SIP gUUISIJifil ffitlltlFSi F 7J 1 A'v Jf 0 11 T I ME R , Editor and Proprietor. rol. XV. The Bloohfield Times Is Published Weelily, At New Illooiu field, Fcnn'a. BY FRANK MORTIMER. strnscnrrTioN terms. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR! IN ADVANCE. AnVKRTIBIXG KATES. Transient 8 Cents per Hue for one Insertion. 13 " " " two insertions. 15 " " " tlirce Insertions. Business Notices In Local Column 10 Cents per line. Notiees of' Marriages or Denths Inserted free. Tributes of Respect, Ac., Ten cents per line. YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. One Square per year, including paper, $ 8 00 Two Squares per year, Including paper, 13 00 Three Squares " " 10 00 Foursquares ", " . " 20 00 Ten Lines Nonpareil or one Inch, is one square. The Reason Why. t Somebody a emsty old bachelor, of course inquires, why, when Evo was man ufactured of a spare rib, a servant was not mado at the same time to wait on her ? Somebody else, a woman wo imagine, re plies intho following strain : Because Adam never camo whining to Evo with a ragged stocking to be darned, collar string to be sewed on, or a glove to mend "right away, quick now !" Because ho never read the newspapers until the sun got down behind the palm trees, and then stretching out, yawned, "Aint supper most ready, my dear?" Not he. He make tho firo and hung the kettle over it himself, we venture; and pulled tho radishes, peeled the potatoes and did everything clso ho ought to do. Ho milked tho cows, fed the chickens, and looked after the pigs, himself, and lie never brought home a half a dozen friends to din ner when Eve hadn't any fresh pomegran ates, lie novo-, tt.iyed out till late at a political meeting, hurrahing for an out and out . candidate, and then scolded be cause poor Evo was sitting up and crying inside the gates. Ho never played billiards, rolled ten pins, and drove fast horses, nor choked Evo with tobacco sinoko. He never loafed around corner groceries whilo Eve was rocking little Cain's cradle- at homo. In short, he didn't think she was especially created for the purpose of waiting on him and wasn't under the impression that it dis graced a man to lighten a new wife's cares a little. That's the reason Evo did not need ahiied girl, and with it was the reason that Iter fair descendants did." Xot so Bad. Maeready's handwritng was curiously il legible, and especially when writing orders of admission to tho theater. Ono day at New Orleans, Mr. Brougham obtained ono of these from him for a friend. On hand ing it to the gentleman the latter observed that if he had not known what it purported to be, ho would never have suspected what it was. " It looks more like a prescription than anything else." ho added. "So it does," said Mr. Brougham, "lot us cro and have it mado up." Turning into tho nearest drug store, tho paper was given to tho clerk, who gave it a careless glance and then proceeded to get a phial ready, and to pull outrtiveru boxes. With another look at tho order, down pnmn a tincture bottle, and tho phial was half lined. 1 lien there was a pauso. Tho gen tlemanly attendant was evidently puzzled. At last ho broke down completely, and rang for his principal, an elderly and severe looking individual, who presently emorgod nom uio inner sanctum. Tho twowhisper ed together an instant, when tho old dis penser looked at tho document, and with an expression of pity for tho ignoranco of his subordinate, boldly filled tho phial with somo apoehayphal fluid, and duly corked and labelled it. Then handing it to tho gentlemen who woro waiting, ho said with a bland smile, " cough mixture and a very Ifood ono. Fifty cents if you please." AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY ottknl Elections. A MOTHER'S PRAYER, DY AIIIIY HAOK. riMiri (lowers are shut and bowed with dew. X The trees stand hushed, and tall, and dim, As in the soft and tender light. Two children sing their evening hymn. One singer's clustering locks am dark, And one has locks of golden hue; One looks through black and flushing eyes, The other's eyes are sweetest blue. Then joining hands in loving clasp, They mingle dark and golden hair, As bending at their mother's knee. They each repeat an evening prayer. One asks that o'er her little bed. The angels' gentle watch may keep; The youngest lisps, In reverent tone, Iiis " Now 1 lay me down to sleep," Deep In her heart the mother prays, While tear drops dim her lifted eyes; The listening angels gathered near Slay hear her voiceless prayer arise. She knows how weak arc earthly