2 Ijc tmcs, New Bloomftclir, ?cu Tho Doctor's Mistake. 66 "T'S of no use to talk about my JL being your wife, Charley. Your father never will consent, nnd mother will never even let mo boo you if slio can help it without his consent. No, you musu't coino a step further !" And pretty lloso Carter drew her arm out of Charley Ilulbcrt's very decidedly, when they reached the end of tho village com mon. "You know it almost breaks my heart to say it, Charley, but I don't think I can ever meet you so again. Mother will bo sure to find it out, and it would vex her so. And she has had enough trouble without my giving her any poor mamma !" Handsome Charley Ilulburt shrugged his shoulders impatiently. " Your mother comes before mc, of course! It is no matter how I feel. You way coolly that you can never meet me again. That means I suppose, that wo are never to seo each other again." " Why, no, Charley, if you will only havo patience to wait! Everything may como out right." " Wait ! You have been telling mc to wait for tho last two years, and things are no nearer coining out right than they ever were." " I can't think why your father should dislike my mother so. think mother knows, but sho never will tell mc. Miss Esther Wagg says that they were lovers once, and had a quarrel that your father can never forget. But one can't believe all Miss Esther's gossip." " I can't think it is anything more than a notion he has got into his head. He's a crotchety, set old fellow, but he's got'a good big heart, Hose, if one can only get nt it. If you were only my wife, ho would be suro to como round and think the world of you. If you would only marry mo, Koso 1 At tho worst if ho wouldn't conic around ho could only disinherit me, and I have a pair of good strong arms, and some passable brains to fight my way our way through the world. The moonlight showed him her face, and he fancied that there was a little shadow of hesitation on it. But sho shook her head firmly after a moment. " Now, Koso, darling, don't tell mo again to wait " Tho rest of the sentence was never spoken, for a heavy hand was laid on tho young man's shoulder, and an angry voice mimicked his tender tones. " Rose, darling ? I'll teach you to : darling' her, young man !" And there was Dr. llulburt's faco, red with anger, looking over Charley's shoul der. Roso, at tho first glimpse of it, turned and ran, like a little coward as sho was. " Ilaveu't I forbidden your Beeing that young woman ? What do you mean by sneaking around here with her, like a thief in tho night '!" pursued the doctor, furiously. " It is not my fault that I do not walk with her openly ; it is not my fault that she is not my wife. It is only be cause sho will not consent to be so," answered Charley stoutly. " Won't consent to be your wife, oh ? It doesn't seem to me that sho treats you exactly like a rejected lover !" sneered the doctor. " She would marry me, if she were al lowed to choose," answered Charley, try ing hard to keep his temper. " Her mother will not consent." " Humph I not consent? that's pretty well !" growled tho doctor. " So sho thinks my son is not good enough for her daughter V " She does not object to uie. If you would give your consent to our marriage, she would give hers." (( Ah, that's it 1 Well, my consent you'll never have, young man, you may rely upon that. And if ever I hear of your being seen with that young woman again I'll turn you out of doors, sir. Not a penny of my money shall you ever havo, sir. Remember that ! I urn not one to make idle threats." Charley was about to reply, but they had reached tho house by this time, and tho doctor went into the ofhee, and shut the door behind him with a bang. So there was nothing for poor Charley to do but to take his way disconsolately up stairs to bed. Ia tho meantime, the doctor seized tho poker and stirred up the dying fire in in his grate savagely. "Won't consent, eh? That's like Hose Shepard I sho always was n proud piece. Let me catch that boy with her daughter again 1" And he walked rapidly up and down the room, brandishing the poker, and with a gcowl still on his face, looking not unliko a midnight assassin, in spite of the venerable aspeot which his gray hairs gave him. Hut he cooled down very goon, sufficiently to carry tho poker back to its place, ana begin a search lor dressing gown and slippers, a search which proved long, and served to turn his auger from Charley to another. " Of all tho miserublo housekeepers that ever I had, this Barnes woman is tho worst!" he grumbled, jerking himself at last into the dilapidated, comfortless looking dressing-gown, and slippers trod den down at tho heel. " Not a drop of warm water, or any thing to cat in tho house, I'll warrant!" And ho strode into tho dining-room, which indeed was cold and void of cheer. lie wont