The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, May 17, 1849, Image 1

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VOLUW. XXIV.
TEE uzaisTEß. ' I
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY . BY
James W. Chapman,
Advance pa,vrnent in Cash per year, - tki 56
If paid whim the year, 200
If notatthe eall of the year, • 4 3 50
Lip, Brother, Up!'
ET C. D. gremear
U. brother, up I the - light begins
Along the eastern
To promise that the - night, is petit;
And better days-are nigh ;
clarion - voice rings o'er the hills,
in, valleys catch the sound—
And freedom is the stirring cry
That fills the world around 1
c
Tt pierces through the fading gloom,
Its strength the'..pensant feels—
And old oppression fromlts throne
With shame and terror reels;
All men lift up their hearts and hands,
More fearless and more free,
And hiud ring out the common shout, ,
No more well bend the knee l
. .
From smithy-forgo, from fisher's cot.,
From ploughs that break the lea,
From iron loonis, from smoking mines,
From ships that cleave the sca--,.
One.voice unites and mightier
Sweeps on an ever on ; .•
The tyrant's day, the vassal's work
Arcgone, forever gone ! • •
Up, brothers, up ! and share the light,
Rejoice the day has come,
When freedom decks the lowest shrine,
And guards the poorest home ;
Rejoice, and pledge,with strengthening ties
The neo- born beast and mind,-
To keep the boon and pass it on .
To all of human kind.
Rejoice, that ye have broke at length •
The strong and heavy chain,
4 icirkkvoettber age nor human strength
Can Nod ye with again ;
Rejoice, and swear ye will uot baud,
Nor give the guerdon hack,
Though glistening steel disputes the way,
And thune is. on your track !
• The Farmer's Daughter.
She may not, in the mazy dance,
With jewelleo maidens vie ;
She may not: mile on eourth - swain
With soft, bewitching eve
She munot boast a form find mien
That lavish wealth has b ru d g ht, h er ,
But, oh, she has much fairta charms,
The Farmer's peerless daughter !
llw man Awl •
Togvtlier love to dwell;
Her laughing blue eves wreathe around
The heart a witching spell :
Iler smile is bright as morning's glow
Upon the dewy plain,
And listening to her voice we dream
That Spniv has come 'again. •
The timid fawn is not more wild,
Nor vet more gay and free, 1
The liliy's cup is not more pure
In alf its purity
Of all the wild foyers in the wood,
Cr by the crystal water,
There's none more pure or fair than she,
The numer's peerless daughter?
The haughty belle -whom all adore,
On downy pillow lies;
While forth upon the dewy lawn '
The mew• maiden hies ;
And, with tile Lurk's uprising Wing,
Her own clear -mite is heard—
Ye may not tell which sweetest sings,
The maiden or the bird.
Then tell me not,of jewelled fair,—
The brightest jewel yet
Is in the heart where virtue dwells
And innocence is set !
The glow . of health nprn her cleek,
The grace no rule bath taught her,—
The fairest wreath that beauty twines,
Is for the Farmer's daughter ! •
THE DOUBLE SURPRISE.
BY MARY lIOWITT,
ME. Josern Husino was a rich dyer ,
in one of:
' , llr large Manufacturing towns, a piodditg, hard:
waded man of business, who never lost *lit Cif-thei
main dance but once, and that was when ho nuir-'.
ned old Green's daughter; with seven thousand
Pound , to her fortune, instead of Then'Stratton,
!
who bad nothing.. He soon found -out bilimistalte,
for his ale was one of . th - ,14e unhappy-tempeipl
women who make everybody miserable taboutthetn.
Ellen Stratton married also tan years, anerwarde;
not for love,l am sorry to say, and was not more
happy than he. Her husband, whose ntune wai
Toqi,cham, was also a dyer, an hard a headed man
as Ililvard, bat without his good tputlititia. He
~its always in law with satnehody: Be had a 4eg'
issate lawsuit with Bayard: about the ferme df
-heir dryirg gns'inds,_ which unfortunately. irroined;
e was a small thing to quarrel about, Nt,lllle
rolling snowball, it grew at every turn, andy in. *J43
cod; brought on his rum. He. WWI& lawsVit , , , ana
then he ed, leaving his affair s axery baiA sta" -1 "
Whenwere wound np, the 'creditors, mit Of m-'
paK.ino to the widow, whom 'everybody rested
fare up ea:dkient to ensure her and her only caw,.
a daughter , an .annuity of seventy pounds for her
ililyarcl hadlofen a fierce adversary to the final-
land, and the- widow felt trzultar grief to see
'knee, in some Ma/UM ruined by his means;
gill ale was not without comfort, even in her de r
[u . ,e ( l circumstances ; 4.ho.:had good health,
, heerful disposition,' a heart :full of love both to
rod and man, a beloved dmighter, whom the her
;elf vas able to educate we lead ahowall—nour
that Poor Mr. Trevisham, watt- g9OO--Pq
, 6 ( 4l `dott at her fireside, such as de -nerg
knowo in her more prosiorous days. 'nnhodY
Icluim at this, lad it is -true - Ithat when :the Otnit
fl* "4 8 " Better t is ,aAinnet'of ludo with 1041
hasa stallt.ll ox suill.dissetts i tm tberelbr" • 1111 0 -
ctula t.ay "amen" from her entire-h e art „, 1, 1
Ilityard had gained the kris:tic and not assvot ,
At) , was dead. "There . was a triumph, fort*
Vie said; but be -did riot And it co* 50 : -. 4
" Lift tlke
nun was, dead and , and hit erro =4,_,
grotcals added to his cowxf,, • ~ y‘ a , ~.;; ;;" !:1
'tetubnunee of
Eniad. the widow 'sin , her titaYt?st i
()WA wife, badubeen,
T h il i
inn hide and the quill
-7 :4 many ycir ,, , h a d , 62 be , , of time, Am',
" THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS HE 'LEGITIMATE SOLTRUE; AND .rirE
poor Mr. Trevishana, gone to her long rest, and then 1 Mr. Hilyaral w, one of thme - rieli men who had
he thought With himself whether he should not re- I not done Much actual good with their money. The
allze the dream of his youth, and miike•atonement I fact was, he had never thought about it; he sub
for the wrongs, of after years, by marrying the avid- 1 scribed, to the. Bible Society. and: Foreign Mishima,
ow Trevis • lean. He thought a deal about it : he -I and the
. et ' sociation,•and, as hupaid his work
, . never, spoken to her far years; ;in filet, it was 1 people's es aegularly, he thOught'he did all that
Ti
years now twee be bad seen her ; for, though' thay I was require him. , Fre was n stranger, - of
dwelt in the same town, he lived in a large square teourse, to the d or, and they began to talk about
stone house which a lawyerluid built, and he had : the poor. of NV rn thiagood man /mew so much.
