THE TIMES, NEW liLOOMFIELD, PA. NOVEMBER 10, 1880. A BLESSED MISTAKE. m KATIE ran into the kitchen singing, but the song died on her Hps when she saw her slater Ilann nil's Bteru look, and her mother's tear falling over an open letter in her lap. " What's the matter ?" cried Katie, " Mother, has anything happened V" "Nothing but what we expected," said Hannah before Mrs. Derwent could open her Hps to reply. " The Bgent writes that we must give up the farm next Monday." The tears started lo Kitty's blue eyes. "And this Is Wednesday," she said; l It Is too bad I I Just hate that Mr. Ariel Why does he, with all his wealth want to take away our little farm V Oh, dear I Can't anythlug be doner"" Mrs. Derwent only sobbed In answer, but Hannah looked keenly at her young sister, as she said, meaningly : "You are the one who can best answer that question, Katie." Katie's face turned crimson, and then rale. , "Oh, Hannah," she said, Imploringly, "don't ask me to do that, for I cannot; ho, I never can I" . " You would rather see us turned out of home than make a small sacrifice, then 5" "A small sacrifice, Hannah V To me it seems very large." " Heaven only knows what we are to do!" wailed Mrs. Derwent. "We haven't fifty dollars in the world." , "Can't we borrow enough money from Squire Davis to pay oft this mort gage?" asked Katie, desperately. " You must think Bqulre Davis has no sense," said Hannah, sharply. "He would kuow well enough there was no chance of our ever paying him back. We manage to make just enough oil' the farm to live and that's all." " To think that I should have to go to the almshouse in my old age," moaned Mrs. Derwent. "Oh, motherl surely not quite so bad m that ?" said Katie. " Perhaps you will kindly suggest some plan," said Hannah, sarcastically. " I kuow of but one way In which we ran keep our home, and that does not appear to suit you." " I'll think it over," said Katie, "and while I am thinking, I will catch that gray rooster you want for dinner, Han nah." " Very well ; but Paul can't help you, for I've sent him on an errand. And I hope you'll think to some purpose, Katie." ' Hannah began to wash up the break fast dishes as she spoke, knowing that her sister understood very well what she meant by her last remarks, for Katie fetched heavily as she put on her straw hat and went out to the farm-yard in search of the gray cock, which she found scratching in some straw, utterly unconscious of his impending doom. But at the first flutter of her apron, which she tried to throw over him, he fled, closely pursued b y the young girl, whose seventeen summers had not given her dignity, or taken from her a childish love for racing and climbing. But running proved hard work in the hot August suu, out of breath at last, Katie stopped in a clover-field, the frightened fowl still a safe distance off. In Squire Davis' great meadow she could see the busy laborers loading the immense wagons with new-mown hay, and just beyond the stone wall which divided his farm from the Widow Der went's lay one of the men under the bhade of a spreading oak tree his hat pulled over his eyes, and his rake lying on the green grass beside him. A sudden inspiration seized Katie, w ho, putting her feet on the jutting fctone of the wall, sprang lightly to the top. "Man!" she called loudly "oh; man I win you neip me catch my rooster I know Squire Davis won't mind if you do," The man thus singularly addressed sat up suddenly, and thereby revealing a wealth of curly chestnut hair. His olothes were rough and ill-fitting, it is true, but his face, a refined and hand botne one, and bis bearing far above that of the average hired man. "I will help you in any way I can he said, after a quick glance at the flushed, pretty face of the girl on the stone wall. ' Did you say you wanted me to help you catch a rooster V" hesl tatingjust a little. " Yes, my sister wants him for dinner and I've run until I'm tired out. Do you suppose the squire will scold if you l-nd a little while helping me?" "Why should- heV" in a tone of surprise. Well, he's very strict, and his hired men have to work hard, I've heard. guess he don't know of your resting under this tree, and I'm afraid he will hear of it from the other men, and pay you your wages and turn you off." , "Ob, 