i . .„. . ~1. .. BY .-H - N‘ttE..:Y . . -- . - L:.36,, — Csill,34sEß,, -1--:..' TIM OLD COUPLE. It stands in a sunny, nicedow, T le house 80 mossy and brown, With its cumbrous Old, stOne chimney, And the gray toot eloping dOwn. The trees fold their green'aims around it, The trees a century .old ; And the winds go - chanting 'through them, And the sunbeams drop their gold. The cowslips spring in the marshes, And the roses bloom on the hill ; And beside the brook in the Pastures', Tile herds go feeding at will. The children have gone and left them ; 1, They sit in the sun alone ; t.. And the old wife's eats ace failing, - As she harks to the well knOwn tone, , That won her heart in her girlhood, That has soothed her in many a care, And praises her, now for the brightness Her old face used to ear. She thinks again of he . bridal— How, dressed in her robe of white, She.etood by her gay yhung lover In the morning's rosy light. , Oh 'the morning is rosy is ever, But the rose from her 'cheek has tied ; I And the sunshine still is golden, • But it falls on a silvered 'head. And the girlhood dreams, once vanished, Come back in ber`W inter time, Till her feeble pulses tremblej • • With the thrill of Spring time prime. And looking forth from the window, She thinks how the trees havegrown, Since, clad in her bridal whiteness, She crossed the old door Odin. Though dimmed her eye's bright azure, And dimmed her hair's young gold, Thelove in her girlhood plighted Ras never grown dim or old. They sat in their place in sunshine, Till the day was almost done ; And then, at its close, an angel Stole over the threshold stone. He folded their.hands tOgether— I He tonched their eplids With balm And their last breath floated upivard, Like the close of a solemn psalm: Like a bridal pair they traversed The,nnseen inystic road, Thal leads to the beautiful city, "Whose builder and maker is God." 1=1:111=1=1 MARRIED IN HASTE. "nll, CARRIE, I'arn Otu •glad • you are BUJ come:; I was just I goicg to send 4Fratik with a note to ask yon to do that very thing. Here, Jack, you take -Miss Carrie's pony. . . A nd You, l- you: darlin g, eunte right . up stairs and take -ofts , vour. heavy riding habit. How , Is all the fain- : '• ilv—Lyoung, old, black and white ?" "AU well, but Nellie, what is, the mat ter with you'? Why , your look 'as if you had the whole round earth on your shoul ders." "Oil. I am just bothered io death, Car.' rie I". . "Well, what is up ? throw ;tnel that rapper, dear.' There, now I aml reSdy to hear all your bothers, little mouse." "I've had two offers,, Carrie, and I don't know which to take—at le4st know which I want to take ; but things are all contrary—the wrong man has got the money—the right man is poor, as rat men generally are." And Nellie tapped her little foot impatiently, and looked at Carrie. "I must say that you have,:a, gigantic bother, Nellie !' .You you - ought to be ashamed of yoUrself ! , _ Most, girls . are bothered because • they don't get any ot fas—takelniyaelf, for , instance—and here you . are pouting because you have . to choose b-tween two. - 11/o I knOw the ri , vat candidates r': • , - ' • .: ."Ye: ,- , you have met . Dick LatrOke of tro—here-and elsewhere ; !and yo must have seen Royal .Wlft.e.ler at hureh with its, for lie never fvrgets thl - roprieties."' ' ai Why, Nelli, :I amton shed, at you I- I know it wouldn't. take - me- three. min- tites to decide." ..- :, .• .: .' , . f ' "In whose fayor?" ‘. ' 1 , "C4n' you doubt ? .. In fayor- of that. handsome - Mr. Wheeler, of 'course... He is so stylish, dresses to, --perfection,And is' a S , !nator. How the, girls would envy you What promise of : balls,. .enteitain ments a. d theaters. Why, Nrifiej ,Ang•:lyash itigton, New Tot k .and. Newport infhe delicious distance:' l • - d I . --'. - "I hate balls and- tnillinera and big vines!' ' .' .: .. 1 ' . "What a little goOae.! •Aemembeeyo - r' pretty face and charniing ' figure, and - 11: thobe bewitching 'golden c ...rls! .'