6erritsot, Vrofrittor. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Cke Riontro.q Dimorrat, PUDLISiIL•D TIT ANDREW J: GERRITS ON. t erm ,..... 41.50 per annum if paid in ad vance, $2.00 if paid within the year b or, 11.60 if not paid•until the -end of the year or period of subscription: Advance payment solicited. Discontiattances optional %%WI the Publisher until all arrearages are paid. Hate.% of Advertising. One square; (f 2 lines) 3 Weeks or .less, 41.00 gO:h subsequent insertion, •-- 28 thle square one year,- $B.OO, two sq'rs $12.00, three squares $16.00, four squares $20.00. Business Cards of six lilies $3.00 per year. Job Work of all kinds executed., neatly land promptly. Blanks always on hand. January Ist. 1857 WM• W. SMITE, :8e CO.; Cabinet and Chair illanuiaetter eri, root of Main Street. Moutrose, Pa:- " ABEL TITRRELL, I\ioTudsE, • Dealer in Drugs:., Medicines, -Chemicals, Dps Stuffs, Glass-ware,;Paints, Oils, Yarnishes, 'Window Glass, Gcocerk, Fancy Goods, eiry; Perfumery, &c.-4nd Agent' for all th'e . most popular Patent edicines. JOHN ROVES , • FashiOnablelor—Shop near fhe Baptist Meeti6g !lons on Turnpike Street . Montrose, Pa. •.' A.114. - ` THROP & CO . , - Dealers in Ready-Made Clothing, flats and cipir, Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, &e. Or Store apposite Seayle:s- hotel,Montrose, ( • 1:DR ( R. -THAYER, ' .Physician and Surgeon, Montrose, Pa. Of&o . in the Farmer's Store. • - :FRANKLIN FRASER," Attorney: avid Conasellor at Law, .Montrose, Pa.; will attendfaithfully to all busi ness entrusted to him in tlio'County of Snstfa. ConveYaneine and,writing of all kinds will be done neatly, and chargesmiiderate. H e will also attend to proiecution of claims ofsoldiers; their .widows and heirs, against the U. S. Govern inent, for Bounty-Land, Pensions, &c. May be found at all hqnrs at the office formerly •eccnp'red by 7:- T. Richards, Esq., north of the Court House.=lBsB-13. - - M. C. TYLER, - Interested with I. L Hunt„ :rimpiarter and DOiler in Hardware ano • Cutlery, Carriage Trimmings, Sprin s, &e. No. 215. Pearl Street, Y. Viniere his Meteantile friends, in thts and oi - irtn Counties, are kindFy invited, and EARNESTLY SO 'Hefted to call and purchase. Gtf. J.D. VAIL, FL D., Physician and Surgeon, has perms netly lorattad himself at Braekneyville, Snsq'a County, and will promptly attend to alli 'calls with which he may he favored. May,,1856---n32. HAYDEN BROTHERS, • " • New Milford, Venn'a. • ~. • VlTholeiale dealer in Buttons, Combs. .1 V Suspenders, Threads. Faney Goods, Watches, Jewelry, Silver and Platted Ware, Cut lery; Fisbina Tackle. Cigars, &c. Merchants and pedlars, supplied on liberal _ WM. TIAYDEN, TRACY HAYDEN; JOHN HAYDEN, GEO_ HAYDEN. -131 DR. E. F. WiLMOT, '; fit raduat of the AllQpathic and Hornet). panic , Colleges of Medicine, is now per- Asanentlilocated in Great Bend Pa. _ April Ist. 18;it3. • • , • JOHN SAUTTER, . . Vashioßtable : Tailor. Shop first door 12 north of the Farmer's Store. . • TILE 11VT 7 43 irk i~ Niairs , lo I h :; - 4) . rtsuranit OF PfiIt.PAJELPHIA,- • No. SG 'Mitt' in t!it., a bore Fourth. L CAPITAL S300;000. - Make'lnsitrance against lose or damage ley Fire ; 6;i 13 aild ings, Fu rit it uTe and - .3fercleandise generally, horses - and Cattle;" against death . from anycause. Fir'LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED., DIIIE-CT•ORS: ( A. R. Mita. r„ J. CF.OASDALE, J. 113.. FLAN 'JEN, , F. S. lioEcntv,. HENRY JO.' S, SAML. 3..RAI.CDALL CIiAS. FL NICE'S, of Wilmiogton,Del., Wll. CAR .RET, Sec, - . - ,- - ..„-i-1 B. R. 111 : ILLE P, Presl. , • ;BILLINGS STROUD, Agent. autfaiturers' hsuranft Charter Perpetual. Granted by the Suite .of Pennsylvania. CAPITAL $500.000,- Fi re, nari tie and Inland TranspOr _ • Itati,ou. • ' AARO7N S. LIPPINCOTT, President. W'. A: Rtionr.s, Vice Pres't. ALFRED WEER'S, Secretary. DIRECTORS. -- • ;Aaron S. tipincOtt, Charles Wise, WM.' A. Rhodes, Alfred Weeks, ; • Wm. Thomas, Rinaldo Sank, WM.' Neal,- John P. Simmons; Charlei J. Field, James P. Smith: ,Office ?10. 10 Merchant's Exchange,Phira'. AOC BULLARD, Agent, 3.lontiose, Pa. 40y 1 10113-1, :MO,NTROSE., P 1 • -.! -- 4 1[1HE subscriber having purehas d, *BSI refitted and newly furnished lie . • abo.ves well known and popular Ho el, —is prepared - to accommodate the tr cling- public and others with all the attentitns and' conveniences usually found in first:cl Houses; No effort will be spared by the P i ro prietor and hii - Assistants to make the Hotel equal in every point to any in the country. The Bar will always be supplied with the Choicest Lisuchs. The Stables, connected with this House aro large, roomy and convenient; and catefuf and Attentive Hostlers are always in chaige of them. J. S: TARBELL. MontEose, May l alh; 1857: LOTHS, Cash inaers and Vestings, very rsb I e styles, at prices that cannbt fail - to Vilt..Call told be convinced. C. %V. mon . • From Mrs, Stevens' Magazine for February. IVIOPSEY. AY Ct3RNEILITB MATHtWS. I see old Sylvester Peabody—the head of the Peabody family—seated on the porch of his country dwelling, like an ancient patri-' arch, in the calm of the morning. His broad briMmed hat lies on the bench at his side i and his venerable white locks floW down his shoulders, which time, in one hundred seasons of battle and sorrow, of harvest and drouth— of toil and death, in all Ns hardy .wrestlings with old Sylvester, has