bought, in one suburb, arid she, since her misfor, I He eta the wealthy
_might to do
unes, its they were collet lived in alittle cottage - for the mamonly . do ; that it
a very little one-in an opposite direction. He qu,es-i oten tt AI circumstances who were
tioned, as I said , whether be should marry her, I their gre s • and then be proved this
but, some way or other, the idea seemed strange ; ; by say lady and her daugker who
he thought people would talk ly if he did. I lived it rind whose income, was un-
No, his marryiag, days wee ever, be leaded ... der a I I for their poor neighbors
People saw bun buttcanted-up in his good broad- i how tl them, and was a friend Mr
cloth, going steadily` about his lausineslzt and matitia der all and when they use illsent
his 11:ceen hundred a year, and,. never 5u... -- petted thunm tl which was often the means
one atom of the romance .which had t.t.ken poss.s.r.- of their a he (tuestioned if . either
ion of his naturally good heart. 'ooo2day he took • she or auk wine, .theiiisekets, ;or
a drive to the little suburban village in which the they hi iof establishing a Tems
widow lived, and, leaving his chaise at. the inn, ranee 9 I done a deal•titgood: Ile
strolled up the lane in which her c tae stood.- said the ham was the kindest and
He had no ideaof makings call, not, the slightest most ( e knew; and that it was a
in the world-he only wanted to see the place: slt pity thi ?. means of doing all the
was a very small cottage : two gentlewomen living good s} • daughter, he said, was a
on seventy pounds a year, could not afford a large pattern lies ; he believed that she
house. ! . and her iged to retake oin their in
"lt manta be above eight or nine•pounds a year," come by dia needlework, but. for all that, the
mused he to himself; "a kitchep, a parlor, and two daughter fou ld time to teach in the Ragged School,
bed-rnoins, and a little wash-house at the back, that i ulicch never would have been established but for
must be all; but it is prodigiously, neat and a her, and that 6he herself gasp half-a-guinea to its
Mighty pretty garden. Ellen was eiv- t: fond of ftualt
flowers;" _and with -that the sunny,-rose-scented Mr. Joseph liil aid, pulled out his Large, well
days of his youth came to his memory most be- filled green si l k p •Se, and gave the doctor fite 4.•
witchingly. "They keep a girl, no doubt, to do the for this school, w eh, he - said, Must be put dta•
housework : they could not afferd a servant at full as firm a friend; and then taking leave of the good
wages," continued his musings '; " I wonder if any man, he turned hark, and walked slowly down the
of their relations help th -.n"?-=hut; poor thine, she lane. Again ' thascottage chininey smoked, and
had so few relations, and none. of them rich, and agent his hearc , wro. as warm as if he had sat'bj- its
he was stieh a spendthrift that he draned his own :ire. He Was Iled•withall sorts Of grawlachemea
family-I don't believe there .is one that would of benefieetteel; h would dos-he did. not, know
help !her: the Trevishams have not a bit of heatt what, for suchexcellent people as these. • While he
among them."was thus vagu e ly t • ing, he apprbached . the cot-
So ,
pondered Mr. Ililyard •as he walked up the tage ; the door o coed, and out came Hitti r Tre-'
laue : in a while he made 'a Stand, and, turning isharn, in her d - Merino dress, plaid :shawl,• and'
round, took a steady survey of the ta& of the cot; straw - bonnet with dark blue ribbon. • She looked'
tage. There was little to be 'seen but a thick holly- at Mr. Ililyand as she mune out, and then walked
hedge, a .ereen water-butt, the little backaatehen trri,,kly on as if she had business, in hand. She was
window, the cottage roof, and-one chimney. It was a sweet, bright-loolting cre ature ,_ - •,. e th -
n e t • t 4fg . ...iv0..
abOut the middle of November!, in • 43 * . a . - - 4 -- - a '''.-`'''''''"""''''''"-- '''' .-n `"'
arid Mrs. Trevisham wet hoe-daughter Kitty, then I'vlien she came- ithin sight of the parlorarindow
jast turned fifteen, were - attrroa• at - the little Parka' r-/IC looked towards it. smiled sweetly and nodded,
fire, the daughter reading and the mother at her l ?Ira Ililyard looked lalso, and there ;mod the moth
setting. Kitty had just put en some coal, and the cr. in her plain cap and black dress, and nodded
little servant-mfild in the little kitctiSe had just af?ectionately to; her! daughter. This little eircum
broken up her fire and put the kettle on for tea: sumce expressed a great deal; mher and dough
there was only, as I said, one chimney to the cot- ter were all the World to each oth er : there was the
t age „ e at these movements at the two fires Kai most perfectly you understanding between them,
sent the smoke curling out of the chimney, which and the last look, weeu for an-absence of art hour or
made quite a picturesque effect against the chill I two, was full of 14etionate intellig,ence.
November sky. And it was 'at this very smoke She walked On briskly, Sad he followed ; she
which Mr.:Joseph Hilvand, with his comfortable in- luul such a neatretty fi gure. She walkeifunecan-,
1 12.
