Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, November 01, 1877, Image 1

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    TERMS OP PUBLICATION.
• •
firqtfiterttslngitt filicases eiciustre of etibscrlit
ti Ohe paper.
( • 1 It% !it TICS Insetted at FIFTEESI . CB.I.4Pg
for the first IttSerttott, Mitt .I”tVit VENTS
.1.-,lo4,etriettt Insert ton,.
' •A I. Nq vrict . ...s, same style as ,reaalug mat
t-r Nry t . it'.STs A LINE. \
‘t) V r: tn . NTS wiltbe luZ , eiled accohling
; t4r loth.w table of rates:: \
1w -1, 41,, , I Inn I tini‘.3 tint j lyr.
; 41.5(11 -
3.4) I 7,.(10 j a.cci 1 . 1(A0.1 1 . 5.0(
2. 0 0 5.001 .-N.On I W. 1 ,0 r I 20.0(
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, z „...biti `. I' t.on I 12.00 I iii.pl I 22.0tt I iiii.on I iiair
..... ~--;'. 'ma., I 10.60 1.211.00 I an.on . I .04.411 - 1%11016`.,
73:
, :, ,-,, m t, r. 1[21.0n. 1 70.0111 fal,Met"inlaft I .rffl). 1 I:40.
1 iMINI:•-ilt ATOR'S . and Elve,
: 0 . : AnilltorN notieeq. 02.50; Mk; fly,.
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VFAF:IN kilverilsennititii are e lar.
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Tit \ `: , Ti , .. T ailv?rtisements must be ‘p:4‘44or
1 .: % 1.0," NN 4 E. .
',Lt. li oviiiiii - ins of Astioetatinnii:Comint
oi limit -, 1 or I toliviclual Int.:e.t.a:nil notice.
n' Nl...irriti.o-i TO pentlip..ext , reiltog five 1,'41118. ace.
...i.j . .vlVri'Nji'ENTsrEti LtNr..
..rain, - PliiNTlNfii of ovory isind, in plain ant
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41 1'"0 , iTF CIWIZT
.NEW ANIt• - cOSII.9.ETE:STOCK.OF
CLOTH - Si
GEN-9 FURNISIIIG GOODS,
cvui r. 311
llt• t,, forui , h to 4rtler , Ina4le to
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SPRING- SNP. SUMMER
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13 EST Q A - I,IT Y'& LATEST STYLF\X
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TH il: C 1 I P.A r_EST
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IN:NIERCIII'TLOCK!
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Clica per Than . ol Alp!, ?goer Plaie
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IBIZETE
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S. W. ALVORD, Publisher.
Merchant Tailor.
LIS just recared a
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Towanl.k. April 71. 1077
ilard:rare
II I:DWA E STORE
rarmvi, I , lly IL,•Ir
URIN.DSTONES,
14r f:f I,IN on hind
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1116 HEST AW Ai.iliS !
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lot ate cINII•tr: , •I' i' IO reSS
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t.l i:EATLY REI)u;TI) njcEs
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71;•• ;,4;11,11, ,it,ivg \
PLANING: .t'rt I) 1:E-S•.V.Vijc(1,
A iLd• ”f \
.I.W AY DivWs: 1)4)WX::' 11)11PWX::
EIZZIENEE
•
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1,a1' , • :al • , u a larr , ! ,toe t.of
5A.-11 %Nl> 1)0
N.... Welt I 'am -...l!rng at pi ire, to sot tt, times
Wr:DOW-NLIN
NI .d.• • • •: -o .•r, at a lrn• price, for CASH
. 1 Fx ,l-. ,i• 5.. , , .. v H I . T. , i; ET 1:1('11 4 ,!VICIC,
... .
( 1 .01.11.,•!'•—• a:I.1 Prl,4,
dad, r rali:.•.l. %%VI I,- kept
1,11, :!:.* dry wnt:l lakell away.
aal . da,l-.E. , r Lk all and a thy.' `ace
T,arnmla..tan, ice. 1.477. -
TEW STOCK
OF GROCERIES!
(11.11ce ,:eleetiozo of
FINE TEAS -AND COFFEES!
owar
Ult. .4d Maud of C. B.,Pitell
Tow:IA.l3, 'April 5, 19:1
i \ ---
,
ATEGET'INE
CRIFIES THE BLOOD, RENOVATES AND
INVIGORATES THE WHOLE SYSTEM.
\ ITS 311:DICINAL PIIOI•RRTISS
ALTERATIVE; tome, SOLV
ENT AND DIURETIC.
EG ETINE. Is made exclusively from the jokes
carefully selected barbs, roots and herbs, and an
rqugly conerntrated. that It will effectually eradl-
rate from the symetn every taint, of SettoIIILA,
Nrltorl'LOUN fiaunit. TCNIORS, CANCER. CAN
, MOWS 111"Moit. ERY,:II'ELAtt, SALT lIIIRFM.
.YritTLlTle - LOISRASES. CANKER, AIIqTMESS AT
Tit F. SroM amt all diseases gist arise from tnt.
hluoil. ScIATWA INFLAMMATORY and
tit."5lATtIlM. NYURALGIA,6OI`TAND
- ‘1 . 1; . , ; AL CoMPLAINTS„ Can only be etectually
i. rtthfotlO the 1.10• AL
.I\l 7 L-FILS and EIit*PTIYF. DISEAKetS of the
"R,t‘:
CHI'S,
•
7t•partikl by II; 11. STE V ENS, lioni l ott Mass.,
qtka rorciround extracted front harks, roots and
It k Natures Remedy.: It I. p•rfertly
:13c1 rifrrt 11114,1 the !..ystent. It
,atoi.s.hing and Ntrt•tigt.h..lllng. It acts direetiv
.ipen tin, dood. It nervous syhtotu. It
giNe , yno . g.Q4 .1, sw,,et at night. It is n great
r..ia.:•-a Int g lotheis and mothers, tior It
strnugt h. nide!. their 'nerves and gives
th. in Nat ores s'uyet ':•teejt, inv.:, been proved by
nnoty e4l p-r-on`;‘, It I. the great Itltntl Purifier.
11 a soothing rentedv for our ehlidmu. It has
t. Let,d and Caret! 11 ' 0C15.1 , 115. It is very pleas.int
to : Ct. ry vllll4l It r. netts and cures
3,-, origami ing ift m i..gmre Miami. Try
I: iVio it a`tair trhil for your
;hen eon nia sav to) , ,Qur friend. neighbor
and aquaintanee, • Try it it Irs cured me.