-' .: '• ' ',Now what particle of :reason is there in being lovely; on -ii, Texan 'frontier? '-'-WhO sees us but a rude Mantel.; now and then,. some stock-raisere i .o:.at- - best a change . of • Me: hodist preadiere? ' Well, i yes, I-. ack-„ amyiedge there is always an '.exciting chance 'of a •ConianchebraVe ;_wouldn't. Your hair.be a .godsend to - theto ?,--- . Mr. Wheeler is a special': and' - extraordinary favor of the gods- , ltake the gorde -they. p.n.s' i de, like a grateful "gill,' , .-:r •'.... 1 i - . ' ' '`You mix trutbiand-untriith iadMira bly, Carrie ;' - .I declare, I' : . don't=know, how to vparate them; '..but ,first -I --will'ack now ledge _the. etyleand position; atideyen ik 18 b.eanty—these three, things are ennply the whole man, and- that is not enough of manhood for tie." ' • - ' ...-' -'-'-: - ' "Insatiable ,girl.!;- - Rut .:-dony . the. fact l --hut vou . • had trgOttert . . blB '..ininietise: Property. "' - - .. ,! '. J..'.,. . . ' • , .' Well.' then' add - '. his Property. - --.; , now i that is a11."..- - : -,-... ....- ~:,... :. ...,-_., 'And a i'nry satisfictoti:•oall.'? , -- - • -Pray • • - • • 1 . • . - i - . - -. ~.i, ,`..; ~~ what more would you liKe to haver , ' "Well, in the first place I would like a little-bit of courage+l hate cowards.— There has not been a! night since he came 'that he has not gone) to bed in - - mortal, terror of the indians 7 4e is afraid of a ,wolf or a bear—if old. Dirk barks he turns pale, and if a book drops in the next, room, or a negro shouts iu the ce dar-brake., he is ready to drop with ter' \ 1 • ror. . . \ "I don't blame him at all. Very nat ural and rirOper, I think. .t feel just Vac same-r-beAdes be is bound to take care'of himself ; the welfare -of the nation we may suppoi4 d,epende !Tod- her law-mak ers'J \.• . "Fiddlesticks Catlel The nation would never MIEN "Let .me -tell. you Nellie, the great .knierican nation, is ; not going to supply scalps of such, dignity to the . Comman ches." 'Ton are joking without material,no*, Carrie ; I think it would puzzle even a Commanch to get a respectable lock-of Mr. Wheeler's .hair—why, his head is as smooth as a billiard ball." 0 "Nellie, take care! Don't speak evil of dignities, dear.; it is - against social.eti queue. Mr. Wi.eeler is one of the pillars of the Constitution!' "Then the sooner the Constitution gets some new p i illars the better it will be for it, I shouldisay.'. • "I siippoie you would like them after the patern f Mr. Richard Latrobe." "Exactly !" "Dick'.has not one bit of style.' "That islcne reason I'like him." "Beside his pay as Captain of the Llano Rangers, I ;on%..believe he owns two hundred h•ad of stock." "That is too much for him and me." "Re haiku° position to speak of Nel lie." - 1 , "I think von are mistaken—he is known t 6 be the bravest, boldest leader on the 'wee ern border. His name is - a tower of st ength to every woman and child for pfty, miles around, and the Commanches dread him' more than a 'whole company [of '"regulars," his own Men sweariby him, and the Whole' corn muniv 1 trust in him. If I was a man--I mean a real •man—l Would rather be Dick L'ttrobe withniit a dollar, than Royal Wheeler in the Governor's chair," "Well, ,Nellie, all, I have got, to say is, that you are a 'fool ~ there .it 'ii in good plain Stixo'h, just what I think.* "Never you mind the absurdity of the thing; will you help me in a little scheme I' have ?" ' _ . "Yes, that is—l was going to say sen sible, but I don't expect that after this revelation —so I . will 'say if it is possi ble." "Oh; yes, it is more than possible. ; I laid the first stone last night, and in Spite Of the : Senators professions 1. found quite a good foundation for them." '"What ao you mean ?" "I must; go back to 'last Sunday in or der to enlighten you. When we parted at the ciiirch door Mr. Wheeler asked me who you were. You may be sure that I did full justice to your many graces and aecoinplis iments, . with virtues topping all. This morning when he proposed, I did not d re refuse him' point-blank be cause of pavals anger, so I told 'him I would give him an answer in a week, that. my frien4hip tor you demanded some delay, as I knew you were deeply smitten, with your perfections." . "Oh, Nellie, how could. you': But what did !Mr,. Wheeler say ?" "Oh, he was immensely 'flattered, cool ed towar4 poor me - very. sensibly,, and said you were a splendid looking