came of fi fteen - hundred-a-year, now stood looking; locally well, lend :I a rennerkably pretty foot and '
he was not, however; noticing the picturesque ef- ankle, as he coul itee when . ..4ie held np her dress
feet, but, in imagination, was picturing to himself where the road Was w et. i
the little household that was assembled beside the " I wiAika-e,ro e 'VCIIIIIO. _1 .It, 4;0. --biau e si./..41.. 4 -..i
alb il it7 illictictit, tnal ids-epn etiti . rea me - C - 70E 7 r who she will marry r and with that, all at once, a
aged mare and dyer though he was, had a very grand idea floated into his mind. lie would send
'vivid ' , eination, for the picture which lie tors' for leis nephew, Edward Grey, and adopt him as
saw warmed Ids - heart to its very core.: the broad- his son, and lie should marry this good and pretty
cloth in which he was enveloped was nothing to i (laughter of widow Treei,ham l It was a splendid
the warm th of his heart. He walked hack again idea -This nephew was the son of his only sister,
peat the
-little green gate which led to the house- who had married upp me
or schoolmaster in the co
door ; a little eirl was coming - up with ,a milk-can; try. . She bad oft n asked him to do something for
and, turning ii 7 at the green gate, 'knocked at the ttea, her eldest so ; he was . Said to be a fine schol
door. He hvas a wealthy man, as we know, and a ar ; a t vcry acetic. oly yotii g„ man, of excellent
girliakingnailk to his own house would have exci- principles, and h was now a.tx-and-twenty. Ile
ted no hrteMst in his mind ; and yet he stepped to could not Oink hew he had never done anything
see who wciuld open the door to take this penny- for him before ;he felt all at once as if he had been
worth of milk It 'was only the little servant girl: a hard-hearted wr •tell ; never, ta d thiat . d oo y, itlig
At the bottom of the lirde:garden he storal again ; given a penny eve ito th ut e w Va t 4r on S u ch ; h
he would
and looked at the :runt of the cottage ; e fire that , hewor tas tu ee
. • - rn epheir. get th e Married to this poor,
was burning in the parlor and kitchen met a glow 1 se n d f
w ithio, form wa „, getting a w a r , on e by, area parlor 1 but good gir l , and alert he _should no longer be
window steed.titty readillg fors had gone to I
ashamed of hunself. : ' ' •
the window for italic,. The ou tlin e of the bent Little did sweet: htttyTrevialiam know Ofthe
tenet, arid the youtli:al bust, sent a still warmer ! schemes which wee wor kin g in t he
headof
there
glow to his beciat ;it reminded hint of th at Ellen I spec able gentle who was following her. She
Stratton who had mice been all the world to him. 1 we.goingto the ,B.a„rged School fora couple of
With hasty steps he then returned to the inn, or- 1 hour., that evening,' and she was thinking of netli -
dered out his cha ise , drank a glass ofsnegua, arid 1 tag but her poor ac olars.
t
then drove home to 7 hit large, square house, and 1 , : in a month's tim ,'Edward Grey was at. his ant
his many servants. i t 'le's, as handsome : a young Mari its his mother had
People talk a deal about 'luxury of doing good.” I described him, with an open countenance, and . a
Mr. Jose- ph Hilyard determined that he would en- 1 great deal Of deal-ion hi bis manner. He was one
joy
_this luxury ; but be did not 'sea , ' a word to any i of those men who •in reality do not need ark. one to
one-not a syllabled He thought a deal about the help them on: in life ; the elements of success are
cottage fire-side end seventy ! pahnds a-year.- 1 . lin flienaselvel ;an men of this character are not
Christmas-day was not fat off, and he remembered I such-as can have a nth chalked out for them - by
that people'Atould.txt have fine ',Christmas dinners , auuther. Joseph li yard found his nephew overt.
with only sive . lppiands a-year. Two days be. 1 different person to hat lie expected ; lie ' fancied
"fore Chris v, therefore,' the carrier's cart thatslte would be p table and' extremely . grateful,
stopped at Mrs.lievislima • s cottage, and left, car- I and that he ahotild pert his plans to hint with re
-1
riage paid, a large hamper. It Was Carriedinto the '. spect to Ditty Treal limn; inunecliately; hut there
little kitchen; and the little se:aunt-Maid summoned. 1 was an independeoc aboot him -which it ,did not
. • . „ ',
her nalatrcsa,to opetr it. ', , -, . 'semi. safe to interfer with, and ambit tut •mdiffer.
" Dear me !.what can it be r exclaimed Mrs- ewe about, the larg income of which, if • lie pleas- .
Trevisliam, as. the girl hastily`cut the strings and' eel, he might be th heir; eb that his uncle fat
opeued t ',..he wading lid of, the i ham Per. Kitty, pretty sure that if h all once' revealed, his ii . e 7
cove 4re r and Kitty came hittantly Out. of thg sign, his nephew w uld turn restive xiiihis hands:
parka. withaier sewing m her hand, Which, ,hOwei-, and there was at th .same ad so much inatilineas
ere she soon threw down to help in
,tutpackieg the and StitidglitforW ' honesty Of . charaetei about
hampera-a S.larked a ham, a dolate 'mmee-pies, so hip; thathe could n t help feelingeispect Torliiiii.
beautifully pack 'that net one waabreken, a game " Inc: ides this," as th 14 1:e wuat P ( l, , 411 took very
pie, such almonclii.and. raisins, and delicious fruit kindly to the basin ..„5,..' and, seemed tit 'once so
for deczert, and. a dozen of, wine i t ~
,-,_.
Mean r
thoroughly to mad a if:: that there was no doubt
' " who can haie sent them I 'What can it Mean r of his becoming a m st valuable assistant or part
exclaimed both mother ...a davgliter. , trier. _
It was long since Mr's. Trevisham had had a reg. 1 Th e y were in fact,' WO of the =Mucci:lent men
ular Christmas dinner of her own; BM and, then that ever met; yet, ia -some respects, they
she and her daughLer were asked out, but not
„of: were so different in rector, that, while they re
ten; now, however, here was a splendid tlizi,aer "Itv gained in any d strangers to eachother, th ey
them who must they invite to partalto of it ? wori?ed ill tcigetheri 1 Edward gamy was,unlike any
Oh, there were plenty of poor Folke• who sho u ld per s on w ith whom his uncle had come hi pentad;
have some ofit,,that was_tobn decided t' :del 'AO as yet he had beeti;gde ling nod master Of hit
nothing was though of for the rest of the evening, world ; lielad had, no,-,idea hut ,of , .remaining so,
but who could:have sent this present! They ecitild and now here was a y oung
nine
w h am h e h a d ja.
net.. iron* ; 'it 714 W e this ( PerNn'and - it -nlielif trocluoed into it; carrimg , everg. his, 07 4 c. WUY,
be tliat ;
but the:y, n i er„YtitOViit it could 'hill --- : . and that with•the utMw-t , - (jute ess mid. apparent
They never gueo4.. the right.per on -how Indewl selPeouiplacency.• . ''• never as ea hia uncle's leave
should, they 1 : ' -'• : i i . ' l.: - . for what bo did,-and Yet beestablished : directly a
•It 'arat now five. the. fi th - t - CtlnSiniAS,:" Temperance Society among the Men, andSetc about.
