The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, December 27, 1871, Image 1

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E. B.I#LTVL.EY, Proprietor.
011 TITO.
.
E. 11411LOWIN,
ar Law, Great Dead. Perm
B, L. BALDWIN, ' ' '
~
LIITOICUT AT Law, Montrose, N. Mew 'with Jaries
CIAMIIt.
lirOktrose, augutt Z 5, 187!: ;tr.
s Atgornm at Liar.offlee T.,..lLaciamssl Aireithe
Seratitod.Va. , Practiceis the several 6,urt• of Va
sem and Saiquettatma CouuLles
F. I. Locum;
Salinton. Sept. eth,lslt.—tf.
W. 'l. CROSSIIIIOIV..
at Taw, Cited at the Colt Ilona., In the
Celatataeloner'e Ofliect. -
Illoatrose, Sept. Gth, , ,
- 10FeKENZFE, & FAIIROT. -
Bars In Dry Goods, Clothing., Ladies sad Mutts
Due Shoes. iLlso, Agents Tor the greet Antetiran
Tea and- Coffee Company. [Montrose, Pa-, ap. I,"fft,
DEL W. 'W.
a;353 0 9.331.•
X1330:31313 priattss: 03Ice tinare.rrota a: X.
pi r . - 3.l<rotrose. thy 3. 1371-13
THE BARBER-11w Hat Ifni!
elltritigarorrte Is the barber. who ; can share year face to
ads Caw. brown, tads and, grizzley hair, In bis
eftleejnst upstairs. !There you wilt iind him, riser
p_ere's atom ti
below MeKenes—jaet one door,
laccatrose, Jane 7,18:1,—it, C. 31pRi11.3,
• J. B. 8c A. IL 1111eCOLLUM, •
ATTOILIVTI AT LAM Ogre OM the flank. Montrose
Pa Montrose, lay 10, 1071. _ tr
, . DU. D. A. EATEIROP,
La opened ao office. et the font of Ch,stnnt street, hoer
tbs Catholic Chtusb, where be can be consulted et all
theeei, '
Xoatrois, Apsll E. - 17
J. D. 'VAR.,
HOILMOTATNIOPISTSICriaI aND Bnnatola. nal permanently
looted himself In Montrose, Pa where he will prompt=
ly. attend to ell cans In his profmsloo with which be may
hrnte3. Once and reslienee west or the Court
nous, near Fitch h Watson's office.
Montrose, February 6,1671.
LW ()trim.
irrrcn A WATIitYS. Attornera ot LAW, at the old °Zee
orßlotley *Fitch. Montan,aa, Pa.,
I. 7. track. [Jan. 11, 'Mt "r. W. WATISCed.
CHARLES N. STODDARD.
Dssler to Boots and Shots, flats and Cap's. Leather and
Plodtar, Wein Stzte, tat Jonr Dewy Boyd'. Store.
Work made to order. sod rapairtn; done neatly.'
Montrose, San. 1; MO.
LtTTLES &113L - IiaIijES.LEF.,
Atterneys end tonneellors at Law. °Mee tbenne
heretofore 0nel:1 - plot by 11. J . & P.Ltttle: Main
Meet, lientroso. Pa. - lApril9o.
IL S. LATTLZ. ON. P. LRTLt. . Z. I. ILaSZILLZ.
LEWIS VINOLL,
SHAVING \ AND IiAIR DRESSING
limp to Abe zoo Poatoalco where ha ottl
to found may to attatol all oho may tyaot anythtn,
Ntouttose, ra. Ort. 13,
0. 32. ITAWILEV,
asalze tn - DRY GOODS. ORocEBuES.cnoc%ERY
nasdoltro, Bata, Caps. BoomSboes, Bead• blade Cloth
log, Paints, Oils, eu., brew Milford, Pa.' IBept. 8, 'Cb.
DR. S. W. DAYTON,
PritsictAN b sruaroN. tender. hi• Penten to
tb• citizens of area, Rend and vi. I din.. (Mee at hi*
naldence. apposite Darr= :louse, C't. Bend villag..
tot. lat., 160. tf
A. O.'WARREN,
ATTORNEY A.. LAW. Dainty, Hack Pay. Pension
Aked Krem • t.n
,Clnlms attended tn. °Tee 5.
agar baba. Boyd', Store, At ontruen.P.. [An-I, '59
M. C. 51liTTON,
Atiothine-er;--ata—nM:MrnVtr-
C. S. GILBEUT,
12L‘zaticuti.c.or.
Great Used, Pa
Q, s.
avgl 6911
All I LT,
Q. IS. ...ILszoticrimoor.
Aar. 1, 149. Address, Brooslyn, Ps
ions GROVES,
riosiosmatET.ulart. Aluntra.e. Ya: Strop OTIlf
cbanditell Stare. Alt ore:CM fined In 4rll,l2leSfAr.
atattirts done on snort notice. and warranted to dt.
W. AV. SIIITU,
AND CITAZR 11.A'SITE ACTURERI3..YooI
Of Mail' otrect„, Kontrose, Pa. , 31ir,c. 1, UM,
----
iI. BILTRUITT,
aziLEßtia Staple end Fancy Dry floods.. Crockery
Mardwara, Iron., Stoves. lira gr. tilla.said "elute
Sositsand Shoes, Hata b Caps, Fu re, Buffalo to p es
Orocarler, Provisions. cia.. Nevi Milford. Pa. '
1511110113) & BROWN,
/11111 AND LIFE inkJafiNcr. Act.sTs.
bootocroolcloodoo co promptly, on fair terms. Once
Arai door north of • Moutro. Hotel," ireat Wen ,
Pstrltcdoerme. ::/clocarooc. Pa. Eitur.l,lB69.
llauwas Smarr:). - Masa= L. Moos.
ABEL TIDRECEM,
„. • - - . .
„. . ..