EiIETI NI for the complaints to,r which It Is
re,..tttnentletl, 1, having a hit ger sale s: throughout
the Voitetl State, than :Lay other one\mettleitte
Why!, vi:w7.1114; trio.- CURE TilE4,
PI. AI V 1 , 4... •
f.' . ANNOT BE E,XCELLE ' D.\
('I I. -TOWS, MASS.. \larch 1 1 , 1869.
Mr. 1. I:. Scs.N.l..s.s: 4, , rr Sir—Thls I, to rer-
I 11:.vt• uwd yopr Preparation In
n,r yrars, and think, that, for
r•i•lcirnla ur ( . 0111.t•riitni Fla • or', or fillet:la:tile
tinn,, it vaitlll , l n ' e 1 . X4 . 0101; and. lIS a Mond
ndln., :110 iii,"l:,g; Ilirdirinti, it I, 111. in . 'd
'nave i•Ver In•nd :and 1 hacr uwd aininst everything.
~ 11.11 lent . nintiiiik it to ally VIM need of
saell a inedielu...
SNA ' I: II IS,
GIVES HEALTH, STRENGTH
AND APPETITE.
daatzlder has pwelvt-d gnat: benefit Irma the
ot tw V F.4:1•.T1N.1.:, Ilrr dcrilutng lwalte was
.1 . ..WM' , r%f g,rn.at l at. xl,l rto a't of her 111..11,14. A
!,•0 I, .1 t It , . V Et; NE restored
st r,',1;4• aisti pri , t-tw, •
r . n • I,t by n. R. 'ST EV I: NS, Bost on, May:
VEG ETINE IS ',WA) •BY Al.l, DI:1,4:1;1:TS
l'ON11'01.7NI) OXYGEN
/ i:EATM EN r.—This 3v no system of Ittrill
-1.:,o 3.11 ,, :iit0. narrate ilf•-
iv.;; . .ItAt:Nt.:Tl:(.Eir, it I. the' moza
1 - 1:31:;,:rof the Ittintan hoar t•ver k
•l it. tot • It -teen,: eon, n !:.,trenty:r enriote of 111 s
:ye. a I:tit - Tor time nI p - Allonts•tlinu :toy other
tight ,•.tr, ..1 t , xl4.ll , nee fnllY reeilfltmc
thet•ith,t. unit!" their
• : o mat.- I. nowa tintl,nenEttlth: to the el. k the
'rrl"l !be 1 . 1 , 1111, .111;41';;"u. lt Is
tel Ott•Apt,t 1110
1,••: a:I 11y.p,•101,.. para.
I: si and all r n d
IL T. JUNE
•Iter an. Itreehure pittr,.. retitttles
ts - d-fetttt fat !tat true ttiatt , Tetst-, beet of testi
c.l:r !el fer li.ettet and t Ince treat-
- i GEN T;:' \l' A N E 1.) $5O
• TO
it 11(0N - 111 te•W, eh.•ar S noel se
N 1 \- EIISA L lIISTOItY
(•• 5 . .:11 the earre.t iterte.d.t.
1,,77.* Tt.ree voltine,,,r the. Worors great.
one. t t. 3111 , 1 t.r: Arms.
hl:zory i'e34l,nn
b.. I rr,rid, ar iffiyor.
ihrthlog titter-
Ser.. faster ihao any other.
1 . ..1"114. li , iv quirt: sale, el.
ten term, cireofar, free. • Aadre-1 .1. C. Met'Ult
'lol, & • 't 09-Kflonat I. 0.: tail-
Mo. :;_htlyl9-lat.]
clo(i(1(i CAN'T BE MADE BY
1 0 11... ) I. # .•t r S agent eNrr s. tnnnth in tile
‘N • ; tnt N , Min!: work ran Va ' S.
;), • 0,0 a 11“ien dollar. n !Tay right In I heir OWII
inore hunt, tat explain here.
and WOinen, boys
k`..•11 a.. 01:0. We will forol-11 you
lei lel- Ilton: free; 'no 111041,5' pays better
111 - ..0 i'!Fe. We will bear of
Parti.,lnrs trce. Write an.l see
b 7 .11S datigloer.
; w. e.. 1 of 'lasing work at lyout..,
:tild 10. u -wall about the work at
N 1,1110 1,011 . 1. delay. •)1 rexs
I. St C.... Maine. jaults,*77.
GET Tut: BEST
•
Awl bu at prices that/6411 mstonisi
all N‘;110 lla -e been in the Ina;it of buy
ingOf othei\clealers.
'CIINTI RELY NEW
sists of
FALL AND W4NTEIZ.
Ifl STOCK f
OVERCOATS! _
OVERCOATS!`
' • OVERCOATS
Clu,-apr than you ever saw th e\ m
•
tNI).'Ly ,sulTs!
1.. B. BODGEBS
•
Ind in . faR everything in the line
11-EADY-MADE.CLOTIItNUi
GENTS' FITIINISHING "GOODS
I. EillEll BFR ! that, having Just corn
mencea business, I have-no old-fash
ioneti, moth-eaten, shod4ly . goods.
EMEM
=.,. , •
• J. DAVI§.
Towanda if." 25, I SM. .
•
....i
B ". 71.4trough Pr y;4, 1;4, Wiwi fie 1iate,,,,•%; s
BRYANT &BIRATION, '
BUSINESS
- ,
And Teleernpleic Institute.
108 S. Tenth St. . Phriadel raga. Pre.
. I riczcasosi facilties. - Telettraphie Days_ In dame
of the JtatartgPr tint tiirenran of the
.._ A , fatoicuswi /Wife rEftl4fulilt C. For
1 f utt particular?, can or Wend for Ireo 10
P illusaratocl circuiar.- .E it.Soor.o.
_. .
P WO DAT 0 E!
W. If. DECKER, Jit
;i ll
Ell
Vezetine.
WHAT IS VEGETINE?
=1
A. DINSMORE.
Itus,,el SEreet.
EaMEI
N. 11. TILDEN . . • •
:11111 Estate Agent.
N. 1 9 I;tol , ling. ltusl. n. Mass
MEC=
EMMllittli
/.
4,. E. E LEN., I:. Elf., M. D.,
(~ il .- , . 1 i , . EY. A. :`,1., M. IL_
:Of '..E . EY Al' ~. I. EN.
