'••7; • • •!,6 , i .. •, • • • . Cl' • y.F. • ' SLZ• si7f -‘• • • f:11 1 4 . 64: 1. • t a • " . _ ".t• • . •.-• • , • ▪ 1 I r -•,••• ▪ • • .. • . . k • r =:3'4 t , . T .' • A. J. GERRITSON, Proprietor.' .VTt7~ J. There is a glory..on the Earth to-day, There is a spirit in the!elianiling trees, There is a soft, low murmur in , my heart, And on the breeze. Sweet autumn sheds a gentle influence DOW The world is clad in beauty and in light; The sunshine shimmers softly through the And all is bright Some spirit has made lovo to ev'ry Salver That breathes its life out on tho.passmg breebu Some magic hand has thrown a witching garb Upon the trees For all the blossoms blush—they seem rare gems From the bright land of dreams. In earth ward flight, Some Seraph's wing has swept the trees and left Gleams of its light Above us bends the silent, elondlesA sky, And o'er its depths a lone bird wings its flight Seen for one moment,then like gilded hope It fades from sight. The Spirit of the wind has struck his harp, But altered is the music of the lay ; The notes aro wailing, and the burden is, " Passing away." We lo're to linger out. The deep ; blue sky Seems nearer now than when the summer's here ; The rustling leaves a melting murmur cast Upon the ear. 'ys, thowe's • h e y breathe the sprit of the mighty Past, They wake a chord in each heart as they sigh "Bright daye fly fast." STONE'S LOVE AFFAM. DV DUTTON COOKE It was agreed on all hands that Ned Stone was a very practical fellow. By some this may have been said of him cns paragingly, though others undoubtedly applied the words in a complimentary sense. Practicality has its eulogists, but. it has also its censors 4 There are peop'e who will find fault with prose because it isn't poetry; the same sort of people consistently denounce practicality, be cause of its deficiency in speculativeness. For it is a common form of criticism to condemn a thing not so much for what it. is as for not being something else; that desiderated something else being, in most cases, something entirely antipodean and irrelevant to the original and disrelished thing. If Ned Stone had ever fault found with him on the score that he was practical, and that, he wasn't poetical, he might have answered with Mistress Audrey-sup posing (and it's a doubtful case) that lie was informed of the existence of that rustic—" I do not 'know what poetical is; is it honest in deed and word ? Is it a true thing ?" Certainly in both word and deed he was himself honest and true. For things that were otherwise he was quite without sympathy. Indeed, be was for the most part without any knowledge concerning them; being a simple, straight forward •gentleman, who went his own way, lived his own life, did what it fell to his lot to do, in a curiously sober, steady, homely fashion. He never swerved to the right or to the left. It did not occur to him; apparently, to deviate from a com pact plan of consistent conduct. He never seemed to say anything he did not mean, or to mean anything he did not say; the while his openness had not, about it that element of - ofrensivenesi which character izes the unreserve of some people; with whom "speaking their' minds, as they Orate it, is rather like cracking a bad egg—an operation better pretermitted than performed. - Ned Stone's mind ran pure and clear as a broOk. Yon were of course at liberty, if such was your humor, to deride it as being merely a water-brook after all— preferring a fount of strong claret, per haps. Still the former, be it remembered, is available at all times, and delectable ever in -its own mild way; whereas, the latter is only foi pceapions of festivity at long intervals,_never running for any pro tracted period, nor always quite clear, and, with all its charms, capable, upon provocation, of giving you a, headache, or of throwing you into a fever. He was a broker' in the city—nothing more nor less than that. Whether his labor,and profits had to do with tea and sugar, Orihips or stock, I am not certain. I found it stiflicient to know that he Was a broker of some kind, in , the city. The fact exiveYed a certain idea to my,mind. If I hadsought to enlarge tha idea by claillyint the 'fact, r ralght have found myiself lesB etilightenaklhan !biller con fused about the matter'; for inquiry, I notice,. often beWilders ns. it in strueffi., Me; liaji:been'Tery,pOkir Al;line hiii'llfe, and had land to Work Very, hard. :His industry, however, had in tie end met with its due reward. Arrived at middle age, he was very comfortably cir cumstanced, and be saw no reason to doubt that his prosperity would coutinue. When ho announced to his friends, there fore, that he thought of taking to himself a wife,,it was felt generally that the step he Meditated was a prudent and proper one, and only what might, under