H n B 5 ?i'??i7on AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. "&IZ2?' Vol. ATIX. IV3v Ulooiiifiold, Tn,., Tuesday, rny 27, 1873. TVo. SI. : . . - . , it IS PUBLISHED EVERT TUESDAY MORNING, BY FRANS MORTIMER & CO., At New Moomfleld, Perry Co., Ta. BolnR provided with Rteam Tower, and large Cylinder and Job-Tresses, ve are prepared to do all kinds or Job-1'rlntlng In good style and at Low 1'rlces. ADVERTISING ItATKSl Trantient 8 Cent per lino for one Insertion 2 " " two Insertions 15 "three insertions v Business Notices In Local Column 10 Cents per line. .For longer yearly adv'ts terms will be given upon application. For The llloomnold Tlmon. "CONSIDER THE LILIES." BY SIIORTFELLOW " O, the chilly vernal season 1 O, the slow returning summer !" Sighed the " Epigaa repens," Peeping forth to see if Flora Had not come to wake her children From the sleep of dreary winter. But the rosy ". Epigjca" Shuddered as the chilly breezes Rudely swept the perfume from her. Waiting for the voice of Flora, Boon she heard the Goddess calling, Where the earth was bare and windy, Calling for her breeze-born danghtor, " Anomosa nemorosa ;" Heard "Thalictrum," a frail cousin Of the Wind-flower " Anemone," Answering the regal goddess From the conch of " Anemore." Scarce had Flora crossed the brooklet Where the " Caltha" was abathlng When the ever-peevish " Crowfoot," Burning with her own harsh nature, Railed because the gentle Flora Had so long delayed to wake her : Said the flowers had all been sleeping Longer than it was their habit f That the " Symploearpus" never Had been known to be so tardy ; That the " Alder" next door neighbor, Still had been an early riser. " Softly,' said the gentle Flora, " Add not to thy fiery nature Acrimonious words for others, ' Lest they too resort to railing." " Go," said Flora to the " Crowfoot," " Go where many smiling daughters Spread their beauty o'er the landscape, Scenting all the air with sweetness i Learn from them that, late orearlf, Every blossom has its mission. w Be thoo, like the " Erythrouium," Ever meek an8 unassuming ; Or like " Viola" sweet and lowly, Constant when the tempest gathers. Be not vain because the day-god Clothed thee in his golden mantle ; Beauty shnns the brazen brightness, Kneeltng where tbe softer blushes Of the mild " Claytonla" greet her. 8bort enough It your existence For accomplishing your mission i Waste It not in Idle murmurs At tbe season or the weather. Even now thy mates are passing To the earth, their common mother. List I there comes a plaintive wailing Trembling on the moaning zephyr. 'Tls tbe voice of lamentation For tbe lost and lovely Primrose. So they pass but still their sweetness Lives la grateful recollection. The Sailor's Story. ONE evening, not long since, a number of old ship-masters chanced to meet at social supper, and after the cloth was removed we went in for yarn spinning, And among our number was Captain Rich- ard Nutter, and a finer man or better sailor never trod a deck. At length it came bis turn to tell a story, or, what we preferred and what the rest of us had done re late some incident of experience in his own life. " Well, boys," he said, as he rejected the wine, which was at that moment passed to him for the first time, " I will give you a bit of the early part of my ocean life, and It is a very important bit, too, for upon it I have built tbe whole of my subsequent manhood." We prepared to listen to Captain Nutter with tbe moat profouod attention, for be was not only an old seaman, but one of tbe mout successful commanders In our mer cantile marine. We listened, and bis story was as follows : . " I was very young when I first entered on shipboard, and at the sge of fourteen I considered myself quite a sailor. When I was eighteen I was shipped on board an East ludiuoMM for a Ions voyage. There were six of us on board of about the same age, and we had about the same duties to perform. The" ship the old Lady Dunlap was a large ono, and our crew was large in proportion, there being fifty-two, all told. We ' boys,' as wo were called, mess ed together, and in all other respects were separate from the rest of the crew, just as much as the officers were. Our captain was a noble-hearted, honorable man, kind and generous, but yet very strict. Of course we youngsters found plenty of occasions to find fault with him, and very often were his decisions arraigned before our mesa and decidedly condemned. In fact, we should have reversed many of his judgments if we had the power; but as he was commander, and we only foremast bands and boys at that he bad his own way, and the lumi nous decisions we came to were consequent ly of no avail, and lost to the woVld. 