girl,.be 7 side volunteering other criticisms on your appearance. which by impliCation, were not flattering to. me seeing that I am your perivct antipodes." , Carrie listened, attentively . to Nellie's sehemr, ith a rew light in her great drearily e, es. 1 ' . \ , , "Now, what I want is this—pitch pour tent right:here and storm this pil!ar of State with the witchery of your beaUty and the flattery of I your tongue; look :your swei•test, sing your best, 'feed him on flattery, morning, .1100 U and night,. .and in it week you will have beaten ihe and I shall be your grateful and .'much obliged' friend, Nellie Marvin." - • '"The arrangements suit me to T ; but you are sure you know what you are doing ?" . ‘`.quite sure.". , • "S - hake hands, then over it. lam to cut yOu - rout ;' that is understood between us, eh ?"I, • "It is do nominated in the bond," said Nellie, kicking off her slipper and calling her maid to help her dress for dinner. After dinner, Nellie, with some unin telligible excuse, left the Senator to Car rie's enchantment 6; and 'if anybody had 'looked carefully alter ' ten minutes kter they' would have found her with Dick Latrobe,at their usual tryti,ting place in the pecan grove .at the bottom of .the garden. , Arid It needed but a moment's glance into the, dark handsome fiae, alive with intense feeling and as Open as sun shine; hut one glance at the magnificent physique,. clothed 'as It were With an al most vitiable sense of power and com- MONTR6SE, mand,to understand and sympathize with Nellie in estimating her two lovers. • Meau while Carrie_, was . improving . her opriOrtunity.i f She new perfectly .all *her good pciints;iarid.She: Afire* herself into the capture tit the'i Senator \_ with.. all the enthusiasm Fin her nature. • soon learned that' to hear himself talk, was the most subtlepleasure this wise legislator was 'capable of • enjoying,.sii she coaxed •himiciut into the - v eranda, got hitt to seat hunSelf on' the vine:shinied, low , broad Steps:and placed herself just solarbelO* him i as to . enable. liet.:_to up into his . facet the itifirvelosiiii light hiireplendid eyes.' • Siie.askedi - him• all about Washington andthe.grent North ; 811044 him to de scri a the . SOnate louse and 'all his own du"ties ahe sympathized in alibis trials, and; the Shaineful • want of :appreciation pecnliarto Iconstituents,. she was full of wedder endi admiration as . the case re • - - • Senator Wheeler. went, r,to sleep th night•ouite [convlnced that she-was the moat sensible w.orrin•Ale had ever met in his , life. ;He even tonndlimioelf. corn pairing l‘er iwitli Nellie...- That, night as Nellie was uncoiling her 'soft! brown hair and" . ' brushing" Ont the tangled curls, Carrie put. her piquant lit tle face,in.at the tiooi and said:: ‘l.l . came, II , sow, Z cotiquoredplease Congiatiilate me." ;.. ,' "Come ynu,go.ed, delivereil I knew ou t could de it." - And Oarrie came in ; then this coun cil f two silt - till 'near- midnight sipping coree, and? •arranging further .plans- of . op4•ations. . It was the third, day after carat's , ar rival. She 1 was playing chest with the Soiator ans Nellie .was leaning against the open door that led into the-western • veranda„ watching . with love-haunted eyes, the pecan-grove where Dick Latrobe wotild have been waiting her; if :he . bad. 'b en in they neighborhood. But Dick had, gone to the next :town for his triens' ra• riots, and the trysting place was vacant .she knew. , -Suddenli i Mr. Marvin e nt er ed the room with an a nxious troul)led . face and bur-, riedlY said f • • 1 l'Nellie, pew .here. I' 'am - in: want of yO0." ' .-1,.. '• i ' , • . A '.... Her father's lobki; and • words shot an app' ailing fear to .Nellie's heart ; :taut Carrie and; her 130744i,t' were too mnch: interested in their awn play and - fiy-Play to 'notice it. - • ' 4,'Nellie,tny darling,- Jake has just es caved with his life from the lower ranche and he say the Comanches . have run off all; the hores, and that a party of them are on thelr'way li.re. What are we to dol? , Senator Wheeler is a-----" .• ' 'Pooh I father, i he is• a coward ; . there L is o morel dependence.' to be placed on biro than i i m my old tabby." _ . 