majm''''mA''mlmm'otm'mna mm Win, r W. ijfcnt ffll ft m ffll fi AMR TERMS tr.aa Per v Year,) CE. it 5 Cents for 0 Months 40 Cts.for 3 months. AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. JJV AD VAN "Vol. VII. IVew T31oomfleltl, JPii., Tuesday, Janunry 31, 1873. IV o. 3. 18 PUBLISHED EVSUT TUESDAY MORNING, BY FRANK MOSTIMEB & CO., At New Bloomfleld, Terry Co., Ta. Bclne provided with Steam Power, and large Cylinder and Job-Presses, we are prepared to do alt kinds of Job-Printing In good style and at Low Prices. ADVERTISING BATES I Trantimt 8 CcnU per line for one Insertion. J3 " " ' twolnsorllous 15 three Insertions. Business Notices in Local Column 10 Cents .per line. Notices of Marrloees or Deaths Inserted free. 1 Tributes of Respect, &c, Ten cents per line. ' YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. 0e Inch one year 110,00 Two Inches " " 1 18.00 t.For lonRer yearly adv'ts terms will be given upon application. ONLY A LITTLE CLOUD. TAKE courage 'tis a little cloud That soon will pass away j The hearts that now with grief are bowed May only grieve to-day. To-morrow, up the azure height, The sun may dart his beam, And then one joyous burst of light O'er mount and vale shall stream. When thwarted plans and baffled hopes Become our only store, And the crushed spirit barely copes With ills unknown before Despond not yet the tide will turn The gales propitious play j Take courage 'tis a little cloud That soon will pass away. When doubts eclipse the ray of joy, And fears their shadows cast ; When rugged seems the way to bliss, And foes come crowding last Faint not ; a mightier power than thine Is pledged these foes to slay j Light shall at last around thee shine The cloud shall pass away. And yet alas ! the real ills of life Claim the full vigor of a mind prepar'd, Frepar'd for patient, long, laborious strlfo, Its guide experience, and truth Its guard We fare on earth as other men have fared. Were they successful I Let us not despair Was disappointment of their sale reward I Yet shall their tale instruct, if it declare How they have borne the load ourselves are doom'd to bear. BiattU MY PRETTY HOUSEKEEPER I REPEAT again, and to myself, that Mrs. Oeorga in an admirable house keeper, and a very superior woman. Hor eyes are sparkling and penetrating ; ber bair ripples and waves like that of a obild 1 am ahem '.almost charmed with Mrs, - T..i i.. ...... . i .. , .. e it I VJeuige. uii uuiy uiv hid vyva ul iura. George extremely penetrative, bnt hor con ception of character is something marvel ous. I confess I was astonished when sbe lield before me the painful delinquencies of my two old servants, Starkey and Tom bad lived with me fourteen years, but upon the Advent of this admirable woman I sud denly learned that I was being plucked ; that half my meats were taken off to poor relations ; that the cat was not answerable for my butcher's iniiated bills, and that the dog has lived very comfortably on table- leavings since then. It is very plain that Mrs. George is an immensly superior wo man. I like ber frank way of speaking about the furniture. "A gontloman in your condition, and of your appearance" yes, she was pleased to say, of your appearance "should not have bis bouse shabbily furnished, Sir. Not that I care. For myself, plain three ply and walnut, or even chestnut; but for these delightful rooms, Turkey, sir, with brilliant colors, and a set, sir, iu satin and fc'ilt." Well, of course, I bad the parlors thor oughly refurnished, and I laid a neat new Brussels in Mr. George's own room. . To ee that lovely woman's gratitude I it was beautiful. Thus was I soliloquizing one morning over my eggs and toast, when Mrs. George came gliding in with the airy grace of a yipb. I never saw a sylph in my life, but I am sure that is the proper thing to say. Really, Mrs. George " 1 begun. " Now don't scold me, dear sir.- Vou .sue I know my duty" with that smile that touches my susceptible heart, as the moonlight kindles the melting snow. " Your eggs are done as you like them, I trust ; I always see to such thing myself," And as she sat down and placed ber slender band on the spotless table cloth, I could not tell which was the whitest. "The eggs are simply perfoct, Mrs. George," was my reply ; and I never tasted better bread. " I always have my eyes on Betty when she is making bread, Mr. Ilaynes. Bo much depends upon these humble culinary efforts. Alas 1" and she sighed softly " we live in degenerated days, sir, when womon seek their ploasuro outside of the sacred portals of home. I have never al lowed myself, sir, to be distracted from my legitimate pursuits." "I do believe you, Mrs. George, said I, warmly, and a diamond solitaire glittered before my mental vision, or perhaps I should say sentimental vision ; but how was a man to bold out long against the charms of so nobly planned a woman, with taper Angers and gentle, downcast eyes, and sucb blessed notions of the beauty of domestic life?" " I trust your breakfast pleased you, sir." " Upon my word, Mrs. George," 1 said, her bewildering eyes smiling into mine. " I was never so charmed in my life. She blushed. What had I said to bring that exquisite dye upon her cheeks? I grew frightened, and backed away from the table, pulling on my gloves. "flow soon do you go, sir?" she asked, raising ber