. ...... . - J..M,MaaBMeneBn ' 'eOMJMBI BEMOCBAT AND STAR OF THE NORTH. , ' : ' , . " r- V ( ) L. XXX- OLD SEIES DEMOCRAT AND STAR KTBLIS riED EVER V WEDNESDAY, IN BLOOMSB.URQ, PA BY . -JACOBY Cc lKELER. TFRM?. 00 in advance. If noi yald tilt the Vnd of ihe year. 5 real, additional will be ehareed. C7" No papr-4icnntinued unlit all arrearage 'rt paid except at ike opi'.ioa of the editors. ' RATES OF ADVERTISING. ' in uFWmrr bc. One ,uar or thret Insertion 30 rrr nbt,uont -rnsertinn le ttiaiil3 ;....30 araca. tot. ..-. . quarre, -t ainarea. Three . Pour aiuarei. r 3 ro 1 4.0Q I 6 n f 4.ou I .tO I 0 I 10 '"0 3 0 3,00 I 7.00 I rUO B.iO II 10 1 Ix.lM) S'lOJ .00 My o 1 I iu mil, ra no j inn. J 1.5 00 i I 1? no i mi 14 01 1S M 5 1 ro One cot Executor's aad Admiirfetratur'e fcwiic 3. CM Aatf ifor'a Nte , Other advancement imertti aetrnitXpecfiii Bu!iinVa notices, without advenitement, twenty. certs -per line.' .. . . . Tran.leat alTeriiment pny iMe ia atl anee. an vtber due alter lb Art tasurtion. C7" OKFICE -la Shire's Block. Corner of Main xnd Irov Street,. . . . . " ' ' Address; , JAConVtlKELER. . eioomfburt. folomhii County. Pa. THE REVEILLE. x t iw. joam raecxa. . The son. of Columbia are gatherinc aeain. To fiht a true baule with might and witk mam. Gainst Error, aud F1iiehod. and ail tbeit dark train Nob Mountain.",, aliU stauds on bia fa.t anc bored . base. And watcbee intently each ehanee In the race. And calls meaehToter to .urine to bis plae. . They coma from the farm hito fnr up oi the bill. Piam tho croek-side where rambles the old water- "I". ' ' ' . And the narsft gratings saw, for tka mooiant Kands still. BhWI wttera rbey atrrb in magnificent line. 'Mid lbs bib rllii' til's aid dark lorests of rwi. 1 he brave bnys of J ackso rmm duty ne'er erred. And has sworn U. old Union mut atiH bsf rcsarr ad. Tber yrtnanry. hardy of tiaada and nt wftta. Old I?caklo rolls frm her ertjTeen MH. Where GnczawdoDS their Shadows cast over the plain. Our boy are awake", andwill beat fbein aeain. Where M adisos s spirit keep snod wntch aad ward. The people bis Uaclriags aad doctrines regard. . . Where Bihtow. seeore 'mid the bin .notches out, TIm brave fellows Tally ith maay a abonl. Old Fntaoc-aK calls for a place In the fray. And Is good for Tito kundrmd hurra, boy a . barra I And Oatwoc remember the meetinc of yne. And will rftand by the Sgibongh the battle nay roar. The boys front the Carres are matching all right. And shoulder t. sba alder UiO coot.st iuril. Old ftniaScKiss: wanders the willows amntie. And heisona gather strength while inarching al ong And Bsnwtct: fall faTl.intly romea to th flrbt. For strung la her will, tb-agh t (rest is her might. -Bcott. mindful how nearly the fm was o'areoina. Js ap and alert at tbd aound of the i rurn. And Bt-ooai claims to have, though in numbers to amail. The boys that will anawer at everT call. Trim the Mils of Motnrr Plubast w a hear 'hurra. Tb flag fl.iats a'oft, they are rict.ra t--Jay. The hundred nf Hkmlacs: srn movfnc ss one. And there will the cotitest be speedily won And gallant 'Monroe, though br numbers are lew. Js always prepared ber full duty to do. JJeyW, wneee the bright ue,iehanna still cOna, Krae'eldCArawtasat. mac-haiMg her tun, A band o aawavtrtnrPewocrat raise The flag W here lbs Loccsctu flawers display e. Where Soakisocmss; tbuadVrs. the yeomen com. forth. Aad bow themsolvss iaiea of position and rn-orth. In Fsahuim the boy. arc astir, and tbey say For Ci we r of flert. tboy can carry tne day. And tho letiwnaof rosT0H. bound to be free, ilavasougbtlbe world ever for sweet liberty. AndlittteCcsTKiui will ant be out-rlote.' l will ! that this fill her drat battle is won. They're coming frm KtAVtk. twohunrfrej or ifiore. To help os tho Union we lave, to reston. And Mirrui responds with a thnndsrinfhout,' eitae'll give t the fooa peek Harick" rout. And the ch-srig rolls on. till it echoes sttin. On she hill sidee that bouna lbs fierce town. hip of Mais. COMMUfllCATIOKS. Abolitionists and Abolitionism. .... - NO 11.- The Enemies of the Co.xstitctiox.Uxios and Libeutt rs Council. Mtssas, Edit ana ; It was a gloomy night; a starless sky hung heavily over our nation, lite a black marble dome over a tomb, and nothing interrupted the sileneo i'night but a a very strange sound.liLe the fl tppingof great wing3, which. from time to time was heard over the cities and fields. Then thi dark ness thickened, and every patriot felt his soul shrink into itself, and a shudder run through all his veinsw ' In a hail hung with black,and lighted by the dull, red glimmer of a single lamp, seven ab olitionists, crowned and robed in purple, were ecttiag upon seven seats of iron. In the cen tre of the hall was raided a throne composed of the bones of dead Democrats, and at the foot of the throne, in place of a footstool. there was a l;berty-po cut 10 pieces , ana before the throne a table of ebony, on which were a vessel filled with blood, retiand foam ing, and a human skull: "And the seven crowned Abolitionists seemed thoughtful and guilty, and from' the depths of their hollow fVnm time to time darted fr.ri nrV . nf livid fire. Ana one or these Abolitionists rose and with tottering step approached the . throne and trod under foot the liberty-pole. At this moment hi limbs trembled, and . he appeared ready to faint The others gazed at hiin motionless ; but an indiscribable expression passed over their features, and an unearthly smile con tracted their lips. Then he who had seemed ready to faint put forth his hand, seized the Tessel, poured the blood out into theEkull and greedily drank, and the draught appear ed to strengthen him. Raining his head, this cry came from his breast like the hollow death rattle : - "Cursed be Andrew Johnson who is trying to restore the