DLazttan in Drutts, . t off .eicin Chetah:On
Laitaara. Pada% 4.30149 y Varniabes, Win la
GL's. Oruneries, likus I.Vare, Wall nod 'Window Pa,
Ea.arare, Lampn:Herosene, Manniner7 OHL
- . gun% Ammunition, li.nlYen. npectndes
;Piney Gpodm,
,Jewell 7, Perta • rr, Se.—
beer lone orthe most =merman, extensive, and
yolsable collections a ponds in Stl s rind:urns Co.—
Li:slashed in 1943. •-• talontronei Pa.
Efri W. SE, RLE, •
Tioifirici AT LAW. offlceovcr
Stc
of A.
labToP, t*lliist Wont, Xs_Qatrose. Pa- 110413.
"''
"DM W. L. RICILIMDSON,
jnitcrat a novorox. tenders . his protessioze
• matzos to the-citizens or Montrose :Ind vicinity.—
Otle• at his reit dance, on the soznee castor So..
lirea.-Foundri. jan. 1, 1569.:
DIL E. L. GiUDNEU,
Ilrisiciim and SPRGEON, Idonuc;se, R. Gives
Merida" .ritleattun to diseases of the Heart and
Leap and all Burgles' diseases. Office over W. B.
Deena • • eat Searle* Bole, [Avg.'. fSCP. ,
BILTIONS 4k., NICHOLS,
alkiiirs in Dingy :, "Ltielletnes, Chemfc li. Dye.
gtalls.Vilists; 01te,% arulah. Liquors.. Spices, Fancy
• ar..tacratent Medlcimy. Yortomery and Tact As ,
Ude* llarrteseriptlons exacta - 11y compounded.—
rade ' Avenneoittor9. Zearlo's 'lose]. Montrose. Pa.
5...1311n5. - - AXos Pienou.
HUNT BROTHERS,
scßitrrols, PA.
Virholocale & natall Dealers In , .
ff44PWARE,--.IRON,:STF.EL,- -.- -
• . ; ,NAILS, SP IKES, - ..IIOVELS,
nUtti)EICS IiIkUDAVAR.E, .
*this' Ain, COW TERSU-Vir & 7 ; RAIL SPIKE.)
.. .17.41L80AD A MINING trIIPPLIES.
SosaaaN BJIZrSOS. - AxiEs, ar4xLvs A.Vb
DOSES. BOZTS. LVTS sin d ..11 , 4AlLins.
" .
PLATED BANDS- MALMO-WI ' ,
~ JIIONS:IIETS.SPOKES. ..
.
, J1TLL0.M.1.8.8.4 2 ' s PINDLES, it 01r9. d
rra, V/C59, STOCKS and DIES; DULOWS
iIIZID3, St.EDDES. FILES...t.t..Ate. - ' •
AND AtILL 9 AU'S, DFLTZ G. PACKUtO
.r
TACK BLOCKS, PLASTER PARIS "
MIX EMT: !LAIN it GitINDSTONES.
_- _
.L , : WINDOW GLASS.LEATHEN a FLNDINDS
i , ~_--:, , . - %PAT= ANR.I7 ACALIIS. .
, , - - ,
ISPNIUM Much it, INA.: • . 117 ' -
IMPROVHD HUBBARD!
•
' PAirsolOp volts tuannuartraiii
erMIMS speed and Doable Drive Wheat It
thlattokGreat No... York State - National Premium
Ahafffoe Great Ohlano.ional Prenalatas, held at Stamp
flefd3ll.llo.
air'ealtiP Peaisfiratda,'llefyland and Vlrginia.Siate
rreadarant - . -
The rattails eitnple;catinaet;renraved entirely
*he drive wheels. and snelwed In a neat dee,,the
goatee of the machine, etti. , etitadly area:log _it Imo grit
aad dant. _
I'be , efieraiiedre ebaarlied instaatig.frnea a high
speed to one a tit rd. elower. vvithoot atop. thus adept•
bottler to had places and heavy treat:
aeo gawp: apparatus's perfect. Noir aXe.and one
111054 krilfsteed. tx.laAd -doubt the strongest
taehlaida the arorld. tad ran can depead apt . it.heins
ralbetAy,rallehte la every particular. . •
x 02 0 3 , 340 ,1tay9. ism—tf
tUlii=ei.Cio.lle=rierkedpor,al,*
-* gad ittratr.
IME iIIOPPEWB
A rosx ICOR
The sinoklof the Indlan . Stuumer
Thutened and doubled the
And the tipatorn. like a amuse%
Shimmered along the hills;
.. Like a gracious glowing onset,
Intoned wittiralabow
Or oantshinresolnga a-tralltng
trelnbling out of sled;
wx: D. true.
s i with tho brier-buds gleaming
In lies darling. dimpled hands,
Toddling slow down the steep-patio
01 the yellow -stubble•lands—
;
Her sweet eyes MI of the shadows
Of the woodland, darkly brown—
Came the ch*PPM'a little daughter,
In bar simple hood , and gown.
C. O. Fatmor.
- Behind her streamed the sidearm'
- Of, the oaks and elms so grand,
Before her gleamed the gardens
Of the ea Man of the land:
--etaraens woontranese - gatewaya —
The gloomy ivy swayed,
Betting all her heart &tremble •
ohestreek within their shade,
Now the choppeeiloWcabln
It Lay nestled
hi the wood,
And the dwelling of the rids man
thenpen highway stood,
Withlts pleasant porches dicing
Against the morning bills.
And each separate window shining
'Like a bed of daffodils
Up above the tallest poplars
In its stateliness it rose,
With its'carred and curious gables,
And its marble porticoes;
But she did not see the grandeur,
Aad she thought her.fattier's oaks
Were finer than the cedars
Clipt so close along the seam
80, In that fall confiding
The unworldly only know,
Through the gateway, down the garden.
