TESi "HE ADVERTISER. THE ADVERTISER - - -,, Published every Thursday by ADVERTISING KATES. CATJPHJEY & ILACJZJBR, S9 ?7 2? 5 Ili : s , ls s"r 2 SPAOK. Proprietors. A -ti ii no JTallincb. I? Mi? 0OIliO52XO fZSOjSS.QO 1.001 Ul! 2.00. 2.50- S.nol 7.80 ?K.0& 14.t tr M.ro 2UO W.C0 euro KO.Ofl 4- Onelnch. IBJCe .O.J.U" DU i .... i -r- - . a. m tt.tlL.MMnld Tl.lr m Wrvl-. Twolnches Three Inches Six Inches. Twelvelnches. t"necoIumn 2.C0I 2.75.' 3.501 4.00 7.00'JO.OO BROWXVILLE, "NT3BRA5KA. 3-coi -i.on. s.00 6.oo law JS.OO 5.00' 7.00, 8.00 10.00 13.00 z&oo 9.09-top) li.00 I5.MI MDC 35.00 1SJJ0 T5SH 3J.SQ ZoM 3J.00 WXOO Terms, in Advance ; .PRala.'lvertlxement&atlpgH! rates: One square U0 line of "Nonpareil space, ot lwd,)flrst Insertion 1 1,00; cachsubeunectinsertion,5& SSTAlltransclentadTertrseinents lfivuttie palT rorinadrjmee. " . - ' jne copy, one year- 82 00 . X 0 50 Jne copy, six months Jue copy, three months- ESTABLISHED 1856. l Oldest Paper in the State. 3 BROWN vTLLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY AUGUST 7, 1873. VOL. 17 NO. 43. LEADING MATTER OyETERTPAGE OFFICIAL PAPEK OF TnE COU 5TY " "" . !- -I .... I I . - . ""' ' ' "' "" "'" 1 - . - -. .- . - i - . - . - BUSINESS CARDS. ATTORNEYS) J. H. Brosdj-) I A Tj. . nvcf gtoMJIaiifc. Brownvllle.yeb. -t .-n -rT-VETX)K AT A...T. . t ir Thomns ,VP,. T t.aW. Office, front room over Li-eBni Crs'a Hardware Store. Brown- ".2.'el- " cMn.r Trfncll. "r0TT rT XT f.AW. . TTOKS-ET A5D S-orpiS Office. B?Swn A OSice, two door, eatt ot ! " H1. ,-f . Alness entrasted to htm. Wi Stull &. Sclvlclc, i mv he consulted In tMcnBiij" .,. li-if:. SS!- u-'u """ TsTly r iutw. Brownvaie. . : " -nr. T. Rocertl nryVT-r aXD COUNSELOR ATXA.- i TTORKEV -,Viiint attentWn to any lezal VT..i J?!"uk re.OfflcelnCounHuie as'.ness eiru-. '" - b Id.nK. wnrouw-M- - -, JL ,sn COrXSELOBS ATXAW .. - irmBlli lA'BSSiasfc tts: "V uKIOUS. Attorney RtVrT. . vji:ri"arv"" -" i " PIIYSIC1AXS. TTmTTADAV .B.. Physician. Surgeon S- 'JTHhmIA Graduated In 1851 Coca ami Li3-"-"" .. - -rf . rmkifr' IrtriclnS-dUeasea of Women and pa i ivm)iu Z ArTTTrw! PhrKiclan and un;eon. 0ce g.WB Sataln street, Brown- - IT T7wtfUM. .tr-v OF THE PEACE AS?COIIEenOS J lJ. C?loWnot 'accounts for Eha-"-611- " 1,. A. Bcrgmann, t a-t OOVVEYAXCEB. I yOT-V xo. Main Kret. BrownvlUe. yen. ; Z T..hii..nd Conveyancer, T7 E.EBRI'lH-r.jMHa--gJo- BnWUVlller I ii. So 7 ffiffiSK American Ton- "J??V .5re"1. Twmpanles. t. IIUC a-i -" ,im ... - fr-f lirh. Tirwins. and dealers n Palnta, Oils, , Wall D iiam Bweev nrjwnvine. eb. I.AXD AG3TSi , n...(n.i TnTTiivlnr A PlC07AVcll Block, wrner First f -Jl. .tztist. O.ace " iJf-a"" ,.;, Mrntionto ESegaffiSja:-.- :hroug ui iu --tT ,-r Tl.t T?otf Atrpnt antl RUliomrih MC- P-Cjr.sBiock. up stairs. ir" " ' ""- i v.- -t?...A nnrt TltT yi IL.iaAJi,u. " f.:.' T.-t-t, rinrt Room. n FaviUSAWK., "'"r"T, o f Ileal E- iS&X&X" uuia xu.i; . GRAIN DEALEHS. fii-o. G. Starti VASnBEVLERIX GRAIK AND AGBTCUD w A3 VJr..l . .....i ctnruro ToTWardinK d Cnimlssion iferchant, Asplnwull.Neb. SADDLERY. J-T BAUER, Harness. Bridies. Lars;r.ic.,-.iu. ."M iIaInstreet.Browuvilltf.VeIj. ilendingdone tcordcr natlsfactlon Guaranteco. BRIDGE BCILDIJiG. CW. WHEELER.BndKeBnildi'rand Contractor. . Brcwnvllle. Neb. Sole av-eut for R. .ismltb s Patent Truss Bridge. The strongest and btsu wooden bridge now In use. HOTELS. A MERICAN HOUSE, L. D.Roblson. Proprietor. A. Fr-jut street, between ilain and Culle&e. Good Feed and IJvery Sible in connection with this House. GUX SMITH. "Tr. F. CRABDOCK. Gun Smith & Ixck Smith. W t3hop at No. 52, JIaIn street. BrownvlUe, Nebraska. uus made to order, and repalririKdone promptly -t cheap riea. 35-ly BLACKSMITHS. JTP. A J. C. GIRSON, Btacksmlths and Horse . Shoers, First street. between Main and Atlantic, Brown vlllc. Neb. Work done to orderand satisfac tloa guaranteed. BOOTS AND SHOES. LF.X. ROBINSON, Boot and Shoe 3Iaker,No. J. L 5s Main street. Brownville.Neb. Hasconstant- y on hand a sood assortment of Gent's, Lady's, Miaiei'a'.d Children's Boots and Shois. Custom work d .