu Nltpr,rne Court
of l'etatt‘ylvailla and Du 44,1 TOWANDA, PA
Stnteg rourts.,—(Dev7.'7fi,
R STREETER,
LAW OFFICE,
I .
. TOWAI4I..
OVERTON Sz M-ERCUR,,
ATTOENEYS AT LAW,
• TOWANDA I'A
0 fti 4we r Montan . yes 'More. DilayaS.
of)?i'ET A. 118w-i7R.
WM. MAXWELL ,
R ]'-A
OFFICE °VET bAYTON's STORE, "row Ati,DA,TA
Aprll,l2, lEan.
FOYLE,
A Troft NE TS-AT-LA
Towanda, Pa.
)).117773.
()Mee, Jri Meirtirsl..l
J.
ANGLE,
A TT , E .1 r- I% .4 Ws:
nlire NVilll 1 tav les It Carnoellati, Towanda, l'a.
1.1)11. '77
F. ARSON,
ATTORN,ET AT LAW,
"t - nw A %DA. PA.
0111,, first door south of ('.
ond floor. NtN.lls,
E. •
L.IIILLIS.
ATT4 ii:N'EY-AT:L A W
Tovosp.i. PA. ,
AitiV,i with i 4 tulth .1 )to novll-75,
J.NN I ) W W ILT;
•
,? A .7.7,,NNA. T-LAW.
- ever Cros,' 1;4.1; Stork., 01 . 0 doors north of
Irv, U- To‘rand3. Pa.. Mlty ho eouselted
ft 14erinati. April 12,-;€,.;
Mcl9lllE SON &(INNEY,
A TroIINE IS-A DILA ir„
TywiNr.a. l'ATafticeln ti Tracy '.
Nole*, Block
Towanda. l'a., Jan. lc. If7g.
I[ l ] . F. (;01'1',
7'7'Ol;SE 7"-
.
Main Strooti north or 11'nr4 Ihnisr), T.l).
11 - ‘lOl,l. 1%1. . rill 12, 1S1.1:'
WI.
e k I TtA I : i v • 1) ( ? '1 1 AT Ait T. l ‘ ll ß tit N te E n Y rf
lO.3 l l. l msittt , s Potrosted to ttts cant lit 11r4trIfottl,
1 , ~ittvattltod Wyoming, Cotuttit, ii licr with 1:,411.
MIME
F!
ELSIMEE 4
ATMI:N EY-AT-1-IW,
TOWANDA, P.%
MEE
C . L. LAM?),
F.l*- .Vr- AIN'
W I LIi.",ES-B Alt E,
C, liccttant prllupl v attG udcd t,
)vnivr()s.. Az, P,I,SIIIIEE, Alfon
-2iF:l-, AT L. kw, I'4WAkk'lll. P.k. /Jail .2i. , , , en
torpl tut , ' c“-parttkershir, offer their rotes-Iona)
Fort lees to Ow public; Special attolltion glt ell to
bil,i,— , ri/ Tho Orphal ,, awl r....;;/..rer's t.'ourtk.
J. 4)V EICTIN. .1 [:. (3101 . 11-70) N. (.. E.I.I.)IItEk.
ATAD.kmi
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
TOWANDA. PA.
(1114 In.lre,Nrs Mock: first door south of the First
• N.4 1 ) ,,, m) Vqvfi):,
F{. .1. MADI I. 1.. rianS-731sp, J. N. C ALI FF.
GRIDLEY & AY).TE,
A 7;TOR NE 1-S
-A
N,J. 1, Tres ( 31.wr STILIF:ET
TOWANDA, r...\
(j 1.77)
I=
Ml;=
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
•
AND
U. S. COMMISSMNZR,
•• Tuw,kNuA,r...
Orate—Nona Side rutalc Square.
.DIVIES CARSOCHAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
MERCCB, BLOCK
Lee
PEET, ATTORNEY-AZ-LAW
prel;ated..rn pmetice all I,rambV.S of blif
to ufea.lun.
I )(Lee, NI F, RC MG It LOC K , (enttrtnee nn r~mth
able) Tow.% VPA. PA. tpm6-70.
•
M. wooDiluitN.
0411 . mwd....±.umvult, • (Mee over O. A. Black'B
( tk•lk,ry .4t"re.
l'orranda, 1,'187217'.
FA, 11..P.AE, M. D.;
1" ! 11C1.1 .Y .1 s rzei nY
t ' 7 , .• Ipvi • r ep t':nres• Store. 1 itttoe ho/Irs (rood 10
1 ,, I'2, , k; V-, and from 2 Ib 4, I. Nr..sperial atU l (hal
171v , '11 . 1 , / .11meases of the Eye aufl Ear.-114.1.111,'76-117.
DR. T. 11. JOHNSON.
ANP suRGEox
t ttthi . tt oi'er Dr. Porter & SolpsTtrnglifore,Totianda.
- 3:ittt-7 - t;r.
' P. 1.. .1)01)S0 S ? . .DENTIST. i
_ . I to attearter Sept, 21. ray tee foontl Inlt.he
tegatt t new rooms oat ttol thmte - of I.lr. rrattli new
k
c :Th. ~..ct zota'e. Street. itusinesS.ittliettell, 1
5..1..!. a -711r. • --'. .
.:i
ANr 11. Kf; L 1.1 y,.:toENTlST.—Oitiett
. over NI: e.. - }tte , ttfleitl's. Towarob: pii:.
Teeth- iilS.Tti'd 1111 4;01d. $...1 iVr . r, VIII a.t.• Ir, ttitil Al
-tno,.tton 'tact,. Teeth extracted ir-Ithottt pail.
ttrt. 34-72. - .
. ,
. -
I - 111. 0.-:%I. S'l' A. N LY, DEN 'LIST,
.. 4 .14 . 1f ,. .., ,, , , ip .g.: • , ..,, t , ,, ,,, , , , . ,. , k ,i [:?;
.t),, r K i, , ,..-4 ii i t ~, ,,T et t ; il k n , t ? T st rl or t :
1 , . te.tr iredit,rett to tio all kinds of den,13 . 1 Work:
II .'ita-....',,, put In a new gas 3parattN. .
may'sl7s. • - ~...
. _ .
!1 I C..W I lITA K ER, •
: •
BOOK BINDER
pr 11.1)1 NG.TIII ian FLOOR, TOWA.NDA4
c _S. - R9SELL ( 'S ;
GEN.ER-AL
INSI3,R I ANCE AGENCY
V 1) 2%-7011
TOWANI)A, PA.'