slender fingers playing with a little chain that relieved the dead black of her dress. " I leave in just twenty minutes, Mrs. George." "And as you are to be gone all da; am I correct, Mr. Ilaynes ?" , I nodded. " As you are to be gone all day, and I in variably see to such things myself, would you leave the key of the safe with mo ? The silver bas long keen in need of scour ing, and you really should not be so ex travagant as to send it to a silversmith's for that purpose, as most gentlemen do. I have a wonderful powder my dear old mother gave me the receipt ; for indeed sir" a plaintive tenderness gliding into her pathetic tones " we have bad silver iu our family ; my mother was a Hancock. Sbe paused. My glance, I trust, was full of sympathy. " Yes, sir, a Ilancock. But reversoB, sir, and reverses swept everything away" with a stately wave of ber white hand. " The powder is invaluable I might, could I condescend, make my fortune with it. Do you think you bad better leave the key, or," drawing her fine figure up, "will you take the silver " "Mrs. George, I beg Here are the keys, Mrs. Goorge." There were ten thousand dollars in that safe, and I detached the key of the money drawer. " Thank you ; you will bardly know your plate to-morrow," sbe said, with pretty laughing lips. "Pray, pray wrap up well; it is such a wind I" Thump wont my heart. " You will be borne when ? I always prefer to have nn explicit understanding, so that everything may bo in readiness." " To-norrow at twelve, Mrs. George," was my reply, wondering bow it would seem to kiss a pair of lips just as dewy and pouting as hers, and then I tore myself from the temptation, shook bands with Mrs. Georgo, and left the bouse, "Straws show which way the wind blows," says the old adage. It is my opinion that hats occasionally do that little favor for mankind. At least mine took the liberty so do so that morning. 1 bad now ten minutes in which to reach the B station. The depot was only a few squares distant, and I was walking as comfortably as I could, bracing myself against the wind, when a swoeping gust camo around the corner. Something was lifted from my head; it was my hat. My first Impulse was to look around to see if anybody was laughing I always laugh myself at a flying bat and then I betook myself to sport. The bat only am bled ; I was sure to catch it. It lodged against a gas-post ; my band was almost on it, when the twin to that other gust came racing along, and off went my bat, It was very early,, and there were but few people abroad. I beard now and then a faint laugh ; a scurvey little urchin sang out, "Go it boots !" a Hibernian maid, carrying a large parcol iu a small paper, cried, " BUure the hat's leading that man a chase 1" but on I went, breathless, chagrined, and mad. Up Oak street, down Green, across Maple, and through Cherry that confounded hat bad led me; now doubling and fluttering almost under my nose ; now gyrating with ex ultant motion, that humbly expressed the jubiloe of uncontrollable jollity ; now whirl ing into somebody's garden ; now whisking around a barber's polo ; now bobbing along the edge of a fence, till at last at latt I bad it 1 Death could not grip harder than I held on to that eratio brim. It was, I felt, a hat gifted with extraordinary powers of locomotion, and I did not mean to let it have its own sweet will again. I pulled out my watch with one band, holding still to my bat with the other. It wanted one minute to seven, and the train was five blocks off. Hoping against hope, I set off on a run and at the corner of the third block had the supreme satisfaction of bearing the final whistle, and the swift thud and thunder of the departing train. I was balked, and gave my hat a savage pull as I stopped to consider what had best be done. I anathematized hats of every persuasion from the orthodox stove-pipe to the Quaker broad-brim. To have crushed the offending member on my head as flat as a pancake, and then finished it with my penknife would have been balm to my ag gravated soul. Turning my steps in the direction of my oflico, I walked moodily on, a disappointed man. Instead of the holiday which I had so fondly anticipated, tho merry greeting of friends, the sight of old, long banished faces, I was still bound to the perplexities of an interminable law case. It would be as well, perhaps, to attend to business, I thought, with rueful visage ; and I prepared to resign myself with the best grace possible. My oflico was nearly two miles from my Iioubo. After a leisurely walk I arrived there just as the clock was striking eight, Up I went, scattering straws and papers, till I gained the cheerless, uncarpcted pas sage, and saw opposite, my own square of painted glass, and the card, " Not in till to-morrow ; and then I found I bad left my office key in my other vest pocket in dressing room wardrobe at borne. Cloaily bad I begun the day wrong foot foremost, as my old nurse used to say when everything went wrong. What should I do next ? I meditated upon the matter going down Btairs, utterly oblivious of a basket of oranges at my elbow till tho vicious scream of the old fruit peddler startled me. " Sacre I Bare, you are no zhentleman." I turned, thrilled with honor. The or anges were racing poll moll down stairs, to the delight of several urchins, and out into