-Wait Wil°l64ent'; nand at the Satilf time preci--., `..e435 forming a Nechania ! Institute fix the . hole' tewn,
forth ne xt toorltoris d•id•tilo cams , tattier'; cart Mr. Hilyard, as we said, was full of rill sorts of
d
;bring samaptesent, or slightly, a'ari,64, :Pa . the: grand benevolent schemes a alert time before; and
11 " e house .. rt;-3146 al at:11 "1 3/3 4 M 0 0 /;;; U:: - .., 15; ' ail ', approved of.Temperapee Societie?„ and schools for
a real .•, •• 'ore to know ttiene ya 9, 4„onieow ‘ i....7.7k_0. the people'yet now he was an with his nephew
;cared' " t rauchloi them . BO ,tile••noiiiw- l e"o l toy zealously -co•oPerating• in them; `Perhaps he
'that C,*- ~ --. provision were not. eaten alone by, s was displeased thlit 1,
with
intinetioe in the place
'Abe wit: .°w and her ' Ainuliihict . t,some neighbor. -great philanthro • with whom he .had never
tei
'some alek woman M . ...teep;Or invalid " er4. al- had anything to do,sho uld seem to court his Deph
'sraara 4. Partaker; And Ink to ,the alatt 31 47 0 .vi5" - eves acquaintance. as,they did, *anger434h. be
ism slittle cellar wasp)* lever - With:Mt )33 - -iivp* was to them all vit. a sort of tacit reproof .to
la° and her Asetrlttmlmly bt, , let*. iielv,aul - himself, anti it anew, hini. Out. Im* lauli, )e.
i th e n ' °n Yer9 extmoOnati g=on g - i
tin'ehrli'f ; where it , would, the and - t4nimlieiv :0 Ocot ,
Itnaa - daY. for inatsocei,Whedthey Oink, 1 4 45 :,1 1 0tb 'get OD WI eon/Idea% • teetliec •tts, Off :On*. to
ortheic ooloPwo illeniefilOarl-htitAke 1 4 1 4. Peer et have done, when ali circumstinie opined, for
kittsC,PoPtliow, ock3hheliuxxl had many iiivtiktietqe the-mama* to ho: the onelt4 to 1b...? ta:caP . of
-from be rlftrc which Ofted did more good the uncle's &pie= easeade4l o :treAcw rip - •
iki4l i hrie '• •4°4 11 " F re'ld-#r4 cannot. tell.' deetly. ~, -. . „ „ , . ._ '
~," ~.., ~', - ,":
1 7oe ..the. good lrkweb. these taWkwas, tiM0 1 .34 ite•hado immediat F - • 9ti'hiii)tigaliait. ',, Triadallis
All tz, AT. Trel 110 her poor neighbors .; • nephew * of 100_4 0 teow! geKArAii4 and
L.--90tlidaYv- 7 ‘ait'it*Mi letting Path& ;du sk, ' kr; chade; . * this the:Y -web . I ° l oeli 4e7: 1641
04 . 34 tot -at ot* IraPf.aP 'llat , ione: - .A. , 0 04- he ems letthiag- . It , **et diOmiling„titliiff9
gems* overtook bus;- it Wa t t tho, $Ta Paiiiih_ , : 4 ' o l him; acid :ha - could ev en ownni,oi of L4Koa, (law.
Pal , .tlit)Y wilite4 clk-tcrtbers* * * L 9 l4°' aw°o l ! °e. •OW thief WI Amen it ~ his. elethes•alt , theY) l 4
Tv
140IkTROSE, .PENISPA.; MAY 17, 4419.
PI SR OF THE PROPLR TRF. TR
,
on thci *ver's bank. -He said nothing to' his uncle
of hislloss,-, for so grihve.d Was he to have failed, as
he tittle had done, in winning his affection, that
he w
Ei wk g.
' tirailling still further to displease him by
.this 0 itrent eareleness. • In his heart, Edward
Grey yded his uncle as a second ' hither; he
would. , Ve died to haTt i served him ; but he was
not • :int" these who make professions, and
as his• , c e Seemed cold and distant, he determined
quiet; lAti 64 on fulfding 'every duti, trusting to
time • , eirannstances for maktue ell straight be
tween :,'.M. ',' '-.. ' . • • - I . 1 -
The ll i I: telt'• had been lost a week when it came
to his' . e's Int:fa-ledge; And , that •tweideittally. A
person • iwthe counting-house where they both
were, •- tolike l tl WhOlier 'Mr. 'Edward :orey had
not lost' ' , :tnethkig. - 'My watch!" said .the young,
man,-joI • y;. «a -gcild . watch and- chain; 'l.lost
them ai ••It age?' - • -
.2 • 1 I
}lir ale Was astonished • and enraged. "Was
the-we Alien of so Rile APalue that he ecrald lose.
it and 3i-nothing about it r ip, twenty ',different
ways hei4otilci look Millis affair and be de. an
gry bri.i He never Thad lost-his own 4416, aid
if he ha , ,'lte should have been - a:: some trouble to'
have to I .d it; etc., ete.• .. •(. I I • '
Grey honght , his uncle' - unreasonable in being ,
thus an.: t, • without hearing him say- -pbe 'word -in
,
his own 'I ' fenoe. It seemed to him. that there was
, rneeh , e'eaid than the occasion waitanted, , and
for that sow he was silent, and by thi'sm..ant iiin
i uncle di , not know lary mo th 'he had stiffinxl, nor
what plli,. • 'he had,•ir‘truth, taken for t' 'recovery
of his- ~1 , I '
The
much gri
last pees 4
the next
told him
watch foril
Grey P 3 9#
Trent. out
die persot
astonished
ted to aAirE.
after:tom(
garden ica;
jaimine n
the open. Ti
ie was not only very angry{ but very
red; lin his anger he declared it was the
A th 4 he ever would make hitn,lind yet,
it:neak he threw him ten sovereign.% and
ogo and tee if he could. get back his
that money, which he did not• ibelieve,--
he rrioney thus ungraciously *into, and
ith the man, who said he was sent by
Who ?had found the 'watch.'
ph
iph Irrlyard would have been no little
could hel have seen his nepheWcondue.
Trevisbain's cottage. It wisi a- lovely
°wards the close of summer; the little
11
.as full of flowers as it could be, and
I roses peeped in and clustezed !round
tier-window, and there sat esc a c ti '
......
dress and lack 5i1k........ apron ; 1......6-
71,7;71wn
hair, taste d up. in As simple knot, and no single
1121.
orrrament ut her, excepting her own dear smiles
and alrec ' nate eyes, looldng, just like a rose., and
-every bit sweet as she told Edward Grey, who
dram the st moment he 1..1,, W her was quite in a
bewilderm tof delight, Wow she and the• servant
maid =et o one morning, at five o'clock,' to look
for mu.sl s inithe meadows, because her mother
was so f ' •of them, and how she found, under a
sod, which eemed to have been cut out .for the
purpose, ato ld watch end chain ; she said she was
so astonish thahe did not !mow -what to do,
and as she ought that most likely some thief had
e l.
hidden it there, she brought it away ; mid there
was no tram in it excepting the maker's, arid that
advertising. 'and then it occi - ilfarnr - nree. ,
might inquizit of some of the watclutiakers , in the
town if the Watch had ever been in their hands;
that she did Iso, and- soon found one who told her
deft he lied Solditlonly a few weeks. before; to Mr.
