1 ..,- M QQ ' Vr" rf " H ffUl ft - J " V, I - , , , , VOL. XIII. NEW BLOOMKIE1L.3D, PA., TUESDAY, APItlL B, 1871. NO. 15. THE TIMES. In Independent Family Newspaper, It PUBL1BHD1VHRTTUHSDATBT F. MORTIMER & CO. BUllSCIlirTION P 11 ICE. (WITHIN THB C0CHTT.) One Year II 2 81 Months, 75 (OUT Of TBI OOUNTT.) One Year. (Postage Included) II M Hlx Mouths, (Postage Included) 85 Invariably In Advance I ' W Adrertlslng rates (urnished upon appli cation. $eledt roetfy. DOT STUPPORN PONY. Mlt bier I growt so belly Dot too much the walkln' pe i So I pyed me of von pony, But dot pettier be sheat me, Bote eyes of blm vas llmpy, Bote tecksof him yaspllnd; But dot rot proke of me mine heart Dot pony ras ouklnd. He keeck Just like a stupporn mule, Oop, town, pe tore, pehlml, Und how I cure dot pony ) I rolt oop In my mind, Dot svmpntee yas nonsense i Bhust eferydlnks he preak : Yen sutten koomed ron grand I tee, I tole you how I make, I beetched him mlt de shatters, But, outside In, Instet, Ills het oop py dot wagon. His dall where yas his het. Den one, doo, dree I selling him, Ach, Hlmmol, how he keeck I But Ten he Und he noddlngs stroock, He stopp dot pooty queeuk, Den looks he opp astoundet, Oxlted pooty bad ; Den suetten makes he packwards Like at of he vas mat. I laugh ai of I ras tying Ven I see him go dot vay i Den ou his haunch he ttoomples town, As he ras going to bray. How shamet he look, Tateflerl I tole 111 m Tot I dinks; Doo dears drop oult his eyepall: , Mlt krlef his dall be vlnks. Aroundt all ride I toorn him, His het before him now, Und streecks he trlves as goot und kind As he Tas been mine frau I A TRYING SITUATION. MANY years back, a young man came out of a little bouse at the eastern end of a town by the sea. There was plenty of life and gaiety at the other end of the town, which was livened by one or two barracks, a fort and a castle. But the eastern end was very poor, and would have been quite lonesome but for the fishermen and their boats. The house from which the young man came was beyond even this homely bustle, and was little more than a wooden hut tarred to defend it from wind and weather. But the young man who came out was in the full dress of a military officer, though that was screened from a first view by the long gray cloak that the wild March wind made so necessary. He was young, and his face was fine ly cut, and would have been pleasant but for a look of stern aud painful sor row,not unmixed with bitteriiess,whlch seemed strangely incongruous with his years and his dress. He walked on quite through the town. Whenever the houses broke apart one caught the glimpse of a wild, flat coun try, dotted here and there with weird trees in Indian file ; and the youth look- ed wistfully towards these desert fields, as if he would fain have struck away acrops them instead of going on, as he did toward the grim old fort. Yet there, it was clear, festivity was going forward; and friendly voices greeted him as he passed the gray old portal. And then, over his sad, stern face lie dropped a mask of gaiety, and though he relapsed into silence at times, he was as polite and conversable as the best of them. There was a preparation for a dinner party in the fine, stiff, old hall, with Its rows of military portralts,and lis dingy, blood-stained banners. The castle, the barracks, and the fort Itself, had eagerly furnished guests to welcome the visitor of tho day, a grand old general recent ly returned from honorable victories in the south of Europe. ,After dinner, when ceremony was fairly thawed, the good old geneial, In the kindness and pride of his heart dis played a little box,whluli had been given to him by some grandee of Spain. I think it must have been too small for a snuff-box, and was probably one of those tiny trifles in which fashionable folks used to carry com (Ha and lozenges. At any rate this box was Bet with diamonds and colored gems of rare value, aud as it passed from hand to hand, flashing brightly in the lamplight, while the old warrior told dread stories of cam palgns and of the daring and honor of his men. But suddenly, at the end of a story so thrilling that all heads had been craned toward him, while the military servants had thronged the door in rapt attention, the simple question was asked : " Where Is the general's Jeweled boxy Nobody knew ; everybody said he had silently passed It on to his fellow. The general begau to rummage his own pockets, lest it had found its way back to him and he bad half-unconsclously put it away. No, it was not there, and the brave old lighting face looked a little blank, as he murmured an excuse about " how the loss would vex Lady Eliza beth." " But it cannot be lost, general," said the officer in command of the fort. "In this room It was but a few minutes ago, and in this room It must be still. Let the servants at the door come in ; though, to the best of my belief, not one of them has approached the table since the box was brought out. Let the door be made fast, and let our search be thorough." The candles were brandished to and fro, under the tubles, under the chairs, round the table drapery. But from no point flashed out the brilliant beauty of the little box. " Still It must be here," Insisted the commandant, " and surely no gentle man will think his honor infringed if each in turn is asked to empty out his pockets upon the table. 