Hf V-IT 131 II WiAflW - II 111 rsv . . A m 111 r: lllll Jym mmr ix if lllll I I I I 3 If 91 If 1 4f(S TEMsr,rorYer, AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. W.irS? ,r 7" r. -.. -- - - - - - t Vol. VI. Nov Bloomflcld, Pa., Tuesday, Decombor 1(), 1873. IVo. 50. IB FVBMSHMI IVKBT TUS3DAT M0RNIK0, BI FEA1TE UOETIUER & CO., . At New Bloomfleld, Terry Co., Ta. Being provided with 8team rower, and largo Cylinder and Job-PreiwM. we are prepared to do all kinds of .lob l'riiitlng III good style aud at Low Prices. ADVERTISING KATES I TrantUitf 8 Cents per line for one insertion. 12 ' two Insertions 15 " "three Insertions. Business Notices in Local Column 10 Cents per line. . , - Notices of Marriages or Deaths Inserted free. Tributes of Respect, dec, Ten cents per line. YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. One Inch' one year JliMS Two Inches " " 1 4.For longer yearly adv'ts terms will be given upon application. PEOPLE WILL TALE. You may get through the world, hut 'twill be veryelow, If you listen to all that Is said as you go: You'll be worried and fretted, and kept in a stew, For meddlesome tongues will have something to do, For people will talk. If quiet and modest, you'll have It presumed That your humblo position Is only assumed, You're a wolf In sheep's clothing, or else you're a fool; But don't get excited, keep perfectly cool, For people will talk. If generous and noble, they'll vent out their spleen; You'll bear some loud hints that you're selfish and mean i If nprlght, honest, aud fair as the day, They'll call you a roguo in a sly sneaking way, For people will talk. And then if you show the least boldness of heart, Or a slight Inclination to take your own part, They will call you an upstart, conceited and vain; But keep straight ahead, don't stop to explain, For people will talk. If threadbare your dress, or old-futhloned your bat, Some one will surely take notice of that, And hint rather strongly you can't pay your own way; But don't get excited, whatever they say, For people will talk. If you dress la the fashion, don't think to escape, For tbey criticise then 1n a different shape You're ahead of your means, or your-tailor's unpaid; But mind your own business there's naught to be made, . For people will talk. Now the best way to do is to do as you please; For your mind, If you have one, will then be at ease, Of course you'll meet with all sorts of abuse; But don't think to stop them 'twill be of no use For people will talk. The Watchmaker's Story. I SUPPOSE every man lias noma whims I know I have. And I suppose one's education lias something to do with one's whims, fiiiue naa. it is now live years since I hung out my sign ablg wooden watch over the sidewalk on Slain street in Cattaqua, Illinois. 1 uau served an ap prenticeship with my father, who was a jeweler in Chicago before the fire, nd the old gentleman had " set mo up," as the saying is, in a store of my own In Cattaqua, There was nothing I enjoyed so much as that sign. Every time I came to the store I cast my eyes up and read: W. H. IHVINO, Watchmaker At Jeweler. jLSut about my whims. ou don't car about the sign. I have often thought that if I was a literary man and was master of literary style, if I had Lad half so much practice at writing for the papers as I have hod putting in main-springs, I could make the history ofmy whim quite interesting, But here I am talking about my sign aud all the test. However, I am not a story writer nor a story-teller, I hope, and you'll have, to let rue get at that story of my whim in my own way. It is as good love story as I ever read. In fact I think it is Letter. Bo does tuy wife. But then everybody thinks his own the best, I sup pose. I know mine is. I had a faucy for carrying a watch that would keen time. I do not mean a Swiss watch that loses five minutes a week or a month. Nor do I mean an English watch that, like Captain Cuttle's, needs setting ahead "fifteen minutes afore dinner and fifteen minutes arter dinner nor an Irish watch like the one that kept " thb best time and the most of it of any watch in town." got me a real machine-made watch I don't think I had best tell what make, it would bo advertising my watches in a love tery ; and besides I am a doaler, and if I tell which watch I chose, I should ollend the ether manufacturers, I suppose, which might not be the best thing in the way of business. But I regulated my watch carefully. I do think it has a good effect on a man to carry a watch that keeps good time. An inaccurate watch always seemed to me a liar, and I do not thiuk any lover of the truth would carry one. I regulated my watch until I brought the thing to a nice point. It isn't best to tell you how little it varried in a year. It would sound like an exaggeration to you, and it would make my story have a flavor of the shop, and 1 hate a man to bo always " talking shop." My watch went boautifully, and I did boast a little about it. I told the minister about 4' once, how perfoctly that watch kept timo, and he looked up at me with a kindly Bmile and then said pleasantly : "I hope you take pains to regulate your life as carefully as you do the watch." That word did me more good