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Office with Patrick and Foyle. fiep.25,19 pEcs & OVERTON ATTOIINZTS,CI , LAW,. TOWANDA, PA. D.A. OVISITTON, RODNEY A. MERCUR, ATTORNEI AT-LAW, TOirANBA, PA., 'Solicitor of Patents.' Particular attention paid roshushiess in the Orphans Court and to the settle ment of estates. Office in Montanyes Block OVERTON & SANDERSON, ArionNIT.Y-Ar-LAw, TOWANI)A, PA. • JOHN F. BANDKESON E. OVERTON; JR TAT H. JESSUP, 1 1 1 ( • ATTOUNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT•LAW, 31ONTROSE. PA. Judge Jessup having resumed the practiceof the law in Northern reunsylvanta, will attend to any legal business Intrusted whim In Bradford county._ Persons wishing Ito consult him, can call on 'H. Strecter,.E.N., Towanda, Pa., when an a ppol ntmen I can be made. • i _ENRY STREETER, ATTOUNILY AND CIIbXSELLOII-Al-LAW, TOWAtiDA, PL. - Feb 27, *79 HL. TOWNER, M. .D .; • HOSIROPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. , RS. Residence and Office Just-North of Dr. Cor bin's, on Main Street, Athens, Pa. jun2o-601. E. L. HILLIS, ATTOR?itT-AT-LAW, TOWA 4 iDA, PA. E F. GOF', • ATT,on4,AT_LAW, WI 4 ALLiSING, PA. Agesicy for the sale and: purchase of all kinds 0 , Securities and for making loans on Real Estate All business will receive careful and proom attention; - ' (June 4. ISM H 'THOMPSON, ATTORNEY • vr LAW, WYALUSING, PA. Will attend to all business entrusted' to his care In Bradford, dull i ivan and Wyoming Counties. Odlce with Esq. T.orter. (novl9-74. E. 11. ANGLE, D. D. S OPERATIVE AND MECHANICAL DENTIST office on State Street, second floor of Dr. Pratt's Office. apr 3 79. ELSBREE & SON, 'ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. ' N. C. ELSBREE KINNEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A Reading Room. Oan.al`7B. I! 31cPHERSON, A TTORN EY-AT-L AW, TOWANDA, rA. Dis•e Att'y Brad. Co. , TOIIN W. MIX, ATTORNYT•AT-LAW AND U. B. COMMISSIONYi • TOWANDA, PA. Office—North Side Public likinare. .Tan.T, 1811 SAM W. BUCK, ATTORNEY-AT-LAN, TOW ANDA, PENA' A °Mee—South side Poplar street, opposite Ward [Nov. 13, 1879. DAVIES Az, CARNOCHAN, ATTORIC %TS-AT-LAW, SOUTH SIDE OF (WART) HOUSE. Dec :3-75. TOWANDA, PA, T ANDREW WILT, • ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office over Turner & Gordon's Drug Store Towanda, pa. May be consulted In German. [April 12; '76.3 W. J. YOTTA4 ATTORNEY-IT-LAW, TOWANDA., PA. Office—second door snuff] of the First Nat!onal Bank Main St., up stairs. WILLIAMS dr, ANGLE, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW OFFIC E.—Formerly occupied by Wm. Watkins, Esq. 11. LLiAI N. ()i.t. 17, 77) Y. J. ANGLE. 'WM. MAXWEL4„, Arrortn i air-al.Law TOW ANDA,i PA. Office over Dayton's Store. Aprlll2. 1876. MADILL & CALI} 4 }7, ASTORNETS-.P.T•LAW, TOWAN'OA, PA DMre In Wadi's Block, first doorsontS of the First Nazi, Is: hank, up-stairs. . . EL .1. .!A.DILL. (Jana-11131_ 1 J. N. CALIFF6 . flit. S. M. 'WOODBURN, Physi elan and Surgeon. Ocoee over 0. A. Black , . C rot: ter v store. . Towanda, May .1, 18721 y.. Avß. KELLY, DENTIST.—Cftice over M. E. Rosenfield's, Towanda, Pa. Teatll - Inserted ou tiold,.tillver, Rubber, and Al- Inutum base. Teeth extracted without tkaln. Oct. 344'2. D PA/ "Nl.' M D ' ,E. D. --- . - Pirrstrists AND StiP.GT.O`5. 4 c:lllce over Montanyes• Store. Ordce hours from 10 tol2 A. M. and from 2 to 4 r. M. Sitectalattention glren - to ,HISEASES i DISEASES or ~ mad Or I TILE EYE . .. THE EAR W. RYAN, . VI • COUNTY SUTFILINTENOE O Mee day last Saturday of each moues, ever Turndr & Gordores Drug Sture, :Towanda, Pa. Towanda,..lnne 20, 1828. MRS. 11. PEET, TZACIILII. Or PIANO:MUSIC, TERMS...4IO per term. (Residence Third street, let ward.) Torranda. Jan. 13,'79-Iy. C S. RUSSELL'S OENEEAL INSURANCE AGENCY Illtay2B-70t1. TOWANDA, PA. FIRST NATIONAL 'BANK, TOWANDA, PA. CAPITAL PAID 1N... SURPLUS FUND...... This Bank offers unusual facilities for the tram action ota general banking business. N. N. BETTS, Cashier JOS. POWELL, President. EDWARD WILLIAMS, PRACTICAL PLUMBER* GAS FITTER, Place of busliaess in Meictir Block, next door to Journal Office, opposite Public Square. Plumbing. Cu Fitting, Repairing Pumps of all kinds, and all kinds of Gearing promptly attended to. All wanting wort in his line should give him -a call. _ Dee. 4.187 e. COODRICK & .141,ITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME XL "At even, or at midnight, or it, the ceekrerowing, It may be in the evening. • o When the work of the Mich done, And you have time to sit ,fn The twilight •• And watch the sinking sun, While-the long, bright daY dies slowly Over the 'sea, . And the hour grows quiet and holy With thoughts of me ; While you hear the village children - Passing along the street, Among those thronging footsteps mayforne the sound of my feet; Therefore I tell you: Watch . By the Debt of the evening star, When thei room is growing dusky -1 . As the clouds afar ; Let the I door be on the latch I ! In your home .. tri F.r It ay be through the gloaming . I will come. It may be when the midnight Is heavy upon the land, _ And the black waves lying_ dumbly ~, Along the sand; When'the moonless night draws close, And the lights are out in the house, When the Are burns low and red, And the watch is ticking loudly , Beside the lied ; . Thougliyon sleep, tired out, on your couch, Still your heart must Wake and watch !,. In the dark, room, For it may be at midni g ht I will come: , BE J. M. BZc May 1, 19 It may be at the cock-crow, When the night Is dying slowly , In the sky, And the sea looks calm and holy, Waiting flr the dawn ' ; Of the golden sun, Which draiweth nigh ; When the. mists are on the villeyt,' . shading The rivers chill, And toy morning star is fading, kading Over the bill,' Behold I say unto you: Watch! Let the door be on the latch In your Lome. o the chill before the deeming, letween the night and morning, I may come.. It may be in tbC. morning When the can is bright and strong, And the dew Is glittering sharply DioTll4s When the waves are laughing loudly Along the shore; And the birds are singing sweetly With the long day's work before you, You rise up with the sun, And the neighbors come iu to talk a little Oran that must be done; But remember, that I may he the next To come ha at the door, To call you from all your busy work, t For evermore ; As you work