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PEREJGO, TEACIIEII Of PIANO AND WIGAN Lessons given In Thorough 'Hass and Harmony . Cultivation of the voice a specialty. tocated at A SL Reverence: Mining St Passage Towanda, Va., March 4; 1880. t IiGIEIN W. CORDING, I.:Tow:EY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA Oftle over Klrbrs Drut Store. .. tr.; OMAS E. MYER L, TOWANDA, rn `Zee with Patrick and Foyle. Sep :5,'79 DECK & OVERTON ATTOHNEYS-AT 1.4 W, TOWANDA, T.' D'A. OVEIZTON, tiODSEY A. IktERUR, ATrtintiftY AT-LA•iv, • TOWANDA, PA., St.llt.ltor of Patents. Particular attCntlon paid to tininess In tta Orphans Court and to the iettle utcnt of estates. Of are In Montanycs !Doer: OVERTON &,,S.O ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. E. ON EnsoN. J se TIT H. JESSUP, • ATTORNEY AND CO-L:NSELLOR-AT-LAW; MONTROSE, PA. .111.1 go .Tegsnp having resumed the pratdireot the law In Northern, Penii,ylvarila, wilt attend to any legal business l ntrinded to Mon In liradlord countv. rcrsons - wishing" to consult Win. can '1 4 211 on H. Streeter, Towanda, Pa., when an appointment can he malt, FIENRY STItEETER, • • • ATV . :II[O: EY ANII (:7(4I,z7.:SELLOR-AT-LAW, Ti/WANDA, PA TT L. TOWNER, M. D., 110S1'EO1'ATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SITIZG EON. rt..lh.shlence and Oates Just North of Dr. or hits ou Maio Street, A then& i'a. Diti2n.ntn. T+ L. 111144.1§, A. AtTORNEY,AT-LAW, • TOWAN6A, PA. , E. F. GOFF, ATTOIt N EY-A T-LAW, WI - AMUSING, VA Atzency. for the sale and purchase of all kinds‘of Seeuritl.•s and for utalttug loans „lon lleat Estate. All lousiness will receive careful and proupt atteuthon. iJune 4. 1879. •11. THOMPSON, ATTORNEY • vs LAW, WI NG, VA. Wttl attend to all !,11 , 1111.5S iatitrtiQted to his care In Drad ford, hullican and Wyonling.Couidles,. °Dark wttt F.:41. rortrr. e :norl9-71. BULL, SURVEYOR 140;1N SCIWEVINi: AND DRAFTING. I'o Qtcc u ith (i. F: 31 ( a.0a, over Patch dr Tracy Main street, Towanda, Pa. 4. 15. M. 1 - 4_ l If. ANGLE, D. D. S • OPERATIVE NI) '.NrEcit ANIgALi DENTIST (infte bn State Street, second door of Dr. Pratt's apr 3 79. ELSBREE ,C; SON, A Tron Aw, , T+ /NV A N DA, rA.: N. C. FIL,Bni.Y... ~ICI'IIERSON, T. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW; TOWANDA, PA. Piv't Att . !, Vra.t. 71►IIN WA.MIX, f ATI'n:~:LY•AT-t.AW AND Co3niissloNEn, T.bwANDA, PA , fb ce—North Side P übl lc 21i uarcl SAM NT.,IIVOK, IAT T , ,ILV T-L A IV, To 11 - A SL .4, I' E.S A" .4 (1111;:x—, P,tplar street. oppo,ite Ward II , \ 1,.9. i- DAVO.:S A: CA11:0(11I4k:',;, A TTOIIN :311‘E Qv NY NI 1) . Doe 23-75; 1 4 . NV NS P ANDREW 'll' 1 II ik i ATT.III , ::*: AT-I , W. ome,-..., , Aq.an.; RT,,,1,. 11,1,0 , •,...r . J. 1.. }CM's alorr, Towaada. May lA. olusal Ted In -rman, r A prt l r 2".... •7 ,, ,.1 -. - r .1. YOU.NG, • ATTolivEy-AT-I,r, . , . TowA ~." I) A, PA. othee—.o,ol,4, do o r ,outh of the First Nat!onal Slain St., up ,tair.s. W.M. MAXWELL,, ATToItNEY-AT-LAW Ti .W A N I).k, PA. 0 (lire flspr Dayton's Store. ;" .April 12 , f 1576. `. .. III:.( 1 S. M. NVOODBURN, Physi ,ll,.'::,l‘.l .r u .•on. Vll:ce at it:Wl:lice. en ~.^ rint• •••tr..:et.--F. - . 3 , 1 . ef Main.. , .1 ., ,NN “... ' : I ~ . S l:.y I, 1.,71: ly• a E . I7 T T I T , eth iti•ortell atA Al umni= ba , o. Teeth extruded without pain. - VI D. l'A YNEI. M. D... 1 1 SuIk:FINI e .aver nntun Storo. I)(flee tiovs trona to 1:: A. `4, a::.1 trt , lTi 2 to 4 rate ration given t' 111-1--I.l.trESi DISEASE:, TE E Elf k TflE EAR - - V NJ • R 17 . A N , eurNTY 11.4 .sattirrtny of em•ti 11101.1. h. over Turner o.3r4uu's Drug Sitar, Ttrknutla,•ra. ". T. wa,.4a, .rtulP 2P. IS7N. . . S. RUSSELL'S GENERAL - . INSURANCE AGENCY Vf 1 ... • 7A • r F ißsr NATIONAL BANK, TOW AN DA, PA (A I'ITAL PAID IN 41freri unusual facilities for the trans it I:ca of a general bauking'husiness. J. POW Prebldeut )111S. TL I'EET, LA (' lla ¢ uI , PIANO 31 V6I C, T ERM S.—f 10 per term. Third street, Ist ward.) T.,, aTi.t, Jan. 1a:79-Iy. ET . YOUR kJ Jo.n PRINTING at the REPORTER OFFICE, oppoldte tau House, Towanda. Colored work a fiporlalty 'COODRICH & HITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME XLI. Ugder the blue New England slaw', Floated with sunshine a valley lies. The mountains clasp It, warm and sweet, Like a sunny child to their rocky feet. MI Three pearly I tea a hundred streams Lie on Its quiet heart of dreams. Its mesd.,ws are greenest ever seen ; • Its harvest fivis have the brightest sheen ; DE= Through Its trees the softest sunlight shakes, And the whitest lilies gem Its lakes. I love, oh : better than the words can tell, Its every rock and grove and dell; But most I loyo thetorge where, the rill Conies down by the old brown elder mill • Above the clear springs gurgle out • And the upper tncadows wlnd.about . ; Then Join, and under.wlllows flow • • •Iloundknolls where hlue.beachi Whipstocks grow, To rest In a shaded pool that keeps. The oak trees clasped In Its crystal deeps. Sheeer twenty feet In the water falls• Down from the old dam•, broken walls, Spatters the knobby bowldera gray, And, laughing, cites in the shade away Under great rocks, through trOut poola still, With many a tumble down to the mtlf. All the way down the nut trees grow, And :.flubrels hide above and below. BENJ. M. BECK Acorns. beechnuts, cheslittite there Drop all the fall through the hazy alr'; And burrs roll down with curled up leaves, 4 In the mellow llght l ot harvest eves. Forever theretLe 4111, old trees Driuk a , s lue of peace that has uo lees 1311132 111 the roadside stands the cider Where a lowland Slumber waits the rat ; DERV,X, , A great brown building, two stories Me, Ou the western bill-face warm and dry ; JOUN F. SANTMESON Aud odorous piles of apples there Fill with Incense the golden air; And heaps of pumice, mixed wlth.straw, • T. their amber sweets thedatc tiles draw. , The carts back up to the upper duor4 . And spill their treasures in on the loor. is. Down through the toothed wheels hey go Tu the wide, deep cider press bet+. ' ' And the screws are turned by slow degrees Down on the straw-laid cider cheese; . '• And each with turn a fuller strealp Bursts from beneaththl; groanimfbeatn. An atpher stream the gods might Gip, And fear no motrovrs parched II ; It 1 . Rut whurefore'Vdsu, Those fdle Ills Were soulless '..0 reai; l tiew England buys. What ria , sic guid i--...et ever felt . SOch trilling tou'eld.s Iluitigh It melt, ) el, 27, 79 As throb electric along a straw, Whet ,the boyish lips the chlei draw? ft ovll-75 The years are heavy , with weary sounds, Alia their