" ' JMifl1 iiMMiiiimn hi i n nu ll m r---wmriniwwwMiMjiijamjYfL-iii iwm h whwiiib mn i L It ii.i(U IJ EV I VII J I Vill i 111 II -J ! II I Jllllll. il. II. Illlll III .III .w . Tf f XI III 1 1 I 1 I I 1 1 I 1 1 I f 1 I ! M 111 111 1 III I M 1 14 B. F. SCHWEIER, THE OOXSTITUnOI-THE UHOI AID TIE EH0E0EME3T OP TEE LAYS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XL. MIFFLINTOAVN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 17, ISSG. NO. 12. J hInt, Koy.s Make Men. ,. r.. -i" rafd urchin .':s:m!iutl.i- T1. vr t lan hire r.d fort, U' '! hv tut cMM unhealing: M-uk,:.,, when npov-u ! ": B .,, if' lvs u:ake lueu. M the -'t -y-";tl!f'1 "I'iriU Owrfcwi!! l.vwi freak, rronrcliua in s" accent. lin-ait wr ia y.a-.h.u. bosoms Ssl,of teii.'.n uierci.-s, then , will prow an 1 hear goc-l fruitage 1 VUen ilif erring l"--y.s are m,-n. 0. WTca ?ver -rn a sran-lsiw ttitii kis as'.-w h joy. p-e -o mini s,-:ue act of kin.lucsi "ietkins to liim a lo? nr'rrV iac "r .dnesa. Witha'bwa- all ctoiide.1. hen .jai tLcy were two thoughtless Tieai-m'.KT lya make men? trtiutrv Ma.I.t TJe fVasirei rotke'ilf" Y . r,rMolii'!iiM t-n-lr-r merest In i:ss rros an.! rs i y Call your ll'-vs 1 y ,:s ljri-lltUfSS: ThVll aroi't a slo-miy 'len, 1. JhU I'.t .-..:!.: elsewhere r I'1'. make men. THE ??T0I:V OF A SUMMER. I WOiluC'i ly tvio iu the world w.is .r.ruliii i'vaj I wosou the day that ttz"h ?-.vm ;'s'i;t'J me t0 lie nis wite? Foralong I::!'' 1 had known that he 'oveJ me at lea-a had allowed mjself tow.mler sometime if such supreme jjjj-juisos could In? in store far ni; but on'tliis day my vague hopes !;ad all teen n-alifil. :;:i:l I the proud c in soiouies of knowing that out of all tW oi'it ho had !. mo. Ma'gi Acair. 1 knew th..t it would be a grand Mto'dforuie, that he was the owner cf a ur-v prosily, and was the yotinj sj!,i:euftl'.e jieigiiburhood; but, if lie Lid Keu H.'nniU'S3 and unknown, 1 think U3' love for liim would have been just as great and my triumph in having ,n liiia as perfeot It ;.s :iisiit, and I had gone up to my own room, nud was leaning out of Bt wit-low, looking up at the far bn';i:t stats, while the wind of the soft spring night I 'ew into myface. 1 think ilere is souieihi;!g solemn in a great joy; and I felt almo-t depressed as I stod there quite still, with the scent of tie Cowers coming up from the garden beneath, and the moon shining down on tlie r,ui;-t scene. What if anything shouM hapisen t J Hugh or nie, anyth"uii teat stou'.J separate us? The tlio.uht struck me like a knife; anl just then an owl Hew past, hooting dismallv, and I turned away shuddering. Was it an paen f evil? Ah, that was a happy time, those lorut bright spring days, when Hugh asd 1 v.eie always togetberl We neith er of us had many rel Hives to whom to itUthe i:es. lie had only an aunt and two cousins, and I had only my mother. Since I was a little child she asd I had lived at Feruside Cottage. How heartily she rejoiced with me! " Haw loving'y he entered into all our plan? for the future, and with what tecderr.efs she advised me as to how I was to act when no longer under her control! Xo one can ever be to me wLat she was; and now, when I have lost her, J feel more keenly every day that her place can never be filled up. But I never thought then of the pos sibility of any sorrow coming to me; my who'.e soul was given up to the joy of the n-.ouient. Every uioruing I watched from the window the approach of the tall gal lant figure and handsome face of my lover; and then our days were spent in in a delicious dreamy idleness, some times wandering through the fields and woods, or sitting under a tree while he read to me and I worked. His chief pleasure was to take me to his own home and show me the stately house where I was soon to reign as mis tress. I never felt so insignificant as in the, grand old jooms 'and in the cloomy picture-gallery, where the por traits of the Seymours of long ago look ed down in haughty disapproval, it al ways seemed to me; on Hugh's choice. 'Iluuh, are you ever sorry that I am such a little thing?" I asked him one day, as we stood before a painting of a court beauty of the reign of Charles II, whose proud dark eyes seemed to look at me with unutterable disdain; and his only answer was to draw mo to him fondly and whisper "My Matrgie, to me you are more beautiful than any other woman in the world;" and I was content. It was about a week after this that Ilujh told us his aunt, Mrs. IILUiard, and her daughter Blanche were com ing to stay with him for a few days. "I did not know you expected them," I said rather reproachfully, for I felt hurt that he had not told me. "Xor did I," he answered, laughing. "In fact, they asked themselves; but of course my aunt know3 she is wel come." lie tried to speak unconcernedly;but I, who knew him so well, saw that be was not pleased, and felt a secret satis faction knowing it. I was beginning to find out what I had not discovered before that I was horribly jealous, that the Idea of any other woman's sharing Hugh's society or re:eiving any of the sunny glances of his gray eyes except myself was tor ture to me. ilow bitterly 1 repented of icy overweening jealousy when it was too late no one can ever know but my self. The guests were to arrive on Satur day evening; and I first saw them in church on the following day. It was a glowing day in June, tiie rich foliage of the trees standing out distinct and still, without a breeze to ruffle it, against the dazzling blue of the sky, and the chrniss of the Sabbath bells sounding clear and sweet in the dis tance. The church was a small old fashioned building covered with ivy hut with a glorious stained-glass win now that I had loved lrom a child, aud that even now tilled me with a wonder ful peace whenever I looked at it. Ti-.e organist was playing as wo en tered, and the lema music stole into niy he at like balm and drove out all the jealous tears that had been troub ling me. As I rose from my knees, I turned my eyes towards Hugh's seat, and almost started at the dazzling Tisioa that met my view. Standing beside him was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen; her tall supple figure was dressed in white, and the robes swept round fcer like the robes of a queen. Her dark clear-cat face was turned to me. and the bril liant eyes seemed to pierce me through and through. For a minute wb gazed at each other, as if fascinated. I saw that she recognized me, and I noticed that a wave of conflicting emotion pass ed over her race; but so quickly did she regain her self-p.ssession that I had hardly time to notice it when her face assumed an air of indolent hmrmtr which I judged to be its habitual ex pression and greate.