THE TIMES NEW BL00MF1ELB, PA., Al'ltlL 3, 1877. A WOMAN'S VOW. A LAWYER'S STORY. CONCLUDED. EVEHY professional niftn will umler itand me when I nay I whs glad to hear this. Hitherto the girl's w him and the murder apponred to me two event connected only by the accident of occur rence on the same day. Now there was but one mystery to solve. Whatever success I have bad In my practice has been due to my habit of basing my theories upon the known character of the parties Implicated, and not upon more palpable accidental cir cumstances. Left to myself now, I speedily resolved this case into a few suppositions, positive tome as facts. The girl had been present at the murder. Hue was net naturally reticent ; was in stead an exceptionally confiding, credu lous woman. Her motive for silence, therefore, must have been a force brought to bear on her at the time of the murder stronger than her love for Merrick, and which was still existing and active. Her refusal to meet her lover I readily Inter preted to be a fcarof her own weakness lread lest she should betray this secret to him. Might not her refusal to marry liltu be causal by the same fear V some crushing disgrace or misery which threatened her through the murder, and which she feared to bring upon her bus Iwrnd ? 1 he motive I had guessed to be utrong as her love ; hnt If it were her lover" Having stepped from surmise to surmise eo far, I paused to strengthen my position by the facts. There were but two ways In whicli this murder could have prevented her marriage through Merrick's guilt or her own. His innocence was proven ; hers I did not doubt after I had again carefully studied her face. Concealed guilt leaves Its se cret signature upon the mouth and eye in lines never to be mistaken by a man who has once learned to read them. Were there but these two ways ? There was a third, more probable than either J'rar. At the first presentation of this key to the riddle the whole case mapped itself out before me. The murderer had wealed her lips by some threat. Ho was wtill living, and she was in daily expec- ' uition of meeting him. Bhe had never neen his face, but had reason to believe him of her own class, (this supposition I based on her quick, terrified Inspection of every man's face,, who approached her.) Now what threat could have been wtrong enough to keep a weak girl silent for years, and to separate her from her lover on their wedding day I I knew women well enough to say, none against ' herself; the threat I believed hung over Merrick's head, and would be fulfilled if she betrayed the secret, or married him, which, with a weak, loving woman,was equivalent, as any man would know, to betrayal. I cannot attempt to make the breaks in this reasoning solid ground for my readers ; it was solid ground for me. The next morning Bearsley met me on leaving the breakfast table. He held an open letter in his hand, and looked annoyed and anxious. "Here's a note from Merrick. He sailed a week sooner than he expected has left New York, and will be here to night. If I had only put the case into your hands earlier ! I had a hope that you could clear the little girl. But it's too late. She'll take flight as soon as he hears he As coming. SchefTer says it's a miserable, bloody muddle, and that I was wrong to stir it up." "I do not agree with Dr. SchefTer," I naid quietly. " I am going now to the library. In half an hour send Miss Waring to me." " You have not yet been, presented to her?" "So much the Utter. I wish her to regard me as a lawyer simply. State to her as formally as you choose who I am, .liid that I desire to see heron business. " I seated myself In the library ; placed jmmi and ink, and -some legal-looking document), selected at random, before me. Red tape and the formal pomp of taw constitute half Its force with women and men of Louisa's calibre. I had hardly arranged myself and my materi uls when the door slowly opened, and she entered, fehe wasalarmed, yet wary To see a naturally hearty, merry little iKMly hubjected for years to this nervous strain, with a tragic idea forced into a brain meant to be busied only with dress, cookery or babies, appeared to me a piti ful thing. V Miss Waring V" reducing the ordi nary courtesies to a curt, grave nod. 'Bc Heated, if you please." I fumed over my papers slowly, and then looked up ut her. I had, X saw none of the com mon, feminine shrewdness to deal with; need expect no subtle devices of conceal ment ; no clever doublings; nothing but sheer obstinacy, which is an unlntel lectual woman m on resource. I would ignore it and her boldly assume full possession of the ground at the first word. " My errand to thU house,MisH Waring Is In part the investigation of a murder in IH54, of which you were the note wlt iip that of Houston Slmms" " I stopped. The change In her face appalled ine. She had evidently not ex pected so direct an attack. In fact, Beardsley told tre afterward that it was . the first time the subject hud been broached to her in plain words. How ever, she made no reply, and I proceeded. In the same formal tone : " I shall place before you the facta which are in my possession, and