discords Itte's sweet music drowus; Itut yet I beat, cdt: meet, oh: tweet, The rill that bathed rny hare, brown feet ; Anil yet tLe cider drips and falls— tln :ay Inward ear at Interval.s And 1 lead at times In a sad, sattet dream, To the that little stream; And I sit In ixfslolied autumn still, tlie surmy 4dor'of the chler How I Became a Murderer. ." Thou shalt do no murder." I suppose that the response which sane men and women. make in church to the sixth commandment is about the emptiest and most formal prayer of which they are ever guilty. Ask yourself, reader, if .. you have the faintest ghost of affiiticy in you that, under any Concelviible, or imagina ble, combination ; of impossible cir onmstanNs you eppld eVer pray with' weaning ,to be alivered from the temptation to murder in cold blood a fellow-man or fellow-wonian. You have read history, and you read the newspapers, and you know that mur 'ders arc not uncommon things; But, nevertheless, you think of' them as belonging to an outside world, with which 'you—otherwise than as a just possible victim—cannot possiblyhave any sort of concern. You 'would as soon think of praying to be delivered from the sin of witchcraft as froth 1-I , ,tsiotKe y'll l'7B IMMEM the sin of murder. They are, alike, impossibilities to yop. Of course, I assume you to be oft the type of the average reader-sane. but for a few harmless' and prot4ly, wholesome crotchets, educated in the ideas and feelings of your time aind country, and in sympathy with them; 'respec table and prudy t nt in all weightier matters, and as .;comfortable, within and without, as the nnijority of your neighbors. If I w+ to tell you that you are a poVntial murder er, you would not 6 - en be angq with me—you would imply smile at such an absolutely -preposterous no tion. And so.4n the face of such an. accusation, should I have smiled- . once upon a tithe. Judge for yourself if I should not have had the right to sunlit. My name, by the way, is . ; ;Vlfred Lam -1 I Ili EIN TOWANDA. PA 8125,000 66,000 N. N. BETTS, Cashier. Aril 1,157.9 =1 THE CIDER MILL. —.l , dan O. Whit thr consider my name as of some con,equence to my argument, because I happen to be oink of a fam ily which can- carry back its history. for an exceptionable number of gen erations. and without-being able to name a single member of it who was not perfectly respectable and per fectly sane—not taking into account a ,t'ertain hereditary , tendency to let ourselves be imposed on and our mo ney slip unaccountably through our fin!rers in' the most contented man ner. 1 should say that our family characteristics were steadiness., pm- KAITII, alit dence, and plain common sense, corn- I It. was too hot to work very-desper binul with a somewhat inconsistent ately after an early ]inner ; and I indifference to becoming higher or lam afraid I must confess that the,,,! richer than we find ourselves at start-1 rich blue of the sky without, the s 4 inn. But of course we have our dis wind that scarcely took the trouble 1 tinguishing Marks among ourselves. to carry the weight of its own scent 1 I. am a solicitor • and I cannot at thiough the window, the caw. of the this-moment calf to mind a case of a rooks on their way home, and th l e man's being,murdered,at l least in the regular heave and rush of the, sea flesh,. by a solicitor. I live quietly, against . _the wall of rocks ,close,, and in hazimony with all my tastes united to set me dreaming of any and, inclinations, in a little place f thing but of gains. I -was myself close to the seal and am; as I . have ;in love, remember, and Venus came , -always been, particularly strong .and from the sea much on such an after healthy„and tond of using my limbs noon. • without entirely neglecting my brain. I had a clerk in the outer office, I have a few cupboards in my house,' who was also in love, and whom 1 but have never had the ghost of a strangely suspect of having been skeleton in one ofthem. I have no sleeping, too. Our office was cur turn for dissipation, and am-quite as tainly not conducted on the ordinary well off as I want to be. In spite of j principles of hurry and open eyes— my profession, I am, and always hate a client from the outside world .did been, absolutely without an enemy, i nat call once_ a quarter, and was not_ which may be partly accounted for -particularly welcome when be came: by the fact that I have exceedingly I, At any rate,-Tom Brooks looked as few neighbors and scarcely any cli-1 if he were Still . dreaming when he cuts, my practice consisting in a I stumbled into my own. room and semi leal, send-agricultirratsteward - startled me with— ship to g the best and dearest friend II . "A -strange lady, Sir; and to see ever had in the world7—friend,s,, I \ i • . \ :. - i i • :_:.. I V , , I N ' should say, for his wife-is as dear to me as if she were .my own sister, and his children as if they were my own. Whom should I ever have been tempted to murder, and why ?' Put the same question to yourself of your- self—and answer it if you can. My. friend was Sir Reginald Ger vase—of course you must allow just as much accuracy' to my , proper , names as you please: He had one of the largest estates hi Foam.shire, and lived mostly at SL Moor's, a splendid place near Spendrith, which is on the wildest and rockiest part of 'that grand and magnificent coast, as all the world knows. My description of him is short—he was, literally, the best and finest fellow in the whole world. Werel Lady Gervase writing this story, I have no doubt she would say a.great deal more of him - ; mine must be a man's praise of a man. He. had not a single fault that I could ever discover, and yet was as far from being a prig as the South is from the North Pole. He was near ly my match—which is saying some thing—in point or chest and biceps, and infinitely more than mine, or most men's, in brains; and his heart was larger still. I sometimes used to think it his single misfortune that, lie was so rich and so happy and so full of sense of all the duties that his birthright had throivn upon him. Had the fortune left him the strug gling barrister that he was when e i first met him in London, he would have made himself a great man, in- stead of merely growing intb some-1, thin°. Much (Treater. For he had by' no means been born to a Baronetcy and the ownershsp of St. Moor's. He unexpectedly inherited it from a cousin of about his own age, and'a parently as strong and as healthy p himself, who had been struck Born by death when hardly thirty years old. It was a change to turn most men's.brains, and to send