-t charm. I did uoi meet ner eyes again during the service; but a sine instinct told me that in iiauc!ie lii.iiard 1 had au impl caiieenemy;ati.l a jealous pang shot uiroui;ii me as I saw her whisper fa- imiiariy w M:r Hugh, while he smiled down ou her with that look I knew so wen, which I considered should be be stowed only on me. l lie sermon came to an end at last and we all uioved out of church with the dignity of mast congregations vyu.iue mis" au i uis guesu were waning lor us, and he introduced Mrs, Hilliard and lier daughter to mv moth er and me. I felt my own deBcieucies lerrimy as 1 stood there, an msimifi cant little figure m blue musiin, beside uiancue iiiinard's stately height and lauiuesa autre. iut uugirs eyes gated down on me with the love-light shining in them, and once more I was happy. A tortitight passed away and thev showed no signs of going yet; and I was s.riiggiing nara to make myself be lieve that I was happy, that I had no cause to b otherwise. But it would not do. Day by day I saw that mv love was g ing from me, that Ulanche UiHiard's beauty had fascinated him. and that my brief dream of happiness w;is over. When we were alone, he wa-i just the same as he had always been; but we were seldom together now though I was constantly at the Chase. Mr. II illiard professed to have taken a great fancy to me, and would send for me every da ; aad it was her cus tom to seat heiself beside me after din nerand engage me in conversation. while Ulanche strolled through the open window t the broad terrace and was joined by Hugh. hat torture I endured, sittini there cutwardly so calm, with the sound cf the voices outside striking on my ear, Blanche's sott laugniiKe the chime of silver bells blending with Hugh's deep tones! I rarely listened to Mrs, Ililliard'a conversation, but on this evening she said something that rivet ed ray attention. We were speaking of B'anche, and I had forced myself to praise her beauty for she did look beautiful on that night in a flowing black dress and massive gold orna ments. Ves. poor child," her mother said, sighing, "she Is very handsome; but her life lias been blighted.' 'In what way?'' I asked absently. "Well. I know I may confide In you," was her anwer. "Hut the fact is that some years ago she and dear Hugh was very fond of each other, and were en- -gazed t) be married; but, owing to some foolish quarrel, it was broken off, and she has never cared for any one since." The words startled me terribly; aud just then the pair we were speaking or passd the window, and I saw Tranche's fair face turned up to Hugh's with an expression on it that a woman's face wears only when she looks at the man she loves. -Was it possible that he loved her. that I was the barrier be t ween them? I turned faint at the thought; but I was determined that no sign of my emotion should appear; par ticularly as I saw the old lady watch ing me with sharp inquisitive eyes. "It was very unfortunate that any thing should have separated them," 1 managed to say coldly. "Very indeed," she answered sharp ly. "You have no Idea how attached to her Hugh was; he was quite beside himself when she broke it oft for it was all her doing. I never thought he would have looked at any one again; but I was mistaken, a? he is to marry you." "Yes," I answered quietly. I could say no more; my head was reeling, my heart was bursting. It was all quite clear to me now; he had only fancied himself In love with me, while all the time his heart was given to Blanche; and now he was too honorable to tell me so. "How they must both hate me!" I thought bitterly. But I would be no bar to their happiness. On the mor row I would tell Hugh that 1 had dis covered his secret, and release him from his engagement; but this evening I must think it all over, and try to re alize my misery and force myself to calmness. I told Mrs. Hilliard that I did not feel well, and would go home with one of the servants, without say ing anything to the others; and, after a few feeble remonstrances from her, I managed to get away, and hurried swiftly across the wide park, flooded with moonlight, which cast weird shadows of the trees upon the grass, and invested the scene with a mysteri ous unreal charm that would have d lighted me at any other time; but now I had no thought for anything but the misery that overwhelmed me. In the Eolitude of my room I sat down to think it all . out and plan what I should do. Hugh had arranged to meet me at our favorite haunt in the weod on the following day; and I de termined to tell him then what I had discovered and release him from his promise to me. I planned how I would act, how brave and firm I would be, how calmly I would utter the words that were to part us for ever; and, even while I thought, a vision cf my love in all the pride of his strength and beauty rose up before me, and I could do noth ing but fling myself down and sob mis erably till sleep came to my relief. The morning broke brilliant and still the whole earth rejoicing in the beauty of the new day. .... ,. . It was July now, and. while we lived at home in peace, a deadly struggle was being fought out in the fair land or France. And still the sun shone as brightly, and all nature smiled In beauty and plenty, as if nothing but peace was in the laud. I was not thinking of these things as I took my way to the wood through the summer warmth and stillness. With the seWshnesa i that is part of our nature, all troubles and sorrows seemed to me as nothing com- wiffi mv turn I walked on swiftly, and reached the meeting-place, a lovely shady spot m 3? depths of the wood. dreaded to