rrin MS a . L t. 5 if IsMn PI "FSTalr AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER " "T" '''Z&'Js? "Vol. "VIII. New Bloomficld, I?n,., Tuesday, .A-iinst IS, 1874. TVo. 33. 6V P Ioomfifltr (hiub. . 1BPUDUBHEDETKKT TUESDAY UOHNINO, BY FEANE MORTIMER & CO.,, At New Bloomfleld, Terry Co., Pa. Being provided with Steam Power, and large Cylinder and Job-Presses, we arc prepared . to do all kinds of Jub-1'rlntlng In good style and at Low Prices. ADVKUTISING RATKSl . TrantientU Cents per lino for one insertion 12 15 twolnsertloni "three insertions Business Notices In Local Column 10 Cents per line. vForlongaryearly adv'ts terms will be given upon application. JOSEPH HANNAFORD'S WIFE RESPONSIBILITY bad come to Jos oph Ilannaford early in life, for be was not more than sixteen when big father died, and left bis mother and bis young sistor to bis keeping. There was property enough for them all, to he sure ; but it was chiefly in land and stock, and needed Jos eph's vigilant superintendence to make it profitable. This superintendence be gave faithfully and willingly, and never once complained that to do so forced him to re sign sundry secretly cherished personal am bitions of bis own. But all this responsi bility wrought its own work upon his na turemade him provident, thoughtful, calculating, thrifty precisely an old young man. This state of things continued for ten years. Thou bis sister married, and re moved to the next town. His mother de sired to accompany her, and was only prevented by the difficulty which attended obtaining a suitable housekeeper for Jos eph. You perceive, therefore, that at twenty six Mr, Joseph Ilannaford was just in a position whore marriage became convenient and' desirable; ' Uthorwise, I rather think, he was quite too well disciplined to have chorished any idle fancies or importunate longings. . .Whether, before this epoch, he had over suffored any truant thoughts to wander in the direction of Miss Carrie Fay, who had been growing towards her sweet woman hood not very far away from bis door, I cannot conjecture. I only know ' that about this time he began to discover that her eyes were blue, and her hair golden, her cheeks ; wore flower o' the, poach, " and hor lips blossomed with a sweetness which he longed to taste. lie told her these things in some discreet fashion of his own, and she he was her first lover, and the right of discovery has gone for a good deal in all ages. . . . Every one said he was making a great mistake. The neighbors thought they knew what be wanted a great deal better 'than be himself did ; and were sure that a good, strong, thrifty girl, used to working and saving, would be just the one for him. Carrie was pretty, and fanciful, and dainty. She was an orphan ; but an uncle, who bad no children of his own, had kept her feeling from any sense of loneliness or desolation by bis constant and fatherly kindness. Under his roof she had grown up to seventeen years, and at that period the old young man came along, and wooed and won her. , ) i Her uncle felt secretly uncomfortable, for be understood just what Carrie ws belter than any one else did ; and be knew that it would be no easy matter to mnke a working-bee out of a goldon-wlnged butter fly. But, ou the other hand, Carrie was evidontly In love with her suitor ; and Mr. Ilannaford was certainly well-to-do quite able to marry to please himself, and make his wife comfortable in her own way after wards. . , j Bo, in due time, the wedding took place, and Carrie Ilannaford went away to her new home, where, before very long, a change came over the spirit of her dream. She had begun by first idealizing, and , thou adoring her lord and master. He was, certainly, well-looking," in a kind of regular massive way. - His face had in it not much suggestion of sentiment. His eyes were clear and shrewd, though kind ; and his lips were firm and rather thin. He knew beauty when be saw it, but he would never be ruled through his senses. His features were well-shaped. There was power in his face. He was a man who knew how to say no to himself and to othors. There was a tuanly vigor and symmetry in his well-knit frame ; and, in short, he possessed a good many of the attiibutes which go to the making up of a girl's hero. But Mistress Carrie reckoned without her host when she proposed to make a post-matrimonial lover of him. He evidontly did not believe in connubial love-making. ' Philandering, as he called it, was not to his taste. Courting was very well In its way. It had not been without its shy delights, even for bim. But they were married now, and it was time to settle down, and begin life as they could hold out. Their wedding-day was in September ; and when the late October winds blew away the sapless, withered leaves, Carrie felt as if her hopes, which had blossomed so fairly, where blowing with the leaves, and withered as they, down the wind. . She was a conscientious, well-intentioned little creature, and she tried her best to put aside all these feelings, which she taught herself to believe were morbid and un grateful. She was constantly striving to justify Joseph, making little pleas for him at the bar of her heart. He was nine years older than she ; it would not be natural for him to have so much romance. Of course he loved hor ; why else would he have mar ried her ? What a goose sho was to expect of a big, strong, busy man the little soft nesses which belong to and delight women. Then she would try to be bravo ; make a pretty little