half of them to the devil. Sir Reginald took his wealth and his position with less elation than he bad taken his first brief, Went abroad for a while, and then came back to settle down for good at St. Moor's. Tile first thing 'be slid—which. was in an hour or two I:•was to become first favorite of the' whole country, and that among his poorer, even more than among his richer, neighbors. The next was to send for, me, then managing clerk to .a London firm, to be his friend and counselor. The next was to marry, as wisely as man ever did in this world. He had fallen over head and ears in love with the best girl in all England,- and she with him, Before long they had a family of two boys and two girls, and were fortunate in them all. The eldest was. Called Reginald, bf course, being a first-born Gervase. The nest was called _Marion; after Iter mother. Then came my own god son, Alfred, and then Nora. Their names have nothing to do with the Matter, but it is pleasaq for myself to write them.. It is hardly more to the purpose than to say that-I; tog, was on the eve of marriage, after a long and weary waiting, but this, too, I like to tell, because this also was due to the position in which Sir Reginald had placed-me. What did I not owe to him ? Past, ;present, future; everything that.l like to re member, all my; happiness now and to come. The one trouble he ever crave me was the feeling that I could do . so little for one who had done so much for die. Anybody could have looked after his atthirs as well as 1. I was never, likely to be so much to him as the mouse was to the lion. In fact,, the hardest work I ever did for him was all pleasure and play, except that he made me feel its inter est and importance by throwing him self- so heartily into all that concern ed the smallest cottager or fisherman with whom be had to do. ne looked upon life as a trust not merely to be, fulfilled but enjoyed, and his wife agreed with him. I hardly know which we learned to like best—our task's or our pleasures. That he liked the tasks best, I am sure. tAtid I.ani sure, too, that if Sir Reginald tiervase, even in this nineteenth cen tury', had taken it into - his head to declare war against .the queen, there is not a man within ten miles of Spendrith who would not have turned rebel. For two months every Summer St. Moor's was left empty while the mas ter and mistress were in town, for they were by' no means people who looked upon rusting and falling out of the great world's stream as one of the duties of those sho have to do their best with the course of a •eoin• paratively sma.ll one. 'Lough I 11 U I wed or their ab. _Aem, 1. approve, sense, for I could net get. rid of my ainbitiOn for my friend ; it would be something if, as member of Foam 'shire, he could have the chance of doing for England some little of what he was doing for one of her -re- Inoter corners. One warm afternoon, while they were away in town, I was engaged alone in my (ace with some drainage plans, half at work upon them, and half thinking about what I could do, in the face of an ap proaching election, to get Sir Regi nald Gervase to stand for Foamshire„. 11l isset VOU !" i • TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST p, 1880. It is hard to wakenp all at once. For a moment I almost took for granted that it could be nobody but my Lottie, who had managed to fiy• through the window all the way from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, at the other end of the Kingdom ; • what other lady, a stranger to, Tom Brooks, could want to see me ? But a mo ment more told 'me the absurdity of such a fancy ; so I stretched myself, rubbed my eyes, - and said sharply, " Then wak6 up and show her in." She came in, with a silky rustle ; and I had certainly never seen her beforh. She Lottie; indeed ! I never can" guess a woman's age, so I must content myself with saying that my visitor could not Possibly have been more than thirty-six or less •than twenty years old. She was of a mod erate height and graceful figure, and was dressed much more fashionably than we were used to round Spend rith—in a brown silk, with bows be himl and down the sides, a tight fitting jacket, and s t sort of, nonde script cross betwe ! a hat and a bonnet, from under Which escaped - a mass of fair brown hair—behind, is thick waves that tio*id down to her waist, and in front, in a fringe falling down to her eve-brows.' .Her face was a pretty one, on the whole, clear complexioned, fair,i and .btig,htly colored r i but her mouth was, at the same time, -too small and too full, her nose, too long, and hex dark eyes ayery great deal too large, as well as being too closely, set together. Still, the g eneral effect was decidedly good, and had to be called pretty, whatever else it relight be called, and however much it, differed from my own two standards of beauty—Lot tie Vane and Lady blervuse. My visitor looked grave and sad my na ture, as if she had a story, and that an interesting one. l sluiwed her a sent, and she sat down. " You are Mr. Laniboutn . , and you are a lawyel ?" she asked in a voice that made hei prcttinesal suddenly change into something More. It was a clear, liquid voice, with. some wilt of special' accent in it, and. a kind of, singing quality about her first words. "My name is Lambourn, and . I am a solicitor.' You call on business, I suppose ? Whom I have the honor • She opened a mother-of-pearl case and handed me a' card—" Adrienne Lavalle." " I come to ask your ad vice," said she. The name looked French; and yet, though she did not speak quite like an Englishwoman, her _accent was by no means distinct ly that of a foreigner. Who could she be, that she came for legal advice to Spendrith ? It is true that if any body does happen to be suddenly in warit of legal advice at Spendrith, he is Bound to come to me. b6wed anJ waited, and - she went on. - "1 am told that you arexible and honest," she said, " and, therefore, I come to you. You asked my name, and I gate you my eard. It' is one of my names, the name by which I am known.. I have one more. : My birth4iame 'is Ray—Juliet Ray. Did you ever hear the name before?" "Never in my life," said I. Then, before I tell you more, may I ask you if you are [lmi:wed to un tlertaki, as a lawyer and a gentleman, the cause of a woman against the racist cruel wrong that evercwas done by - a man? A cause that wilt give you honor and glory throughout the "Neer mind the'bonor and glory," said I. " The giestion is, , 'wbether I could find the time and snare the pains. ,Of course, I shall be glad to help to „get justice done, just for the sake of the thing', I.w.yer though I ,am. But I must hear the story ffist " You shall hear it ; and you shall hear why I come . to Spendrith for a lawyer_ sI did not supposejou would know the name of Juliet'llay. But I had my reason for asking, all the same. I wasnorn in London. I had a mother Mr. Lambourn; but no other relative in the world.. My mother was on the stage. I cannot tell you all, for I do not know ; but we were in Paris when my mother ' died, and when I was Seventeen years . old—without any, means to live, but 1 with the need to live you understand. 