1 "r, l',,
!II" WAN•l).'i INSI.7It:t.NCE A.GFiNCY
•
, .
• , 111TA Nr• li•r Use
N()B1,1 , ; 4:,N I NCEN'I','
NSU RANCE. AG ENCY._
I
, g
RFILL A DI',E 'AND FILE TRI Eir
< \,:hp,,,tuies tvi.reseniteA :
3.1 N --.. . 11 I RE, PIia:SI.V.TIOSt F. EIICTIANTS
/' ' 'i, `1 I 4: t, . n. A,I9I,ACK.
-I 's" :`
8. W. AL, ORD, Puhlieber.
VOLUME XXXVIIL
NEIIT GOODS
WE ARE NOW READY WLTR
A FULL STOCK O'}'
TUBE' AT PRICES TO- SUIT
THE TIMES, OF OUR OWN,
MANUFACTURE, WHICH WE
INVITE YOU TO CALL AND
EXAMINE.
LARGEST
STOCK. OF C,NDERTAKIS4
GOODS OF ANY ONE IN THIS
'ART OF THE STATE, AND
• ,
OUR PRICES ARE. AS' LOW AS
'HE LOWEST.
WHEN IN WANT OF ANY
THING IN OUR LINE, GIVE US
A _BALL 41.EMEN1 gR.THE
PLACE, AT 'lT,us OLb STAND
OF MAIN SIiEET. •
REM
duly 2.':R
l'a.: April 5, 1077
Tins WAY FOR
4: -
S 1)111 I,N G SII 1 T g.'„
41:SD NIT4II4ANTEQ TO
,FIT
=
L.III4cIINAHON,'
MERCHANT TIAILOR'.
OPPOSITE COURT 110tE SQUAItE,
Jan. 1, 1876
NEW AND CO:1111,1•:Ti STOCK , OF •
TOWANDA. rA
CLOT LS,
FiJRNISIpNG GOODS,
• HATS, -
- 'ikc,.&C., &C.\ •
•
_ ' \
lie Is preparpd ID furnish to order, .made to
measure, . ~\\
SPRING ,ANTY SUMMER SUITS
BI ST QUALITY LATEST STYLES
At Tirlro4 the !host res..,onal.to.ot any establlstimen
fu Towanda. Cat( and es:amine thy stodk.
Towanda, Pa., April b, th 77
TTIGIIEST AWARDS!
TpIuTEENTII AND FILBERT STS., FULA.,
Manufacturers of patented - •
WROXIGIIT4R:ON AIR-TI( liT
With Shaking and clinker-Grinding Grates .for
• ":burnlng, Anthracite or iljtittninotts Coat.
WROUGHT-IRON HEATERS
IIyfIOUGUT-I.IION -I,IEATERS,
itauges, Grates, Etc
•
Lsrs 5t,.44 F uEir. to any adlireK
t ,
EX MINE BEFORE SEI.ECTINO.
PitWel WA. Apr,ll 2e, 71,4 y. -
El
Parnitnrk
FOR THE
‘SPRING. Pll
El
-I
J.. 0. k'ROSI"S-SONS.
Merchant Tailor.
kade to order,
, 11-as Just recelvet4 a
J. t: 3P - MA HON
Heaters, 4:
CF.Tr.NNIAT. EXETIBITIO:c
J. REYNOLDS,* SON,
Northwest copes
HEATERS,
Ck:NtENZiIAb
For Intitiirluolis Coal
IMMENSE S'
SPRING iND
'LA open
M. E. SO
Arretiply witts,annonteement,
MR. J. DAVIS
liar 811 rd thydort. btely occupted by &demob it
Sou with the oat complete maurtment of .
11,11,ADY. ADE CLOTHINGI
kr offered •In this .mserket.
vthlPginthelinoof Reidy-
Of 'every description
My stock comprieeerral
made Clothing for
"7 1
FURNISIIiNG 0 ODS, ,
• CAPS, TR \ ITN.P,
UMBRELhAS,:
MEN 1, X. OUT 113. A 14,1
lIATS,
VALISES,
CANES; dm
I &hire to aenottßee to the people of Itnutfortl
leanly : that
. 1 hose permanently f ues7trf to Towan
AT THE OLD STAND
Also, that
HS PRICES ARE LOWER
TITAN-ANT OTHER ESTAII4.4IIIIIITENT
Tills SIZE OR TIIE Nal COUNTRY!
Ills goals are islssyS
I . OITGIIT CASIti
AND GUARANTEED TO itE JUST
:wit AT THEY ARE RECOMAENDED
p stock e6mprises everything
IN TIIi - CLOTIIIN - 6 LINE!
}'ROM TIIE I'IIEAPEsT TI)
MOST COSTLY O.i.B.llrST
A. nice Avovrtinvot of
BOYS' C!LOTIIING,
NEATLY AND SITRTANTIALLY - MADE,
AT ABOUT THE COST OF MATERIALS
SPRING HATS,
SPRING - OVERVOA TS,
TASTY ITSIBREILAS.
A utl the
ISEST -11311.1SVITINii'Giocwiys
. EVER 01 , 1.FALED 1N Tills MARKET!
My customers know that I am
PERMANENTLY LOCATED IN 'TOWANDA
A rot I hey therefore run no risk of being •cheateli
as In cases nr 1117 f rely transient deaters, obit never
continue long In oiao
St. E. IviSENTIELD
Tor/azyla, MAr:11 , 22, 1677:
REN9:VATEE 1 !
- RE . NtIVED 51
REI'LENISIIED 1!
\
...1.......ms
\
hiring he pas,t *lnter I Imre by close applies
t lon to boilorss. .
CLEANED 617
My old Atock or Reidy-Made Clothing, and now
offer to my restored); .
AY ENTIRELY NEW ASSORTMENT,
Purchased with a special Clew to ttto wants of
TOWANDA AND .
By tong experleAce le trade herr. I twiteve I en
derstafad what the people desire tu the -
•
CLOTHING LINE,
And feel sure that my Meek, now Going aliened,
-CANNOT rAir.. TO SUIT ALL.
nacEs. wr.RF: FVF:R I'..(ITV
And 1 can offer eTeryttilag
lti TUE LINE OF CLOTIIING
!WM
GENTS' YIIBDiISHIN,G• GOODS
At pr ces seinen defy competition
DT, WI LL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
fiemonber tli when In WAS of Clothing
Towooda, 01 3.7., *et
_~~ --
MI
1
r
-
........., ~.....0., , ,.."....., . ......-.,,,................"--..0.7 : -;•-•
c NENE II THE TENPLE,
The Pharisees awomisn' led,. ) .