toilet, perhaps ; wear the dress and the ribbons he had praised six months ago ; and meet bim, hor eyes bright with hope, her cheeks pink with expectation. Was he blind to all this such an old young man that the sweet devices of youth had no longer for bim any language ? At any rate, he made no sign. ' How dull, and prosy, and commonplace were the long winter evenings which they passed together. They got through supper and were seated before the Franklin stove in their little sitting-room, at six o'clock, punctually ; ; and there for three mortal hours they sat in unbroken quiet, be read ing his newspapers through and through, and she watching him, and wondering, wondering, wondering whether life was t& go on at this dead level forever. Punctual ly as the clock struck nine, he would get up, light his lantern, and go his nightly rounds among cows, and oxen, and horses. Then he would come in, take off his boots, leisurely warm his feet at the open fire, and go to bed. She grew to bate the pre cise epoch at which he pulled off his boots. It seemed to her that juBt up to that pass she could bear on silently, but ' as if then sho must utter somo outcry, or silence and constraint would choke Tior. ' ' Once or twice sho made some few for lorn ' attempts to better the condition ' of things brighten them up, if possible. Once she planned tho beguiloment of a little supper. Having ' made alt ready be forehand, while he was out upon bis eve ning round sho stewed some oysters and browed 6ome codec, fondly fancying her small least would be a success ; but tho wise old young man would not see the fun. Ho did not believe iu oysters at bedtime ; thoy would disagroe with , him, he knew. As for coffee, he was sure a single cup would keep him awake all night j but if Carrio could take such things at nine o'clock, and not have them hurt hor, be bod not tho slightest objection. So, with no heart . to taste it herself, sho carried away lief little , treat ; and if a few tears cooled the coffee sho had poured for him iu vain, he, at least, was nono tho wiser. Slowly the winter wore away" the long, sad season of snows and sins." Birds came back from over seas, and began to siug. Violota opened shy blossoms. Grass blados sprang up greenly ; aijd oven Carrie Uannaford brightened with the brightening of nature, and began to remember that she herself was young. - One day in May, her hubband came to her with the proposal that they should take a summer boarder; He put the matter in the most ungracious way, as is the matri monial wont of precisely this class of men. As she would bo having a hired girl any way, he said and ho used, in saying it, a tone which made her feci herself a monster of extravagance they might just as well have something to keep hor busy ; and this boardor who wanted to como, this Mr. Hugh Waring, would pay woll, and make very little trouble. He knew this, be eauso three years ago, in his mother's time, Waring had boarded with them for some months. Of course, Mistress Cariie consented for what could she do else? and kept se cret her own dissatisfaction with the pros pect before her. It only took Mr. Waring' arrival, how ever, to reconcile her to his presence. With his first deferential bow over her hand, she became his willing hostess. He was a per son of such type as the wife had never be fore, in her short, quiet life, encountered a man of wealth and of leisure, high-bred, scholarly, and belonging to the ancient Ordor of Oentlomcn, He was a handsomer man, too, than one often moots, with his clearly-cut features, his warm coloring, and the chestnut hair and flowing beard, which the eyes matched. He was not an old young man. Impulse was strong within him ; discipline had not yet taught him discretion. When he folt strongly, he would speak strongly, and, perhaps, act rocklessly ; but, under ordinary circumstances, be had the aplomb and the oool self-possession of a man of the world. Very soon ho began to perceive that to board with the Hannafords now was a slightly different thing from what it had been in the administration of Joseph Han naford's self-contained mother and ' staid sister. Joseph Ilannaford's wife was of altogether another order of women. It may be questioned whether sho would have made any serious impression on him had he met her as Miss Carrie Fay.. But, since hei marriago, a soul-subduing pathos had grown into her look which somehow went to bis heart. Perhaps, too, the strongest appeal which can be made to a man's chiv alry, is the sight of a sad and disappointed woman, who neithers parades nor confesses her misery. . Hugh Waring was not a bad man. In some espccts, indeed, his heart and his life wore purer and fresher than those of most men. He certainly meant no harm to his fair young hostess. He would not have added a feather's weight to the bur den which had already borne so hardly upon her life. But be commenced by pitying her; and Love has been : Pity's neighbor ever since the world began. Ho was tender and gentle to hor as no one bad ever been before. Ho was not too busy to notice the blush roses in her hair, or the blushes on ber cheeks. If she liked a wild flower be had brought homo, he niado light of a long tramp to fetch ber its kindred. While she sewed, ho read to hor, and taught her to love Keats and Shelley, and Browning. ' At nightfall ho. used to sing to hor while hor husband was busy about the late "chores" with which a New England farmer fills up the summer twi lights sweot, suggestive lovo-songs, and