lawful rights and liberty to the South, and union and peace to the whole country." ; - - . - And the other six crowned Abontioniste ose with one accord, and together they ut tered the same cry : . .. . -"Cursed be Andrew Johnson whose policy to restore constitutional liberty to all the people of this Republic" ' : ' Then resuming their iron seats, the first "Said : " My brethren, we are Abolitionists, what shall we do to stiSe libertyj for our rttra is over if hers begins. We have a 'common cause ; let each now propose that which eacci3 to him best for us. Listen to &7 counsel. Before Jolms6n carau into pow who could stand before us ; .we controlled Ii'nccla aad he controlled the oEcers, and they cctlrolled the sc.'uief3 and in this way Vs t racdulently carried the elections for three Wf j'r.r ycar'and l.al eTCrythin our own w-jv. d 'tn Booth, for he or tee Leva, icaae t, ior ue ur tiic ajuiu. u.auc in f-!vin '-Lftne't Old Abe a great misiae .n-'r'fm-i a ;" therefore let ti3 char.se and f ' - a ' . . And they all said, It is good counsel. Let us aboliih the Constitution and Unioa of the Fathers." Then the second advanced to the throne, took the skull which lie filled with blood, drank and addressed them -a follows : " It is not only, the Constitution aiad the Uion that must "be abolished ut scieBoe and thought -also ; for science teaches men to know tkat which is not for our god, and thought is always ready to contend against force." And all answered, "let us abolish science and thauehL" The third after imitating the example of th first two liyinnking blood, thus spoke : " When we have plunged white men back to the lovel and brutishness of the negro by taking from them their legal rights, science and thought, we shall have accomplished much ; but there will still remain something else for us to do. The brute ha? instinct and dangerous sympathies; therefore our subjects should not hear the voice of any other peo ple nor read any but abolition papers, for fear if one should murmur and become rest less, another might be tempted to do the same. Then do not let Democratic papers be circulated among our serfr." And they all answered, 44 It is good coun sel. Let no report come from without into our abolition uistricts. Proscribe the free dom of speech and of the press." And the fourth also drauk of thercd foam ing blood and said : 4 We have our interests and the people have theirs, which are di rectly opposed to .ours. If they write to de fend those interests against us how shall we over-power them ? Let us make division by unjust legislation on the tariff and bonds not taxed, that we may reign securely. Let as create in every State, city and hamletan in terest opposed to the interest of every other State, &c In this way all will be divided, hate each other and not write agaiust us." . And all replied, " It is good counsel Let us divide the people and the union that we may always rule. Unity among the States and the people will ruin us." And the fifth having twice filled the hu man skull with blood and emptied it, ?aid: 44 1 approve the measures ; they are good abolition regulations, but insufficient. For our parposes it is well to mate mes. lretcs Dy destroying tne distinctions uoa nas. maue between the races, and to frighten these brutes, and strike tenor into them bj; inex orable laws, and cruel punishments if you would not sooner or later be displaced by them. The Reconstruction, or Destruction Committee, or "Central Directory" is the thing for us. They speak and it is done, they command and the nigger stands fat. All answered, 44 It is good counsel. The "obstruction committee ' is the prime lead er for us." The sixth drank blood, and said : "I ac knowledge the advantages to be gained by our party from prompt, terrible and inevita ble punishment. But there are heroic and courageous souls who brave-punishments. Would you govern men easily,-nervate them by voluptuousness. Virtue is of no use to ns -t it encourages re-i stance ; let us control the greater part of our dupes by robbing the Treasury and raising corruption funds by Black-mailing." All answered, 41 It is good counsel. Let us exhaust the strength and energy and cour age and patriotism of the people by corrupt ing them with Green-backs." . Then the seventh crowued Abolitionists having drank blood from the skull like the others; said, with his feet on the prostrate liberty-polo and the Constitution j "Down with President Johnson I There is war to the death, eternal war between him and us ! But how shall we alienate the people from him ? It is a vain effort for ua alone. What shall we do then ? Listen to me. We must by bribery, with riches and honor and power, gain over the professed priests of Christ And they will command the people in the name of God to submit to U3 in everything we may do and order, and the people will believe them and obey for conscience sake ; and hence through these bought hypocrites we can keep up perpetual strife, contention and ill-will and our abolition party power shall be more stable than ever before.' And all answered, "That is our true poli cy. Let U3 gain over the Priests by corrup tion, for they can mostly be gained in this way." Then suddenly the lamp which light ed the hall was extinguished and the seven crowned abolitionists vanished in the dark ness (May God grant that this may soon be the late cf their whole party, for they all love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil. ) Then a voice was heard say ing (to a good man, who, at that moment watched for the L nion and rights of the States, and prayed for the peace of the peo ple,) "The day of deliverance approaches, preserve the right, adore and fear not" Jetfeksdn'. Died of Grief. A touching incident is related by the Mil waukee Wiseo?isin, as