Wtrase.drooping eyes mid :downcast head
' ilncialmed,her alttrie;frochilmed her sin.
. They led her , weeping nuto - Hirts.,•
Throtigb the crowded Multitude,.
.. rMthe Temple where Ile stood—, .j ..
. het her le the midst of men, ' - '
Called theltaster untOthem.
' What. cared they for women's 'egret ' • . '
What caredithey for woman's tears? ,
- Told lIIm all the facts they saw...— .
Sald.'twas death by Moses' law. . • . %
~.
.._ ,
„
If by this advent display ' • /
Ili la Tr Ze On that day? .
\ ,,,e.
/.....
,
, ...„...._.
The tap* . was the place to pray.
His m crydoebtleits they all saw,
Atubtheidglit by It to pick a flaw,
.A cd gala irctort' by the law. . ~, ' -
They did not \ know that high abiWe . .
The, Majesty 0 the law was Lore,
- And to Inlllctit May
... ' .
Is not for human cy. • ;
Before .Him stood, tinit close allied,
The fallen one and rig teouspride. '
The walnut telt the title of shirr. 1
They scarce conceited coo Ml* for Him.
\
. Tim woman's sin was known, exposed ;
They shined In secret chamber closed,
The woman wept in silence who
The Pharisee made a boastful pray .
He looked within their hearts of its:
• , And saw these must be nude to tied.
• The law on which they inost relied' ..
Was now by Him to them applied; -
""TIS true the law says, Stone ;vileglia—
k Lct , him thrnli 4 1 1 r -st Mars ralfhout stn;'
ILDUEN'S WEAR
. . .
Its searching words went to each heart, • '
And one by ono they did depart— •
.INos good enough to thrown stone—,
And to waatett with Illin atone. '
Tbo wl asoilor shame had fled
Away fro Glniarith downcast head,
'Male desuvrruie,ttpon the ground—
() that bia wth - dst4re written down
\\,)
When Jesus l'r n.tho s gyOund mac
Go asked the wok an, •`'Where are thosd
A ccusindthee ?" • • where tetra they Y
They, cobselence•snatk9l, ran array, ; .
"No man condemns." 5k. , .•! said, Alt! why? 1 1 1
And Jesus said :."•Nel thet s do I :.,. I
Goon thy.way and-sin no rd re," . '
1 . 4 ran nfa llin on, realer
• '
Long telltales bare' ro b ed awa ,
And man is fest the same t(sday ;
kilnners ahoutni'by men seduced,
' -Ity nren belayed, by men traduced,
• By mon held up to public shame,
By men condemned in Jesus' name. ',
. Ton *fm raii.clatin thlspeelal aid,
Wm:ll'you see yoUise.ires portrayeA
erpe Pharisees In %Ilenee heard),
lteadMitthsw, chapter twenly=thlrtl.
They wIM profess to be the heat, •
The Imeming goat, are cruelest:
\
ey kelp ..a bliMer,"'loud.proe t lithe,
Th r zeal for HIM; expose! their Milne,
\
. Nam rho tell Them of their ate—
lco ohe an follow 7 after Him.
The owl : 's claws are on the roe,
And Hato! triumphs over Ltrg.
SSC 41111111 .
—''
-77- 411 7-- II
. --
-
, .
. ' Love and Loim — g.
.
Louisa's father bad gt:i\L, up into
the woods, sixty miles'awa,s i lo make
the camp before the Wintees 'basting
should Lei - dn. Sloe'' felt ver3\l6uely
as soon wr he was ought of sig t;sA)r
more reasons than one. In the rat
place there was nobody at home nt`
little Tim, who could dig the paths;,
to be sure, and look after the cattte;
grandmother, who was companion.
able enough with her stories of old
times, but a tare mote than a pro
tector,; and 'Suzette,' who 'helped .
about the house, bUt was only a.
child. The second reason:was, that
she had quarreled with Ben; and last,
but' not least, he and her uncle Simon
had driven off, on the ox team . with
her father. , .lf there had ever been a
time since their quarrel when she had
;felt disposed:to make it up, it Was
when the ox team had disappeared
from ,sight, and it was impossible to
follow. .
The fact of the case *as that lien
had been looking .upon Louisa as his
own 'prol)erty ever 'since he could re-'
member. lie had Nailed her to and
from siriging-school ; he had helped
her out .with her hard problems at
'district school, and, had carried. her
'home on a sledl at quilting, sewing
circle, or picnic, hehad chosen her for
his partner in the dance, had paid hii
forfeits to' her and lad revolved
about hei'dail 'daily. And 'she had seem
ed to ielish etic whold thing tilLshe
went away to the city one winter to
work in .& milliner's shop, 'and so
came bome quite out of conceit with
'country living and country men, and
had rather given Ben . the cold shoul
der, refusing his. gifts and attentions;
and showing pretty plainly that she
looked higher. But Ben, 'with the
instincts - of a free-born_ Atneritan,
felt himself as good as; anybody, and
charged, her 'one . day -with 'having
come by ..,hifulutin ideas _Of •herself
and life in 'the city, which didn't the
least become : her, and avered that
,she couldn't do ' better than to
marry
"Well, Mr. , Iletkinnin Thurman, I
hope you'reeoneeited enough . ," idle
answered • him. J" Marry you I—l
won't says 1;4 you're well enough
vourself;" but to live in this slow;
backwoods, fashion foreVer would be
' the death of ; and not so much as
a lecture ort concert 'to while ICwiy
the time,; to he wearing hcimespun
my days, and worrying "about; the
crops. Oh, dear, no,
thank yon ;f I've
had .enotiO of hard . times. I believe
I'll wait awhile before I satle-down."
Prelim - vs there.'s soniebody.else ?"
ventured. Ben.
"No, I ban't; say - - that there is;
theiugh I don't mind telling you that
I.didn't come, home single for a want
of a chance,. Ile had •a house, too,
in. the suburbs, and a house.fieeper,
and he said I never shoOld bring the
water to irash my hands."! •
"And • you marry him?"
askedaskedllen, .
"Oh, he Alieul, suit me; he'd' lost
his • front teeth 'mid his hearing.
" There's as ',good fish in the sea us
ever yet.-wOte caught," she sang
gaily. • •
" Well,' I said, Ben, risina,tuad look
ing blue lightning; - " on Se„ whole,. I
ant :glad that you 'won't. marry me,
ror:yon!ye g ot no intareheart iltan'an
adder." s Aiul • then \ hi could \have
bitten his tongue oidt.lor saying what
Wasn't true, ' heart was al,
most breaking for lo4re 'cif \ her ; an
if sbe had showed that s h e was
wounded, by word or lie was
ready to abase himself beneath her
feet, and take it all, baCk.,
4 You're amazing Oo!ite;Wi.-Thiit
man, I mustsay," Abe returned.'
sorry-you asked for What yon didn't
cant, because 'would have been
awkward,:if I hadn't ref Use d ..: I
didn't know - that 'this was the way
ACOBS.