1 Perhaps you find it hard to believe, 1 but I was as innocent then asayoung [girl can b;." 1 I let silence imply assent;. but I i was certainly beginning to wake up, land to call my professional wits to getter. It was in Paris. that I met a young man—if I must call him so— who niacle love to me. I took him for a mail of honor. -He swore, Mr. Lambourn, a million times to make me his wife, in the sight of heaven and in the sight of man. In the sight of heaven he did make me his wife; and whtni we• were soon after in. London, he married - me in church, as he should have done before. He is a scoundrel !" • " But if he married' you at any time, he did Lis best to right you, it seems to me. -Well ?". , " Praust not call 'scoundrel?' Wait; see what you will call hits, if you' are a man! We went abroad again—to Paris, to Vienna, to twen qcy places—and then one day he. left me, never to return." " lle deserted you? You did not hear from him again ?" From him ? No ; never one word. Of him? No; tot for many years ! lie _left me to live as best 1 1 could, without the means, but with all the need, once more. Perhaps you, will not tinti it hard to believe that I was no more as innocent a fool as at seventeen." Again I let assent be implied in silence ; so much I did not flnd„ it bard to believe. " But I hear of him at last, and he, is married again I" '- -" You meari. that • you wish your . husband tO.__•b prosecuted for biga my ?" " No, Mr. Lsmbourn. I mean that I will haVe my rights, and that I will have my revenge ! That is what I mean !" And I Could see, beyond any ques'. , tion, that it _was what she did mean. If her story was true, she had cer tainly been ill-used; but, all the same, REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. I wished she had not come to me. I felt that, from the beginning, 1 bad not liked Miss, or Mrs., Lavelle. " I don't care about taking crimi nal matters," I said, rather coldly. "There are plenty of solicitors in the county. And if you want—since you speak of your rights—to make any sort,of profitable compromise, I must decline your case on any terms. However, as you come for .present advice, I suppose you can prove your marriage ?' " I can prove it as surely as that I live 1" said she. "I have my lines. Will that do?" "Certainly they will do. You will have to prove the second marriage, too—" "He won't deny that," said she, with a smile. " And he won't deny that I sm.l; and if he does, he can't deny that I was alive when his crime was committed ; and if he:does, there are scores and scores who will know. You ask me why I come to Spend ? It is- to . make sure—to have him under my - hand. I have not found him out and tracked him down to let himlgo again. And 1 come to you, because you are here ; because you can watch for'me. When I have my rights, you will have Aura too, never fear." So she had set down my reluCtance to undertake her ease "to a fear of not being sufficiently well paid? If I had not much liked her before, I liked_ her exceedingly little now. And who at Spendrith could possibly have been guilty of big,rmy, and of deserting a 'wife abroad ? I knew every living creature in the place— there was not one whom 1, could connect in the wildest , fancy with Mrs. Lavalle. " Who is the man yoit say is your husband?" asked I.• I suppose she thought that ,her last words had refreshed my interest in her ",The scoundrel who is my Lus band ?" said she. ." There !" A little theatrically she Lid a doc ument before me. It was a perfectly good and authentic copy of a register of marriage solemized at a London church between inlet . Ray, spinster, and—Reginald Gervasel My eyes seemed to darken and swim. What could it mean ? As she sat tchere, triumphant - in her coming vengeance or in her greed, I thought and thought; and the more I thought, the more clear the meanings grew. Some months before the date of the marriage my friend had been in !Paris, I knew. Just before the, same date he had returned to town And then there was' his long subsegdent absence abroad for nearly a WholOcar. But, still, Was . Reginald Gervase, who held diity to . be evenabove hOnOr—if such a thing can be-a . !flan who - , under any circumstances, wpuld, when he found himself suddenly rich and in a high position before the world, rid himself of any woman—whether his wife or not, and even if he had learn ed to hate and scorn her—by leaving her to starve? No doubt she must have been false td him first. But even so, the pride 'of my own life had gene ; every illusion I darkened, at such a shadow as this must be. Perhaps he had thought her dead:. But no, that could not' be unless he had willed very hardi indet to think her so. " Leave me this paper,' s aid I. " Call on me again to-morrowlat ten; I will think over what you bave told 'me. Excuse me noir." " Yon will -undertake the case, then ?" , - • "I will -- (ty.to` do whAever is for the best, Miss Lavalle." " Who is Miss Lavalle ?" asked she, as she left me: " I am Lady Gervase." I locked the copy of the register' in a safe, where' I kept my own pri vate personal papers, shut up my office, and went out to walk myself cool. -I had met with a skeleton from St. Moor* indeed I I could see the whole miserable history as if it had been written out for tne., The young .barrister had Made a fool of himself, as many otherwise wise men 'have donee{,.,. lie had been entrapped by this woman -In Paris. • Perhaps the pitifulness of her unprotected condi tion had imposed upon him quite as much as tier bright . cheeks and her great black eyes. -She bad stuck to him and drawn him into marriage; no doubt.his sense of honor had help ed her, however' much his reason Must have opposed her. It was slit, no.doubt, who had swallowed up the whole of his little fortune and kept him under water. It, was she who had been the cause of those long va cations in ' Paris, which he used to ' make even during his term time. Anti then, when fortune came to him, he had gone abroad to