1 0 If I con, ld only get word to the settle ‘rtent." '1 '.• . tuCan ndne of the servants gor r , . r‘There are only; three at honie that .cali handle alifle T i-I . may need all these. The rest, if they thought we.. Were, in dan ger wouldibe so fraid as, to be worse than nseless.", I - 1"I will v. lathe i l v--=1 will -ride Rabbit. Itl 'Will be ii 11, , Pt hbrse that .can overtake ti 4. I. kni. - w every step, of, the road so ydu must 'let me go." _ , . l'..liut NOlie-- 7 - 7 " .. "But, fsither, I should .be' of no use.in the house l; I can never i hitanything but by mista4. Bat ; if 'yoit - go and the peo p(e-get frighteued, I can do nothing . with them." 1 . . .. ~ .. . 1"But, it anything should happen .to you Nellie • ."; - "But nbthing'Willhappen to me:" , "I will I find, .;' son in God's, care, my daughter.l :. N 4:,),. Child, hurry; : . I ,will hive Rabbit atihe door in three minutes. Once at Ole settlement, - find -Capt. tat ro'be, he will knew what to do:at once. ... ' In less she five ' minutes, Nellie Was. fairly inhe saddle,' and Rabbit a-power-- fill hors e was_ making the quickest time iv en he ad ever.madl , , while Nellie gave 11 a '4i , loose re'ti- and Watched with keen bright. e, the timber around and before' ti.r. , 1 he,V1.43 already.. some miles • .oriher jfriirney,.nd the. moon waf. risen almost hke a - lesser sun - 'When, she heard a yell 0o hide,dus.to be desoribed. - Rabbit . knew *hat it betokened as Weil. as she did, and his etreadi of Indians-was almost- equal .to her own, l_ "God. help me_ P' , she murmur .ed, and then spoke to : her 'horse in tones. fie searcely needed, for ries*is going at a trightfullspeed.; An'arroW. flew past her - h '• - Mr - but' ' was r anot er a -another; -she: thbrouglV rousek. 4 l.ly, Rabbit, fly I" she kept,uren - g and: th e noble brute answer id-.with Supernatural efforts. .H: . ••. .. 11.• "Thei dare not follow -much , further—. half an - j hour-L4 .quarter---ten minutes' will brie g me i within reach:of helli," . - osheelicouraged. her .brave little heart, until R l abbit aliiiost - ,staggered tip the main - street of 1 ti*. town. ' -' She Iteew, .where to go ;' She was sure Most' of tWe Men tvcOld be Congregated iti,...th'e . bur".6ii . the piazza .of . the one, hotel t :she was :not piistakeo. . :.• - :.-- - '- . '• Her horse was scares at th 6 door-when a crowd! surrounded her: Dick who was 0, that Moment smoking his cigar to bap PA., '..JUNE - 14, ' 1876. py thoughts of . ; lier, Jeapet: up in the "pretty steep—yes. - You kn.,* that in wildest astoot-hnivnt. He. understood as i oi.l tunes, in. England,. grades of thirty if by instinct, what : message she had ; and forty feet to the, mile . were thought brought. It took brit a minute to lift to be heavy. Grade of seventy or eighty her safely into the house, and whisper in: feet were thought impracticable. - I can her ear. words. of I love and comfort ;in remember - reading- all about. ,it. They the next moment he was Mounted on his didn't understakt then what a grip an own horse to gather his men and go to iron wheel had on an' - iron rail, and how the rescue of her home and friends, much a good locomotive - cOuld - -Pull if Nellie and Rabbit lwere very netdful you only give her fuel and time: They of,.and- very grateful i.for the attention found it out .afterwards. ~I hear they're and refreshments 'so . kindly urged on got - in England and France . grades,l32 them; but it'was very hard for,Nellie to to 196 feet to the mile: and even - the. Sal mak in such anxiety and suspense.— timore and Ohio railroad hat 'grades of What Was going on at the lonely plants- 114 feet:. Thegraded on' the Pocifici rail tion no one could tell; they could but roads, „and on that Reeky Mountain, fear and hope;; and even when word Xoilroad from Denver city to the mines, cane next day, that t the. Indiana had fled are worse than any - yet. This grade don't westward, pursued by. Captain Latrobe,_ seem very bad, does it ? And besides, Nellie was still very miserable, for,' to the just look at that view l" ' '' ••`/P unusual' exertion a excitement - had succeeded an almost , . hysterical state cf weakness, and . the. good women at the settlement would