11E:4;1:10 SIT. et,;Plilla
Clothing.
HO! 1,003. E HERE!
Why flo you continue to pay
MGR PRICES
or
RE A D Y MADE CLOTHING
When you can go to
J.DAVIS'
"'Mr: r"rlflt s rlY OCcuptua by Suloino%)
111(1 cu)
WORK s uiTsl _
tOrS SUITS
MEI
eqll gee for yourselves,
TOWANDA, BRADFORD' COtNTY, PA., TRURSIM
Intim
==il
NEVER SATISFIED.
Borrow, sisrrow. an nround; •
The world Is , full of woo;
There's plenty grief for every soul
Whose home Is here below.
North or South East or , . West, .
Wherever you may bide.
You'll trod no man who ultb,hls lot
Is fully satisfied.
One grieves bei•attse he's ovorstont,
One mourns that he is thin; • •
Give each his Wish, you change the tune,
Dui cannot change the din.
The farmer's boy would change his geld
And seele'llte ocean wide ;
Held leave the immt. lauds of the farm
' And - plow the billowy tide. .
The townsman to the fields Would hie,
The countryman'to.lown ;
The village lass would don a robe, ' •
The city belle a gown. -
She whose hair Is waving gold
Wonla have It black as jet ;
Anil 'where Is fairest blonde who'd not
Much rather be brunette?
He who is aging would be young,
The youngster would be man,
And little dreads the closing up
Of life's fast ekAing spin.
All are at sea, In storm or calm,
All; all are tempest test ;
Some mourn (or what they never had,
Some grieve for what they've lost.
dill
Ile' : .
—Cift! '..p - ri le.
T : OSE EYES.
T. T(11 TI - lIVE.T.".
q4;11111 . 8 aays.
I ctilv, gaze,—
' we-tight WaXtp,
1, the (out I •
, i s:ln thillle,
tt., c 111
t ., '— ,
TN ever thus, go where yen will, •
‘ Throagh countries far and Wide;
man the I , t, he'd better It ;
purer satisfied.
In rosy dawriot
1 haply met their -
A hasty gleam_ with%
A sunbeam's flash auth)\
Rut oh that glance It t
And still my lviart 'with Mir
Were you to quiz me of their htf
If Mack or 1111, 1 / 4 1 / 4 gray or
If filuged with lashes of the night,
Or curtained with the morning
.1 swear that I could never tell,—
I only own their hatuttliig spell !
aijt:ellattrotO.
Ronald Ogdens Bank Account.
No)v,tell me all 'the latest gos
si )." \
- Stretcll lazily upon a wide
lounge, his ' , skippered ferk and gay
smoking. JackOt,,suggesting - a luxuri
ous ease. MaxWql Fisher was en
joying•his first day \at home, alter a
five years' sojourn in \ Europe.
mother; whose heart hail wearied for
him sorely in all that tying absence,
touched lovingly the waving bro Wit
hair as she put
_as:de hersipretence of
knitting and settled . herself for a
comfortable chat.
She told him all tlpe ''Sihrerton.l
ne w ute a_ bud getor tlfe Fish-1
ers; mother and son. were: people of
wealth bntl importance, ail also peo
pie of benevolence and gentle -sym
pathy with the poor, so that the tide'
of gossip, both from higlt and low,
generally flowed into Vreir sitting
room, never to ' wound Orinnoy. but
seeking the old ladyls• (tunfort or
pleasure
When she-had told of suOh changes
as she remembered, Mrs. Ostler
OnO item. she had liept back,
just as she had kept one name out of
all her letters to her son, P_ecause.she
knew that for love - of Siilqey Claire's
face Maxwell had exiled hi)nself from
home, and neen fiar on Id`:s way over
the sea when Ronald Ogden, tbok
Slaty for his wife.
She had wondered then how any
eyes could see more to lave inßon
ald than in Maxwell, the pore when
Ronald was a poor man, Onlra clerk
iz the bank where Maxwell had many
thousand dollars inVested F
She was the orphaned daughter of
the. Silverton Minister, this pretty;
gentle Sidney,- and was teaching the
village school when Ronald won her
love. She never knew that the an
nouncement of this engagement'
struck a heavy blow upon Maxwell's
heart, for there was no coquetry in
her nature,- and her one true love had
absorbed her heart.
" There is one piece of news I have.
not told' you yet Max." •Mrs: Fish ;
er said, 6‘ because I hate to cloud
your first day at . home. But --- ,you will
he sure 'to hour it when yOu go out.
Ronald Ogden has had a terrible ac
cident." ' •
"ltonald - 1 How waS'it, ?"
?"They were driving out, Ronald,
Sidney and little Jessie, when the
horSe bt came unmanageable near the
deserted quarries."
. Maxwell shivered. All Silverton
knew the danger of those great, gap
ing pits of granite..
"They were all thrown out Jessie
and Ronald went' over •the edge of
the quarry. but Sidney did not. Jes
sie was killed, Ronald is dreadfully
injured, his spine and brain are both
seriously affected. ,Sidney 'was but
little hurt, has quite recovered, brit
yen eaniMagine hew stricken she is ;
Max. her only child - dead, her hus
band dying." .
" Dying !"said Maxwell, hoarsely,
"is it so bad fui that ?". ' -
"Dr. Smith says he may liVe for
mouths, but he can never recover,
and he will be but a helpless cripple
while he does live!"
There was a Along. silence in/ the
room after Mrs. Fisher spoke.. ,Nlax
: Well was thinking of the sweet;, fair
1 girl Mit had bidden him farewell live
years before,- her sunny hair falling
in loose, curls aver hes. shoulders, her
frank, blue'eyes full x!l* happy light,
\ her sensitive, Child-like mouth, mull
fna2T as she gave him . cordial' -good
•
wishes for his voyage. 11 face so in
nocent, so full .of . joyous light,' it
seemed\as if •sorrow:Juust - pass him
by.,
And Maxw.ell, erushin , r . down his
agony at the \ thought of shutting it
out from hiS. life when he. had hoped
jto gather it to \ bis• own heart and*
\home, had speken\rio word to throw\
even a passing shadoo'er its bright
ness,„ but carried his 'appointment
far over the water, ”, to I - e it doWn."'
• "Mother," he said atlas "do you
think Sidney ever knew •wh I went
ahroad " * - . I
,
"1 think not, der. She ai ays
. seemed cordially glad
. to hear ally
news from you, and there was never\
, any embarrassment in ' her manner
when we talked about.you. . .. •
1.. ' "Men I think I %ill go fiver
there." • •
. . , .