\\, •,..,
\
':TOwA . ND mtibfoßpcovN,tyi,. , pl)l:-Tgultspiy:.,NOßßNG, ,, j_vNE - z iii, 1877 .
j4latilds
.foeffg.
itEGAßixzeis taiihrishtiloi FROM ANY. QUARTER%
■
folks made love , calliitig•names,witen
\ Pie always treated you •well'."'
\" Treated /we • Well * with a , yen
gesuam !"Oried.Ben,liii face(' white
its ti\ Oat, and Ideeyarlike' thunder
bolts.\"/Do , you call - ii:, handsome
*Uncut to let ,me go on loyingjon
year nfteiyear, while it strengthened
with / - iny. Strength, Without a hint
that/you couldn't return mcasurefor
Measure ?• And then go back Upon
alellow andthioiw him over becatise'
he dOsea't live like a nabob, though
he loved the • ground you walk on,
and. thought nothing too hard to do
for you! ' If that's what - you call
treating. me aiell."good by,3--.i don't•
want ever to see you agaitt.'
Louisa had been looking\at him
with sparkling eyes, she ratlir, liked
to see hi . ..angry ; -it was tastlY \ be=
coming. .-- nd then he Loved hei\so
desperately. She felts strange, de,
in s\
lightful thrill litter heart; as if it re
sponded- secret * She had Mit a
mintOp go to hint and hold out her
arias "and he disk to his' beating
heartornd forget ambition aQd luxury
and choose .rathern heaveh.on earth;
and while she had hesitated' he, Lad .
said, "good- bye—l don't want ever
to see you again-'—good bye." • '
"I: return the sentiment," said ,she,
instentl. , "I beliern I can live with;
out yen., Good bye." And when
e wiWcaafely out Of sight she took
rtnge in a good cry. -: . . .
nt now 'that he'. was gone, she
beganio'find how mueh she had de,
pended\ upoh him, how pinch more
hia•lnere\presence . was too her than
any dreatir-of worldly prosperity,
however' golden. Perhaps but for
this,, breach 4i,e might never have
'known how de. tt. he was to 'her, nor
how little valued `the. superfluities . of.
life in comparison. - •
Well, one of the th ' ne was to return
before the winter sea 11 of loging
began, in -ordertn i
lay n,provisions
for the eamp-as they \liaa only
taken up enough for awe or ten
ys—and -perhaps Ben 'wouldhe the
!one to . come ; in which Case he 'ould
hardly avoid bringing her stne
word of her father and uncle. .A 1:(
\heii`Who would predict but he might
thT it mirth his While to reiterate
his :in his eloquent style ? And:
then ouisa laughed wickedly at the
prost t, and decided that if he was
enough i love .to do thus and',thus,
it would c she for her beyond a
peradveatu t& take her own time
1 about makin.,„ up, to show a supreme
indifferetiee to is regard. No-More
' heart than 'an Ater, indeed 1 What .
.was it then, that ae led' so, day after
day, ii,S,..lhe dull, col( Novetnberwind
sighed about the hems _ and touched
the neighboring pings - 'to ..I.lolian
' harps
.tinil*-- swept up the m ead leaves
only. to. scatter theit - agai r Why
was% she alivnYs straining' .h: • eyes,
down the 'frOst,whitened c(.l ntrf
road? Arid ' what, was it that t ni4
bled in' her bosom :whoever a,spe k:
appeared against they frosty ' sky.
.But Louiia had reckoned without
I tier host. Ben was not the man who'
*is fond of reiterating,a love thUt
14d\been remixed. so,',coldly. Ile
didn't\inean to leave ~the woods till
Mareli, if he Could . hold out so - long.
Moreo\,:er, itvits l Mr. Bruce Himself
who pro eed 'to.'go back with the
es . team a e
• hring the Supplies and
hire tfi ' etme \
tt Ido 't te '4lliti. right about the
head ,"s id he, ‘ find I - want Louisa
s ii
to cos t me. 'T re o •I'll go out to
Shoptod and see S ales and Weight.
nbofit the stipplies, , nd, be back be- ,
fore-you and \Si have at \ up all this
'ere victuals."
~ s a id \ r ,, -
"All right, s i r, " en, smoth
ering a twinge of disam 9 , ititinent
=which lie wouldn't own ip loniself.
We'll' get the 'hovel re: 0y ftkr Of
cattle while you're otr, mid .tak \a
tramp through the woods and sl t`
the, best timber for felling.".
" There's enough. t o do," said Un- -
cfe Simon. ...
.... ,
"You'll be backin five dSys , , Say?"
"If Pm lucky. How's the stores,
Si?"
" Good for a week, I . should say,
Such as thtiv are. But the sooner
you get blek the better. It'll. be
easier for you. if you can manage to
get, up before a heavy snow conies.
Yoh see, we haven't had anything
but spits,.Yet, though may be we're
_going to have an 'open winter."
" Ay, ay," answered Mr.',Bruee, as
he drove off through the woods =With
the ox ter. " Provisions - for
*reek, eh That'll tide ye over,
reckon. There's a sight of work to
he got through with in a week's time.
'There's the suppliea! to he got, and
the [hands tn.be hired ; lemine see—,
five cutters, two, teamsters and. a
cook; that is about it, and to have 'off
ready to start Whew 1 do, and I ain't.:
so young as I was. Heydey,itsrub
and grind, a lumberman's life is !"_ •
Alas! there was more to begotten
through with in a week's time than
Mr. Bruce' - had an inkling of; so
much, that it ran over into the nett
week, as work hasn trick of doing.
When Louisa saw that it was only.
her old
,father trudging along with
the returning ox team her mercury
went down ,to zero in half it second.
.She saw before' her, a Weary ' three
months °timeliness and longing, and
she saw, too, that she deserved it.
-"lt's a deneed.coht day-for an old
man," said 11r. Bruceoltivering -be
fore the wood fire, as if there should
have .been special • sets of weather
created to suit customers. "tWhat's
that you've got cooking on the crane,
Lu Y Stew l? I ain't got e '
no more ap
petite than a bear in Augu@t. Brindle
*and Trot were sfow as cold molasses . ;
they've seen their best days, I reckon
like their master. Wish I'd swapped
'e to Dunn for the. yearlings and
0; it would have been a goOd bar
ge' . Si sent ,his love. to you, Lu.