nct suffer . her to return home until her father came-Ito protect her. • TwO dayeiafterwartis, after ever one had' recovered - from*l their fright, and Nellie was safe at hoti.i.e, there was great rejoicing at theMarvi . W.place. Diok!had returned bringing the hist: notses 'with hid,. There. had been la hard chase a., , d a fierce battle,. and soil of the brae . tel.; lows who rode so c', eerily, .ourd d not re- Eturn. But what of. that'? - Ili the glory of success, who thiii.ks by. what . means it has been y wou ? . : , "How shall I. reward you Captain -?" said Mr. Marvin joyfully', . And Dick made hard terms with the old planter, th.iugh Neliie declared her poor_little hand was, PreSen t fair too small. :Hardly was the arrangement approved when batri- came in, With . a. - beaming 'face and said: . "Mr. Marvin, Mr . • Altrlieler and 'I have just - decided to be. marriel immediately—, :if you will n,rmit the ceremony her - e.— . .We don't want to take 'any more Indian risks." "What is . to 'binder a double mar riage ?" asked the captain', . .•• . And as no one seemed *hie to soggiest any objection Mr. - Marvin Said.: "Well, if thingi are to', be brought to a.head.in this shape I. may as well send Jake for parson Justine at,once." - ' The proposal .was. at once carried. For once. fortune seenied merry mood, and inclinedto gi v e! . love, anything — he .desired.- ..! • So Carrie attainediheratribition. became a brikii . t_par4plar , star of fashiOn. Nellie, too, got her own way—and she liked it—to .be Abe aearly, loved wife of a brave man,: to trialce'her' -- earthly.home always among. the woods and, prairies they both loved,..thi.se.things she counted good:equiValents fur . 64:that .fash sOciety, of the :place that ,pomp and power could give ; for 'When one is contented there is no momito be' desifed, acd - when there is no more to be desired, there is an end of it" • ! A STORY OF THE RAIL. lson, the racy' cotrespondent of the New York World, relates .a story told him by an engmeer;on the Lehigh Valley railroad,.what time the locOmotive climb- :ed the mountains "oa the; most. -pictur esque line - of railway in .A tnerica; At' White• Haven we bad - dinner, and engines and engineers were changed.•. .1, ifoUnd myself here - on one of the' finest locomotives ever .built for any road, and 'hi the company of : one. of the brighteSt of engine-drivers. The ride thencefOr • ward was one to be remembered through a -life time. • • • • A great, flood had swept ihi•ough the Valley here not matiy , years ago. Thl3 Le high, swollen with its rainy tributary, streams and , reinforced by the giving way of (lath after dam with their vast accu mulation of luMber and (*Wails, soonsbe cathe irreBtible and froth White Haven to Easton the waters, 'rising thirty feet, rav aged both banks. • MerD, women and - chil , dren were crushed: . and downed . without ,other warning than the roar of a wav e that rose at the rate of thirty feet in nine minutes. The vision' of ;this flood in the midst of etorn and darkness, and the , eehos of despairing cries, were easily ,conjured up as the locomotive , boomed a'ong, jingling its bell under the cliffs.— little while the road quitted the val ley for the mountain and we began the long ascent through the heart of the Pennsylvania wilderness to 'a height which overlooks one. Of the hisiorical and typi- . cat Scenes of the pcmtinent„ • The grade was steep ' • the etigineerl 'opened the valve, regulated his engine in all respects, smoked ' and asked, me to step over and sit on his:side, of theloco motive. - , • "It's all clear' sailing. for a few miles. now," said be. "We not meet any-, thing. It's a tng "What grade.?" "From 100 148 feet to the mile." "That's the reason. then, that you have these heavy engines Is" ;, "Yeti." this grade thought by railroad, men to be very . steep ?" "Well," said the engineer, sloCy, VOL. :3-‘4.7.7:N.q..;;'24- Away to the south stretched the bleak Pennsylvania wildernesa, uninhabited save by a few wood-men, the panther, the deer and the bear. The solitude seemed •• like that of a desert, and the gigantie . locomutiv6 like a gigantic pioneer. ' . ''There's a right-down_ romance, or. tragedy, -or whatever you inty call it,"'. said the engineer, , 4 'uttached to this hill. And I wail the least of - a tier° in it.' As. there was a woman in • it though; I intik tell win I um a married man." • • : "All right. *Go ahead..with your ' • "On - night, about four yea; s,ago, and just about this in,'th, I , was coining flown the hill With (eons:derieg the rea ct) eon) a pretty heap train. At Wilkes Barre over the' valley—which you'll soon see—a youlig lady: got, aboard of my en glee. She wanted a night ride and was . put 'on by the superintendent. She was: a perfect lady, and her 'mother *as in one,of the cars, back.