your heart must watch, For the door Is oft the latch In your room. And It may be In the morntog L. ELSBUZZ We all have had our childish shud derings over stories of the " Gar- G are, or Were-wolf;" that grim ghost of bosky fastnesses of Norway, of Hungary, the Black Forest,. and even of the plains of France ; that uncanny " thing "—for neither man nor beast was he—that - spent half his time as an honest gentleman should, the other half roaming the high woods, and anon assisting; so the common people believed, in a meet ing of chosen demons. • During Sir Walter Scott's time the belief in the existence of " Gar-wolf " tteb.l7B or " Biselavaret " still remained in Brittany ; and a contemporary of Sir Walter Writes : " The Bretons still suppose that certain men deck themselves it the skins of wolves, sometimes even assuming their very forms, to 'frequent nightly gatherings over which "Old. Nick ' himself pre sides." One can well imagine how number less 'were the tales of Bisclaveret in the days of chivalry, when the red deer wandered free over the breadth of Normandy, the boar made his lair in the woods of Versailles and. wolves bayed the moon at the gates of the scattered castles of petty Kings in ancient Armorica. But it is scarcely so easy to imag ine them not a century ago, when the wild. woods of France were no more; when • the plough-land and vineyard had taken the place of oak and' chest nut grove, and when the very occa sion of a wolf coming down into the Dordogne would • muster out more men from a single village than could a whole kingdom of chivalric time. At the present time the sipersti tion has died out. Nevertheless, one " Bisclaveret " story still hovers round the winter firesides of Brittany --by which vicux bonpapa in • his great arm-chair— the centre of a semi-circle of well-filled stools and wooden settles—doles out, amid the puffs of his briar pipe, the following: You • may. well know, my children, the high road leading from Poitivy to Guingamp; how, after leaving the village of Corlay, it winds up the Cotes-du-Norff through wooded glend and steep head-waters of the River Vilaine. ' At about tiro miles froth the sum- mit there are the ruins of a. little chaumiere,l 9 ng since deserted, but in my young days inhabited by one Yvon Cardoc. ea Very little was known of his his tory ; he had come, he said, from Finisterre, and n'as n carpenter and blacksmith by trade. But as he was a bon garcon, paid ready money; did not get more than ordinarily drunk, and above all was loyal, nobody cared what he might have been be fore ; and every one liked him for what he was. - At all the merry-making was Yvon, ringleader in the frolic and fun; and each girl in the . country side vied with the other for, a loving glance from his brown eyes ' And well they might.. , His tall, athletic frame was 'set off by dainty . clothes, And dark- locks, rolled over his shoulders, as long and fine as Jeannette's here. When I was about twelve years old it was rumored round that he was going to be married to one of the prettiest girls of the Haute-Bretagne ; and she looked it, too, shortly after, standing before tile Cure of Corley, in her pointed white linen cap, gay kerchief, dark-blue woollen gown, 1112.5.00 e 66,000 Aril 14 1879 foeirg. COMING. or to the morahlg." Over the little lawn ; Aboixt the door ; I cettl come gel c cled Cafe. wizioauwAsill A BRETON ROMANCE. he short enough to show pretty feet and ankles incased in crimson stockings and silver-buckled shoes, with bright bows of ribbon on their instep, a' siL ver heart and crucifix (her lover's present) on her bosom; resting on a snowy.frilled bib and apron ' • and I thought; as -Yvon took her hand to lead her out of church, that a better matched pair could not be found Brittany. Up to the little chaumiere they took their way, followed by a joyous throng. The pigs and - chigkens had been banised into the it, oods for the night, the mud floor si i wept and sprin kled ; candles stood round the room in niches or on pine brackets, reflect ing brightly off the. 41c1 carved oak bedstead ; the big chest had been shoved - . into a corner to give free warren for the dancers; while over head dangled the bread-basket, burst-. r ing its sides with new barley cakes, in company with such; a goodly array of sausages l onions and hams as made the hungry wish for supper time. The evening passed off gaily, and not a cloud was to be seen in the new Married couple's horizon till a game of 'chance was proposed. " Try your 'luck' in the fountain," said one; and in an evil moment Yvon and Annette consented. With solemn air Annettes L t on papa hands to, each a piece of bread and butter; and amid a laughing crowd they sally out under the moon light to - a spring bubbling and gurg ling from a network of old oak roots. The pieces arc thrown in. There is a moment of breathless excitement. . _ "They 'swim ! " "They don't ! " "They stick !" "'No I Yes . !. No Annette sinks ! and the buttered side up, by St. l ves V.' Why this should have cast a sudden chill over the party, I know not. A dozen times before on New Year's day had each and every one of them tried their luck in the same way ; laughing as they saw the fatal bread and butter foretell their prosperity, sickness and death. S . But now; somehow, it seemed dif ferent. The whilom jest had become a solemn reality. Perhaps the tone in which the bodpapa said "God pre serve thee from ill, my' Annette I" perhaps' the sombre shadow of the oak, through whose heavy foliage tiny rifts of silver flickered on-and around, the pool. had something to do with it. Be that as it may, the party returned to the (Italia:ere in silence, which the scattering "Pout', peti, Annettes," from the more su perstitious did not help to brighten. Yes, the revel was at an end ; the bread and butter had foretold death for Annette within a year, and bon= papa looked sadly disturbed when the•heard the ominous result. So the sobered revellers made their adieus. hastily—starting at the foot fails of the roe which crossed their homeward path, and - shuddering at the whisper of the aspens in the val ley. However, in spite of the bad omen. the honeymoon seemed to pass off as happily as could be ; and the anni versary of their marriage day had neariy come round ere any one knew that aught was wrohg in the Chau miere D'Yvon. When they had