hide what had, no doubt, proved a disgraceful, mar riage. And then, no less beyond doubt, he had discovered unfaithful ness in her and bad-Jeft her, half ashamed, half relieVed, twsuch a man would have left such a woman, aim ply;. utterly, and Without a word of blame. And then true love had come into his heart. Perhaps he really be lieved his first wife dead. Perhaps the belief was too' much due to the wish—who knows? It was not for me to judge 11,tginald Gervase. knew the man as he was, whatever he had done, however weak lie might have shown himself in one thing. • And what was I to do? Nothing? Nothing? When 1, and I only re alized the nature of the blow that was about to fall ? On the one hand, there was the true Reginald Gervase, my more than friend, brother, and father, who bad ,plainlvbeen able to free himself of the old shadow, trust ed, honored, loved by all the world, whose whole life was a growth in goodness and usefulness,'and whose loss would be public as well as pri vate, and felt none could guess how far round his home. There was the wife, who believed ii him as a hero, and who loved him with her whole heart and soul. There were his young children—what need I say of them ? On,the other hand, there were ruin, scandnl,the dock, the prison cell, a wife's broken heart, and four child ren's lives blasted for all their days ; =II and only because a worthless woman bad not died. The thing looked too hideous to be possible; and I dream ed of such a word as—nothing I Well, thank God that be was not at St Moor's. Every day delaye&was a day gained, if only for thinkint what could be done. I was walking along the narrow coastguard path' overh#nging the sea, which was the shoitCst cut from Spendrift to the nearest market town, when I was met by a lad who acted as rural postman, and who stopped me with a letter. I took it with scarcely a word of good even ing, and opened it absently. "Dear Lambourn "—I read with out even taking heed of the bind writing—" Cone .line in baste to say that we shall all be hOme to-morrow evening, almost as soon as s this reaches you. Everything's all right, but Jenny - would rather be safe at home just now, and so would I. Look me up for a weed, there's a good fellow, about nine, and we'll have a good big talk about the ,ilrains. I feel like 'a - school•boy off for the holidays. 1 R. G. It was like. destiny. Be and his wife—yes, I would still call her so— were hurrying back full sail into the storm. I knew what their coming back sooner than usual meant; it was One of Gervase's. crotchets that all bis children should •be of Foam shire, and of their home bred and born. Well, that made matters 'worse a thousand times. He wasacoming where that woman—l could not call her his wife—was waiting to lay hands upon him and to destroy him more terribly than even she could dream. I was not to see her again til the next day, and I did not know where she was to be found. I sui). pose I _bad acted stupidly ; but it is bard to keep one's presence of mind where one!a heart is concerned too deeply. how could I meet Gervase this very night with this terrible secret upon me-? I Could nat. And yet what right hid 1 to leave him in his fool's paradise for n single avoid able hour?• I tried to' ask MySel what I should have donetad I been simply his lawyer` instead of his And I could find no answer GM IL seemed strange that the thunder o the sea, as it rose 'higher and Eiger with the advancing tide against the cliffs, did not change 4ts tone. The letter-carrier could not have left me many minutes--long as they seemed—when he came running back breathlessly,shouting and point ing behind him with his arm. " Mr. Lambourn !" he panted out, " there be ? some un down yonder on the Carao - f sus lone as lone, and not half an h: ur o' tide!" 1 . I *as 8 rtled out of such_thoughts as eken ra he. I knew every inch of that i coatt as-well as if I had . been a smuggles: f the old times, and no body whO knOws the cliffs about. Spendritfit needs telling what being alone on the Carricks means within even any hour_ of high ' tide. The Carricks are a point of rather low rocks, projecting something like the 'blade of a' scythe, or,rather like the pointed ram of an ancient galley, from the base of the cliff, easily to be reached within about, , A.vio hours of the highest tide; but;lafter that, breaking the calmest sed into a rage, and entirely Cut off from reach either from above' or below. At absolutely full tide the most shoreward of these rocks was a full two fathoms under high-water line. ,The cliff, itself a promontoliy;rose up sheer from the rocks for 'Soke distance, then bowed out over them, sand then finished its course of. , some hundred and fifty feet to the overhanging • path on which I was itandinff. All: these meant, in a dozht words,' that he who found himself atone on the CaNriclia half an hour before the tide tuilted I would be a dead man in half an Ithui, :or there was no point among the network of currents which the strong est swimmer could hope to gain. " Who is it?" I asked. you tell ?" "I couldn't see for, sure ; but it looked .to seem like' Lucy Green that keeps company , with Master Brooks—" " A woman—good God !” • In this peril, at least, something - might pos-' sibly be done. As fast as I could , cover the ground I was at the coast guard-station, only to find a single old-sailor on what was by courtesy called.duty, a strong fellow enough,' with any quantity of rope at hand; but what could two men do ? •. Nothing, certainly, without trying.' We could carry to the _edge- of the cliff rope enough to reach the Car ricks twice over. But that was little. How could a woman, even if she had the courage, fasten herself safely to it, and keep herself from being dash ed to pieces against the face of the cliff on her giddy upward journey ? And hoW,pould one man reach her, with but one pairof hands to hold to the rope above him ? Happily, the sea was tolerably calm ;. otherwise, considering the' shortness of the time at our disposal, nothing could have been done. It was only too certain that'somebody was there. The letter carrier: was positive that he had twice seen a woman on the rocks ; the secoal time, while I Was - on my way to the coastguard station, he: had seen her trying to clamber farther out sea ward, as if' she had become fully aware of her danger, and was trying to place herself where she might hav,e a chance of being seen from the atshore. I. looked t my watch, and the sailor looked out to sea. There was no boat to be signalled, and not nearly time to Obtain one for our selves and to row round. The question of the boat was set tied in a single look from one to the other.. But the same lOok set the sailor's wits working. "Run to the station," he said to the letter-earrier, " and get all the oars you qin lay your hands on, and bring theriyhere, and look aliye." He craned over the edge of the path, and so did kthough more cau tiously ; but there were no means of seeing anythrng more in that way. The sea hal already risen in a surge of white foam and dark greed cas cades over nearly the Whole length . . - . . \ . -, - 1 .I\ll,\\. ...