1? - , villi .- ... C VOL. XI. NEW BLOOMFIELD, PA., TUESDAY, JANUAltY 23, 1877. NO. 4L 1 V : '?ti fccmawj frlSKP -v rarfv IVVYiA arm. v l l T a mm mm n m it mm r. m Blips ma v m I i.i II l' MJ IS 1 IV. I Itt I H 1 B't 1 II IL" .- V ' . V - THE TIMES.' Aa Independent Family ' Newspaper, ' 18 lUBLTSnsn BVItRT TUESIUT BT ' F. MORTIMER & CO. Subscription Prloe. Within the County ... " " Blx months, Cut of the County, Including postage. " " " six months T' . (1 V 75 . J 50 85 Invariably in Advanoe I Advertising rntes furnished upon appli cation. Helecit 'Poeti'y. The Washerwoman's Song.. In ft. Very humble cot, In a rather quiet spot, In the suds and In the soap Worked a woman full of hope Working, singing, all alone, In a sort of undertone, " With a Saviour for a friend, He will keep me to the end." Sometimes happening along I bad heard the semi-song, And I often used to smile, More In sympathy than guile, But I never said a word, 'In regard to what I heard ; As she sung about her friend Who would keep her to tho end. Not In sorrow nor In glee Working all day long was she, As her children threo or four, Flayed around her on the floor t Bat in monotones the song She was humming all day long, " With a Bavlour for a friend, He will keep me to the end." It's a song I do not stng, For I scarce believe a thing Of the stories that are told Of the miracles of old ; But I knew that ber belief Is the anodyne of grief, And will always be a friend That will keep her to the end. Just a trifle lonesome she, Just as poor as poor could be, But her spirits always rose, Like the bubbles In the clothes, And though widowed and alone, Cheered'her vith the monotone , Of a Saviour and a friend Who would keep her to the end. 1 have seen her rub and rnb, On the washboard in the tub, While the baby sopped In suds, Rolled and tumbled in the duds, . Or was paddling in the pools, With old scissors stuck in spools, Bho fctill bumming of ber friend Who would keep her to the end. Unman hopes and hnman creeds Have fhelr root in human acds, And I wonld not wish to strip From that washerwoman's lip, Any song that she can sing, Any hope that songs can bring. For tke womau has a friend That will keep her to the end. , A WOMAN'S SECRET. A Story of the Revolution. , , CONCLUDED. ANOTHER day and still another had paused away. Ferguson and Lynd ay bad successively taken the field against the ghost but none would come when they did call for him. Old Jamai ca was the only spirit that was raised, and tobacco-smoke was the only intangi ble essence that infested them. What was to be done now r" It was plain that the ghost was more than a match for them. They believed that they might be his masters in the field but he cer tainly had the advantage of them in the strategy which avoids the presence of a superior enemy. They felt,in the slight est degree in the world, like fools, that they should Lave lost their natural rest for three nights, and expended a degree of skill and energy sufficient to have raised the siege, and all for nothing. Friday night was come. The morrow was the fatal Saturday, when the orderly-book roust be found, or the loss re Krted at bead-quarters. The confeder ates sat rather gloomily over their wine at Ferguson ' lodgings for Ferguson was a married man, and did not live at mess and considered with themselves what was to be done next. " You have not won your supper at the Dragon yet, doctor," said Ferguson " The ghost does not m-m'to regard you with any more favor than the rwt of g. " The Ides of March are not past yet, my friend," observed the doctor. " I shall have a double chance, as I shall keep watch the last night of the slege,as well as the first. You Cannot tell what this night may bring forth." 1 Bo you are not discouraged, I am glad to find," said Ingrain, "and still hold to your intention forthenlght. But don't you intend to ' go to Miss Cluir- mont's this evening t I know you are invited, and your watch can begin after the party ends." ' Not I, indeed," responded the son of Galen, not I, indeed. I am not quite boy enough for that. It is all well enough for you youngsters, who have no turn for rational pursuits but a pipe and a tankard for me, against all the gatherings together of flirting boys' and girls, and gambling papas and mammas, that were ever held. I shall repair to my post early in the evening, and main tain it unreduced and unterrified." " And 'faith! I believe that I will bear you company, doctor," said Ferguson. My wife has not got over the cold she got at that sleighing party, and intends going to bed instead of the party." ' Do so, by all means," replied Hol- combe, " and I dare say that, besides having a rational time together ,we shall have a good account to give of the ghost by the time these boys are ready to come home ; only, I suppose, if we see the ghost both at the same time, you will expect to go snacks in the supper." ' To be sure I shall," said the major, laughing, " we will be partners in the