raise my eyes, lest I should see Hugh standing waitingfor me, as I tod often seen him, and my resolu tions might fail. But, for the first time he was not there before myself and I thought, with a bitter pang, that ?n the charm of -Blanche's had forgotten the hour IseaW my self on the fallen trunk of a tree ana Prepared to wait patiently for his com- lDI had not sat there very long when I heard footsteps approaching; and. look in! upY saw to my surprise Blanche HuUard coming towards me. She bad taken off her hat,' and was swinging it in her hand. She showed no surprise at seeing me there, but sat down lie side me and began to talk on indtffer eut subjects. I could not listen to her I was in a fever of anxiety for Hugh's arrival, and, aft r a little time I saw that she was lit at ease, that she evi dently had something of importance to say. "I know you expected to meet Hugh" she said at length; "but he was obliged to go to London this morning on busi ness." "Did he leave no message for me?" I asked, quite unable to control the un steadiness of my voice. "Oh, yes!" she answered carelessly. He told me to tell you he bad gone." "lint, he should have told me him self f I said passionately, and then stopped short, for I was determined not to give her the satisfaction of see ing that I cared; and I knew she was watching me keenly. "Well, I suppose he knew that best himself," she replied coldly. "I can ottly give you the" message he left with m:" and then we both sat silent. I knew she had come there Tor a pur pose, and 1 waited to hear what It was. Ky no word or look of mine should she receive any encouragement. She mov ed restlessly two or t'tree times, and, turning her head away from me, began In a low unsteady voice, strangely un like her usual dear full tones. "My mother told me," she said, "t'.iat she spoke to you last night about au engagement that once existed be tween Hugh aud me." '"Yes," I answered quietly. I knew now what was coming, and bad braced myself to bear it without flinching. Mie went on hurriedly, after a pause, as if she wanted to get her task over quickly. "I suppose she told you how it was broken off; and of course, when we came here, we knew he was to marry you." "Yes," I said again it was the only word I could utter. My brain was reeling, and her voice sounded a long way off; but I sat calm and still, wail ing for what I well knew was coming. 1 was not prepared for her next move. She suddenly threw herself upon her knees before me, and, raising her eyes streaming witn tears, shesoooed out "Oil, Maggie, ve love each other still! You will release him Trom his promise you will let him come back to me? ou can't lore him as I do, as I have done for years!" Not love him as she did! The words made me almost smile in my misery. "Do you think," I said proudly, "that I would not marry any man who did not love mer If so, you are mis taken; you need uot bo the least afraid of my being a bar to your happiness. 1 ou can tell your lover that I release him freely from Lis engagement, and I wish him all the success he deserves " She still crouched at my feet, and, as I looked down on her, I acknowledged 'her to be a beautiful woman and a finished actress, and, as such. I admir ed her. Bur I felt I could have slain her as she knelt there, so unlike her usual proud salt, so humble and tear ful aud passionate, . . Maggie you are not ang-sr?" bo asked. "Will you forgive me ior what I have done? 'Remember be loved me before he saw you." "I am not likely t3 forget it," I said bitterly. "Of course I am not angry with you; you are perfectly right to act as you are doing. It would have been endless misery for both him and me If I had married him in ignorance and discovered the truth afterwards." As I spoke I rase to go. My strength was failing, and I wauted to be alone before I gave way. But she caught my hand, and said eagerly 1 ou have been so good, Maggie, so unlike what I expected, that I know you will do one more thing for me, and that is, that jou will write to Hugh to tell him you have changed your mind, instead of having an inter view with him.' Whatever you like," I said indiffer ently. It never struck me that tne request was a strange one; the one idea that my mind could grasp was that I had lost Hugh for ever, and I no more doubted the truth of ber story than if he had told it to me himself. At last I got away, and hurried home through the shady beauty of the wood, like a hunted creature seeking a refuge I knew that there, at least, I was sure of love and sympathy, that there was no fear of my being in the way or hin dering any one's happiness. Of the days that followed I can write nothing; it was a dark time in my life which 1 cannot recall witnout a suuu- der. I wrote to Hugh as I had prom ised, and received in answer a few for mal lines thanking me for my gener osity and saying that he should always take an interest in my welfare, but making not the slightest allusion to his own prospects. After that, my lire settled aown 10 a drear? routine, which seemed as if It would never be interrupted. Hugh did not return to the chase: and I was glad cf it, for I dreaded having to meet him again. But Mrs." Hilliard and her daughter remained there; and it some times struck me as oeing Birange uiab Blanche's lover did not hasten back to her side. However she said nothing about it herself, and I was only too thankful that the subject was avoided. It mav have been fancy on my pari; hut I certainly thouaht that she was thinner and paler than when I first saw her. aud that her face baa oiten an anxious restless expression that was foreign to it. But again l usea 10 think that it was only my own imagi nation, and that surely she could not be unhappy when Hugh loved her. I seldom saw her, as we mutually avoid ed each other, and, if by accident we met, our demeanor was constrained and formal. A vivid remembrance of the interview in the wood seemed present to both of us. And so the long hot summer aays nronr slnwlv bv. and I never dreamed of what was coming had. no idea but that my present life would continue to its end in the dull uneventful routine in which it was now