TIMMS Or IPVIIILICULTION.- The B*ADPOlan RZPOIPrza Is published ovary Thursday morning by Go°Puce linteateriTL. at One Dollar per annum, la ethane*. airAdverßaMg in all eases 'Wady* of tab• tiering= to the paper. SPECIAL NOTICES Inserted *TIN MINTS per line for lint Insertion. and WIT, C ars patine for ach anbetquent insertion, but no notice inserted for less than fifty cents. YEARLY AD VERTISEHENTS will bs Anson ed at reasonable rates. ' , Administrator's and Executor ' s Notices ,; Auditors Nonces,ll.so : Butunesseards, Sulam, (per year) additional Han It each. Yearly advertisers are enUtieti to quarterly . changes. Transient advert/semen - Pi moat be pit for to advance. All resolutions of associations; exnximunications of limited or individual intermit; , nod notices of marriages or deaths.exeeeding aye itnesare charg ed Irma carve per Mte, bet simple notices of mar. lieges and deaths will be published without charge. The RePOßTett having a larger circulation than any other paper In the county. mai :es It the best advertising medium in Northern Pannsylvania. JOB PRINTING of every,land , In plain and fancy colors, dOne with neatness and etispitch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Painphlt 'Wheal% Statements. 8.c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The REPO' ATER Oka is well supplied with power promos, a good assort ment of new type. and everything to the printing line can be executed in the most ar Stale manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS Ib VARIABLY CASH. Vusiness fubs. JOHN W. CODDING, ATTONNIX-AT-LAW. TOWANDA. PA. .1 Office over Mason's old Bank. THOMAS E. MI ER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, • viTOWAISDA, PA. Office with Patrick and Foyle. • PECK & OVERTON' ATTOISNZYS.AT-LAW, 'POWANDA. PA. I) , A. Orzwrox. BZNJ. RODNEYA..)IERCUR, A TTOLtNiT AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA., , ' Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention psid to huslnese In the Orptans Court and to the settle ment of estntes. , Office 10 fontanyes Block ' 3tay 1, 79. OVERTON it SANDERSON, A TTOILNEY-AT4. AW, TOW AND A,. PA- E. OVERTON, JR W IL :lESSUP, ATTORNEY 'AND cOccsiLt.on•AT-LAW, MONTROSE, PA. - Jisttge Jessup hartng resumed the practleeot the 13w In Northern Pennsylvania, will attend to any tool business Intrusted to Mtn In Bradford county. persons wishing , to consult him, can call on H. Streeter, Esq., Towanda, Pa., when an appointment C.lll he made. HENRY STREETER, ATIONEY AND COIINSEtiLOR-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA NAMES WOOD, ATTOUNST-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. mch9-76 H. L. TOW . I!TER, M. D., HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AN'D SURGEON • * - 5„ Residence anal Office Just North of Dr. Cor bin's, on Main Street, Athens, Pa. jun2O-6m. E4L 'LILLIS, • . ATTOR NET-AVL Ave, TOWANDA, PA. E. •F.irOFF ATIOWNET-AT•LAW, z WYALUSIN43, PA. Agency for the sale and purcha'se of all kinds of Securities and for making leans en heal Estate. A!! busineas will receive careful and prompt attention. fJune 4. 11170. iv-. A. THOMPSON, ATTOANEY T LAW, WYALCSING, PA. WIII attend to all business entrusted to his care In Bradford, Sullivan and Wyoming Counties. Mice with Esq. Porter. (n0v1944. FIH. ANGLE, D. S. . OPERATIVE AND 3IECIIANICAL DENTIST. ritace on State Street, second floor of Dr. Pratt's Office. apr 3 79. ELSBREE & SON, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA, N. C. ELsnnEs. D. KtisT-NIIY, CU ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office—Rooms fortuct i ly occupied by Y. M. (. A Reading Room. • 05n.3118. McPHERSON, • TOWANbA, PA, Dirt .Att'y Brad. Co. f feb.l7B JOHN W. MIX, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW AND U. S. Commissicman TOW A!FDA, PA. 'Onieo—Norah Side Puldlic Square. Jan. 1,1875 DAVIES & CARNOCHAN, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW, SOUTFI SIDE OF WASH HOUSE. Dec 2:1-75. ' i TOWANDA, PA, ANDREW WILT, ATTonsET-AT-Layr. Tice over Turner St 'Gordon's Drag Store, Towanda, ra. May be consulted In German. [April 12, na.) 3. YOUNG, W e ATTMCVEY-AT.I.AW, TOWANDA, PA. •OMee—Aecond door south 'of the First Nat'unad Bank Mulp St:. up stairs. WILLIAMS & ANGLE, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW (IFFACE.—Formerly oecuptedley Win. Watkins. -q. It. N. WILLIAMS, (net. 17. 771 E. J. ANOLS. `Tat. MAXWELL; ATTORNEY-AT-TAW TOWANDA, PA. °Mee over 'Dayton's Store A tail 12, ISM ri - NIADILL CALIFF, 4 IT ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. TOWANDA, PA. ' Ware in W orl's 'Block, first doorsoutS of the First Nan 11: twat:, up.malvs. a.D1T.1.. flanB.l3ly) .J. N. CALIPT. - nit. S. M. WOODBURN, Ptlysi _LF clan and Surgeon. Otl!Ice over 0. A. Black , ' Crockel v store. Towstila, May 1. IBT.llr. - M. S. INCEN r, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT, M =I A v. B. KELLY, DEsTisT.—Office B. M. A. Rosenfield's, Towanda, Pa. Teeth inserted on Gold; Silver, Rubber, and Al oinulurn ease. Teeth extracted without ken. Oct. 34-72. c ER . D PAYNE, at. D., PHYSICIAN AND SCRGEON. Other over .11outanyes' Store. Office hours from 10 Co 12 A. ii. and from 2 to 4P. x. Special attention given to DIRE ASES )S DISEASES or and OP __..... i i THE EAR, TUE .EYE W. RYAN, - GO COUNTY Sr PERINTIMDZICT. 0 Mee day last £ 4 at rdsy Of each month. over Turner & t}ordon•s Drug Store, Towanda, Pa. Towanda, June 20. ISIS. "A . IR. 11. PEET, TEACHER Or PIANO MUSIC, TERMS.-410 per term. - (Residence Third street, Ist ward.) Thisanda„ Jan. 11,11,17. S. RUSSELL'S GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY varzsmtr. TOWANDA, PA. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, TOWANDA. PA. CAPITAL PAID IN. S.CMPLUSIUND.... This Bank offers unusual facilities for the traria action of a general banking busin4sa. N. N„ETTS., Cashier • J Os. POW ELL, President. ( Q,F.ELEY'S OYSTER BAY AND EUROPEAN HOUSE.—A few doors southor She Means House. Board, by the day or week on reasanable ,terms. WirM meals served et all had' Oysters at wholesale wadi retail, febtl7. . GOODRICH & HITCHCOCK. Publlithers. VOLUME XL. , E. it DORMAIII4, . . 325 East Water Olt., Elmira, N. Y. I Ist Floor nwr GOODS 2.41 Floor MILLINERY - 341 Floor - • CARPETS 4th Floor CLOAKS A 811A.WLS Doper floors accessible by elevator. ' APirA visit of inspection ti respectfully solicited. QIISQUEHANNA COLLEGIATE IN "aTITUTZ. First Winter Term will begin MONDAY. NOVEMBER 3d, 1879. Expenses for board, tuition and furnished room from on to 8190 per year. 