Hilvard, fur bis nephew, and that to him it belong
ed; and, in confirmation, he showed her an 'adver
tisement in the paper, offering a reward for this
very watch. ,i And bow 'here it was, and it Wee im
possible for Kitty to tell him the pleasure she bad
in restoring, tittil him.
The cratchy had become of ten times iv. former
value as he icceived it from her band. How he
longed to-kW that hand I He was the last man in
the world to; Make . fine speeches, but.his counte
nance expreed Ornething of what he felt. • And
then Mrs. Trelvisharn began to sav that 'in former
time-. 1 she had known Mr. Ililytrd; that unfortu
nately there had been a law-suit befikeen her Fife
husband Midi him, hut that when the was young
she had thought very well of hint Grey said that
his uncle was the hest man living ; that he had
given him the, watch, but that was nothing to his
having taken hini into business with him, which
was a great thine for him, who was poor and the
eldest of a lia-gjturtily. Mrs. Trevisham had ev
ident pl ea sure, in hearing anything to his advantage ;
and how as'imished the uncle would harelbeen
could he have, heard .s.lll that-his eephew hall, said
in hie praise II
Kitty wenti on with her sewing, and the mother
andn he -talked n great deal. lie sat :with the
wnieh in his hand, andtbe mender is, that htsdid
net.eommit *tie extravagance or other, he felt so
inconceivablyllet ppy: 'He said that the thieflwho
had stolen the watch and hid it there, nevei ire
agined the bl ' ire he was conferring upon hiin.-1.-.
He dad not - lam] his meaning, but Mrs. Trier&
ham knew 'V vwell veluit he titeant i ancliK.ihak
Kitty 'al, fo sue bPaelted as she sventeriwithlitir
work. He lied o ff ered, in his advertiremetkteis
pounds for the recovery of his watch, but he neva
thought of °fitting •iVeither to the mothers fi the
daughter ; he*ould much more likely have °soda
his heart and his life ;,. however,he lerlia handsome
present for the man who had fetehe.d. him ;. and
who was' a poor' gardadr With a large family. and
t
ar -I .er he hadt .ken tea with them, and Walked in
the little ga ' , and helped Kitty to tie up/the
eamation.!i he c),alt his leave, promising to visit .
them tigam be *clung. • t
If this nate I had been leadenly encircled With I
diamonds, {it chtild not have been more precious:
His uncle told him angrily that ho hoped he would '
not lose Wil e , nt There was no danger Of that.
This of ID the wetdi.diduot tend to a better'
Understanqing • tween uncle aadnephelgi and spite:
of Edward, Or: 's assiduity in the buSitk-4, he could.
got find the iv ?into his tirteld's affeetions. • I. At
"There is ...' thing mild_ about him," said WA-,
yard to Itiles - - 1 i, 'i a very goodyouagmanhe,is,
there,'o no dou t .tf that—but Unite your good
: pc?: {
6
pie ;he of ' hiesband for u ltttty—after till 'I
I shall be force
~o have her myself," and with that 4
ho l a ughed ~ ' Al , : He thought a deal about '
; t.
bothllia - ttyl ail dier:m6ther,'and - otae day he was it
the teoublei of ,be ' the Ragged School, where
i
he tbonght,tha I e might have some talk with het.
Tlizre she Was, merry as.a lark, mid as fresh es
a ]lower. unto c little 'ragged urchins, and the
very- exyressi . .61 . their faces, end the tones of
their votee.a. chengedaii they apii.osehedlier.
The - master; of eohOl had . not words enough ' 0
praise het, a vid Kitty had no idea,not,the least e)
-- mid, tha At - -- for her :mike that this good
.
Kitty
Ilia Vona,
awl paw . viaitl
aecarai dona tiOi
“Ilowodd
day'aller-Ed
and 3 -. 1 2 3
nieces; I w 7
has forgotten
arililige p
I'V r
on a '
ce.tho t a
t icao , wag
his I
u *ilejlat h
pennilessh g
humor ; gulgl it , 11
hi* nephew allf'
MI, and leftbehin ' I
4se oo d Imp a
1 '-'. • ' • 0 1
ill bantisouOtt llita.Trevieblte, Po
al Grey 142deelavoct bie - San*,
xt. `` f°! Ird4y.to-l?e3lr,..lltlynrck , 4
.*hat be - iwill ett.y,_an4 ylother 10
6 0 4 a ti tb m t i :Ed w ri i _? l , tho t
Ii . in t il veZ ° e7l ° I kitOw tha t
about money? , --- 1 - .:.1,.'
xi 'roOrintattion candidly to tell
e - fiinttilin love litts a•pra
..tidy mben be masin..p.,
as to anew; intention also, to
bo 6.teet , KittyTreviebnin, ton*
1 ~ •i , 1
1E END or-GOVERII4IItNT:'
day when they Were talking about acheolti
people, and such thin"). for. then he .thott-le•
should, be- able to interest him shank the young .
teacher, at dicßagged School.' He feat:lea - 40)i
could draw a very prettypictdreof herlitheinidit
of hei forlorn group, ead thisihellionglitiecOdei‘
ing his nephew's pWlontrophio - rpropensitte, would;
very likely, niake_a deep nnpression upon hi&
Summer and autumn were now over. Chnatrnas' -•
was apprwhitig.' There - had' been, es one lniiY
say, a 'cessation of hostilities. for wand' time, ,be
tween Uncld , and nephew, ; they- gradually . and r.