been married about ten months, bonpapa was one morning sitting at .the door of his ferme, unbending rom the rheumatic cramps of Winter in the warm May sun ; now watching lin the yard. around him the grim gambols of a litter of white pigs—gaunt even in their youth; now giving an approv ing look at the sturdy colt that bin 'nied and snickered round its mother in the pasture, and made sudden -and futile attacks on two meek-eyed cows, blotched - -black and . white, as had been their ancestors. Pulling contentedly at his pipe sat bonpapa,,drinking in the sweet scent of the stocks and wallflowers on the gable. He was at peace with the world and himself; his farming had been prosperous these twenty years ; the old Stocking in the oak chest had been iexchanged a few days before for a newer and larger one. Yvon seemed well off ; Annette was happy, and what more could an old man want? But, after all, was Annette happy ? Of late, dark circles had grown under her eyes ; at times she seemed distraught ;i at times, very affectionate ; then again cold and listless. :,,,What could it be ? Ah here she comes 1 Not trip ping dawn the path as was her wont though, but hurrying onward with her head bent, one hand clutching her cloak round her, the other clinch ed tight at her side. What could be the matter? " Bonjour, bonpapa !" "Bonjour, ma mie !" "Is any one at home be sides you, bonpapa ?" asked she, looking anxiously around. "Nobody! Jacob and Pierrot are in the fields ; Hamlin has gone to market. What is it, child ?" For a moment or twa she hesitated; then, throwing herself, at his knees, she blurted out flercelr, "Be is a Bisclaveret! lie told me so himself once, and I did not believe him ; but last night I found it out for certain." "4 Bisclaveret I who, child, who!" ' exclaimed the astonished old man. "Who ? why, he I—he, of coarse-- 'Yvon!" • Although' bonpapa was of a genet.- ' ally placid disposition and somewhat rheumatic, the suddenness of this announcement was too much-for him, and he bounced out of the arm chair like a. jack-in-the-box, nearly upset-. ting himself in breaking loose from . Annette. Had he been a German he would probably have , sat still and said, "Z000000d! Z0000000l" and given vent, to his phlegmatic feelings after a long brown study over his china pipe. But bonpapa, my children, was a Bretint and a Frenchman, and, dashing his favorite briere pipe on the ground, be danced j around the kneeling Annette, alter.' nately swearing and, crossing , himself. At last broken sentences began to form themselves out of the torrent of expletives. "A Bisclaveret! mar ried to my daughter! Ah, cochon. —and no one to Itnowit ! The omen of the maTriage, da7l Bad luck at-, TOWANDA, 'BRADFORD COUNTY, PL, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 5, 1880. tend him !" etc. However, this strain could not be-kept up long, and, sink ing into a chair And picking up his pipe, he puffed itiriously at it, seem ing unaware that the bowl had been broken by the fall. As soon as his excitement waned a little, curiosity took its place, and he conjured Annette, by her Patroness St. - Anne, to tell him all about it; till the poor girl, creeping closer to him', began in a low, frightened voie:e : "lon rememtser, bonpapa, the omen of our marriage day foretold my death, and I went sadly to bed on my marriage night. The next day when I went to the spring, the bread was there still, with little fishes tog• ging at ikpo what I would, I could not shake 0* the fear of that omen. " Yvon was kind and good to me, and I loved him; but yet he seemed in some wa►y coenected with my fate. Another thing troubled me; be would never tell me anything of his past life, except that he had come from *Finisterre. " One night, about a month after our marriage, I was surprised, on waking up at midnight, not to find Yvon at my side. Some nights after that he was gone again, arid a few nights after that; and one morning, on asking him where he went at night, he colored up so, and made such a clumsy excuse that I decided to lie awake and find'out how long and how , often he was absent. "At last I; found out that every other night he went about ten o'clock and returned just before day. . " Knowing, as the whole country side does, of his many amours before marriage, I naturally concluded that he went out to see some old love, and the idea so maddened me—for I loved him dearly—that I taxed him with unfaithkulness, and said I knew he had some mistress whom he tisit- ed regularly. " Whereon he laughed, and an swered that I was the first mistress he had ever had, and that I would be the only one. ' But,' added he, 'if you really want to know my se cret, I am a Biselaveret and every other night I am condemned to spend in the wild woods.' • " Of course I t then thought this nothing but are . dxcuse, and things went on as usual; excepting that once a fortnight he would take the donkey and be gone twodays, always coming back with plenty of money—so much that I think he must - have saved up a hundred louis. "You well know, bonpapa, that, at this time of the year when they have cubs, the wolves howl more than at any other time. Well, about a fort night ago there was , a regular chorus of them to the northward of the chattinfere, and Yvon two or three times in , that evening got up after listening anxiously, went to the door and came back with a disturbed look on his face. "It seemed to me so odd that Yvon, a mountaineer, who had been out at night three times a .week for the last year, should be afraid of. a wolf howl, that Ideterniined to find out the reason. 