having occurred in that city lately. About two years ago Mr. Strausburg purchased for his child, six years old, named Willie, a voting Newfoundland dog, which was also called Willie. The two became very much attached. About two months ago the dog was run over by the team of Mr. S., his leg broken, and he injured so seriously that it was found necessary to kill him. The grief of the little fellow was inex pressible. ' He cried incessantly, and called continually for his companion. The father, to quiet his grief, had the dog's hide stuffed, but it satisfied the child only for a day. Another dog, similar in appearance, was purchased for the boy, but he would ray no attention to it, calling constantly for Willie. Every effort was made to distract the little one's attention from -the object upon which it was fixed, but without success. For a week he lay in his little bed, hugging the stuffed dog-skin close to him, moaning fre quently, just above a whisper, and sometimes breaking out into paroxysms of grief, and calling loudly for Willie.- He would eat yery little, and every . day when food was given him, he would offer it first to the object be side him, and upon no attention being paid to his desire, would throw it aside. One day the child's grief had settled into that quiet, half slumbering state that so plainly speaks an approaching dLssolution. rfe asked his mother, as he had done many times before,, if Willie.had gone to Ileaven, Mamma, I love you and I love papa, but I want to go and see Willie. Good by, mam ma, I am goinfr to see Willie now. ' ' Before the mother could reach the child's side, he was dead had died without a strugglel and without a gasp that could be heard quietly, calmly,' his little heart wore itself away from the effect3 of excessive grief. anawnen Deingansweredalhrmatively, asked, "Shall I see him there, mamma?" , "Yes. Willie, if you are good and try to eet welL a. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA. CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 18.1866. Mr. Thompson's Umbrella. "Augusta, I wish vou would practice Cho pin's march. Mr. Thompson likes music" Ohl how sick I was hearing abeut Mr. Thompson I My per aant, she meant it Very kindly, of coai-so, but she little knew how she made nre hate those single gentle men whom she so wished me to please. I was an orphan, and had forty pounds a year, and Hiy aunt's-annuity died with her ; so I suppose her anxiety to see me married was both commendable and natural, but to me it was dreadful. Moreover, perhaps, because I was a proud girl, and perhaps, too, because I was. a foolish one, the mere fact of a man, young, or middle-asod for only the old and wedded were excluded-coming to the house on my account, inado him detestable in my eyes. I should not wonder if that was the reason why I pleased none. I was said to be 1retty I may say that now, alas ! it is so ong ago but plainer girls, with no greater advantages than I had, went off at a premium in the marriage murket, and I remained Augusta Raymond, uncared and unsought for. I did not care, not I. I only lamented that aunf would worry both these unfortu nate gentlemen and me, with vain efforts to make them admire me, and make me like them. She was my best friend, however, and I loved her dear;y. So I now sat down to the piano and played Chopin's march, and racticed for the benefit of the devoted Mr. 'hompson, who was to come this evening, and who little knew, poor fellow, ho had been invited to spend a week with us for the express purpose of falling in love with his second cousin's, niece. I had ot seen him since I was a child. He wa.s a yotmg man then, tall, dark and grave, and already on the reaJ to prosperity, lie was a rich man now at least, rich for such a poor girl as I was, but he was Mr. Thompson, aad 1 hated him; he must be old, quite old. I thought ef all these things whilst I was playing, and then foTgotthem,for the divine music bore me away, and misic was a pas sion to rae then, "My dear! Mr. Thompson T' fhii mv aunt's voice, as I cloned the instrument I turned round and saw him ; tall, dark, grave verv little altered, and not at all old. We had expected, him for dinner, and he had come to luncheon ; I forget how the mistake arose. Ashe opened the garden gate he met my aunt They heard me playing, md stood by one of the windows to listen. When I ceased, they entered the room, and it was then that, as I said, I saw him. I did not know it rt the time; hut I knew it later ; I Irked him fro? that very moment lam not snre that every girl would have liked Mr. Thompson. He was decidedly good looking, and he was both shrewd aud pleas ant ; but he had a quaint aud abrupt manner which was apt to startle strangers. I liked it well, however. I liked that eccentricity which never took him too far, and that slight want of polish which cave great flavor to everything he said or did. I liked all, ex cepting hfs umbrella. That I detested. It was large, soiled, massive and dreadfully ob trusive. He had it in his hand -on that bright warm day, and long as our aoquanit ance lasted I never saw Mr. Thompson with out it Later, when our intimacy had pro gressed, I taxed him with this. 4ies," he said good humoredly. "I confess it is my hobby. My earliest ambition as a boy was to possess an umbrella, and my greatest happi ness as a man is to go about with one.'' Of course'we did not speak about his um brella on this the first- morning we spent to gether. Mr. Thompson praised my music, and, looking me full in the fiicc, told me I Elayed divinely. He sai'i it without pream le, and I saw he meant it My aunt was delighted and I felt pleased ; but somehow or other, I also felt that Mr. Thompson treated me like a littli girl; and so he. did not merely then, hut ever