into tho pantry and munched a hard very dark-colored doughnut sav agely. " I'd turn her away to-morrow, sho and her husband, too, only that tho next one would bo suro to bo worso. They ore all about of a piece. There is nothing worso to havo in tho house than a house keeper unless it's a wile. And I don't know " Doctor Ilulburt still stood in tho pan try, solemnly deliberating, after tho last morsel of doughnut had disappeared. It was so long since he had a wife that ho could not decido whether ono was worse than a housekeeper or not. It was n question that ho had bcc.n revolving in his mind for years, without coming to any dehuito conclusion. " ' Better bear the ills we have, than fly to others that wo know not of,' tho poet says. But then, a man can't bear this state of things long; ho might as well live in a cavo in tho woods ! No order, no comfort, none of tho decencies of living. Some time or other I shall have to marry, and I might as well make up my mind to it at once. And there's tho widow Zilpha Thomas. (Strange that boy can be such a fool as to run after that littlo jado of a lloso Carter !) The widow Thomas is a good housekeeper, I havo no doubt; housealways looks as neat as wax. Then there's that wood lot of hers that joins mine; not that I'm looking out for prop erty with a wife, but that lot would conic very handy ; and tho widow is a fmo woman; a little quick tempered, I'm afraid. I never did like those snapping black eyes; that girl Rose Carter, is just her mother over again, with her bluo eyes and her wheedling ways confounded little jilt! and that boy is fool enough to bo taken in by her. I should like to seo anybody take mo in ! No, I thank you ! oneo is enough. I said to Miss Esther Wagg, the other day, ' Tho widow Zilpha Thomas is a fine woman ; a capital manager, isn't she?'" " ' Manager you may bo sure of that. She managed poor Reuben Thomas iuto his grave,' said Miss Esther. " But then, it is of no consequence what these spiteful old maids say. Most likely she has an eye on the situation for herself!" And tho doctor drew himself up, in tho proud assurance that when ho did take a second helpmeet, he should leavo every marriageable lady of his acquaintance in consolable. " I'll drive round and seo tho widow Thomas next week. I don't think it likely that she could manago mo !" And having made up his mind, Doctor Ilulburt betook himself to his chamber. But his face was not that of a man who is quite satisfied with his decision ; nnd he stood for a long time at tho window, and looked down to tho foot of tho lull, where tho Widow Carter's house was was plainly visible in the moonlight. " No, No ! once is enough for a man to bo made a fool of! And that silly boy shall never marry her daughter, if I can help it !" ho said at last, turning away with a decided shake of tho head. From which signs an observer would havo sup posed Miss Esther Wagg to bo right, and the Widow Carter nn old sweetheart who had " made a fool of him." Rose Carter, with pale cheeks and downcast eyes, sat demurely sewing bo sido her mother tho next morning, when her uncle, old Squire Carter, came in. The pale checks had been observed but not commented on by her mother, but the Squiro was not so delicate. " Bless uie ! what has become of tho red cheeks ? Why, they arc as white us snowballs ! Too much sewing and moping, aud not enough air and exercise or has its sweetheart deserted it, poor little Rosy?" Upon which Rose's checks grew scarlet of course. But the squire was not satis fied. " The child looks really ill, and some thing must bo done," liesaid to Mrs. Car ter, us he went away. " Sho hasn't look ea like herself for mouths." And tho squiro, haunted by Ruse's pulo face, betook himself directly to Doctor Hurlburt's office.. " I want you to go and see my noieo, little Robc Carter, or prescribe something for her. She says nothing ails her, but she looks pale and moped. I suppose it is uothing but want of exeroise ; if theso girls would only do as their grandmothers did ! But you know what will help her it's nerves, I suppose," said the squire who funcied that " nerves" wero at the bottom of all feminine ailments. " Ah yes ! I'll send her a prescription," said the doctor, heartily. And thinking it tho heartiness of interest, and good na ture, the squire went on his way reliev ed. And Dr. Ilurlburt, feeliui: even less aiiniuble than on the previous night, gat down at his desk, and wrote a prescription for Miss Rose Curter. Just us he finished it his man Barnes brought him a note. It was from the man who took caro of the doctor's farm on the outskirts of the town, near the Widow Thomas's wood lot. " The widow Thomas' niau Jake wants to know if you will let the widow take JHack Bess, to go down to Saugus to the quarterly conference mooting to-night She told