Upon the warble portico,
Her bare feet brown as bees' wings,
And her bands of brler-buds 11111,
On, along the fleecy crimson
Ot thh carpets of dyed wool, •
With a modest &nos uplifted
. Through the lashes drooping down,
Came the chopper's little daughter, '
. In her simple , hood and town ;
Still' nd steady, like a shadow
Sliding in ward from the wood,
Till before the lady-mistress „
Of the house, at last, she stood.
O as sweet as summer sunshine
Was the ladpdsche to see.
With the chopper's little daughter,
Like a shadow at her kneel
0 green as leaves of clover
Were the broideries of her train,
And her bandlt shone with lairds
Like a with the rat%
. „
And the priest befbre the sitar,
As she swam along the aisle,
Reading; nut the sacred - lesson,
Recedirmit consciously, the while!
The long roll of the organ
Drew across a silken ittir ,
And when he named a saint, it was
As if he named but her,
But the chopper's child atulamded
..si
(She was rami ar-sarrnrtannunnunn
And so *weedy end so serenely
Met tbe cold and cheerless tam
Bar own "olive with blushes.
E'en as one who gives a grace;
Aa she said, the accents falling
In a pretty, childish way;
"To-morrow, then to-morrow
Will tare brought Thanksgiving Day;
And my mother will be tom ,
And be honored; so Abe ss►tdd.,
To have the landlord's lady
Tutc her honey and her bread."
Then slowly spake the lady-
As die:m:oll4 she smiled,
" Liao you not in yonder cabin!
Are you not the chopper's child?
And your foolish mother bids me
To Thanksgiving:do you say! •
What is It, little starvling,
That you give thanks for, prat r
One bashful unomen4 'Deane—
Then hashing up' her pain,
And alreedzeta growing out of it
As the rose dues out of min—
She stripped the woolen kerchief
From off her shining head,
As ono might strip the outer husk
From the golden car, and said:
" What have we to give thanks Or?
Why, Just our daily bread!"
And then with al! het Mlle pride
A n d bluo,ing out so re 4—
Perhaps, too, the sunshine
Can come and lie on our flOOf.
With none of your icy columns
To slim it from the door r
" What hate We to give thanks - for!"
And a anile Wonted her tats,
As a star the broken vapors, ' •
When it suddenly appears; -
.And she answered, all her haulm
Throbbing up and down so fast;
"Because my poor slck brother
asleep *slut, at List
" Asleep beneath the dal:ails; ; • -
Rut when the•drenchir,g ran
Has put Om oat, WO know the dew
Will light them up sintin;.
And we make axid 'keep Th an
• With the best the house aligns,
Since, if we live ' or if we die:
• We knew we lye the Lord 4,
• Thst out of Ma hands of Mercy '
Not the least of us Can fall;
Bur we hare ten thousand blessi n gs,
And Leannot name thenf l a n ...
o see them youraelf, - good
I will come tied show you the 'way=
After the nuirrow, the mono, again.
I \Yin be the gloat; glad day."
And, tucking up her testes
In the kerchief of gray'lsool,
'When , thiy gleamed like golden lights
In the autumn mists so doll, •
She crossed theorimson carpets, -
• With herrosatuds itt bet hands,
'And climb up the
.Qt Ike follgs* sti= ll . l
. .
• That evatlnt when thiceorwitelds
Had lose the rainbon' light •
Pf-misbio wing' ,
And trem bling out of ' .
Apart fosse her great possession
• And from ell me world spark
litteirthe ledpfite ort4 inigiMma
rich ran's lumse. and /mat,
. ~Erneit ale; WE liar VITO ok
-- And the shame she could not iTent •
ginning out upon the daftness •
ylum theftrea UP= ter chesk. •
4.nd prayed the 1...0rd of the =rot
To make her meek and mild,• -
• Mel es Balite, in'ThMilfsgifirK
49 the VII-OPPef* gaild•
Csuoir—ita
, —...-744141/ 1 14 ssilssamo tzwi
4iperissig
rpsisopos ship a/AnY
—..Fericed polltentei—Boiint ttl
stances.
MONTiItiSE, PA!, : : DECEMBER 21,-1871:
'FiotOtatuouo.
p wl4 41 ',III a VD4 till
I remember the day when grandfather
took "old Welch's boy" into his office, just
as well as I remember anything that hap.;
penedlesterdity, though at is sixty years
ago. Orandfilther. AIWA lawyer—Lowyer
Place the folks called hiinand he had
got on 'very well indeed; owned a fine
piece of land, and a hen= that was the
pride of Goastown on. the : hill—the aris
tocratic part of 031:isstiown, where all the
handsome dwellings were:—and bad I don't
know how muoh in bank stock and gold
besides. And there were always a couple
of boys in the office; and noon bad been
sent away for idleness, and grandfather
was looking for another.
Would it do to try Welch's boy?" said
be. "He's looking for a place, and' the
schoolmaster speaks , well of him and the.
'minister too; but then, you see ( e is old
Weleh'six,y-that's the worst :otit."
"No,matter grandpa," said L • ,, Try
him, I'go !rarity. I. .know he's good.
Do try.hun.
'foresee Walter Welch and I were not
quite strangers..' He lived in the low part
of the town, low in every sense--full bf
the people from the factory, and lying
among the manthes, out of which agues
come up and shook the poor folks who
lived in thefdamp little houses. And his
father was tipsy old Welch, who bad kill
ed his wife with cruelty, and was killing
himself with rum. And Walter was
shabby and poor enough, Hearen•knows;
but !wiled a gentlemanly way with him
for all, and a good face and sweet voice;
and be, bad saved my pet poodle horn
some boys who were going to kill it, end
he climbed down the precipice where there
was junta foothold between hint and death,
to get me a flower I had said in his hear
ing I wanted. And at Sunday-school be ,
was the brightest and best boy of them
all. And it seemed so hard that the sins
of his drunken father should descend up
oninnocent Walter. And so I plead
with grandfather, and, because he bad de
cided to do so perhaps--for why should
be listen to a girl of fifteen ?—told me, at
last, that he would hire the lad,
I can, see him as he looked when he
came into the office—a tall, slender boy
with fair hair and a bright flush of color
in his cheek ; as pretty n boy of seventeen
as one could meet anywhere. though hie
clothes were so worn and dingy. I can
see him sitting at the tall desk writing, an
hour aftir, as though be hull been , there
forever, and grandfather and old Mr.