'For catalogue or 'further particulars address the Principal. EDWIN E. QUINLAN. A.Y. Towar.da, - Jely 8..1879. - 771 THE CENTRAL HOTEL, • ULSTER, PA. The undersigned having taken possession of the above hotel, respectfully solicits the mUon• age of his old friends and the public puerility. sugn.tf. W. A. FORREST. EAGLE HOTEL, . , , • (SOUnt sins MT= SQUALL.) This well-lunmin house has been Marone:ay run tureted and repaired throughout, and the proprie tor Is now prepared to otter' first-class accommoda tions to the public, on the most reasonable terms. , ' ! E. A. JENNINGS. Towanda, Pa., May 1.. laTil. HENRY HOUSE,' ,) , • CORNER MAIN & WASHINGTON STREETS JOHN F.SANDERSON Meals sta. houie. 'Terms to salt the times. Large stable attached. , WM. HW.NRY, PEOPRIZTOR. Towanda, July 3, 7944. MARKET. Announce to the people of Towanda end vicinity that they are now prepared to furnish FRESH AND SALT MEATS, Feb 27, '79 4 POULTRY, FISH, OYSTERS, - t And Vegetables to their season, at *helmet reason able rates. Everything purchased of as delivered promptly free of charge. sir , Our loeation, ONE DOOR -NORT4 SCOTT'S BAKERY, Is colt:gent for aIL • 1, We buy the best stuck, and take great pahss to keep everything In the byst order. !Givens a 411. • ItOSiCBANBE & BREWER. Towanda. Dec. 5,1575. NEW LIVERY BOARDING AND EXCHANGE STABLES. The undersigned having rented the .old i Means House Barn. and provided himself with ' NEW BUGGIES AND WAGONS, AfD GOOD HORSES, Is now prepared to tecomMottilts the pubileat REASONABLE airliew Buggies for sale cheap. 8.. W. LANE. t Towanda. 15.1878. . 771 [nosh -75 INSURANCE! 13EMEME1 FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT • POLICIES . None but reliable companiia repreaenteil Towanda, Nov. 13, 187 a THE OLD MARBLE YARD STILL. IN OPERATION. The undersigned having purchased the MAR BLE YARD of the late GEORGE MCCABE, de sires to Inform the public that having employed experienced nien,. he Is prepared to do all kinds of work in the line of t • MONUMENTS, HEAD STONES, MANTLES and SHELVES, In the: very best manner and at lowest rates. Persons desiring anything In the Ma i n le line are Invited to call and examine work, and sa exits' commission. • JAMES McCABE. Towanda, Pa., Nov. 18. 1878. :Br N EW ARRANGEMENT • - 11! TUE • - COAL BUSINESS: 1 '; . . . , f The uerslgned having putt - hatted •frotu Mr. 7 McKean he COAL YARD - . , AT TH -FOOT OF PINE STREET, NEAR THE COURT HOUSE, • - Invites the patronage, of his old friends and the public generally. I 'shall keep a full assortment '- of all sizes, PITTSTON, WILKESSARREE — AND LOYAL 1 - SOCK COAL, ' t • . AND MALL FILL AT LOWEST PRICES' FOR 'CASH. 1 . • - NATHAN TIDO. ' Towanda, Pa.. Aug. 21, 1878. '1271 s TOWANDA. PA MEAT MAR K ET! • . • • MYER k DzYOE, Located in . BEIDLEMAN'S BLOCK, BRIDGE STREET, - Keep on hand, FRESH AND SALT , MEATS, DRIED BEEF, FISH, POULTRY, GARDEN VEGETABLES AND BERRIES IN THEIR SEASON, &c. sir AU goods uell7 free of charge. - MYER & DAVOE. Towanda, PaZ, May 2s, 1879. .125.000 +116,000 Aril 1. 187.9' Isitstsess gabs. (OR Till TUROPIAN PLAN) TOW#NDA, PA. ROSECRANSE .& BREWER, C. S. RUSSELL, Agent, TOWANpA, PA. Issued on the most reasonable terms Losses adjusted and paid here LIST OF, LEGAL BLANKS Printed and kept on sale at the Baroninn OrrICSI at wholefaid or retail,. .• • Deed. • tiortgsge. Bond. - Tteasurer's Bond. Collector's Bond. Complaint. Commitments. Warrant. Constable's Return. Articles of Agreement, fixtros. Bond on Attacbment. • 'Constable's Sales. Collectors-Sales. Execution.. . . Subprena. Petition for Licentel Bond for License. • Note Judgement. . . Note Judgement Seal. Note Jugemeatls percent . added. . Town order - Boot. 4 School order Boot. . SuMmons. BIM t i i . ..,:' • : . . ; .....i. • ... i..- ... ~ . :. 1 . ~ . i. Sivice• NOTREWa WOBL ST XAEGAUET I. SANOTILE. Dear patleat woman; o•er your children bending . To leave a good-night hies on tray Ups. Or list the simple prayers to God ascending Sisslumber TOII them in its soft eclipse, I vionderc do You dream that seraphs love you, ' And ,sometimes smooth the pathway. for your feet; That oft their slivery pinions float above you, When llfc is tangled and its cross-roads meet? So wan and tired, tho whole long long day fui busy, To laugh orweep, at times you hardly know, So many trifles made the cdoihnitt, dizzy, Bo many errands call you to and fro Small garments stitching, wearing fairy stories, And binding wounds, .and bearing little cares, Yours hours pass, tir,heide all the glories ' Of that great world beyond your nursery starts. Cue schoolmate's pen has written words of beauty, Her poems singthemselves Into the heart; Another's brush and magic; you have duty; rto'tinie to spart for poetry or art, But only time for t raining little lingers, .. And teaching youthful spirits to be true; Y-ou know not with what 'famine woman lingers, With art alone t 11l her, watching you. And yet, I think you'd rather keep the bables: • Albeit their heads grow heavy on your arm, Thais hivelhe poet's fair. enchanted maybes, The artlst'a visions, rich with dazzling charm, Sweet are the troubles of the puppy hours, For even in 'leafiness your soul is blest, And nigh contentment all your being dowers — That yours Is nota hashed and empty nest. —Christina Unto' geli t tle,d Irak. A Picture Dealer's Romance. Chambers Jmq4 I, John Gilderni was confidential clerk to MeSara. Copal & Sons, pic ture dealers, Oxford street, London, long ago, when these events happened; and the firm of Gildern & Co.; that now passes pictures worth thousands through its hands, was not then even a dream of mine. I thread my way back through the maze and confusion of a busy life to those unforgotten days, and one pic ture rises before. me, real, living—all but substantial in my memory—the one picture that has haunted. me through all - these years, and that all the gold that ever was coined could not purchase, : thin all the power of man give back again to my bodily sight. 'A young English girl, not tall or queenly.