REGARDLESS OE DENUNCIATIO
"It was. not a, long 'walk to a
little cottage'. it had . Wein Sifirees
pride to make cheery and hOme-lile,
and Maxwell was soon in the parlor.
It was shut .up with crape upon the
window - shades, arid looked cold and
neglected, Presesently a little, pale
woman, with eyes haggard with
weeping and watching came in.
'But the eyes brighrened, when Sid
iley.saw who her visitor
“ Max ! how glad I aid to see you'!"
It was a cordially glad welcome,
too, Max could - easily, see, and he
took.the little hand extended to him
ilk a warriclasp.
"'Sidney* Where are you ?"
'This voic *pia .the next room
was feeble and. iluertilous. Was it
possible , ltonald's•yiriging voice 'had
fallen to this?
While Max askedilimself the ques ,
tign; Sidney answered it.
"Ronald misses me if I lea,ve . the.
room a moment" she said, " so you
will excuse me if I invite you in his
room. We could not carry him up.
stairs."
She led the.tway - as she spoke, to
•
the next room: H_ ere there was no
look of neglect. Upon the bed was
stretched a tall, helpless figure cant
fully dressed, and. in every detail the
room .shone brightly. Mg shaded
windows admitted the soft7llay air,
spring' flowers' wire in -little
,vases .
upon the table and manteliiiece, and
an open book lay near thelavalisi'S
hand.
" Noland, here is Max," Sidney
said. - . .
" Max ! Max !" Roland repeated.
" I hope you are all well, sir."
"I thought- he , would• know i i o/1,"
Sidney tnurmered, her eyes .misty
with tears.
But it was evident that poor Rol
and had no idea. who his visitor was.
lie talked feebly and without connec
tion in his words, only coutentid
when Sidney was close beside him.
ff, she went across the room, the
16kpus cry of . Sidney, ." where are
foil 1 hr
ey
one ‘a check for .a *hundred dollars.
You know it is a mouth since lie
was hurt, and I have used all the
money. we had. I am afraid
4,liat Jane cannot draw the 'money in
Lank, anti I cannot leave-the room.
I f m gone any minutes Roland
tries to rise and follow me, and the
effort throws hitn into terrible convul
sions of Pajn."
" understand ! Give me the
check. I will \ gst, the money at once."
" What is Roland Ogden's balance
at the bank ?" wasffe question Max
well* Fisher asked his uncle, one of
the director's an hourlnter ••
"I will see I ' \*
And 'presently the answer c.im
" Three hundred dollars." \
" 1-1 9 in ! Mrs., Ogden wishes :t9
know."
" Poor child ! Have you seen
Ronald ?" asked the old gentleman,
kindly.
I called there this morning.
There is very little any one can do.
Ronald will not 16t his wife go ten
yards from his side."
• " Sad case, very sad."'
And more than once ax.we
echoed those words in his heart as he
saw more of the suffering of the in
'oral man and the devotion of his
wife. Utterly- ignorant of any busi
ness, Sidney thankfully accepted
Maxwell's offer to attend to all such
matters as Jane -could , not manage
outside Of the - house,- and gave him
always the checks Ronald drew, an i
the bank hook of the-injured man.
For in all that concerned Sidney
the clouded brain was singularly
clear. Ronald understood, when
Sidney asked for motley, that he was
to sign the check MaxW her
to till-up; he know when. Jati
ed him to eat, take his .1, to
submit to all her t inis
tration ; lie missed her wed
from his side, and had a pathetically
teader smile to greet her care s s,
Often when he had lain for hours in
dull stupor, he would gently draw
his wife down - until 'her lips touched
his, and whisper a loving word. „
But outsidn„of this one love, Ron
ald's mind was„a blank. Ile suffered
intensely...at - times, and lay often dull
ed by opiates, and very slowly his
bark Of• life drifted towards eternity.
Mrs.. Fisher was a wanstant friend,
coming' tothe cottage every day,
sending the choicest fruit from her
ektensiVe,garden, the daintiest fruit
from her kitchen, to Ronald, and
Maxwell knew that there was always
a - sympathizing, motherly affection
near Sidney. Not 'one thottght that
was.not loyal to both Ronald and his
wife - ever crossed Mt&well's noble'
heart; but *hen the end came and.
Sidney followed her dead (Mee more
to the cemetry, Maxwell Fisher left
his home for another trip abroad.
It did.not need. any very eloquent
pleading to induce Sidney to 'accept
a position suddenly opened to her,
that of) companion to old Mrs. Fish
er. Very delicately it was offered,
dr-d the cottage was vacated, - the fur
niture sold, and the little pale widow
received into hernew
r home.,
'ln its kindly, atmosphere some ! of
the bitterness of her loss left Sidney's
heart, and.. Once more the
,bloom of
health came into her fair face,. and
her voice lost its hopeleis tone.
She did not think that Maxwell staid
abroad for her sake; and his mother
bore the second absence more cheer
fully . than the first, for Sidney was
like another child_
her, a gentle
winsome woman, who clung to her
as a danghter might have done.
" Sidney; dear," she. said, one morn
fling; " Max is coming home."
" That is good neWsl It is three
years since he went away. I cannot
'aderstand how he can, be'aviay from
11 a lovely home so much."'.
kope,this will be his last jour.
less he takes a bridal trip."
my, u
O ' i',4!XY Q-UAR*I.
O'VE3IIIEIt 1, 1817. ,
, 'Married 1" Sidney; cioiely; a
'katt Atie Mush coming into lier face,
"rim adnkin,g of thic
'.es, can ''.D,o, you nt think it
e ? Max is thirty.fonr." .
't is time but—'l' .
it, Sic uey ?"
t SCCITI, as if ther e
.m 1 e‘nough. for Max.
oble \ s 'man I ever
, .
Tome, thiatight
ab;is even
'Sidney to
4 1 of that
de
d
it is ti)
"Yes,
'". B wi
" It dses
anybody . half
I think he is the
knew."
But Max, coming
there *as one wntnan
his deserts, and .persuade.l
think the same. - He told hi
long-hidden loye deepened ai.
fled white 'watched her wife
votion, to spring up anew strong
true when she I was once more fret.
and SidneY,listening,.kneii that deep
and faithful love as her love forßon
aid had been, lier heart was still
young arid had /Q01:11 'Tot' a 4 second
love tender and strong,
But it was not • until: Sidney .had
been Maxwell's, wife for more tlian
two years that she discoVered hoiv
nobly lie had aided her in her hour
of deepest tribulatiom She was look ,
hag over some papers in a large desk
he had asked her to. "put in order,
when she found a' bundle of checks—
strangely familiar.,
3i - ax she „cried, " 1
came all Ronald's checks •in
desk ?"