1 see," said the young man with a smile. ' It is true ; you don't know mm as well as I do. I guess you haven't been working for him long." "Only this morning." " You look smart enough to make something better of yourself than a hired' man in a hayfleld," pursued Katie. " But of course that Is your own afl'alr. Don't let us waste any more time talking; that rooster is getting all his strength back." The young man sprang lightly over the stone wall, and again the chase began, the poor fowl succumbing to his destiny after five minutes of hard run ning. "And now you had better hurry back to the hay field," Katie said, after thanking the young man for his asslsU ance, "or you will certainly lose your place. It Isn't very pleasant to be turned off. Oh, dear, I forget that we are to be turned off ourselves next Mon day." ' What do you mean V" ' Well, I suppose you've heard everybody in the neighborhood knows it that there's a mortgage on our farm. It has been due six months, and now the agent writes we must leave next Monday. Oh, how I hate that Mr. Arle I" setting her small white teeth together vindictively. The young man started violently. "Is he the holder of the mortgage V" he asked, biting at a wisp of hay he held in his haud, hiB dark eyes bent on the ground. " Yes, and he is rich enough, if report is true, to afford to make us a present of the old farm. But I must go, or Han nah will be scolding," and with repeat ed thanks for the help he had given her, she hurried away, thinking him far superior to any laborer she had ever previously met and hoping the squire would not give him a scolding for shirk' ing work. The chicken dinner was much enjoy. ed by little Paul, the only one of the family who did not feel troubled at the impending removal from the old home, and he, poor child I was too young to know What sorrow meant. Hannah looked stern and forbidding. Mrs. Derwent's eyes were red, and there were traces of tears on Katie's cheeks, for she had not escaped a scolding from Hannah for unnecessary delay In the catching of the fowl. When dinner was over, and she had helped her sister tidy the kitchen, Katie took a tin pall from the pantry and her hat from Its peg and started out. " Where are you going 1"' asked Han nah, sharply. " To the stone wall in the pasture to pick blackberries." answered Katie. "I saw some nice ones up there this morn ing, when I was chasing the rooster, and I thought mother would like some for supper." "Very well," said Hannah ; "but don't stay the whole afternoon, for you've all these dish-towels to hem, though there's dj telling if we'll use em, since vvc'ii be in the poor house after Monday. The afternoon sun shone full on the blackberry bushes, and Katie found picking the ripe fruit no cool task ; but she preferred it to sitting in the house with llannan, listening to bitter re proaches for her refusal to take the step which could prevent the old home from passing into the hands of Mr. Arle. " Why should I have nothing, and Bqulre Davis all the good thingB V" she said, aloud, " Even the cool shade is on his side of the wall 1" She was interrupted in her rebellious reflections by the sudden appearance of Hannah, almost out of breath from run ning. " Katie," she said, "come home at once, Squire Davis is waiting to see you." " Oh, Hannah, I can't go ! I don't want to see him!" " Katie Derwent you ought to be ashamed of yourself," cried Hannah, loudly. "Squire Davis is rich, a mem uer or cuurcti, ana a man any woman might be glad to marry." " But he is so old, Hannah, and I am only seventeen." " Pshaw ! what does that matter V You will see us thrown on the charity of our friends, robbed of home, and its comforts, rather than make a trifling sacrifice. You can't have much love for your poor, sick mother or little brother. Squire Davis would pay off the mortgage at once if you would only promise to marry him. Come, Katie, don't be so stubborn." "I'm not stubborn, Hannah. I would do almost anything for mother and Paul, but, oh I let me have a little more time. I will think of it-I will indeed Tell the squire to come to-morrow, and I'll give him my answer." "Do you suppose he will submit to such treatment " demanded Hannah " Tell to come and go at your fanoy You promised last Sunday to give him an