Ames nodding to each other as who should
say, de. ,
I can see myself too, with my hair all I
411 puffs, and my white muslin frock and,
kid slippers, witting before the fire in our ,
parlor a ft erward, working at a frnit-piece '
in floss silks on white satin.
It was the oddest room you ever raw,
• • !--Ninnurratriet-iaticrernswerew ti'gyoyi
deal, and bad tilled tho house with curiosi
ties. There were pictures and statuettes;
and rare china and Chinese idols, and
drinking vessels from Turkey and long
Turkish, pipes, and bits of iudian bead
work, and is real Persian carpet; and
scattered over the ceiling, Cupids and
cherubs, and festoons of roses, painted
there by a French artist wlito had great
talent, they said, though he lived and died
without being rich or famous. Bat the
pride of the room was the great mantie
piece, brought front Italy, all covered with
carvings that told some wonderful, my
thological story. Ah, what a fool I am!
There it stands. It was older thau grand
father when he bad brought it in pieces
over the ocean, and it will outlast the
baby there in its cradle. And as for not
knowing the story. it's 'the old one, rm
thinking; there'll Cupid, and a shepherd
anda shepherdess, and it's the girl that.
Cupid is,taking-aim at. Our hearts, are
tenderest, is why be wouuds them worse.
"Men have died, and worms have eaten
them; but not for lover but many a•wo-
man has died of love, in good sound earn
est I believe.
I was too young to think of such things
then. But after a while I dropped my
work, and mt looking at the carvings, as
I often did, and thinking of the pretty
faces of .the shepherdess and shepherd,
and how.tbrougb the crack at the back of
the 81104 my gold thimble had roiled a
week ago, and laid there out , of reach
among the mortar that held it in its place,
though 111 fished for it by hours together.
Perhaps Welch's boy would one thy get it
out for me, he was so smart and kind.
" Well; in a seek or two I asked bim
and he tried bat in rain. It was A day
when grandfather anti old Mr— Ames
were both away and we had a long, long
talk. The brightest, bbe was - the best
and dearest boy. I wi sed than I had. a
brother like bun dozens of times. We
were allays solely sneiabla after . that.
'He told me some of. MS troubles:Mai felt
sorry for him front Myheart. It 'hakes a
woman love any one solumob more, tu
inst a. little sorry for him. Annear:a,
childish lore it was, but even then it was
love All the lame that. I felt fur, Walter
Welch.
It dori not teeth mu t! to tell a ft er all.
We, grew older both.° us., 'They said I
was a beauty. and I was grandfather's
heiress. Two or three o.me courting me
tifore I 'was eigliteen,,before that
me,Qld Welelafiad brought a new dis
grace upon. his sou by mixing himself up
with slobbery. I saw, the radial old Man
taken byle jail, and I Cried' a little' for
Walter's_ lake. .- He -did not. forsake his
father even then, but versa la , visit him,
And did all he could for him. c.as as
poll as denth &mid be, When I ea* hint
again ;Int be soi,cfno word about it, and
of course =I did. not. Bet- I. wanted, 0
bow I vatted to tell him that no one
could' think less of
.him for any Boob mis.
fortune. .
It vas Garret Gray; rho .owned the
woolen mill% who 'mine 'a courting; me
just. then. , They were # good, tuhily, the
(ame, and Line Jading too; Every girl
itt' town envied me, I do bolieve, when he
walked beiide mei-or danced with•,me uk
the Assembly balls. = He made) Ao.. secret
of liking me; he was of, unuiCut null out;
and wondered that I did - not like"birn
better; but you,:see, Wolter was in mY
Mind. • Arid get one Mau in your mind,
there hi little room for !mother,
.
Iliat •
all thirmbile he sail nothing. He
was tivtfrindlWenty by that time; and he
had come to be a clerk in grandfather's
office, and was regularly studying. law.
We were men.and women, and if he had
liked ine as I „thought' he did once,' be
surely would have !Token, if it were 'only
a word or. two; - He - was very kind and
friendly, but no more; and if, those shep
herdess had had eyes to
_see and tongues
to speak with ', they - would bale derma,
enough to tell of those days. I hatedthe
th'ouhte of being an old maid, as every
girl does; but bow could I marry any bat
the one./ loved ? and he did not ask me.
A look now and then modemy heart flut
ter, or a sigh. troubled and pleased me,
bat a girl Mud Wait for words. I waited
in vain. And Garret Gray courting me
so warmly, and I thought, as girbi mtnit.be,
that torture should not wring my love
from me as long. us- . I was not sure it was
returned. tried to eeem„cold to Walter t
'and, arn notrnind seemingwarm eninigh,
to Garret Gray, for IT cared uotbing for
him. I'kuew heiwas poor enough, but. I
would be rich. And I.knew ho was eld
Welch's eon; britithat made no difiZrence,
I pined for a kital of a loving word from
him, as starving i people long for bread.
The one great jot of earth seemed to Me
the they¢ of ,being Valter'a wife. I'm so
old now. that rdon't mind telling you the
truth; then I'd have -died first...
One day • we sat together before the fire
klasing,orider that great inantel-piece--
grandfather and , his partner, Walter and
I. It was uncle's birthday, and we had
little feast, and Walter just as well
thought of after five years in. the office ap
any cir i e there—had been asked to taste
the old mine grandfather prided himself
on. And -we were talking of what bad
happened in • the town, and of how Dolly
Rose was married..