tie. The mother's love, how poor and frail And for her helpless littio ones. She seeks the love which cannot fall. She prays that, with His fondest eare. The lender Father up in Heaven, May help her guide to noble ends, The preciom lives his love has given. Thus from tiiat hushed and holy hour, Their softened spirits drink repose ' Till gently round thoir-hlending rornn The deeper shades of evening elose. My First Patient. A DOCTOR'S STORY. A N ORPHAN, almost from birth, atari J.. ago beforo my recollection, my grand . father, a man of largo property, had die I intestate, and to me, as tho lineal heir, tr.o property had fallen. In tho belief that this property was mine, Iliad grown up ',o manhood, a gay, light-hearted, impulsi vo fellow, who had never seen aught of liOo 'jut a bright, easy sido. Tho only touch of tho practical there was about ruo was a -pasision for tho study ot medicine, and th's I had pursued to a really considerable e j tent, for the mere love of it. Ono day, as I was rummaging among somo old papers in the 'ibrary, I happened to pull out from a corner where it had lain undis turbed for many a year, a paper, yo:iow and worn with ago. I unfolded it with idle cu riosity. There at tho end, was tho signature, firm and bold, of my grandfather, and above it my eyes read tho words that mado my brain spin liU-o a top, for it was tho last w ill and tcsta-jient of William Lannce, and it gave and bequeathed all hisjnoperty, not to me, but to Alicia Orton, a .person whoso very iiamo and existence wcro hitherto urJcnown to me. Tho shock was a severe ono in everyway, but most of all my prido was touched. I had lived on what was not my own all my days. Could I live another hour without giving up this property to its rightful owner? I was young and impulsive with a full sharo of that prido which had always been a leading trait of tho Launces, and I thought loss of what a mighty change this involved for mo than of dispossessing myself of that which was never mine. But who and whoro was th is A'l icia Orton? Who would know? Grandfather lawyer was dead, the witnesses were dead. " Bah ''. I said, impatiently, "Everybody in" dead. Ho, wait, there is old Aunt Rhoda, sho may know." And locking tho will carefully in tho drawer where I had" found it, I went in search of this individual. I found her knitting, smoking, and work ing with equal vigor in tho full enjoyment of undisturbed possession' of that chaotic region, her own room. At sight of me a smile of delight spread 2Vew Illooiuliolcl, Januniy 1870. over her broad dusky face, whoso color was ! nnely set oil by the snowy whiteness of her kinky hair. " Well, bress do Lord !" she said iovons- ly, " ef here aint my boy, a coirdii' to see me in my own room, de room bo irib mo all for myself. Set down, chile. Well, there, clairfor it, the chain is poofy much occu pied. 'Tis ma.in' how things cots licaned up with mo claim' up all the time. Yis, honey, jist turn dem tines Tito out on de floor. Dev aint much Vimnt iisf . Yr stockings I was gwine bo exit over for Nan cy's chil'cn." "Aunt Khoda," I said, as soon as I could get in a word, "do you. know, or did vou ever know a person by tho name of Alicia urton. " Lord, massy, yes I Well, no, not'zactly eider, but I know about do moder ob her, she dat was Margrj-et Reeves, an married a Orton, but oif or carried your grandfather. an' I'll Ray dat eC I am talkin' to you. But dar do Lord, Allows yo aint noways to blame, sodon't. ycr trouble verse! f. lioncv." said site, with the rambling garrulity of old age "Ought, to have married my grandfather? Why?" luaid, trying to bring her back to that head of her discourse. "Y!iy? Hadn't a man ortcr marry a gal wliou he hangs around her a vear or two, an d gets her so sho aint no eyes nor notlun' for nobody but him? His folks beat 1 ,im out of it, yer see. Nobody neber was rood enough for de Launces dem days. But lie repented on it, 'pend on dat. He nev ir took no comfort wid do woman he married, and neber was like himself artcr- w ird. But ycr aint in no wise to blame a'aout it, cf sho was yer grandmother, hon ey." Poor old aunt Rhoda ! Sho had always a soft placo in her heart for her boy, as sho always called me big and little." I began to see through this matter. My grandfather had willed his property to the child of his o!d sweetheart as an atonement. There was something of spite mingled with this moro Christian-liko spirit, I thought afterwards, when aunt Rhoda explained his cruel and complete ignoring of me, by in forming mo that ho never manifested tho slightest fatherly feeling for his own son my fathor, seeming only to regard him as tho child of tho wife ho hated. " Do you know where this Alicia Orton is now ?" I said again. " Wal, no ; yis, p"raps I do. 