riot been nhle'to bend. HThe old man's form is erect' and tall, and lifting up his head to its height, he looks afar, down:the country; road which lads from his rural door, 'towards the city. He has kept' his gaze in that direction for,. better than an how-,and a mist has gradually - orept upon his vision; objects begin to lose their distinct _ness ; they grow dim of soften away like ghosts.or spirits; the whole landscape melts gently'into a pictured dew before him. Is old Sylvester, who has kept it clear and bright so, 'long, losing his sight at lait, or is our com mon world ; already changing , . under the old patriarch's pure regard, into that better, heav enly land I It seemed indeed, on this very - calm morn ing in November, as angels were busy about the Old Hoinestead. The fair country lay in A delicious dreamy slumber.' The trees did not stand forth-boldly with every branch and leaf, but rather seemed gentle pictures of trees, the sheep bells from the hills tinkled goftlyos if whispering a secret to the wind; the birds ,sailed slowly to and fro on the air; there was no harshness in the low of the herds, not a sight nor a sound near by nor far off, whith did not partake cf the holy beauty of the, morning, nor sing, nor be silent, nor stand still, nor move, with a..v other than a gliding sweetness and repose, oi'an undertone whi c h might littre been the echo, on earth, of a bet ter sphere. There was a tender sadnesi and wonder in the face of old Sylvester,,. when voice came stealing in upon the silence. It did not in a single tone_tlisturb the heavenly hat MC;ll%* of the . hour, for it was the voice I f the orphan dependent of the house, litliriam Haven, whose dark bright eye tind graceful form glimmered, as though she were the spirit of all the softened beauty of the scene, from amid the broom corn, where she was busy - in one of the duties of the season. Well might she sing the. song of lament, fur her people had gone down far away in the . sea, and her lover—where was he? Like every other cogdition of-the time, the voice of Miriam ; too, had a change in it, "What wonder is this?" said old Sylves ter; "I neither see nor Lear as I used—are all mv, senses Foing!" •%. Ile turned as he - spoke,- to a woman. of small stature, in whose features dignity and tenderness Mingled, as she now reg,arded him with reverence for the ancient head of the Louse. She came forward, as he addressed ber;so.4 laying her band gently on Lis arm, said— • • " Yt,u forget, fattier; this is the Indian summer, which is the first • summer softened and soberer:and °P en comes at tl•anksgiving time. It always changes tte-country..as you see it now." "Child, chid, yob are right. I should have known it, for always at this season,often RS it has .corne•to me, do I think of the ab sent and the dead—of times and hours and friends, long, long passed away. Of those whom I Uve known," he continued eagerly, "who have fallen in battle, in the toil of the field, on the highway, on the waters, in silent chambers, by sickness, and by sword ; I thank God they have All, all my kith and kin and people', died with their names untouched with crime; all," he added with energy, planting his feet firmly on the ground and rising as he spoke sternly; " all - save ono alone, and He turned towards the female at his side, - and when he looked in her face, and saw the mournful expression which came upon it, he dropped back in •his chair and stayed his speech. . At this moment a little fellow, who; with his flaxen locks and blue eves. was a very ,cherub in plumpness, came toddling out the door of thehouse, struggling, with a basin of yellow corn, which shifting about in his arms, he just managed to keep possession of till he reached old Sylvester's knee. This Was little Sam, the yonngest of the Peabody's and as looked up into his grandfather's face you could not fail to - see, though they grew so wide apart, the same story of: passion and character in 'each. The little fellow began throwing the bright grain from the basin to a great strutting turkey which went marching 'and - gobbling up and, down the doorvarcr, swelling his feathers, spreading, hie tail, and shaking his red neck tie with a boundless 'pretence and restiesMes, like many a hero, be was proud of his u'nifotm, 'although the fatal hour which was to lay bit low was not far off. It was the thanksgiving turkey, himself, in process of fattening under charge- of Mas ter Sam Peabody. Busy in the act, he was regarded with smilinifondness by his mother, the widow Margaret Peabody, and his old grandfather, when he suddenly turned, and " Grandpa, where's brother Elbridge ?" The old man changed his countenance and struggled a moment with himself. "He bad better know all," he said after a ,pause of thought, in which he looked, or seemed to look, afar off from the scene about him. "Margaret, painful though it be, let the truth be spoken." An inexpressible anguish overspread the countenance of the widowed woman, and she turned aside to breathe a prayer of trust and hope in the hour of trial. The thanksgiving turkey, full of his banquet of corn, strutted away to a slope in the sun by the roadside, and little Sim Peabody renewed his question. " Can't I see brother Ethridge, grandpa ?" "Never again,l fear my child." " Why not, grandpa V' "Answer gently, father,"'the widow inter posed, "make not the case '.too harsh against ny boy "Margaret," Said the old man, lifting his cbuntenancc upon - her with a dignity of look, "it shall 'speak the truth. I would have the name of my race pure of all stains and de tractions, at it has been for a hundred years, but I would not bear htirdly against your son, Margaret, This child, ifinoteat attd tinswity ed as be is, shall' hear it, ,and shall be the judge." . . . .. ' WE ARE ALL EQUAL BEFORE GOD AND THE CONSTITUTION.";-3innes litichana.p. - , trose, %usqtteiptititti Conntil, pemett, Ckursail gornini2, I:thriarg. 