afterward. Tiresome man! 1 hid thought him old be fore I saw him. I could not make him think me old now that he saw me. Mr. Thompson did not stay a week with us, but a month. Oh ! that happy month, with long golden dayg and delicious evenings and music and yweet converse ! Shall I ever forget it? If the awakening was bitter, let me remember the dream was very sweet. Mr. Thompson was to leave us next morn ing, and we were in the garden together. I knew by this time how I felt toward him. and, kind though he was, I doubted if he cared much for me. And when he said, "Augusta, I have something to say to you,' my heart began to befit He used to call me Augusta now and then, having known me as a child, but never had he said it so kindly as this evening. Ah, well ! I suppos-s many women have to go throuch the bitterness which came to me then. Mr. Thompson had met nfy Cousin Jessie at Mrs. Gray's, proposed to her, and been accepted. From the moment he men tioned Jessie's name, I knew my fate. With out seeing it, I suppose, she had ever stood between me and every good. She had taken the friendship of my best friend, the liking of my nearest relativij I was not really my aunt's niece, only her late husband's and now she had forestalled me in the love of the only man I ever cared for. Surely she was not to blame for that, but, oh! how hard, how very hard, it seemed to me ! The night ingale sang in the trees above us, pure bril liant stars turned in the sky, the garden was full of fragrance, and Mr. Thompson went on pouring Jessie's praises in my ear. She was so handsome, so bright, so genial, and so delightfully innocent. And what do you suppose he told me all this for ? Why, be cause he wanted me to co and live with them. 'My aunt's heath had been failing of late, and he was aware that 1 knew the worst might soon come, so he wauted mc to be sure of a home. I burst into tears. 'My dear, good child," he cried warmly, 4 'if I were not going away, I would not have grieved you so. ou have, I know, a true woman's heart., Your dear aunt may live for many years, only if she does not, Jessie and I " 4 'Pray, don't !" I interrupted. I could not bear it The more he praised me the kinder he was, the more I wept and felt miserable. At length, at my requt st, he left me. I grpw calmer after awbile? and went in. "Do playChonin s march for us, my dear," said my aunt Poor dear aunt ! she wanted me to fascinate him to the last She little knew that Jessie, whom she disliked so, had been before-hand with me there. - I played it "again. J t was the knell of all my hopes. A gray twilight filled the room and they could not see the tears which flowed down mv cheeks. I played well, they said, and I believe I did Something from myself was m tne music inn evfinine, ana mat something was yery soiTOwful. Mr. Thomp son eame and eat by rae when I had done. The servant brought iii the lights and a letter for my aunt While ehe was reading it, he said softly : "Will you think over it?" TRUTH AND RIGHT GOD AND OUR vou," he insisted, "and then you will do my little heedless Jessie grood the poor childish darling. Besides, I have set my heart on something."' This crowned all. I guessed his meaning ; he had a younger brother for whom he meant me. He had all but said so this evening in the garden. "It would do John, who was rather light, all the good in the world." I could not bear it 1 rose and went up to aunt. "What news, aunty?" I asked. "News, indeed!" she replied, amazed. "There's Jessie going to marry my cousin, Mr. Norris, old enough to le her father. I wonder what he wilf do with the little flirt" There was a pause. Mr. Thompson came forward. I did not dare to look at him. "What Jessie is that ?f he asked. "Sure ly not Mr. Raymond's cousin?" Yes ; the same. Do you know her?" "I have seen her at Mrs. Gray's." He spoke very calmly. I suppose he did not believe it I pitied him ; from my heart I pitied him. "Perhaps it is not true, aunt," I said. "Not true ! why she writes it to me her self there's her letter." I looked at him now. lie was as pale as death, but very firm. Neither troubled look nor quivering Up gave token of the cruel storm within. Something now called my aunt oat of the room. "Augusta, may I look at it?" he asked, glancing toward the letter which my aunt had handed to me, I could not refuse him. I gave Jum the letter. He read it through with the same composure, then looking for his umbrella, which he would always Tceep in a corner of the siting-room, he said very calmly : "I think I shall go and take a walk." And he went out, and we saw him no more till the next morning, when he left us. My aunt was disappointed to find that Mr. Thompson had not proposed to me after all, and I was hurt to the heart's core by the coldness of his adieu. My value has gone down with my cousin's faithlessness ; mine had been at best but a reflected liffht I was liked because Jessie was loved. She became Mrs. Norris soon after this. She was married from my aunt's house, out of regard to Mr. Norris, who was related to her, and who disliked Mrs. Gray. 4 'That busy-body," she called hci and I am afraid she was a busy-body. She teased me un mercifully about Mr. Thompson. She was sure, she said, he had made love to me; and she looked at me with cruel significance as she spoke. But I betrayed neither his se cret nor mine ; and though she vexed mc when ehe quizzed him to Mr. Norris, es pecially about his umbrella, I did keep si lent. "I am sure he will be married with his umbrella under his arm," she said the even ing before her own wedding. "Don't you think so?" I did not answer her. I went out into the parden and wondered how she had charmed' him. Alas! 1' might have wondered how, without seeing it, he had charmed me. Jessie's ruarriace was a blow to