hlra to say particular that she didn't feel very well, and thought tho rido would do her good, if you would be so kind as to let her take lilivck Bess, which is so gentle. Sami:ki Hoihikins." Tho doctor's face cleared as ho read. " I.ittlo Sam Ilodgkins is waiting 1'or tho answer, if you please, sir," said Barnes. And the Doctor wrote a few words hur riedly, in answer to Samuel Ilodgkins, not without grumbling at the man's stu pidity in not lotting tho widow have tho fiorso without applying to him. But no mntter ! tho widow would not havo to ask for Black Bess again. "With all my worldly goods I thee endow," ho meant to say to her very soon. Barnes was entrusted, with tho two notes one for Miss Rose Carter, and tho other for little Sam Ilodgkins to carry to lus lather. gj. In the meantime, Charley had come Jo a new rcsolvo. lie would see Mrs. Car ter once more, and try to gain her con sent to his marriage with Rose. With out her consent, Rose would never be his wife It was evidently a hopeless task to try to overcome his fa thor's prejudices; but he was determined that they should not bo allowed to destroy his happiness, und Rose's, too, for life. Mrs. Carter liked him ; she would givo Rose to him willingly, she had told him, if it were not for his father's objections ; sho might bo persuaded to, in spito of it. And there was no time to lose, for in two days ho was going away to a distant city, to establish himself in business. Ho had hoped to carry Roso with him, but all his pleading had been of no avail to induco her to marry him against her mother's will. All his hope now lay in influencing Mrs. Carter. So, early that morning ho took his way to tho cottago at tho foot of tho hill. Squire Carter had just left, and Mrs. Carter's mind was still filled with tho anxiety regarding Rose's health which ho had aroused ; so perhaps Charley could not havo found a better time for trying to win her over to his side. But, though sho did hesitato fur a mo ment, his pleading was iu vain. " You know there is no one whom I would rather have for a son than you, Charley," she said. " But I know your father. He is a stern man, a very stern man, and he will never relent. lie would never lorgivo you for marrying against his will. I cannot consent to your ruining all your prospects in life. Vou and Rose are both very young; you may change. Tho time might come Charley when you would regret disobey ing your father's wish. You aro his only son, and so dear to him ; and beforo this, you say, ho has never thwarted your slightest wish. You ought not to disobey hi in hastily. To bo sure, his prejudico seems unreasonable " " Unreasonable ! It is absurd !" inter rupted Charley, hotly. " Why, he has never so much as seen you, to my knowl edge !" Mrs. Carter's check flushed faintly. " I lived here when I was a girl, you kuow. I knew your father then. He has some reasons for disliking mo which I don't understand." " It is only a prejudice, a notiou, I am sure," said Charley. "And he has no right to dictate to mo iu such a mat ter." And ho was beginning his oagcrplead ing over again, when Barnes appeared with the note. There was no address on tho outside, and Mrs. Carter opened it, whilo Charley waited in a fovcr of suspenso to know what his father could have to say to Mrs. Carter. Her faco was a picture of amazement as she read, but pleasure shone through it as sho handed tho note to Charley. It was brief and to tho point. "Let him havo her. " KUWAIIU II. lluitLHURT." " I always told Rose ho had a heart if ono could only get nt it !" cried Charley in a transport of deliht. " Now. vou can muko no objection ; wo have your promise! And 1 urn going uway tho day uftcr to-morrow, you know, und I must tuko my wilb with mo." " I lie day alter to-morrow ! My dear boy, you are besido yourself!" oxclaimed j Mrs. Lurter. j " You and Rose have said wuit to mo for so long, that you cuu't havo tho heart to say u longer, uow Hint mere is no reason for waiting. I shall coux Rose over to my Bide, and then you can't re fuse." And he did coax them both over to his j side, after countless arguments aud ob j jections. It was arranged that there should bo a very quiet wedding, to which only a few intimate friends were to be invited, the next evening. Thcu Charley hurried home to express his gratitude to his father, whom he begun to think he had misjudged. Whilo this sccno was transpiring at tho cottago, Samuel Ilodgkins has re- I ceivcd Doctor Hurlburt's auswer to his i note, and beiny; somewhat surprised und puzzled by it, had transmitted it directly to the Widow Thomas; thus relieving himself of all responsibility in the mat ter. ! So the widow, who was adorning her , best cap with new cherry ribbons, in un ' tieipution of the doctor's tuking her gentle I hint and coming himself to drive her to