11, !&58 Rising, old Sylvester, with Margaret's help, lifted the be k y to, the deep window seat; and, standing on either hand, the window and the old man each athis side, Sylvester, taking one hand of the child in his, began— " It is, Int , child, a year ago this .day, that an excell'ent] man, Mr. BarbarY; the preacher ofihis neighborhood, disappeared from among living men.[ He was blameless in life, helad no enemy on the face of the earth. flu was a simple, worthy man.. The last time alive, he was seed in company with your brother Elbridge, b the Locust wood, near the pond where you oto gather huckleberries in the summer, atld buds in the autumn. .He was seen with him and seen no more." " Is Mr. Barbary dead, grandpa !" the child inquired, 14ming forward. "How else! He is not to be found in pul pit or field.' No man seeth his steps any more in their an ieot haunts.- No man hearkens to his voice." The chil sat for n moment in dumb !talon ishment, glancing with distended eves and sweat upo his brow, fearfully from the stern face,Otthe old man, to the downcast features of 1113 wid 1 w, when recovering speech he ask ed: • " Why should my brother kill Mr. Bitrhary, if,he wss his friend Was, not Elbridge ,al ways kind,; mother ?" "Ever kind! There was not a day be did not make glad his poor mother's heart, with some geneilous act of devotion to her.' "Maiig4et, .you forget. He was soft of heart, but proud of spirit, and - haughty beyond his age; you may not remember, even I could not alwaytt look down his anger ; orsileKe his loudneSs of speech. Why should he kill Mr. Barbary ? I wilt tell you child : the preacher, 00, had discerned well your broth er's besettihg, sin, and being fearless in duty, from the Sabbath pidpit lie snake of it plain ly, and. With such point that it could not fail to come home directly to the bosom of the:- young man. This was on the very Lord's dity before Mr.; Barbary disappeared from amongst us. It rankled in your brother's bosom like poison; Mit, passions were wild and ungovern ed, and this was cause enough. If he had been innocent, why did Elbridge Peabody flee this neighborlood„like a thief in the night r I , Wh'y did Elbridge leave us, mother r said the i child; bending, eagerly towards the widow, who wrung her hands and was silent. " Ile murky come , back," said the chihi,sha king his flaxen locks, and not abashed in the least by hOr silence. "He may come back yet and e. plain all to. •• Neve At tha stood wit very moment a red rooster w ho, his burnished wings on the garden. enough to have heard all that pas up his throat, and poured forth a which rang through the piaci e air • de. w3ll, nea .teti, lifted clear cry,i far and IN' " lie w, ll—l know he will," said little Sam leaping . down from his judgment •window. `'Chanticleer knows he It would riot speak in that way. Lie wed once Faure, you know, grand ee Elhridge went away ; we II hear Sher soon, I know we. know Peabody scat in th will, or 1.1 hasn't. cr Ifattier, si from bro We'sball ?I' The sled patriarch of the fimily Lowed his head aua was Silent. From the broom corn the gent) voice stole again : The m rnatir of Miriam's musical lamenting had scar ely died away on the dreamy air, when tit re came hurrying forward from the grrden-4wLere she had beim tending the great thrinksgivinff pumpkin, which was her special eharge—the black servant of the househol I, Mopsey, who, with her broad fring ed cap tlyiag all abroad, s and her great eyes rolling, FJpoke out as she approached— " 1)o hear dat, massa ?" r nothing, Mopsey." don:t you beget :now lley're coin- lug!' She h in the d of dust, wheeled in less d scarcely spoken when there arose -tame down the road, a violent cloud from which there emerged a two vehicle, at a thundering pace, which, han a minute's time. went whirling Homestead. It was supposed to pact ti Captain Saltonstall and wife; but It the gpoed alai dust, no eye could entanin %%hat w II ev ,, 7,1) they we came S horse, i Lion, of' I•s.ed with at•,v accuracy who or what e. In le -s than a minute snore it , eeping back with the - great white wing the libase again like an appar e ghost of horse and gig. With another sally doWn the road and return, with a kn, . urve in the road before the Home stead, it at last came to at the gate, and dis closed i. a high sweat and glowing all over / his hug person, the jovial captain s and at his aide his pretty little cherry faced girl of a wife. l t llenriet a Peabody,daughter of William Pea body,.bo be it known, is old Sylvestes • D. There also emer g ed from the one g, aker ,t he captain\ had made ground ped his little wife thjhe same landing . ms, a red faced boy. who must have sely stowed somewhere, for he came e vehicle highly colored, - and looking ch as if he bad been sat upon for a .f hours of more. The captain having is horse from the traces, and at old oldest s