passed. In the gray of the early dawn one morning 1 was roused from sleep by a summons to Blanche Hllliard's death bed. After she had gone to her" room on the previous night, her dress had in some way caught fire, and before the flames could be extinguished she had sustained such injuries that no hope m Pntertained for her lire; ana me doctor said a few hours must end it all. All this I learnt from tne maia wno had been despatched at Blanohe's ear nest request. "She has never ceasea asking ior you, miss,' said the girL "Mrs. Hil liard thought it belter that she should not see you, she was in such terrible pain; but that is over now, and the doctor said it would do Iter no harm to see you, though she i. sinking fast." We were driving rapidly along the familiar road, which yet looked strange and unfamiliar in the gray stillness of the coming day. When the carriace stopped at the door, I stepped from it, and followed the doctor, who was waiting for me, without a word. Silent ly we went up the stairs, and along the corridor of the house where I had once thought to reign as mistress, to see her who had taken my place, and whose happiness had been dashed from her it! such an awful way. At the door of the room I paused, and a violent shudder shook me from head to foot. "You need not fear," Uta doctor said gently, for he evidently saw what made me hesitate. "Her face has es caped.' I hardly knew her. Could those hol low pathetic eyes, those features pinched and drawn with pain, be Blanche's? All my feelings of bit to ness and resentment against her van ished forever, and I think some of the yearning pity that I felt must have shown Itself in my face, for she looked up at me and said "Don't pit me, Maggie; you would not if you knew all." "Oh, Blanche, if you knew how I feel for you!" I answered, tears forcing their way in spite of my efforts to keep them back. "My poor girl, if I could do anything for you!" "You can do nothing," she said qui etly. I know that I am dying; and that is why I sent for you, Maggie. There is something I must say to you. and there is no time to be lost. Send every one out of the room; we must ba alone." The doctor wai the only one present and, as Blanche spoke, he quietly took his departure. ' Poor girl!" he said gently, as he turned to go. "I can do nothing for her." I came back to the lied, aud, kneel ing down beside her, I ventured to st roke her wau cheek with my hand, and waited for what she had to say. "'Maggie," she be;an after a pause, "u ill you try to prepare yourself for the hearing of a great wrong that has been done you? Will you promise to try to forgive the person who did it, and to believe that that person has never ceased to regret the act, and has never ei. joyed otic moments peace since it was done?" Her words bewildered me. What did she mean? Or had the terrible suf feriug she had , gone through affected her brain? I feared so, bat thought it better to humor her, and listen with attention to anything she l.ked to say. Her voice was hoarse and broken, and she spoke with evident pain and difli culty. "Will vou promise?" she repeated eagerly, and I promised. Her next words -startled me. "Do you rememqer that day in the woods," she asked, "when I came to you while you waited for Hugh?" Did I remember it? As if the recol lection was ever absent from my mind! Bat I only said quietly that I did. "Would you believe me," she wem on, "If I told you that crerr w said to you that day was a lie?" I could not answer her a new light seemed suddenly to break in on me and took my breath away. There was a ring of truth in her voice which I could not doubt; and 1 knelt there, gazing into the sad dark eyes that were fixed on me with such pathetic wistf ulness, "Yes. it was a lie." she went on. ' Oli, Maggie, if you knew what my life has been ever since.you would pity me: For vou must hate me. How could you help it when I have robbed you of vour happiness? From the first time that I saw your sweet face in church and Hugh told me you were to be his wife. I determined thj t it should never be; for Maggie, I loved him that part or mv storv is no lie l loveu mm wuu all ray heart and soul, though I knew well he never returned my love, that his whole heart was given to you; but still I hoped desperately that I could win him, and did all in my power to fascinate him. But in vain; he had neither eyes nor ears for any one but vou: and seeinz that maddened me, and I did not care what I did. I was determined to senarate you." As she uttered the lat work, she fell back exhausted, and lay like one dead. I was going for assistance; but she managed to call me back, and whis nered brokenly "Do not call any one; I shall be bet ter presently; and I must tell ltali now. There will never be another opportu tuuity." I waited silently until she was more composed; aud then she told me of the deep laid plot that naa Deen arrangeu and carried out against me how she and her mother had determined, when they first heard of Hugh's engagement to prevent his marrying me, ana ior that purpose she had come to stay at the Chase: how liiancne naa usea an her arts to attract him, while her mother skillfully engrossed my attention and gave them opportunities of being alone how at the same time nicy nau cau tiously contrived to poison his mind against me, and how on the very even- ins that Mrs. liuiiaru naa una me oi his love for Blanche she had, after my departure, told him a similar tale about myself, saying tnai i naa conuueu 10 her the secret of my love for another, and Implored her to ask Hugh to for give me for my deception, but to im press upon him that I had never loved him, and could never marry him; how Hugh had been like one stunned, and had left home the next morning vow ing that he would never look on my face again; and the last news they bad of him was that he had joined the French armv. and. for ali they knew to the contrary, might be even then lymj stark and dead among the hundreds that fell almost daily. "And he loved me all the timer' They were the only words X could sob out as Blanche's voice ceased. The wild triumphant joy that filled me at that fact for a time made me careless of everything else. 