require your Assent to such as are within your knowledge. On the afternoon of Tues day, October fi, 1854, Houston SI mm left the Pine Valley station, carrying a valise containing a large sum of money. You " Hhe bad been sitting on the other side of the table, looking steadily at me. She rose now. She wore a blue morning dress, with lace ruffles and other little fooleries In which women delight, and I remember being shocked with the strange contrast between this frippery and the speechless dread and misery of her face. She gained control of her Voice with difficulty. " Who has said that I was u witness of the murder V she gasped. " I always explained that I was in another part of the wood. I went to aunty Huldah " " I'ray do not interrupt me, Miss Waring. I am aware that you were the witness the sole witness In this mat ter." (She did not contradict me. I was right in my first guess she had been alone with the murderer.) " On return ing fiom your nurse's cabin you left the direct path and followed the sound of angry voices to the gorge by Mill's Spring " I did not go to play the spy. Helled when he sold that," she cried feebly. " I heard the steps, and thought Colonel Merrick had come to search for me." ;' That matters nothing. You saw the deed done. The old man was kllled.aud then robbed, In your sight" I came to ward her, and lowered my voice to a stern, Judicial whisper, while the poor girl Blirank back as though I w ere law itself uttering judgment upon her. If the had known what stagey guess-work It all was ! "When you were discovered the murderer would have shot you to insure your silence." " I wish he had. It was Thad who would have done that. The white man's way was more cruel oh, God knows It was more cruel I" (There were two then.) I was very sorry for the girl, but I had a keen pleas ure in the slow unfolding of the secret, just as I suppose the physician takes do- light in the study of a new disease, even if it kills the patient. " Yes," I said with emphasis. " I be lieve that it would have beeu less suffer ing for you, Miss Waring, to have died then than to have lived, forced as you were to renounce your lover, and to carry about with you the dread of the threat made by those men." " I have not said there was a threat made. I have betrayed nothing," She had seated herself some time before by the table. There was a large bronze Inkstand before her, and as she listened bug arranged a half dozen pens evenly on the rest. The words she heard and spoke mattered more to her than life or death ; her features were livid as those of a corpse, yet her hands went on with their mechanical work one pen did not project a hair's breath beyond the other. We lawyers know how common such puerile, commonplace actions are in the supreme moments of life, and how selti dom men wring their hands, or use tragic gestures or indeed words. " No, you have betrayed nothing," I said calmly. "Your self-control bos been remarkable, even when we remem ber that you believed your confession would be followed by speedy vengeance. not on your bead, but Colonel Mer rick's." She looked up not able to speak for a minute. "You you know ally" " Not all, but enough to assure you that your time of suffering is over. You can speak freely, unharmed." Her head dropped on the table. She was crying, and, I think, praying. " You saw Houston Slmms killed by two men, one of whom, the negro Thad you knew. The white man's face was covered. You did not recognize him. But he knew you, and the surest way to compel you to silence. I wish you now to state to me all the details of this man's appearance, voice and manner, to show me any letters which you have received from him since" (a random guess, which I saw hit the mark)" in short, every circumstance which you can recall about him." She made no reply. "My dear Miss Waring, you need have no fear on Colonel Merrick's ac count. The law baa taken this matter out of your hands. Colonel Merrick is protected by the law." '"Oil did not understand," meekly. To be brief, she told ' me the whole story. When she reached the spring she had found the old man bleeding and still breathing. He died in her arms The men, who had gone back into the laurel to open the valise, came back up on her. The negro was a desperate rhatacter, well known in the county. He had died two years later. The other man was masked and thoroughly dis guised. He had stopped the negro when he would have killed her, and after a few ' minutes' consultation had whispered to him the terms upon which she wan al lowed to escape. " You did not hear the white man's voice y" " Not once." " Bring me the letters you have re ceived from him." She brought two miserably spelled and written scrawls on soiled bits of poper. It was the writing of an educated man, poorly disguised. He threatened to meet her speedily, warned her that he had spies constantly about her. ' That is all the evidence you can give mey All." She rose to go. I held the door open for her, when she hesitated. " There was something more a mere trifle." " Yes. But most likely the very thing that I want." - " I returned to the spring again and again