the gutter. I, unfortunate wretch had sent them there with an unconscious movement of my arm as I gesticulated to myself. Nothing stirs mutiny in a man's soul quicker than the imputation of not being a gentleman. A five dollar bill, however, healed this noisy foreigner's wounds, and mine too, for with ono of his most frantic bows the peddler repeated, "Sare, I mis take;! see you are von zhentlemen." There was nothing for it now but to go home again. I pleased myself with pic tures of Mrs. George busy over my silver. I make no secret of saying that I like to soe delicate, refined women at work. The bare, round blue-veined aims, tempt ingly displayed just below the elbow ; the pretty handkerchief tied over the dark flowing tresses ; the stout linen apron jealously keeping guard from throat to toes; the quick, fine step; the musical gurglo of some sweet favorite song ; the dash and spirit they contrive to throw into commonplace observances ; the mitnio blus ter when one of the stupid masculines inter feres with their privileges, if it is only try ing to find the shoe brush make a charm ine oejrreeate delightful to one who has never bad more intimate acquaintance than bis bousekooper. So should I see Mrs. Georgo, perchance, herself rubbing with those white tape fin gers the old silver that my mother once do- 1 ighted to honor. It needed only this ex- perlenco, I felt, to make me a willing slave, to send me in. baste to Ball & Black's to choose the finest, costliest solitaire to be found in their brilliant collection. I reached my borne : I mounted the stops. There was a strange 'silence about the premises. No cheerful bustle, no mer ry voices, no sound of footsteps, no ring of clattering silverware, no anything. I pulled the bell. Still ooinplotest silonco not even Jip's little chery "yell warned or weloomod tho solitary and disappointed homo-seeker. The parlor blinds were clos ed, the basement 'shades were dowu ; seemed as if there must be a corpse in the house. Airain and again I rani?. The bell, a powerful one, jangled spitefully, as if it took pleasure in insisting that there was nobody at borne. I descended the steps ; I went around to the bock gate, and succeed ed in loosening the book that confined it, with my pen-knife. All was as silent as elsewhere ; the servants miiBt be gone ; Jip must be gone. " What the deuce is in it all ?" I muttered impationtly. Perhaps Mrs. George had postponed ber silver cleaning till afternoon and had gone to the matinee ; but where were the ser vants ? There wns fortunately a window at the back part of the house that could be un fastened from the outside. The contriv ance was one of my own, and nobody was in the secrot but myself. I opened the window, and had just fastened my knee comfortably on the stone coping when a heavy hand grasped my elAw. I noticed something suspicious, and fol lowed you, you rascal 1 Are you not asham ed a man looking like a gentleman break ing into a house like a common thief." The follow held me in his grasp as if it were a vice. 1 looked over my shoulder, A star blazed on the wretch's blue-ooated breast ; there was a guilt number on his cap, bis breath smelled of but we won't mention that ; his noso was a turn-up, his hair was a little reddish this is original and the whole contour of the man, told ot his i'aui try instinct. 1 lelt my eyes flash, my cheeks burn, and I mentally ro solved, after crushing and cutting, to put my unlucky hat that had led roe into all theso,8orapcs, into the kitchen stove. " What do you wish, sir?" I exclaimed with as much dignity and severity as my very peculiar and cramped condition would permit. " Unhand me quick, sir t I am no thief, but the lawful owner of No. 1140, My name is Ilaynes, Robert Haynes ; go round and look at the door-plate." " None of your blather, young man,' said the officer sternly, "you've scrutinize ed that door-plate protty thoroughly. have had my eyes on you for some time.' " You don't know what you are talking about. Let me get down, sir," said 1 botly. " I tell you I am Mr. Haynes, Robt. Ilaynes, law office on Cooper street. I shall not con descend to explain to you how I happened not to have the key of my own front door. You have only to accompany me to Judge Holt's on the right here, aud ask any mem ber of tho family whether I am or am not Mr. Robert Ilaynes." " Very well got off young gontleman,but you must allow me to take your arm." " I am not in the habit of walking arm in arm with a poT&comau," said I haught- ily. " Then I shall bo oblifftt to arrest you for suspicious conduct," htrresponded pre paring the way for action. There was nothing for it but to submit to have bis blue sleeve passed through my black one, and proceeded to the residence of the Judge to find out if I was myself. , We bad bardly passed to the sidewalk when fortunately, the judge himself came along. " Hello, Ilaynes !" be cried, and then glanced at the figure at my side. " I am to bo arrested foi breaking into my own house," I said returning his salu. tation. The policeman had suddenly dropped my arm, as if it burned him. The old judge who relished a joke, burst iuto guffaw which brought the neighbors to their windows. "By-the-way," said the judge when he had rocovered himself, "you had better keep your friend of the star in tow. My wife spoke to me