all the circumstances of the case, have been rea sonably. expected. And when he further stated that he had made an offer of his baud to one Miss Georgiana Warren, the daughter of a wealthy East India mer chant, and that his offer had been accept. ed by the lady. We a emieau huten.wi tentmr min our hearty congratulations on the happy occasion. When I. say " we," I must not be mderstood as employing the editorial first person plural by way of veiling my own individuality, but as speaking on behalf of myself and various other friends of Ned Stone's, who were also my friends, and who cordially agreed with me in wishing joy to our friend upon the proposed important change in his lite. Ned Stone spoke of the matter in his own simple, sober way. " Well, you know I'm getting on," he said, "and if I am ever to marry, it's about time I should think of setting about it. A few years hence it will be too late. I shall be settled down then in a bachelor kind of life, have adopted bachelor views and habits, and bachelor ways of looking at things; which I shouldn't be able to alter or get out of at any price. A few years ago I couldn't have afforded it, to put the matter plainly, and so it was nut of the question. But I always looked for ward to getting married when I could afford it; and so now, when I can afford it, I'm going to carry out the notion.— You're very kind. I think I shall he happy—in fact I'VQ Pc% nas any right to ex pect to be. One ought not to expect too much, of course. Bet I'm fond, in my way, of this ., Georgiana Warren ; and I think that she, in her way, is fond of me. She is not too young, nor too old; not too good-looking, nor too plain. She's sens ible enough, and accomplished enough ; and I.don't see why she shouldn't make me a very good kind of wife; and simi larly, -I doh% see why I shouldn't make her a very good kind of husband. I know I'll stn 411 comfortable, and I've no doubt she'll do the same on her side. What more is there to be sail ? Perhaps I'm not very fond of old Warren, the father; and perhaps also old Warren, the father, isn't very fond of me. But still I don't see that that need matter very much. I dare say we shall understand each other better by and by; meantime we must rub on as well as we can ; and I must try and make the best of the old- gentleman's humors, and not run counter to him more than I can avoid. We needn't be meeting so very often, yon know. And it seems to me that the old fellow wou'd be no fonder of anybody else who might want to marry his daughter than he is of me. And if Georgiana likes me (arid she says she does), and if I like Georgiana (and I know I do), that seems to me the chief part of the business. I don't think I need trouble myself much about the old man's views on the subject. You see it's our affair— Georgiana's arid mine—and not, his ; though it's hard to make him see it in that light. But I dare say it will all come right in the end. That's what I tell Georgiana when she takes up with rather gloomy views, about her father's temper. She's very good sense, and I think she looks at the matter very much as I do— only, Of cairse, she can't help feeling he is her father; whereas, thank goodness, he is not mine. I'm much obliged to you all for your good wishes, I say again." It wiil be seen that. Ned Stone was not, a lover to "sigh like a furnace." As for " writing a 'useful ballad to his mistress' eyebrows," r don't fancy he could have accomplished such a feat, even it' his life had depended on his doing so. Ili, pulse beat, ever steadily and punctually.. The thermometer of his love stood at tempe rate, with no tendency towards a rise.— Let Cupid do all he could, it did not seem that he was able to work very vital changes in I,llse respects. Stone, it was evident, persisted in contemplating love and, marriage from the prosaic and prac tical point of view. Notions of poetry and sentiment on those or any other sub jects were not possible to him. His con stitutional serenity refused to be disturb. ed at all by " the quotidian of love." There was nothing about him demonstra ting "a careless desolation." The "marks of love," as they are ordinarily under stood)), were not discernible upon him. He was, indeed, a great disappointment to conventional _ideas in relation to the lover. Many, perhaps, would be inclined to think that, he was not to be regarded as a lover at all—that he was simply, a man going to be married—winch charac ter does not necessarily involve,the former more attractive and showy rove. Certain ly he did not attitudinize, or speechify, or behave .in the eccentric way which- is popularly expected of a lover. He affect ed' no particular raptures as to theTro- Jiosed change in his life, though he loCked forward to "ft *kb- a'° sort of cal in satisfac lion.sdie,tiever , said.a