1 " About half an hour after he had gone to bed tie leaned over me to see if I ‘.was asleep, and when, as he thought, he had assured himself of it, he got up, put on his clothes' and slipped out. The moon was young, but when 1 got to-the door I could' see him srike into the woods clip°, site, heading directly for the wolf howls. , "This brought to my mind his saying that he was a Bisclaveret,and when the same thing happened , the second night, and on the second from that again, I determined to follow him and - fid out the worst. "I did so last Monday up into the pine woods, along a beaten ,trail starting from close to the corner of the pasture, but which I had never noticed - before. Just as we had got close to the wolf howls, by o great pine-tree and a ledge of rocks, 1 lost all trace of him, and, fearing the wolves, I hurried back again. Wed nesday night I followed him only to lose him at the same spot; but last night, by keeping v closer to him, I knew, to my horror, that he'bad spo ken the truth, for on arriving at the ledge of rocks he stopped, lifted a large flat stone, and took something from under it, which, par Notre Dame d' Auray, were wolf-skin clothes. He put his own clothes in their place, - and, arrayed in the skins, started to ward the wolves, to a broken part of the ledge of rocks overgrown with bushes. "As soon as I could muster up courage I hurried after him: " When I had got through the thicket he had disappeared, and the wolves seemed to be galloping away through the forest; but as I scram bled up over the 'ledge I was con fronted by a wolf so enormous that I can only believe it to have been Yvon metamorphosed. " I bad just presence of mind to strike him on 'the bead with a short ox-goad I brought with me, and then run down the rocks again, falling near the bottom and nearly stunning myself. But I sprang up and fled, home, fearing every moment he would `follow and pull me down. "I meantto come on here, but I was in such terror of his catching me as I ran that, as the ehaumiere seem ed to afford me some protection, I rushed in, parted the door and waited Any fate. ] "About his usual time he came to the,door and tried At last he knocked. I could not answer. I wa s tongue-tied with tear. He knew 1 was in there, and that I had shut the door to spite him, and after a long time, a ft er makin g swear bfthe Virgin he would not tiara me, I let him in. rz4 " I was nearly frightened to death when he came in, for no sooner was he inside than, taking me by the shoulders and gnashing his teeth at me like a - wolf, -he told me that if ever I played him" - such a trick again - he would kill me. . "phis -winning, as soon as I could, I ran down 'here. But ah, my God ! bonpapa, do not let me go back to the wolf. He will kill me some day, I know be will ; and the prophecy of . the fountain will come true." So little was known of Yvon's an- a:J L I REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION PROM ANY. QUARTER. tecedents; he had always been' BO mysterious about them, that, putting this. and 'sundry other little things together, ' coupled with Annette's story, bonpapa could only arrive at the unpleasant conclusion that be had married his granddaughter to a Bisclavaret, and that it might be as well for all concerned to put such a grandson out of the way quietly be fore some horrible catastrophe , hap pened. Many were the plans be formed for doing so, bat they were all marred by Annette,. who would !never consent to' be the means of Yvon'a death or to go back to the chaumiere and the morning had nearly slipped away ere bonpapa bad half-coaxed, half-bullied her into helping him to follow out the one least.objectionable to her. It was more than probable that Yvonobeing out of temper with his wife, would go out again that very night; and as it would be easy to , follow him in the moonlight, the old man proposed to dog him to his wolf conference himself, and if he found it'to be a fact, to take steps with the Dure of Corky for his regeneration or extirpation. To this Annette, at first, would not azree, as she would not consent to bonpapa's risking his life alone with the Biselavaret. Bon- papa to this urged strongly that .he must go alone to save the scandal to the family, and would not take her foi fear something might happen to her. But at last it was decided that both should go; so toward evening Annette went back . to the chaumiere as if nothing had happened, and by dark bonpapa was ensconced in the edge of the moods, with the prover bial silver bullet in his gun in case the Biselaveret should discover him and show his wolf nature. Yvon's morning fit of anger had passed of, and though moody at times, be was kind and loving ; so much so that Annette began to re pent of the night's adventure before her. She could hot help loving him still in spite of all; but As evening grew on, fear came over her that he might any night return in his wolf's form, that his savage nature might be aroused, and that the prophecy of the fountain might come true; be ' sides the scandal to the family if it were known that she had been mar ried to neither man, beast, nor de- mon ! Pah I she crossed herself at the tearful thought ! The Cure would find some way of regenerating him, and he would not haye to be killed ; so that by the time Yvon slipped from the house, she was again nerved to follow out te quest, and, giving him a few minutes law, she hurried out across the pasture, mottled with wide eyed buttercups, and over the low rail t and bank beyond, under whose shadow bon papa awaited her, gun in hand Bursting through a grove of birch and willow they find the trail, and in a moment more - Annette's keen eye recognizes . Yvon's figure ahead of them, now half lost in a dense thick-' et, now standing'out gray in a moon lit glade against a bank of wood. Now they scramble down over moss , clad rocks into a dark glen, where hazel branches arch over their heads, the brook tinkling and simper ing down through the damp shaiighs and coppices of alder, fringed and tufted round the roots with rank burch grass. Up into the moonlight again, along a hillside, in an air heavy with the scent of primroses and hyacinths. On either side the oak stems loom up gaunt'and white, save where knot ted veins of ivy creep up and round . them, sticking their life blood. Anon they drop into a low vale where the spongy moss squeezes out its water from under their tread, and sighs as it takes it shape ; once more, at the delkiate yellow asphodel, too crush ed and bruised to rise again. A rabbit scuttles across their path, one ear slouched toward kthem, the other eocked at the great horned owl sweeping through the tree-tops. Cowering in the grass and ferns they watch I von's tall figure top the earth bank, where he stands for a moment looking back over the trail,, and, as Annette avers to bonpapa, straight into their biding place. But a moment, and they hurry on again, as the chase is lost in the labyrinth of seedling pines, which usher in the forest, and whose sturdy branches swish their faces and limbs as they wind through them. But taller and taller grow