'Yes, Maggie, he loved you oniy you," Uiancne-s noarse voice answerea All my plotting ana lying uia me no rood: he never thought cf me. I think he hated me," she added bitterly. "Oh Maggie, when you think or me alter i am gone, do not be too hard on me I Remember that for one loving iook or word from him I would have perilled, my soul, and that I never got it," Hard on her i as it i couia reel any thing but the deepest compassion tor her. In spite of all the misery she bad caused me! I was so infinitely better off than she I who possessed the treas ure of Hugh's love that my only leei ing to her was one of yearning pity and tenderness. Something of this I tried to tell her a3 1 knelt at her side, with her head on my arm and the light of the early morning stealing in through the closed curtains and touching us com. Eue turned ner haggard eyes towards the light, aud said falutly "Maggie, the end Is very near; and I am glad. Heaven will pardon even such sins as mine; I shall have peace now. Draw back the curtains: I should like to see the sun once mere." I obeyed and a flood of glowing crim son light filled the room and illumina ted the dying face on the pillow. A radiant smile lit up her features. "I am not afraid now, Maggie, she said, iu clear full tones; and, al most as the words left her lips, her head fell back, and, without a struggle liiancl'.e laniard was dead. After her daughter's death, Mrs. Hilliard left the Chase, and the house was Uiut up. 'o tidings have been received of its absent master, and peo pie began to wonder what had become of him, and if he ever intended to re turn. 1 1 was now for the first time that I began tp realise that I was utterly se pirated from Hugh as when I be lieved he loved the dead girl who had come between us, and that lie must still think what he had beard of me was true. There was no way of uude ceivlng him, no way by which I could d scover him. I must only wait and how hard it wa to do that! I do not know now, when I look back upon them, how 1 got through the days days that were like years to me. With what sickening dread I read the daily history of blood and death in the newspapers, not knowing whether I should see the name that was so dear to me in the fatal list! And at last news came but uot in the way I expected. A letter reached me, dated from Sedan written by a French officer to tell me that Hugh Seymour was dying. Ha had been fearfully wounded in the fierce struggle that decided the fate of France, lie had told his friend, who wrote lor him, that he must see me be fore the end; and the writer implored me to lose no time in going out to him. "I cave the letter to my mother. "Won't you come with me?" I asked anxiously, '"My poor darling, do you think I would let you go alone?" was l.er answer. I saw by the date of the letter that it had been w ritten some days before, and t-ven now all might be over, and our Journey of no avail. Hut I would not Ut myself think of that; I felt should go mad if I dii. At last we were there, at the very floor of the hospital where Hugh was lying. And now my strength broke down. I dif-aded letting my mother make the nti.-essary inquiries, for fear of hearing tie fatal words that would tell ma ail hope was over. I clung to her, helpless and trembling; darkuess came before my eyes, and her voice sounded a long way off when I heard her sneakini!. aud then a woman's voice ! saying In answer "lie still lives, madam; but that is all." The nurse for it was she who spoke led the wav ; and we followed her 1 remember entering a large white washed room, and passing by a row of beJs, each occupied bv a wounded suf ferer, and one where a sheet was drawn over a figure that lay quite still. I heard one golden-haired boy moan piteously for his mother, as he tossed in the un rest of fever; and at hist we stopped Le.-i'le a bed at the end or the room, ai.d once more I saw Hugh Seymour. lie did not recognize-us. He lay in a hi -.ivy stupor, almost like one dead. except for the labored breathiDg that was sj painful to hear. A doctor was btndiug over him, and a nurse stood at bis side; but I pushed them both away, He was mine as long as he was on earth. and I would let no one else be near him. I put my arm round his neck, and drew his head close to me, "Hugh," I said, "my darling, I have come to you; only speak to me only oiw word my own lover I forgot everything else but him. He and I seemed alone together in the world and he was dying. I spoke to him imploringly; I prayed desperately for the boon cf even a conscious look from him; and I think the very agony of my entreaty had some mysterious influ ence over him, for the heavy eyes slow ly onencd and met mine, a faint smile flitted over the wan face, making it look almost as of old, and he softly whispered "My Maggie!" It was the day after my arrival, and I was still at Hugh's bedside. His consciousness had returned, and I had been able to tell him all. The wretched misunderstanding that had caused us so much misery was cleared up now, and nothing could separate us any more, except death, and that was com ing near; but, as long as there was life I clung obstinately to hope, and refus ed to thick of what was before me. - He toy very still, with closed eyes, for he was fearfully wea-, and could speak to me only occasionally in broken whispers. As 1 sat there, holding his hc.