Max colored guiltily and d opp - ed
his eyes.
,1;
/1
i r
vrned," he
/.:.
ion. .
bank kept
A ,
.4( '
s v
t• ) :
I{//'
thought those were by
slid, biting his lip in vex
" But I thought, Or
them?" •
"No,"they are
but-1 may as well
those never went
Then, looking
understood tli/
kept her rainc. l
;icy anxiety.
nearly emu'
Sorrow.
hi g.
Oh, Max'hOw could you ?."
"/Darling," he answered, t" 4 never
uteant that you should know. Ron
ald's little savings were nottotiehed
till you drew them yourself after his
death. llutyou must forgive me now."
" Forgive you! My< whole Ike
shall thank you r! •
And Sidney keeps her` word, while
the secret still lies close in two hearts
Even Mrs. Fisher never . was toltrflie,
story of Ronald Ogden's Bank AC.
count.
ECONOMIZING STEPS
A hrrgepart of the wehriness of
house-Avolk comes from the number
of stepS required of the housekeeper
erforming it. The going up and
dO , n stairs, -the vibration ITtween
the kltchen, dining-room,. cellar, rind
otker)krts of the house, Wear out
the strength as mulch as all other .
tasks eom ined . . llt.nee such con
eentration o resburees' as :will give
the house-kee '4 , the • advantag- of
Position and -the easy connnand of
every point to he.coverea is of the"
utmost importance. If she can find
in
.her
,pantry every requisite for
ebmpounding, bread.' pa4ry,
and have no occasion tp run - here.
and there to get things tOgaher and
put them away again, her task will
seem
light.
If in her sewing-roonl she can put
he hands on everything required by
the seamstress. without the iserplexi
ty and trouble of hunting, up linings,
thread, butions. - braid. l rthat task *ill
he 'robbed of half its wearipess. But
comparatively t'ew houses . have been
pia lined- with rei'ereinke,to this saving
.;f steps. `'l he majority of- 'families
have no.sp&ial room 'fitted up p.s a
lautitlry;mo pantry capacious•enough
to contain ever thing a pantry should
contain; no sewing ri,iotn set apart
for that .sole purpokc, and articles
in cited in thoSe various industries
-are necessarily scattered, and kept
where it is most, convenient to keep
them. The washing uteiisils \ are
ally kept in the cellarand Must lie
bronolit to the kitchen and carried
• , \
baok again. • r .
\
, The sewing'machine stfuids not fit•
from the cook stove, so the woman
•who ily t her own work can have an
o; •
versto . of thescooking, while busy
atczthe machine, but her Materials for
sewing cannot all be within reach.
t, ley using. her brains as much
she does her fret, she may save the
latter many . an unnecessary trip. It
she must go down to the cellar for
anything, let her pause 9 miiment, be
fore starting and see if- there is not
.something else to he :carried - down,
'sr it' there is any errand there that
mby be attended t 6 other than the
special one she goes on. If she has
oez!asUsT to.go bp stairs, let her,con
shier In:lw much there isfto be done
she can aCtkoniplish once going there,
'
and so. of everything else.
__A great
deal can be done by planing work
to make it easy. She who has ar
ranged in her -mind a little 'Pro
giamme of her work, and. goes :at it,
systematically, will accomplish with
half the fatigue, what, taken at rail
dom, might be entirely beyond their
strength.• Children can be 'trained
so as to. save their ! mother's steps.,
and by setting anti clearing away ta
bles; putting their own toys and be
longings in place, do Very much to
lighten the toils of their, mothers
•
V.PLC E OF A TIMELY Vonn.--:A.
good deal - of harm is. doe through
forgetfulness. A little thoughtfulnei4
obit care with respect to others' would
.often .save pent front a great.deal of
suffering and aid them in their work
A man iSdiscouraged in conseiptence
of the difficulties he meets with. An.
entoOraging mold may be all that is
necessary to .retrieve his energies and
to cause him to pcirsevere. That word
were easily . spoken. There arc those
who are perfectly willing to speak it,
but they do not think of . it. They
:de besy with their own work. The
discouraged one sinks into deeper
despondency. not through their heart
lessness, but their want of thought
fulness, A,young man is exposed to
temptation. lie is about to take a
step from which a little influence of
the right kind' would' save him. There,
arc numbers among his 'acquaint,
antes who-poUld exert thatinfluence ;
but they db not see his danger, or are
•so busy that they must leave him . to
the care of his other friends. Ale
takes the step, . and :it ' . leads • to his
ruin., A' little effort rightly pig forth
woUld'haTe _
,ty:4 returned--,
on! ess, Sidney-4
6 the bank."-
Jut() his face. Sidney,
generosity that had
. free from aft pecuni
, when her heart was so
/ Shed under weight a
She came to his' side soil-
,
\ . , \l I I\\ -\, N: .- -
_,. ...
1 / 4 .'t . ls
~
'• , .
... s
--
\ . is .•
, .
. LAMENT or A DEVELIIIW- wirr.
\
How long , ' O Fathar In Heaven,
Must we Liar this bitter wrong?
We wives of men who are drunkards,-
A sad heart-broken throng. -, ••i k . \ \
Haw long shalt those who ruin i '
. The ElPlig I;.t ' men for gain 1 . i.,
Grow Hell while we are starving.,
And mock at our woe and pain? l''
They LIII tlt souls of our husbands .-
I hey rob Our children of bread •
They deiolaie our hearthstone,
Till our Lope Is almost dead. .
I
Thou knoWest hew oft the, b rden
. Seems more than we can / war.
We oft would fall In the sift - Jiggle.
Were H tuft fur relief iii prayer. ' •
We try to teach our i rlitillren
To be bidoLt, g I' aid d tine,
tut i
tut alien their f• ler is kdrunkard,
God r what nwe (10
0 nun who se then Minor,
Slow sflill'•ou answer, when\ , ..-
G 1• !those f requires or you ..-
\
T. e so Is ,f \ these ruined men. ,
--Moo.. ( • 9 .1 rnrti.