-tie with neatness and dispatch. Repairing done on short notice SALOONS. JOSEPII HUBDART fc CO.. Peace and Quiet Sa loon No.51 Main street. Brown vllle. Neb. The -best Wines and Liquors kept on hand. L. A. BerginnTTTt & Co., Manufacturers of Cigars, and Wholesale Dealers in Chewing and Smoking Tobaco, Orders from ih country promptly filled, and satKractlonfcuuranteed. io.41 Main St., ItllOlTSYILLE, XEB. Clocks, Watches, Jewelry JOSEPH SHUTZ, No. 59 Mala Strt, Brotcnville. Keeps constantly on hand a large and well assorted stock or genuine articles in his line. jRepairinc of Clocks, Watches and Jewelry done on short notice, at reasonable rates. ALL WORK WARRANTED. EXCHANGE M J. G. HT7SSJELZ, Dealer In J 23 wnOLESALE AXD RLT1IL. -3 iS JIalu Street, i-3 H3 BILLIARD "W. T. MOORE & CO., Commission Merchants, SHIPPERS, AXD DEALERS IN GRAIN AXD COAL, 72 Main Street, BrownvlUe. Nebraska. 9vl ii BT HD GROW FIT I" BODY & BRO., (SnccEssons toJ.L. Crooks &. Co..) BUTOHEES ! SUN TWO SHOPS. One ODonsite Sherman TTons-on "Main streot ,hi other next door to Bratton'p, on Sixth street. Good, sweet, fresh meat always on hand, and sst Ef&ctlon guaranteed to customers. 17-25-ly FRA2TZ HELMER, UfAGON &gLAGKSMlTHKOP ONE DOOB WEST OF COUKT HOUSE. WAGON MAKLNG, Repairing, PIowb, and all work done la the best manner and on short notice. SafisBscfibn Kuaran--eed. GiveUimacan. IM-ly. ! f n t'OA rr!7ranti urt!t-AncU"fwitMcffJ. w LJ v le,orlUicrex,im;oroU.Ta&teIBarexaaaf;a: ' i fCi3 ? -' p morMii m-ii um umatiuui t uixtMss . Is UQU0RS&C1GARS PERU ADVERTISEMENTS. Insurance noil a Privilege bUtaSntyi Continental Insurance Company OF NEW Tf ORK. Assets over ...... Lokhc paid in Chicago. Losses paid In Boston, . . $3,000,000 . 1,500,600 '500,000 ITo rr mBlle a specialty, upon thelnstul r di III meat Or Annual Premium plan, Qiclz-c for five years; less than fire years, niolVb stock plan. Insure against loss or damage by Fire and jiguiniug imiiuings and contents, nay. grain and stock. GEO. T. HOPE, Pres. Cvnus Peck, Sec. C. J. Barber, General Agent, Omaha. P. M. MARTIN, AGEN FOR NTE5IAHA COTFSTY. BAEKBS & HOODET, SATII UA11313. S. a 31O0DCT. DEVLEHSIN w BOOTS, SHOES, Glassware, Qneensware, i HH oioTiHnro, SATS, LvXPSofthe In great i CAPS, L Latest Styles Kj- variety. ! i A FULL Moul for Picture LIKE OF dings3 for ' ,T?w,n W . i X GtiitlHt HIGHEST aiAHKET PRICE t PAID FOR 2r IE. &.X !F; l?of Present or Spring Delivery, i We are constantly filling up with new goods which we SELL LOW DOWN to suit purchasers. WE REFER TO GTR CUSTOMERS. S. R. DAILY, DRrGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, FINE TOILET SOAPS, '& Fane j Ilairi Tooth BfushcSi Perfumery, Toilet Articles, TErSSES, snorxDEK BRACES, Gtv antl Garden Stall, POIE "WINES AXD LldDORS FOR. MEDICINAL PURPOSES, Paints. OilSj Tarnishes and Dje Stuffs Letter Paper, PenN, Inkv, Envelopes, GLASS, PUTTY, Carbon OH Lumps and Chimneys. Physician's Prescription! Carefully Compounded TRUSS UHB. II. S. Mail and Transfer lacks, MAKE P.EG UL AK TRIPS DAILY FROM PERU, NEBRASKA, TO Nobra-ka mnklne connection with trMns City, on the Midland .Facinc ll. R, Brownville andretnrn dally, raaklngcon- liection witn the liusses to iiieips fetation. Mo., ou the K. C, St. Jo. & C. II. R. R. Also with hncks Jo Araso via Nemaha City. Asp! n wall, Hillsdale and St. Deroin. FREIGHT AND EXPRSS orlTl TJJc, transferred on these routes All iViiiub at reasonable rates. fi3- Passengers comfortably provided for. Charges moderate. OFFICE at Dally Bros.'s Drue