1 myself will be the first do so. And the servants Bhall be the last." Nobody could be expected to demur at so simple and sensible a proposal, backed as it was by the honest old officer in stantly rattling out some crown pieces, and a tobacco pouch, half pence, and an old pipe. One after another, the gentle men on either side of the table followed his example, while sharp but not un friendly eyes took eager note of strange pieces of personal property ,and of dainty three-cornered notes, which might serve in the future as material for badinage and quizzing. But one drew back when the com mandant made his proposal. The young man who had walked in from the eastern end of the town dropped sud denly into his seat whence he bad risen in the first eagerness of the search. He passed his hand once or twice through bis hair, leaving it wild and straggling, And then he watched blankly, as the fruitless search drew nearer and nearer to himself. Within five minutes one or two officers were whispering to each other that most any simpleton might bave seen he did not expect it to be found. His turn was the very last. "Ensign Hanson," said the commandant, steadi ly. Ensign Banson was certainly the first who required to be called upon by name. The youth arose, and, though the rest of his face was deadly whiteness, there was a spot of burning red on his cheek "I do not think any gentleman should be asked to do this," he said. " I will give my word of honor that the box is not upon my person. I did not keep it in my bands even for a moment ; I merely took it and passed it on." 11 Too high-minded even to look at such gewgaws," sneered a spiteful old major under bis breath. " What men high in the service and old enough to be bis father have already done, Eusign Banson may safely do also," said the commandant, with a se verity whleh was not unkindly, for young Banson looked such a boy among the crowd of men, mostly stout and mid' die-aged ; and the very suspicion sud denly lowering over blm mode the old officer think of his own lads, growing up and not quite sure to do well for them selves after all. " I would never have asked It for the sake of my box," observed the general, leaning back In his chair, and Inwardly wondering what Lady Elizabeth would say of his carelessness. , " But we asked it for the sake of our honor, general," said the command ant, testily. " And we do not seem to bave asked it needlessly," whispered the spiteful major. " I will not do this thing I" cried the young ensign, passionately; and he looked wildly around the group ns if he sought for one face that would compre hend and compassionate bis misery. The face that looked the kindest was that of the old general himself, partly because It was not bis hospitality that was outraged, partly because his genial nature was terribly shocked at finding anything of his the cause of such a wretched act of dishonor. " If the general will come with me to the ante-room," said the young man, ,l I will convince him that I have bare ly touched his box. But this public ex posure I will not submit to; our consent was not asked and" " Certainly not I" " Out upon you!" General, you must not think of in dulging bis Insolent request," were the only sentences audible in the general hubbub that rose on all sides. But the general rose : "Oentlemen," be said quietly, " I've never yet refused to listen to an enemy's petition. If you can satisfy me, sir, perhapB your comrades will take ray word for you." There was a murmur of very reluc tant acquiescence, as the ensign bowed and waited respectfully to follow the general to the ante-chamber. They had not disappeared behind the heavy cur tains before all sorts of surmises were whispered around the table, guesses and hints so wild and so sinister as to do credit neither to the beads nor hearts which originated them. The general and ensign stayed a longer time in the ante-room than would have sufficed to search the ensign's pockets twice and twice over. Not a sound could be beard. If any conversation was going forward, it must have been in'a very low voice. The two gentlemen were away for near ly half an hour. All the military ser vants bad been subjected to the com mandant's rigid scrutiny, and then dis missed. It might be as well that none " but the gentlemen of the regiment" should know exactly what the end was The delay grew first awkward and then awful. Even the whispers and rumors flagged into un intense and excited watching. At last the general and the ensign came out. The ensign's face was still very pale ; what flush remained upon it bad now mounted to the eyes. The old general was blowing his nose. " Ensign Banson has thoroughly sat isfied me," he said, in bis most gentle voice. Never mind my box. It has vanished by one