the pines, freer and freer of lower branches; and at last, after a plunge into a dell ? of bracken higher than their heads, they emerge into the wild woods, and a sharp yap, yap, with,an answer= ing howl, sails down the' wind, sigh ing through the pine branches over - head, to greet them on their way. Ghost-like glide the- three figures through the dark stems,lamong which gray boulders crop outs, mushroom. like through the warm carpet of fir iteedles. Warily tread the hunters in, the scanty cover, twice nearly dis covered.by Yvon, who had stopped to breathe a moment in the ascent ; for excitement had' so kept up An nette and the old man that neither feltAtigne ; and as the hunted press es on again, they slip from behind their sheltering trees and creep alter him like a pair of panthers, while louder and clearer down the breeze sweep the wolf howls. On the crest of a long chine, over looking a gully, Annette clutches the old man's arm and drags himtlithind a tree. " There! there it is 1. across in 'the moonlight. There is the stone! Let us wait here." ° Slowly Yvon 'climbs the further slope and.appears in a .little cove bathed in moonlight against a ledge of rocks, there rising abruptly some thirty feet, but which a °few yards on was a broken slope overgrown with shrubs and bushes. Breathless they watch him don.the fatal skins and glide into-the thicket toward the wolves, now quite close. "Stay you here, Annette," whisper.' ed the old man.; "I will now go on alone. If I don't come back in half an hour, go home and alarm the country side; if you see the wolves, climb yon tree and call for help." " Oh,Ao nothing rash, bonpapa. for the love of Notre Dame d'Auray Do nothing that may bring death On either of you, for my sake;" A wave of the band, and anon . be, too, crept out into the moonlight under • the rocks, and was lost to . Sight in the thicket. The wolves, after a sudden burst, had stopped howling; and, as Annette heard bon papa's footsteps die away in the si lence of the night, a vague dread seized her that she should never see him again, and she counted the mo- mentste his return. Then, as she strained' eyes and ears toward the thicket, ehe thought of his errand; of whom he was and all her year of married life passed by her like a dream. If bonpapa was successful, -if he satisfied himself that Yvon was' a Bisclaveret; what then? What would he and the Cure decide to do with him. He bad been a good husband, and in Spite of her knowledge of his double being, she loved him ; it seem- ed now more than ever, at the chance of his being -condemned to death through her means. Better'have faced it out than to have told bonpapa = Bonpapa Bow long bonpapa had been absent—he should be:back by this time. The'half.hour must be up. The Biselaveret might have seen them t racking him, turned on- the old man now that he was alone, and killed him. That were, if possible; worse than the other. And in her double agony of doubts and fears, she krielt and sobbed Mond to the What is that velvet footfall on the Sr-needles ?' That short sigh behind her? • Oh, God! the great.wolf again at her elbow! "Yvon! Biselaveret! have mercy!" For a moment the two, wolf and girl, glared at each other; and then,, clashing the broad 10 hite-fangedjaws like a'steel trap, he- lunged at her. With all her force she drove the or lgoad home. Rut not this time ! and, ere she had lifted it_ for the second blow he was upon her, the white fangs buried in her white neck, and the • cruel claws tearing her shoulders and bosom. One long despairing death scream broke the stillness of the forest, cut ting through the pine stems, buffeted against the rocky ledge, tossed from side to side of the, glen down into t 1 woods below, and then nothing but the muffled worrying of the wolf and the throbs of the girl's death struggle. The scream reached the ear of ben papa who, having suddenly Jost all trace of Yvon, was slowly return. ing. It could only mean one thing, that Annette had been attacked by wolves -or the Bisclaveret, and he hurried back where he had left her. As the wolf raised its head to look at the newcomer, the - same idea that occurred to Annette flashed across, botipapa—thqt, Yvon' bad discovered them following him, that not content with his- skin's, he had taken a wolf's form, and having given him the slip, had gone back to kill his wife; and the horror of the scene so unnerved the old man that he could scarcely hold hiis gun steady; but the Biscla veret stotxl. still frothing his bloody jaws over his.victim • and - at last the silver bullet sped. • With a how! the wolf sprang into the air, struggled a moment. on the ground, and then shambled slowly off. Ah, what a sad ending to their ex pedition-l_ What a 'poor revenge, on the Bisclai•eret! He must die—the silver bullet 'must do its work; but bow dearly had that revenge been bought! Arid bitter tears dimmed the old man's eyes as he lifted into his lap that little head hacked and , gashed by those cutting teeth. Who was to blame for it but himself? He I should have followed the'Bisclayeret alone! 'There was no question about Yvon's identity now. He had sud- I denly disappeared only; a few paces before him among the wolves, almost at the top of the ledge. The thicket + the plateau, had' ben searched, .but be was not to be Seen. „Too sudden ly and mysteriously had he disap peared for man. Bisclaveret he ;must be Devil helvas, to come back and kill his poor defenceless wife! But it was the 'prophecy; the omen of the fountain had'come true He. wiped away the blood from the face as well as he could, n and, after one long kiss, sat dreaming and stupefied, The wild hoot! hoot !"i - of a , screech-owl aroused him; but now that the excitement had worn off, how weak and helpless he felt! On rising, his lifnbs were so numbed and trembling that, after carrying the body for ,a few paces, he was obliged to rest. It would be impossible for him to get it' home alorke i so he stuck a branch with a handkerchief on it over the body ;to keep away the wolve s, and started sadly home Ito rouse the country side. How dreary was, the downward path through the tall ,pine stems! how ghostly the ' hush, hush " of their branches Sißut even that was I •company in the great silence of the forest, where a pine seed quivering, Spinning down, clicked as it touched 1 a fallen limb. How- heavy