about your housekeeper this morning ; said she went away in a car riage, and took more bundles than she brought when sbe came here." My heart beat almost audibly. Could I this gentle browed, low-voicod woman of whom I hod thought in connection with a diamond engagement ring, be vile enough to doceive me, to despoil me ? The sup position was too dreadful. " I counsel you to attempt another raid," he added. " Perhaps Johnny here will give you a boost ;" aud he laughed again. " It may all be tho purest conjecture on my wife's part you know. Ladies are apt to be suspicious of housekeepers. Ha t bal ha ! ha 1" -Itmight be all a mistake! It was a mistake, I repeated, almost furiously to myself. Mrs. George, that quiet movlug, perfectly lady-like person ; Mrs. George, whose lightoHt step had sometomes set my pulses fluttering ; of whom I had dreamed I dare not say how often ; whoso superb eyes, swau-like throat, and stately presence I bad admired untold of times she to de scend to any little petty meanness, to house lifting t I entered tho domicile at the back win dow, bidding the policeman be within call. The first thing I saw in the basement pas sage was the dead body of poor Jip, my pet terrier. He bad evidently been pois oned. I walked through tho lower rooms. A costly bronze clock and three expensive . vases were gone from the parlor shelf ; also a very beautiful little group jn terra cotta, for which I had given an extravagant price. On a closer examination I saw that the edges of my new carpot were loose. They had certainly been tacked down before. N I opened the door into the fiont hall, which literally swarmed with packages. They stood on the chairs, on the rack on the table everywhere. Not oaring to stop to examine these evidencos of dishonesty, I went up to the second story. There on the toilet table lay a neatly folded note, of which the following is a transcript : " DearJMat. I have packed everything that could be conveniently carried the clothes, the silver, the books, and as many light ornaments as possible. I think you might easily take the carpets, if you are ex peditious and cau rely upon your men. The old gentleman (I bit my tongue) won't be home till noon to-morrow. I've circu lated the report that he intends to dispose of some of his furniture ; consequently you might fill a couple of large vans. The money I have in my possesion. I contrived to loosen the . carpets at the edges, but could not move the heavy furniture. You can fold the first, aud your men can carry out the latter. I hope you have followed my directions as to dress ; the neighbors will take you for Mr. Haynes. If it bad not been for you, Mat, I would let him make love to me. I could twist IrffU around my finger. "After you are through I shall be at the place designated. The servants are in my pay, and I have sent them off. You can not tell how patiently I have looked for ward to the completion of this little scheme. My dear Mat if we get off (wo shall get off) we are made for Hie. "And now my darling, " farewell for a short time. I wish I could have seen you, but this letter must suffice. Destroy it at once." So she could twist me around her finger could she ? The truth is this bold asser tion made me wince ; I felt a fool down to my finger ends. The Star joined me at a signal, and we went up stairs together. "It's tho most audacious thing I ever' heard tell of 1" he exclaimed. " We will wait up here aud see the play out. I'll bow the Bhutters and there'll fco some fun before long. Have you got any shooting iron ?" ?went to my room aud returned with two revolvers. "That is good," he said, his stolid face lighting up ;" now we are prepared for them. It will make a pretty case. Sup pose you suspect the housekeeper ?" . I had kept the contents of the letter to myself, morcly giving him a hint or two, but I felt my blood boil at tho mention of Mrs. Georgo. " Yes of course I suspect the house keeper. V She turned off my old servants and brought two creatures of her own here. Nobody knows how much they have carri ed off." "It's risky business," muttered the Star, with a shrewd glance. " Mon ain't never safe with women-folks about, unless the ladies are in the firm, by Jove I Rayth er nice-looking?" aud the fellow winked vulgarly. " No, ugly as the deuce !" was my half savage reply. It would never cajoled by an artful interloper. "Here's our game!" whispered the po liceman, as a stylish carriage drove up to the door. I looked down. The make np of the thief was complete.' A casual acquain tance would have sworn it was mo. The follow sat gracefully back in the carriage, waited till the coachman opened tne door, and stood there a moment on tho side walk, looking carelessly round. ' I' Sure it's a perfect duplicate ; but he'll send the carriage off presently. ' ' It's ex pecting ho'll bo about for a time, and then a 'different kind of carriage'll bo in wait ing. Bute enough, tho stylish equlpago was driven off aud th'o man with the very track of my own stop, ' lounged coolly up to the door, the red lined cape of his coat jaun tily displayed. Since that day I have dis carded red lining. The door opened, , and the fellow went prowling over the lower rooms. In a very few momenta be wtis joined by two other men, whom be let in by the back basement door. CONCLUDED ON SECOND FAOS. t