for months afterward. People thought I was mad. 1 may have been ; but I found there one day a bit of red dish glass with a curious mark on it." "You have it herey" Site brought it to me. It was a frag ment of engraved sardonyx, apparently part of a seal ; the upper part of the head was cut upon it ; the short hairs curving forward' on the low forehead showed that the head was that of Her cules. Some old recollection rose in my brain beginning, as I may suy, to gnaw uncer tainly. I went to my room for a few minutes to collect myself, and then sought Beardsley. He was pacing up and down the walk to the stables, agitated as though he had been the murderer. ' Well, Floyd, well I What chance is there ' What have you discovered '" " Everything. One moment. I have a question or two to ask you. About ten years ago you commissioned me to buy for you in New York a seal an Intaglio of great value a head of Hercules, as I remember. What did you do with it V" " Gave it to Job SchefTer, William's father. Will has it now, though I think it is broken. " Very well. What have Dr. Schefl- cr's habits beeii lately,by the way f Was he as fond of turning the cards as the other young fellows y" " Oh,-yes, poor boy I There was a ru mor some years ago that lie was fright fully involved in Baltimore that it would ruin the old man, In fact, to clear off his debts of honor. But it died out. I suppose William found some way of straightening them out. - "Probably. Where is Dr. SchefTer now y I have a message for him." " In his room. But this matter of Louisa Waring " "Presently. Have patience." I went up to the young man's room After all, the poor wretch was dying, and to compel him to blast his own honora ble name seemed but brutal cruelty. I had to remember the poor girl's wasted face and hopeless eyes before I could summon courage to open the door after I had knocked. I think he expected me, and knew all I had to say. A man in health would soon have known that I was acting on surmise, and defied me to the proof. SchefTer, I fancied, hod been creeping through life for years with death In two shapes pursuing him, step by step. He yielded, cowed submissive at the first touch, and only pleaded feebly for mercy. The negro hud been his body servant knew his desperate straits, and dragged him into the crime. Then, he bad loved Louisa; ho was maddened by her ap proaching marriage. The scheme of en suring her silence and driving Merrick away was the Inspiration of a moment, and had succeeded. He only asked for mercy. His time was short. He could not live beyond a few weeks. I would not bring him to the gallows. I was merciful, and I think was right to be so. His deposition was taken be fore his uncle, who was a magistrate, and two other men of position and weight in the community. It was to be kept secret until after his death, and then made public . He was removed at once to his. father's house. On Colonel Merrick's arrival that eve ning, this deposition was formally read to him. I do not think it impressed him very much. He was resolved to marry Miss Waring in spite of every obstacle. " But I never would have married you unless the truth had been discovered- never," she said to him that evening as ' they stood near me In the drawing- room. Her cheeks were warm, and her dark eyes full of tender light; I thought her a very lovely woman. " Then I owe you to Mr. Floyd after allY" he said, looking down at her fondly; . : - " O, I suppose so," with a shrug. ' But he is a very disagreeable person ! Cast-iron. VOU know, t am an thankful yon are not ft lawyer, Paul, as my vow not to marry you is cancelled." What Men Need Wives For. It is not to sweep the house, and make the bed, and darn the socks, and cook the meals chiefly that a man wants a wife. If this is all he needs, hired holp can do it cheaper than a wife. If this is all, when a young man calls to see a young lady,send him in the pantry to taste the bread and cakes she has made ; send him to inspect the needle work and bed-making, or put a broom Into her hands and send him to witness its use. Such thing are Important, and the wise young man will quietly look after them. But what a true man most wants of a true wife is her companion ship, sympathy, courage and love. The way of life has many dreary places in it, and man needs a companion to go with him. A man is sometimes overtaken with misfortune ; he meets with failure and defeat ; trials and temptations be set him, and he needs one to stand by and sympathize. He has some stern battles to fight with poverty, with ene mies and with sin ; and he needs a Woman that, while he puts his arms around her and feels that he has some thing to fight for, will help him fight ; that will put her Hps to his ears and whisper words of council, and her hands to his heart and impart new inspiration. All through storm and through sun shine, conflict and victory, through ad verse favoring winds, man needs a woman's love. The heart yearns for it. A sister's or a mother's love will hardly supply the need. Breaking Down. Men who often have their bauds full, are over-crowed with business and drive hurriedly along at it, but