VOL. XV. THE TIMES. Ail Independent Family Newspaper, IS FOBLIBHBOITIRt TUISDlT IT P MORTIMER & CO. TEIIMS i INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. 11.30 rr.lt TEtll, POSTAtJK Fit FT. so its. roil month. To siibsorlbers residing In this county, where we have no postage to pay. a dlsi'ntiHt of 2 cents from the shore terms will be made If payment Is made la advance. ear Adrertlslng rates furnished upon appllca tlou. SETH'S COURTSHIP. YOU are the torment of my life, Beth Smith. What under the sun, moon and stars are you forever poking about my kitchen for ?" and the speaker, a pleasaut-faced serving-woman, looked up from the pumpkin she was sifting, with an expression of countenaace which quite belled the severity of her words. " You mean Miss Caroline's kitch en," said Beth with a grin, as he seated himself by the pine table, which he had been heard to say was whiter and shini er than Deacon Brown's bald head, and a considerable more wholesome look ing. " I rather think you know, Huldah, why I stick round in this ere way," he continued ; "and it you really want me to tell you the story over again, I am just as ready now as I've been any time these last twenty years." " Oh, get out 1" replied Huldah, mak ing an unnecessary racket with her sieve agalnBt the side of her milk pan. " Throw an armful of wood into that oven, if you want to do something. I ain't got no time to listen to stories. ' ' Seth grinned again, and without stop ping to reply, though his great mouth was eloquent with words,which Huldah might have seen, had she looked at him, were only postponed arose and did as he was bid. Mechanically and abstract edly, he threw piece after piece of the dry, split wood into the oven, until Huldah, alarmed at the blaze which shot from its mouth, thrust him quickly to one side, 'and with a long poker, separated the burning mass. " Well, I should like to know, Seth Smith." she exclaimed, as she finished, "what you wor doing? Ask a man to help you, and if he don't set the house a-fire, '(ain't his fault." You're more scared thau hurt, Hul dah," Beth replied cooly. " What shall I do now stir the pumpkin for you ?" " No, you won't do anything of the sort," his companion answered. " If there's one thing that I hate above another, it's to have a man fussing about my cooking." " I made my own pie last Thanksgiv ing," said Seth,with unintended pathos. " More shame for you," replied Hul dah. " There wasn't anybody to blame but yourself if you did, for you know that I'd come over and made 'em for you. All that I wanted Mas an invita tion." " Why, I've In vlted you hundreds of times to come and stay," said Seth, in that same pathetic manner. " Well, suppose you have," was the irritated response. " I should like to know how you think Miss Caroline would get along without me? I've been in this kitchen a good many years, .Seth Smith, and the folks that I served are all gone now, 'cept Miss Caroline, and I wouldn't give her the slip for a hundred men, no, not for a thousand! 80 you can put that in your pipe and smoke it quick as you're a mind to." " That's the kind of tobacco I've been smoking ever since I can remember, Huldah," said Seth with a comical grin, but in a minor key for all that ; " but I've kinder thought' inebby what you wouldn't do for a regiment, you might sometime see your way to do for the man you know you love. Huldah whenever you may say and" "Rake them coals again, Sethi" -broke in Huldah, with a well-feigned interest in the oven. "At this rate I don't believe I shall get any baking -done to day 1" "I tried, lately," Seth began again, quite ignoring the Interruption, " to try NEW BLOOMFIELt), IJ-A.., TUESDA-Y, and put down this feeling that there couldn't nothing come on, but I might as well try to make myself over into a handsome man, Huldah, as to stop thinking of you." "Well, there wor a time Seth," said Huldah, as she stirred the sugar and the spice into the golden pumpkin, and taking on a more con tldential tone,"that I were willing to own up that I was tempted." " When was that, Huldah V" inquired Seth, with a sigh, though ills eyes were dancing with fun. " Wheu you got home from the war, and had to go on crutches then for a spell," cried Huldah. " Then it seemed to hie it wor my duty to take care of you ; and I remember well the day I'd made up my mind to say so. I was looking up the road expecting to see you come hlppity-hopping down aa-you had been doing, wheu lo and behold I there you wor as fine as a fiddle, without any crutches at all, and walking almost as spry as you do this minute." "I give 'em up before I really ought to, Huldah," said Seth, " because I thought you hated the sight of 'em ; and now I And when it is too late, that they were my best friends. They're up iu garret now, and I'll get 'em out if you say so." "Don't be a fool!" Bald Huldah, with a snap. "Ijustwauted to get it into that thick head of