.'' \
\
... I :OA I DETECTIVE'S STORY.
myl ions affair , "
1 "ns;' ' mit I had
I .' 1g up he case,
e in nding
`) ongeille,
.overe,d,
quek
ic a
AE
" 4 "cs,.it was
sai
li tle . troubleFin work,
though I was some tip
the chain t i p which -bc
broken linkthat had u
It all came ahont in such
way-that if I should live - to
thou and nears old I-should not,
.
bet it." •
th.t's no Wav, Dielc," cried
tack Franklin, the genial
Master of Transportation, after wait
ing a long Mine for Rollins to con
tinue—" that's no way of getting'
over the road. But its just like then
in your business; stirring, up one's
•
}osity, and exciting oni!'s
so that triey-, settle:i
aek for Something good's,'.
,
;case may oe, only to
nettles ly long pauses,
1 you are now 111,-
dormant cur
i
expectations;
themselves b
or not, as th%
be plaped on
like that in.
we, drop a little sand,
open, and take a run
your stOry.7
Dick !" exclaimed Jack
dolline,•.
pull her wid
at the hill o
i. " Aye, ay.
I,4ere bulletined for that
out, my boy." ,
Sprague, "3
!yarn, so pul
Id. he the last man to
gineer,. Jack," replied
"You sho
hurry, an e
her of one of the com-
Rollins•
1211
s'' or a story., In either
oinpelled—if he does not
the .risk of bienking
imuy's kettle
ease-one is e l l
wisji to ru
king on some
. hard pull
e. his machinery,: drop
oil here and there, whfte
ger or rtist f anq after Kat
f that his' *des, cross
ccentries ael all .0. K,
19:- I now prgpose to
. track, gooki Oen
,nd fuel, antCa good train
down, or sti
examin
ping a little
the'reis darq
isrying hitns
heatl.',nod ei
pull ahead,
with a,elear
ty water"
behind."
" On the r iorning of the 10th of
December, 1„70 was sitting in the
telegraph office 'in the depot in D—.,
congratulating myself -on the dearth
of bosiuess•iin my . line on account
. of the terrible weather we were then
experiencing, and 'chinning:: the op
erator, as ‘1 , 13 sat back in our,. cora
-font:dile arm chairs, testing theraer
its of sOme} Lone Jack'. in whibh I
had- been. inVesting, when click, elk•k,
wentthe call:Over the wires for head-;
quarters office: Now, among- other
things, useful and otherwise, that I
have picked up in many years •.ser
vice. with the railroad, is the artif
suck it may; be called- of telegraphy.
1 cannot manipulate the liglitning
myself to any 'great extent, but '1
have no difficulty in understanding
the strangedannage as spoken by
the many Months of -the telegraph
line. So when Eon and I heard the
call for headquarters' office, we in.
voluntarily suspended our . smoking
and conversation, and listened•fer
what was to fsliow.•
" Headquarters answered, and then
his message- 7 ns- near mid can recoi
l-ea—was Sent flying over the
.wires
" Agenti'palicoaq of,-this station
(Attica), was found dead in his. of
fice at o:3o'this A. T. That Ir„,e2m
mitted suicide, is evident from, the . .
fact that all the doors were securely
locked, and it - was fiecesshry to force
an entrance to hisCffice. 1 The b o dy
"was lying 'about the centre of the
\ fior.,. and near by was a large pock,-
et-kuife—suPposed to be ; his own—
Neover \ ed with blood. 11e.had stabbed
im several places near the
heart, and failing thus to reach the
seat' of life cut his throat almost
from ear to`ear.. Safe.key-..fotind - on
.it's person; at contents of safe sup
posed to be 0.
" In a Minute after 'this message
had been turned in \, ,there . came one
from headquarters, "ailing
Then folloWed:
" Is Rollins there? Answer quick!"
•," Of course Rob tokLithem
. 1 was.,
"Proceed to Attica* N 0.41, and
investigate death of Agent Paneoast,'
was the order, and a..541ie,• train \ was
due in liVe minutes, I, had but
time for preparation. :
"I was ready,. howevey, when No.
pulled out, and was soon driving
along through snow and‘gleet, on my
way to the tragic scene. •
" I now had an opportunity to
study over the sad affair, -and the
causes which must- have 'led poor
Pancoast to commit the rash act. As
was my custom,. I drove my thoughts
from the p:esent, and the 'saying
is, went to the root of the matter.
"lie had been agent at ,A Wes Tor,
some five years; he, Was: also agent
for the U. S. Express. Co., doing the
railroad and express business in the
swine ollice. - Ile kept good cornpqny
—in fact, he was a consistent Chris
tian, mid there being so- few of that
class of Christians, one's ;attention 45
attracted when tong of the true - metal
is found.. As he did not drink, gam-
ble, drive fast horses, 'or spi;cutate,
and consequently was not in tinanCial
troubles, why.did he commit rash
act? , •
" But did he commit suicide ? „ '
"That question tolentallfanswer
e& most 4ecidedly in' the negative,
when an hourlater I stood in the of
fice and viewed the body and sur
roundings.. It was still lying in the
same position as when fOund„..it not
having been disturbed further than
an unauthorized examination of the
-pockets, in which were found h's
watch, a small amount of mtnry, and
the 'key of the safe.
.1 took the lat
ter,- and opening the safe examined
its contents: •
"I found
-but a few small express
packages, Of small vnlue, according'
to the figures marked ow them, with
.\\ • 152 - nor Annum in Advance.
EMI
- . .
the 'receipt-hook, belonging to the
agentd\lt no Other entries
than of the \ paekagetOnentiOned, and
if, as 1 suppose,-he• had received any
valuable -paelsages front''the messen
er on the etpreSi - the"ni‘Oht be'fare,
Or for railroad frOght,. . bad neg
lected to make-au-eikkry..of tbeto, or
bad \ hPeu FropiercAl , 01414 0 044\ the
opportunity: .You see ny that
thoughts.were drifting.
" But hoi- aecouot, for 'the office
being, securelfloCked—as well ai the
out door, and no possible signs of
foi eible entrance -On doors :or Win
\
doves,:' . • --- • .
What.eakier than, for the initriler-,
er to, gip int?
.the frelkht room un.
perceived, aftxr,Paticp4st ha~i hurried
out triihilibbtfetafi himself
h_ciTlind • the fieiglic and when the
agent lOcliecttlie Outer:doOr folloW
lipp to the inner.offlee and perpetrate
the. deed ? • •• • .2.