horse g and ill in his a been cl out of t 1 very In , couple freed •r's suggestion, set him loose in the r d to g,raze at his leisure, Pushed for pon the balcony very much in the Sv ices doorya ward er of a good natured tornado, saluted ow Margaret with a whirlwind-kiss, ittle Saw high in the air and caught he came within half an inch of the char the wi threw him as shook the old grandfather's readily d hand with a sturdy grasp, and up for a moment, with a great cuff .ide of the head with a roll of 'stuff for gown for Mopse, saying as he de it, " DAv ere, at d r ye say to dat, Dar- ground extend:! wound' on the anewi livered key !" . ey blightened' into a sort of nocturnal ation, and shuffling away, in the loose o the keeping of which on herfeet the calf of the best energies of her life was , gave out•that she must be looking me important business over to Brun- I-.ss than twenty minutes the captain had I d done so many good natured things, • wed himself so. free of heart withal;-- tle considerate of self or the figure he at in spite of his great clumsy person slash in his face, and the scunewhat ant character of his dress, his coat he-' stc, as long and straight in the line the hack as the edge of a table, you otlelp regarding him as a decidedly ade; well thsei, 3, and quite a hand rson; in the ootainiassed with ole family for a floe looking man. In I said a .ad s . , .4 . /ross l could . well ~; Presently Mopsey carne.rushing along at a great speed, for several paces, and suddenly came to a halt, during which her head disap -1 peered, and then renewed her pace, repeating the peculiar manoeuvre once in every ten yards. She was shuffling on in her loose shoes (which were on and off, one or the oth er of thorn every other minute,) at as rapid a rate as that peculiar species of .-locomotion allowed. Bursting with some impatience and the importance of her communication, her cap flaunting from her head; she - stood bfore them and announced," We've beat Brundage —we've heat Brundage!" " What is thii, Mopsey i" old Sylvester in quired. "I've tried it, and I've spanned it. I can't span ours!" On further questioning, it appeared that Mopsey had been on a ptlgrimage to the next neighbor's the Brundage s, to inspect their thanksgiving pumpkin, and institute a com parison with the Peabody growth of that kind with a highly satisfactory and complacent re stilt as regarded the home production. No body was otherwise than pleased at Mopsey's innocent rejoicing, and, when she had been duly complimented on her success,she 'went away with a broad black guffaw to set a trap iu the garden for the brOwn -mouse, the .sole ,surviving enemy of the great Peabody thanks giving pumpkin which must be plucked next day for use, and _whichshe insisted that they should all inspect. - Old Sylvester rose with his staff, which be carried more fur pleasure than necessity, and led the way. As they approached there was visible throngh the plants, shrubs, and other growths of the place—whatever they might be—n great yellow sphere or ball, so disposed on a little slope by itself, - as to catch the eye front a distance, shining out in its golden hue from the gatden,a sort nftiral to the sun him self. rolling overhead. " I -what &rye tick °Nat I" Mopsey asked, forgetting in her granduer of the mo ment all distinctions of class or color; " I guess lot's "That's a pumpkin," said the captain calm- " Yes, I guess it is—de tank giving pun Mopsey condescended net another word, but walking or rather shuffling disdainfully away muttered to herself, " Dat is de. very meanest man, for a white man, I elicr did see ; lie looked at dat dere punkin which his cost me so many anxious days and sltepless nights —which .1 have Watched over as though it hail been my own child—which I planted ~••t~t Jts !lei; nand 'of my own, and fought fur agin de June bugs. and de white frost, and dat mouse dat's been tryin to eat it up for dis tree weeks and better—just as if it hail been a small green cowcumber. I donTbiAive dat man k►.ows it is tanksgi% in. Ile's a ,greilt big . fool." " There was no question where the children were to lodge, fur there had been allotted to them from time immemorial, ever since chil dren were known in the Peabody family, a great rambling upper chamber, with beds in the corners, where th.q were always bestowed as soon after dark as they, could be conveyed thither under direction of Mopsey and the mistrb.ss of the household. This was not al ways easy of achievement,-and costs the shuf fling black servant at least half an hour of diligent search and struggling persuasion to bring them in from the various straying, escapes, and !urk'ng places, where they shirked to gain, an extra half hour of free dom. As soon as Mopsev bad left them abovo, they all darted from bed, an.l commenced, in the middle of the chamber, a great pillow fight, amicable and hurtless, but furiously waged, till the approach of a broad footstep sent them sc.amperinr , back to their couches. Mopsey, well aware of these frisks, tarried till they were blown - over, in her own chamber hard bv—a. dart room, mysterious to the fan cy of the children,with spinning wheels, dried gourd-shells hting against the wall, a lady's siding s a ddle, now out of use this many a day, and all the odds and ends of, at ancient farm house ,stored in heaps and" strings about. It was - only at last by going aloft and inov ing