"And Japeth courted her tiro ; years,"
said grandfather. "Afraid to askber the
!tendon all the while, and she came near
jilting him out of pique; but he's got her
after
"Served him right italic had jilted him,"
said L "If a man loves a girl, let him
say so out and out, or else let .her not
wait for him.
"A man may be to bold - sometime, and
resume on kindness," said Walter, "and
•e huffed for his paths."
"He'll know her mind at least," , said
he, "and shell know his, It's death to
barn to wait. I Should think so, at least."
blushed whew' said that, I knew, and
Walter blushed too.. I wished I had not
spoken. He was silent all the evening
•after that; but when be left us he shook
hands, and kept my hand in his a little
while, and looked ut me in g‘ way that
made my heart beat furiously.
I laid awake all ; uight, and only fell
asleep when the sun was rising.; and it
was so late when ,t arose, that the maid
was dusting the parlor, and—awkward
thine—bad gat a feather fan half way
n.o.e
out of sorts that Want i scolding came
natural.
" Oh,..it I had not made that speech!
I thought. What did Walter think of it?
And 1 asked myself. that question more
than once; for from that I never saw him
again. I did not go to the office, nor he
come, to the parlor and on Saturday
grandfather came in to tea, and sat down
with a face half puzzled and half angry,
and said:
" There's a piece of news for you, Effie.
Walter has gone."
"Gone where?' I asked, turning. cold.
"Left us," said grandfather,"Effie,
there is somethin g queer about t his. Hare
you been hurting him ?"
" He never gave me a chance' to hurt
him, grandta, said I; and the truth
would'out t hen, "If he had—l—l could
not hose hart him, :grandpa, dear. II
never liked me one, bit, though I liked
him."
And grandpa said: All Effie, it's
dangerous leaving young folks much to
gether. I-wish things had been different,
furl. like Walter. Isio matter. Kiss me,
Effie."
So I kissed him. We never spoke of
Walter, and he never again—never, never!
To me it was as if he were dead; but I
could not cry for him as if he had been.
And after awhile, Garret Gray made me
listen to him, and we were married. And
oh, the • sin 'and the shame! y I did not
love him one bit. I marrieditist so that
Walter might not think I pined after him.
You couldn't expect lunch happiness
from.lsneh a marriage, none; came. It
was my fault I suppose, as pinch na bii.
We fell out soon, and quarreled constaut-
We hail a girl, and a crippled boy, who
died at five rears old, and I . loved them
dearly, and used to wondei. bow 7it was
that they .. bothisad Walt q -s eyes. , Yon
see that sometimes a .wonstn's children
now and then.look like the man she loved,
whom she'nsver even kissed, rather than I
like the hitshand she bas= starriedi and,/
blamed Garret fora full the got,- and
was hard with him. In the end he mu- I
away and left me to myself. I came hack
to this house then—grandfather was dead I
—and brought mv-littlegirl. -, Siam I sent
her to school; and to sit day after
day, evening after evening, before this old
mantle-piece,..eratching. Cupid , with . his
bow, end the :shepherd and .shepherdess,
the stairs down below, there, and thinking
of old times and Walter.i' Div hair turn
ed gray . carly, niy figure Shrank} and .tny
face - .wrinkletl. -, . They called me.old Mrs.
Gray when - I was forty, ;list as. they do
. Do you believe in me
,orirai? .-I do, a
little.'- Them crag . something that drew
me "constantly to that -old - mantle-piece,.
1 kept we touching it; and looking •at it,
4
I somethingivery - strunge, you'll believe,
1 when •Fre :told you elff.
.: .. -• • . ~
I - .My girl "grew up Mid . vied, and clime
to live, With me, - andlier: bildren aliened
shoat :m,y.. knee and glade rao . tell - them
about thefigu*orillus milrbk. thovo l ;iacl
in My old age's kicd of '
c alm pyrite to ixte
I ~.a sort of bappinesiiMi heiuh 11, mated;
I and I leoked. hack oir the l td 1 Ind 'been
once, and (MGM vionsatil had been elteef
want pityingly; as though they Were oth,
er people, not? • Effie ,they
had nasaed'after we, my granadabghter
link :no aft old - now as 1, when I fell in
love with Walter Welch; her inother OW,
er than I when I brongbt her back to my
'own home, and settled doifti to , my
lonely life. • ' • -
Tins weeks ago, Effie came and told mo
oho was going to bamanied, • She was all
blushes and smiles.
It 'seemed odd enough to me • but
promised her a hadsome gift and wished
her- all good wishes, and felt itildeiteed as
her mother did in uettiog.the house in or
der,: and seeing all was Ilion and - nentv—r
rin not.reeblo )•et 3 Omit I eevetity.
five. 1,
We had nevi carpets sent froth the City,
and the went parlor was newly painted,
all but the .ceiling. And my daughter
would have the. grand old mantle-piece
reset; for the crack behind was "a great
trap now, and itliallY'was in danger of
falling. A mason came for' 'the *purpose,
and we stood, woman=like; watching hire.
lie took the piiees down one bY one, and
there was the• mortar with• all sorts of
things in it... There was_sitisittriut: ink
and 'fere a paper-folder or,ror :pup, fa.,)
flier's and matehes and tfelnyuk jar cover,
and there'was - "my - tlitmblc=my gold
thimble-Aost sixty yeaft i befere. And
re
he's a letter, said the m on; handing it
to me. I looked at it. It as black with
dust, and sealed as thoug hit had - never I
been opened, I put on my glasses,My
maiden name , was written upon it—Miss
Effie Place—and the hand. I knew'. it,
though I had not seen it the , all these
years, was Walter Welch'e. ,
" What's the matter mother?" said raY' l
daughter.