Store. Peru. All orders will receive prompt attention. M. H. THOJIPSOX, Prop't. SCHOOL nmwm We invite your attention to the superiority of the )EARS ( 6 SETTEE ATENT COMBINED. IT HAS THE FOLDING DESK AND SEAT. IT IS FltEE FROif NOISE. IT IS STRONG, BEAUTIFUL, CONVENIENT,' UUXtA-UL. The castings are one-fourth heavier than those of auy other desk, and so llansed as to secure the Kreatest possible strength. The wood is selected cherry, walnut or ash, thoroughly seasoned and kiln-dried, and handsomely finished in shellac. The scat, arm, and back, are beautifully carved and slatted. We guarantee against breakage In fair usage. It fits the school house for school or church purposes. We also manufacture "THE G E 31 ,' as its name indicates, an elegant stationary Top Desk. The 'ECONOMIC" absolutely defies competi tion In prices lor rurnltnre WHICH IS GOOD. We are also making a fuUIlne ot Recitation Set tees. Teacher's Desks, Chairs, and all SCHOOL FURNITURE. Our list or apparatus includes Clocks. Bells. Globes, Maps, Charts, Slated Paper. Liquid Slatlntr, Chalk, Philosophical and Chemical Apparatus. Dictionaries, and everything desirable In any grade of schools, all ol which we will sell for cash, or on sufficient time to enable a district to levy and collect a tax. liaade's Reading Case is rapidly superceding the ordinaryreadingTablets. SCOOOgroups. phrases and sentences, based upon tne word-method, admirably 5?an,t,ed to primary lessons In Drawing, Numbers, steading and Grammar. Address our nearest agent, who will call upon you without delay. National School Pumiture Co., jia ana iio State Strre, CHICAGO. P.M. MARTIN. Exclusive Agent for Otoe. Ne maha. Richardson and Pawnee counties, solicits correspondence. Will visit you with sample. Five or ten-year building bonds negotiated without charge to patrons. Address Box 101, Peru. Ue'brasluu CHARLES GAEDE PROPRIETOR. Guests received at all hours, DAY and NIGHT. Connects with jLavex-y Stable under same manarrRmpnt i .eS-Careful attention Iven to the ' wants or guests. "We refer to the traveling public. C. W. CUX.EERTSOX, (HER and BUILDER CONTBACTS TAKEN. Material PurnislieflTrlieE Desired, at terms and rates which defy competition. I Address, or call at Shop, corner" Flff.br arid; A'arK streets, rTsra. jn en, Sefffi V, J A. H. GTLLETTr " Ur M.TTCLES. 87 TLANKS ofallfclnds. forsaleatthe"AdTertIse GENERAL GROCERIES Bill a 8 " f?3lj Lr Ffe1 omcE PERU ADVERTISEMENTS. Xfc . Gr. W. PEARSON J I will make to order W I BOOTS AND SHOES. W g2FAIEIN& DONS PEOMTTLY. Call and see Samples. S3 K o H R Al.T. WORK WAKEjLXTKD. JOHIV BRPWSDOIV, 1 , Fashionable Boot and Shoe CUSTOM W0KK ALWAYS OX HAXIh H 5 Repairs erecuted with neatness. W I CALL AND EXAMINE MY STOCK B. B. S3IITH, Justice of the Peace & Coflection AGENT. Special attention given to collection of notes anu accounui xor uuu-icucuw. Address Bos 50, PERU, Nemaha Co., Neb. " O. JET." BarberShop & Restaurant W. C. CCMUIING. All work done In the neatest and latest style. The choicest brands of Cigars con stantly on hand. Delicious Confectionery. Ice Cream In season. Oysters stews on short notice. Soda Fountain in full blast. Fifth St. opposite Brick Church, WELL; .A.. W. ELLIS SOLE PllOPBIETOK. has the exclusive right of putting in BUKE.U WELLS in NEMAHA COUNTY. Calls by letter receive prompt attention. Parties may make choice of PINE, GALVENIZED IRON OR CE13IENT TUBING. We make wells through ROCK, as we are provided with a thousand pound horse-power drill. Drill same size as Auger. Guarantee water or no pay. Postoflice address, PERU, Nel Horing done in Wtnteras well as Summer. BANKS. a 3?g S. 1 Q M d o o o 8 M c e -i So a? as I?" H o H N td 0 W r3 u Q 0 J K r3 d 3 5 3 -5 trc s mri va H r & C-3 SS: o I o 1 E p c ft i P o 5 - wg r . &3 1 J- r 73 3 C a l?0 9 5 H r a 1 55 hi rJ III 2.