answer to-day." "But I can't, Hannah; no I can't to-day. You can tell him anything you like, but I won't see him to-day." " Then I'll tell him I couldn't find you," said the wily Hannah. "If I should tell him you had refused to come he would Buspect something." Katie waited uutli her sister's gaunt figure had disappeared over the rising ground, and then, throwing herself down by the blaokberry bushes, burst into tears. "I suppose I must do it," she moaned. " No, you mustn't," said a very sym pathetic voice, and looking up Katie eBpled, to her astonishment, her ac quaintance of the mornlng,slttlng above her on the stone wall. He was hand somely dressed now In a suit of gray tweed, and looked undeniably a geu- tleman. " Were you listening V" she demand ed, sitting up, the tears still lingering on her long, curling eyelashes. Yes, I was," was the frank reply. " You see, I grew tired of work, so I left the squire's employ put on my Sunday clothes and strolled out. I was lying down in the shade of the wall, dozing and had Just become aware of your presence on the other side when your sister came. Of course I could not then declare my proximity without embar rassing you both, so I waited." " You don't seem to think you are embarrassing me now," Bald Katie, wondering why his black eyes sparkled so mlschlevlously. "Am IV" very cooly. "Well, I am very sorry, (still you don't look very much overcome with confusion." "Appearances are deceitful sometimes" said Katie, rising to her feet. " True; you will have cause to remem ber that later. Now, take a little advice iu return for that you gave me this morning. Don't let your sister persuade you to marry the squire. You are far too young to take the position of step mother to his five children." " But if I don't marry him we can't keep the farm. No one else will lend us the money to pay off the mortgage. Oh, how I hate that Mr. Arle 1" The young man smiled. " Something tells me that all will come out right in the end," he said. " Wait a little while and see if I am not correct In my prophecy." " You are very kind, I'm sure, to take such an Interest in me," said Katie. " I thank you very much ; and now good. bye I feel too badly to stay out in this hot sun any longer," and picking up her pall of berries she walked away, the young man watching her until she was lost to sight over the rising ground of the clover, field. Katie's heart felt lighter, though she could scarcely tell why, and she crept up the back stairs to her own room unnoticed by Hannah, and bathed her red eyes. Then, feeling much refreshed, sne threw nerseir on ner bed and was soon asleep, completely worn out by the excitement of the day. She was awakened by the sound of voices in the parlor below, and curious to know who the visitor could be, she smoothed her hair and went down stairs. The parlor door stood half open, and she advanced as far as the threshold. but no further, for to her infinite amaze ment she saw, seated on the sofa in easy conversation with her mother, the young man whom she had left two hours previously by the stone wall in the clover field. ' Katie, this is Mr. Arle," said Mrs, Derwent; "and he has been so kind as to offer to let us keep the farm at a small rent. Come and thank him." But Katie did not stir in obedience to her mother's command. She gazed at Mr. Arle a moment as if petrified with amazement, and then turning, fled slamming the door behind her. " Forgive her rudeness, Mr. Arle," murmured the proper Hannah. " She is only a child, and does not know how to behave." George Arle smiled, but said nothing, understanding better than Hannah Katie's strange conduct. Katie was standing under the apple tree by the gate In the front garden when George Arle came out of the house and she waited for him. "forgive me," sue said, as He came close to her. " I did not know. I tho't you were really" "The squire's hired man," he inter rupted. "You see that, as you said appearances are deceitful sometimes I borrowed that old suit from Bob Davis, and I went to the hay field for a frolic but I found It less fun to.toBs hay than I had anticipated, so I went under that old tree to lie down. I came yesterday to the squire's to spend a few days with Bob." " What must you have thought of meV" Katie faltered. "I gave