"An old letter, dear, said L "It brings
old times hatk;tWatts all!" - • I
And I went away to my room and cat
down there by the window, and read that
letter for the first time, fifty-five years at
ter it, was written—read my only love-let
ter from the only man I ever loved, half a
century after date.
" DEAR EFFIE," it began, "you think a
man who is worth much should not be a
coward, even in lave. So do I. There.
fore I begin tut I do. Dear Ellie I. love
you. want you for" my wife, 1 I
never
can be happy without you, and if you can
make me happy by saying that yon like
me, for Heaven's sake do so, fur you can't
guess what a condition of mind I am in.
I know. I'm nut quite all I onght to be
towards you, I. know how heavy my poor
father's disgraoe lies upon [ea; blit I love
you, and Fit try my best to make you
proud of me, if yon can think of me at
all. I cannot speak to you of my heart,
I cannot even write as I would, but I love
you better than Garret Gray. could love
any woman, and I think you would be
happier with me. If your answer is Yee,
please send me just one little line. ff it
to no, don't say anything. I will under
stand it and go away,. When I have seal
ed this I will put it on , the mantle-piece
in the parlor, where you will be sure to
find it. And whatever you answer, I shall
always be your true and tender lover,
" WALTER WELCIL .
sj
hadn't cried before for twenty years.
Bat I cried when I read that letter like a
child. The clurasy maid had brushed it
into the crack in the mantle, and never
told tee; and swell my life hid been al
tered—and all his perhaps, for he bad a
I loving heart—by a Switch of a maids
dusting brush, and a crack in an eld man
tle-piece. And I wonder whether he lives
or is dead; and whether he ever married.
But I wouldn't care to have him know
the truth now; it's all too long gone by,
and we are as ranch-dead to each other as
though the sod was over na,
---..40..•••- , ---..-.
The New Intoideant.
ORLOUAL to Beds.--The British lied
ical "Journal" discusses a letter which
Baron Liebig lately wrote to, friend in
London, in which Be stated, as a matter
of interest, the quantity of charcoal that o
a certain mannufacturer turns out weekly. i
The amount appeared surprisingly great,
and the professor edded;att a possible ex
planation, "Some say it gets into our
beer." He probably did not expect that
his familiar friend would publish this
morsel of unauthenticated gouip. A
nonprofessional journal reads the great
German chemist's remarks, and from
small beginoinga, the idea has taken shape
and has been extensively repeated in the
press in a more or less authorities form.
Dr. Oscar Liebreich, the &coverer of chlo
ral as a medical agent has made a com
munication to our Berlin correspondent
on this subject. Be states thht there is
no ground whatever to suppose that the
drag is employed to adulterate beer, and
that the public may be at once disabused
of this notion. The strong bad taste pf
the dreg fortunately disqualifies it for this
nefarious use, and itssoporific effects upon
the constitution are each as to. make ,it
totally unadapted to counterfeit the qutd
ities of the genuine beer. The presumed
enormous demand 'for chloral pas been,
authoritatively explained on the gonna
that this," newest popular vice is to take
chloml." • ladies, ithas been announced;
are especially addicted to it, and it is doing
at least as mach harm as our old enemy,
alcohol, The drag is kept in thousands
of diessing-cases, and those who begin its
use often grow so .addicted to it that they
pass their lives in a scat of contented sttl
pification. One seems to find here evi
dence of , the facile power of generaliza
tion; that writers devoted to social phi
losophy possess in an eminentdegree. If,
indeed, so vast a body of women possess
ing dressing-case hare, within a year or
two, come to pass their lives in a sort, of
contented stupefaction, so astounding a
constuntnation has been brought about
without attracting the notice that it calls. ,
for, It is knit possible thet had/elide and
fathers are so pleased with the content
ment. and the stqpeftction of the ladies
that they have held their petiCe- In :the
mean time, it mat be well to remember
that chloral is used medically, underskirt,
ed observation, in the tame caSes cantina.
onsly from day to day, and often for pen
oda of weeks and Months together, with.
out injury, and the aggregate at all Mose
doses presents'a very considerable Amount,
There are a present no data which- iniar
cats its use for, other than major :1:11 ,
poses, Such a use would be highly elan
geroue, and the statements' waiou have
been clrealate4 144 - ate
lila:Nereus:" "
—AunimpostopammOtlithlth
Siss it.
VOIMME F7ltti3lll
" ; r.-?
Tbe Iltaven l , ' ,
We bate: beard of-Die/MA two ravens,
,towards - them lie shewed so mich . fondness
that Dongfai Jerrold said jocosely, be was
raven mad. One of hisyets,-be tells us,
had "good' gifts," but nevertheless lost
his life , by the "youthful' indisCretion" of
eating "a, paunil . or two of• white. lead." i
Alas! t uljiist what* juvenile risven-,;
one raven would do; 'for ho 'is 'a glutton '
like his parents, Withent their'
Theeiconcl raven,•Dicliens; 'nays,- "newt,
pointed. the 4'reater part -of_ the:garde:lH
wall by digging • out the mortar,: broke{
countless squarea_ of glass by ramping 1
away the putty all"round the frames, and
tore up and mvallowed, in •eplinters,.•the
greater part of a :wooden staircase :of Jai
steps and a landing—but aftersome three
years bo too -wastalcen ill„and died before
the kitthen fire; kepthia eyelo the
last vipan-flut Medea i't"retnitea.:A.4l.4.-
denly turned over• on his. beck,: with •st
sepulchral ore of , t Cacho/11u Sincotheiri_
adds Dickens rriminifully, I've been 'rev
enless, Thegreat author himself Is now
silent in death, hitt his affection towardt;
all living. creatures, "Min and • bird and
beasts," still lives and endears hit memory
to many • thousands of mankind;. for in
this respect,like his own. Barnaby, 'the
was known to every-bird and beast about
-the place,tind . had a name for every one '
.of them." But We are reminded 'also,
when we look upon the raren, of Southey;
Byron, Longfellow and Poe, , who have.
told nssomething.of the-pranks, virtuous
and vicious, or this clever bird; and of
Goldsmith also, who says.- lic " hem.d 'a
raven sing the 4 134;4 joke with aiatiuct
nes% trntb, and humor." There. can be
no doubt about the linguistic powers, of
- our hero throu g hout all ages, fur he is at
the head of 'talking birds. One of his
ancient ancestors; tired of tbe monotony
of the temple of enstoa; gravely entered
a tailor's shop, and remained there appal.,
ently only -to -amuse himself by pro
nouncing illoud to .gasping „Romans the
names of "the Empe ror l'lberius' and the -
Hoyal Family, Ho was arrattled utter
death' , by -a Magnificent interment.
