'tHmmuemM.iiMmMHmmim.mitm A - - ..nri .T1lf. rnf , lJx, - , rM , , , ,t M , ,ni ,rtl , nlr)w w mavmi mnium iimn n Mi.m,fimi,itiiinir;l f,,n.i mm rm iTinmw Mininmr nn.. iy.wiTS rWVL -ZTs 9 rr? iiiiliiilliiiiiKliirililW'M.iiiHi'i'iiiliiiHiililiia.U - ....... ., . ... vofi xtn. NEW BLOOMFIELD, !P.A.., TUESDAY, APRIX, oo 1879. NO. 17. THE TIMES. in Independent Family Newxpnper, IS PDBLISnK D B VBHT TUESDAY BT F. MORTIMER & CO. o ' SUBSCRIPTION F It ICE. (WITHIN TIIB COUNTY.) One Year 1 2 9U Mouths "5 (OUT Of TIIB COUNTY.) One Year, (Postage Included) II RO -Six Months, (Postage Included) 89 Invariably In Advance I - Advertising rates furnished upon appll- cation. $eledt Poetry. THE BRIDE'S STORY. When I was but a country lass, now fifteen years ago. I lived where flowed the Overpeck through mead ows wide and low; There first, when skies were bending blue and blossoms blowing free, I saw the ragged little boy who went to school with me. Ills homespun coat was frayed and worn, with patches covered o'er; His hat ah. such a bat as that was never seen before! The boys and girls, when first he came, they shouted in their glee. And Jeered the little ragged boy who went to school with me. Ills father was a laboring man, and mine was highly born; Our people held both him and his In great con tempt and scorn They said I should not stoop to own a playmate such as he, The bright-eyed, ragged little boy who went to school with me. For years they had forgotten him, but when again we met, His look, his voice, his gentle ways remained in memory yet; They saw alone the man of mark, but I could only see The bright-eyed, ragged little boy who went to school with me. He had remembered me, it seems, as I remem bered him ; Nor time nor honors, in his mind, the cherished past could dim ; Young love had grown to older love, and so to day, you see, I wed the little ragged boy who went to tchool with me. MY FIRST CLIENT. J HAD been called to the bar not quite a year, and was seated with my friend Frank Armitage, in our chambers in the temple. Frank had been called on the same day as myself, and we had agreed to make our professional start together. To that end we had become joint pos sessors of a set of chambers at No, 99 Figtree street, and of a boy named Blobbs, who was known as our ' clerk,' though his tender years and seedy gar ments made the dignified appellation nound almost ironical. His style of dress was peculiar, and gave one the idea that he had several brothers of various sizes, and had borrowed an article of apparel from each his boots belonging to the eldest and bis trousers to the youngest. There were sundry other boys on our staircase, with whom Blobbs was con stantly having little differences and fighting them out upon the landing; indeeed this, with occasional expeditions to Prosper's for commlssiarat purposes, formed the staple of his professional oc cupations. When he first undertook his duties we had started him with a pint bottle of ink, a ream of draft paper, and a gross of pens , and we had enjoined him to employ all his leisure time in copying precedents. He began with great vigor, and cop led about a page and a half in a large school-boy hand the first morning, but he never got any farther. The ream of paper dwindled, somehow, and the ink disappeared to an extent to which the numerous little black imps, with which Blobbs had embellished his domain, failed to account for, until one morning I detected him in the act of blacking his boots with it, and polishing them with a pen wiper. Still, as boys go, Blobbs was not a very bad specimen ; and, as we re ally had no work for him to do, we were not disposed to be extremely angry with him for doing it. Fortunately ,Armitage and myself were both, to a considerable extent, independ ent of our profession, for, to all appear ance, our profession was quite inde pendent of us. We had been called, as I have mentioned very nearly a year, and neither of us had been favored with a brier; nor did there appear to be any particular likelihood tliat we ever should. We had a friend, Charley Larcombe, who had recently been articled to a so licitor, and who had promised that when he was out of his articles (which . would be in about four years,) and bad passed his examination, (which might be forty), he would " give us a lift." This rather vague prospect really ap peared to be our only chance ; but, with with natural sanguineness of youth, we still looked for briefs, though we had not the faintest nollon where they were to come from. In truth, in the very early days of our professional career (when we had only been barristers for a week or two), we used to watch with anxious solicitude.any person of legal aspect who was seen to cross the court in the direc tion of our staircase ; but we found that the person of legal aspect invariably stopped at the chamber of Cocksure, Q. C, which was immediately below ours, and the approach of a stranger had ceased to excite more than a casual in terest. At the outset of our career we had unanimously agreed that everything of an unprofessional character in our sur