lianas npproaching each ,other ni the Ausit , of
Mutual good faith, still neit her of them
the propitious moment tor WhichlheY **" l/ . 4 1.**
and each was -beg'duling Mee „the o t r:ao Owt, 7
that they almost • fearecllormakte_ rmeakatone;
diiclosure, lest it should throw tEeig,
_infollok
state of - alienation which had Wit so • 'Painral to
bOtIL •
Edward frequent,';tholu rir iecret, Aglaia
Treriebant's. 404 the long, iffirtistir
Miner trouble) was rtznillar.ta.biln- • c# ll l lose
Of the five yearn Christmas Present, aid of;:
their fruitless conjectures ae - to whrithelentili**i:
lriendrcould brti' vrr
." dine , withus, ;Edward, Madam*
day r said-the mother " I have no doubt hakwO,
.haVo our ,usual dinner but at all - eferita:' ,. .yOO:
ill cother tclward promised, and . went 'home
determined that this should be the lasf , visii•he
Would pay to thiibeloved familywithrmthis driele's•
knowledge, for he would Palikelin epPortuiLify if he.-
did` not find one, that Very evening. The eyed;
ultele, too full o f the , delight of baying sent pita
OM more -bountifully aupplied hamper than usual;"
together -with ft, letter,Ut which we shall speak ,
anon, sat th at evening in, his rest/ *lnerant and,
slippers by the parlor fife., the very' image of mod,
hiunor, as his nephew . mitered: Thelre-inkroeit
briehtly, so did the larripi; tea came in, *bathe irrn:
bubbled and hiased, , ,andj though' there, were only
two men to pe?taire of this, *al, which secma,sq,
peculitirlY to require the prusence of crowed, yet
itwould'haVe been difficult to find a *dee bangle
. .
oil comfort thin it presented.
t" New," tbought_the . nephew, I will tell
'"Non-," thought the uncle, "I will; 9*-2„ 0 10
attack." Nevertheless, the tea: wa s arena hi,
• IT - nc!e -7 ", at length bgo the youngmenl- '-;
"My dear fellow,". interrnpted..the unele-:; but
go i on--what Were .yougolag to'a*Yr -,.
"I beg your pardon, my dear ter; after. ycoti,",
said Edward, with a ceremonious manner '74y . tita-4
usual to him.
" Well, my dear lad," began the uncle in good.
earnest, " I may as well tell you at first as-lasti r
I hare, often wished to tell you—l want to See you ,
married." •
flWery" Rtrlsl3ge.6 said the nephew, joyfully; Mit
I. was just going to tell you that I am very wuCb
disposed to get married." .
" What ! the deuce ; you have no girl in . ynur eye,
have you r asked he, as the idea struck him, that
perhaps Ms nephew might be engaged to some girl
at his native pia
" Yes, .1 have, repliei . l yilward,
what righTlia. • - - tryair-re-..-----,
" Nobody had so'great a right to choose ,
as myself," said Edward, astonished.
" Sir," returned his uncle raising himself in his chair
and 'looking very angry, . " I have chosen a wife for
you before I had seen you; don't interrupt me, - sir," [
said he, seeing his " nephew about to speak; "and I
should not have sent for, you if I bad not wititedi`
husband for this good little girl • It wasp° merit Of
yours that made me adopt you, but my esteem and
admiration for her ; and I hare made up my mind,
sir, either, you shall marry her, or she shall be my
heir 17' and with this the uncle crossed his legs, and
threw himself back in his chair, in a very deter
mined and dogmatical manner.
" Very extraordistary," said the nephew, in a
tone in which his wounded feeling , was very evident;
" butif that be the case, I must do th'e best_for
myself that I can; at the same time 'I must `may
that Tour ideas are arbitary_; I knew nothing'if
thed conditions, and I came to you in good faith
I wished to lore you as a fathecanil to serve yoji
di
, as aro obedient son ; and fathers' di, not Caunnonly
1, impose arives uponitheir son; besides," added'ila;
cheerfullv, as a new idea struck him;'' howdayou c
knowthat l
the •-,inroglidy you have done' me the, i
honor of selecting for me would like me r - ~ , .1, 1
" She would!" said the uncle; ' she's a good girlt,
one }list of your own sort;' fond of Temperance
Societies and Schools, and , such things.'—,-.,
I don't know one like herr - • "',
"Well, sii;" said the nephew, with hal rh . seine
on his lips, "if th&e be her recommendations,
..tha
girl that I wih to make my wife loves Temperance . ;
SocictieS mid IlaggedSehoolsalSo."
"The devil take herr said the , uncle, in great ' , ,
• wrath; On all at once he. fancied it - nirist be 'the
daughter of. Some of, thoseplulantroPhic 'people
who had been so assiduously courting Ids nephew's
abcpiaintatiBe; and of ivhom,he knew nathin l g; and
taking up his bed-candlestick; he wetly to his roam
without another word: , •
The next mrquiag his uncle, in- a much kindir,
voie than he eipeeted,,hiti him that hi liadinada
an engagenient t for Jinn to-dine out smith him - on
the morrow, anditerefore he benatithat tietroald'
be in readiness'tthe beau. which he named: 'Ed=
A v n - r d w a s en i•aird alfeady; he told his uncle in,-
a n d that ta a voice of as much conciliation as poi:
1. sme. Another r one drop to the - fall cup of his
uncle's . &pleasure ; and the .cu p,, as, usual, Bowed
over.
We said - that, a letter accomPipiled the hamper.
[ to Mrs. Trevisliara's this year ; if did so ; and aline
1 which.oceasioned: some oaken:tent:and anxiety ; it
said that the friend who had, for some . years ; ' die,
pleasure of sending this snisdl . pi'went, 'propos ed
' to eat 01 . 9, Christinits &drier with them on this, Oe- 1 . ,
~ . .
.. 1
' vision, itrid watild'alsa take the 'betty of bringi ng t - .6, 4 „, 'la 5ui50r. _,,, e0 , 1 4 0 4, e• f f .4 04 , 1 4 , 444,_
a you4X friend 3 1 7 6 11* The 'hand -writin g ' 44 ' *S ri - snake
stun
- itif - 7 ;-•liriatt-li •
unknown to ,fliem ; it. Was a very differed ' haii a . ta , t i osm , f a ...., n - . thry Axil, '"finite.,; , -' , a - m d e m
that which ha& been familiar Mrl * Tre ~
' ......: 1 ' 'Some lor - lio;i l. 4iitiPlA th4; l outrivetog
annex days: - Of coarse tbeY reitkr" •euar ; . •
,'l•;,' 1 - - J ''''' ; „
l a d t k Oa the i r kind' unknown •
_friend' and " laa. ''
',- -d : ,••• one day i in tisiiol44, 'bet.,: - ..V.,:." - ''t '''d;
uiporituur Yet Sin there was -wt , a .._'"_. 1 ..., ° ` 0, tiiiite , ; tO•sereist Sisk, er n statrat thii-iwiiit.ott
unmet in the bottom 'elf their hearts, 5.••".., .ituur t ai l _ Meted *oaf an 40 1,6,Abi nsiiiitic &jam*
it would turn out to , be. ' ',lt vie
• ,,somebody ~,,,,A • , .l ogi t a zil l fit e fke,,,„4oepirtk-Ailis
w h o wished ami4 . `Nrell, no,dciubt.; they yhe ~ - ;1;* , twii ii ed A ut , , , , c i n o m o ir: , : ,.... ..- ,-, . ..i.,
that it would prova to 4iii 'tine front w , " et 1-0 , .W , ' Ili
_nay' tor my, tale . 4. '''''irl . 01
would like to receive; a
.fiirce 'We always fea -- '' • in,ithe r - ti or iaddr.,l , -- - likiare O ,
i -
anxious when a myirteo;. however .araa4l; I .