-.d in perfect silence, he suddenly oiened bis eyes, and, turning them towards me, said quietly "Maggie, will you marry me?'1 "Yes, dear," I f aid, smiling, while a bitter pang shot through me, as I felt how idle the words were. "But I mean now to-day," he said eagerly. "My darling, I know that I am dying, that the end is very near now; but it will be a comfort to me to think that after I am gone you will bear my name and live In the dear old home where we have been so happy." And so I married him. I do not re member my wedding distinctly; it was like a dream. I stood beside his dying bed, and repeated the solemn words after the clergyman, without realizing them. J heard Hugh whisper bis re sponse, and felt him place the ring on mv hand while the doctor held his steady.. I heard him call me bis wife. and stretch out bis arm reebly towards me; and then a terrible change came over his face, and his bead fell bask on the pillow. With a cry I sprang towards him; and then a great darkness came before my eyes, and I remember noth ing more. I bad written thus far when J was interrupted by my husband coming into the room. What have you been doing, Mag gie?" he said, laughing, "lou look as solemn as an undertaker," "I have been thinking of my wedding- day," I answered laughing too. You thought you had got ria or me that lime; but you see I disappointed you. Was it that made you look so sober?" "Yes, it was that," I answered as he clasped me close; and I looked up into ' his face, almost wondering at my own' happiness. I 'Wll tret nn ivinr fliinrru linl wx. I man; the horses are coming round, and ; it aoes not do to keep them waiting.' But I clung to him still. Somehow the remembrance of the time when I thought that I had lost him was very vivid to me, and I was afraid to let him go. "Oh, Hugh," I murmured brokenly, "thank Heaven, my darling, that 1 have you still!" "Yes; thank Heaven!" he whispered reverently; and for a time we were silent, and then, with hearts full ol a deep and lastiug joy, passed out to gether into the summer sunlight. five nouns ix xassau. A Reporter': Visit Ashore at new Pro. vidence. Xew Providence contains eighty-five square miles of land, three towns and a score of more of curious features not to be missed by a visitor. To see all these In five hours was a tremendous feat, and the accomplishment of it shocked the community to the same degree that the earth quake startled this city last summer. The horse that did the work wore an expression of as tonishment and pained surprise at find ing himself whipped into the first hurry ever known in the West Indies. The mahogany colored soldiers came lang uidly out of her majesty's barracks, the halt nude negro babies rolled to one side of the roadway, the English merchants and clerks came to the doors and windows, and there were signs, as the team passed through the African hamlet of Grantstown, tnat the popula tion was so stirred that it would surely turn out of the houses within an hour or two to tee what was the matter. And yet the nag did not make more than six miles an hour when it was walioped the hardest. What a buggy ride that was to a man who had embarked at the foot of H all street, shivering in a heavy beaver over coat, and at the end of the journey i.o further than fromXew lorkto C hi cago, had turned out ot bed to hud himself in a land ot perpetual summer and strangely beautiful tropical scenery, The while town on the sloping hill-ide shone in a setting ot tropic verdure like a pearl in a bed of green plush. Here was no end of novelty ; cargoes of pineapples, boat loads of spoilt s, holds full of singular lobsters, crabs, and grotesque-looking fishes, decks heaped with singular fruits of uninvit ing appearances, but with names that called up visions of oriental feast in, aud other heaps of loots that looked like peppers, aud yet were not exactly like them either. Over all the decks and on the wiVarf and down the main stieet and uu all the side streets and far away into the country were swarms of negrses, not flat-nosed, thick lipped Congo men and women, but darkies with regular feat ures, straight noses, and mouths with in reason. Their bare feet, colored cotton shirts, the dissolute straw hats of Oaesex and gorgeous bandanna tur bans of the other, the thin flapping trousers of the men, and the jumbie of colors m the women's dresses demon strated that the poor were as cool as the white merchants and clerks who wear summer silks or suits cf thin dr. 11 goods, and cooler man the black police men uniformed ::i heavy and still white duck. Xass-Ti has about 14,1X0 in habitants, ana is said to be the cleanest city in the world. This is partly lie cause nearly everything in it except tiie people aud vegetation Is made of u white rock, part coral and limestone. The streets, are simply smooth beds oi" it, the houses are big boxes of it, t he wharves are solid cubes of it, ami the fences are slices of it set ou end. The city looks white, and as it is built on a hillside sloping down to the s.a, it keeps itself clean. A ride through the Iilt.e capital takes you past square alter square or low, light colored square houses, many ot them shielded on one or more sides by additions enclosed in walls made of shutters that will admit the air aud exclude the sun. The gardens and farms, if you can call them so, are also made of solid rock. To plant any thing it is only necessary to punch a soft spot In the stone with a crowbar and plant or sow the seed in the pow der. What little sou there is rest m the cracks and pockets of the rock, but vegetation thrives as well in a hole made for the purpose as in an old one. A thousand and one ties.s. bushes, plants, and shrubs brandish their leaves In every band. Palms, cocoauuts, ban anas, and pineapples ornament every view. Oleanders as higb as the houses and gorgeous with blossoms, roses that never cease to b oom, jasmines, shell flowers, cacti without number, geran iums, and an interminable list of flow ers illumine the scenery and weight the air with perfume. Iu wild profusion and In trained good order are the fruits of this land ot incessant June cocanuts, lemons, or anges, bananas, pineapples, sapodillas, guavas, breadfruit, citron, mulberry. plantains, grapes, tamarinds, and a double score of fruits wholly unknown to this country. All this on a soilless rock in the sea. Over the tree tops the red flamingo floats, the wild pigeon coos in the branches, partridges, qurdl, ducks, snip, and pigeons are credited to the woods and beaches. Invalids and those who dislike or have reason to dread a northern winter find there a climate which between November and May does not vary more than ten de grees from about 70 degrees to about SO degrees. The negroes have Orantstown foi their capital. It begins a little beyond where Nassau ends, and consists of a most interesting collection cf wooden shanties without fireplaces or