1 Now, we boys bad learned, in the course of our travels, to drink our grog as well as any sailors. We could toss off a glass of rum and water with as much grace as any one, and we claimed the right so to do, not only as a piivilcge, but as an honor to which a life upon the ocean entitled us. But even in this respect our captain pre tended to differ from us. When we could get on shore, we would invariably indulge in our cups, and not unfrequently would we come off, or be brought off, in a state anything but sober. I said ' we,' but there was one of our number who could not be induced to touch a drop of anything intoxicating. His name was John Small, and he belonged in one of the back towns of New Jersey. "Now, Jack Small not only refrained entirely from drinking himself, but he used . sometimes to ask us to let the stuff alone. He gave that job up, however, for wo made such sport of him that he was glad to leave us alone. But our captain had sharp eyes, and it was not long before he began to show Jack small favors which he did not show to us. Ho would often take Jack on shore with him to spend tbe night, and such things as that, while we were kept on the ship. Of course this created a sort of envy on our part, and it ended in a decided ill-will toward poor Jack. " Now, in truth, Jack was one of the best fellows in the world. He was kind, obliging, honest, always willing to lend a helping hand in case of distress, and as true a friend as ever lived only ho would not drink with us, that was all. No that wasn't all; he learned faster than we d id he was a better sailor, and learned more of navigation. But this we tried to lay to the captain's paying him the most attention, though we knew better at the time, for we had the privilege of learning just as much as we had a mind to. The truth of the mat ter was, we five loved the idea of being old salts' bettor than we did anything else and we spent more time in watching for opportunities to have a sproe than we did in learning to perfect ourselves in the pro fession we had chosen. " It even got so, at length, that Jack Small was called upon to take the deck sometimes, when the officers were busy, and he used to work out the reckonings at noon as regularly as did tbe captain. Yet Jack was in our mess, and be was a perfect eyesore. We saw that be was reaching rapidly ahead of us in every useful particu lar, and yet we wouldn't open our eyes. We were envious of his good fortune, as we called it, and used to seize every opportunl ty to tease and run him; but be never got angry in return. He sometimes would laugh at us, and at others he would so feel ingly chide us that we would remain silent for awhile. " At length tho idea entered our heads that Jack should drink with us. We talk' ed the matter over in tbe mess while Jock was absent, and we mutually pledged each other that we would make him drink at the first opportunity. After this determination was taken, we treated Jack more kindly, and be was happier than be had been for some time. Once more we laughed and joked with him in the mess, and he in return helped us in our navigation. We were on our homeward bound passage, by the way of Brazil, and our ship stopped at Rio Janeiro, where we remained a week or so. One pleasant morning we six young. sters received permission to go on shore and spend the whole day; and accordingly we rigged up in our best togs and were carried to the landing. "Now was our chance, and we put our heads together to see how it should be done. Jack's veiy first desire, as soon as he got ashore, was to go np and examine the various things of interest 1n the city. II wanted to visit the churches and such like pluees, and, to ptoane trim, we agreed to go with him if he would go and take dinner with us. He agreed to this at once, and we thought we had him sure. We planned that after dinner was eaten, we would have some light sweet wine brought on, and that we would contrive to get rum enough into what he drank to upset him, for nothing on earth could please us more than to get Jack Small drunk, and carry him on board in that shape, for then we fancied that the captain's favoritism would be at an end, and that he would no longer look upon our rival with preference over ourselves. We bad tho matter all arranged and in the meantime we paid Jack all the attention in our power so much so that he at length signified a willingness to go anywhere to please us, provided we would not go into any bad) place. " Dinner time came, and a most capital dinner we had: We had selected one of the best hotels, for the prices were no high er there than at places of lower repute, and, in fact, not so high, for these low places fleece us sailors most unmercifully. Tho eatables were despatched with be coming gusto, and then tho wine was brought on. "Ah I what have you here ?" asked Jack betraying some uneasiness at the appear ance of the glasses and bottles. " Only a little new wine," I replied, as carelessly as I could. " Mere juice of the grape." " But it is wine, nevertheless," pursued ho. " It isn't wine," cried Sam Pratt, who was one of the hardest nuts old Ncptnne ever cracked. "No," chimed in Tim Black, another of about the same stamp. " It's only a littlo simple juice. Come, boys, fill up." ' The glasses were accordingly filled, Sam Pratt performing that duty, and ho took good care that Jack's glass had a good quantity of sweetened rum in it. " No," said Jack, as the glass was mov ed toward him. " If you are going to com mence thus, I will keep your company with water while you remain orderly, but I will not touch wine." This was spoken very mildly, and with a kind smile, but yet it was spoken firmly and we could see that our plan was about being knocked in the head. We urged him to drink with us only one glass, if no more. We told him how innocent it was, and how happy bis social glass would make us, but we could not move him. "Then let him go 1" cried Tim, who had