word as to the jigit'iited;at'aWOTPSj!feaVit, oethe'eidite menCOf bin feelings. Re did not,regard MONTROSE, PA., TUESDAY, OCT. 29, 1867. Miss Warren as an angel or a goddess; probably he would have been the first to contradict any allegation that might have been made to the effect that she was any thing of the kind. Passion did not per plex or discompose his vision. Miss War ren seemed simply to him what she seem ed to everybody else—a nice-looking, sensible English girl. If he was to be considered a lover at all, why then it was as a lover with a large infusion of the man lof business. At the same time it would be noted that as a man of business. Ned Stone was a strictly honorable and thor ough-going gentleman. - • et - interesting to 4 looker-on ; if it could bw called a romance at all, it was unquestion ably a dull one. Yet there was something respectable about it, too. His affection was not all for display, but wholly for use; a solid and durable-looking article, and in that light commanding attention. It was not a wine that sparkled and effer vesced, babbling over the glass brim in rose-tinted foam ; yet it might, for all that, be of a sound, still and potent vintage.— Possibly, too, it would be found to keep better than its more dashing and sump tuous rival. "0, haven't you heard ?" he said qui. etly. "But of course you couldn't have heard. The affair's off; our engagement has come to an end." " You do not mean that ?" " Yes; the thing's 'broken off,' as peo ple say. It's a had' job, and I'm sorry about it—but it can't be helped." Had the lady resented his serenity and dismissed him ? I asked myself. As though he had heard the question,,, he went on: "It's the old man's doing. I hope be's satisfied now. He's the rnopt okt fellow I ever bad the misfortune to meet with. But, what did he do ?" I liked the man. His worthiness, in deed, commanded the regard of all.— Moreover, he was a staunch, generous fellow, a most trusty and resolute friend. To me the progress of his love affair was a matter of curious study. I was often considering the question, Would it change him much ? would his practicability ulti mately succumb? was his philosophy wholly proof against passion.? would he nit.ut.h..r. rn t coolly he might enter on the matter,Tnd at• least an unexpected fire kindling and crackling in his breast? • I called upon him one evening. He was alone. lie looked a little grave, and he held in his hand a small sealed packet. We discussed various indifferent topics; then I inquired concerning Miss Georgi ans Warren. " Well, we fell out about the settle ments ; —that was where the hitch arose. I'm sure I did all I could to please him. I gave up condition after condition, quite iu opposition to the advice of my solicitor. I told him to settle what money he pro posed to settle upon his daughter = it wasn't much, after all—just as he pleased ; I didn't want to touch a halfpenny of it. He might settle it, I told him, just as strictly as ever he pleased ; or be might settle nothing at all upon her, if he liked that better. It was his daughter I want ed, and not his money. And for my part, I'd take care that my wife didn't come to want. I undertook to insure my life for a large amount, and to assign the policy to trustees for her benefit, in case of my death, covenanting, of course, to pay the premiums regularly, and to keep up the insurance in the usual way. I thought that a fair arrangement enough; but it didn't 'content him. He wanted ,to tie my hands completely. He hadn't a ha'p'orth of confidence in me. He gave me credit for no sort of affection for his daughter. He insisted that any money I might in future become possessed of I should covenant to bring into the settle ment. It was most absurd. Of course I didn't consent to it. I had my business to consider. It may be very desirable by and by to invest further capital in it.— Why should I be hindered from investing my own money in the way I might deem beat? Of course my wife and my chil dren—if I ever have any—will reap the benefit of it just as much as I shall. How ever, he' wouldn't listen to me; so there was nothing more to be said. He wouldn't give in; and I wouldn't. I told Georgi ans exactly how the matter stood. She's of age. I asked her whether she'd marry me without the old man's consent. Poor girl!