and choking the scent of the hyacinths below. Air! sir! To be again among his fellowmen, out of that dell' where the mists rose heavy and dank, and the leaves sprinkled a clammy rain on him ; and, as the sleeping vale below berst'on his.sight and 4 the dim out lines of the fields mapped out on its broad moonlit -bosom , as he peered down at the ferpie nestling in its sheltering aspens, he . breathed a prayer that revenge might bring at least a poor relief , to his troubled thoughts. It was barely dawn when some twenty armed peasants filed out of the farm yard, the old man himself on a pony, vowing to find the Biscla veret dead or alive, and, if the latter; to take a fearfnl.vengeanee. As to have gone by Yvon's chaumiere would have been longer, they, went straight up through 'the woods to the spot. Little tits and golden-crested wrens were twittering through the -pine branches when they reached it. a woodpecker was tapping on the ,• . • tree over it, and flopped. away throUth the woods, eehoing his harsh laugh; but the body and the handker chief was gone ! Where ? " Look for the clotlfes under the stone," proposed one. "If he is dead his own clothes will be there • If alive, the skins!" The stone was lifted, andihere lay the Bisclaveret's nightly gait), a rude blouse land trousers of wolf 'skin, with thongs round the waist/. Off both of 'them', the hair was f z4 yed in great patches, and they wre be draggled with mud. "IV St. Yves,his namesake,he does the Saint honor, wearing the devil's live# so freely!" said a peasant. " Twere to take these , and-confront him with them, as he is alive! 'Even if he,doea deny killing Annette, he cannot deny that in these he has joined in the wolf dance. Ten to one he has buried the body in the :woods, and gone down chaumiere to brazen it out has we can avenge Annette first and hunt•fpr her , body afterward." The advice seemed good; and in the first piece of soft ground; along the ! trial, they found Yvon's ,tracks going down the mountain. At the corner of the pasture bun papa called a halt, Should ti 4 take him alive if they could and 'make him confess, or kill him outright ? -" Kill him 1 kill him ! kill tilt Bis claveret I" was the answer. `3 Why should be be, allowed to live lotiger? What was he but a murdering demi:on in whose company no one was safe ? If he would kill Annette, he - would kill any one ! This taste for blood might bring out his wolf nature, and our homes and little ones are not safe! Call hizn,out; shoot him downl and if he will not 'come out fire the roof. En avant len avant !" And soon a ring of fierce faces close in on the little ehaumiere, from whose chimney a thin film of white smoke simpers up through the morn- Ong air. " Yvon ! Biablaveret ! come out and show yourself I lla , .ha 1, we have you now, in spite of your sharp teeth ! Ho murderer 1 wolf mate ! show yourself. Slowly the door opens, and Yvon, pale and hollow-eyed, shows himself, only to stagger back into the house d slamming the door convulsively as the charges of a dozen 'guni rattle round him. "Fire I fire ! Burn him out.! Set fire to the thatch ! Smoke the wolf out 1" rang out again the revengeful . voices, and ere it was well said tinder was put to the roof in two or three places. A pause. A bright streak of_ flame runs up a long straw, and the roof is in a blaze. - " - Aha! Bisclaveret, you are trap ped now ! The dievil will have his own- sooner than he expected! Shoir yourself, murderer 1 Show your teeth for the last time, and die like a brave wolf!" But not an answering soun.i, till a sullen rush of smoke hurtles' up as the roof'crashes in, echoed by a cry of rage and pain which silenced even crackling straw and rafters. Iri a moment more the door was burst outward, and- from the debris into their midst struggled Yvon, , shambling and tottering, grimed with smoke, and dripping blood from a . dozen wounds ; but -in his arm was' clutched something, of which, in thel fury of revenge, they had forgotten the existence—the body of the un fortunate Annette—in a dress once white, but now mottled with the fresh blood of Yvon's wounds, and smirch. ed with cinders. The sight was so unexpected that all shrank back as he staggered across the road, and fell beside the spring. Still further they shrank back as, glaring round on them, he panted out with the energy of death— " Devils ! what do you mean ? What have I done to deserve suck a death ?" " Done !" exclaimed bon papa his anger rising as Yvon spoke ; " have you not done enough ? Did not Ai nette and I track you last night to your wolf den ? And did you not , murder the innocent thing while I was in search of you ? Did not my silver bullet bite into your wolf flesh? And do you ask what you have done, fiend that you are ? But 'tis no use ; you have not long to live, so make your peace with God, or the Devil, your master, which ever may be." "Stay," said Yvon, "I eame'out of my mine this morning (there's no use concealing it longer, as I'm dying) to find Annette cut to pieces by wolvest, I suppose, though some one must.,have been theke since, as the body had been moved. Water! quick ! I'm dying 1 I am a miner. A year ago, in hunting, I killed two wolyes in a cave, in which r I found traces of lead. I opened the min: used their skins to work in, so ant* AO soil my clothes , and betray myself; sold 'my lead in Guingan3pi and tO, pat. Annette off the scent I told h her Was a Biscliveret. And the omeliof the fountain ' has come true, doubly true—Annette ! Annette !" Slowly the last, words bubbled; up through the froths , lips, and d i roppibg over her body there passed away from earth the soul of Yvon Pardoc, the last Bisclaveret of Brittiny ! —Macmillan's Magazine. A covivrnic doctor, being out for a day's shooting, took his errand boy to carry the gante-bag. _ Entering a field of turnips, the dog pointed ; and the' boy, overjoyed at the prospect of his master's success, exclaimed : • "Lori, master, there's a covey ;,if you get near 'ern,• won't yon physic 'em ?" ' Physic them, you young rascal? What do you mean?" said the doctor. ," Why, kill 'em, to be sure," said the lad. L i TuE,th is a man named Ice in the,peni tentiary of West - Virginia. lie froze on to somebody else property... • THE OLD, OLD STORY. Eager to see, she pressed the soh. • The slight frame broke with sudden crash, Aid teal into the street. A splinter strnck a gallant knight, He upward glanced ; there met his sight The little maiden sweet. She smilefl ; he smiled ; you know the reit... My tale You have already guessed, The end of course Is plain. Theniahl confessed, drew back tram view' The knight passed on, amidst his crew, They never met again. 