I've got n, Cold .reckon I'll turn'
In and sleep it off." . -
. They oughtn't !lave' let , you
come," saidindignantlY, as . she
carried him • a batle of hot water'far
his feet. Uncle Si or Ben - Ought. to
have come instead." '
N 4 It wasn't their fault thought
reofild better liar raid with
the hands.' Ben 'said leg 'come in
my place, but his heart wa'n't 'set ola
which assurance in no wise com
forted. „
Mr. Bruce was restless all
,night,
and in the \morning was out'ot his
head, and 'didn't know his right hand'
from his left; a 11 cidttid Lottisn'Ben,'
EN
.. , .
~ , / ~
. nd asked grmidiria to- put the' oxen
In ~ ,the {tart, mistaking her for Un
cle z iiiion, i ' And , 'ulna, halt frigh t. *tied to' detith jii s it ped - -ripon old
'ltoan'sAtti ‘ ck galloped all the way-to
Shopton'for,the nearest - doctor:
. 66 Ahetn,l<' Nothing mere nor less
than a fever;',!'said he . , the instant he
laid his eyes an Mr. Bruce. - '-1
"Is. he dangerous?" asked Louisa.
- ..“',Ditiigerotisl \Oh, I guess he'll .
pull :through. I'll \ leave - this pre
scription; and be .round to-morrow.
-There's 'Mr. Maveriek,"pf the tavern,
--•=litaverick'a 'tavern, at our plaec 7 --
had the same syniptoma a \Week ago,
and he's about to4ity., There's no
telling about these things • di ff erent
bonitituticms take die teases different
ly. At leaataou- needn't be alarm
ed at present. Good morning;".
with an emphasis: on #the good.
Louisa' thought it.i:Was anything 'but
rt good morning, alter the comfort of
lifs priifelsional presenee was witli-3.
drawn. But the next ' divher father
da y 'h er
was\no better, nor yet the -next,
though the doctor assured her that
''be was' ing as well as could-be ex
pected, whatever that might be. _
.:
~, Lobisa was to busy and weary
with watching and' nursing,, cooking
and looking after the liouse'and see
ing-to grandma's Cold, and keeping
order and quiet at:ig the children,
to' take note of th e - lek man's delir
ious words, though he \ was constant
ly talking about i the \ e s airip, -sixty:
miles' away—where her o
. iri thoughts
wandered - whenever she .had- time to
think them—bargaining with jinni
inarytetmsters,•haggling with \ Scales
& Weight over - groceries, rind' \ re ,
, peating, " Provisions for a-week, for
a week,''S and, counting the days orb .l
his - fingers andlosing thecount arid ,
beginning over again 'and again as
if it were a puxzle,\upon the solution
of which his life depended. And so . i
the' fever ran to the into day 'and
\
turned, the tattled fell into a',
quiet sleep, and awoke to . weak and ,
languid to-put words' to ne _ er, or to
remember anything but tha he had ,
1 4\
suirered alearful nightinarea d it
wa.. over.: It was perhaps the third
'day -after the fever turnedlthat he
:suddenly took up the thread of life
wherehe had dropped it and asked,
" Ilow Jong have I been a-laying
here, Lu ?"
,
- " Tivelyedais."
4, l l Vliere's•Ben and ljnele Si ?"
• "Left 'em irr'eamp! TWeive days
ago;" he ga.sped,\" with a week's pro
visions! ' I shouldn't Wonder if they
Were both in heaven by this time!
What hey you, been thinking. Of all,
this while, eh ?"
," I didn't know. they. had only a
week's . provisions," said \. Louisa,
showing a ghastly face ; "and I , had
to look after you and thefever,"
" . Well, don't wait another minute
round me ; just harness up old Roan
and Quickstep, and lake some eotteei
clothing, provisions and thingsand
don't let 'eni short. C'ome,' start
-ourself, and don't be standing still
li e a' ghost and :folks' a-dying, for
lac :of you." . •
" nd you?"
"11 take care of -myself, and so'll .
grandm ',Roan and Quickstep can:
do the di. lace by nightfall. Take
.my gun, to keep ott the wolves; and .
little Tim, aril .a lantern."
"Bilt haw sh 11 I find the, way ?"
r Loiii sm. was- al rea -inside her pelisse
and muftlera.
'f Bless you, a bab , *couldn't miss
"it; \the trees are notheoil With a star
every half mile, on the ft hand side.
lA \
There,- take Tint and 1r... qr." , -
And there was not an ab e-bodied
man short of Shopton at Iliaseason t,\\,4,\.
who wasn't off loginci, and as rand-.
initanti Susettc could take s care, of
her 'patient, and Ben was starving
without her, what could she do , bdt
, \
„go?
\ And how were they faring in the
'-camp, Sixtymiles away in the. hi art"
or it, wood., Which was almost like a
Primeval forest? After Mr. Bruce's
1 departnre they had gone about their
work with a will ; while Uncle Simon
was busy 6 4 '116 hovel for the cattle,
Ben had walked milca, and miles
through the \ sieet-scented ' wood,
spotting . the timber ; and . suns had
risen•and Set, wlin one morning, be:
fore the week waS>out, Uncle Simon
was Surprised to sk the bottom of
the meal chest. , - ' \
" Tough luck 1" said\ he, briefly ;
"but there's swamp pciii„ - tiili eke it
out.". And he plunged his hand con
'Wendy into .. the pickle and had
something Of, a chase after t*o . or
three insignificent pieces. Tho , ,two
men looked at ,each Other, in diStriay
for an instant. ' . .
. .
" But he'll be back - ;day after 'to
morrow," said 'Ben. - • '
" But what, if he, shotild n ?".. asked
the older man, not so sanguine.
What. can keep him ? At any
rate, we'ire.got legs of our own:"
" Precious stiff ones mine Are! It,
would be a nice exedision, sixty
Miles afoOt. Why' ww.should freeze
to death
" Well, let's wait ; no - use running
from your shiuroy." - •
_
And so they waited. • - •
" Hell be sure to come to-morrow,"
'was the assurance' with whiCh they
comforted each other ; and when to=
morrow passed without bringing him,
" We will wait, another day ; prehnps.
the oxen we're disabled on tine road."
For a stOrni had set' in, cold -and
blustering
c , ; . not much- snow ; just
enough to make the world lovely.