- ' not lofty in looks, but straight and graceful and very fair ; a face with clear-cut features, wear ing yet. the looks, of a child ; blue eyes, looking upward, with their dark fringes raised; , eyes-.of the softest grayish blue, not bright, unskilled in any artfulness of giant e, not fine with any artistic correctness' of form, but eyes that were - supre6ely - beautiful in that rapt. upward look, because they told of a - child's unconscious 1 2; simplicity, of a true heart's opef can-• dor, of a pure sOul that in ever ...day. life and among every-day, thing was bright enough to make its presence known.. This is the picture in my mind. Marian staading on the door step of a manor house watching the floating, clouds in the autumn sky. It was a picture of ofidinary things with an inner depth of beauty. The accessories were Commonplace enough. There was a white pave ment before this side l / 4 ddor, some ivy on the wall, and all within was dark. The , fair figure thus framed was dressed in some WIT cotton stuff of pale blue and white lines that ran in to one soft color. The dusky brown hair, with only a few golden threads where it sprang straight upward from the forehead, was plaited and hung in braids, as was the custom once before in those old days; and the hat, with ivy leaves thrust under its band of pale blue, was pushed back, and cast no shadow on that never-to be-forgotten face. - , I, plain John Gilbert, was -in the :most unromantic of moods, when, 'turning out of .the path at the side gate by ,which I had entered; I came upon this sight. I presented—the appearance of .tlie most ordinary man of thirty, such as may be seen any day in _London banks or offices in scores. I had come to the house merely on business, with no intro duction to the family ; but I carried a carpetbag—a necessary appurten ance of the traveler la those'days— and I was invited to stay in the house until my business was done, for it was expected to be troublesome and lengthy work—the'• drawing up of an accuratetatalogue of the names of a gallery ful of pictures, which the master of this place desired to sell to our -firm. At my approach the girl stepped out of the doorway into the garden, and I saw no more of her that day. An old gentleman, careworn and, as it seemed to Inc, not tooinniable 1 in appearance or manner, received me .tin a room full of books and pa pers. When the servant, a-shabby looking indiiidual with threadbare livery, ushered me into his presence, he was bending over the table look ing at some stones and colored earth through a glass that he held in a thin, palsied hand. Ile drew a news paper hurriedly over his treasures, and without asking me to be seated, made his inquiries in a proud, slow voice. Was I fiem Messrs. Copal & Sons? I was. - Had I come to ex amine the pictures as. their agent. Yes, I had come to do that service. Then,i he said, holding himself straight all the time, and with a pit iable artifice of display, smoothing back his thin igray- hair with • the shaking hand, whereon glittered a greit diamond—l would find my room made ready ; and 1 was free to stay at Elmsmere, as long as my work lasted, for , Megsrs. Copal bad given him to understand that it was some times a - tedious operation to catalogue and.do justice , to so ma , by pictures of all degrees of merit. He explained that he was a loiter not of art but of study—rwaving his hand toward the book shelves.; He never 'went near the picture gallery, and desiring re tirement, he chose to ask but few to his . - house ; 'so be was anxious to clear off the whole art .collection— '! all," he said, "every one of them;" and with a sudden betrayal of anxie ty despite his proud demeanor,: " I am sure, sir, Messrs. Copal have sent a competent agent who will do - my property justice. Toucan have them ally, every one, mind; and I know TOWANDA, *NORD COUNTY, PA.,' THURSDAY MORNING, DEOIIIIII3IIIV 4; 1879. such '8•:-honse as yonis give, W wind price. Now, :sir, the servants - wilt attend to your wants." With, that -he bowed inn out and the =shabby serving ,Man.weot, before e malopg- the passaga, with slippers down at heel and stooping , gait, a living satire upon the last order of the poor broken down genthiman. Such, indeed, was his master I knew it as well as if he had.shown me his files of bills and his mortgage papers and the blank credit side of the accounts of Elmsmere. Ilk! dia mond ring, his Cold ceremony and his erect port; braving fortune, did not deceive me; but I must say for the credit of me, John Gildern the clerk, that I quitted his presence as I would haye quitted that of .a mill ionaire; for respect was commanded by this remnant_of a grand faMily struggling against ill-fortune, and being, as the phrase goes, - " out of luck." . My work began, and was not easily ended. There were but few paintings of value, though there were many having traditions of great names at tached to thew, which a close.ex,l6l - proved to be groundless; for there were generally but copies, or works "in the manner of" of Yan Eyck or De Wint, as the case 'might be. There were, however, some real ly good pictures/ a beautiful, but ill preserved Madonna of the Tuscan school, and a Aubens that horely puzzled me, but which, as the event proved, turned ;out to be genuine. The main bulk of the collection was family portraits, worth little more than their frames. It was clear from the name's of these that the tardily was related to a knightly one; but this branch bore no title. There was a veritable Stuart court lady by Lely among the rubbish; and there were two pretty children with unkempt hair, great brown eyes and pointed chins, purporting to be from the pen cil of Sir Joshua Reynolds. There is no need to describe, nor can at this day remember, all the pictures of that miscellaneous collection. But among these hundreds of bright or old and discolored canvasses there was one that attracted my attention, and it was only a little thing, no more than eighteen or twenty inches in size. This was the portrait of a fair young woman among vine leaves at a window. She was dressed in white silk, adorned with jewels, and with strings of large pearls round her neck. Her hands were raised and clasped as if in some enraptured gesture, her bltie eyes cast upwani. And though the dress was so differ ent; and the ,attitude of the hands was tra g ic and what we commonly call "stagey," I had no difficulty in detecting a striking likeness'between those fair, refined, spiritual features and the girl I had seen-standing at the door. In'the corner of the pic ture there was an awkward smear of , paint. " That conceals the.artist's name," I thought, and I soon care fully removed it. -But beneath there was only serittehed in small 'white letters, ":Myl Juliet"— two words which cast nollight upon my business, but awakened my curiosity to a pain ful degree. On. the back was a date twenty years before. My work soon put the discovery Out of my head. I saw no one all day except the slipshod serving man; and, after a lonely evening, he came with, a fluttering candle to light me , up stairs to a large bare room, filled with the smoke of an unwonted fire. It was a room with faded hangings, seedy pictures, a tiled hearth-place and shadowy half-lit walls. Any one nervously inclinpd would have imag ined not one it half a dozen ghosts there. I was haunted'by nothing but the memory of the girl at the door, and