yourn, that if you needed me you'd have me in spite of anybody in the created world. Stir up them coals again !" Once more Seth did as he was told, and as he raked the glowing embers, the door opened, and Miss Caroline, the mistress of this great house, and sole heiress of one of the richest estates in Massachusetts, walked into the kitchen. She might have been thirty and even more, but she looked about twenty-three or four with her fresh, almost childish complexion, light brown hair and beau tiful gray eyes, with her long, dark, sweeping lashes. She was a little above medium height, aud in face and figure was the very personification of grace and delicacy. Caroline Wyndham could never be called pretty, but she was as handsome and as proud a woman as ever walked the earth. " So Seth is tormenting you again, is he Huldah ?" the lady inquired laugh ingly. " You were so quiet down here, that I didn't known but that you had forgotten all about Thanksgiving prepa rations !" " Now, Mis Caroline," said Huldah, annoyed as much as she could be with the mistress she was fond of. "I've been talking kinder of serious to Huldah," Seth broke iu. "But I can't see that it has amounted to any thing." " Keep it up," Miss Caroline replied. " there is nothing in this world tells like determination t It is very strange, that Huldah holds out so long against becoming Mrs. Smith ;" aud now the lady brought a spoon and tasted of the cook's pumpkin mixture, which was almost ready to be poured into the pie plates. " A little more sugar, Huldah," she continued, and then, with another laughing glance at the awkward lover, who stood with his back against the kitchen door, added : " Why, Seth, I should have given in with half as much coaxing as Huldah has had." " There are some folks you know, Miss Caroline, who are too proud to beg," said Seth, with a quick look at the lady; " but I'm glad I ain't asham ed to hang on to what I want. Huldah has been telling me that if I'd beeu obliged to go on crutches a little while longer, she'd had to give in." Miss Caroline turned away, and looked out of the window, but not before Seth had seen the color fade out of her face, and a little shiver creep over her supple fig ure. " I was down to Boston yesterday, Miss Caroline," Seth continued careless ly. " Well, I suppose Boston is as well as usual," the lady replied, with a poor at tempt at facetlousness. " Lively as ever," Stth responded. "I run up to the West End to see how Colonel Lovell was getting along. I al ways like to call on him whenever I get a chance." If MIbs Caroline imagined that Seth was going to volunteer any more infor mation she was certainly disappointed. After a pause of a few seconds, she re marked, with apparently very little Interest In what she was talking about : " I suppose the Colonel Is still Improv ing V At least I've been told he was doing very well." " Oh ; they are all fools," Beth replied, angrily. " The Colonel cau walk rouud the room a little on crutches, and that's something he never expected to do. Just think, twelve years, Miss Caroline, without walking a step. I tell ynu that last Bull Bun gave him a dose." " Isn't that better r" the lady Inquired crossly, the blood coming back to her face in a great surge. Some emotion must manifest itself, aud, as sometimes happens, in cases where there has had to be a great repression, auger Is the first to come forward. " That's better as far as it goes," said Beth, " but the Colonel's health Is very bad, and the doctor says if lie don't have somethiug to rouse him from the awful fix he's got Into he's a goner. He looks fearful, Miss Caroline. His eyes are as big as saucers, and he's pale as a ghost." " Well, we have all got to be ghosts sometime," the young lady answered, after a pause, aud with an assumptliw of heartlessness which was utterly for eign to her nature. " I Bhall be obliged to you, Seth," she continued a moment after, " If you will ask John to saddle Nero. I will be ready in ten minutes." " You've done it, Seth Smith," said Huldah, in rage, as her mistress walk ed out of the kitchen and closed the door. " Going to ride Nero. I don't believe the Old Harry himself has got a horse in his stable that'll come up to Nero for viciousness. If you'd only held your tongue she'd helped me to make some cake, and been as peaceable as you please. Now she's all worked up." " I'm glad of it," said Seth. " It's time somebody was worked up, and if you could see the Colonel you'd think so too." " Yes," said Seth'of course he did. 