old ballads which have filtered down through the centuries their tearful music. All this time I doubt if he had thought of danger for himself or her. She, certainly never had. Her delight was pure and sweet. She would have said, if any one had questioned ber, that Mr. Waring was her friend, the best friend she ever had ; but, unquestioned, sho did not say even so much as that to herBelf. : Sho scarcely know that it was summer with hor heart, as well as with the year ; or that the sum mer days were flying fast. Nor did anything in the aspoct of affairs make ber husband uneasy. To do this young, man whom perhaps circumstance, rather than nature, had made old, justice, he was neither mean nor ungenerous. His confldonco in this young wife of bis was perfect. She loved him ; she was bis to havo and to hold J why should he grudge hor a few hours which gome one else mado pleasant after a fashion not his own ? I do not think he was likely to lose auything by this gonerosity, or that aiiy amount of suspicious espionage on bis part would have served his own cause better. There came, at last, an evening of revel ation to the two who were going ' on so blindly ; or perhaps it had come to Waring before Ho had boon sitting ' silently through the sunset, watching tho play of the warm light of Mrs. Ilannaford's fair face and golden hair. She looked wondor fully young and helpless, with hor extreme delicacy, hor appealing eyes, and her soft white dress, mado as simply as a babe's, and girdled with a blue ribbon. A languor, born perhaps of the summer heats, op pressed her. She drooped towards him, loaning her head upon hor hand, and look ing frail as a snow-wreath which a wind might blow away. . Waring sat silently, as I said, and watched her, untty the sunset lights bad gone out of her, and a curious awe bogan to steal over bim, as he saw ber through the gathering shadows, white, and still, and unearthly as a spirit. Then, out of the semi-darkness, bis voice came to her in a sort of chant, too low and even to be a song. The first line was follows : " Bwcet la true love, though given in vain, Iu vain." Hor tears were falling fast bofoie he had finished. A spoil was upon her which she did not understand, and could not evade. Still, she kopt silence, and waited for his words, words which, when they came, pierced hor like a sword. "Mrs. Ilannaford, I think 1 must go away to-morrow. ' It is midsummer, and all the hay is down." ' . " But I thought," she faltered, timidly, "you were to Btay the summer through." " So I should, if all things had been as of old. It is not good for me to be here un dor the now regime." , " I have tried," she bogan ; and then she stopped. Her tears choked ber. She could not go on, and tell him, iu simple common places, that she had tried to make him comfortable. "If you bad done no more than you tried to do, all would have been well," he cried, bis tones fervent with sudden pas sion. " I saw you just what you were, and your husband Just what be was. I saw how much it was in you to give to some man ; how little you were even asked to give to him. God help us both, for I havo loarned to lovo you. I covet my neigh bor's wife I daro not stay here." Sho said nothing ; but he heard through the stillness tho bitter sobbing which she strove to smother. It was more than he could bear. He crossed over to hor, but he did not take her in his arms. Some shield of purity was about her which still held him away from her, though he was close at her side. ' ' " Carrio," he said, calling her for the first time by ber name, " I must go away to-morrow ; but you shall go, too, if you will. Your love would be worth to me any sacrifice. ' What would mine be worth to you ? You know just how much your hus band cures for you. You have' seen what life with him is. Do you think it would break his heart to lose you? I 'tell you, no. He would very composedly get a divorce from you, and marry more wisely next time. You would be free in a few months, and the moment yon were free, you should be my wife. So help me God, I would deal honorably with you. Don't you be lieve me?" ' : ' He caught a low " Yes," murmured un der her breath. " Then will you come ? I think I can make life a different thing for you from what it ever, has been. You shall know what it is to be loved by a man with a man's heart in him. Will you come, or will you settle back on the old life, and send me away alone to curse the fate that ever brought me to the knowledge of you ?" '.''.,. He stopped, and then she could hear his heart beat in the silence. Temptation be set her sorely. How sweet this love would be of which he spoke this love for which she had so hungered this passionate, lover's love, which Joseph Uannaford would never give her. , She had a tempera ment to which love was the supreme thing. It was her one idea of Heaven. But she bad not gone for enough away from the in nocence of childhood for her guardian angel to have forsaken her. Clearly, as if some human voice had spoken' it, she heard a whisper, which came, again and again, and would be obeyed " Pray 1" She got up at last, and saying to Hugh Waring nothing but "Wait," wont away to her own room. In the darkness she did not see her hug band, who sat thore in an arm-chair, too tired to care for a light, and waiting for her. Ho would have spoken, but somehow he felt the excitement of her mood, and silenced by it. She knelt down, and tried to obey the voice. But sho could not col lect her thoughts, and only two words would