The wind sang among the - pines like
the voice of nu , angry water-course,
and' splintered great boughs.in the
forest, and up-rooted blasted trees,
and seemed like an invisible presence
haunting the recesses Of the wood—
some impersonation ot.-Thor, whose
touch *as a. blow; and all the while
the, snow built up its Aladdin palaces;
crystal by - crystal ; wreathed about
;the 'Jiving green, tapestried - every
Doubler, hid. the , dead leaves sand
hollows under the screen, for it was
by no means . dell); the weather was
too bitter told for more than a light
'fall, just -enough drape . nature
(gr.iccfully .in s its - folds, and give a
promise of more tOtome.
• licfoie the -sky- had cleared the
last-mouthful of food- had vanished,
and; exeePt Tor partridge• that Ben
had Made shift -to kill With a'cltib-r
-for 'there were no fire-arni • yet in
camp---and- a rabbit, taketi iii a rude
trap Of their. own conatructiag, they
bad not eaten au,ything for two ibiya.
MI
,:•
1) , ..„,_ r .••...•.\ N,
- ....,,.
..\,.._ ~... \...„..,•,
r. ..„ ~,..s. , ;,...
- ~,,),-,.,,.----
.:
Ell
/ //
But they. were rapist men, whO
would have a tough flghtwithstarva
tion before suceumbing then
there was no lack of: water;', • '-
In 'the meanwhile . they • *ere
.most as Anuch concerned for \ Hr.
Bruce as . themselyea .He :Might have
lost his way,. they; feared, . or :be e n
overtaken by the storm or the Wolvetii,
be `iiiiht come into camp at any ma-
Meent too far reduced to help him-,
Self; and need their weak misistance. -
Since theirstothachs were idle, their
brains became correspondingly active
With fearful imaginations.. Every
flay they proposed setting . out to
walk Ihome-L'bilt• perha)A, he would
come to•-morroirt and then they hated .
to desert their post; besides, the wee- - ;
ther was stinging cold, and, reduced;
by hunger, they might .faint •by the
way, frost-bitten 'or, unarmed, en-',
frost-bitten,
and wolves
ight be able to endure'
ft that Uncle Simon's
itterly inadequate • to;
They were beset with
adventures.; there was
,in the ',way,' but all'
.s, real and imaginary.
_Ay il, perforce, • watching . ,
.he days vanisb\in.a tender dream. of,
color, and the sta`rmake their silent
journey , tißross the 'deeps of heaven,
, and - the Morning davn •as the rose
Moms. 'They busied themselyei - .
still about , the camp and\hovel, giv
,a. thousand last touches;, such .- as
,they .. \ ivphld• never have thought of
giving -nt .another` time, gathering'
flre and rabbit-trap
wood\ae•
, P
in vain. Arid
from Ben's reJ
just dragged hi
And stretc hed 'Tunic Simon
ing•hol
orse," PO
was- tl
it hav4
..b. „ley'S * Ali
gers he had pay
• " Perhakßri-- .A:
turned Uncle \ Simon.
- Through a. eldnk in the canip door.
Ben watelied the\sunset 7fade 1 he i , .,
tire amoirg the wbods, and one by
one the starsshine'nt, each in Its
appointed solitude, and the northern
fights.palpitate rosily Along the shy.
The howling "of wolves shoed. dis
mall -, whilenOw &nd then branch
.crack I in the forest, and t e 'wind
1 .
trebled mong the pines. Ins" e the
fire Made comfortable glow, , der
the intluen of which he was, s on.
nodding : off t sleep, when through
the fog of his emi-consciousness In.`
seemed to hear sort' of ringing in
his cars, ;It, first mere thread of
\
sound, then louder_ d nearer, as lf,
every tree in the fore.' was a Clanrch
steeple with all the bet a swinging.
Then be heard no more VII a smoth
eredt\ groan from Uncle Sir?' n caused
him to raise himself . upon hi . elboW.
I \
The fire was still snapping -hn blaz 7
ing brightly-, and the form and pro
file of a woman was shadowed
. 13 th
)upon the wall of the. camp—a ~Ve . '
familial. face and figure it - Was ;too - , ,
that .appeared to be bending over
something that was cooking . on the
fir 6. Was it the excited action Of'
his brain that - photographed' ; Louisa
Bruce on the wall? If so, he prayed
that it might last forever. Then he i
turned hiS head langandly toward the
fire, and met a parr of eyes that had
shone 'for hini all hiilife with the fas
cination of-a will-o'-the-wisp. *ere
they still to . ' haunt hita , .heroSs the.
confines of this world ? ' '', '.. ' . -
'lf you are awake, Ben; L yon had
better- taste this gruel that• 1,, have
made for you-" said Louisa; gnielly.
" You must be 'nearly fainished."\
" How came you here ?" was \ all
the ans*er Ben vpuchsafe.d. ' '\
" You are mighty, polite if you are
most starved. Who else could come;
d father hot' ableto lift his head?
I . rought . Thii; - he is putting ,up the
ho % ..i s. It's no such pleasant jour
ney,. *ther;,l - Can tell you; between
i„,\
the wo es and the frost, not to men-
'Ueda coii - 1 welcome. Come ,mint you
going to v 4 - ke'-soinething? Here's
broth and`Nuffee and gruel,take
\yoUr choice." i 1 .
No:---yon a all Choose for me,"
c ik
said' Ben.-. -" laten.‘, 2 Unless you
take - back the worn ' you spoke - When
we met last, unless 3u give me back
love for love, I7i3wear ' wilinot taste
s \ci
a Morsel, - of anything - ou have .tb
offer. I'll stay here and tarve rath
er than takelt crunili of co ort from ,
your hang'. - . -., .- •
" - What did I say?" asked L visa,
meekly.
"You said that you could
without me.' •
"Oh, ye s, I suppose I conic]; liut,l
\ ,•,
:slionlil not want to." ..' . .
'4 But you refused to marry me."
~" Certainly ; because you - didn't
_Wad* marry a girl . with no., more
heart than an adder, Den." . •
. s" I wane to marry . you, heart .or no
heart." - . •
• "I:cry well; have some broth first,
I , on% you ?"
1 And then Tire( came in, and Uncle
Simon W - blit and \ there was an end
of p.
starvation in cam, . •
WINDSOR CASTLE.'
Of the fewpiles in the wOrid which
build their idea into stone, Windsor
Castle is certainly-one. It: is \ a
,Roy
al residence, and of no upstart roTal
ty of yesterday, of no soveret,;›-
whose crown is an accident, or an dn
•certainty, but .of Gm: whose, throne i 8
. ..,
old and' sure, • . •
Broad based npon the pople , s will ,
And - compassed by the Inviolate sew."