'Tlsu't likely an honest, square-minded man like Colonel Lovell would expect a woman -to stick to an engagement with a cripple for life, is it V But I'm just as sure as if I'd heard him say so, that he never thought Miss Caroline would take him at his word. She thinks he wanted to get rid of her, so there's a pair of idiots together." Seth went out to the stable saddled Nero, and brought him round to the front of the house. Miss Caroline had a spot on each cheek, as she walked down the hawthorn-hedged path to the gate where Seth waited. " Johu wasn't anywhere round," said Beth, apologizing quite humbly, for do ing the lady a kindness; "and so I brought the horse round myself. Bhall I give you a mount, Miss Caroline ?" " Yes ; thank you, Seth," she replied, springing at once to the saddle, and while her companion held the snorting and impatient Nero, Miss Caroline,drew on and buttoned her gauntlet gloves. " I don't know but this beast frill be the death of you, sometime, Miss Caro line!" Seth remarked as he stepped out of the way of the dangerous hoofs. "Oh, well," the lady replied, "if he is, there's one good thing, there won't be any one to care very much about it." This was said with childish petulence, but the tender look in, the deep gray eyes, aud round the lips which would tremble In spite of all efforts, touched her companion to the heart. " Seth," she broke out again, before he could collect his wits to reply, "you are always talking to me or at me, which means the same thing, only it is more disagreeable, about Colonel Lovell, and as if I were iu some way responsible for all that has happened to him. Now, I want to tell you one thiug, and I hope you will remember it sufficiently to spare me iu the future, and it is this I am no more to blame for Colonel Lovell'sbelng alone and unhappy, either in the past or in the present time, than I am for the wounds which have made him an inva lid all these years. If he had allowed me, I should have been with him, not as a duty, but because I couldn't be any. where else, in comfort ; but I could not force myself upon Colonel Lovell, Seth. You have heard of course that he broke the engagement. I have given every body to understand this, because I could OCTOBER 4, 1881. not allow my friends to suppose that I would be mean enough to desert him in his great affliction. Blnce his cruel let ter, Seth, by means of which be broke his promise, and mine, he has never sent me a mefgige or written me aline. Now, do you think ynu understand the case enough, Beth, to stop speaking of Colonel Lovell to me V" TbeBe last words rang out In such a wall of anguish, that Beth's eyes filled with tears. Miss Caroline gave him no time to reply, for she took up her reins, and Nero aud his rider were oft' like (he wind. It wasn't but a few minutes be fore she came galloping back over the meadows aud through the orchard, and so 011 to the kitchen door. "Where's Beth V" she asked of Hul dah, reining in Nero with great difficul ty. - ' He didn't come iu again after be took the horse round," Huldah replied, and before she could say any more, Nero was wheeled around and bounded off in the direction of Beth's cottage, a quarter of a mile up the hill. All that day Miss Caroline, was rest less aud nervous. She was obliged to return without finding Beth, and so she wandered up and down the great house without any apparent motive, except to kill time, aud when Huldah asked her if she wouldn't help her with the cake, she replied that there was cake enough in the bouse, and half an hour after wards she entered the kitchen, with her cooking apron on, to try a new rule. That evenening, wheu Seth came round, Miss Caroline sent for him to come to the library. " I never thought this morning, Befh, to tell you," she began, with averted face, "that what I said at that time was in the strictest confidence. I rode back to try to And you, for I began to be worried five minutes after I left you." " I hope you don't think I would do anything to hurt you Miss Caroline?" " I don't think you would Intend to, Beth," the lady explained, " but I didn't know but your desire to do me a service might render you indiscreet. You un derstand now, Beth, that your lips are always to be sealed in regard to that fool ishness ?" " Yes Miss Caroline," Seth respond ed. " I'll never speak another word about It as long as I live, unless you give me leave," and here the interview ended. Seth made desperate lave to Huldah, the remainder of the evening, every once In a while bursting out into the most unexpected fits of laughter, and these spasms were so contagious that Huldah found herself joining in, with out any idea of what she wai laughing about. " Say, Huldah," Seth remarked, just as he was leaving, "I want you to promise me one thing." " I'll see," said Huldah. "I want you to give me your sacred word of honor that If Colonel Lovell and Miss Caroline ever get married, you'll marry me the same day." " Lor yes 1" Huldah laughed, "and I'll do better than that, Beth. I'll prom ise to be your wife the day Colonel Lov ell steps his foot into this house, or the day Miss Caroline steps foot in bis." " All right," said Seth, " but suppose he Is brought in, instead of stepping In?" " I don't care a hang how he comes," Huldah replied, " but that day shall see