I the quarterly conference meeting, was j culled from that pleasing occupation to read tho following note, a mcro scrawl, written evidently in hasto and irrita tion : " Let her tako a dessert-spoonful of ex tract of valerian, night and morning for her nerves, common sense in as largo doses as sho can get it, nnd stop gadding about evenings. "Ktnv.xnn It. IIunt.ni'iiT." The widow's black eyes snapped so that the doctor, if he had been there to see, would havo liked them less than ever and tho roses that had deserted her cheeks sho thought forever, reappeared in full bloom. Sho had been angry often in her life -the departed Reuben had not been very easy to manage but never beforo had sho felt anything like the wrath she felt at that moment. "The impertinent old scoundrel! ' Gadding about evenings' indeed ! ' Vul crian for my nerves !" as if I were somo fidgety old maid ! " Common sense in as large doses as I can find." How daro he write such a note ! Well, I have had a lucky escape ! Stupid, cross-grained old wretch ! a life of it I should havo had with him !'' And tho widow put on the cherry ribboned cap upide down, and fell to dusting the portrait of her deceased spouse with a vim. With all his faults Reuben was not the worst man that ever lived ! Charley was obliged to repress his cratitudo for a whilo, for when ho reach ed homo he found that his father had gone to a neighboring town to attend a medical convention, and would not re turn until the following day. When the doctor returned the next af ternoon Charley was absent, busied with preparations for the approaching wed ding. Dr. Ilurlburt, finding a leisure afternoon upon his hands mado an un usually careful toilet, and drove out to call upon tho Widow Thomas. lie had fully mado up his mind that it would be a lesser evil to have the Widow Zilpha Thomas for a wife, than Mrs. Barnes for a housekeeper, but he had not tho air of a very eager wooer, and, in truth ho was not without his misgivings; ho saw in imagination the widow's black eyes snapping defiantly at him, nnd won dered if he should uot repent, if she proved to bo of a quarrelsome temper. And lie cast two or three glances back at tho Widow Carter's cottage, and as he did so lie certainly sighed. Tho widow had been iu the window, und sho had bowed to him bowed, and actually smiled a littlo, though in a shy sad way. Dr. Ilurlburt did not quite understand it. Ho had met her but twice, to be sure, sinco she had come back to the vil lage, two years before, but at neither of thoso times bad sho shown any disposi tion to recognize him. His looks had not invited a recognition either then or now, but here she was us sweet us a May morning! It was all her artfulness, of course : Mio thought sho could cajolo him into letting Charley marry her daughter. Sho would sec! lie would send that boy to Europe, to China if ucod bo, to get him out of Rose Carter's way. Still it is certain thut he sighed deeply as he passed tho cottage, and the Widow Thomas's black eyes snapped before him all the more ominously iu contrast with the Widow Carter's soft shy bluo ones. Was M iss Esther Wagg right, and was it possible that there was still a spring of sentiment in tho doctor's heart, which fifty years and his crusty temper had not been able wholly to dry ? From afar oil' the widow Thomus saw him coming, "riding along with thut grand cureless air, us if ho owned the wholo town," us sho declared, and pre pared to do battle. Sho was in such a quiver of indignation that her cap-ribbons stood up straight, und the snapping eyes of his imagination were as notliiii'' cum- pared with these! " How dare you como here, you insult ; ing, hypocritical villain ! you perfidious J wretch! Leave this house, sir, and if j you ever como here uguiu I'll sot Towser I upon you as suro as you live !" sho cried. To say that tho doctor wus uinazcd would but feebly express his cmutiou. Ho wus thoroughly alarmed, und lost no time in escaping from the presence of tho maniac (as he felt suro sho must be), to his carriage. 'Insane from evil temper, ah, I knew thoso eyes were not for nothing! But why her anger should be directed uguinst me I can't understand; though I suppose her wrath falls upou any ono who hup pens to be near when the fit seizes" her. (), what an escupe 1 have had!" And Dr. Ilurlburt took his homeward way, resolved to bo contented with a housekeeper, and thankful thut his lot was no worso. Barnes met him with an unusually smiling countenance. "Mr. Charley's been wuiting to see you, sir ; ho wuited a while, but of course ho couldn't wuit any longer, and it's six o'clock this minute. He told mo to tell you how thankful and happy he was, and that he should feel awful bad if you did not come to the wedding." ' Thoukful and happy !' Como to the wedding!' What are you talking