" I procured' a light, and ,-went.
prowling
freight,
in the -corners be
hind' the freight, scanning e z verythino ,
carefully; and just es I as,. on, the
point of going,elsewhere'.for 41 tine,
my eye caught something deeply im
printed on the top . i:?ta , box, which,
on examination, I,ibtiad to b ean im
press of a boot-heel:. • .. . ~
• "Now - you / May say there' was
was
nothing strange in that; but when I
tell you that a map standing on the
top\orthli box-could-just-see= over
the.ole(Of freight 'and watch the Ik
n r Oleo, you will know that 1., piCk
ed ) U_ \ br( ke n -_ 1i n k-,--t hat. impress
was ti me lAe the broken twig, 'or
iliint la) . ressroa of afoot, is. to the
scout pn e trail.' .. '- ..
p t.,t,
" llcre„ ien, "the. .murderer had .
stood an4V-Wa'
rka. t :s befit baleful eyes
1 .
his' victim. - 'n lookout tie
had planned thcpropeklme for sit
tack. Then, stepping* carefully doWn,
he:approached the u nnsti9us agent,
...4 ,
with open knife in rea • °Ss 'or • the
fatal stroke, grasped' hi and with
ope lighting flash of the bl le across
qic.throat the Aced was done.
•" But to: make sure of
,hisWo li . - he
had used the giving several
stabs in the region of the heart.; and
then arranging the 'body, and drop=
ping the knife near, to oye' tlie ap
pearance of stiicidei he ,had opened
the' safe,- abstraeted only/4 valuable
packages, locked the tlOorS•of,the of
fice and :reight::rooin,with duplicate
keys, and fled, leaving, as, he thought
no trace: . •
"lint as I studied the heel-mark in
the . soft pine I knew he /aid left a
tracp—a link that 1 determined 1
should.he fitted to'n chain - that 4, de-
terrnined should bind him- hand and
foot. As I have'said the egact . ina.,
print of heel Was deeply imprest
ed in_tlie-soft_pin.c...she maker of
. the hoot to which that leel.hclonged i
must have had leisure and a fanciful
turn of mind; for ke had Made in the
centre a perfect - star, and here it
N-ris, 'every. nail.distinct. Itlwas use
'less to titin -- of , tracing
. hi 4 Course
without, for it
1
liad :been 'snowing all
night—and n fact all , day—and of
- course every mark was long since ob
literated. .
petted; the county coro
r returned _a verdict of
'tide. I immediately held
)n With•the railroad and
itils,.ta-whom I imparted
ti rder,but cautioned them
I iin pression- go- forth that
itislied With ,the verdicti
e_chances_ were the tnifr
, itt take alarm - and fly.
s he\wa.s,.no stranger to
and list 'he would, tat,
by,the\faet. being made
Panceasthad not corn
de, remain; for fear that
I v
ay. would eYeate suspa
-t-
-.,.
" I visited all : the" ,
boot and - shoe
Stores in that part Or the country,
ostetis:ibly, to bay a pair ofbeats,but
I Was hard.:to suit. - ; - I managed to.
discover, however,. that none had
made or sold apair of boots or shoes
with a star in the heel. ' I 'fell tomn-
Spect - ng every - studded foot, and the
marks they might make; ` .with- inile:
fatigable perseverance, It grew to
be such a.-mania._ with . me, that I
gre;qly surprised Mrs..-,131511in5, 'by
incohanically raising her bodtheels,
as she laid them aside -to 4n: her
slippers one-evening, and examined
Ale heels thereof ; and.she fell tO . e.x.
patiating on - the beauty of the fit and
the cheapness, fearing, the dear little
woman, that I was growing parsimo
niously inclined: . . s . .
..
"I had boots* 'and shoes, frbm
number nothing to unheard - of sizes,
iniXed up in my dreams; and 'when
one night I.missed the expresS, and
took the fast freight fors R,—,- and
threw thyself down in a seat in the
eabOose and fell asleep,- it was not
surprising that - I Tell to dreaming of
,the perpleking solution of the ins,
tery attached to -thy ,murder Of Agent
Tanenast. . ,
-" I seemed to be in itivisibl
an . .. . '
sliaPe, 'w.. nderingaioime
. from plac .
_ 7
to place search of a 'fhir of boots .
with n:it r worked.in the heel with
nails. ' t last . l,stepped,into h store
tat 1 re ognized as being_ the one
ilf - .:Xt._do'irtothe - headquarter§ in
(2 . . (heat Ibroad treads,' with
it
strange eviceS worked in the heels
with/ hu e nails, - flitted before my,artd
ituiged hemselves.on the long ,coun
terby A e side oflittle shoes-with no
heels at all. Dainty ladies' shoes and
gents! I outs seethed of their.own vio
. Rion t leave the.thelves and boXes
and eo e down'for inspection. ' • '
" At last came the pair 1 hail, been
'gain r
. for pair with a
pertee star worked in the centre of
the lie l.'-' I had already
.reacheOut
my ha id to take them ip, when be
fore n e.stepped a man I had known
by si it as a ne'er-do-well, who bad
been *making on the road for a few
week , who, taking
. poSsession - -Of
theni with an air of ownershipotalk
ed o t. - .
.. • ,) ' .
• "As lex
ner and jar'
:keath by' sa
a onsultati
expis Oflb,
by4ielrel'of
to leave\the
they werosi
and then
deter week
My idea v .
that sectio
less startle
knOwn that
milled soh;
,hid going a
eion,
s he slaMmed the door, I awoke
tarted to my feet with the ex-
and
elan
WW I
the
atiOn : At last, have found
IP foimil.myself face to face With
man of my dreiiius.. Ilis,lsiam
g'she door coming in had
Et me, and now, with pale face,
fod before me and asked what I
ant; and then,hefore I had fecov.
al from bewildfrinent, he jangbed
vvon;ly, arid: with tr remark that j-
as dreaming, - pieked" .
up 'his ilatup.
ti started' out., -But before be reach
-1 the .door I Iris myself again,. and
.
\
Wan instant bad isty it I
shoulder. •
" Not RC - fait, my: friend, -said 1.
" Sit down here and let me your
boot-heel." . . :
I
" What the deuce Is thaTfor?" e
asked,lrith much surprise:
"Do as I tell yoii, I. answere d,
patiug him into a seat. ' -
'By this time the other brakemen
and conductor had crowded up, and - -
stood: lost in wonder at my proceed- '
-
' '"l
ncw raised his foot, and &Will ' . ...,.:
ran through me as I saw that I:bad ',/
found the • chnin.' Tbere..it " was as ,/
plain,as nails could make
. It—a star .