'Pears now I head Nancy say somethin' about a Miss Orton that was teachin music to Niss Price's chil'cn, when sh was down to Fairbank's on a visit. Nancy," sho said, elevating her voice to a higher key, "what was that mu sic teachin' Orton's fust name ?" And from somo invisible quarter camo back the fateful reply : "Alicia." "Aunt Rhoda,,' I said. " this nlaee. and all I havo so long thought was mine, is this Alicia Orion's. I havo discovered today, that grandfather left a will and by that will every dollar of this property is given to her." Tho good old creature's aged eyes filled with tears, and she rocked herself back and forth in a state of great dismay and sym pathy. " Don't yer neber say nothin' 'bout it, honey, neber. He hadn't no right to will his propel ty 'way from his own blood that way. I neber sco sich a topsy-turvy world as dis is. I 'claro for it I'm glad I'm 'most down to Jordan's shore. Dat's what your grandfather wanted to tell 'cm an' could n't, whar dat nr was. Ho had. a stroke you see. en' neber could speak or lift a linger nrtor it, an' all tho timo a tryin' to, three days" an', nights. Ho was an awful closo communioned kind of man. . Nober told nobody nothin'. J)oy asked him (his lawyer man died jint beforo ho did yer hoc) of dar was any will, an' somo thought ho meant yes, an' somo no, but dey neber found none, so nobody don't know nothing NEWSPAPER. 'bout it, an, don't you, honev. Mv 'vice is. jist say not hin' 'bout it. You've had it so long, and you ought to have it any way. r Blood is blood, 'member dat, my boy. "Aunt Rhoda," I said, feeling very chiv alrous and strong to do and dare, " do you suppose I'd live a day longer on what is another's? I'd starve first, there is not much danger of that. If a young girl can get her own living I should think that I might." Yis, chile, but yer sco that yer warn't brought up to it. Makes all tho difference indowoild.dat does," said aunt Rhoda, with a dubious shako of the head. But I paid littio attention to her croaking and a feverish hasto possessed mo to divest myself of my unlawful riches. I could scarcely bear the air I breathed, the food I ate, the houre I lived in. I communicated tho discovery of tho will at once by letter to Miss Orton, and commenced settling up matters as fast as possible preparatory to go ing to tho West which was then a popular El Dorado. I thought that I had knowledge enough to set up for a physician there. I did not wish to stay and meet my suc cessor. It did not seem to mo that I could face her, for I had a strange unreasonable feeling of shame at having kept her proper, erty from her so long. She answered my letter in a womanly yet business-like style, begging mo in a delicate manner to con sider the old place my home and remain there as usual. In return for this I wrote a cold, proud, letter declining the offer, and pledging my word that I would as soon as possible make up tho value of the only piece of property I had sold. Then I disposed of my guns, fishing ap paratus, and a number of other expensive articles which I did not see that a woman could have any use for and started, cutting myself adrift from all my old moorings and setting myself afloat on the world's untried sea, as ignorant of its shoals and deeps as a man could well . be. I settled in a Western town, and waited, till hope deferred, pride, disappointment and hard fare wrought such a change in mo that many an hour I sat doubting my own identity. " This way madness lies," and so at last I came to the rash resolve to leave a world which mado mo despise my self for my inability to conquer. Ono doesn't often como to suicide all at once except in lovo affairs, I think. Tho idea had haunted and dogged me for weeks. First it was a thought whose cntranco into my heart shocked me, and was shown out in high haste. Then, material objects be gan to haunt and tempt me. I got afraid of my littio medicino case there were cer tain littio bottles there that took on a strange fascination. Sometimes the gleam of a knifo in a shop window would give mo a turn " there's a short cut to death" I'd think. Get on, get on, for the lovo of llcavcn Launcelot Launce ! Then tho times grew harder and I never crossed a bridge but I whispered, "drowning is an easy death to die. A littio plunge and all is over." Set your foot quick on tho firm shore, Launcelot