already drank some. In fact, all of us but Jack had drank more or less during the forenoon! "Let him go we don't want the mean follow with us." " That's it," added Sam, with a "bitter off he goes.' "If he's too good to drink with his shipmates, we don't want him." "You misunderstand me," said Jack, in a tone of pain. I am not too good to drink with you, in the sense in which you would take it, but I do not wish to drink at all." " Too stingy that's all," said I, deter mined to make him drink if I could. But Jack looked at me so reproachfully as I said this, that I wished I had not spoken as I did. " If you wish to enjoy your wine, mess mates," said Small, at the same time rising from his chair, " you can do so, but I beg you will excuse me. I will pay my share of the expense for the dinner. " And for yotir share of the wine," said Tim, " for we ordered it for you." " No," returned Jack; I can not pay for any of the wine " " Mean " cried two or three at a breath. " No, no, messmates not mean. I will pay for the whole of the dinner for every article you and I have had in the house, save the wine." " And as be spoke he rang the bell. He asked the waiter who entered what the bill was for tbe company, without the wine, and after the amount bad been stated be took out his purse to pay it, when Sam Pratt, who was our acknowledged leader, caught his arm. - " 'No not so,' sard Sam. 'You shall not pay for it, for we will not eat at the expense of one who will sneak out of s scrape in this way. We want nothing more to do with you unless you take a glass of wine with us " " Very well,' said Jack; and as he spoke I could see that bis lip quivered, and that be dared not speak more. " He turned toward the door then, but before he could reach it Tim Bluke ran and caught him; at the same time exclaiming "' May I be blessed if you go off so, any way. You've commenced, ajid now you've got to stick to it.' ' " 1 This was the signal for us to com mence again, and once more we tried and urged Jack to drink the wine ; and when we found that the urging would not do, we commenced to abuse and scoff. We ac cused him of trying to step over us on board the ship, and of all other bad things of which we could think. For awhile the poor fellow seemed inclined to let his anger get the upper hand ; but at length he calmed himself, and, stepping back to his chair, be said : " 'Shipmates, will you listen to me for a moment?" " Silence gave consent, aud in a moment more he resumed : " ' Since matters have come to this pass, I have resolved to tell you what I had meant to keep locked up in my bosom." ' We had always thought, from Jack's manner, that there was something peculiar connected with his early lifo, and we were all attention in a moment. " ' My story is but a very short one,' he continued, ' and I can tell it an a veiy few words. From the time of my earliest child hood I never knew what it was to have a happy homo. My father, was a drunkard I Once he had been a good man aud a good husband, but rum ruined all bis manhood, and made a brute of him. I can romembor how cold and cheerless was the first winter of my lifo to which my memory leads my mind. We . had no fire, no food, no clothes, no joy, no nothing, nothing but misery and woe I My poor mother used to clasp me to her bosom to keep me warm ; and once once, I remember, when her very tears froze on my cheek I ' Oh I how my mother prayed to God for her husband; and I, who could but just prattle, learned to pray, too. And I used to see that hus band and father return to his home, and I remember how my poor motiier cried and trembled. " ' When 1 grew older I had to go out and beg for bread. All cold and shivering, I waded through the deep snow, with my clothes in tatters and freezing feet almost bare ; and I saw other children dressed warm and comfortable, and I knew they were happy, for they laughed and sang as they bounded along toward school. Those boys bad sober fathers. I knew that their fathers were no better than mine had been once, for my mother had told me how noble my own father could be if the ac cursed demon, rum, were not in his way. But the fatal power was upon him, and though he often promised and though he often tried, he could not escape. J 'Time passed on, and I was eight years old, and those eight, years had been years of such horror and suffering as I pray God I may never see another experience. At length one cold morning in the dead of winter, my father was not at home. He had not been at borne through the night. My mother sent me to tbe tavern to see if I could find bim. I had gone half the way when I saw something in the snow, by the side of the road. I stopped, and a shudder ran through me, for it looked like a human form. I went up and turned the head over, aud brushed the snow from the face. It was my father, and be was stiff and cold ! I laid my hand on bis pale brow, and it was like solid marble. He was dead 1" " Poor Jack stopped a moment and wiped his eyes. Not one of us spoke, for we had become too deeply moved. But he soon went on : " ' I went to the tavern and told the people there what I had found, and the landlord sent two of his men to carry the frozen body of my father home. O ship mates I I cannot tell you how mother wept and groaned. She sank down on her knees and clasped tbe icy corpse