—she was - in a dreadful way. But she didn't dare do that. She shrunk from offending her father; so •there's no help for it—the thing's broken off, and I'm not to be married, it seems—this time, at any rate." He spoke rather sorrowfully, but still without the slightest trace of temper. I endeavored to console him in a coinmon place sort of a way. It was a difficult matter to know what to say,upon such an occasion, and consolation at all times is apt to run into rather common-place forms. He opened ; the small packet he had been holding in his hand. •" This. is pleasant,',' he said. : "Here . are all' ,my letters to Georgiana, And here's .a little present Y.gave :to her, sent; back There a wore-Aot- many lett ertl- Th 4 37 were written, I could see s in my friend s usual bold, plain, legible hand. Their contents I could guess': little enough like conventional love-letters probably—very unecstatic compositions—yet simple and to the purpose, and unmistakable enough. The present was a ring, a large diamond, heavily set in plain gold—just the valu able, substantial, simple present I could have fancied Ned Stone selecting for his betrothed. " I suppose they'll expect me to send back Grtklrgiana's letters to me i " he said. " tindoubt oily:" "It'ethe usual -way when engagements come to an end like this.?" He rubbel his chin and seemed to re fleet a little. " Have a cigar," he said presently, "and let's talk about something else; this is not the most agreeable subject in the world. Tell us what you've been doing with yourself' lately." So we fell to talking about this, that, and the other. Presently I left him. As I went away he said quietly, "I think I shall try and see Georgiana once more, for a particular reason." I did not ask what that particular rea son was, and he did not tell me. A few nights afterwards I saw him again. He was at no time subject much to change of mood, or at any rate seldom betrayed any variation of that kind. Yet it struck me that, if anything, ho was in rather better spirits than usual. " You didn't mention," he said, " what I told you the other night—that my en gagement was broken ?" I explained that I had not mentioned it for a particularly good reason. I had not seen any person whom it would interest to be the_ ract. it's just, as well," be said, " beeanse, as it happens, the engagement isn't broken off; or rather it's on again." "Indeed! I'm sure I'm very glad to bear it." "I told you I should try and see Georgiana again. Well, I knew that she eften went with her father and other friends to the Zoological Gardens on Sun day. I couldn't call at -old Warren's , house, you know, because 1 understood that I was as good as kicked out of that. So I went to the Zoological: I've a friend who's a Fellow, who gives me a ticket fa bs SAnty,l, t yclappv er I ask him,—au t j . covered her, wittiWlT'i•W and "fi'i r t;t, of other people. She saw me, and under stood by my sign's that I wanted to speak to her on the quiet. Well, -she lingered behind a little, and when the rest of the party went to look at the kangaroos, she Blipped with me into the snakehouse. She looked rather frightened, and the tears 'stood in her eyes; so I put my arm around her--it didn't matter to me who saw me, you know—and told her there was no thing to be alarmed at, and that I only wanted to say a word or two.' I then told her that I was sorry that I had not sent her back her letters as I ought 'to have, but the plain fact of the matter was I couldn't do it. You love me still, then, Ned ?' she - said. Of course I do, Georgy,' I said; who's been telling you I don't ?' Then she began crying terribly. ' Come, Georgy,' I said, 'let's be married, whether papa likes it or not; only say the word.' She didn't say the word. Poor child! I don't think she could speak for crying; but she looked at me, and she gave ever such a little nod, and then she began laughing through her tears. It was the prettiest thing you' ever saw. Of course I kissed her; and then I turned, and who should be standing close at my side but old Warren Georgy gave a little scream, and then tried to make believe that she was only looking at the boa con strictor. But of course that didn't do; so I said to old Warren in a cherry sort of way,' putting out my hand, 'Mr. War ren, Georgy and I are going to be mar ried; that's quite settled. But you and I may as well be friends all the same. We'd .much rather hay,p . your consent than not. Suppose you give it us.' lie was so as tonished, that before, I think, he quite knew what he was doing, he'd taken my hand, with all his friends standing around and lookinff b on. 'Of course he couldn't go back after that; and so—and—so the thing was settled." I congratulated him heartily. Presently I said by chance, "'Hon lucky it was you didn't send back Miss Warren her let ters !" "My dear fellow, that was what I wanted to explain to her; I couldn't send them back." " Yon fonnilthem too dear , to you." ' At last, then, he'd been betrayed. into a feeling of romance. "Not at, till,?'