roundings should be rigidly taboed. In particular we had decided that our breakfast should always be over and its remains cleared away before nine a. m., and that smoking should not, on any account, be permitted in the room des tined for the reception of clients. In ac cordance with these virtuous resolves we were, or, I should rather say, had been, always to be found by half-past nine, each sitting in the rlgldest of armchairs, wearing the blackest of frock coats, and the stillest of shirt collars, attentively perusing ponderous law books,and mak ing copious notes with the assistance of a glgantlo pewter inkstand, of positively dazzling brightness. But this halcyon state of things was too good to last. We bad screwed up our virtuous resolves to too extreme a tension, and they had gradually sunk down again. Who was first to give way is a mooted point. My own idea is that all should have gone well had not Armitage insidiously suggested our allowing ourselves just one cigarette after breakfast ; while he will have it that the thin end of the wedge was Introduced by my surrepti tiously reading an occasional novel un der cover of " Cove on Littleton." However this may be, we had speedily fallen away from our original high standard. Not having been troubled with that frantic rush of clients which we bad originally expected, we had become less particular in our habits. The large law books had been left unopened, the hour of breakfast had become gradually later and later, and short pipes and tweed jackets had become the order of the day until luncheon, and sometimes, I fear, even until dinner time. In our earlier days we had made it a point that one or the other of us should always remain in the chambers, so as to be ready for any thing that might turn up, but now we made nothing of putting up the delusive notice, " Return in five minutes," and departed together for the rest of the day. In order, however, to keep up the pleas ant fiction that we still expected to have clients some day, we made a bet. Each backed 5 to get the first brief, with the proviso that (if ever the bet should be decided) the winner was to stand a dinner to the loser, in order to com mem rate the event. Imagine our emotions, therefore, when, on the morning of my story, soon after ten, a heavy step wbb heard to ascend the staircase and pause at our door ; and when Blobbs who had been, according to his usual habit, settling a little diffi culty with Cocksure's boy upon the landing rushed in, and in a hoarse whisper Bald, frantic with excitement : " A gentleman for Mister Brown I And he's got a bundle of papers." I must say that Armltage's behavior did him credit. My landing the first prl.e must naturally have been a disappointment to him ; but in the most magnanimous way he exclaimed : " Good for you, old man I Oo in and win. Ill hook it into the next room, and leave the coast clear for you." And he bolted accordingly into his bedrootu. I would have given much to have been able to assume a more dlgnl fled attire, and to straighten things geu erally, before the entrance of my client, but it was out of the question. I had only Just time to pitch the end of my cigar in the fire, open one of the large law books upside down as I afterwards discovered and to compose my features into the most professional expression compatible, when the visitor entered. He was a short, puffy little man, middle aged, and of a good natured, unlutel- lectual cast of countenance. He wore a shabby white hat and greasy black gloves, and his trousers were shorter and ills umbrella fatter than is generally con sidered desirable in those articles; but, notwithstanding, there was an air of snug respectability about him, and the bundle of papers, tied with red tape, which he carried, had an eminently bus iness like appearance. He begun : I must apologize for disturbing you at this early hour in the morning, Mr. Brown he was evidently not a high class practitioner but, the fact is, I have come to beg your assistance In a very urgent case." I tried to look as if urgent cases were matters of the most common occurrence in my professional appearance. " Ah," I suld, "quite so. Take a seat, Mr. " "Ward, sir; Gribbens & Ward, of High street, Bloomsbury. You have heard the name, I dare say. Gribblns Is dead he has been dead for some years, but we keep up the old name, you know." I didn't know In the least. I had never to my knowledge heard of Grib blns & Ward, but it would not do to ad mit the fact. Not to know Grlbbln & Ward would clearly be to argue myself unknown. I took my cue accordingly. " O yes ; Grlbbln & Ward, a most em inent firm. I am delighted to have the pleasure of making your acquaintance, Mr. Ward." " You are very kind, sir. Well, sir, I was saying, or was about to say, I have become connected with a case, a very peculiar case indeed, a most peculiar case; and, hearing of you from my old friend, Mr. Wiggings, I am a stranger to you myself, I might venture to call and ask you to assist me in it." " Dear me," I thought, " whoever would have thought of old Wiggins" my hair dresser " sending me a