81.00 per. Anna!» In Advance. A GIRL OF THE PERIOD. , . Put sway the curling Hons. , Lately used by darling Claire, , • ?Or she nevermore will need them; ,She bas banged her golden lisle. Place the frizzes In the bureau, - • . , Where her eyes nay on them fall, As she dives around the bed room Getting ready for the ball. • Set her tooth•bruth ln the tumbler, • Hang her itocitings on the chair, So that when bar young man cometh She will not be is despalt, • Don't forget the zebra garters I That go with her silken hose, • And getout a perfumed rag for her to blow ber tiny nose.' • Now l oir darling's fairly ready; Soon she'll face the wintry Breese; _ 1 1 And, her youliger brother ?immure thy i ain't sne just the elievieln EDGAR ALLAN POE. His Venerable 'Teacher. Still Living in Baltimore---Intereisting Reminis =noes of the. Poet. to the If he One of Oe'Bulletin's staff, a day or two ago, had the good fortune to have an inveryiew with the' venera ble Joseph H. Clarke, now eighty nine years old, who was the early preceptor of the poet, Edgar , . Allan Poe. In Eugene L. Dialer's memoirs of Edgar Albin Poe, the folloiting occurs : "On Air. and Mrs.' Allan's return from their two years' visit to England, Mr. Allan placed Poe in the academy of Professor Joseph IL Clarke, of Trinity College, Dublin, who kept an English and classical school at Richmond from 1816 to 1525." He greeted the Bulletin represen tative cordially, but it was plain• to see that the aged man, though physi cally as hearty ai many a man thirty years his junior, had grown mentally feeble under the weight of _many years. When the old _gentleman was seated, the reporter explained that he wanted any reminiscences of Poe that he could give. "Edgar, Edgar," said the old man, rising, with a far-away look, as memories,of old times flitted through his mind. - "'Why, he was a born poet. One .day Mr. Allan came to me and said: " Mr. Clarke, I have heard much about your school, and as 'Ed gar shows a decided aptness for classics, I have detertnined Ao place him uder your care." This was 'about 1820 0r.1821, and. Edgar _en tered my school. He becathe one of the most distinguished of my schol ars. He and4):at. HoWard were in the same Glass.' Nat. was as good, if not better, than Edgar in the class ics,.but Nat.. couldn't write Poetry like Edgar could. Edgar was a poet in every sense ot the word. One summer, at the end -of the Session, Nat: and Edgar both wrote me a complimentary. letter. Nat.'s was written in Latin, after Hortice, but Edgar's was written in poetry. I came to Baltima•re that summer, and I showed those letters to Rev. Mr. Damphoux, of St. 3ary's college. and what do you tliink he said ? "air. Clarke.. these compositions would do honor airi, credit to the best educated professor in my col lege." .oh, yes, Edgar was, a poet, and he Wasn't more than twelve or fourteen whennhe wrote that letter to me." " Did you keep it? have you. it now ?" the reporter asked eagerly. "No, , no , " the .old. gentleman an swered sady: "I returned it to Ed gar. ,One day, after I had 'come to Baltimore from Richmond, Edgar came to visit me. I, .old him about the letters, and Edgat rose and said, with such a strange,, yearning looli in his eyes: " ion couldn't do Nat. Howard and me a greater . favor than to return us those letters. I think Nat. Howard would like to have his, and I am sure I would give worlds to have mine.' I- gave them to him." "Then you have no memento of Poe?" •• The old man sadly answered, "No, sir ; that's one thing 1 always regret ted, not, having kept some of Edgar's notes or poems. But then, you know, I couldn't tell.at that time that. Ed gar would ever be a,great man." " Wain't P'oe a very - handsome boy, Professor ?" " Well, he had very pretty eyes and hair, and rather ,an effeminate face, but :I don't think he was a beau tifui'boy. He had a very sweet dis position. He wee• always cheerful, brimful of mirth, and ,a very great favorite with his schoolmates. I nev er bad occasion to say a barsh word to him while he was at my school, much less to make him do ' penance." " Did he study very hard ?" - "No ; he was not remarkable for his application. He was naturally very smart, and he always knew- his lessons. He had a great deal of pride." " Did you ever see Mary Poe, Ed gar's littlesister ?" " Yes; she was adopted by Mr. litiKenzie when Mr. Alldn took Ed gar.” "'Was she pretty ?" ' 4 Well, really, I can't remember very well, but I think she was 'a very sweetlnd interesting child." " You saw Poe after ; you left Rich mond, of coarse ?" " Yes ;' when, he carnet() Baltimore and stopped at the tavern, he would never forget to come and see pe." ' "Do - you believe that your pupil 'was an habitual drunkard ?" "That I can't tell. I think he was fond of wine, and I know that I Rl ' ways opened a bottle for him wheal he came to see me ; but• then it was the custom of the age, you know, to drink wine at that time. Then, when Edgar becartie editor of Graham's Magazine, be sent it to me regularly gratis." " Was he affectionate to you, pro.: fessor?" " Yes, indeed ; I think the boy and man kived me dearly, and I am sure I loved; him." ' " When was the last time you saw him?" " When he wail laid away to rest, in 1819. -I went to his funeral. A large number of persons were pres ent; and I remember the minister who officiated dwelt long on the great man's virtues. Yes," he Con cluded, "Edgar, as a boy, was a dear, open-hearted t cheerful and good boy, and-es 'a man he was a loving and atreetionati friend to me." - , A case of peculiar interest is down for hearibg by Lord Young. in tbe Scoteh court of sessions. It appears that a watchmaker of Ayr, who .110 amassed a fortune of £lO,OOO, len it" by will (subject toe partial life inter est for two sisters) for the rebinding of the old bridge of. Ayr, whenever such rebuilding should be required. He appointed the magistrates and town council of Ayr trustees under - the will, and' directed that the prin cipal Bum should lie out at compound interest