a trap in the ceiling, which was cctnect eif in tradition "with the appearance of a ghost that they were at length fairly sobered down and kept in bed, when Mopsey, looking in for. the last time, knew that it was safe to go be low. They had something left even then,and kept up a talk from bed to bed, fur,a good long )lour mote, at least. " What do you think of the turkey?" be gan little Sam Peabody. . "I don't know," Peabody Junior answered, " I don't care for turkeys" Little Sam Peabody, the master'of the tur key, tool: th!i•Very much at heart. "I think he's a very fine one,--twice as big as last year's." . ' It)bert relented., • , "As fine a turkey as I've ever seen; when do.tkev kill Lim?' Sam struggled a little with himself, and answered feebly, " to morrow." There was a sileuee for several minutes, broken presently by Peabody Junior. " Don't you miss some One. to niht that used to keep us awake with telling pleasant stories?" " I do," answered Sam Peabody. lam just thinking of him now. 1 wish be was back again." A gentle 'figure had quietly opened the chamber door, and stood listening widi breath less attention to th'a discourse of the two chil dren. ^ " tou wait and see," continued little Sam firmly," I'm Sure hell eomii back, and befori_t long.? " What makes you think so? I hope he will." " Because the red rooster," answered little Sam," crowed yesterday morning for the first time since he went away, and the red waster knows more than anybody about this farm, except old grandfather." 'Thinking, how that could be, reabcxly Jun ior fell asleep; and little Sam, sure to dream of his absent brother, shortly, followed after. The gentle figure of hfiriam haven glided in to the chamber, to the bedside of little Sam, and watching his calm, innocent features— which were held to greatly resercible those of the absent Elbridge----,with tears in her eyes sh'e.breathed a. blessing from her very heart on the dear child who had faith in the atsent one. , • - . Thanksgiving morning came, calm, clear and beautiful. ft Atil,lcios; . as if of Lep-item, and nut of earth, ruled thewide tandscaric.-- j The Indian simmer, which bad been- as a gentle* mist o'r veil upon the beauty of the time had gone away a little—retired as it were,in to the hills and back country, to _allow the undimmed heaven to shine down upon the happy festival of families and nations. The cattle stood-still in the fields without a loW;. the trees were quiet as in friendly recognition of-the spirit of the hour; no reaper's hook or mower's seethe, glanced in the meadow no rumbling wain was on the road. The birds alone, as being snore nearly akin to the feeling of the scene, warbled in the boughs. But, out of the silent gloom of the mist there sprang, as if by magic, a lovely illumination which lit the country far and wide, as.with a thousand sari-colored laMps. Then breakfast, being early dispatched,there was a mighty running toand fro of the grown people through the house, dresses h s urried front old clothes presses and closets, a loud de mand on every hand for pins, of which there seemed to be (as there always is on such oc casions) a great lack. The horses were put to the captains gig, the old house wagon,with breathless expectation on the part of the chil dren ; and in brief, after-bustling preparation and, incessant summoning of one memlair of the family and another from the different parts of the house, all being at last ready and in their seats, the Peabody's set forth for the Thanksgiving Sermon at the country Meeting • house, a couple of miles away. While the quaint preacher urged the ra tional enjoyment of Thank-giving cheer from the pulpit, Mopsey labored With equal zeal at home to have it worthy of enjoyment. At an early hour she had cleared decks, and taken possession of the kitchen—kindling, ,with dawn, a great lire in the oven for the pies, and- anetper on the hearth for the tarlcey. But it wai from the oven, heaping it to the top with fresh relays of dry wood, that she expected the Thanksgiving anger to walk in all his beauty and majesty, In performance of her duty, and from a sense only that -there could be no thanksgiving without a turkey, she planted the tin oven on the hearth, spit ted the gobbler, and from time to time, mere ly as'a matter of absolute necessity, garb it a turn ; but about the niouth of the great i even she hovered constantly, like a : had her head in and out at the opening every other minute ; and when at last the pies were slided in upon the warm bottom, she lingered there regarding the change they were undergoing with the fond admiration with which a bon noisseur in sunset hangs upon the changing colors of 'the evening sky. The leisure of this duty• snowed her was employed by Mopsey in seariw away the poultry and idle young chickens which rushed in . at the back entrance of the . kitehen in swarms, and hopped pith yellow legs about the floor with the racket of constant falling showers of corn. Upon the half-door opening on the front the red rooster had mounted, and wifb his heal on one side, observed with a knowing eye all that went forward; showing,' perhaps, most interest in the turning of the spit, the im palement of the , turkey thereon having been with him at: ob j eet of special consideration. Meanwhile, Miriam opened the old Family Bible, and, at the widow Margaret's request, read from that chapter which gives the