you advice and said" " That you hated Mr. Arle. Oh, I don't bear you any grudge. I am very glad you did not know to whom you were speaking, for, had you known, I should not probably have learned what my agent was about. I did not even know that the mortgage was due ; or, if be told me of it, I had forgotten it. But it Is all right now, and there Is no reason whatever that you should marry ihe squire," with a merry laugh. Then lie went away, and left Katie with a radiant face and a very Unlit heart, standing by the gate. When the squire came the next day for his answer he received it from Katie, herself, and it was very decidedly In the negative. Disappointed and chagrined, the elder ly lover went home to pour the story of his sorrows into the ears ot his guest, George Arle, who sincerely advised him to transfer his affections from his child ish Katie to the practical Hannah, who was In every way fitted to rule his house with judgment and economy. The squire's thoughts were driven Into a new channel, and he was not slow to see the soundness of the advice offered him. The result was, that three months had scarcely elapsed before Hannah was installed mistress.of the Davis house hold, she having no scruples on the score of her admirer's advanced years The three months had not proved uneventful to Katie, who received calls from George Arle whenever he could spare a day from his business In the city. Stundlng together one evening in late October under the old apple tree by the gate, the young man suddenly took in his both the small brown hands of his blushing companion. " Katie," he said, trying to look into the blue eyes which were persistently averted, "tell me, dearest, do you still hate that Mr. Ale V" There was no answer, and George raised with one hand the dimpled chin until he could at last see into the sky blue eyes. What answer to this question he read there, he could best tell ; but it must have been the one he wanted, for soon after there was a quiet wedding In the village church where Katie had worshipped since her childhood, and the blushing girl became the wife of him she had once mistaken for the squire's hired man. Before they left the village George Arle placed in his bride's hands a deed of the old farm, with the remark : "Give it to your mother, Katie. It win ue a guc wniou cannot rail to re mind her pleasantly of the little girl who persuaded the squire's hired man to help chaBe the rooster, and in so doing sealed her fate forever. That old gray rooster little knew how he would help us to a life together by running into that clover field bless him!" She thought it a " blessed mistake" now.- - - Joking the Lawyer. GOOD-NATURED Grlswold street . lawyer left his office unoccupied for an hour about two o'clock one hot afternoon, and some of the jokers in the block went in and built up a rousing hot fire in his coal stove.. He came back with his hat in his hand and almost dead with the heat, and was met on the stairs by a lawyer who said : " This is the hottest yet. The ther mometer in my room marks 120 de- grees." uon't seem, possible, though it's a scorcher," replied the other as be went on to his room. He threw down his bat, took off his coat, and began fanning himself; but the harder he fanned the hotter he grew. Two or three lawyers came in and spoke about how cool his room was compared to theirs, and were greatly puzzled to account for it. Several offers were made him to change rooms, and pretty soon he became ashamed of being so over heated and sat down to his table. In five minutes his shirt collar fell flat, and in ten he hadn't any starch in his shirt. The perspiration ran down in every direction, and he seemed to be boiling, when one of his friends looked in and remarked : "Ah, old boy, I envy you. You've got the coolest room in the block." " Say," said the lawyer, as he stag. gered to the door, " I'm going home. I never felt so queer in all my life. While I know that the room is cool and, airy, I'm so baked and boiled that I can't lift my hand. One drink of brandy wouldn't act that way on a man would it V" " That's just it," whispered the other. " Branny always acts that way, especi ally if you drink alone. You ought to have known better." "Boinaa soi naa. uon't say a word to the boys I'll make it all rlitht. I thought something must all me, and I was a little afraid I was going to be sent for. I'm glad it's nothing serious I'll be back In about two hours." Mrs. Partington says don't take any of the quack rostrums. as they are regimental to the human sis. era ; but put your trust in iiop Hitters. which will cure general dilapidation, costive bauits ana an comio aiseases.