-13 - ?. Id ? i es 9 O 2 p O 9 .3 fa J4 S 55 ? & c55sx - 9 s .n BBS : r .Z ii- iT'x o e Q KZ o f d 4 H 0 o c n ri i JC ri a ro5 -.-a 1 - o rUBNITURE. J. L. KO"", Dealer in FURNITURE.! Undertaking a Specialty. Keeps a full line of METALIO AND WOOJD BUBIAL GASES. 56 Xaia Street, BROWJfYILLE, TfEB. J. BLAKE, DENTIST All Operations Per formed la thebrst Haer . Oyncxr At residen ce on Main street; ; H -i j a U n f 5 ! g Phases l 5 K 2 I gsa HPfcg53 . 2 R-. H U I I r : -rf t: la , O fa . a a -, LaSQlMJWSt5R. ' AK EDITOR'S WOOING. "We love thee Ann Maria Smith 4 And In thy condecenslon, We see a future full of Joys, Too numerous to mention. There's Cupid's arrow In thy giaiieS; And this, by lore's coercion. Has reached our very heart of hearts. And asked for an Insertion. "With Joy we feel the blissful smart, And ere our passion ranges, "We freely place thy love upon The list of our exchanges. There's music in thy lowest tone, And silver In thy laughter; And truth but we will give the full Particulars hereafter. Oh ! we would tell thee of our plansj All obstacles to shatter ; But we are full, Just now, and have A press of other matter. Then let us marry, Queen of Smiths, "Without more hesitation ; The very thought doth give our blood AJarger circulation ! LAMEST OF THE DISOOXSOLATXl LOAFER. They say "a good time's comlnc," Though It travels mighty slow ; But If ever It should getiiere, I hope they'll let us know. I can't get a drop of gin. And am short of braad and tater, And llnd that I am getting In Almost a state of natur. My'coat with mud Is coated, And wholly full of holes; My drawers are overdrawn ; my shoes - Have mercy on their soles ! For they have gaped, and sasmed To cry for pegs and stltohes t But though divested of a vest, I've breaches in my breechesi Tboy say this oountry's free4 Ho tyranny can block up But when I has a spree. They puts me in the lock-up If thus they treat a freeman Of this boasted Yankee nation, I'd rather be a nigger slave. And work on a plantation. There were terrible mistakes. At the time. of the "creation ;" For the plan of natur' surely needs A sight of alteration ; For thorns or thistles grow Without being hoed or planted, And weeds are always sure to come Just when they isn't wanted. Why net have wheat and corn Spontaneously growing? And why should inters need Such an awful sight of hoeing 7 Thut a fellow's back must ache, And his hands grow hard and horny? Oil, If I oxly had the tin, I'd go to Callforny. THE THREE MARYS OP SHARPS YILLE. They are all dead uow as dead as tbeir scriptural namesakes, bo that they may lawfully "become the prey of literature," and, without auy glam or of romauce, ouly with the safety of time and distance, be made to live in the memories of the few Sharps ville people why survive them. Three unmarried Polly a they were, of different degrees of education and opportunity, but of the same social position, being that of "one that serves," and of very nearly the same age. Polly Frank had a story ; a sorrow ful one, of which 1 never heard mauy particulars, and those only years af ter my first guess. Poor thing! I suppose it was a comfort to her her to whisper her Bad seoret to the ear of eveu a child, else why should the have told me once that she had a son, twenty j-ears old; aud when I bald, "I didn't know you were mar ried, Polly," why did elie unnecessa rily confuse my infant mind by say ing she never had been ? he mubt once have been very handsome, for her face was of the Grecian ideal type, with a line run ning straight from the low forehead to the tip of the nose aud following a short upper lip and round chin that Aspasia would have been proud of. So much of beauty was left that age could not wither ; with a