• • , ' . - of the rocks below, so that any pris oner upon them must have been driven for respite from death under the bulging part of the end, where she would be altogether. out of sight of all but 'The senulls. Then the .old sailor looked out westward, where a broken patch of white and _gray cloud seemed to be rising from the sea into the sky , in the shape of a spire. "The wind won't be here tilt after the turn, Sir," said he. ."There won't be so much swing on - as there might be." Ile pat his hands to his mouth and shouted downward, but no an swer returned. "Where's-that young slug with the oars?" I could only hope he had some plan. I certainly could think of none. Perhaps, though as i anxious as any human Creature mustte when a man or woman is drowning under his, eyes, and when he can do nothing but, wait above and listen for the dead heave of full tide against the 'cliff to tell hini all was over, I may not have been. so absorbed in the emergency 415 I should have been two or three hours ago. What was a moment's struggle with the sea compared with that worse than death against which I was trying to put out my hands no less in vain ? I was not, I feel sure, at that moment con -seionsly thinking of the greater peril in the immediate. face of the less ; but that it was the greater which had' well-nigh paralyzed me I know. At last the lad hurried back with four long oars. The old sailor laid them all together, fagot-wise and bar wise, over a'cleft in , the edge of the path, so that the bundle of oars might serve 4. 0 i one strong beam,' and that the rope might run through the cleft for a groove before swinging from the projecting rim of the cliff out into the air. The beam of Spars was kept from being pulled forward instead of downward by the form of the path which rose up slightly to ward the edge, and by the :chance— on:which the whole plan depended— that the natural gutter 'ran between two ears of crag just high enough to serve as posts for the beam behind them. He fastened one end of our longest line , of rope, with practiced skill round the middle of the oars; he bad already made the other end into a noose, as soon as his •ready eyes had taken in" at a glance the chances of the ground..:' He paid out the whole rope over the' edge of the cliff; there was no time left for argii lug who should go down. Indeed, I felt as if forced by an irriplse from outside myself to take that matter into my own hands. It is true, I was a great deal younger and by so much more. active than the old tar, who was still as strong in the arms and shoulders as tugging at the oars can make 'a: man, but had - certainly not been in the habit, as I had been, of spending hisleisure in clambering an :King rocks instead of staring through a spy-glass at the oiling ; so* that I was likely to feel a great deal more at home among the nulls and cormorants than he. There was every reason for placin g him at the fast head of the rope, and me at the noose!. Bat had it been otherwise I should have stood upon my rights,, as representing the'lord of the manor, to do as.h pleaseda . boye the - ine of high water. Do something I must— something, anything which,;. had the semblance of helping a living crea ture, however unconnected it might be with the storm - that was gather ing.over the head of my friend. 'As I have said, there was no .time left for a needless words; I took my way, and, resolutely thinking of nothing but of keeping my eyes Hied on the the highest,visible part of the end, -was ; beforca word was spoken, let 4ing myself: down the rope with my knees and bands. It was not that I had room left in my heart to care, save in the most general way, for the woman on the Carricks. 1 was • in anything but a philanthropic mood, or in one that, would excite me to risk a sprained .wrist for any soul on earth but- Reginaid"Gervase. IL was all-sheer impulse; neither foolhardi ness on the one hand, nor courage on the other.. I claim no credit for the climb; . rather blame. It could in nowise be of .the smallest help to Gervase ; on the contrary, I was risking the only life that could in any way hope to . aid him. . Only I had no hope__ for him left in me, in the face of the proofs and of the . - woman. whose hands they were. It all came from just what I have said, the overwhelming hunger. for action .of any sort or form. 'Of- course our idea was to fasten whomever I might find below to the loose end of the rope, in hope-that the sailor, with whatever help the letter-carrier could give him, would be able to draw her up, and then let down the rope again, so that I might follow. With a view to the first part of the work, I carried_ doWn with me a second rope to fasten. to the noose and to act as guide from,. below, so that she might not swinglgainst the face of thceliff.on her upward jour ney.. As tot my own return7l might manage a good deal by climbing, or I might, at any rate, be pulled up far. enough to swing above the tide until further help should come. At last I stood upon the last slab of slippery - rock - which thi- sea had not wholly covered. There was just room enough upon it for two. And I stood faire to face with Adrienne Lavallenay, I must call her so— Lady Gervase. • Why had she been brought here, out of the reach, of-all aid but mine? - W hy had ihe tidings of her peril been brought to me? What was the true nature of that impulse which had' brought nie—men of all men— face to face with her thus, and here;? . her Think of the first sentence o i t this history! We were absolutely,'titter ly alorne together, unseen even froth the cliffs that rose up betwed us two and the whole world. Her secret was known to me alotie ; its Iproof was in my own hands.