than all the ser mons he had preached since I came to Cat taqua. I could never look my dear friend, the watch, ' in the face after that, without seeming to hoar the question: " Bo you regulate your life so . carefully?" Well, I hope my life does not vary from the true standard so much as it did ; but it isn't a tract or a Sunday School book I am wri ting, but a love story, if I ever got to it. You see when I wrote to father at the end of the first year, telling him how well I was getting on, he wrote back to me that I ought to get married. lie Baid I would be a better man aud a happier one with a good wife. And then he added this sen tence: ''But do not take any woman not full-jeweled." I knew what he meant. He wanted me to be as careful not to be imposed on by a sham in marrying as I was not to be humbugged in a watch. But how few women or men there are who have all the jewels ! My father's letter set me to thinking about marriage. Living a rather lonely life, I amused myself by thinking what sort of a woman my wife would be and what I should do to make her happy. I would give hor a watch, the very mate to my own, a ladies' watch that would keep time. Ladies' watches are such shams generally ; good for show, nothing else. So I picked out a watch of the same make as my own, and amused myself with regu lating it. - That was for my wife when I should find her. 1'layiuiiy 1 told one or two friends what I meant to do with my ladies' watch, and the story got abroad. It was a matter of no little bantering among the girls who should have my " Lady El gin." Some declared they did not want it, and a great many asked to see it. Its accuracy got to be talked about, and the story helped trade, for half a dozen mar ried gentlemen in the village provided their wives with duplicates. But there ! I am talking shop. ' My Lady Elgin became more and more celebrated ; some, imagining that it must be better than any other, endeavored U buy it, but this I refused steadfastly, even whon I was offered a premium for it, would not begin by wronging my wife while yet I did not even know who she would be. I soon found that I could not go into any company wfthout meeting all sorts of allusions ta my wife a watch When asked who the lady would be, I always answered in the words of my fath er, "a lady full-jeweled."- Some thought by this I meant a rich wife, but others un derstood it. I am not one of those who think that might have married any woman. Any man who believes that of himself is a fool and an egotist. But the very fact that this watch was talked about made some of the ladies' particularly anxious to oarry it off, as It had become a sort of a prize to be taken by competition. Sometimes a girl weuld stop te see it, and talk about it, and. blush in a way meant to hint to me that she would like it. But I was determined that none but a full-jeweled woman should have it. And is not modesty a jewel ex ceeding precious? My business was even more prosperous the second year than the first, for Cattaqua was growing rapidly in consequence of the location of Dodger Female College iu the town, and the building ef the Perkinstown Branch IX. Jl., which made our town a rail way junction. I thought more than ever of. marrying, aud bad well nigh settled on Miss Sophie Bonnett,a member of the senior class in the Badger Female College, and the daughter of Mr. Bennett, of the firm of Bennett & Brown, dry goods merchants. Sophie is handsome and a fine musician. She is well educated, and she taught a class of girls in the Sunday School of which I was Secretary at that timo. I did admire her a great deal, for she was a brilliant talker and know a great deal more than I did. And she had the art of winning. When I walk ed home with her she managed to make the conversation pleasant, and though she knew so much more than I did about many things, she never lot me feel it. She was in every regard amiable. That is what everybody called her. She had a friend hardly so handsome as she w as at least I thought not, Louisa Jones was quite young yet, but she was teaching iu the public schools in order to help her father, who was poor. I mention this Louisa Jones here because of a con versation I overheard between hor and hor friend Sophie Bennett. I had paid some attention to the lattor, until I found that people talked about it. Everybody's cu riosity hod been excited by the talk about my watch, and I could not walk home with a young woman without starting a talk about my Lady Elgin, bo I was careful not to give too much attention to Sophie while I was still undecided. But one evening I had about made up my mind. Fixing a watch for Mr. Bennott set me to thiukiug on Sophie Bennett aud all hor amiable ways and her fine scholar ship. I thought I would go to the Church sociable that very evening and go home with Sophie, perhaps I should do more. That watch would look well on her. But I did not get Mr. Bonnet's watch done as soon as I bad expected, on account of boiug interrupted by customers buying present for the holidays. . I had promised that the watch should be ready in the morning, for Mr. Bennott was to start to Chicago on the half-past oight o'clock train to buy goods. At last