chimneys. with thatched palmetto leaf roofs, and no glass or shades in the windows. These houses peep outside the white roadsides from a beautiful confusion of fruits, flowers, and tropic trees and black women and children abound in such numbers that tree such cities as Nassau could not provide work for ail of them." A stbasoeb. journeying in France, i fell sick unto death; his friend called in 1 a medical man, who demurred about ' his professional services, fearing the' erewithal might not be forthcoming i to settle bis bill. The friend, produc-. t n u..au rMnA Kill : or cure him, this ta jours." The cU IUK w uuuuicuiauii lull, caiu ikt.i uiim man died and was ounea; ana tae uoc- ,,, tor, finding his aoney slow to appear, I reminded the survivor or the dew, - Did yon cure him?" he asked, "No, sir." "Dia you Kill nimr" "uexiainiy not." "Then you have no claimW me, sir; I wish you good-day, CAUSE OP SXOW-BUN'DKESS. KxiM-rVnee of a Coloradan Whose r.jm n ere Once Seriously Affected. "What is snow-blindness?" asked of an old mountaineer. was "Why don't you go to a doctor?" re plied that worthy, "l don't know any thing about the science of the business. A physician would give you a scientific explanation or the phenomenon." 'Were you ever snow-blind yourself? "Yes indeed. I was living in Central once, and there came a great suow- stofa. Ihe day preceduig it, of course. had b.tn very cloudy, and when I went or.t the next morning after the storm. rue sun seemed to be sliming more brightly then I had ever seen it before. ".Everything was one great dazzling sheet or whiteness. 1 remember blink ing considerably but I staid out most of the day, and when I went into the house the Limits were lighted, but could not see them, nor could I distin guish objects. I could not seeanything cut wnat seemed to be a great round giooe or light, iTetty soon my eves began to smart and burn, and i "cut and sat down m a dark room. where I staid for a week, putting cool ing applications to my eyes, and never seeing the light once in all that time. 1 lie iain was a severe itching and burn ing, and did not abate for the space of several days. 1 ou can depend upon it I was careful to avoid exposing myself again. ' "How did you arrange to avoid it?" "By wearing snioke-colored glasses. green goggles, or by blacking the skin under my eyes with cliarcoaL" "Do you think it Ls the color or quali ty of the snow that produces blind uess?" "Oh, the color, by all means. I think if the ground were covered with white paper the effect on the eyes would be the same. So far as I understand it snow-blindness is produced by the irrita ting effect of the sun s ravs reflected from the snow." 'How do you account for the intensi ty of your suffering?" "Well-the violence of the attack is proportionate to the amount of expos ure, which in my case had been pro longed and aggravated. Slight attacks are likely to occur from a few hours' ex- Iosurp, and these may be cured by giv ing the eyes a day or so rest. Severe attacks may require many dav's rest in a dark room, aud cooling applications to reduce the violent inflammation which exists should alwavs be used." "It would be well then for persons go ing into snowy countries to provide themselves for these emergencies." "Yes, considering that the protection jielded by the snioke-colored glasses, goggles, or even blacking round the eyes is sutlieient to prevent snow-blindness. it would be well for all persons likely to travel over snow to remember these un pleasant effects, and provide themselves with suitable appliances, thus avoiding the painful result of this complaint." "Is eyesight ever seriously affected bv snow-blindness?" 'Yes. Perfect recovery is not always attained in these cases. Many sufferers retain a weakness of the eyes for life. ,Yon will fiud that the inhabitants of northern countries are very carerul la this particular. Too much care can not be exercised where the eyes are con cerned." Two Moats a Day. The word meal is so old that it is un certain just what our Saxon fatliers meant bv'it. Possibly it dates back to i time when grain, pounded and cooked. was the chief article of food. The Orientals generally had only two meals, littween which intervened the lalMirs of the day, and it is largely their custom now. This causes confusion in t ia iiMat ing Bible terms relating to meals. For instance, Christ is represented as saying to the disciples at early dawn, ''Come and dine.'" and the Jews had no light meal after the principal one. Even in cold countries, where threo meals a day are the rule, the first was looked on as a slight breaking of the f:ist, while the last was a mere sup, or sip, later of tea, thus giving us tea-time as an equivalent of supper. The meal cf the day was the dinner; hence among the Greeks and Jews the word for din ner and a feast was one and the same. Where, among the higher classes in England, the dinner occurs quite late in the day, no need is felt for another meal. Iu the rural districts and the small towns of our own country the original custom of three meals is well nigh uni versal, and the dinner divides the day into two nearly equal parts, and so con trols the social and, to some extent, the religious customs of the people. Dom estic cares belong to the ferenoon, and social calls to the afternoon. So, too, whereas the synagogue worship of the Jews has but a single service, we gener ally iu the country at least, have two, the one in the afternoon being simply a duplicate of the one hi the forenoon. In our large cities, however, where otliee business is transacted mainly be tween U A. M. and 5 P. M., or where business men reside miles away from their work, the tendency is toward the earlier custom of two meals. Such a change can hardly become general. But where it is convenient, there are two solid reasons in its favor, i. r., of two principal meals, with a slight lunch be tween: (1) It gives time for a complete digestiou before again filling the stom ach a matter of no little importance to high health. (2) It transfers the princi pal n.eal from the time when the nerve force ls in special demand for the brain, to a time when it is