•he explained; " I couldn't send them back because—l hadn't kept them • I'd destroyed tam." them ?" " Yes ; what was the good of them"? • I only : kept business letters;.they're all reg ularly docketed at my ; office. But t for Georgy's letters,tbey were of no use.. It was- no. good in keephig them. 1 made them ino pipe-lights I" " Vopi didn't tell her that?"', " ; Hadn't time. •I never arrived at,my, explanation about the lettere "'Then, my dear . StOne,let Me, entreat Youil. l oq 1 49v..5c1a Warren your explinitick 4914 ' . .41:0 To: terb." " Why shOuldn't I?" " Don't you see ? She thought you didn't send back her letters for a senti mental reason ; because they were so dear to you that you couldn't part with them; and so, in point of fact, that little misun derstanding of hers led to the re-estab lishment of your love affair." " Do you think so ?" be asked musing ly. " But it' Georgy's made any mistake about the matter, I think I'm bound to set her right." . "My dear Stone, take my advice. For fear or accidents, set her right—if lon Bygt„,Bo l 4tr: rig/teed-tar tha Ira/Mina Whether or not he took my advice I'm not aware. He was married in due course to Miss Warren •, and 'I know that that lady was often heard to declare subse quently she, bad married the best husband iu the world. His practicality had answered; and it may be a good plan to convert love-letters into pipe-lights; still I shrink from laying it, down as a rule : that such a course should be invariably adopted: Lovers mast be left in that respect to pursue their own devices and to do what, may seem right in their own eyes. 'lt must be owned, however, that the story of Stone's love affair shows that there is something to gain in favor of practicality. Fattening Swine. Yarmers begin to fatten swine too late. The consequence isf plat the animal scarcely gets under way, when the time comes for slaughtering him. Our best managers make it a rule to keep the ani mal growing without intermission from the period of its existence until ready for the pork barrel. If kept over winter, they are fed and kept. comfortable throughout, and the reg ular fattening process is commenced ear ly in the spripg. A bushel of corn given thus early in the season to a vigorous growing animal, is worth much more than the same amount fed in autumn, and far more than if fed in cold weather or in winter. One reason that some farmers find it unprofitable to fatten pork, is that a large part of the process .has to be performed when the weather has become so cold that much of the feed ;s required merely for Ele7lTe - S t pork raiser we know of one instance grown - a pig eight months old so as to weigh about fi7ur hundred lbs. and in another 450 lbs. in ten months.— He has the corn ground to meal, and pre pares it by pouring into a covered tub 4 pails of boiling water.to each heaping pail of dry meal. After standing a day or two more it will become nearly a solid mass, and make excellent feed. The animals are kept perfectly clean, day and comfortable, (not in a close pen, but, in a small yard,), are fed with great regularity, and never quite so much as they will eat, surfeit being carefully avoi ded. He finds that pork thus manufac tured costs him only five cents a pound when corn is a dollar a bushel. Farmers who have not begun to fatten their swine regularly, as they should have done months, ago, should commence im mediately. By attending to the particu lars just mentioned they will find the bus iness far more profitable than the too fre quent process of feeding in the ear, giv ing the feed irregularly both as to time and quantity, and paying no attention to cleanliness and comfort. The skillful farmer 'Whose practice we have already described, finds that the mix ture of meal and hot water makes twice as much pork as corn fed on the cob, ac cording to careful weighing and measur ing. Dirs. Lincoln's Finery. The widow of President Lincoln bus in sisted 'upon largely advertising her true character to the American. people,. and to the world. An intensely vulgar woman, her conduct throughout .the administra thn of her husband. was mortifying. The gaudy bad taste with' which she dressed, and the constant effort to make a show of herself disgusted all observers. She was always trying to meddle in public affairs, and now she will have it -- known to the whole world that she ac cepted costly • presents from corrupt con tractors. Her relatives were nearly all secessionists, and - it was suspected that her sympathies were rather with the re bellion than' the nation-, and her highest dream of ambition to 6recognized as one of the Southern aristocracy. After the death of her husband, her conduct was disgraceful. She lingered at the White House, and when she haeto leave it sought to appropriate as her per sonal property articles that belonged to the house. Mr:; Weed shows that she deliberately seilt for a dinner to the Prince Napoleon to the Secretary of the Interior, charging three times the cost of the din ner, and at length got her money under a false preten'se that was acquiesced