the mystery of the portrait with its obliterated name, "My Juliet." All nest day I worked alone, the rain waterlog against the high nar row windows of the' gallery. Many of the fatally portraits I omitted from my list as not salable, and vari ous other pictures 1 set down -as " doubtful," not being able, without consultation, to settle the question of their authenticity ; but the little painting of the girl in white silk at the window was so_ exquisite in feel ing, in color, and in minute finish, that I bed no hesitation abOut-plac ing it in: my list. It was about sun set when the light in the gallery was strong and clear in s dry hour after the rain, that as I knelt deciphering some artist's marks on a little Dutch sea piece hung badly near the floor, I heard a light footfall, and looking up I beheld a slight girlish figure treading. With little slippered feet. on .the dirk oak floor. I rose and bowed. It was the girl of whom I had wished vainly'all day and all - lastevening to catch another glimpse. I rightly guessed that she' was my host's granddaughter, and I was not free from an embarrassing flutter-of heart when she came to speak to me ; but I supposed it would be some message from the old man, nothing more. The girl drew near and began to speak, with eyes not downcast, but like a' hild's eyes, raised steadily to mine, with a look that was at once the soul of innocence and maidenly gentleness. " I want to ask you," she said, " is that picture to . be sod among the rest?"' The picture she pointed to was that which had roused my curiosity the evening before. Yea; I said ;'4 was on my list. The instructions received were to the effect that all were to be sold; -and ' though there were some of the larger portraits that I could not take, this picture was of value. Never shall I forget the effect of these words—the nervous trembling of the :girl's lip, and the liquid look: inthe blue eyes. "Sir," she said,; addressing me in that way because she knew nothing of, latter day cos toms, and was making an - earnest appeal;' " Sir, it is my Mother's por trait. Grandfather does not care for it ; butoll I I do.. It is no use for, me to ask it of him, be thonght so little of her. But will, you ask-him, and have it kept forme?" "Most assuredly I will," said looking down at the earnest, faee, which it would have taken a harder and More unchivalrous heart than John Gildern's to refuse. " am certain there will be; no. difficulty , 1 1 11‘,..1 1--- i.: 1 •, , -,-, , ,-. 1 , : • ...., 1 1 . I ': ,•.:„ ,'. 1 - . :.'IIE44O . TLEss Or' DENUNCIATION. FROM ANY QUANTE& about having it' left out of the list." "I am. not so sal% of that," she said, smiling and shaking her head. "Grandfather has such strange ideas sometimes, and be keeps so to what ever he once says." - "Other people do that, too," I replied, assuringly. '" I shall keep to what I have said; and see that the picture remains here." With her sweet voice she thanked me and went - away, leaving poor' John Gildern standing still, note. book in bawl, calling to mini every Word that bid passed, like any ro mantic swain of twenty, wondering if he would See her twain and, thro' sheer anxiety,' fancying every word of his own had been awkwardly and stupidly uttered. ' When the sen 3 ant summoned me to my solitary dinner, and took, his place behind tny chair in the deserted 'dining room, full of faded grandeur. I could no longer resist the tempta t ion to find out something about .the family, or rather—need I coneell it? —about my charming little maid. "It is rather tedious work for me here," I said as a beginning, my pre occupation causing me to make such spluttering failures in dismembering a duck that I know the shabby-coated old man was ginning behind my . shoulder., "Family portraits are such useless things unless they are by a man of note, and there are some of the pictures thatc I know nothing about. For instance, there is a little thing of a lady in Isvhite'silk at a wiridow, and there is something in teresting about it, but it has not even an artist's name." I knew I was not wasting my words. This servant had evident& grown gray in the family ; most likely there was.not an inch of the house unknown to him. " ' cs—ah, yea, yes!" he said, speaking ' in low, husky tones, and clearly waking a bad copy 'of his' ' master's air of importance. " There's A secret about that pictur ; 'taint no common affair, not it." " Well," I said, " if you can assist me in any way that is valuable in my business, I shall, of course, con sider your services." All is lair in love and war, they say, and 21 could not resist the desire to satisfy my curiosity. cc Mich obleeged to you, sir , " said the husky old man,with a ow of great dignity, its he forthwith pro ceeded to relate. the history of the mysterious Picture. The facts L f afterward put together were these There had long ago been a coldness, almost a_ feud, between l the owner of Elmsmere and his only son. The ,cause'of this was the tachment existing between the son and a beautiful and virtuous girl who was then on the boards of a provin cial theatre. The delay to this mar- . riage was caused by the father's threats of disinheriting the offender. But at last that difficulty was sur mounted ; a consent was - wrested from thepld man ; .the marriage took place, and the bride, bidding fare well to the stage, was brought home to Elmsmere. Her husband, the heir of the mansion, had dabbled a good deal in art: He painted his wife as Juliet, the part in which he had first seen her; and he insisted on hanging the portrait with the rest in the gai-. key.. He met with a fatal accident, not long after •the marriage; and the father, for love of his wilful son, let the small portrait hang where he had placed it, but with his own hands had blotted out the words in the corner 7" My Juliet." The young wife did not long outlive her sudden loss ; and ihe-old man was never reconciled to her, although, as the, servant said, "she was the gentlest, most heavenliest bein', sir, tEat ever drew breath." But, when, in dying, she left, an infant daughter, the et-, titer's heart warmed to the child, and for his son's sake she becante to him the one dear thing on earth. This was the whole story—a sad one enough. My interest in it only made the servant more communicative. "Master will want to'see you to night, sir, as the business is done," he said; and anal you mind, sir, if you find him nervous a bit—or hot as I may say. It's his way, sir. The world's-gone' askew with him' this long time back : and there's a e l ways a mine or some such nonsensejust ago- in' for to be found on the estate, and not bein' found after all, and