you and me one, and I'm safe In prom ising it, too, Seth Smith." Bath walked off still laughing, and Miss Caroline, as she sat before the li brary fire, felt more alone than ever. Within the past five years, her father, mother and Bister, had been taken away by death, and to-night, of all nights since these terrible events, she seemed to herself most wretched and lonely. The next day but one was Thanksgiv ing, and Miss Caroline nerved herself to meet this holiday with all the courage and philosophy she could bring to her aid. There used to be great feasting and merriment in the Wyndham man sion on such occasions, but the . mis tress of this beautiful home could not bring herself yet to open its doors for the old-fashioned hospitalities. " I was in hopes you wouldn't cry to day," said Huldah, Thanksgiving morn ing, as her mistress entered the dining room. " Goodness me I my muffins are as light as feathers, and the coffee is un NO. 40. usually good, and seems to me this last ham we cut beats the rest all boiler ! Now I'm going to broil a nice bit of tenderloin. Bay, don't cry there's a dearie I" and Huldah patted Miss Caro line's shoulder, and wept herself as she tried to comfort her mistress. " You've got a heap to be thankful for, Miss Caro line, after all," Huldah said, with a lit tle protest in her voice. " Yes, I know it," said Miss Caroline, wiping her eyes. "I have muffins and bam, to be thankful for, and a little more money and land than my neigh bors," she added bitterly, and then "I don't mean that I bavn't anything, Huldah ; for as long as I have you, I can't be quite desolate." " Good gracious I" exclaimed Huldah. " I've got a lump in my throat as big as a loaf of bread I" and, as she left the dining-room, "You know Miss Caro line, that when I get to sniffling there ain't no stopping me. Miss Caroline went to church that morning, and as she walked up the aisle to the Wyndham pew, there were no traces of tears on her face, anil her bearing was as queenly as If, as many thought, her wealth and position entire ly satisfied her. After the service was over, she greeted her friends and ac quaintances kindly, and then got into her carriage and was driven home. " Perhaps it would have been better," she moaned to herself, in her great lone liness, " to have taken somebody home to dinner with me. But how could I make them happy, with this heavy heart of mine?" When the carriage stopped at the front gate, Beth was ou band to open the door. ," Good sermon, Miss Caroline?" he asked. . " I don't know Beth," she answered, " for I believe I didn't hear a word of " That's a pretty way to go to church!" her companion laughed and added care lessly, " Say, Miss Caroline," you've got company to dinner to-day." "Only one," Beth continued " and he's making himself easy before the library fire. You needn't be in a hur ry, if you've got any fixing up to do." Just here, Seth dodged round the cor ner of the house, and when Miss Caro line called upon him to come back, be didn't reply and the lady walked into the house like one in a dream. Very slowly and deliberately she removed her things, and then stepped into the parlor, which room communicated with the library. The folding doors were partly opened, and the first, thing that met the lady's longing eye, were a pair of crutches, standing In au angle of the mantle. A little further, and there, In her favorite lolling chair, reclined the man whom all these long years she bad so faithfully loved. Her step was as a fawn's, but Colonel Lovell heard it, and was prepared for ber coming. Stepping behind his chair, Miss Caroline," placed a tender band on each side of his cheeks and kissing his forehead, said, Boftly.be tween a sob and a laugh. "My dear, I thank God you have come." Kneeling beside bim with ber fair bead on his breast, and his loving arms around ber the Colonel said : " Beth brought me to dine with you. Did you know it, my darling ?" "And you shall never, never go away," Miss Caroline replied, " until you take me with you." Just here, there was a knock on the door, and Seth and Huldah entered arm in arm. " I just come up," said Seth with his usual promptitude, "to tell you that Huldah and me was going to be spliced this afternoon, and to ask you If the parson mightn't kill two birds with one stone?" Mis Caroline lifted a blushing, laugh, ing face to her lover's uut replied quite clearly : " It seems to me that would be an excellent plan." " Is it not a shame ?" the Colonel be gan, but a little hand was placed over his mouth, and the sentence was never finished. " Well, Beth has come it over me this time, awful," said Huldah ; "but I gave my word, and I can't go back on it." "You were wiser than I Beth," said Miss Caroline ; "I shall be grateful to you as long as I live." " And I' said the Colonel. That evening there were two weddings in the Wyndham niansioiv Did the Colonel get well ? Of course he did.