story of the prodigal son. Bow the fair young face brightened, when she read that the youna man resolved to arise and return to the house of his father ; the dear encounter; the rejic• ing over his return, and the glad proclama lion, son, was dead and is alive a gain he-was lost and is found.' "If he would come back even so," said the wid wkel the book was closeci,"in s mow, in poverty, in crime even, I would thank Goa and be grateful." , "He is not guilly,motheriMiariam pleaded. casting her head uPon the widow's bosom and clinging close about her neck. Margaret answered, lifting up her head,- "guilty or innocent; he is my son—my soh." Mopsey came in from the kitchen ; inter rupting them, she several steps'from the door-sill into the room, then lifted up both her arms. , "One thing I know," said Mopey, "dere's a big pie taking iu dat ere oven. and . if Mas'r Elbriclue don't eat dat pie luif to sour, dat I know." alSrhitt is it, Mopsey," asked Margaret, " that gives ydir 'such a faith in my son ?" " I tell you what it is, Missu.," Mop Fey an swered promptly ; "last tanksgivin %;Iten I tumbled down on dis ere self same floor brini n' in de turkey, everybody laugh - but Mast!. El bridge, and he conic from his-place and pick me up. He murder anybodyl eat de whole tanksgvin dinner mysef if he touch a hair of de old preacher's head to hurt it.-- Suddenly changing her tone, she added, " Dey're oornin from the meeeting, I heard de old wag on." As the Peabodys approached the bomb , ,head, the stroke' of the kitchen chimney was . ' visible, circling upwards, and winding about in the sunshine as though it had been a deli clue corkserew uncorking a square old flask of a delicious vintage. The ova) averred I a quarter of a mile away, the moment they had conic upon the brow of the hill, that he , had a distinct savor of the fragrance of the turkey, and that it was quite as refreshing as the first odor of the land breeze coining in from sea. The captain's conjecture - was strotTly confirmed 1.1 -the appearance of Mopsey, darting, with a dark face..of -dewy radiance, at the wood-pile, and,shuffling back with bustling, speed to the kitchen with a handful of delicate splinters. "She's giving him the last turn," said the captain. , 'As the family entered the homestead on their return, the widow and Miriam were spreading the ancient four-legged and wide leaved table, with a cover of snowy whiteness, ornamented as with shields and weapons of quaint device,. in the old plates of pewter, aria horn handled kuives and forks, burnished to such a polish as to make the little room fairly glitter. Dishes streamed in, one after another, in long and rapid procession; piles of ionie - -inade bread, basins,. of apule sauce, pickles, potatoes of vast proportion and mealy beauty. When the ancient and lordly pitcher of blue and white (whether freighted with ',new cider or old, or cold water need not be told) crowned the board, the. first stage of, preparation Was complete, and. a portentious pause ensued. The whole Peabody connection, arranged in stately,silence in The trout parlor, looked on through the open door, in wonder and expectation of what was to follow. The children loitered about the doorways with watering eyes and open mouths, like innocent little dragons lying in wait to rush at.an op portune moment and beirrioff their I And now, all at once, there comes a deep- , h—a still more portentous pause 7 —all re in the; direction of the'lciteben ;., the len are hanging forward, with' their 4 and outstretched necks half way in at door; Miriam and the' widow stand. :bless and statue-like at either side of the l'; when as.if rising out - of some- - myste leave in the 'very .groubd, a dark figure ; erned in the distance, about the Centre kitchen (into which Mopsey had made, •Urean impressive effect; atgrand circuit,) 1 ateCt and bearing bCfpre it a huge plat- I 11 their eyes tell them, every seem l reports, what it is the platter, sup - she advanees.with slow and - sale= she has crossed the silk sh , has enter sitting 1-44,0rn1; and, with a full sense of -ful responsibility, Mopsey delivers on le, in a clear place left fur its' careful, t, the Thanksgiving turkey. ' re is no need now to sound a gong; or . an alarni-bell to Make known to that roll that. dinner . is ready -,, the brown speaks a'Stinirnons as with the voice thousand living goblets, and SylVesfer the whole Peabody family flock in. To one his place is considerately assigned, • ptain iu the centre directly opposite key, the widow at one end, old Syl-, at the head. The children too, a spe 'ception being made in their favor, to re alloived seats with 3.1.1 c grown folks, :am-disposing himself with great corn his old grandsire's arms. -as 'short work thelovial captain made the prize turkey; iu rapid . succession were forwarded, heaped, 'sent around ; (with keen relish of the Thanksr.iiing r, every head was busy. Straight on ople who have au allotted task- before the Peabody smoved through. the dim er hut eyes : child' bodies the (I breati room is die of t 6: to se head ter. vividl l ports , step; ed th bor a the to depos house turie of a rising vesteir cial day, little with plate and tlitm as pl diet I ner. though; while they were at-the t of • its enjoyment, a sudden storm, at changeful seam* arose without, and led - its heavy drops against the door and low panes; that only; by the contrast of