dging his temper, poor gentleman?" The old man was, evidently glad e of someone to talk to; but when he verged on his master's present affairs I stopped him. - anddinner being fin ished, sent him with a message tai my host to ask if he was at leisure• to see me. lie sent hack Word that , he was engaged on most important besiness, but he would see me in half an hour. When the summons to the library came in at last, it, was easy enough to see that the " most im portant business" had something to do with the plans on the table, which were stained by late contact with clay or dusty stones. This much could not help observing, as they lay on the table, and the old an held something in his hand, which dropped' reddish earth on the floor ,When he stretched it, toward me with an inipatient gesture. I gave him a, rough estimate Of the value of his pictures, subject to . changes, for bet ter or worse, which might be made in it by . my emp:oyers.. I offered him his option of doing business in this way of having the whole Collec tion dispose:l of on his own account for What it would bring at our sales rooms. He said he preferred ready money transactions, with the firm for the purchaser, but the figure I' named w4s much too low. He went over the list with me, and waxed, as the servaht had predicted rather hot on, seeing some of the .prices, and hotter still at my inability. even to' , 'take in consideration the purchase of many of the portraits, He was only pacified, when he was absOlute •ly losing his self-cominand, by my assurance - that -this catalogue was only a first estimate; that in order to avoid disappointment 11 had set down What I myself thought the low est figure, and that I had to' leave out some .works which examination might prove to be of' great value, in which' case our. house would deal with him liberally.' • He had risen, to his feet ;.but he Sank again into his arm chair on hearing this explana- , . Lion, saying; '''Certainly, certainly ; we cannot yet decide on the exact figure; and after all "—with a tremb ling voice and his loftest air—" a few pounds one. way or the other matter but little to me; but .a man . does not like to part with any or his property below what' he himself be lieves to be its actual worth." , This I judged a favorable moment for the commission I had. received from my fair solppliant in the morn ing. I hastened to explain that a young lady, Whom I judged to be his daughter,—miserable me, driven to use such IlatterYl,-" No," *he said ; his granddabghter." I bowed, and went ow, The young , lady had re quested tee not to include in my list .s small family portrait of some.value. . "I know the thing," he said impa tiently; "She has been talking , to me about it. Let it go. Itis only. a fancy of hers to 'keep it—a fancy, sir, which does not concern your bus iness here. I want the gallery clear ed, and Lam only sorry so many of those vapid daubs of our ancestors have to remain there." ' His severe tone and cold . looks were almost too much for, me; 'but I was not outniastered yet. I replied in a firm but respecittul Manner, sor ry for the artifice I was resorting to against his gray-haired ruined pride: "You say, sir, it does matter to you whether the pictures bring a few pounds more or i tess. The price of the one is no value to yoU ; and the portrait itself is of so much- value to the youn g lady for whom I speak that she herself made - it my busi ness and my concern to Mention it." This was the homethrust. "Of course I don't care about the paltry price;?" he said. "If she real ly wants the thing my much - strike it out of Aar list." After that hurried speech fie 'bowed my dismissal as he bad docM at the last interview, only remarking that he supposed I would carry the- result of my work to Lon don in the morning, and there would be no further delay. When I had gone to the foot of the staircase, in the dusk of the spacious flagged hail, I saw his granddaughter coming hasti ly from a doorway, where no doubt she had waited anxiously for my step on the stairs. "Have you . asked 'grandfather ?" she whispered. . "I have. He will do as you wish about the portrait. I have struck it oil my list." • - "I am so glad !" she said, 'still in a low voice. " 1 would notvart with it for the world I" And she seemed surprised at her good' fortune; while I kneiv but too well that the secret of it lay in My allusion to money af fairs, a:subject on which the poor man would have done anything rath er than have a stranger's s uspicion aroused. • " You haVe been very . kind," she said—" very good to me:" And with some sudden impulse of gratitude She stretched out her band, which I was but too proud to press for a mo 'ment in token'of friendship. • ! "It was but a slight service," I' said, scarcely knowing what words 1 .1 • stammered out; "I have to thank you for the pleasure' of allowing me to do it for you." In another moment she was . gone, . with a kindly "Good night," and I tried in vain to,persuade myself that it was possible fpr her to take my an. swet as' anything but a piece of ordi nary politeness. Yet I had meant it with all my beak. What else qiuld I have said ? Lthought t Wllat else could I have done ?I Of course,' my words had only the sound of cour teous answer, and as such she took them, thinking not of poor John Gil darn but of her rescued treasure. In the morning I wished in vain for one sight of that fair, simple hearteit girl, that had so unconscious ly robbed me of my own heart's peace. and of my ordinary, unroman tic, business-like frame of mind. More—l confess I loitered unneces sarily- long over breakfast and depar ture; and I took many a side glance as the shabby servant led me to the door, and then it was not by the shortest route that I made my way to the high road. But there was no help ,for it. ;'I left_Elmsmere without seeing my little enchantress ngain. EMI Four years passed to be added to John Gildern's thirty. 1 was for tunate enough to'have a:rich relative, and I gave up the service of Messrs. Cbpal and spent the beSt part of Ithose, four years traveling with him in. Italy ; and it must be admitted . hat I thought but seldom of Elms mere aftlr . the first few months, though there were certain memories connected with the place which might any day or hour have filled my time-tried heart as full of ro-. mance as was ever a boy of half my years. These memories, I put out of my mind permanently as useless and disturbing; but. I had no other ro mance; though there were anjple op portunities for such indulgeni e both at home and' when we wereon our travels. At the end of 'th, e four years we returned to London, and' .I took up my former employment, but at a ditfrent house,which I may call here the house of Messrs. Easelby & Sons. One morning I was laughing over the pages of Punch in an idle hour—there were many idle hours at. Messrs. Easelby's—when a fellow clerk said in his usual ofrhand way of throwing work on me: " You might open that parcel and attend to those letters which the , late post his just brought in, aildern 1", ' , I made some remark more forcible tlian courteous about the pared and letters, adding : " I shall attend to then this time, but it is , none of my business." 