.is alK:),t. i n; v 4 ; i t iir nier itly ; s ina •. 4 *onsittrt,
['to:be 501i44 ~ At All' eventli ikes mere Igian l a d '., l'• , , .pnii,ixietbettai -410n * At '.
~t , et "'
1 Edward Grey : woUldbo therOiand;lothe - suijr;,. 144 thialp in fieriAlitsi - ie - lthotalik‘..
Mond out to be wli*yer ho t!ight to - ISY: ':,fi'4',;',' lthoat hi' Un4l,'" ' ' •:thii c tleld'lii,
11,44,
agreed ,' t Kitty's
. eigsgeitent i' 3 zl a lal',l9 t. ,a7:, :Abbot : '"-• ',, _ *air '''' ilt**iirdiniarck - . , ,_.-'.
,i)isit
should . puti4 known IP Idin` - • "
ch --- - ' airy ',, afar% tiaogicOunfiigttikaiikMill' s
[ 71 , 4, e , ,„ w a frie 4 44,:srho had seat ,
____.., M9 18 ',._ titi r i ful-gtown, I bed4kkiirerat-- ' 4 1,,
I r ' tha4 his Alued iuppl 0 u; 11113 aaaa al atir a r l ea'-w- oiii -,-- unreel * , **lila" If Wale' , ' - ' 4
1 Ibe rr o the m ' for er.,..it Kro.'-', r-q_wird pro, , 4 ,,, _,„,,,,„ ; 5* ,,,,,, 14 - ~,,,,,,,,,- , „ v .:,
t h, 4 .
'ho , was there i : Iwo; stud 'visit - Wigetbei : - 1 ...„„a tew .ii i „ e i r ,, a , Al ., e i l zr-„,.p- , e, , , , f 40ffik.
• ' Wetl .he and; itt.„T tpok to tisk(' Vie-
sf . „'1 -...-... groin Milli
v,,, 1 pre, mabboria_liiiii - iriaA- ..:- , , ~ A ., - . . - , ' 7 ' -, t - i b e,, - **-:ii,, , ,
cdly, i , ';.rust - evetgraitensi ' - pogn, hip: ,• - •• - -k-, ,• -- Opc= trait aolvoltmegc:
EU”
Vi 14411-141 7 . fleYeqtY. - rounk a- eat . • lial -., ;.,ti, shinty-40 , ,
.. _
~
..,,,
tile,parl r4ui veil, .., Yet lb% lias s ll ,e it** ~!-'l * ~ 7,st 1,40 1 45 -- . - I =ifsr* l •i : -i
-4'l
Want ii do Geri . ,W.M_M lAA,' ever' IFDA set r , _-..,..:1rrie1t.A. ,„,,,„1,1 4 ,,„... ~.i
*stow kid. - Mrs:,
~' ..ithatti * luidgot - iiso* - ';'"a , ' ' aa t alcanf!,'n.,,,...ri t itv . .4± . - dipi. ,
l ib. ttiencb.* it'it'stiVellkillr,.o!All in l 4' /4 1 4' T'.• ' . 4,l r e to ' ! s r u ir , " ; m il t: 6 o oo4*o -:-,
i,,,
ott l 4
the cliry• mak as,to , sahl6;l9o ell hysiirtifeltri I ) ralne, redf ! aiwar*irsl4i , , :
~ , 4 ,..,,,,,_
-' - '' i • - ' ''' 4' ~ •t' ,^ t . 0--, r ~ ,
- :., 7 . -..
i•••, - ; - ,;.••.:. -0 ,.• :•. •-•,:. • ~:-.,)4Vt-'-':..,-.
, i•att%Prt • sr: I
:•%== - f.ikz" ; ;
%
! . 1.• - ••Pp. '
.
, , . :fi , - . - 7,
f 7: ;',.., .: !.2.41 . 1.1:.t... y:;.•;1
'NVMBER- f i2Or=o l .'',„;;,
them iras a Atte ,Aamaille tebleidathaineAdenrith,
napkins as 3 ,71 1it0' a* A llov 6 lal l 4lo lftt l ttf4
whichlad lielOugnd te th ' . -hini'dy - in its
_x i
and bright elms and
}, w ater let,
claret , . i Ai had. Mae :007 gik ' 4 1 16 011 , 11 ,
sp k re
:the :last haulm Peat- , 1 wlnt-iguarsato,
dutch for a 40ren,*014001.11,..14344)PRP.i,
guest could
_only eipecti fber l •• ~ ,„fiAdisn, ) l
however tateetedlive-` * 't ,-' ~- . ~' t
It grew- dusk, and AtimiAnaltke4P VWllll ,4 oherel
drawn down ; it 4 - the hearts of
Mr& 'l'reeishaei sod herVd eee Niiiiior,
se, no doubt, wont 4 - GektfiPadriiethigerl
his " c le___ t Or iv ing i42u.t r 4,1 2 1 .1 10404 - 1
Inc cab, &km ma v." wis io ,MtSi 6 , t
to make IsinnielViety- Vai,
The cab leo ripoisl the Tt s k - g 4 l***Kll4lhyl
Vt
:house -doge ' 4 Pliwid .it law* ililatillatia
Emu's ; one wassibed tat the lafidsw i
into the parlor,litti*Oe T iatenttlettlei • '
little wal i•- s s"auV,st°f'd i ithLthtktrta,k
and Dlrs . TreViEshaineaw4h4F ft Tl y`few.
s ial
gedseinlneediaf 'rev, and - .
gentlnian, bottened. lu in b :tisha . iiii!a_ooiii•ft ,
with atekmailstenetd 1 3044 ,4 ShilfteMtibibilla C,
1
iaet who he was . , IS , felt flOcktidopArlY: v ~CA ' i
and h'r., We must. eorifels* . atiYather"er, I
an yet ; as I have odd twins-WA tivtated. ,
h eleser and be laid -pdikititAtat' dailie: 1
whickhe now (atne*Citi Vi 1 q.:7 n-d - r. ~,,,wa,..:,-, i . ,
Mrs, Tievisbam stood at theparlar jo i r,e l l
(mice him ;he took eft* his hat;in-t* -- ki - sat
..,
need trithlikunieVeredtenil biddintatitie
r ibs tart at once who it-w herewnoldlisehelAtts
dversary of her hualnuldl 4
asirs4P 119:41410-
l i r arer , t ' .1.,.• ~,-7' , -,..-., ,
n I feel %pelf rather to j an , Ilarkinta .' ' I
y cigar madam," he l ibesitan l- .but noissOW
tend. these word)„thsn 440, Oxey ,
from the side of rlttrut thelparloilins3nal
helloed, imelainlci, uttocibleiainediheirisesti
is it YoUr - ,4 1 'r 1 't. ''' raS 0+4.0 153407 1
" 4 1 4 is this You E 4 ws ?"I: 6 MLANII. 2I I I -kels
n ame you here r .