- To tell the honest truth (as : I have often :said to mv4ife) I never saw a more beautiful and game • looking girl. She was very, small sized, -. dressed in what my wife . calls' complete taste, and her figure was so good; and her. ways so frank and • artless,. that I al- . most wished she' was my daughter. -Her face, though, .was what I can't give you. an idea of. It was the moat beautiful' . face I-ever saw. It had' all the intell!- . gence 'of a woman's and the simplicity Of a child'e.: And she was so upright and loiable altogether, and asked so , many.. qeestions, that, although. 1 never had a . w`)man on the train. but once ,before,l., invited her here' to* my seat, and ex 7 plained to her a holy' about' ho a locomotive ' is run. -,I showed her how to manipulate the leve.eihich admits, ore or lesssteam , to the cylenders 2 • how the reverse lever, worked ; how the - tests Of water, and, steam are tilade:' ' 1-:showed her how ,to blow the whistle and . ling the - bell, and. explained how the breaks were blown down, and how warnings were given on the approach to crossings,. She . took it all in, and," said the engineer 'stretching his arm across the •boiler, and clutehing my sleeve. "It was tae best leszon I Pifer. gave.. Right up around yonder about: two miles fromhere, : jAst as I was.hand- : ling the reverse le7er, we struck a stone tn or.soething on the :rack at nine o'clock at night. I was a-bending down at the time.(the girl was sitting ~ where yeti are, on my.ctiehion) and quicker: tha' light ning the leper' flew back and struck me in the eye agsl knocked me— well, I'll be d . --d if I kiraw where: Anyway it don't . make much difference for 'a min t o or two, for I was justatunned. As were inthe down grade, with : no need o fuel, the 'fireman was hat* in the baggage car,, and when I came to, this young girl was holding on my head and fanning me 'with her toy of a bat. It wasn't. two seconds' before' I kßew what was to pay. The en- . gins., and the whale train had started . , down the hill, at the rate of sixty miles an hour. I tried to spring upand reach the lever. - Mr right arm and side' and; right leg were numb. My face and even my _tongue were so paralyzed by the blow . I received that I could hardly speak. I WBB 80 desperate that-(more to attract the, :girl's atteolin 'than for anything else) I grabbed ,her hat with my left hand and , threw it otit of the locomotive, and then 'managed to beckoei her ear down close to my' lips and . say . : - . ig‘Train'S going too fast. Well be iii hell , if you don't orn . the lever P." , "She understood me in an . instant i and it was time. • The engine, was rock- . ing, swaying, grinding,. and skurrying down' the track like a beast with . great bounds. Every koOond I expectedit would leap Vie rails • it certainly was decending et the Irate of seventy miles. an hour. But. that little thing sprang up here, clutched the leyer,,,motioned which way she should shove or push it, , gotmy nod and reversed the wheels like a little man: Then she whistled down .brakes-4here was op need of that, . for the boys had:. ;put on every brake already. Inside of a. mile and a halfshe stopped the train; and then . she knelt down'all trembling and : orying—and now what do you think she said P., , - .. "I can't guess." - • . -' • , 13ahl :ehe : -ildr.—„l feel as if I ahou:d faint., Henn you got some ositnilnr, , "r a' little , whiskey In ',And aura as you. livri she 'did 'faint; right away there—right down m front of the flre-box--right wi top of me.. The flre•man had to run the .train dowu to White Jilmer -f .