- - If she had died there unaided, what would have signified the lciss.of a woman such as she? Why had she not been left there to die ?., And.if she was left to live—in one. *instant I saw the whole of that vision upon which - my mind had been dwelling ever since " Could Sl.OO Par ,Arli11101:111 Advance. she had left me—the ruined lives, the broken hearts, all the .world's loss, all the shame, all the cruel pun ishment of an' innocent mother and her children for the weakness of a good man. I had despairod of help. ing, them all. But what! was that now ? Nothing, less thali nothing, when I realized that all kills storm, would burst upon them, no longer froth the hands of this woman, be cause she lived, but from my hands, because I did not let her die ! _ Would there not be something um speakably mean and cowardly in pre ferring the perfect Serenity of my own selfish conscience to the lives of those to whom I owed more than even alvorse sin-for their sake could repay ? Surely the ways of justide are not the same as,human Jaw. For the sake of - others we 'must punish what, for the sake of others, We must cull crimes; • but we do not call, crimes necessarily sins, and what we condemn with our cold,. reason we,. may in our, hearts and souls approve. At last I could - do all things for Re ginald Gervase. -Virus I too flinch, so that 'tau weakness Should let loose upon shin all from which could save him, and that in such a way that he would never ever guess the peril in which he had been ? I swear that I,felt as if for this very purpoSe she had, as if by Providence, been delivered into My, hands. only that wretched lad bad never caught sight of her? But was I to let Ouch a miserable chance as that destroy- Reginald GervaOe ? What -was I there for - but to counteract chance, and to do all things for him?. Sup pose I did murder her, • what; but good would have been done ? I, did not shrink from thinking of the thing by its name.. I had completely cool ed my blood by now. What she read in my lace know not: But something she must have read, for it was very .far frOm the birth of a hope of rescue that I saw. in hers She seemed looking through - my eyes into my heart, as if she fear ed it more than - the sea. Neither of ' us spoke a Word - ; hitt, meanwhile, the sea itself 'rose and rose, and the wind began to rise too., . I was absolutely - Making plans: I lea* her there—it would not be my 'fault if she were found, drowned. The body 'could . be - recovered at low water, and buried; and nobody would be the wiser. I must give, up lottie, of cOurse; it was one - thing to com mit a murder, but quite, another to make her the wife 'Of a 1 - murderer, even though of one .who had right on his side I could take it - into my head to leave Engtand,,and should -soon be forgotten. . Can you - save me ?". she said at last: " What are youl;going to do with me ' . " I? ivith you ?" I asked—i" God ',knows. What are you doing With Reginald Gervase ? Lpok, the tide will:, be Avaist-high soon. I 'nm friend. Are your rights or is your Mlle dearer to you But I can't • trust you.", I turned faint' and sick at heart. How 'could nerve myself, even for his sake, lo„be strong enough to let this weak ittomar . i die? Suddenly a heavy wave 'swept. over the 'rock, brought - her toter knees, and would have carried her into deep water at I)nee had I not instinctively thrown-. the noose round . her and held. her so. It must be done, though; it wal some, weaker self that had saved her for a minute More. "';'ou can, save me, jtmd yOu 4 bid me spil.my rights for my life!" she Laid,` withceal scorn, and with a ' courage that startle& me. 'Yes ' you say truly;. you, are his friend. Like master, like man." Should I have held her there till she was dewub&? Should I have been able to face the unspeakable shame of returning to the cliff dione,. or should .1 have waited there untiil the tide had covered me' also ? I say to myself, and I 'say to you,, what I said to myself. God knows:. I trust, not; ?but 1 have never very confident ly believed in the • goodness of the good, or the' badness of the, bad, Or the weakness of the weak or the strength of the -strong, since that day. . " Ahoy, there! Hold on !" heard a shout, and the grind of ' wood on the rock, and the unshipping . of oars. I think we wete - ,botli - in the boat be fore we knew where .we were. • She was saved without my help, and I scarce know from what, if from anything ; I had been saved. . Sir Reginald i 1 mself was. at .the helm. What could Ido now ?. Ab °solutely nothing;i4t last, except give up everything to. despair. ' I waited for the storm to burit.even there - and then. It was simply to my amaze that no look or sign of recognition passed between the. husband and the• wife whom he—he, not I—had saved to destroy him._l waited in vain. "Thank God I saw you, from the yacht in time!" said he. "Ittivus like you old fellow, to try 'to break your neck for nothing,. but I don't think both of you could have got up without, damage. May I ask the name of the lady whom I have been 'lucky enough to—Allow-me to intro-_ duce myself." - "lam Lady Gervasel" she said with a scornful look at me. " I thank you, Sir, for saving my "'Lady Gervase!" "You seem snprised ? I am the wife of Sir eginald Gervase, of St. Moor's. ay I. know whom .1 have to tha or—" "I r 1 y must ask you to pardon me," sad he, courteously bewilder-. ed. "But Lady Gervase happens to be on board that yacht yonder. I am Sir Reginild Gervase." What could it all mean? If you reader, cannot guess, . you must be as blind as I have been. You must have forgotten my.telling you that Sir-Reginald had inherited St. Moor's from a cousin of his own age, and that Reginald was the fami ly name. If that cousin had chosen to die suddenly- before he had time to communicate with his wife or his friends, or to make a will, his wife was perfectly entitled to call herself Lady Gervase if she pleased ; but it could not possibly affect his hair be- yond compelling' him to pay d cer tain part of the personal estate to the widow, *lab he was able enough , i t V o. What a worse than afoot! had When I have heard people talk lightly of their temptationato do this or that, I have said. " The greatest find strongest temptation Dever felt Was to murder, in .cold' blood, a wo- man who had never done me a shad- ow of. wrong." People think me jest ing; but it ia trie. , --Licmdon Society. A MISSIONARY stationed at one of the South Sea Islands determined to give his residence a coat of white wash. To obtain this in the absence of lime, coral was reduced to powder by burning.' The natives, watched the process or burning with interest,. believing that the coral was' being cooked for them to eat. Next morn ing they beheld the missionary's cot, - tage glittering in the rising sun white as snow.,],, They'- danced, they. sang, they screamed with