battle and in the spoils." The party soon after dispersed and went their several ways. And it will not surprise my readers to learn that In gram's way led him to the residence of Helen. He just looked in to see if he could be of any service. He found the fair girl in some little perturbation. "What goes wrong, my love?" he inquired" has the governor sent an excuse, or has la belle Wilton turned sulky and refused to come V" " Worse than either, I assure you, Charles," she replied. " I could spare a dozen governors and beauties better than black Domingo, who has Beclected this particular occasion to fall sick, and to throw me back on the mercies of James, who is hardly equal, as you know, to such an emergency." " That is unlucky, Indeed," said In gram, " but my Jonn is quite at your service, such as he is ; and he is certain ly competent to the ministerial, if not to the executive, duties of such an Occa sion." " Thank you," she answered, "he will be of great use, and I gladly accept your offer. But what will the doctor and Major Ferguson do without him to at tend them since you say that they are determined not to smile upon me V" " O, never fear for them," replied In-. gram ; " John shall brew them a double supply of punch, and leave their supper ready laid for them, and they can wait upon themselves fast enough. They are too old campaigners to be disconcerted by a trifle." " They shall be better treated than they deserve, then, for not coming to me," said she, " for I will send poor Peter over to them with their supper, and with a bowl of punch I have been superintend ing myself for the evening. So you will be good enough to let me have John as soon as you can spare him." 1 " He shall be at your command di rectly," he replied, " as soon aa he can put himself in proper trim. Peter will answer all the purpose for the doctor and Ferguson." " After a few more passages between the lovers, which I do not think particularly concern my readers, the captain took his leave of his ladye-love, and proceed. ed to his quarters. I beg that no unkind imputations may be laid upon my Helen in consequence of her holding this fes tivity on the eve of the important Sat urday, for the arrangements had been made for it before she knew any thing of her lover's troubles. And as they were still a secret, and as she had as yet no acknowledged interest In them. If they were public, there was obviously noth Ing to be dons but to go on. But the dear girl had suffered great distress and anxiety about it, especially as the week drew to u end without any tidings of the missing volume. But she had put a good face upon the matter, and would go through her hospitable duties with the best grace she could. In thof e days the hour for the assem bling of company was a very different one from that which now brings a party together. Before seven o'clock the rooms were filled. I cnnnot stop now to describe, (though description Is my forte,) the beauty nnd splendor of tho scene. We have nothing in these days, excepting the awkward imitation of a fancy ball, that approaches the gloris of the days of brocades and scarlet cotits, of gold lace and gold buttons, of dia mond buckles and steel-hilted rapiers that looked like diamonds, of powder and high-heeled shoes. Ah I' those' were times when you knew gentleman by his coat, and were not obliged to cypher him out by his conduct or his conversa tion ! The company were received by Mr. and Miss Clnirmont. with all the cere mony of the old time. I have not In troduced Mr. Cluirmont to the reader aa yet, simply for the want of time. As he made no objection to .Ingram's pro posals when they were laid before him,, only declining to rallfy the engngement formally, until the consent of Sir Ralph had been received, and as I therefore, could make no use of him in the only way fathers can be suocessfuly managed as cruel tyrants trampling on the young affections of their daughters, I have had no occasion to mention him. He would have been well worth your knowledge, however, as a favorable specimen of the old pre-revolutlonary New England gentleman. But I have no time left for you to cultivate his acquaintance. The fact is, I want three volumes to make use of my materials. Maga is very good but, like Chanticleer in the fable, " she Is not enough." All that was eminent in rank or station, civil or military, all that waB brilliant in beauty and attractive in manners, that the besieged town could command, was gathered together on that gny evening. Youth and dancing, old age and cards, were in happy proximity. And whatever there might be of love about the former conjunction, there was certainly nothing of it in the latter. Mrs. Battle, herself, never despised play ing cards for love more heartily than the former generation of Boston dowagers. Gaming was in those days almost as much a necessity of life, as drinking. At the proper time, when supper was announced, His Excellency led the pro cession, bearing aloft the