Anotheriatailicted.to peeping and listen ,
ing from the.porch of a chapel during do.
vine service, heard the minister say re
peatedly, " Let us pray." On the occasion_
of a tea-party at the Squire's Hall, this:
animal was 'brought into the 4n:wing•
room to amuse the- assembled .conipany
with. ilia tricks. Set' down, he looked
about him, nothing abashed. Presently;
kenning.an old well known antiquary, ,
clad in a dark smiff-colored suit, whose
head and shoulders only were risible over
thcitop of a high-backed chair, on which
the worthy, man happened at the very
moment to be kneeling, our sable hero,
assuming solemn attitude, gave out
slowly; andap pulpit tones, "Let
pray r , Another 'who sat up his abode-at
a
a posting house in Yorkshire,,-guarded'-.llpals,U.,fl„,„tidelity of a watch
invariably ctoannd .
"Ostler, come and lairthWrgatifleffini
horse I' 2 -knottier, long accustomed to
ramble about a nobleman's park in Wilt
shire (11.1arquis of Ailesbnry's,). when Bur
rounded bya crowd of unwelcome rooks
and crows, would cutely lift up his bead,
and imitating the voice of a man, shout
out, Holloa r and the consternation of
his affrighted companions, rho took
flight instantly, seemed to give him. infi
nite merriment. Another, called the
"Parson, lived in a stable, and observed
that when the groom tickled his favorite
horse behind the shoulder, the hind legs
of the horse would go up, and the groom
would frequently Say to the playful ani
mal, "Ha, Jack"; go it, old fellow!" One
day the groom bead - C - 40N and noise.in
the stable, and aPpioliehirig the* door was
astonished by the sounttof his own voice
—" . .11a, Jack ;,go,it, old fellow 1" Upon
entering the stable' he found .the raven
perched on the belie's hind , quarters ;
mg hairs out of Jack's tail, and' respond:
ing regularly t o theliesse'a kicks with the
grooms eiclamation, "lie, Jack; ge
old fellow r'—,Saturday Evening trusti
An Eccentric Bride,
The marriage of Florence, the only
daughter of Lester Wallach, and Mr. Ar
thur Sewall, has been duly ohronicled in
the daily papers, but it seems that this
union was not, consummated without
some difficulty, The New York corres
pondent of the St. Ipttis Rtpublican writes
concerning the °ream follows
Tke bride was quite young, considered
pretty, and ail the world. (in Net, York)
krona that title has Oecutteritk's peculiv.r
lyber own, - Baring the solemnities of a
bridal ceremony it was snpphsed she
would, forego the' ways and manners that
have made her conspicnonsin her father's
theatre, and in public; generally, ' Un.
founded suppoiition. , . The..church was
well filled. The .. bridal "cortege, arrived,
passed up the long.covered passage to the I
vesteenle,'and no peal of the organ fell On
Florence's ear. "What," screamed the
bride, with a church. full 'of people in
front and a crowd-.of, guests pressing . in
behind i" music? _ 1 ;von% be married
Without music." Several ladies here filed
the open door behind the bridal party.
The ushers were sent flying_aftet on or
ganist. The bride , -zo streaming, iyhite
silk, flowing veil " and orange wreath,.
turned upon the croivd, Motioning then;
backahe cried; "Yon can't come lit here
new, till I pass into ebnreb, keep thedoor
somebody, Her father owed , vain to
calm her. ",
Her proposed husband yentnwt
ed a word, but she shut him up summar
ily, No organist was found, the invited
gloats outside the chapel'.der were
clamorous,-and the disappointed damsel
relnetantly went tip the male land was
married. As the benediction was pro.
nouneell4he commenced au animated ar
gument with the happy Sewell. As she
passed_out
if the church. heitentY down
the aisle she spied Tom Baker, the leader
of the orchestra at %Hack's and. sung
nutt . 't Here, what's the reason T had no
mustier . Unabashed, the: gallant Baker
replied; "_'Why didn't You let tae: rtockrt'l
Fre seen blushing brides,. tearfal brides t
and agitated brides, bat" ,it blist:Wallactk,"
had been getting married every day . :tir
five years she couldr4 bore been -a morel
self-possessed and easy-acting- bride than.;
she prune d heraq.,
Worm Man a Triaged,.