rity and fireside comfort, heightened the within, while they were engaged with many good' dishe's at feast, but , when, ether pause - came, did not the pelting wet and the chidit , wind talk with them, h one in turn, of the absent, 'and some !e will pot believe it—the lost I It was; doubt, some thought or this kind that. mpted obi Sylvester to speak : My children," said the patrinrch,-`glanc- beig , that, da,,f %in.! g with a calm eye around the circle of owing faces sit the table, " let us, on this 'Howe , ' day, cherish none but - kindly_ oughts towards' all our kindred, and if him e have least esteemed offer the hand, let us Ike it iu brotherly regard." There was a pawn of silence once azaiu, i hich was bioken by a knock at the door. It was old Sylvester - hiutself who opened le door and admitted the strangers; one of _ern, the younger, Ware it douched 'hat, ilieh did not allow his features to be dis octly observed, further than his eyes we re tight with •a strange lustio, and that_his face -as d - eadly pale. lje wmpartly supported by e elder man,whose person was obrd in a long at reaching nearly to the ground. They were , invited to the tattle., but refs -r.], d took their station un either : side cf the !earth. • Will you not remove your hats'?" old 11-1.-.ter fuming slowly at this question, the young 4an answered, "AVe may not prove Et corn jrarfor such as von." - " You should•not say so; my son; for this le 'day in the year at least, ye may suspend I evil thoughts and In at peace with all r fellow creatures." The young man,. turned towards the. corn ny at the table, but not so fat that his lore lace -could be seen. "Have all who sit about you at that ta .," be asked, - glancing slowly areund," per imed the duty to which “itt• refer, and re•ed their bosoms of unkindness towards 'err fellow-men f" - . "It may be," said old Sylvester, " that to of its are disquieted, for one of the chit m of this household is absent from among for causes which may well disturb our .iights" - . . . ' I have. heard the story," the young man tined. ' There were two men, friends, e id this neighborhood, Mr. Barbary, the aeher, and your : grandson, Ethridge Pea v. Something like a, year ago the pie:teller ldenly disappeared from this, region,. and • report arose and constantly spread that had fallen bY, the hand of his friend, that ndchild of yours. It began in a cloudy isper, afar off, but swelled from day to v, from hour to hour, till it overshadowed s whole, region, and not the least of the / , kness it caused was on this spot, where is anc?ent hornestcadslands, and where the sung man , bad grown and Jived from the !ur of his birth. He itasv coldness and loidunce on the highway ; he was shrunk .m on Sabbath mormngq, and by children ; t this was little and could be borne— :. world' was against him : but when he w an aged face averted," he looked at old lvester steadily, and, a Mother's comfit , ace sad and bostile"--:---" "Sad—but •not hostile," the widow :hur t! red. "Sorrowful and troubled, at least," the +ung man rejoined, " his life, for all of hap- Ine-s, was at an' end. lie know that. big' end had not fallen by his hand, that he 11 lived, but in a far distant place, which ne but. by a long, and weary journey could lath.t Nothing 'but: !bellying presence of s friend could silence the voice of the ac.. user. lie rose. up and' departed without unsel : of any, trusting only in God and his vn strength : with a handful of fruit, and e humble provision which his good mother td fura!sh&l fur the harvest-flidd, be sot ,rth; day' and night he journeyed on the jack he knew his friend had taken to that r country, toiling', in the fields -to secure gad • and lodging for the Alight, and some !ant aids to carry him from place to place. e pushed on fast and far through the west n country ; often as he hoped on the very ps of his friend, hut never overtaking him, ith fortune at so low an ebb that there he as well-nigh waste in strength, hunger rieken, and wan ; so mean of person that s dearest friend, eveen . his old playfellows, Ito had wrestled with Lim in childish talk L aity a time by summer streams, would* ye passed him by as one-unktiwn. • "The young man found his simple-hearted end, the preacher, -in an . ollt-of-the-ways 'Wetness among the mountains; exhorting 0 living, comforting the siok i consoling the Ilatiniit'lli. i _ Riiiittt-ltz!' dying ; but when .he deavned * the peril an . the sore distress of his . young friend, b r e 'tai- ried not a moment, but took Ship; in: teMs pest, and with many risks. of perishing fryr away unvindicated, in the middre of, the wild i.ea—"' Thy widow moiler could restrain herielf 1 no longer, but rushing forward, sh'e removid, 1 the young man's hid from 'his brow, parted his locks, and casting herself upon his neck, cried out in the. affectinc , language of Scrip ture, to which she had listened in 'the morning : "My son was dead, Ail tis illy° again—he was lost and is found 1" . .... Miriam timidly grasped his offered,ban:o, and was silent. the company bad risenTrom the table anti gathered around. The elder stranger cast back his coat, Ye moved :his hat, andAtatiding forth, said, ".I lam here, and- testify to the , trutb, in every word, of all my young friend', has declared to you: I received sudden tidings that my I biothr, a missionary in the Tar Indian COnii tries, was at the point of .death, and left