fair hand of his lovely hostess, and not tucking it under his arm like a walking-stick, or a wet umbrella. The tables were loaded with the choicest viands and the rarest wines " and all went merry as a mar riage bell." White these festive proceedings were going on, in the next house Doctor Hol combe and Major Ferguson were whillng away the hours as best they might, in such talk as the garrison and the mess afforded. The punch-tankard stood be tween them upon a little table, and filled up many pauses in their conversation. As they lazily puffed out the smoke from their mouths, they thought with satis faction of the wisdom of their choice. The distant hum of the party, and the music, only enhanced the solitary satis faction. At length, a tap was heard at the door, which opening, admitted the sable form of poor Peter' to whom, we introduced our reader in the second chap ter. He entered the loom' with a dogged and almost unconscious air of stupidity, bearing a basket ' in either hand, from one of which he produced Mme elegant extracts from the great supper, and from the other a fresh flagon of the most de licious punch that they had ever dream ed of, and, besides, two bottles of the celebrated old Madeira, which had " put a girdle round the earth" la its travels, and knew more years than I dare men tion. It is hardly necessary to sriy, that as soon as Peter had disposed of these edibles and potables upon the table and reti red., the friends drew up to it and commenced an assault upon its contents which did infinite honor to their milita ry education. The flagon was jn con stant requisition, and was pronounced nectar worthy of the Hebe who had dis pensed it. Then, after their supper was finished, they uncorked the wine, and, drawing up to the fire, set In for serious drinking.. They were seasoned vessels; but, I am sorry to say, that in due time. the liquor began to make' Inroads upon their brains, and to set their tongues in perpetual motion. They told excellent stories, only forgetting the point; but this, as they both talked at once, was of the less consequence. The doctor grew professional, and the major musical. The one described operations, and the other broke down In the midst of songs, all of which he aung to the tune of " Bonnie ioo." Their eyes began to glaze, and their tongues to trip. They were not at all surprised at seeing duplicates of all the objects in' the room , nor at finding themselves stopping short In the midst of their stammering sentences. In short, I grieve to relate It, they were getting very drunk. ' I say doctor, "stniumered the major, won't yon take another glass of ghost l" "Dn the ghost 1" hiccoughed the doctor. " I do be-bclleve you're dr-drunk! I should like to sec the gh-ghoRt that would face me n-now." " Suppose you sec, doctor whether the door's drunk ;" said the major "it loo&s d d tottering to me !" The doctor laid his course for the door, and, after a few judicious tacks, succeed ed In making it. It was slightly ajar, so he shut and locked it meandered back, to his jltalr saying: " You'll have to c-come through th k-key hole, to-night, m-my friend if you o-couie at all." Having with great generalship re covered his seat, thes attempted to re- Rume their " rational enjoyment" and Improving conversation. But nature was too strong for them ; and it was not many minutes before they were both fast asleep in their chairs. I am sorry tosay that such scenes were not so rare, ot so discreditable in those three-bottle days, as they have happily since become ; and the sight of two middle-aged gentlemen drunk on either sldeof a fire-place would have been no astonishing sight on hun dred years ago l How long it was after this point of their adventures, I cannot exactly tell- but It was not long before the men who were keeping guard were alarmed by a loud and most startling noise In the haunted chamber. They all wished in continently to the door, and hard with in the Bounds of a clamorous struggle. The ghost was evidently caught at last. But it was also plain that he was fight ing for his life. He was game to the last. He was apparently almost a match for his two adversaries, for loud cries re sounded through the house. "Here he Ib, d n him!" "I've got html" "By , he's ehoklng me V "Murder! murder!" "Help! help.!' " Where are you, you scoundrels r" All attended by a running accompaniment of furniture breaking, and chairs tumb ling into chaotic heaps. The men tried In vain to open the door, when Ingram rushed up stairs in bot haste, having been summoned, by his own dlrecllon,at the first alarm. " Where are vour muskets, man " he cried. In stronn excitement. " The bloody rebels are murdering them! Dsh open the door with the butt-eadsl" Seizing a musket he suited the action to the word, and the door wos soon bro ken down though not without dlfflcul tv. as doors were then. Ttw scene was frightful. The furniture was overturned. The lights were out ; audi lying, on the floor, cither mortally