- They saved Isaao from a severe ex tact of tripod fever. They are the neph unutn or meuicines. Jtsottton utooe. 4a 2t . O" Health, hope and happiness are restored by the use of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. It is a positive cure for all those diseases from which women sutler so much. Bend to I Mrs. Lydia E. Plnkharu, 233 Western Avenue, for pamphlets. jyUSSER & ALLEN CENTRAL STORE NEWroitT, PENN'A. Now offer the puullo HARK AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT Of DRESS GOODS Consisting at all shades suitable for the season BLACK ALPACCA8 AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINB, AT VARIOUS PRICES. AN ENUr.ES3 8EM!CTION OF PBINTS' We sell and do keep a good quality ot SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS And everything under the head ot GROCERIES 1 Machine. Needles and oil for all makes ot Machines. To be oonvinoed that our goods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, IS TO CALL AND EXAMINE HTOCK. W No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. NOTICE ! rjMlE undersigned would respectfully cull the A. attention of the citizens of Perrv nnnntv that he has a large and well selected stock ot HARDWARE, UKOOKKfES, DHUdH. WINES & LIQUORS, IRON. NAILS, HORSE and MULE SHOES, STEEL. IRON AXLES, SPRINGS, ' SPOKES, HUBS, FELLOES. SHAFTS. POLES & BOWS, BROOM HANDLES. WIRE, TWINES, &o. ' Also, Paints, Oils, Olnss, Plaster, and Cement HOLE, CALF, KIP and UPPER LEAT1IEB, FISH. SALT, 8UOAR8, SYRUPS. TEA8.8PICES, lUBAiiUU, uiUAits, ana BMli.il CUAL. John Lucas &Co's.. MIXED rAIXTS, (ready for use.) The best Is the CHEAPEST. And a lareevarletvof rood not mentioned. allot which were bought at the Lowest Cash Prices, and he oners the same to his Patrons at the Very Lowest Prices for Cash or approved trade. Ills motto Low prices, and Fair dealing to all. Go and see him. .Respectfully, 8. M. 8HCLER. Liverpool, Perry Co. Pa. FOUTZ'S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS F0UT2 FOUTZ Will euro or prevent DlmM, Vo nouns will die of Couo, Bora or Lou Fa-. tea, If ynutz't Powderaare needlntlme. FoaU'ePowriari will cur end prevent Hoo Cffoun Fonts'! Powders will preront Gafbs iw Fowls. Fouti Powclcrt will Inrreiwe the qnnntllr of mil and cream twenty per cent, sod make the tratter firm end sweet. Foatz'e Powders will rare or prevent eimoet kvcbt Diiiasi to which llunioe end C'Mtlo ere nlijcct. FooTz'e PnniiEu will airs Satisfaction. Bold everywhere. DAVID E. rOUTZ, Proprietor, BAITIMO&JC, Kd. -For Sale by 8. B. Smith, New Bloomfietrf. Perry Con nty. Pa. ly if voa ere a of buslDe.weeA-I etted by the atrela of tentoiiixutcn vnur dntlM avoid I Bight work, to rec tor bnUn nerve ukd etimnlantsaBd use Hop Bitter. If von ere yoantr and eMecretkiu or dtalpe. lied or euie-te, old or poor health or uuwulsh Beee, rely on Hop wU. OM Hop rafferfo from may te Hod i it yon are mar yottikjr, muterlag from in on a bed of ttufr Bitter. Whoever yon are. whenever yoa feel tee your evetout Beede deeming, tor lu or etUnuietliMr, without intoarioattng. Thousands ate an froAlij from eome form of JC ldnv dlseaee that might have been prevented by a timely am of ieee nop Ittors. nopmrciara or urimarifoom pLiint, iLlmwi rxu o. ( an ahaolnta land IrreaiMa i bi e a r e for Jmknneee, )um of opium. hvtror nnvmi Tbi vlll ke eared itjooumt iopiooo, or nrjottea Sold by drmr trtsta. Head tur Circular. op mm HOP B.ttATS Ifyoaaretlm pry wsk awl lovnilrtUMleiry it I it may av your I Iff. It has saved hurt Srada A Tweeto, Ool iilHHIHMffllflULi November 9, Itww-K A Large Farm for Sale. A GOOD FARM OF ABOUT THREE Hl'N UKhl) ACKEtl niortt or Ires, in Perry County, Pa., hevlly t with Plna, White Oak. aud Hook Oak Timber. te.etiir with choice fruits. Mountain water conveyed Id pipes to the door of the dwelling. ts. For further particular call at this office. Augut 10, matt 1 t NEVER 1 FAIL Ui