I finished the job, locked all my valuables in the safe as quickly as possible put suit the kerosene lamp it was before the gas was introduced into the villagi and hastened to the sociable, . hoping to arrive in time to go home with Sophie Ben nett. I must have pretty much made up my mind before starting, for I remember now and I blush when I remember it that I did not lock the Lady Elgin iu the safe that evening. I thrust it, chain and all, into an inside pocket of my vest cannot tell why I did it. I certainly had no very distinct purpose of offering it to Sophie ' Bennett that evening, and yet I doubtless thought best to have it handy It made my heart beat faster to feel it there as I walked briskly toward the house where the sociable was, for I had missed the car. The street cars had just been introduced at tliat time, and the ouly line running was the one from the dopot to the Female College, and it would have carried me past the door, but that I had misssed the car, aud there was no other one at that time iu the evening for half an hour, so I was obliged to walk through the lain. But I had brought a largo umbrella. It is al ways well to have a large umbrella when you mean to share it with a lady. I soon found that I was too lato for the socia&e. The people were already going homo. It was very dark aud raining noticed two , yoiftig ladies pass and stop within six feet of me, standing under an umbrella together. I could not tell who they were, it was so dark, and they evi, duutly did not seo me at all 1 stood shel tercd by the box which protected those feeble maples that we prairie people plant along our side-walks aud call shade trees. I thought from their relative stature and fiuure that they must be Sophie Bennett aud Louisa Jones. As the Lady Elgin in my pocket made my heart palpitate as stood thore waiting to recognize their voices and then make myBelf known to theui. But by tbo time I had made sure who they were I was so much interested iu what they were saying that I was guilty, for the first time .n my life, of eaves-drop, ping. I shouldn't have listened if it had not been for the watch in my inside vest pocket. I was never a very impulsive man and I confess that in this affair of the heart I acted deliberately. 1 wanted a woman full-jeweled, and it behooved me not te be lii a hurry, and not to be dazzled by any finery on the outside. " It is a real shame, Louisa, that you should do so much for your family. wouldn't at your age. You ought to ex pend every cent you earn in dressing." It was Sophie speaking in her good natured musical voice. "But," answered the young school teach er, " 1 am poor and my father is poor ; if wore good clothes it would lie a sort of a lio." "O dear !" said Sophie Bhe had a most charming wayaf saying "O dear," and now it smote my heart a little "0 dear, how honest you are I Why I come home every day and dress up, and tako my school books and go calling. I like people to think that my nice clothes are my school clothes." Here the car going down came along and they got in, but I walked back, not liking to ride with them. And I put my hand over the watch several times to be sure that it was there. And wasn't I glad that it was there? I was called home during the Christmas holidays. My father sent down a clerk of his own, well acquainted with the business, to take charge of my store. I did not have to give him any directions except a warn ing not to sell my Lady Elgin to anybody. It so happened that in returning to Cat taqua after Now Year's, I traveled in the same car aud sat in the same scat with Louisa Jones, the young school teacher, who had been spending the holidays with her parents at Aurora. Unsentimental as I am, I liked her more and more, and I heard several things about hor in the next days which raised her .greatly in my estl matiou, but which I cannot take time to tell. A week after New Year's she brought in her watcu to nave it nxed. it was an old silver English lover of her father's. She asked how soon I could fix it, and I told her that it would take four days, on account of the work ahead of it. She look ed disappointed. A. time piece is indis pensable to a teacher, you know, so I of fered to lend her a watch. I took down one and put it back three times. Then went to the show case, and with a tremu lous band took up my Lady Elgin, first removing the chain. She did not know the watch, and so lot me fasten it to her watch guard without suspicion. Before night the absence of the watch from theBhow case had been observed, and all the girls sot themselves to find out who wore it. Sophie Bennott was accused of having it, and she managed to deny it in such a way as to leave the impression that she had it. Early the next morning, in came Louisa Jones. " Mr. Irving," Bhe said, "you have made a mistake. I find in tbo back of this watch an inscription which leads me to think that you have given me what you did not mean to." 1 Foreseeing that tuo conversation would be a delicate one, I gave Tbemas, my ap prentice, a letter . to mail, and then took the watch and read the inscription in order to gain time. I bad put on the insido of the case a sentence I had heard the minis ter quote: " A perfect woman nobly plan ned' I liandod it back to her and said: "Mists Jones, I made no mistake. I lent you that watch on purpose." " But you must see," she said strongly, "that I cannot wear it on any account.' "I do not see," I said smiling, and blush ing, I fear. " It would create a false impression. " If you say that the impression it would create would be false, I must take it back.' ' How could it be otherwise than false?' she asked a little puzzled. "I know of but one way," I said slowly, "You know what the' impression mado would bo. On ray part I wish that it might be a true one. If you are agreed, it shall be and you shall accept the watch and wear it forever." She was silent, holding tho watch and turning it over absently, and growing ex ceedingly rod. ' "Take time," I said. "Do not show the inscription to any one. I will come and see you about it whenever you say, Shall it be this evoulug ?" She nodded her head aud left She has often told me that she did the poorest teaching of her life that day, does not matter. She has long since quit teaching. But it took the gossips a long time to find out who bad the watch. She wears it yet ouly her name is not Jones now. f A Jersey editor get off the following definition of a widow s " One who knows what's what, and is desirous of furthor in formation the same subjeot." History of Noah. ' KY ARTEMITS WARD. Noah's front name was Noah ; Noah's last name was Flood. Noah's wife's name was Mrs. Noah. She was called by her nephews and nieces Aunty Flood, which being interpreted, means before tho Flood. Noah had three sons Ham, Shem, and Japhot. Their playmates used to call them Hem, Sham, and Jackass. Ham, as tho name indicates, was a pork butcher. Shem, I am a Shcm'd to say, kept a faro bank. Japhet was let me sec, what was Japh- et?oh, ycBl Japhet was in search of his father. Noah, in conjunction with Barnum, used to keep a menagerie ou the European plan. No reserved Beats." One day it rained it rained the next day, too in fact, it rained for a month. Things were getting damp around No ah's house, so Noah told his boys who were dutiful children ; and, besides the . fact of their being dutiful children, their . father always carried a cane, to get out the canal boat which laid in the barn, and forthwith they mounted the house, on the boat, and after getting the animals all housed or boated they set sail. The collection consisted of every kind of animals. Ancient history says: , "The animals went In two by two, The monkey and the kangaroo-" With many a sigh they left their former home; but of what use, as Mrs. Noah re marked, was ace high when there wore so many jair$ around, which ttraight way railed a fluih on Noah's face as he glanced at the poker, Even the nephews and nieces "went for" their aunty withuJ! handt. The boat was fitted up gorgeously, each family having separate apartments. They never quarreled, yet being oppoeile neighbors they all had adveree-areat. Ancient history tells us that there was every known kind or amniai in tne coai when they started out on their expedition ; but in, another chapter it distinctly con tradicts itself, for it says that not until the storm had abated did they hit on Ary-a-rat. Whon the boat became a wreck on the mountain, Noah became a wreck on the shoro, and, reckoned he would sell out all his right, title, Interest, etc., to Barnum, who brought the animals to New York. Bhylock was one of the animals which Barnum saved from the wreck. Some peo ple called it the timid hare. " The lion and the lamb laid down to gether. It was, in reality, a happy family. Everything was arranged so that all the animals should return from the voyage just as they had entered the boat' For should the hateful wolf destroy the tender lamb, The ewe would not be worth one continental. ' Comic Advertisements. The following have been from time to time clipped from Irish papers: "One pound reward. Lost, a cameo brooche representing Venus aud Adonis on the Drumcondra Koad, about 10 o'cleck ou Tuesday evening." ' "The advertiser, having made au ad: vautageous purchase, offers for sale, ou very low terms, about sixty dozen of prime port wine, lately the property of a gentle man forty years of age, full iu the body, and with a high bouquet." "To be sold cheap, a mail phaeton, the property of a gentleman with a movable head, as good as new." "To be sold, a splendid gray horso, cal culated for a charg er, or would carry a lady with a switch tail." " Ten shillings reward. Lost by a gen tleman, a white terrier dog, except the head, which is black. To bo brought to," etc. , To these Irish advertisements may be added one English one, which was the sub joot of a humorous article Intlie Saturday Iteviete, some four or five years since: " To be sold, an Erard grand piauo, the property of a lady, about to travel in a walnut wood case with carved logs.l' ' tlTVIsitor " How long has your inastei been away?" ' - ' Irish footman "Well, soor, if he'd come home yestherday,he'd been gone a wake to moro' ; but if he doen't return the day afther, shurd he'll beon away a fortnight next Thursday." ' , tW If you court a young woman, and you are won and she is won, you wilt both be one.