my aunt. She had always though? thai I shotild go off first. She was also cruelly disappointed by Mr. Thompson's indifference, and perhaps she guessed the meaning of my altered looks. I believe I got pale and thin ust then. And I was always playing Chopin s march. ".My dear, said my aunt to me one evei ing, 4 "is not that very mournful ?" "Hike it, aunt," I replied; but I resolved to play it no more. "Mr. Thompson liked it," she said with a sigh. 4 'I wonder he did not propose to you," she said abruptly. , I was silent. m "I wish I had never asked him here," she resumed; "I can't help thinking " "Don't pray don't!" I interrupted. She did not insist but he made me go and sit by her. She caressed me, she coaxed me, and little by little she drew my secret from me. . ' "My poor darling," she said, when I had confessed all, "he may value you jet" "No, aunt, he never will. But pray do not trouble about me. I mean to get over it, and I will," . I spoke resolutely, and my aunt praised me. 44 You have always been the best of girls, she said, tenderly, "and I am glad you have had confidence iu me. 1 did not mean to leave home this year; but now I will take you to the sen. side. You must have a change my poor darling." -She kissed me. and I remember how calm and happy I felt in that gray room, sitting bv my dear aunt's side, and looking at the starry sky." The nightingale was singing again as on that sad evening when I had felt so broken-hearted ; tears rose to my eyes when I remembered it, and his last kind ness, and my foolish, withered hopes ; but the bitterness was gone from my sorrow. "You must have a change," said my aunt again. . Alas ! the change came in the morning. My aunt was late for breakfast I went up to'her room and found her calmly sleeping. But, oh ! too calm, to deep were those slum bers. The kind eyes which were rested on me in love, were closed, the voice which had ever spoken in praise and endearment was silenced for ever and evef I suppose it was not Jessie's fault that her husband was my aunt's heir-at-law ; but I found it very hard. Poor, dear aunt, she always did mean to make a will in my favor, and she never did. Mr. Norris behaved very handsomely I was told. He gave me the piano, which had been bought for me, and a few other articles of no great value, and all my aunt's wardrol. He kept her jewels, which were very fine, and the furniture, for which, as he said truly enough, I had no use. Moreover, he allowed me to remain in the cottage till Lady day ; though, perhaps, as he could not five in two houses at a time and must pay the rent whether I staid there or not, this was no such great favor after all. God forgive me, I fear I was very sinful during the dark days that followed. I had some friends who did, or rather said their test; but there wes one who never came near me, who gave me no token of his exis tence, who had no kind word for mc, who let me struggle through my hard trial, and who never offered a helping hand. He might at least have written, have condoled with me in my sorrow but he did not. And yet, he was in the neighborhood. He was often at Mrs Norris' house. Jessie herself told me so. True he had business to transact with her husband ; but still, how could he do it? He did it, and he did more. Mr. Norris was thrown off his horse one morning, and brought home dead. Jessie became a wid ow, and a poor one,, said the world. Mr. Norris was not a rich man, after all, and left many debt. I only went to see her once. I found her cold, callous, and defiant under affliction: yet I would have gone country. with the widow, and I could only inter fere ; besides I could not bear to see them together. It was very wrong and very useless, but it was so. Mrs. "Gray often came to see me. I can net say she comfort ed me much. She gave fnc a word of wea risome advice, and told we much that I would rather not have heard, yhat was it to me now, that accounts kept Kim so often and so late with Jessie? They were both free, and. if he chose to forgive her and laarry her, and if she chose to marry once more for money I say it again and what was it to me? m And yet I suppose it was something after all ; for when Mrs. Gray left mo one after noon in February, I felt the loneliest being on this wide earth. She had harped again upon that hateful Btring that Mr. Thomp son seemed quite smitten with Mrs. Norris. "And what do you think, my dear," she added, "he thought you were gone. He seemed quite surprised when I said I had seen you on Sunday. -"What, is she not gone," he asked, 4 'gone to London?" 4 'No, indeed. What should she go to London for?' ' He did not answer that, but from something said, I saw he thought you were engaged to be married. 4 'I wish she were, poor dear! " I replied : "it is a hard case to be so young and so loely," I do not know how long Mrs. Gray had been gone, when Carlo gave a short bark ; the gate bell rang ; I saw a tall dark form pass across the window, and my little maid opened the door saying "Mr. Thompson, ma'am." I rose. He came in, with his umbrella as usual, and Carlo went up to him and wagged a friendly welcome. I could not say one word. I was dreadfully agitated. I felt quite sure he had come to tell me that he meant to marry Jessie, and to ask me to go and stay with them, or something of that kind. Nothingel.se could have broughthim. Or, perhaps, as Jessie had, no doubt, told him that I was gone, he had, on learning the truth, felt ashamed of his coldness, and had come to make some sort of an excuse. He had none ; but he asked how I was, took a chair,' looked rather hard at me, and with out waiting for an answer, I feared he was not very wciL "Oh! I am not ill, you know," I replied, a little carefully. "1 trust you arc well, Mr. Thompson." He said he was very well, and looked at the fire. For awhile we were both silent I spoke first My remark wa? scarcely a gra cious one. "I heard you were so much encaged that I scarcely expected to see you," I said. I was vexed with myself as soon as I had said it. He might think I was annoyed at his long absence, and, surely, I was not. But he took my implied reproach very well. He answered that he had indeed, been much en gaged, but that everything was over now. Mrs. Norris, he added, hadlcll this morning. "She left in no very contented mood, I believe," he resumed. 