wounded or ex hausted bv a fruitless stsupgle, lay the watchmen of the night. , ." Where is the vlllai V" cried Ingram rushing into the room. " Here's the scoundrel !" cried tbedoc- tor, laying hold of tae major. " This is the infernal rascal !" bellow ed the major, seizUg the unhappy Hol- com.be by the threat. And as they snook each other, they vainly endeavoaed to rise from among the wreck of things that surrounded them. . ! v ! ' , It needed im conjurer to. tell how the matter stood. Ingram sank into a ehair which, fortunately, bad survived the fray, and made the whole house ring with interminable peals of laughter. His followers could not resist the contagion, which was made the more irresistable by the drunken gravity of the two heroes, who sat like many tipsy Marluses amid the ruins of another Carthage. You would have thought that a legion of laughing Imps had taken possession of the mansion, and were consecrating it to their service. As soon as Ingram could command his voice, he gave directions to the men to separate the unlucky ghost-seers, and to carry then! carefully to bed. Then. taklmga candle he surveyed the prospect oeiorenim. rue emptied nagons anilbro kenbottles sufficiently accounted for the scene be had just witnessed.; He glanced Iil3-eye upon the table, Hta color chane- edj. He started Ssrward.. TliEitK LAY? 3JE OjtDERLY-RaOK 1 : Two or three years had. passed, away, and a happy 'family -party, were assem bled around a Christmas fire ati Hazle weod, the seat oftthe iDgraras Vigor ous) age and blooming infancy clustered around the hearth, bub the centre of the circle was Charles Ingram andhia lovely Helen. He had consented, reluctantly. t retire from tbearmyt that.be, might sustain the dec3ttlng.years ot his parent. He had brought his wife, with him, and there they sat, as happy and beloved, a pair as ever lived. and iovsda The evening had been epedaway with games and gambols. At last,- the sports were over, and the party, closing round the firebrands, yielded to the. inspiration of the hour, and vied with each other in tables of diablerie. At last, Charles Is coaxed to narrate his AtVentiue. He told it well, and was rewarded by alternating deep-drawn breaths of interest, and by peals of laughter- Bui the mystery still remained unsolved. WWle they, were all offeri'ig their several) explanations, ' Ingram exclaimed ; " I would pay down. a handsome re ward to. any, one wlv. would tell me where tbat book was during those four days!" ' And would yoa grant an amnesty," asked Helen, " to. all concerned, if you could know it i"' " TJbat I'wouhH with all imy heart for the excellence of the joke, row. thai no misohlef came c it redeems its .roguish- . nesa." "Then .lean easily satisfy, youi, my dear," resumed his wife Itiwus all the time in my drawing-tab! drawer." There- was nouoment of silent- "aston-. iabmentj and then Ingram, exclaimed . " In your drawer ! . VHby,wera you the ghost, Helen?" " Not exactly," she replied.; u but I had an AfrHe that dl(my. willi quite as well as an ghost could do." " What do you. mean, my lower"' in quired hen husband " You ar jesting. What A arlte do yoa mean?"' " You. remember-poor Peten'rv" He nodded asseat. " Woll, he was the, ghosts sd none but he. I never meant to tell, the story, but it is. too gootl a joke to. be. kept to oneself." " Iflut how V What- kad. you to do wlth.it ?" " Reniembe your, f noclamatlon of arrmesty, and It will bill you. You know that ha was tie servant of the ' Vaughns"" " No," Interrupted Charles, " I knew no such thinir only that he belonged to a family that had left the town." "True, she reswrned; I remember that I kept back taai particular, for fear of exciting your suspici. But their servant ho was, and. treated with merited kindness for tho service done his mas ter, walch resuUed in disordering his poor brain. A iter; be came to live at my fathex's, he saver setned to feel at home, but would often, wander away at nlg.it. I suspected, that his resort was to bis old master's house, and that it was his prowling about it that gave it its bod name. But s the officers who. first occupied it were not especially pleasant neighbors, I did not interfere with bis amusements. But when you. came, my dear " " You took uue under your protection, and I thank yewt," said Charles, laughing- "Certainly, I did," she continued, " but I thought he inh;ht just try your courugo for one night. I hud him wutch ed out of the house by my uuiid, and, from the glee In which he returned, I had no doubt of his entire success. That was the first night" " But pray tell me," asked her hu. band, " how be performed the feat, If you happen to know. He must have had wlugs, though I never saw them." "That I cau," she replied. 'Poor refer was a native African, and was as agile as a monkey, though you would not think so to look at him. He could go up the side of a house by tbespout.or the slightest Inequalities, like a cat. When you heard lit hi walking over your