1 It was in this.mOod that I opened the first- letter. • Had ,my fellow-Clerk been a. sitidint of physi ognomy he would 'have seen i my an noyance suddenly change to t s' feeling very different. But my comrade had no such, gift of insight - ; and, even if he had, there were deeper feelings awakened by that letter which my face did not'betray. It was address ed-to Messrs. Easelby, and the write ing was light and unfinished in char acter, much like a school girl's, with u and a alike. It was in after read ings—days and months after that— I noted all this, and then it was in no spirit of criticism. At the time I only saw that it was from a young lady, asking if water-color drawings of hers, done at her former , country home, would be acceptable for sale, adding that any price would be taken, as she was anxious,to part with them, and the name signed was Marian—. Even here I cannot break the sacred secrecy of that second name,' but It was the same as that 91: the owner of Elmsmere, and I no longer doubted who the writer Was, even , before I. opened the thin fiat parcel and took out sketches of, parts of the well-re membered garden; • the avenue of elms and the shallow, reedy widen ineof the little river that bounded one part. of the grourfils and gave the name to the house. The letter was dated from a shop that I happened - to know, a stationer's in City Road. I knew also that this was merely an address for correspondence, and not the residence of the writer. Unfor tunately, there would not ; be the smallest hope in offering the draw ings to my employers. Brit it was impossible for one who knew the would-be artist, and g uessed the his tory-of their coming, to retuPn them to her as a failure. At least it was impossible for me, with pielores of the past rising in my mipd, u and sympathy roused until it wn.'s pain. I inclosed a trilling sutn,,letting it appear ; to come from Messrs. Easel by, and signing my name in my ac customed illegible manner; and that night I took the parcel of drawings td my own home. Day after day I spent in plans for coming into actual communication with her. I built castles in the air then, indeed, imagining how I would come to know , her again ; how her g4ndtather,.who doubtless had- by ) this time. fallen lower in the world,, would accept me as .her suitor; anti' how life would ran for the rest of our days like a fairy tale. At the mine time, every week that went by in hesitation added to my anxieties, and at last I was positively suffering from suspense, all , My old ardor roused and my sympathies quicken ed by 'the thought of this young girl, so unfit for the world's trials, obliged to do stern battle with them and per haps labile. My surmises were true. When about,a month had passed, the clerk who had attended to the cor respondence came to me one day, laughing at a poor attempt at water color drawing. "I took the cardboard out of his hand, touched to the ; quick, and gave some awkward ex planation, ending with: "I shall attend to it." SO' I did attend to it by sending to the girl's' address a poor price, but the best I. could afford, and taking borne with me the worthless drawing. This happened twice agaln; and being now on the watch, I, myself managed to receive the - parcels and letters, and each time I did what any man on earth would have done bad he been placed as John Gildern was—'-sent my own money with , my useful illegible sig nature and appropriated the poor child's work. Then, fearing the rep etition of my pardonable ruse might lead to some awkward discovery, I desired the sender of the water-color drawings to leave them in o the future at an address which I gave in the city, and merely to mark them "Messrs. Easelby & Co.—:•-to be call ed for." The result of this step proved that. I was right in relying on her small knowledge of the business world. But what was my dismay to find, when I first called at this city: address, a package, which when opening it at my rooms, I found to contain—ah, how well remembered ! —the _picture of Marian's mother. A voice came to me out of the past : "lam So glad ; I would not part with it for the world." But some overruling power had doubtless com pelled it otherwise. And what a, tale the parting told! I glanced at,the accompanying letter. It stated with the most unbusiness-like that the writer greatly valued the pibture, but needed money at the moment. If Messrs. Easelby would send part of its. price and leave her the, chance of buying it back again atisome future time,she would be s most grateful. 'But if they never did business on those terms, she would sell. the picture for whatever they thought it worth. "-Poor child I Poor Marian 1" ' I exclaimed with Heaven knOws how sad and burning a heart, "she is sorely tried somewhere in this great, hail world of London—sorely tried, and perhaps without a friend." . I paced up and down for a few moments with the open letter in my hand, thinking what could •be done; and haunted by every soul-stirring memory that the sweet young face and trustikll blue eyes had left me. I wrote a hurried - note and sent it on its way, &elay in g only to Inclose a check for the picture, and to explain that it would be safely kept, and might at any time be repurchased by the sender. Then I wrote another letter, taking care that it would ar rive a post!, later than the buiiness "communication, purporting to '-be from Messrs. EaSelhy's clerk of the unknown' signature. The second letter ran : • IC DEAR Miss : I have hither to corresponded_ with you only in your business affairs in relation to Messrs. Easelby; but strangely enough I once had the honor—far froin forgotton—of meeting you at Elmsmere, when I was acting as agent for Messrs. Copal & Co. I. have not forgbtten your kindness and confidence in allowing we then to do you a slight service in connection with a picture whit ti has to-day pass ed through my hands. If you send a word in answer to this note to John Gildern at the above address, I shall take it as &sign that you will do me the gieat favor of permitting me to renew thati chance acquaint ance. If I receive no