they may not be overworked. We cannot always tell when we are overworked. A man does not always know himself no more than he knows the strain on the mainspring of his watch what will break it. But there comes a time when the watch stops. Men break bown in this way. They go on, day after day, the pressure bearing harder each successive day, until the vital force gives out, and the machine stops. It is a great pity that the indica tions of this state of thing cannot be seen beforehand, and if seen regarded. It is one of the last things that men will admit to themselves, much less to others. They flatter themselves it is only a little weariness of the flesh which will pass off with a few hour's rest when, In fact, every nerve power and resource are exhausted, and the system is driven to work by sheer force of the will. When the oil on the shaft or in the oil box Is exhausted, every revolution of the wheel wears on the revolving part, and soon will ruin it. The same is true of the human body. Physicians Puzzled. The very remarkable case of Hattie Brown, whose physician believes that she has a living reptile preying upon her vitals, has attracted the attention of the medical faculty. Dr. J. H. Demarest visited his patient yesterday to make an examination with the stethoscope, his purpose to ascertain how far a decay of the lungs might contribute to the audi ble sounds that Miss Brown insists are from a living creature that is growing and killing her. But she had eaten very hearty breakfast, which, in her emaciated condition, distended her stomach, and the examination was not entirely satlafactory. Dr. Demarest said, last evening, that he had no reason to change bis opinion " It is certainly not a case of hysteria,' he said, " because it has been contin uously in the mind of the patient for several years that some living object was within her, whereas all cases of hysteria are variable in their attacks. I still believe that some species of rep tile has grown within her and produces the sensations which she so accurately describes. As soon as she is in a proper physical condition a further examina tion win, l Deneve, resoive mis aouoi into a certainty." js. x. Jieraia. tST The beautiful hymn, "I would not live always. I ask not to star." most persons would suppose was written by a person of slender vitality, whose bold on luo was so tenuous that it parted early aud left the mournful singer to sink into a premature mv hut not so. Rev. Dr. Muhlenberg, B , the author, still lives though upward of eiphtv vears of aae thouch now probably od his death-bed. He is also the author of that inspiring Christmas hymn, "Shout the ilad tldincs." Two such hymns are enough to insure a hope of a blessed im mortality. rwThe English institution of game preserves has been introduced into Berks county by a local spoitsmen s association. Thev have leased 3000 acres of forest, field and stream, which tley will stock with birds and fishes. Thev pay eacU or the fifteen farmers who own the land live dollars a year and divide the proceeds of fines, for "poaching" witb the farmers on wuose territory game is killed. , , DR. SCHENCK'H STANDAKD REMEDIES The standi ril remedies fur all diseases of th 'ungs r Hchenok's Pulmonic; Bvritp, Hchenek'a Hi- Weed Tonic, knd Hehenck Mandrake 1'IUs, sua ii tasen Before me mug are sestroyea, speedy cure Ik elfected. To Miami three medicines Tr. 3. II. fk-henck, of Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success In the treatment of pulmonary diseases. Tlie Pulmonic Syrup ripens the morbid matter In the Inngs i nature throws It off by an easy ex pectoration, lor licn the phlegm or matter I ripeaslight cough will throw it oil, the patient ha rent and the lungs begin to heal. To enable the pulmonic) syrup to do this, Dr. Scheock's Mandrake 1'llls and Hchenck's 8ea Weed Tonic must be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver. Hchenck's Mandrake I'llls acton the llver,removlng all nhstiuctlons, relax the gall bladder, the bile starts Ireeljr, and the liver Is soon relieved. Bchemik's Sea Weed Tonle Is a gentle stlmnlant and alterative! the alkali of which It Is composed mixes with the food and prevents souring. It as sists thedlgestlon by toning up the stomach to a healthy condition, so that the food and the Put- monio nyrup will make goou blood t then the lunas heal, and the Datlent will siirelv ct well n care Is taken to prevent fresh cold. ah wimi wish w uuunim j.r. nenencK, miner personally or bv letter, can do so at his nrlnelnml nice, corner of Sixth and Arch 8ts.. Phlladel- pma, every aionaay. Hchenck's medicines are sold by all druggist throughout the country. mch&apr. VEGETI N E VEOETINK has never fiillmt to iret . giving tone and strength to the system Uebiiitat ed by disease. 