como, over and ovor again " Help, Lord, help!" ' - Vaguely Joseph Hanuaford comprehend ed that she was passiug through the crisis of an agony such as ho, in all his placid lifo, had never experienced or witnessed. Some intuition withheld him from trying to comfort her mado him feel how idlo would be any consolation which he could offer ; but when at last She left the room, he arose and stole softly after her. A deep, yearning tenderness for ber filled his soul full. ' He thought be had never loved her half so well In bis life J and what this trouble was which was breaking her heart he rou know. ' Down-stairs she went, and into the dim room whore Hugh Waring waited for hor ; and her husband stood just outside the open door, and listened breathlessly for hor words. tihe spoke at first with a certain feverish eagerness, as if she doubted her owu strength, and must hurry through with what bIio had to say before it failed her ; but, as she went on, a deeper and calmer earnestness grew into hor words. '"Your tenderness," she said, "has made life very sweet to me. I never knew what it was before to bavo a friend who cared for the same things I oared for ; and no one else was ever so gentle to me as you have been.- I did not know bow much you were to me until you spoke of going away. I want love more than I want any other earthly thing ; but I do not think this is love which we feel for each other. You pitied me because you saw that my life was a disappointment that I was love ly, and unreconoiled to my fate ; but I do not believe you would have chosen me out of a world full of women, if you bad found me free and happy. As for what I feel for you but I will not talk about that-J have my duty to do. And then I did love my husband first. If he had loved me in the way I once fancied that he did, I should have gone on feeling the same for him for ever. And I know I could love him even now, if he cared to be again my lover. In any case, I will be true to him. I will not make myself unfit to meet my dead father and mother again in Heaven. I do believe that you would be faithful and tender, but your best tenderness could not console me if I bad lost for your sake my own soul ; and I should grow old, and sad, and be a burdon to you presently." " I think not I think never I" , Waring cried, passionately. " O, Carrie 1 I could make you happy." " Not in despite of God," she said, Blow ly, and then she turued away. . Standing still in the shadow,' her . hus band watched her go up-stairs, and then he stole noiselessly out-of-doors, for he was wise enough not to go to her. ' What in him was really true, and noble, and worthy of a woman's loving, came out now, as never before. He looked straight into his own hoart, with eyes which tried to be as just as the justice of Heavon. He did not stop to blame Hugh Waring, as a hotter-tempered man might have done. He understood jnst how Carrie's sad, sweet face, and lonely seeming lifo, had touched -the man's heart, and so forgave him, even for the rashness which would have mado bad worse. ' ' Ah for Carrie herself, he seemed to have only now began to love her at all.' He opened his eyes and saw what he bad been doing when he took into his keeping this mere girl, this young creature whose nat ural ailment was love, and then deliberate ly starved her expected hor to be as self contained and independent as his mother bad been. How. reckless he Had been throwing away his pearl of great price 1 But what if it were not altogether too late for him to recover it? She had loved him once she had said that she ; could love him, even now, if he cared again to be her lover. Did ho not care ? His pulses be gan to throb, very much as if he were not an old young man. If love, tender and patient, could win her back, she should yet be more his own than ever, please Heaven. He would never pain ber, he resolved, by tolling her what ho had heard. If ever she felt near enough to bim again to confide in him, her confidence should come unforced and unsought. But be would use every power which God had given him to make her happy. He would not be too proud to knock again at hor heart's door; would any tender voice ever bid him enter?" At last he saw from the covert whore he stood, with eyes grown used to the dark ness, Hugh Waring come out and walk' rapidly down the path, as if trying to es cape from himself. Then ho went into the house, lit a. light, and looked at the clock. It was ' midnight ; now, at last, he would go up-stairs to his wife. He found her ly ing, with white, still face, upon the scarce ly whiter pillow. He knew that she was not asleep ; but he saw that she wished him to think her so, and respecting her wish, he got into bed silently.' The next day, making some exouse of just receiving letters, Hugh went away. For ono moment, just before he left, he managed to see Mrs. Ilannaford alone, though she had carefully avoided him all the morning. ' "Do I bid you good-by forever?" he asked, looking into those sad, entreating eyes of hers which hod wrought bis woe. " I think that is best," she said, gently, " unless you can come back as much my husband's friend as mind." He bent ovor hor hand, and left on it tho kiss he hod never dared to press upon her lips. " I want to tell you that you have done right. You have refused me the only thing I cared for in lifo. You have sent mo out into the world a wayfarer, without a hope or on interest, but you have done right. We'shall be thankful, both of us, concluded on second fAOB.