,/'
in the centre of the heel. .. ; -
MIME
MS
N 22.
" Wlio- made you those boots?" I
asked •
" Watson; next doot to headgear;
ters,, in he replied.
"My dream to a dot 1. I w i se now
sure of man; fluid pilling out the
knife . with, which the Murder had
been counnitted, and:.*high I had
carried for just such / an occasion," I
ppened it, and holdinAt up - before ,
his ..eyes, demanded - in an abrupt
tone:
John Peters, is
~not this your
knife?" / -
"His bravado instantly left him,
and turning as pale as a corpse be
'stammered out-that it - was.
Yoti ne.ver saw a man weaken so .
(tack, and , when -I put the' bracelets'
on/liiin, squealed' the whole
hn.• -
.
"It wa N s a sorry New Year for hire,
for it was on. New Year's morning
that. I siepped \ from the train at Atti-
Pa with my pris o ner, and h,urried him
to jail. His trial, e' cam on in due
eourseof time,andashe had , cotifetised
to the murder, no defense other than
the insanity odge was set nri by
counsel.
" Ile had, gone 'over from C—.- 7 0n , 1-
' the trait} that reached Attica --at
11:30. • Ile had' slipped into the
freight-room while Agent , Paneoast
was at the.train, and concealed him
self behind the freight; and he had ,
stood on the box and, looked over
the pile of, freight watching his
chance, to slip out.. •He had seized; -
his victim from behind, cut'-his throat,
and then, after stabbing him, arrang-. -
ed the body and knife to give the ap
pearance: of suicide. After posses
sing himself of two , valuable pack
awes on the , safe. and taking a largo
roll of money from the wallet of, the
- murdered;man, he locked the -doors
with duplicate keys v walked to the
next station, concealed himself in a
box car on the night freight, and,
reached C. withoutbeing seen by .
any one. He had been' breaking ex
tras pn.the road for some time, and
the very next day was offered. and
accepted a permanent.positivn, know
ing that this would - keep suspicion
from. attaching to him. '
" He deserved hanging, if any mur
derer ever did, but he tot off _with
imprisonmenkfor life. -
The longest life is made up of sim 7
•
pie days-fewor manyltut the days
grow into years, amtgive 'the meas
ure of our lives at the last.
The life is at he last - What the.
days haye been. kst the children,
therefore ,look a er. the days—one
difat 'a time-jand put - into each.,
one something Forth doing, some
thing worth re 'embering;sumething •
wortli : imitatin7
by those. who follow • •
~. . .
n. • ... : • _ . :!,..,
. 'h Everydaa little knowledg e .
' One• Piet ln:a day: • How small :,a,•
thing is o,tiefr !—Only tine! ..T e n
1 ye a rs pass Av. Three thousand and -
six hundred :ad 'My fitts - areTnot a
small thing.- - ._ \ • -
2. 'Every day - a little self-deniak
The thin that - is dillicult.to do'to-•
day will,be an easy thing to do' three
huudre, and sixtytve dayk hence, if
each 4i,S' it shall have been repeated.
Wim.t power of self-maStery.ehiall he .
enjoy who, looking to GOd for His
I Grace,•seeks.„gvery clay AO. practice
I the Graeelcii prays for! •. •
3. Every day a little .hopefulness:,
We live:for the good of othe'rs, if Our
nny.Sense true living. It
• . .ts.not the great deeds Of philanthrix 7
ply that, the only 'blessing is found,
A LITTLE EVERY DAY.
"Little deed's of kindness"
.
repeated every day,. we find true hap
piness. At home, at school, in 'the
street; in the neighbor's. house, on
the play ground—we_shall find oppor
tunity every day for uiefulness.
4: Every day. a little .lodk into the
Bible. One Chapter)a day: What a
treasure of Bible knowledge one may
acquire in ten years. Every day - a
'verse committed to, memory. . What
a Volume in the mind-at the end of
tWenty-five years.
. .
TILE GENTLEMAN IN OMEN
Tlie true gentleman •ai.ehnreh is
known byrtlia following marks:
1. He comes -in . gnoft season,-so as
neither to interrupt the pastor nor the .
CongregatOn by - a. late arrival.
:2. He does not stop Upon the steps
or in the portico or vestilinle, either
to gape . at the ladies, salute friends, _
or display his colloquial pOwerS..
•
3. He opens and shuts the door gen- .
.tly, and walks
.deltheraltlyand
ly up the ais!e.or gallery.stairs, and, -
gets his seat quitely, - and_.by, making
as few persons remove as.possible.
4. He takes his . place.either in.the •
hack part of the seat Or steps out
to the' aisle when any one wishes to
pass in,. and - .never thinks of such
thing- as making . people, crowd past
him, while keeping his seat.
. • 5. He is always attentive to stran r •
gers and gives up 'his seat to Snell, 7
seeking another for himself. . I.
. B. Tie never thinks of defiling tbe .
house of god with. tobaco spitt:e, or
annoying those Who sit- near him
. by
chewing that' • nauseous Weed • in
cliurch:
7.410 'never; unless in ca le of All'
ness; gets/up-Or goes out - during the
time'. of Service. But if. necessity
-compel him to do so, he goeS so
quietly that his very manner, is. an .
apologilfor the act. '•• ,
8. He .does not engage., in- conver
sation before the service.;
9. : 11e Goes not whisper, nor laugh,
nor eat fruit & 'wits, in the house Of
God, iirlounge in that holy place.;
10. lle does , ' not !ph •out ot-Iher .
church like a
. tramping horse., the -
.moment the benediction is pronouric- •
ed hat retires slowly in a noiieleas,
quiet manner. • -
, 11.• all . le can, by pre.
cept and: exaMple,.tO promote deL
corum in others; and is ever ready to
lead his - aid to :discountenance all
indecorurn in. the house of God.. - .
==
PLVAGTIC and irdigenee depend upon'
the opinion every one has for them ; and
riches, no more than glory or health, have
no more beauty or pleasure Shan their
pmsessor is pleased to lend them. 1
• • :
lle whti" betrays anther's secret be
cittse• ho has gnar.reled with hint, wad :
never worthy of thelsaered name of iriend;l
a breach of -kindness will not "justify a
breach of Oast: , • ,
n 4 on 'tde