answer, I shall do my best to be resigned to the greatest disappointment of my life . ; and in either case your buisness re lations with' Messrs. Easelby will continue exactly !as if I lad never ventured to send you thisletter. I took care to write my name with clearness in the body of the letter, butt sign it as usual at the close. After .a day or two of the utmost , anxiety, a few words came in answer. !Poor Marian explained that het ._. * ..._ .::: k..._ . . ll= 01.00 nor Annum in Advancir. grandfather w i ne but that he would ',be glad .to receive , me, and that she , hoped I. would not be ear prised at finding that they had suf fered great loses and misfortunesifor I would visit a very different home from Elmsmere. Atthe head of this letter was an address in a street - in Finsbury, a quiet, dull corner, not far from the City Road. Thither made any way the very first evening after receiving the letter; and I' still recollect how.dull that street looked in the twilight, all the. houses alike, as it each row. hail been cast in a mould. As I looked *up and-down for the house - ' I • • wondered if the people who lived there bad to make sure of the. number every time they went home.' The number--I sought led me to a house ;where - in the lower room there was -, i but dim firelight, and bright light'only In the top,windciws. After a' long delay 1 was admitted to the , room distin guished in those houses as the "frdnt parlor." The stout landlady,"- who seemed particularly Antidy and in a. berry, poked up the fire before she _left me, and I could see 'distinctly the worn furniture, the glass shades of wax fruit and the old lace cur tains that I still recollect in one vague dream when I think of that room. The fire was bright, flashing white on the walls, when there came in.a fair girl, piile and altered, but . blue-eyed Marian still. Rut' - how strange she looked—tearful, and without a smile! She stretched out her hand, with the, sorrowful words on her lips, !' Poor grandpapa I" She could utter ,no _more ; but I under stood, the r_est. 'The poor, broken down man was- dead in that bright room upstairs. would have gone away at once; feeling ray presence to be an intru sion just then; but she asked me to stay, adding most' simply,with her face hidden in her thin, white hands " Ton won't mind my crying a little? But tion;t go" just nwhile. i lt is kind of:you to come, and -I shall be able to talk to you wow But I'm so —so nervous and shaken." • We did not meet ,Os strangers. Sorrow and iympathy became friends at once, and there is no harrier of ceremony between them. Somehow she trusted me ; why I cannot! 'tell, except, perhaps, because she knew nothing of the world, and I bad 'once shown some little kindness to her about that picture at Elmsmere. There is but little more to tell I accompanied -her a few days.after to the old man's funeral; we were the only mourners. - I let but little time pass, until I won Marian and made her my own ; for loneliness and grief were telling upon her, and I could afford to de spise the tattlers who talked Of my unbefiting haste. Ah! it was melt to make haste ; - for little did suspect' then that my new-found treasure was already hastening away from me. She busied herself gaily in our new_ hOme •' she laid plans of„ all She' would do to make it "a little-para— dise, John,” when she-would_ be well and strong; but there was a dark look under my little wife's blue eyes, a hollownpss of the cheek, once so fair and smooth, a husky cough that drove me wild with increasing fears. There was, for me a deepening beauty in her looks;. but more and more I felt the trAnd or fate upon us as I *at:died her face and delicate form from day to day, seeing but too plainly Something faint and fragile In the whole - As though 'twere but a lamp that held a'aoul. At last the' day came—dreaded, oh 1.. how long! -when raistng her 'fair head ' from , ' het: pillow; my poor Marian 'whispered to'the watcher in' his constant place beside, it, " Dear heart, tell mei am Idying?" Oh ! ko'w the words out into- my verysottl." Am I dying?" from the sweet flower of Elmsmere, and . the same question from" troubled blue eyes that had 'so •charined the „long 'ago: "1:Cot, dying, darling,". could only say ; " don't call it dying; itis only going home." ' Then she laid -her head upon my arm, looking up ilt me with..those pure, childlike eyes. Don't grieve and fret, dear heart. Ah! I'm afraid you will. He will bring you home too, 'you know, into IDS bosom:" When I sat beside my lonely hearth, I. took courage from those words; to bide. my time and work out my life bravely. My grief, has not driven me into selfish. seclusion . , and I halie fciund interest in covering the walls of my hothe_ with. art treasured of .My choice.. "Among these is the pie ture of ~Juliet, which, with a 'pardon-_ able artifice of loye,l pretended- to buy fOr my poor girl: before tier mar riage. ',As to tier own drawings, I kept them hidden; 'and she never knew :my secret. The revelation would only have taken- from her the s ploastire of thinking that her work had supported her ruined grandfather. But when she was with me no more I filled_ my own room with those Worth-. less'iketches—priceless to me„ and it is among them now "that I have gone back through - those old years,-and raised again the' memories of Elms mere and of Marian ati - I law her first, before her 'frail life- was broken on the bard. world's - wheel. A New Tons divine said, - in regard to the doctrine of iinmerSiotii last Sunday, that the man who did not go.far enough into the water to get his pocketbook un der was spiritually. benefitted to Wit a very limited extent. If this doctrine is preached very 'extensively.it will tend to spread a coldness over thu congregation, as the colored brother said about the ten commandments.—Boston Post. " IT is strange how the sudden opening of a parlor door will send tvio joeople tq the ends of sofa and set them to count ing the 'figures in the carpet. There must• be something power[nl in the drag of air to blow humor beings around in that way. '' • Dn. gvonns tells the story of a man who remarked to a penurious companion that the kingdom of Satan was to be de stroyed and asked him if he wasn't glad ".Yes,"-he replied : "I suppose so, but it seems a pity to have anything wasted 2" , ' - , '"Docrou," said a gentleman to his clergyman, "how can I best train up my boy in the Way be should go?" "By go ing that way yourself." A 000ny old colored person was burned to a crisp recently in Georgia. The toxt of the funeral sermon was : "Well done, thou good and. faithful servant." Tur. doctrine - of the litoriemeut i 6 full of the love of God. WO it'd - MOW theirea"."