client." And on the principle that one good turn deserves another, I mentally resolved to go and get my hair cut the very next day. I replied : " I shall be very happy, Mr. Ward. Have you any particulars in writing V" " Well, not exactly, said Mr. Ward, depositing his bundle of papers in his hat. " I have a few rough memoranda, but I'll tell you in half a dozen words the state of the case. The party I rep resent is a Mrs. Podgers, and I think that you'll agree with me that she has been very badly used. The fact is, she was the daughter of an old fellow named Grubb, In the oil and color trade, a man reputed to be worth a mint of money. When she tnerrled Podgers, who was a pork butcher in a small business, Pod gers naturally wauled to know what the old man would do for them. A little ready money would have been very ac ceptable, and as they knew that Susan that's Mrs. Podgers was the only daughter, and would come in for all the old man's money at his death, they did not see why he shouldn't give them a little at once, on account like. - But old Grubb wasn't to be had in this way. No,' Bays he, " if you marry Susan, when I die you'll have all I'vegot,whlch may be ten thousand or It may be twen ty, but I'm not going to undress before I go to bed, as the saying is.' Bo upon that, and quite relying that the old man would keep his word, Podgers gets mar ried. They all kuew that the old man couldn't lust very long, so on the strength of his expectations Podgers put in a new shop window and starts a pony trap. Trade was bad, and Podgers found himself outrunnlngthe constable a bit ; but he didn't mind feeling sure it would be all right when the old man went off the hooka." I began to see my way. Podgers had married on the strength of the old gen tleman's promise, aud the old gentle, man had subsequently changed his mind. Here was an opportunity of im pressing Mr. Ward with my legal acu men. " Excuse my Interrupting you one moment, Mr. Ward," and I rang the bell Blobbs entered. 'Blobbs,get 'Chltty on Contracts,' and then go and ask Cocksure's clerk to oblige me with loan of the sixth volume of ' Messon and Welsby.' I think I can give you a case Just in polnt,Mr. Ward." Blobbs handed me 'Chitty on Contracts,' which in point of fact was on the man- telplece immediately behind me, and de parted to execute the remainder of my order. I referred to the index, mur muring, audibly : " Consideration good valuable marriage page 18," then turned to the passage and silently pe rused it with much attention. " Ah,yes, I thought so !" Blobbs here returned with the bor rowed volume in which, with an air of deep reflection, I turned to an imaginary authority. "No, that won't do. I had forgotten for a moment that that case was over ruled by Jones vs. Robinson. Pray proceed, Mr. Ward." Mr. Ward had more than once at tempted to continue his story ,but,with a gentle wave of the hand, I had cau tiously, yet firmly deprecated interrup tion. He resumed, apologetically : " I'm afraid I'm giving you a deal of tiouble, Mr. Brown." " Not at all, Mr. Ward, I assure you I always like to make sure, from the out set, as to the broad principles applica ble." "Quite so, sir ; very true. But I'm afraid there is a little misunderstand ing." " I think not. I have followed you with great attention. A married B's daughter C on the faith of an under standing by B that he will on his death, leave C the whole of his property ; B that's Grubb, you know dies, and he does not leave his property to C that's Podgers but to -somebody else. Isn't that your case?" And I leaned back in my chair and eyed him with a deny-that-if-you-can sort of expression. " Just exactly so, sir. You had been one of the family yourself you couldn't have got It more pat. They all went on as comfortable as possible until one Sun day, the old gentleman dined with the Podgers, and found a caterpillar in the vegetables. He would have it that they did it on purpose. He went home at once, tore up his will and made another, leaving every penny of his money to the Asylum for Incurable Clearstarchers. The excitement brought on an apoplec tic fit and he died the very same night. Personally sworn under $25,000, and Podgers all but in the Gazette. I now began to fear that the case would prove to bea chancery matter ,and that my share in it would be limited to giving Mr. Ward an elaborate opinion to that effect. But it clearly would not do to make any suggestion of the kind at the present stage of the proceedings. "Ah, just as I thought, you see." I tried to look as if I had anticipated every detail of the cash, even to the cat erpillar. "Well, the question now is, what evidence have we, first of distinct agreement on the part of B (otherwise Grubb) to leave all his property to his daughter, and, secondly that A (other wise Podgers) married on the faith of that promise ? You hear what Chltty says : "A valuable consideration is such as money, marriage, or the like, which the law esteems an equivalent given for the grant, and is therefore founded on motives of justice. That's the law, but how about the facts f Mere assertion