set free for the stomach. But there is a large class everywhere who would be greatly benefited by hav ing only two meals a day, it being un derstood that they eat as much in two meals as would ordinarily be needed in three. They are the neuralgic, those whose digestion is feeble and slow, and. the victims of many chronic complaints. In such cases the first meal should be somewhat tote, and the second some what early. A Rcouantic Traveler. Colonel Prejevalsky's facts throw I Jules Verne's fancies into the shade. This famous Itussian traveler has fought his way through Mongolia and Thibet with a party of seventeen, so'diers and a host of other attendants, spent 43,000 roubles, killed 400 people who barred I : . wav. given a number or Itusstan . . c . . ' h of V." 5 ruTtZn ZdTr hi. Yalo College is enjoying s boom. chess NEWS IN BRIEF. There are 223 submarine telegraph cables, all told. Lincoln's tomb, at Springfield, 111., is going to ruin. Wyoming Territory has but eight organized counties. 2 No quarters or halves haye been coined since 1S7S. The Iowa prohibitory liquor law is to be tested In court. The grave of the celebrated Kit Carson is at Taos, N. M. The cattle now owned in Colorado are valued at $40,000,000. The value of the Canadian fisheries for 1&33 was J17,2ol,675. The dividends payable ia Boston In April aggregate f 7,970,S0i Brick masons are gettiug SO a day in some parts of the South. A carload of Mormon converts left Knoxville, Tenn., for Utah. There are about 50,000 Northern tourists in Florida at this time. The Komau Catholic clergy no longer oppose cremation In Italy. Chicago butchers killed 1,132,003 cattle and 3,911,792 hogs last year. A Newbern, N. C, firm shipped m one order 4S.0U0 cans of oysters. The sugar crop of Columbia county, Fla., will be an average one this year. An industrial exposision will be held at Raleigh, N. C next September. Atlanta, Ga., cotton mills will re quire 70,000 bales of cotton this year. For the year 13S3 the South spent J.OOO.OOO for new railroad locomotives Mrs. Quincy Shaw, of Boston, is said to spend J2o0,000 a year in charity. Eighteen colored teachers aie em ployed in the Nashville, Tenn., schools. Nearly five million boxes of "sar dines" were packed in Lubec, Me., last year. A medical journal states that the average Chinese baby weighs but five rounds. One firm in Salisbury, North Caro lina, advertised for 1,003,000 pounds of dried fruit. A Chicago widow ordered her funeral outfit before death, paying 10,000 for It, During last year 100 manufacturing and mining corporations were formed in Tennessee. Sixty million pounds of copper were produced by the Lake Superior mines last year. There have been 1S.0SC homestead entries in Florida siuce the passage of the act in May, 1802. The Brooklyn Aldermen appro priated $3,000 for the reception of the Army of the Potomac. The milk inspectors of Boston have found in some recent examinations 40 per cent, of water. The corn crop in Kansas this year exceeds last year's by 5,000,000 bushels. It will reach 200,000,000. It is understood that Kev. II. W. Beecher has netted about $13,000 by hi present lecturing tour. j Traynor, who once crossed tho Atlantic in a dory, now proposes to make the trip in a rowboat. A man in Clyd. N. Y.. has a flint lock pocket pistol that was used by his grandfather in the war of 1S12. A 17-inch snake was drawn from a hydrant in Floyd street. Brooklyn, ac cording to the face of the returns. Spurgeon, the famous London minister, has only two children twin sons and they are Baptist clergymen. It is said that Shanghai shipped to this country last year not less than 500.- OuO pounds of willow leaves disguis.d is tea. The highest rate of postage from this country is to Patagonia and the Island of sr. Helena fifty-four cents an ounce. There has been more snow this winter in London than for fourteen years, and there is great distress in cou- cquence. At St. Helena, California, a few days ago, several thousand gallons of ten-year-old California wine sold for three cents a gallon. Fresno Connty, California, is mak ing a canal 100 feet wide from King's River to irrigate 30,000,000 acres of dry and worthless desert. A druggist at Louisville advertised his store as a "free warming place" for the public during the very severe weather of a few days ago. The valuo of the contents of a barrel of crude petroleum ranges from SO cents to $1 dollar, while trie value of the barrel Itself ia 2.50. A railroad station is to be erected on the site of ancient Babylon, and patent medicine advertisements will be the handwriting on the wall. A needle that entered the left hand of a Southboro', Mass., lady thirteen years ago, worked out recently at a point just above her right knee. A veteran New York clubber gives it as his opinion that the club mau who keeps his club expenses under five dollars a day his a marked genius for finance. A few days ago a dealer in Lowell was selling two fifty-cent flannel under shirts for one cent, and his next door neighbor was giving away shirts of tho same quality. Kecent experiments conducted by Professor Kojuig, of Beilin, show that within the range of the normal spect rum a healthy eyo can perceive about 300 differences of colors. There are S13 cotton mills in tho Southern States, against 10 four years ago. A silver box, shut at a wedding in Hartford, Conn., the other day, is to ba kept under sea!, like that of Pan dora, till the time for the silver anni versary, twenty-five years hence. -In Southwest Virginia there are thirteen counties where the roar of the railroad has never yet been heard, and the people live in ignorance of the events of the outside world- According to the report of tho Surgeon General, there were only two cases of varioloid and one of small-pox in the United fetates army last year. Vaccination was carried out with great regularity. . In London the policemen aro cot allowed to carry revolvers lest the7 might be tempted to use them too care lessly. A recent and somewhat pro tracted discussion o the question of arming the police has ended in pro viding for them no mere formidable weapon than" a new and approved whistle.