No pile in England symbeliiesiony
conception ,pf England better than
this home of her sovereigns--palace
and Castle, feudal stronghold and
modern dwelling, grim' fortress And
royal halls in one. •
It crowns the hill, at • the foot of
a~ttch liesthe little borough of : W ind
sor by the Thames side, with tower
on "tower; with lofty roof of St.
George's chapel; a cathedral for size;
and the -central keep 'upon its grassy
'knoll rising far over:all. .11nd from
half a sccre of counties they.say the
EOyal .standard on the ke . ep, is visible
to the eyes of men. There are tow,
em builtslong ago, and • quadrangles
built yestertray. Elizabeth built, and
William of Wykeham left his mark,
and ohlifr -"Airflow; still are here,
which take, one back to the Saxon
Kine• 3; awl All Cocky,
MiMiTINSMM
=I
°. s.• .E
la
=I
Eli
EMI
---
OM per ArieumAis Adverse..
solid, as If it were put here to stay,
sure of the pertannence or the world,
and especially . • of, the. Kingdom of
England. t
'The sentry's lAtilp echoes on - its
•walls day and night, and the roll of
thp drutn c tl notes of thbig
pipes, and le short words Of t. ow
mand at • aster or. review, tell you
it is a rti.ess. But . what a smiling
tbrtr , with its gay parteires . ; ha
)v*, °loud walls, its sunny terraceS,
iti bowery orchards! And what:par
tieularly:_ amiable- lOoking _fellows
Tier "Majesty's grenadiers are, under
their. frowning bearskin shakos'!"
There can be fevi- sights in - the
world, I think,. superior to the view
from the - terra ces of Windsor,. none
that in its peculisr beauty 'can be
even compared to it.' \,
Near at hand in the VSlley are the,
turrets of Eton College. A - fonder
sweeps away for three straight miles
"the Long Walk " with its .quadru
ge Colonnade Of:magnificent branch,.
one oaks. The leafy gladei of Wind
sor Park stretch to the distant hills.
applare thiS side. That farm,,
and meadow. and village, grange.and .
%ball; mill castle; cover the *Oiling
lad' till it.mclts into the purple' of
the far away hills. • , -
So; ringed with boweryorchard
and, Wavinn• woodland, • with ,yellow
harvesWierd and rolling meadow,
with the roofs of rainy , a stately
home of England far, and hear gleam
ing through‘aticestral , trees,- and the
winding Thames, a silver :ribbon on
this ground ot- velvet green, now
brighten 'the' sunlight of 'the open
ineaddw, now shadowed b'y the great
trees that. stand sentinels on its brim
ming marge, so gleam afar. and out
i xistich fit setting the stately lowers
of England's royal home.
. 4 7here is not, they say, in ,all Eu
rope, a palace to be named With it.
And .1 can well understand and be
lieve it. It is 'so real, so old, so inns
sive, so vast, so grim, and yetit has
so clotlted its. rocky strength k witli
wreathed its
---,-
. I..nrou ,_
gh many cmw a s.... _„
.apsing .ye rs." \
. A ritle.th - ugh.' the _Park', wAs . of
course. INi nt, home. f.n. - awhilel
again. Ilere is yet the 'unshorn for
est of Windsor, the . favorite hunting,
..N
ground of the orintrin Kings.' The
deer Still 'cOuches iU\llie. fern; and
e partridge.whiues . way `hough
,th 'wood till - spfing - s rtied from
the 'reen,thickets. T . lie wild .- crea.
tures of the approaching fobesteii.
tN .
I have aid I. missed 'tides u ••Elig
land, or 1 lige monarchs efthelitest,
ern forest I found them at Wind:-,
sor, arid s ree imized the green ero • is
\
of infold fri uds of niany.yeara: ~.. f"
._ Theieblde 4 A thrans loved - broad
Acres' and branch' g oaks. I They: ad
miredthe, sire6p 'o a.;_ great forest's
skirts, the roll,. of Nast mountain
side, the . stretekof b ii meadows.
They were \ land' 'thieve. - by` nature.
It is something left,in-ch blood. All
English : speaking .. People have the
Norman hunger for land: . 'hey are
'indeed the best 'sailors :that •iil the
seas. . They, are at horne on the Test
of the wave, in every latitude.
•. hey
\,
traverse land arid sea, the most. revt.
fess and adventurous of peoplei.lt\
' is the same with both the great diVi,
slops,- under St. George's, Cross, un
der the Stripes • arid Stars. But .in
both cases they -have.. an 'insatiable
bringer for solid earth and plenty of
it. ;That' they should " annex ":. is
-the law Of their: " - manifest .destini,".,
ItbreaksOut in Many* ways. We
buihreitiea, and. yet\lve rum: away
froni,.-New,.York;, as We_ rim 4* . ay
frOtiv:tondon.. - Pecqir Nall the. ap- -
pliances - of civilization in, its most
advanced form; the Lon - 1611er flies to
the fords of Norway,. the Wilds Of
Canada .or
~Australia, as the\New.
Yorker canipS out hi "401111 , 13re - 00es
Tract," or. tries steeping in a blanket.
on 'the Plains of Colorado. -When,
All ,is over • And . done, the English
\speech . a flavor of the greenwood.
liobiadlood . had the making' of it as
Shakespeare, who indeed loved. it as'
wells any-other deer-stealer: There: l
is the>ccho:in it of the winds and the
wateraXotthe. surf upon tlie shOre,'
and the ckkughipg, branches of the u 'lli.,
trodden forest.',. - 7 ' ' • ' •
And all o • s who learneditin the
eradle,dove.h, ad space, plenty -of
\
elbow-room,, - gr *at trees, hill-sides,
,prairies, the gene sities and sciences ,
of nature.--: . . • ' - :- ~ ' - • k •
~
SO if r -.tell . you that my - ride
through tliclorcst Of 'Windsor was
retorc than half delightftll because it
was an afteincion of .honk again, - . a
real stretch of Western 'l4d laid
down - in the - heart - of England,.. you
Will not be surprised.. '
The • other half...of,AN
,enjoy tiTnt
Came from the ' 4soeiations or.itti
past... For thinforesi, unchanged - ili
\ essential features, has-been forest-for
• it\thousand-:3-ears;', yilliam - Rufus
hunted the red ileeif,',hcre..• Richard
Lionliart ranked unOr these trees'
his iso7r „rot Palestine. Elizabeth
rode throngh theSei glades,. or' flay'
herhawitat the ancestor -- of -the her
on that whirls from sedge.