to hor bosom as though she would have given it life from the warmth of her own breast. She loved her husband through all his errors, and her love was all-powerful now. The two men went away and left the body still on the floor. My mother wished me to come and kneel by her side. I did so. " My child," she said to me, and the big tears were rolling down her cheeks, " you know what lias caused all this. This man was once as noble, and happy, and true, as man can be ; but oh I see how he has been stricken down t Promise me, my child, oh I promise here, before God and your dead father, and your broken-hearted mother, that you will never, never, touch a single drop of the fatal poison that has wrought for us all this misery." " 0 shipmates 1 1 did promise, then and there, all that my mother asked, and God knows that to this moment that promise has never been broken. My father was buried, and some good, kind neighbors helped us through the winter. When the next spring came I could work, aud I earn ed something for my mother. At length I founed a chance to ship, and I did so ; and every time I go home I have somo money for my mother. Not for the wealth of the whole world would I break the pledge I gave my mother and my God on that dark, cold morning. And even had I made no such pledgo, I would not touch that fa tal eup, for I know that I have a fond, do ting mother, who would be made miserable by my dishonor, and I would rather dio than bring more sorrow upon her head. Perhaps you have no mothers ; and if you have, perhaps they do not look to you for support, for I know you tSo well to believe that either of you would ever bring down a loving mother's gray hairs in sorrow to tho grave. That is all shipmates. Let me go now, and you may enjoy yourselves alone, for I do not believe that you will again urge the wine-cup upon me.' "As Jack thus Bpoko, he turned toward the door, but Tim Black stopped him. " 'Hold on, Jack !' cried Tim, wiping his eyes and starting up from his chair. ' You shan't go alone. I have got a mother,' and I love her as well as you love yours, and your mother shall not be happior than mine ; for, by the love I bear her, I here swear that she shall never have a drunken son. I will driuk no more.' " 'Give ub your hand,' cried Sam Pratt ; i ll go witu you. v " I waited no more, but quickly starting from my chair, I joined the two, and ore l.i f Iwi nlwila Aira rf ,,a ininul ntUl, T . 1- Small in his noble life-plan. We called for pen, ink, and paper, aud made Jack ' draw up a pledge. He signed it first, aud we followed him ; and when the deed was done, I knew we were far happier than we had been before for years. The wine upon the table was untouched, and the liquor wo had drank during the forenoon was now all gone in its effect. " Toward evening we returned to the ship. There was a frown upon the captain's brow as we camo over the side, for he had never known us to come off from a day's liberty sober. But when we had all come over the side and reported ourselves to him, his countenance changed. lie could hardly give credit to the evidence of his own senses. " 'Look here, boys,' he said, after he had examined us thoroughly ; 'what does this mean?" " 'Show him the paper," whispered I. "Jack had our pledgo, and, without speaking, be handed it to the captain. He took it and read it, and his face changed its expression several times. At length I saw a tear start to his eye. " 'Boys,' he said, as bo folded tip the paper, 'lot me keep this ; and if you stick to your noble resolution, you shall never want a friend while I live.' ' " We let the captain keep the paper ; and .when he had put it in his pocket, ho came aud took us each in turn by the hand. He was much affected, and I knew the cir cumstance made him happy. From that day our prospects brigbtoned. Jack Small no longer bad our envy, for he took hold and taught us navigation, and wo were proud of him. On the next voyage we all six were rated as able seamen, and received full wages, and we left not that uoble bearted captain until we loft to become offi cers on board other ships. " Jack Small is now one of tbe best mas ters in tbe world, and I beliove the rest of our party are living, honored and respected men. Three years ago we all met the whole six of us at the Astor House in New York, aud not one of us had broken the pledge which we made in tbe hotel at Rio. Four of us were then commanders of good ships, one was a merchant in New York, and the other was just going out as American Consul to one of the Italian oities in the Mediterranean. "You know why I do not drink wine with you, and of course you will not urgo it upon me, nor take my refusal as a mar k of coldness or disrespect." Fiddling for a Dancing Bridge. Tbe Franklin Institute Journal says ; Wheu the bridge at Colobrook Dale (the first iron bridge in the world) was build ing, a fiddler came aloug and said to be workmen that he could fiddle their bridge down. Tbe fiddlers thought this boast a fiddle-de-dee, and invited the itinerant mu sician to fiddle away to bis heart's content. One note after another was struck upon the strings until one was found with which the bridge was in sympathy. When the bridge began to shake violently the inored ulous workmen were alarmed at the unex pected result, and ordered the fiddlor to top, .