in ra ther than' makea scandal. Having been charitably permitted to sin into obscririty, she' demands notOrie ty at the - expeOse of public shame, and we ,have no' dOub s yshe enjoys the large advier• she - ie reoeiiiiik from ,tiro-phiss,,of the genntry. IVOLUME XXIV, NUMBER 44. She had plenty of money..to live coin fertably with, but she wants show, and regards it her right to revel in barbaric pomp. Hence her cries about the ingrat itude of the people and the need of mon ey. If she had had the good sense to , re turn to return tu her old house in Spring field, and to live modestly there, she with all her fault, ifionld have been respected, and perhaps in time she might have been been revered by the Amencan people.— She could not think of such a thing, how ever. Her complaint of straightened cir cumstances is unwarranted.—Cincinnati Conimor,;‘,/ Cousin 'Bate was a sweet,, wide-aivake beauty of about seventeen, and she took it into her bead to go down to Long Is land to see some relations of hers who had the misfortune to live there. Among these relations there chanced to be ,a young swain who had seen llatt on a previous occasion, and seeing, fell deep ly in love with her. He called at the house on the evening of her arrival, and she meL him on the piazza where she was enjoying the evening air, in company of two or three of her friends. The pbor fellow was so bashful that he could not find his tongue for some time. At length he stammered out : " How's your mother ?" " Quite welk thanl you." Another silence on the part of Joah, during whim Kate and her frititids did the best they could to relieve the monoto ny. After waiting about fifteen minutes for him to commence to make himself agree able, be again broke the silence— " How's your father ?" Which was answered much after the same fashion as the first one, and then fol lowed another silence like the other. " How's your father and mothei ?" again put in the bas4ful ldver. " Quite well, bothlof them." , This was followed by an exehsinge of glances and a suppressed smile. T is lasted some ten minutes moreolu rin which Josh was fidgeting in his seat and stroking his Sunday hat. Bat 'at length soother question came— " How's your parents 2" 1 ' This produced an explosion that made th. ...- -- . 3 .. .ling. . A good joke came off quite recently at a court house. A person living a short distance out of the village is in the habit of frequently coming into:town and drink ing to inebriation. At such times he us ually called upon his honor, Judge M—. Recently ho made one of his visits, be came decidedly tipsy, called upon Judge and desired the Judge to write him a pledge, asserting his intention to cease drinking. His honor wrote the pfedge as desired, and the tipsy individual affixed his name thereto. He then desired to have the pledge that he might take it home and ex hibit it to his wife. His honor thought be was himself the proper custodian of the important agree ment, but yielded to the solicitations of the man, at the same time assuring him that if he broke the contract, and appear ed before him again in a state of intoxica tion, he would have him locked up.. A week elapsed, and the Judge was confronted by the same man, as tipsy as ever. " How is this ?" said his honor. 4 ' Did I not tell you I would have yon locked up if yon did not keep your agreement ?" "Judge M—," said the . tipsy fellow, "do you think lam a fool ? I knOw what I am about°. I'll show you if I any a fool!" and he drew forth hi. wallet ,from his pocket, took out his ple, ge, unfolded its worn creases, and holding it np Who]. phan_tly, exclaimed : " Will you just show me the United States Internal Revenue stamp on that agreement ?" The Judge caved. When the celebrated Lord Castlereagh was stopping once to change horses ,at some very poverty-stricken postmtation in Ireland, his carriage was surrounded , by beggars who implored him in all the ea ger accents of native entreaty for a chari ty. Taking no notice of their appeals, he sat cold , and unmoved until the horses were ready to start, when a very tinieera ble looking fellow approached the car riage, and .said in a voice' of persuasive entreaty : "One sixpence, my lord- , -only one six lence, and it will treat all your , friends in reland I"—Blacineood's Magazine. —When 'Artetnna Ward vvasin Virgin ia City, Nevada, the_bardy piovectra forced whiskey upon him every three min ute's during his stay. When he mine to go 4i-way, they surrounded the coach and cheered him. He mounted the vehicle and said : "Goodbye. Take care of yourselves. I was never in a place in my life where I was treated as well as I have been hero, nor, I . may add, so, °fon." -In the ninnei s e lite, tlinteses Tigrish, the Ahern& efts thiVol uttip.% the thorns &Vend do Kind Inquiries. a Limited Circle.