*W444o erettuttg l onnyrumc Softly and ewlfly thp7 7 llottereo4,l4ll*, 'Tolithruto their6omi O&M.' While Over, sad tatter. sad ibrourb the Fee% Shrill la the North windy/its" . Come piping from MUM the fairy Woo/ -To Maim tbelr win* Neer.; • .Soil hither sad thither with flash and flaw, Over the aWadowainwas, (tier the attemitteti, awl over the They set their glittering crown. • Then gayly cloy dart. +Niece the 'Hid bee baa►medr peep In the forest glade; , , • I°e* the rtotets bliss end the 111Ies pale bioooted In filo-triage:li Away, and away, with whistle and whir Away over the bramble andbed/e, ilia:) , till the farthest solitudes NIMII3ER Are totitheti:ultb edissooluf edge. • Then lighter they, paint 110Lbrery sheen • " The story of many • dream. - 7 And snout sethe tnal4 at the ertaelove-pans See! hope's hrliht vlakins gleam, - Slisobeth A. Diego da MUM* Union. DetrcU Free v Prea., •-• Truth. is mighty and Must prevail, but for all that there ins heap of hy pocrisy in this ~ world, and tens Of: thousands-, of peopte rather 'slip around a sharp eorneiiban to 'come - right out -with an honest *pin ion. • A. day or two ainee'a strapping young man, having the biggest- foot - between Detroit 'and Omaha and the worst pair of cross•eyes in four States, entered a Woodward avenue•} drug store i9d said to- the proprie tor': • ' • "If .I ask You a question will you give me an honest, straight•forward . answer?"' " Yes, by jingo !" was the prompt reply. 1, • " Well, then; • am: I -what you could call a passably; good-looking man ?" ' . "Not by a long shot !" answered the druggist„as he. stood back and Bur 'veyed hitnei "'Would you refer to my feet as washboards' if "you" were writing ?"I " I should. They are the biggest and most ungainly hool'i I ever saw on a man !" „ . "And how are my: eyes ?"asked' the serene stranger without a wince. "Awful, sir—perfectly awful! I never saw-another such-a pair in my 'Wei-and if I were . 6 . :WOMatt I'd run. across the road tzither. than . :Meet yciu!" " Anything elm?" quietly asked' . the young man. " Well," replied, the- druggist, • as . he looked-him over, "the back settle.: meats are y our best hold."' "Stranger !" young man as he extended his paw, "I've asked. fifty men the sank questions I've put to you, and they evaded them._ . You are honest and plain-speaking, and, I'm• .grateful tab you. Give me an ounce of peppe4nint essence, a tooth brush-andsour address, and if I can work up any t i rade for - you in the pine .woods yo"n shan't be forgotten !" GET ENOI:Gn StEme.--Puring every moment of consciousness - the brain , is in activity. The peculiar peocess of •celebra.tion, 'whatevei that may' consist of, is taking- place • thought after thought comes for th, nor can we help it: It ,is only when the pe- . culiar connection, or chain of connec ,_tion, of the brain cell with another is broken and consciousness fades ,away in thetdreamless land of-perfect sleep, that the brain is at _rest. In this state it .receperates its exhausted energy and power, and stores them up for future nee d. The period, of wakefulness is one ot - constant year. Every thought - is generated at the' expense of brain.cells whit!) can 11 fully replaced only by periods of-per fectly regulated repose. If, therefore; these are not Secured by sleep---if the. brain, through over-stimplation, is not left ,to recuperate,-its energy becomes exhausted; debility,disease, and finally disintegration supervene. Renee, the, story is almost- alwaysi, the same. ' For weeks and . 'montlis before; the signs of active insanity appear the patient has been anxious, worried and wakeful, : not sleeping •more than foul ol• five hours out of the i twenty-four. The 'poor brain, unable to do its constant work, be gins to waver, to show signs of weak ness or aberration ; - hallucinations ?r delusions fiOver atound like floating shadows in the air, until finally dis ease comes. _ =Ow rminsit; 'DIOGEffEEP,I9I7ND. DIAMOND CUT DlA*osc.—The chap lain of the Ninth Massachusetts regi ment during_ the war was strongly opposed to gambling. Half afrozen "officers were playing a lively grme of poker one day over a pot" of $9.75. Just as the game was up the chap lain spranc , in under the tent-flap, grabbed the stakes and Tut them in his breast poCket, with the remark, " There it is, and there it ieiii stay(!"" When pay day ".came around the usual collection was taken up for the chaplain, who knew what was ) . the amount; and Mt in, his tent, waiting for it to be brought to him. The officer who had taken the collection was one of, those_ who had been die; turbed at the little....gaine a few 'days before:.lie Uri:it - 10A in the money. The chaplain counted aid then turned sharply to the messenger with the 'question : '" Where's the other ?" 'the officer, drawing himself up, s!apped his band oh the breast of his coat and answered : "There it is, and there it'll stay; that was my pot you tirk." The reverend gentle- _ man did not, interfere with poker as a camp amusement after that. PEOPLE!Ei - intentions can only be decid ed from their conduct." Hu keeps his read well enough who gets rid of bad comp-any. To-openly offend virtue is to clandes tinely defend immorality:' -By looking into 4 .ppysical causes our minds are opened ancl'enlarged. Firn is simple, it is'to believe ;laith is sublime, it- is to be born again. liarrixEss and imluippinegn and Tall ies of mind, not opplace or position. Nosx abideth faith, t hope,. love, these three, lbut the greatestof these is love! You should consider your adversity, as absent when your senses are departed. Cumraergu alone la immortal. Not what we have, lint whtt we are, is endur ing. I A BRIDAL couple from Washoe Taney, at breakfast at Reno conversed as follows : Ile—"Shall I skin you a pertator, hon eY2" fihe—"No, thank you, deny.: I have one-already .- CENE, Wall street—" Bill, you weren't down to-day," - "No—mother's dead. 'llow's Erie?' " Forty4right,; -when will 'she be buried?" "Saturday, at two. Get nie 200 at a Outer." JANE (under nine) to -her governess. "Miss Blunt, when ma asks you to have some more wine to-day at dinner, do, pleme, say yes." Governesi—.4 Why? Whaitdo you wish mei to take more wino for ? " a "Oh I only want to see ma's face)." THERE is great demand - for a thezzle that will fit a, man's nose, and shut out the, insinuating - odor of ithree.eent-cigar. Syracuse_ Times. • Well, - if a man will smoke a three-omit-cigar - when five-cent cigars are so cheap he muzzle-like it,. that's all. But hequie have one made to - odor, take it iri what cents you New York Neil. , . , 11 111 1 11l !I