The Chicago Araii tells thisiad
to story ; The central figure is a bold:bad
•a,:but to 9 succiessfulua., his efforts t t
despoil. The man is a sufferer by the ~
fit and, prompte&by humanity, an ac•
uiinlanee received him and his supposed .,
,Wife - to her home on the - Wit Side,
the house of this- ospitable %mean ot) •
"ert-also sufferers, kept coming. until. the
goo 4 Jody foindshen time so absighett ut
the.hirrofilces of.chairity, that she hall .
litthilime to observe particularly rho act *
vial habits of her gnesti, and still less 'to
detect utterly unesrffie4 tiad, ingrate
She bad a-ilaughter4 an uccomplished,
beautiful daughter, Lately married to , an -
honorable man, whom her • mother's love,
could not`permit to live else*be'relbat4
under tberoof which sheltered herself:
A6AWnaghtomlama.l44.lmiselmadmma-art--
bnth3Lia loved 00 darighter.r; The he
, -, •
friended was pleasing to them .all:,
The daughter liked bins, -bill the niotlie..
garc oo thought, for'Aras a mar
ried Watt? AVaBll9 under tip;
tame, roof s and - .11.4 ;they mot loco, each
other ?. • 1 • •
gee day, however, and by accident, th e
in - otheoverheard this Supposed wife and
her hUSbaud 0) in loud and- thieatening
converiatiott; Prom ft. - the mstonlibed
mother learned Viet-Agri: was the
•wifo of another nian, and had been led
Iwo/ her -home .by t iia. mac-, hMi
.promised to '(put her through A divorce,
pay all expenses, and: then marry- her?"
She learned more: She found that the
reputation or her: own daughter -Was in
jeopardy, and that jeAlous9 of her had
caused: these , bigis . yrords.letweni this,
-mail typd likrich4...
. Thoroughly sVoisseA now thewiethet
beguile investigate, and found that by
costly presents, assidtiens attentions, &V. •
tering words and ways beisiclesTramiseatn.
get divorces and:marry," this wretch had
too successfully carried out- his bastkpurA •
mese & , But bow to. save ber daughter!, .
Shf dint sonthe . so-called 'MA B.,"+""
told' her she knew all--found tho wornau
nt last, penitent, .aaispiluvii to do all she
':could to aid in the cestAilitiiku tO regeota,
, bility of the already , demoralized &ugh
'The danAtei heard ell. . The tale or •
° milky its' maidiofis provresi, slow at first
but finally swift and all conquering la its
approaches, Then she laughed -lightly.
and said, it couldn't •ho true,"
,The
mothet at eve ordered quer :
tern elsewhere, hoping to 911;I bap(; tier
daughter, if she could only resent ler
Iroas his baleful eye an 4 influence,- Tort •
late! Her .daughter klei (led from . hen
mother'e . orme. ona kph% the - seducer of •
female Nulty laßglie beck ia mockery.
land the heart brokett Mother cries tolled
for t he l he only comfort still left ber—tho
gm
•
.Wereirapiiiliffetitegy"Ter •tantei -
What the producer wants in his stock•ie
gocsl.94ality of flesh, early maturity and : •
c:!pacitT to make the most flesh out of a
emu 4thettntbrfood. A turkey Weigh- ;,
ing dftecti pounds is justas geed' for the - ".
table as One weighing- thirty, and Most .
housekeepers -worild , prefer !tbsim• Wider
twelve pounds. In most markets' the •
lighter weights would . bring the higher,
price, It, is buly.in the .region of." :large
betels and boarding hoeses that the very
large birds bring an extra price, It takes - -
about three ye aye for a - turkey -to attain,.
his largest weight. If at twelve months, •
a gobbler reach thirty potindiliroweight, ,
at twa - years he' Irould. reach thirty-oe,
and at three years-forty or a little mot;
Bit it is rare to get 4 wale bird over forty
pounds, and then it is generally some
process of sidling teat des . troys.bie state--
ma and knietimes his life. " 'J'bis Weight
is excelled sometimes, bqt abant the - time -
one thinks he is almott' sure of a fertyt.p
fire pounder, the prodigy eickenspnd dies,
It may be assumed,- then,- that forty •
-pounds is obwiirtho 1;2'1014n erf t ioh: Lida.
orons turkey cock may be safely carnieZ.
.and frorni half to. two-thirds •of 'that •
weight is'tbe last safe limit for the hens.
With breeders of this Bike and alittle nn
-derire should get large, strong • tbicke,
that will economize feed and mature..
.earlier than the offspsing of • common
sized birds. hirds.yield more
to treatrdent than the turkey. - - The , .
'thieve° of a large-sized gobbler in ti flock-
is immediately visible in - the in4r4sed
Ailed the - chleket, The k'utsoduction. of
Mild blood increases .tho . hardineisbf thy:
yOtiag, • A larger. proportion of the eggs •
will batch and a much !Artier slumber
the youngAwill be likely. -to' grew- up.
With a little painstaking it • is quite etyy ,
to breed tunny desired shade or.plopne.,
-- .. - Imericals'..lyrics.liftratai • 1
Uew li'Vou .71!ireipin
The Peeattit. LI) *publican ti t this
The teialt.rof a-young wi ower, '
who resides not so very Est front here, in
trying to get "help," tire worth relating,
After becoming almost discourageft by tins
many failures , he at last drew up in front
s
of a mall dwelling among the -hit% and
ashedthe customary question on you
tell me where lean-get o wiiroon to do
the Work in a form-hem f" "Where ara
you from?"' asked the old math Timing'
the handsome horse and buggy with a
critical sir. . 4 131 y name is —, and 4
came from "ON yssl I've heard
of you; pa lost . your wife a. spell ago.,
itcl4 ire .got Pti—Secti VA too t
and Too nu" take your
_pick atamig ern
for a wife; bat they wouldn't none Of 'eui
think of going antler work. I slirld
have you - should take litureN eeause,
she'i the oldest, and her chance i t
so, good,'nein' as she's nigh" sighted, and
cant heir very well ; hut, if Jon don't
want hei-, - ,rnti can take yourpick of the
othcrs.''_
_fltir friend went in, selected the '
belt kOlog °Re, 410 , 0 tho Justice and
was married, and carried his bride, i burnt;
that 4eny - night, having soured per-.
utunent and tilicien4 Inause-teepei, whi4
Primreil 41,A1P fan very satufactory t with
question of wages, and -no : hriut..to tho;
iteipected to 146 1 r ,
re!
Bas iag)aoue b l =4=-1 1 .$ t
to rids q , 4% •