,_,-- . 4 , ....,
.... I never was so glad ' in `My' Ilfe, gelll "Zt 4
d, helping: his uncle off iirithiiii etiW, thiiiisf
great light began to days in his seira, , s ‘„! ~,a
"I declare I doulknavrhow Worms, my pleasure
tliink of_ itieetinil yon.midst - , lisaC *VI
. ees
p in the world,n t ... - 0 1,„,
.• , ~,., , ,fi. ~3 - 3,0 1 i
I u And to think Of i trientuer
,ipsii - ;,,f,,,,robpped, )
the - unele. 'Von resist. exerqe - me r lit "_ . dni'litail- '
1 1 1 .
ame,"-sidd he; turning to - Mr% t iiitt - Vi
then sat.down in a-large doll'.-by _ ' '
tro. overcome- )fra Tre i vntham cyw *as)
•
, • k i ..., 1„,. 1,;4+4,11
"My good ladyr at length lie aw, i / lea Molr
as if ' I had done very wrong; I mtglWeibEtof haVe 4
been so abrupt I have do4e the:lath* flitiogi
clumsily." ,
Mrs. T • rovishanv said Artily ithat,itigsk" erther ex.
frame Rimini tettnd that -- zde* l 3lyo 1 / 4 4 141 .°
their friend for so many yeaiii , _
_,.. • 6 ' *
It was new Witty's' tarn td - iornefersnuatiwaligi'
recognised in hint the kinti , iiteoraztbramitic
sAnn
- r -:
cs 11 12 470 4 be
Ino - ,l l lt"Vdelfaitli.;)lAL
•- - - - • :f
an • You, ',ltheve all, have k rig tto knee , ' sm.; Se
crei. This is ray *Minced wif lett us lunito *ff.., ,
bleiwire 1 1 I • ..'., • .._-:- 3-:4=... , .. -
E 2, 3
le uncle took the two clasped bendt is 1 4.4.44;
pi them warmly, but he iiidd i?otit mill; -, -- .
' ex WILS placed" on the *Si ' -Mi 'starlit'
te i
wit their two hands.-in his.; bo Wiped *oink'
from his eyes, "and. then, k
../ rho :thoorfn -.
voi possible, said that theyiwbuld now„go t tp.dirii t
ner !for that he was kung•, an 4 kfier
. .. er they would talk about thp.„4 t..*'''''.'' l '... 1 -e"
•fter chnner,..whot theliessert was' aethirtablel
ho . (merry the , uncle was a Ara-espense , o7:hisi
n,.. ew ;Ind he : told how ho hoil".. l *--, .4 2 *: to ' 1
wit . the doCtoi;* and heard abeid ', iuid i , ..„
Ra 1 d &hoot - aid hour' he th; lirigrie&it — otaist
r.: her anefferitinisolt-itad thrills) 4 ,•:'.:loi
of ~ '.. for his nepbew,andrthinfk6.3l,%
ty .. thp was. 4 very Obeli:lrak i nil! A ,": 1 7, ..,4'lli
that he could k not be guided by his goc.,4*.nnele
wli. meant so welt by-tddi i'ind thew FAH . - gitWbiii,T
to .whiin howit was thtriosing'o his sititeliksiiret' it:(
had brought him aequifrdo4o4. - mair: - . kirsi
haPP 'they bad bPoll., .eve 3 iobi4o*lfithe '' ,4% i
draw • . - and ihat WaS; hisnikla i jastinclti . , --
tetniteied , .. 'tire Man, Who givO#d'imft anise .•
nephew o wished tate se, detitaViii :Usk •the 7
n
' to choose a wileforimalkaisd- , tiPlit , thili
said;'wicked uncle had nearl y WIMP 449 Ag uai Vo
! h by quarreling Witt him Atka Itis
~ ,
~ _
_,
wire. ' „
1 re Was a Aar sif liingtitiii,itid ° m*Alit j ' -
though it was only 'a of folir;
.tt Christmas party; bob ist7ltritktivongisietpEnc
g,_4, 2 _43 „ r _ l3 '4_
_err-. iiic
to ,_rakar___ i aalsare I*, 10 .. 7 Yei arkekktkita
I C3 PF Unt ''' s U " .. ' i ll 11 4: :, -
ter this day t he emigpie--11.i.liskr10,1yporP,.
4 ii
so e ceedingly irtuotab''opci greasily, tbk r eeerr,
taint would butvelbeeoinedeetir.r
'Jose Hillard insisted :alt; iserrebrisir et .
"Zit I; .flo , l l Ao • re4alWilliggili .1ii4r.... -./;...: 1 ,:,-,..,
, 1 riminoPeoPkiivedinil ' flgt, l l4o-diaxaa., i.
ba not tar frara th e re- isige ..allas , ~,,
br .
~,,e„,''Still kept on the cc. 4though shi'Veis
- not nth breve; for Kitty and '-basi#OditedistesP
an being - mostly with them::. _Wary' orten i ctorro
Mr. gibikr4 It as there and. 44430 410 1 1r.t..
grown so`wise as not teettie toi,,==kolOt . ,
say when a good action siia big e 11, _ hentadeiip
Ilis mind' to Peiinado th 6 widow ' SO`give
IIoP‘IIM cottage altogether , • Itad-ramie lailia SW=
lagi*O. h 904 A tim,ohltrs,i4Mo4.` Wk. ~#4l - - t oltel.i\
ivredgill ooo r , mld iho. Olriito - 14-,..4r...Nrerr
lenteti - ' l W.r en the "nth .4 Dece:mberitSlV
1 ...., ~ :. • t, 1----... , :-..%,1-4 , ~ A.-: -1•11?-0 ir,:r
tufu,h9usq
1 - dinner
e c ii
,
i sib
f sick
1 tor
Tv „twit
tlia
tfrjjeZlirt ' I
MMSM