Launce, or never upon tho firm shoro shall you set your foot again! Well, I wrestled with and fought it for a while, then I dallied with it, and then I hugged it, and hero I was an able-bodied man, and all that, and about to kill myself because I couldn't get bread to put in my mouth. You despise mo ? So should I in your placo. I suppose hunger made me a little light headed. At any rate, tho strongest feeling I had as I sat aver my last stick of wood, with my pistol in hand, was that it really was a most stupendous joke, that I should be freezing and starving and about to take my own life. The idea of dining oil Sevres and silver ono New Years day, and commit ting suicido the noxt for want of a crust! To bo sure neither Sevres nor Bilver was my own but I had been laboring under tho mis take of supposing them to bo so all my life so the effect was tho same. (Term: IX ADVAXCE, I One Dollar tier Year. IVo. 1. I had a strange feeling at tho moment of sing not one, but three-tho me ofol.h.i. be time, tho me of latter days and the me contemplating these two former personnels', as ono might a couplo of his own photo- rapiis. "You wcro a gay, debonnair sort of f,1. low," I said, turning to one of these, "and merry uanco you mado of life, and if I ere to introduce you to this." tnrnino- the other, "It would be somewhat. .afWth;u fashion, self to selfs ghost." lu that hour which ono would nafiirniw havo supposed to be a solemn one, I was rauier possessed lof a feelimr of stran.m ,;. zrrelightness, and I laughed at fancy, while cAuuuneu my pistol with a touch almost caressing. At this moment a most remarkal.lo O.lnu- happened a most uncommon and unusual tiling. My office bell rang. I had waited so long in vain for this same event to occur that I had half a mind to treat it disdainfully, with' contempt at this eleventh hour. But after all when one plays at balance with life and death, each ono siroultl have a fair field and no favor, ko I laid my pistol by with a whispered " Wait !" and answered the summons. I recognized' the porter of-the- Darley House as I opened the door. " Yees wanted at the hoose." ho said, in his broad Irish brogue, "there's a grand letioy suit toryees." "Very well, Tim," I answersd as non chalently as if "grand leddies," were in the habit of sending for Doctor Launce nt nil hours, "I'll bo along directly." As 1 stepped back into mv room for mv overcoat, tho pistol shining on the shelf bcemeu somehow very different from what it had a few moments before. I even was conscious of a littio shudder as I glanced that way, and as I walked alone over t.bn crisp snow, the keen, bracing air seemed to rouse ana awaken rne as if from a night mare. But if I had any visions of achievimr n. professional reputation from tho difficulty oi tins providential case of mine, they were dissipated at once as 1 entered one of thn parlors of the Darley llouso and saw beforo mo my patient. .Never was tho seal of nei- fect health moro plainly set on lip and cnecK, or displayed in tho full flowing of a woman's figure than in hers who awaited me, half reclined on a deep luxuriant arm chair. . Doubtless my faco betrayed my astonish ment, for, dismissing the servant on some trifling errand sho said, tho roses deepening in her cheeks, and a shack) of embarrass ment perceptible in her voice, despite her assured coolness : "You are right Doctor Lannce. I am n-. more sick than you are. And yet for rea sons that I cannot explain, but which I as sure you art not in tho slightest degree re prehensible, I wish to appear so. "if you will only treat mo as nearly as possible as you would if I were afflicted with violent pneumonia, I will bo so very, very much obliged." Tho large, soft, brown eves looked plead ingly full into mine, and the rich voice was full of entreaty as sho proffered this singular request. I hesitated a little, moro from astonish r incut than anything else. " I pledge you my word you shall nevei regret it," she said, " not I" she addeda lit tio proudly. ' Just then the seivant re-entered. ' A well simulated Expression of pain crossed her fair face and she quickly put her hand to her (ijdo. , ' There was no time for further considera tion ; I acceptod the situation. Tho pain is almost constant , now, is ii not ?'.' I said gravely. Then seating my self at tho table, and remarking that I quite frequently put up my own prescription, ? proparcd a potion supposed to bo vctj- pow erful, but of course perfectly simple utnl harmless. V A littilo gleam of pleasure in her eye did ' " 'X .... -V - 4