4 'The balance in her f ivor was low lower than I had expected. Mrs. Norris has something like a hundred a year. This and a few jewels constitute the net profit she derives from her marriage. Unluckily, these speculations can not be re peated often you see. The capital of youth and beauty has but a time a brief one ; it is apt to wear out, and the first venture ought to be the best. Mrs. Norris not having found it so, is disappointed. I suppose it is natural, but you know I can not pity her very much. 1 supposed not, but all that cold hard talk pained mc. "I have a fancy," he resumed, l'that this kind lady expected some other ending to our accounts. This is not very flattering to my vanity, unless, indeed, as showing my mar ketible value ; is it now I - 1 would not answer that oucstion : nis tone, bis answer, vexed me. fcuddenly he raised his eves to mine. "Did such a rumor reach you ?" he a-ked I dould not deny it My face was in a flame. I believe I stammered something, but I do not know what. "Even you have heard it," he said, looking secretly pleased ; "the world is very kind. And you believed it, too ! 1 had hoped you knew me better." He seemed onite hurt ; but I offered no justification. 1 hen ho rather formally asked to be allowed to mention the business that brought hitm So it was business! I scorned myself far my folly which, was not dead yet, and I bade him speak. Was 1 asleep or dreaming? 3Ir. Thomp son spoke of my aunt, her love for me, my forlorn position, and expressed tho strongest wish to take care of me. "Bt he added with some hesitation, "I can do so but in one fashion as your hus band. "Will you overlook all these pecular ities in my temper, which used to annoy j-ou I fear, and take what there is of true arid good in me? Can jou, will you do this?" He looked at me in doubt Ah ! this was one of my bitterest moments. He cared so little for me, that he had never seen, never suspected how much I loved him. And he expected me to take him so. I clasped my hands and twisted them nervously; I could not speak at once. "And you, Mr. Thompson, I said at last "And vou " "Well, what about me? Do you mean can I too do this?" . t "Yes; can you do it? ' : "Why, surely else I had never proposed it alL" He had half smiled at the doubt my ques tion implied, and he looked at me as he smiled. Both look and smile exasperated me. "Mr. Thompson," I said excitedly, "I have not deserved this. n t- t ' Vyariu. cuiuc ucrt;. My poorj shapsy Carlo came forward, wag ging ulS tail, iie laia nis iieau uii my a.nc-e and looked up wistfully and fondly as only dogs can look when they vainly seek to read the meaning of a human face. "lie was an outcast," I said, looking at Mr. Thompson ; "he was starving ; he came to this door ; I fed him, and he would not leave it I took pity on him I gave him a mat to lie on and a crust to eat He loves me for it; but, Mr. Thompson, I am not quite so low as to be brought to this poor brute's level I can take care of myself. ' Mr. Thompson threw himself back in his chair and uttered a dismayed whistle as I made this free commentary upon his pro posal. "Well, well," he said, recovering slowly, 4 'I can understand that you should not care for me, but I did not expect that you would takeitsfk" ,. "And how could I take it," I cned: You give me pity ah, I scorn pity Mr. Thomp son ; if I were not the poor, forlorn gall am, would you feel or speak so? Do you think I do not know how nch girls are wooed and wnn? If vou eared an atom for me, would you dare to come to me with such language?' "What language?" . - - tio REIT SLR What. T mud. Yes. Auirusta, I wish to take care of you true, fondt loving care; nothing shall make me unsay it He snoke warmly and a mapiy giow, .to his face; but I would not give ns, and l said angrily, that 1 did not want to oe iaKc care of. . i . i. "Do let us drop these unlucky worus, ne entreated; "and do tell me whether you win marrv me, yes or no. Let it be, if you like, that I want you to take care of ine.( I am much older than you are, you know. I don t know what possessed me. x said "no." Oh, how I would have liked to re-! call the word, but it was spoken, and he rose with a clouded and disappointed lace, lie lingered a little, asked to know why it was no instead of j-cs? I said we could not be happy together. He bowed gravely and left C 1 A A? 1 J ! .4 fcA me, 1 suppose he was nun, ior ue uiu uvi add a word. No assurance of friendship, of rmnrl will, no hone that I would relent or change my mind, passed his lips. The door closed upon him. 1 heard tne garuen gaie fall to, and I fell into a sort ot stupor. It wa3 over. What "madness had made roe banish him? Every step took him away further from me never never again shouM we meet Perhaps he would not have left me then, if I could have spoken the truth. Ah, if I could have said to him, "I cannot be happy with you, because I love and you do not ; because my love and prid would suffer all day long if I were your wife ; be cause it is easier to do without vou than to have you on these terms." If 1 could have said all this, would our meeting have ended thus? It was too late to think of that now, but it was not too late to suffe, I buried my face in the pillow of the couth on which I was sitting, and cried and sobbed as if my heart would break. Poor Carlo's cold nose, -thrust in the hand that hung down" by my side in the folds of my dress, roused me. I looked up aud saw Mr. Thompson. He was very red and looked flurried. "I have forgotten my umbrella," he said, a little nervously. Yes, there it was in the corner, thathorrid umbrella of his I But instead of going to look for it, he suddenly came and sat down on the couch bv mc I do not know" how I looked, but I felt ready to die with ihame. He took my hand and kissed It. "My dear Miss Raymond," he said per suasively, "I can not bearto give you up, in deed I can not." I looked at him in doubt. "Then do vou really like me?" I asked. 