at once, telling .no one but Ethridge of my in tention, and enjoining him to notify my pen-. _ • ple •" Old Sylvester stood looking loftily : down over all from the outer edge of the circle, and while they were busiest in congratulations and well wishes, he went forward. : ~• -- "Stand back l' cried the old man ? waiving the company aside With outspread mins, aad advancing' with extended hands towards his grandson. "I have an atonement to render ~, here, which I call you nil to witness." -. Tears filled 'the obi •patriarch's eyes, and I with a gentle hand he led his grandser(tii ! lend) to the table, to which the - whole eons._ .pain returned. I take your hand, grandfather," Elbridge interposed. .. . Ar this crisis of triumphant explanation, Mopsey, who had, un6r one pretext and another, evaded the bringing - in of thCtiie to to i the last moment, appeared at the kit ben 1 doer, bearing before her, with that air f ex ordinary importance peCuliar tote ne— gro countenance on eventful occasions, a huge brown dish, with which she - advanced to the head of the table—,-there, with . att em= piratic bump, she deposited the great 'Thanks : giving pumpkin-pie. -Looking proudly around, she . si 111 ply said, " Dere !" It was the blesiort and crown of Mops ey'a It: - ., the setting down and full' delivery of that, the greatest ,punkin-pie ever bakedja that hearse from the. greats: punkin Byer reared among the reabotlys in all her tong . backward recollections of past Thanksgivings ; and her manner of hitting . it down was, in its most d e fiant form a clincher arid a 'Challenge to all makers and bakers of pumpkin-pies, to all cutters and 'carvers, to all dinners and eaters, to all friends and enemies of pnropkin pie-,, in the thirty or forty rnitedStates. The Brundagcs, too, cdglrt come and look at if : - i they had a mind to. -, • . . As though it had caught something of the genial spirit that glowed withiu the hernae; the wind. was laid without, and the night svfturred with the beauty of the rising ineop. With a sadness on his brow which, neither the old homestead ndr the pure heaveni'milt Were,. Elbridgewent forth into the :malni night, and sit :in' for a while by the toad be . - neath an ancient locust tree, where he.had often read -his book in the surnitier4imea, or boyhood, he coinmuced with himself. Ile was - happy—what mortal- man could. be happiei,l --in all, his wishes come ,to pass: his Ivera • (Itearns had taken life, and proved to he r4l - and friends, and yet a sadness he could not-drive away followed his step S.. ~.: As he, lifted up his cyes from, the earth, the moon sailing forth from the clouds, and flood ingthe region . withsilver lig,lit; disclosed •a 'figure ,so gentle . iind'delicate, and' in- its tek tites so pure that it seemed as if.his ,troubled • thoughts had summoned a spirit herure him from the better world. • . .. „ "No, no," he said,, declining the hand ex tended in gentle salutation- and retiring a 'pace, "touch me not; 111 i iam, I am not War.; thy of your pure companionship. If you knew what passed and is passing in my beast, you would loath me." . S'Ae was sitent, and dropped her eyes be fore him. ' - If you love me no tenger, Ethridge," she interposed quickly, ",fear•not to sayso, even now. . I will bear the pangs as beSti . ctiti."' " Von have suffered too much already," he rejoined, touched to the heart. "My long elence insist have been as death to one so kind and gentle." ' "1 havesuffered," was all she said. '" One word froM you in your long, • absence would have made me happy. Ilad you no thought of me in that cruel absence, dear tlbridge l''' • "Of you!" he echoed,,new -taking her hand—" of yon' Was it not my religion and • my only solace, that 6u thought - dine, v alid though all the, world abandoned and distrusted the wanderer,' there was one star that Yet shone true, and trembled with a hopeful light upon my path ?" • _ As slur lifted up her innocent face to hefty- ' en, did not those gentle tears, from those fair eyes, drop in hearing of .111111 who ac knowledges the faintest sound of ,true atfec-, Lion, through all the boundless ,unlvetse, mu sically as theaime of holy Sabbath-bells?".. . An old familiar instument, swept as ie . well knew by his mother's fingers, sounded at • that moment front' the homestead,,,and hand in hand, blending their steps, they returned, to the Thanksgiving household within. jrg" A good story i 4 told of it " country gentleman," who, , for the firstaime, heard an Episcopal clergyman preach. Ile hid read much of the aristocracy and pride of the Church. and when he returned home he was asked if the, people we're ," stuck up." "Fshaw, no," replied he, " why the minister actually preached in his shirt sleeves." r' A country youth ,came to town, to see his intended wile.,.. and for' a , long time could think of nothing to say. At least, a great snow falling, he took occasion to say . that his father's sheep would be• all- midone..- "Well," said she, taking him by his hand, "I'll keep one of them." • jar Near a depot were several Irish thwy men. Thinking to quiz them, a gentleman shouted to one. , 6 has the railroad got in r ind has, sir," was the protnpt responie, r.. 47 "Am 1 not a little pale inipirekln lady, who yeas sbartunaeoriairent, of a Crusty old bachelor: "Yoir look more like a tub . 1 " was the blunt reply. tir A clean glove, oft' n bides a ditl hand.