of those mysterious ac cidents that will happen some times. It will be found some day. And now, gentlemen, perhaps as we have been thus broken up we shall not settle down again very comfortably to-night. I hope we shall see you all at the castle before Lady Elizabeth and I leave for Lon don." " General," said the commandant, drawing blm a little to one side, " may I sincerely trust your great generosity has not led you to" " Sir," cried the old general, " can you imagine that any mistaken idea of kindness would cause me to make you a companion of thieves? Oentlemen," he went on, seeing that the company were not aware of this little by-play. " I pledge you my word that I am sat isfied of Ensign Hanson's honor; and whoever dares to doubt him makes me to be his accomplice." And the old general seized the young ensign's arm and marched with him from the banqueting-room, while every one sat dumfounded, till the spiteful major remarked that wonders would never cease. There was nothing more to be said. It was discovered that Ensign Banson was not only invited to the castle with the other officers, but was also asked there by himself and actually was believed to bave taken tea with the general and Lady Elizabeth in their deepest retire ment.' For the general's sake, rather than his own, his brother officer's con tluued on courteous terms with blm ; and he had always been shy, and belt! himself so aloof, that perhaps he did not discover there was but little cordiality in their courtesy. And presently he ex changed into another regiment, wbich went on foreign service. He was away for several years, and in the fortunes of war he got rapidly pro moted, so that when be returned home, though he was still young,, b was no. longer a poor nobody. When be landed in his own country he found a letter awaiting him, written by one who bad sat near him at that memorable dinner party, and who was now residing in the old castle where the general and Lady Elizabeth had been guests. This letter pressed blm, in the warmest terms, to spend some of his earliest days in England at this very cas tle, and to give many old friends who were in the neighborhood an opportu nity of meeting and congratulating him. Ensign Banson, now Colonel Banson, cmiled a little strangely when be read bis invitation, but be wrote a very po. lite reply and accepted It. Once more he sat in the stately old banquet-room of the fort. This time he bad not walked in from the bleakest end of the town, but bad been taken from the castle in the chariot of the castle owner. But as he took his seat in the chair of honor, he noticed that every face at the table was, in all Its changes, familiar to him. All of the guest at the former dinner were not there. Many of those, indeed, he well knew, were sleeping on battle-fields far away. But nobody was at this dinner who had not been at the other one. Once more the dishes were removed and the servants withdrawn. The guest of this evening was no wonderful story teller, like the good old general, who has now passed to bis rest. Colonel Banson was as taciturn as Ensign Banson was shy, and he even let the conversation flag and never seemed to notice it. " Colonel," said the eldest gentleman of the party, speaking with visible ef fort, and giving a slight cough, to veil his embarrassment, " Colonel, I think we all remember another time when we fllncwl tncroflinr tioro " " Certainly ; I remember it," answered the Colonel, lifting his gray eyes with a cool light In them. " Colonel, we fancy you think some of us did you ill-Justice then. At least a lady says you felt so Lady Elizabeth, the good old general's widow. If what we are going to do Is any way painful to you, I hope you will pardon us, for we are only following her counsel. Colonel, there was a box lost that evening. Here it Is." Yes, there It was, gleaming once more in the light which danced gaily upon it. The Colonel looked at it calmly, and asked : " Where was It found V" His composure was exceedingly dis concerting. Another gentleman, feel ing that the first had done his part, now took up the parable. " It was found in the very chair in which you are now seated, colonel," he suld. " You will remember that the general sat there on that night. It must have found its way back to the general's own band, and in the interest and excitement of bis story telling be must have Intended to slip it back into bis pocket, which, if you recollect, was the first place where he sought it. In stead of that, it evidently escaped the proper orifice and dropped into the cov ering of the chair, that covering was very thick and heavy, and hung In lap pets about Its legs. Part of it was un sewn, and this box dropped between the damask and the lining and remained there safely and unseen, till the chair was recovered lost year." "Gentleman," said the colonel, with his accustomed calmness, though bis Hps trembled a little, " I cannot wonder if some of you thought my conduct sus picious. I thank you heartily for show ing me your brotherly delight that those suspicions were unfounded." At