4 'Do I really like you? Why what else have I been saying all along?" t) 44 You said you wanted to take care of me. "Oh, if we are to po back to that " he began, resipnedly. But we did not go back in that. : went back to nothins. for a misera ble girl suddenly became the happiest of women. Still I was not satisfied. 44 You would not have come back, if it had not been for that horrible umbrella," I said with a little Jealousy. "Very true," he "replied, with hN peculiar smile ; but i did come hack, and I glanced in through the window first and saw you hiding vour face on that cushion, and Carlo lookine" at vou as if he thoueht itrange you should 'he so forlorn, and so I came in for my umbrella ; and, to tell you the truth, I hnd furrrotten it on nurnose." Perhaps h only said it to please me, but as I ooked in his tace 1 did not tnink so . " . . a w a - l then ; and though years have passed over us both, I do not think so now. Soliloquy of a Poor Farmer. "Bntutifuir "Whoa!" "IiCt us stop here and rest under the shade nf this tree for the old horse is tired. Isn't this a. beautiful house iust in the edce of thf fitr. The around are clean, and the grass is kept cropt like the face of a new sha ved man. And look you, Maggy, how thrifty the trees are. And how many flowers there are all about the yard. Let us stand up in the wagon the horse won't start for he is too poor and tired to run. Look at the roses, and the verbenas, and the evergreens, and the dahlias, and the fruit trees, and the stat uary, and the nicely graveled walks, and the broad steps, and the double blinds, and the matting before the door, and the fancy stain ed glass by the side, and the silver bell pull, and the rosewood door. And, oh, look what a bright, pretty carriage. Aud how sleek the horses look. And how gay the driver is. with his uniform on. I tell you, Maggy, that man is rich. Ah, here he comes, stand up on the seat of the wagon, Ma.argy. It's an old seat covered with an old blanket but it will hold you. I can sea down here. He comes out of the house. Here conies his wife. Ain' t they dressed nice ? And here conies their son and daughter on horseback. They are going out for a morning ride. Ah ! They have started. See how the horses dance down the drive to the road and see how quick that little boys ruus to oneu the gate. "What are tee traiti! for Plasc sir, we were looking, and didn't know but you would like to buy some butter, eggs, vegetables, chickens, berries, flowers or something of that sort "Mire on?' All right. Sit down Maggy. We will go on to market We can't sell anything ex cept at market, for we have no license, and it would take all we have to buy a license. We could get more for each load of our pro duce to peddle it out, but it's against the law, so we'll sell for what folks will give us who have license to sell. 44 157y u this ?" Ah Maggy, I don't know. I wish I did. Phew ! how the dust flies in my eyes as Mr. Bond, for that is his name, dashes by with his happy family. I siose its cause we're poor. You know, Maggy, I went to war five years ago. Then I owned fifty acres of land on the crcek,and there wasn't a dollar to pay on it I went to save the Union. Mr. Bond paid me two hundred dollars to take his place, and go to war. I went , , You know, Ma eg-, how you Oned when 1 went but like a brave woman that you are, you dried your tears, filled my pockets with pins, needles and thread-my eyes with tears my mouth with kisses, so I could not speak, and told me to go and to earn the two hundred dollarjf.and to keepont of temp tation, and to come back. And then, .Mag pv, you ran into our little bed-room where Johnny and little Maggy were born, and hid yourself, and cried, so I could not see you when we all went marching by. "Don't taVc so T' But. Maggy, I was thinking. And you know I had two good arms. And I used to hold you in them, Maggy to hold you to my honest heart, and say Got ble! you,dar ling ! And you used to sleep in them, hap py and contented. I went to war. I was in a battle. It was a terrible fight. My general blundered as nsnaL How anv of us came Out alive none Dollar pet Aenan IA A4f a&ce HVOL. 1. NOv 2l And what did I find? Little Johnny wab. dead. Little Maggy was dead. . My poor brother, whose leg was shot off while under orders confiscating cotton for Ins general was home sick, helpless, tnd you were sup porting him because he was my brother. it was a sad day, .Maggy, wnen a came home. I came back poor. , 1 lound Mr. Bond had grown nch. lie had contracts. His brother was in Congress. His uncle was friend of Lincoln s. lie male war speeches -filled quotas, pave bounties, and with Ids stay-at'home neignDors voted Dig Dounties and escaped all the calls and draft?. They pave town bonds. These bonds ran me in debt, for they were mortgages on our little farm. ,, They amounted to five hundred dol lars. Three hundred more than I had boun ty. I couldii t help it, forwmle 1 was in tha army it was easy for those who did ngt go tdr mortgage my iarm in mat way. . . . , 1 lost an arm'. 