won't do,you know ; we want evidence." "Well,as to evidence, I'm afraid there isn't much in a legal sense. Mr. Cock sure bus advised upon the case, and he says that we haven't any evidence in fact we haven't a leg to stand upon." It was flattering, and at the same time a little alarming, to be consulted in case in which Mr. Cocksure was timid I had better at least be cautious. "You have up hill work before you I'm afraid, and I should reccommend you, Mr. Ward, as a man of business (that is, of course, between ourselves) to see your way cleur as to the costs out of pocket. The Incurable Clearstarchers will tight hard sir, you may depend on It." "O, dear, yes, sir; no doubt they would. But we've quite made up our minds not to go to law about the matter, It would be throwing good money after bad ; leastwise it would, if we bad any to throw ; but we haven't. Podgers ran away to America last Monday, and his poor wife and five young children are living in a two pair back In Camden town, sustaining a miserable existence on the scanty remains of the stock-in- trade." A horrible misgiving crossed my mind, and I shut up Chitty. "I thought I mean to Bay I suppos ed I really don't quite see, then, in what way I can be of service in the case, Mr. Ward." "Well, you see, sir, Mr. Wiggins told me as you was an uncommon kind hearted gentleman, so I made bold to call and ask if you would put down your name for a trifle for the widow and orphans not that Mrs. P. is precise ly a widow, nor yet the children exactly orphans, but rather worse, if anything, in my opinion." . I was fairly cuuglit. Not for worlds would I have let Mr. Ward know that I had been laboring under a misapprehen sion, and had been mentally welcoming him as my first client. On the other hand, after, the extreme interest I had exhibited in the case, I could not do less than give him a handsome donation. Smiling amiably, but inwardly breath ing the most awful imprecations against Wiggins (and very nearly vowing, on the spur of the moment, never to have hair cut again as long as I live.) I ex pressed my extreme gratification at having the opportunity of contributing a sovereign to the necessities of the Podgers family. Mr. Ward beamed with delight, and pressed my acceptance of his card, assuring me that, if I should at any time require anything in his line, it would be his most earnest endeavor these words, by the way, he apparently spelt with an h to give me satisfaction. He insisted in shaking hands at parting, and appeared to find considerable diffi culty in tearing himself away. At last, however, he departed, leaving me still holding his card' whereon I read : Grib blns & Ward, Greengrocers, 195 High street, Bloomsbury. Evening parties attended. My absorbing thought, as soon as I could think at all, was how on earth to conceal the facts trom Armitage what possible fiction to invent which should save my dignity from exposure of the horrible truth. What dreadful falsehood I might ultimately have given birth to I cannot say, for I was saved from the ordeal by hearing a burst, or rather a succession of bursts, of frantlo laughter from the room to which Armitage had retired. I pushed the door which yield ed to my touch. My worst fears were realized! He knew all! He was lying upon the bed, his feet considerable above his head, cramming a pocket-handkerchief in his mouth, and every now and then breaking out afresh into a peal of maniac laughter. "Well, Brown, old boy, I hope you have given the new client a good, sound legal opinion. O dear, my poor sides 1 Where shall we have the dinner, eh, old man ?" "Come, Frank," I said addressing him more in sorrow than in anger, "don't be adding insult to iojury. You've had the door ajar, you scoundrel ; so I needn't tell you any particulars. But at any rate promise to keep my secret." "I'll be hanged if I do old boy; the joke is a great deal too good to keep to myself. How about 'Chitty on Con tracts' and '6 Wesson and Welsby V Oh, you old imposter! I'll be hanged if I don't tell the story to every fellow I meet." "So for fear that the facts should be misrepresented I hate misrepresenta tionI determined to tell it myself. A Singular Hatching Place. A hen at South Carolina railroad yard, in this city, took a notion a few days since to lay her eggs in the tender box on Bob Hubbard's switch-engine, and notwithstanding that veteran's views to the contrary she persisted in getting her work so far advanced that it was deemed prudent to let her " lay." After depositing, as she thought, the usual complement of fresh eggs in order to go into the spring chicken business, she finally settled down to her work and is now daily sitting on her nest. She ' never leaves the engine only occasional ly when it stops in the yard, and then only for a few moments, to fly off, pick around and stretch herself. The engine is in constant use and crossing and re crossing the city daily, pulling long trains of cars. The engineer has fitted her up with a nice, comfortable cotton nest, and before long expects to have a whole lot of steam-engine chickens. Augusta (Oa.) 2?ew.