the bottom of the table sat the spiteful old major (he was on half-pay now, and more spiteful than ever) aud be thought within himself that there was no telling whether Ensign Banson bad not taken some subsequent oppor tunity of getting riii, of his dangerous booty into the hole in the damask, and that mystery could not be called cleared up, unless the colonel had explained why he had demurred to the search. And this spiteful old major would have said as much to bis net neighbor, if be himself bad not been so terrible deaf that be could not regulate- bis own voice be tween a confidential1 whimper and a . mighty shout. The colonel safe hi silence for some minutes. Then he recalled himself with a start, and drawing something from his pocket, said quietly ; "Gentlemen, I, too, have something to show you." All pressed forward as he carefully unfolded the soft paper packet and laid something ou the table. What was it 1 What could It be? It was a bleached skeleton of a chick en's wing. " Gentlemen," be said in that same quiet voice, which no longer sounded cold and stern, but rather full of strength and sweetness," when I was here before, I waa a poor, fatherless lad, owning nothing in the world but my poor little pittance of pay. I fear I was an eyesore to some of you. 1 think you felt my appearance did not do justice to the dig nity of our regiment. I believe I often looked rather shabby, but really I could not help it. "I bad only one relation in the world, and that was my mother's sister. After my mother died she had been as a moth er to me, but when our home was final ly broken up, there was nothing for it but she must be a governess in a stran ger's house. And she did her work courageously and cheerfully enough, till her health failed, and nobody wanted the service of a sick woman. "She had always been good to me, and we two had only-esch other in the world. I could not help ber as she ought to have been helped, but my pay would at least provide her such a main tenance as a poor workingman cau give to a poor working woman. "I took my aunt to lodge with the wife of the miller's man, in the little black cottage beside the mill. She was a very kind, cleanly woman, though rough and plain in her ways : and my poor aunt used to call herself very bappy there. But she could not eat the simple food my scanty means could procure. And the good landlady used to break my heart by suggesting that her appetite might be tempted by chicken or game, or such luxuries beyond my utmost reacn. "All the day of that memorable dinner-party my aunt bad been very feeble and failing. When I left ber I really wondered whether she would be alive when I saw her again. My soul revolt ed at the sight of dainties that were no good to me, and which I could not con vey to her who seemed dying for want of them. Suddenly a bright idea seized me. I took a letter from my pocket and spread it on my napkin, and then, by an adroit movement, transferred a wing of a chicken from my plate to the paper, and thence smuggled it to my pocket." The listening guests began to look at each other with enlightened eyes. - The spiteful old major felt that a very full explanation was being given and he was glad he was deaf, and need not hear it. "Gentlemen you can all imagine my feelings when such unlooked-for circum stances threatened to expose my poor plan. Gentlemen, there are some of you who were, like myself, young then; whom It would bave been as bard to meet, after such a discovery, as it would have been bad I really stolen the jewels." "Heaven forgive us, Banson ; but I can't say you are wrong." said one brave gentleman, who bod been a fash ionable dandy in those days, but who has a wife and six children now. "Gentleman, I did not fear the old man, honored and enriched by a grate ful country. The men who had fought the best battles of life have a pitiful respect for the poor and friendless. To blm I could lay bare my poor little secret. But my place then was among the young, who, having never conquer- . ed, always despised the defeated the vain giddy youths, extravagant with their fathers'money, and" "Oh, come, Banson," cried one officer, "It is your turn now, with a vengeance. Please to remember that to-night we are the abject and defeated and be merci ful." The Colonel laughed. And they could not tell wether it was good faith or subtile irony that lie rejoined, "You are right," aud then went on : "In the little room yonder, I told my sad story to that good until who is gone. And I folded up my queer treasure again for I could not leave it behind to bear witness; aud, besides, having paid such . a terrible price for it. And she ate it for her supper that very night; and next morning, almost as soon as it was light, there was the general hammering at the cottage door with a basket of fowls and fruit carried in bU own band. And, then and there, I took this little chicken bone, and vowed that I w ould keep it till the snuffbox be found, and I myself was such a man among men that uone would smile at my poverty, or even despite my weakness."