1 earned less man i wouia at home. I returned I am now working, Maggy, to pay myself for going to war, tor losing rriy arm, to keep Mr. Bond at hom so that he could play with his wite and Dames, speculate and get a political influence while I was fiphting not to restore the Union, but to enrich him. Its pretty hard, Maggy, I don t caro so . much for me, for I'm growing eld, and its little account a poor man is, dead or alive. But you, Maggy you are as dear to me as Mrs. Bond is to him". Your lips are as sweet to mc, your boscm teas sacred, your eyes are as deep, your voice is as good to me, your touch, is as tlirilling as it rests on my tired houy, your kiss is as welcome to me as Mrs. Bond's kiss is to him. I know we can' t wear broadcloth norsilks nor have a clean pair . of undarned stockings every day nor. clean white underclothes every day. INor can we have such soft carpets nor such costly dish- es nor such nne norses nor sucn a nno house as Mr. Bond has. We listen to th robin to the canary bird. They ride out with their children We walk out to.th " pr?.ve whefe.Ours sleep. TV e rlrtnk water they drink wine. And, Maggy, your hands are hard with toil, but your heart is wanner, and dearer and truer than I think Mrs. Bond's heart L, for you never flirt your skirts in the faces of those who are still poorer than are we, and stick up your ncsc in disdain of poverty, as Mrs. Bond does. I didn't enlist to get in an office when the war was over. 'Twould have done me no good if I had, for of course when I went away, I lost the run of public affairs, and was not fit when I cameback-and I had no mon ey to win my election if I had been fit And so I must work. You and I must work. We must sell bur early garden produce bur fresh butter ej-ly thickens fresh ggs &c, &., for these taxes must be paid. Tne tax gatherer does not stop at Mr. Bond's. 1 le owns nothing but United -States Bonds. They are green bills with red figures on them like the green fields with the blood I lost from my arm spattered and spilled thereon. lie has a hundred thousand dollars worth of these bond's. He bought them with the men- ' ey he made out of the war. And there aro no taxes to be paid on them. You and I, Maggy, with our little earnings and raisings with our old horse and wagon by work ing early and late by selling the pest and using the poorest, pay all the taxes. We pay the interest on tne town bonds and wd must pay the principal when the time comes. We must build the roads. "We must build the bridges. "We must erect school-houses: "We must pay the town officers. , - Mr. Bond, the Bond Holder, pays noth ing. The government protects.him but it can't protect the poor, One-armed farmer whb fought to save the Union. It can't protect the poor men of the land, as it did in Democratic days. The Bond Holder takes hb ease. He pays no taxes, for Congress savs he need not bO he goes to the bank and swaps off his cou . pons for greenbacks, and the government pays the bark back lor what it paid but, and pays it for the trouble. It's better to be a dog than a poor man that is a poor white man. The pobr black folks are fed, and it Li you and I, Maggy, who feed them not the Bond Holder. As if the poor white men of America were not of more consequence than the niggers who were freed that the white men might be slaves. How I wish the good old Democratic times would corfe again, when the rich Bond Holder would not be fastened upon poor people for support So much for Republican blessings to the pee- Ple ! . . .. ... There is cne man one editor in the coun try who thinks as you and I do, Maggy. I wish every editor in the country thought so. I wish fill the papers of the country would say with you dnd I; Maggy, that it is wrong to favor the rich and oppress the poor. There is one man in the country who dares talk boldly, as he dot's, when he says that it is cowardly, "wicked, unjust and damnable to build up a Bondocracy at the exin-ie of la bor. It is cowardly to send to hire to drive to entice poor men to war to buy, barter and traffic on their poverty and their wants to send them to the harvest of death, and while they are gone steal froni theni what they had to bring them back slaves, lund in debt Call you this equality ? Is this the realization of the promise of Liberty pave ? Ls this what we gain by forsaking Democracy and building up an accursed Re publicanism which grinds the life out of pbor men ! Oh, it is a shame a di-grace an in sult to white men a dishonor to the soldiers of the Union e burning bitter wrongtothe poor white women of America, that the only true patriots should be, by a Republican Con gress, made the toiling slaves of a cowardly Bond-holding aristocracy who dance, and ride, and sing, and dress in fashion on .the blood and sweat of toiling millions. Oh, would that some man would dare lead the way to a remedy for this damnable disease, for the hardy sons of toil will not Icng be slaves God never pve to a white coward the right to grow rich from and be supported by the earnings of those whose only crime is poverty. Give us equal taxation or repudi ation ! A STRONG, hearty, lary fellow, who pre ferred begging for a precarious subsistence, to working for a stire one, called at thehouse of a blunt Massachusetts farmer, and in the usual language of his race, asked for 'cold, victuals and old clothes.' . 4You appear to be a stout, hearty-looking man,' said the farmer, 4 what do you do for & living? 'Y hy; rot much,' replied the fellow, 'ex cept traveling about from brie place to an other.' " . 'Traveling about, eh ?'"rejoinedthe farmer, 'can you travel well?' . 40h, yes,' returned the sturdy beggar, 'I am pretty good at that 'Well, then,' said the fanner cooly open ing the door, let tee you travel. Tttb best oil for railway purposes train ..... .