till it was required. The will is contested ,by the brothers of the testator, who urge, inter* a/la that the old bridge of Ayr has staid for several centuries, and solar as can be judged will stand lor centuries to., come. They therefore maintain that the will is null and 'void, in respect of the remoteness ,:of its ptirpose. The alleged verbal testimony of the bridge might itself be called -in in suppOrt of the case of what in Scotch law are ,called_ the pursuers. The depositions were taken down by ,' Robert Burns, and stand, upon record under 'the - familiar heading, "The Brigs of Ayr." At _the date when Burns heard the alleged controversy between the Auld Brig and - the New Brig he says of the former: NUMBER 36 Auld Brig appeared of ancient Bictish.rbre. The very wrinkles Gothic in.his face ; lie seemed as he wi' Time h ad waratled Lang. Being twitted by this condition by his. younger , rival, the . Auld. Brig de clared with pardonable pride : There may - be some - difficulty in getting this evidence accepted by"the court. It is, nevertheless, not alto gether without interest,-and • seems to go straight at the point at once. A great dea of talent .is hist to . the world for the want of courage. Every day sends to the grave a num ber of obscure men, who have only remained in obscurity because their timidity has prevented their first ef fort, and who, if they - could have been induced to -begin, would, in all probability, have gone great lengths in the career of fame. The fact is. in order to do anything in this world that is worth doing, we must not stand shivering on the brink, and think of the cold and danger, but jump in and scramble.as we can. It will - not-do to be perpetually calcula ting,risks and adjusting nice chances. It -did - very well before the flixl, when a nian could consult his friends upon a publication for one- huadred and fifty years• and then live to see its success for six or seven centuries afterwards, but at present - a man waits, doubts, and hesitates and con sults his brother and his uncle, and particular friends, until one 'day he finds that he is sixty, years of age ; that he has, lost so much time in con sulting first cousins and particular friends that he has no time left to fol low their advice. There is no'such thing for over-squeamishness at pres ent, the opportunity so easily slips away, the very period of his life at which man chooses to venture. it ever,-is so confined, that it is no bad rule'to preach up necessity, in such instances, of a little violence to• feel ings, and to efforts made in defiance to strict and sober calculatiob. The Aukl. Brig of Ayt. This mony a year I've stood the flood and tide, And though wi' crazy etid'Arn sair forgalrn. I'll be a brig when ye're aiittagetess cairn t Words of Courage. Thacke \ ray. He was born-of a well-conneoted, well-established family, peihaps with no floating grandeur of a pedigree,. but with. a generation of cultivated lives behind him; and thus had the advantage, , not shared by all his ri-' vals, of thorough acquaintance with , the inner life of those classes who are the favorites of literatpre, and among whom the finer problems of civilized life can .best be studied. Dickens never possessed this advant age. HoveVer- elevated the society might be in which he lived, in fiction lie was never at home among gentle- men, and had no freedom in handling them. But tho{igh thus standing on a higher level than his great compet itor, Thackeray had not his immedi ate success—he had not even ,the success which attended Lever's easy and dashing' sketcher t -but toiled up ward for along time before his hand touched ate hazard the hidden spring, and the - door flew openefore him. Up to this time he had lived a strug gling- life ; spending and losing in the first place the little fortune to , which he was born, and then -for a number of years, struggling along with varying degrees of unprosperity; neither happy in his circumstances nor fortunate in his -efforls, .but al ways cheerful, always honorable, and self-sustained ; a man flung by stress of weather into many out-of-the-way vessels and voyages, but never stain ing his good name or leaVing shame behind him.—Fraser's Magaz.ine. Fun, Fact, and • Facetm. A TRAMP and Keely's motor,are alike, " inasmuch-as they won't work. .1 Tge thrifty man will always iut tome thing away for a.rainy day, even if- it is nothing but a stolen umbrella. PROMISE to treat a man and he will walk a mile to get a tive.cent glass of beer. Something in the word just touch es him. , Tux di ff erence between the man who digs in the ground and one who digs in books is that the former digs foi hire and the latter for lore. Tas worst ease of "stage fright" is that of the man who thinks ho has - pass ed up a two dollar and a half gold piece instead of a dime to theAriver. CONDUCTOR (to'Brown, who . -is pretty nearly pumped out with running to catch his express 'bus)—" All right, sir ; all right. Don't flurry yonrscl, you're a-gain ing." Ax.old lady - in Wichita says she never could imagine where all the Smiths came from until, she saw in a New England town a large sign, "Smith's Manufactur ing Company.' . AT the'inner table—George : "What do you call that piece of wood, in the - roast beef?" .Lincolu: "That f. 4 called a skewer." George-: ' "Oh ! that keeps the meat se-curb, does it?" "idoNEt doe everything for a man, " said an •old• gentleman, • pompousy. "Yes," replied the other-One, 'but mo ney won't do as much -for a man as some men will dolor money." • THERE 18 a patient idone of the New York hospitals who, in h' delirium, con tinually ca ll s out, " Next next !" The physicians are.undecided whether he is a college professor pr a barber. Bien Dentist (wh o is contemplating the erection of a fine residence)— Wh style of architecture do you recommen Architect—Sebing it's y u, I should think Tuscantwould be ab4dt the thing. "Jour" said a doting. parent to her 'gormandizing son, "do you really think that yon can eat the whole of that pud ding with impunity?" "I don't know, mar," replied the young hopeful, "but I can with a spoon.' ` A sun who bad sixty-five dollars stolen from him received a note with twenty-five dollars, saying : "I stoled your money. Remora news at my consbens, and I send genie of it back. When remote 113111f5 agin I'll send you some more."- - • - 11