-Shakespeare, fairieS danced under
theft' slindowing oaks. ' The world'
has changed. The \ houses . in, which
they'll - v. 04 they would know no niow
to-day, The •grent,trecs have - not
changed,' The br4nclies under which
the hunters &tided ‘l.on - - begin, the
chase - or 'at , its closc,. \ candpy-.thif
greensward- as of old, and Alic heath,
cr-bell blooms purple, -and \ the : fern
grows green; .sedge Clusters .
round the maridnof-the pool, 'as - in
the-daynivhen7Englikul- waif ; yOnng.
It is something to' think of, that \if
the marble firgtireS Of - the armed,
kings in Ciithedral idsles„oierypt in
NOrtafindy - iir -England -shmild he
suddenly moved to life, if the : : g reat,
Queen asieepwith the sleeping ions
pillowing liCad and feet in Westmin
ster Abbey Should suddenly , awaken.
,the one spot in all fair England that
they would ,recognize at sight, wheth
ernt the end of seven centuries or of
three, would be the forest glades they
lovid so well "in the brave days of
old:" '
The past yea me about me strangely
in my long, silent ride. It mingled
itself as strangely
in with the present,:
with lonely
walks Western wood
lands, bythe banks of crystal, lake_
or sweeping river, With days- when
the-siimmer winds told their inystiii
stories all day long in the crowns of
.elm and oak_ and whispering pine..
The forest - brought the dead kings
near, somehow. It made them seem
as it were but "Western men" of an
earlier date, pioneers in the vanguard
of that great airy of their 'kindred,
who have been 'always Moving west..
ward, and have always loved the-
Woods.--Church Journal.
lilitEEß 3.
LIIIIIHY'OI THE RAM
- ,
We have been , frequently - asked :--.-
. 0 What is tie difference between a
railroad dining car' , :ancl a Pullman
Hotel car ?" That there is a vast
difference is 'well known by things,
who have had occasion ,to use either, •
:but the untraveled , public are not
icily advised as tOthe'pointiof differ
ence. The ;Id-fashioned railroad
eating-house ifi,alaSi too well known;
itk,peculiar,.hastily-forgotten. - The
dining car, then, is this well-known
eating-house placed ' on. , wheels, at
tached to the train at the usual meal
hours, and hauled along for thirty,
forty or sixty miles, untjl the meal
has been served, when it is set off on
a side-track, andis by the next train
hailed back to its Starting point, and
so it
,ruirs a.few miles. for each meal.
To get meals in this car the passen
ger has to work his way through the
twin while it is under full rreotion
pass from car to car, ;running the
risk of fallink between the= latform's,
and finally finding the car at tire
rear of the train.. 'Then cornea the
meal, which must be hurried thrOugh
ivith•to give chance for other hungry
passengers , to take your place, and
you must force your way back to
your seat, and again run - the risk of
your platform passage while the train
is at full speed. In such cars' you;
pay seventy-five cents for each meal,
even if you take - or need only a. cup ,
of Toffee and a cracker, Bear in!.
mind, in no'ease do these dining ears.
accompany the train from I starting
point to destination. They are' al
ways " cut off" and taken on - ak we
haVe described.' With-the Pullman
'Hotel car• the case is different in
every respect. These cars are sixty
to sixty-sik .feet long, have sixteen
wheels under each, are built strong,
so as to insure steady, quiet running,
,without the usual unpleasant side -,
motion. . Each Hotel car contains,
in the order named, the following
coropartmentk4
Ist. •A cosy; neat 'and clean little ,
kitchen, fitted up with a - range, an
ice -and meat box, rows ot shelves
covered with bright silver and bright
er
glass ware, and all the appliances
needed for preparing a sumptuous
meal.
C:tre
'-'J
,
„A compact China andiglass
Closet, in which is kept , the • table
ware am!. tible linen, cutler3r, etc.. •
3rd. A pasaage way, cutting off
kitcher Id Chi • fror
y... pi .4, , ,c5r y 4... cal 4e/
open the end and have the company
'of those ins the grand .saloon. -;• , /
• \6O. - Charmingly-arranged , lava. ;
tor" ' are partitioned off; and ar. •
rang d in two distinct compartmento
for th
1%
separate - use of ladies:and
~(Tentlemen. ,' These lavatdries• are
supplied with - pure ' water,• clean -,-
towels, combs, brushes, and, in .fact ?
everything the most dainty may Ale
lire for the pertect performance 'of
an claboratetoilet. '
th. Then folloW conduCter'S and -
porters'. rooms, linen closets,
c /
It. will thUs
: be seen that -this car -
is, as its name .implies a perfect
'modern:hetel, with all of apPlian- ,
ces• and comforts complete. .This.
\ car -is taken on at the commencement..
Of' the journey, and is part of the
4rain to its destinatien.• -In
: it you
.•get,' your, sleeping compartnicilts and . -
your \meal accommodations, while'
neither \ encroach upOn the other.'
.EnViouss\ dining : car- employees, who
are paid tedecry this form. of Hotel
ear, cannot,'with anything liketrutb,
on their side, .give any valid oreon
reasonS, for; preferring the
Ito the Hotel car, and they
only c ' latter in avoref their dining.
car beCause they are paid to do so.
These Hotel cars haverim froni New
York 40 'San Francisco 'and back.
with 'the _Emperor Dom Pedro--with
Jarrett. Sr., ralther's Party; that travel
ed. at 'almost lightning speel-with
Inanyaparty Of 'California -bonanza
'kingS';.'and.all join in'
: pledging\tbeir
. honor thatlye cars ire incomparable.
two lines/of these 'celebrated cars
run lietweefi Ne*Xork,anil Chicago
and one line Only between Chicago. c ,
`and Omaha": It ''may be needless to •
s.y that this last-named • line runs
Over the steel traeksetthe Chicago
North-Western Railway. ,:That
theSe cars are attracting largo
`share of the California tl-avel, both •
nays,. might. eirily be , crinjectai:ea.
Any road deserveti -to bc..pat,roniZe.d
.that \isenterprising enough.tit, give
the,triveling public such facilities itia
are.„L.-freely•tendered Wthe Chicligo
NOrtlafestern Railway •on its
California -
We have • neglected to. say,: that,. in
these Hotel roue, the meals }1 , 113# la
carte-4uu pay\ for What you : get,
and nothing' more; and this': at very
reasonable, rates. The .` Tribune,
.-Ipril PA, '77.
` . •
THE trouble with our praying. Is 4 not
se much thatlor ihi not pray , ,enmith lor
have not , faith- i3up!ptlh uf , that We ell
`want tai be . 'lO afai
,
CoorrnitthE, .
THE DIYPERENC~..