811 K 11E8T8 WELL. Bonth Poland. Me., Oct., It, 187(1. Mr. It. R. RteveilS: Dear Sir I hv tie en ilnlr two years with the liver complaint, and during that time have taken a great manydlfferent med icine but none of them did me any good. I was restless nights and had no appetite. Hlnee tak ing the Veget.no I rest well and relish my food. C'au recommend the Vegetlne for what it has done for me. Yours reetfully. . Mhs- ALBERT 1IICKER. Witness of the above. Mr. Ueo.M, Vaughn, Medford, Mass. VJSaiSTINE. Thousands will bear leitlmonv and dn It vol. nntarily) that Vegetine Is the best medical com pound yet placed beiore the public for renovating and purifying tne blood, eradicating all humors. tinpuribivs or pumoiious secretions irnm the sys tem, Invigorating and strengthening the system debilitated by disease; In fact, It Is, as many have called It, " The Great Health Restorer.1' , Safe and Sure. Mr. H. II. fifevens; In 1S72 vnnr Vet-eH recommended to me, and yielding to the persua sions of a friend. I consented to try it. At the time, I was suffering from general debility and nervous prostrations, superinduced by overwork and Irregular habits. Its wonderful strengthen ing and curative powers seemed to affect my de bilitated system from the llrst dose, and under Its persistent use i rapidly recovered, gaining more than usual health and good feeling. Hince then I have not hesitated to iriva Vpiri-line mv most un. qunlifed Indorsement as being a safe, sure and mweriul agent In promoting health and res tor-, ns the wasted svstein to new life and enerirv Veuetlne is the onlv medicine I use. and a Lin as I live I never expect to And a better. loursiruiy. w. ii. uiahk, 130 Monterey Street, Allegheny, i"a. VEGETINE. VEOETINK thoroughly eradicates every kind of humor, and restores the entire sysiein to a healthy condition. . The following letter from Rev. . W. Mansfield, formerly pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Hyde I'ark, and at present fettled in Lowell, mnst convince every one who reads this letter of the wonderful curative powers ol Vege- iiueasa inorougu cleanser anu puriner oi me blood: Hyde Park, Mass., Keb. 15, 176. Mr. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir About ten vears aeo my health failed through the depleting elTects of dysoepslit; nearly year later I was attacked oy v P" oiu lever in us worst iorin.it setueu in mv back and took the form of a lame deen-seated abscess, which was fifteen mouths In gathering. i naa two surgical operations, ny ine nest skill in the mate but received ne permanent cure. I suf fered great pain at times and was constantly weakened by a profuse discharge. I alsolostsmall pieces of bone at dilTerent times. Matters ran on thus about seven years, till May 1874. when a friend recommended me to go to your olllce and talk with you of the virtue of Veg etine. I did so, and by your kindness passed through your manutactory.noting the ingredients etc., by which your remedy Is produced. By what I saw and heard I gained some eonfl-, deuce In Vegetine. I commenced taking It soon after, but felt worse from its effects; still I persevered and soon felt it was benefiting me in other respects. Yet I did not see the results I desired, till I had taken it faithfully for a little more than a, year, when the difficulty in the back was cured, and for nine months I have enjoyed the best of health. 1 have in that time gained twenty-five pounds of flesh, being heavier than ever be Tore iu my life, and I was never more able to perforin laborthan now. During the past few weeks I had a scrofulous swelling as large as my list gather en another part of my body. I took Vegetine faithfully and It removed It lev el with the surface in a month. I think I should have been cured of my main trouble sooner if I had taken larger doses, after having become ac customed to its effects. Let your patrons troubled with scrofula or kid ney disease, understand that it takes time to cure chronic diseases, and if they will patiently take Vegetine, It will, in my judgment, cure them. With great obligations f am. Yours very truly, O. W. MAA8FTELI), 14 lin Pastor of the M. E. Church. Prepared by H.R.Stevens, Boston,Mass. Tegetine is Sold by ill Druggists. ' JEATHER &C. THE subscriber has now on band at LOW PRICES, Good Sole Leather, Kip of Superior Quality, Country Calf Skins, French Calf, LININGS, ROANS, &c. F. Mortimer, NEW BLOOMJ1ELD, PA. NOTICE. The public are hereby notified and warned not to jnole.it, or in any way tres pass or the rights and credits of Anthony 6u ghart in the following property purchased by him at Sheriff's sale, at the residence of Levi Sughart, on the 7th day of February. 1877. said property being left In the care of Levi Sughart. viz: Two Cows, 4 head of Young Cattle. 1 Mower combined, 1 two horse Wagon,. .1 Metal Plow. Double and Single Trees, 1 Grain Cradle, Lot of Cow Chains, 1 pair of Breasi chains, 1 pair of Hutt chains, I Hay Rake, 1 Corn Coverer, and 1 hpreader. ANTHONY SUGHART, Per Lr.Ti Suiubt, Agent. Jlain. Pa-'ebruary 13. 1T7. TESTATE "NOTICE. Noties ts hereby given 111 that Letters Testamentary on the entateol Frederick K. l"uni, late ol Tyrone township Perry county, Pa., deceased, have be granted to the undersigned, residiug In KUiottsuurg, Perry CAtprsons indebted tosald estate are request ed to make immediate payment aud those having claims to present theia duly authenticated lor aetliement to WILLIAM n. BUM. Executor. A. hi- Markku Attorney tor Executor. January 30, 1877.