about, you idiot ?" demanded the doctor. " To his wedding with Miss Rose Car tor. I thought of course you knew. It's at half-past eight." " The young rascal ! Does he dure to do this f shouted the doctor, and rushed out of tho house, and down to tho Wid ow Carter's cottage. Mrs. Carter and Charles met him in tho hall. His wrath had had time to cool a littlo in his walk, and if it had not he would have found it hard to bo so demonstrative as usual un der tho widow's calm clear eyes. But ho expressed his disapproval quite strongly enough to show them that there had been Borne mistake. Charley produced the note, and the doctor saw through tho mystery at once Mrs. Thomas's lunacy and all. That stupid Barnes had changed tho notes. Tho widow Thomas had been udvisod to, stop gadding about of evenings, and Mrs-.. Carter had considered herself permitted to " let him have" her daughter! How ever angry ho might be, tho doctor saw that it was too late to interfere. "Well, young man, you havo choseu. your way, und you must walk in it! She is her mother over again, they say yon had better marry her as soon as possible or she'll jilt you, us her mother did me Tho widow Carter looked at him with something like a flash in her eyes. " How can you say that, when you know it was you who deserted me?" she said. "Didn't you write mc a letter within a mouth of tho day that was to have been our wedding-day, telling me, coolly, that you had discovered that you preferred an other?" demanded the doctor. " Never ! I never wrote you such a letter I" said tho widow. Charley began to see that an explanation was coming, at which a third party would not bo wanted and took his departuro. If he did, then, have a fiiint presentiment of what might happen as a result of that explanation at some future day, ho was not ut all pre pared for what did occur that very night- Whcn he and Roso moved away fion beforo the minister who had made them, husband and wife, his father and Mr. Carter stood up before him, and tho cere mony was repeated for their benefit. They had decided, in that brief space of time, that that was tho best reparation possible for the mistake of almost a lifetime. And it proved so agreeable an ar rangement that Dr. Ilurlburt is often heard to say that, though he has always prospered in his practice, ho never mado so great a success as when ho wrote a pre scription for Rose Carter. Dill is h (,'ouf. AS a gentleman from New York was taking a glass of wine at tho St. Louis, corner of Freeman and Hopkius street, in Cincinnati, about throe weeks ago, he observed at another table, seated with others, a Gorman who seemed un easy and anxious, as if there might havc been Franco-l'russian disagreement be tween his beer and himself. Presently in ran a littlo girl, her faco radiant with smiles exclaiming: " Oh, father wo'vo got a littlo boy at home ! " Dat is goot," said tho Dutchman, as. tho anxiety disappeared from his coun tenance; " fill up dcr glasses." Not many minutes elapsed beforo in rushed the littlo girl again with the an nouncement : " Oh, father wo'vo got two littlo boys at home !" The Dutchman looked a good deal as tonished und not altogether gratified at this littlo family redundancy, but risin" at length to the magnitudo of tho occa sion he said : Veil, den, dat is also good. Fill up. dcr glasses.' In a few minutes again appeared the radiant messenger, with tho astounding, proclamation : "Oh, father, we've got three liitle boys at homo ! This was too much even for Teutonic impassibility. There was no further calb for glasses. " Veil den," says ho, " I goes up derc and I stops ter whole tain business ! A Question (iiime. A BAND of . rustic worthies were Boated around tho tavern fire, one winter's evening, consisting of the black smith, the barber, the constable, and tho schoolmaster. After they had drank and smoked to their heart's content, aud exhausted all tho ordinary topics of con versation, tho pedagogue proposed a new kind of game, iu which each ono wus to propose u qucstiou, aud whoever proposed ono thut ho himself could not solve, was to pay the reckoning for ull ; Dick Dolt, whom every one thought a fool, was pick ed out for tho first question. " Neighbors," said Dick, drawling out his words, and looking ineffably stupid, " you have seen the way squirrels dig holes ; can any oue of you toll why they throw no dirt ?" That was a poser ; and after a long co gitation, even the schoolmaster was com pelled to givo it up. It devolved on Dick to explain. " Tho reason is," said he, that they be- -gin ut the bottom of tho hole." " Stop stop !" cried the pedagogue, surprised out of ull prudenco by so mon strous an assertion ; " pray how docs the squirrel get there ?" " Ah," answered Dick, "that's a ques tion of your own proposing. You're u for the drinks, master."