joy. The. whole island was in commotion Whitewash becaree the rage. Happy was the coquetterho could enhance her charms ty a ,daub of the white , brush. Contentions arose. One par ty-urged their superior rank; anoth er obtained possession cf the brush and valiantly held it againatill com ers; a third tried to upset the tub to obtain some of the precious cosmetic. To quiet, the hubbub, more white; wash was made and in, a week not - a hut, a domestic utensil, a war-club, . or a garment but. was white as snow ; not an inhabitant but , had a skin - painted in grotesque. figures ; not a pig that was not whitened, and even mothers Might be seen in eery, di- • ' rection capering joyously and yell ing with delight at the superior beauty of their whitewashed babies. NUMBER 11 How .AN ARAB LADY PERFUMES -11EusErs.. , --In the boor of the tent or hut, as it may chance to be, a small , hale is excavated sufficiently large to" contain- a common champagne bottle; - a fire of.. charcoal or of glow-.. ing embers is made within the hOle, into which'. the woman about to be .- .scented throws a handful of . drugs. She' then . lakes 'Off the cloth or "tope which forms her dress and crouches; naked over the fumes, while she arranges her- robe to fall as a mantle frZi!n her neck to the ground like a.tent,.. She _nbw - begins to pet:- spire - freely in. the hot-air bath, and, the pdresl . ofl the skin" being thuS opened and moist. the - volatile oil . - from the smoke of the . burning per-._ fumes is immediately absorbed. By. the time that, the . fire completed, expired the scenting process is completed, anUI both her person and her robe areerel dolent-withincense, with which they , • are so thoroughly impregnated 'that . [have frequently smelt a party of women strongly at full kundred yards distance .when the wind has been blowing from their: "direction.' —Sir William _Baker. Children's Fancies and Sayings. N'Vusv is the worst thing about - rich est" asked the Sunday School - su . perin- .• tendeut. And the no* " boy said : Their. scarcity." "MUTABLE Schoolmaster : "Now, Men, stupid, what's the next ' word? What comes titles cheese?" Dull boy : A. 1- - mouse, sir.' How do' you define ' black as your hat ?' " said-.a schoolinaster to one of-his • - pupils. "Darkness that may be felt," replied the youthful wit. li.xxsasSehoOl teacher : "Where does your grain go to ?" "Into the - hopper." - "-What hopper?" . "Graishopper,7 tri- - umpliantly shouted. a-scholar. A NEW pair of shoes fora live- - year-old.r-old. He tried them on ; and finding his feet were in very close quarters, c)nirn cd, " Oh, my ! .they are so tight I Can't wink ,my toes." Youxo lady visitor (reading the para-. Me of the Pi odlgal Sou) r —"A.nd he would -- • - fain have - eaten of the ,husks that the - _ swine clid eat." Small boy • (to teacher) - Why diddle not kill one of the pigs r (Young lady visitor much shaken): A GALVESTON school-boy persisted ilk.: throwing his hat,on the door, • until final- - ly the teacher chastised him: severely. '• " Now," said the breathless teaCher, - "do you know whore your hat ought to have - been?" • "Yes, sir ; inside clothes, sir." z. . ONE of the lady teachers in a Rena, Nevada, public school, a feiv days ago . was laboring with an urchin on the sci ence .of pimple division. This is what • came ofit :." Now, Johnny, if • ydit had an .orangi Which you _wished tol divide with, your little sister, how - much would you give per?" Johnny—" A suck." RE.am,f-a.-Pact this Time:—Rise of in tellect in the Midland Counties.—Dioces an Inspeetor : ," And what , happened , when they came to Paphos?" Child : "St. Paul struck Blymas - the sorcerer blind." Inspector : What did he strike him blind fur:"'- Child: "Because he sauced him, sir."—,Ludy, • " • Ronmiaged three .years, has . attended Sunday School one or two months. He is an apt scholar, and gives early promise of bearinr , rich_ and ethical fruitage. play - with an older brother the other day original Adam so far got the better of sd as to cause- him to clinch his little fist .and strike his brother. lirother'Tom was about to re- .. taliate with his more formidable weapon, when, Robbie cried out : "No, no, no' Teitelter says oo mu't n't strike back when oo is hit." h TEItE is a good deal of human nature inateu-year-lqld girl. The Browns were discussing at the- breakfast table how nitro r conference delegates' they would try to entertain. Two, four and six"were the numbers, before the house, and ,the -genecarsenßinent, seemed to be in favor of the smallest number. Little ten-year old, however, stoutly advocated the max, imum number. - We have three spare beds and might as well take six. Take six, mamma. Please do?" "Well," re- .' sponded the matron, "if you will wipe . the . dishes each time, we will." Ten- ' year-old immediately began to sink down-, in her chair until her head. almost disap:" bared - under the table.. " How many ; shall we take?' asks mamma: "One, was the whispered answer. Thoughtful Thought* Nucu charity winch begins at home is too feeble to get out doors, and much that begins out doors never gets into the 'home circle. No humility is perfect and proportion ed bUt that which- makes us hate our selres as corrupt, but respect ourselves as immortal ;Abe humility that kneels in the dust, but gazes on the, skies. I As every thread of gold is valuable, so is every minute of time ; and as it would bergreaf folly to shoe horses (as the .10- man Emperor Nero did) with gold, 'so it is to Spend, time in trifles. MovNTAINS never shake bands. Their roots may tobeh, they may keep together some way up, but at ' length they :_part company, and rise, nto individual, isolat ed-peaks. SU it is with great men.. PiursE.Gon for all your gifts, and use" them wisely and constantly. 'Then pray that you may do your work in life as in the sight of God. Peek to please and honor Him, put away all, selfish, motives. - Whether men sriiile or frown, go straight ahead, ~ a nd you have an approving conscience and at last a great reward. Ili rwEEN male and female, says a modern writer, there is a difference of kind only—not degfree. Man is- strong, woman is beautiful ; man is daring and confident, woman is diffident an unassum ing ; man is great in action, woman is suffering ; man shines abroad, women at home ; man talks to 'convince, woman to persulde; man has a rugged heart, a wo man a soft and tender one; man prevents misery, woman relieves it ; man has sci ence, walnut taste ; man has' judgment,- woman sensibility; man is a - being of jus tice, woman an angel, of mercy. •