tall, com manding figure, that never stooped or bent to living man or woman. Blue eyed, fair-haired, and strong-limbed she-was as the chariottedBoadicca, or as a daughter of the New Hampshire hills was wont to be. Had she a father? hnd she a moth er? And why was she scrubbing in any back-kitchen in Sharpsville that happened to want her, when every one knew that she counted kindred with the bluest blood in W., and when she couldn't wash a floor or cook a dinuerwithoutmaking enough olasslcal allusious.to astonish a soph omore? "How came you to know Latin, Polly V" "Studied it, child, of course. My father taught me, Dr. Frank ; and Greek, too," Then aho would reaite In what pur ported to bo that tongue. We never thought of questioning the Greek or Latin then but there came a day when doubt broke in upon us, and when we doubted everything I mean about her knowledge. The first day, so fatal to faith, I was reading in the kitchen, and looking up dutifully, as usual, said, "Polly, Where's Crown Point? do you know?" "Know ! of course I know ! Crown Point? why, it is off Cape Cod." She leaned on her mop haudle, as on a sceptre, while she asserted this, fix ing her eyes gravely on me. If man ner would have done it, the fortifica tion would have been planted at Province-town, and she doubtless thought it was, or else believed in herself as implicitly as Norma of the Fitful Head in her own prophecies. But, somehow, the assertion didn't fit in with Ticonderoga; and so, as I said, the whole fabrio of faith came event ually to the ground. Yhateve wo might think of Pol ly's geography, or even Greek, we were heartily afraid of her knuckles In the nursery, and rather bore the ills of keeping our own faces clean, than have those hard hands at our wind pipes. Then the wondrous tales by the kitchen fire at night! Even after we oame to disbelieve one of the most frightful, we Bhuddered at the "Bluck legs coming down the chim ney," as with the pleasant thrill from a theatrical catastrophe. Polly had fallen from her high es tate of maidenhood at W., and as the custom was, had been discarded by all her large cirole of unspotted relatives. Coming to Sharpsville, wbereshewas both known and unknown, she had some peculiar advantages. People could afford to sympathize with her ; and, being down, she feared no fall. She readily found employment and lived and died among us, an honest, industrious woman, a Pharisee of the Pharisees, and a respeoted member at last, with three others, of the town's poorbouse. To the poorhouse we all sent her frlendry contributions of green tea, loaf sugar, and such delicacies as are provided by the selectmen ; as also, from likely to need. These she ac cepted with & lofty grace, quite her own, leaving ns only hunrbie that our offerings were not twice as many and better. Bometfmes in my mother's eagerness to bestow good" gifts on Pol ly, Bhe quite forgot the proprieties, as when she sent her ll too- aomv my fetber's winter drawers f Ba that, re turning from encrrch la the teeth of northeast wind, the good man was moved by conflicting emotion to ex claim with augry, bliter personality as he rubbed the chilled surfaces of his sacredefrB, "I met Polly Frank, going to thefOrthodoi meeting, ttflth mp drawers on." I should do wrorig to say that ehe was a "professor." Sitting In the front pew where the town's poor were paraded in what seemed to me an in delicate and inconsiderate manner, Polly always stayed to the commun ion quietly waitlngfor 'the elements,' which never came. The deacons would not bring them to her, as she had never given what was called "satisfactory evidence" of her fitness to sit at the Lord's table. They might have forgiven her for her much loving, as He did the other Mary, but they wouldn't do this without a 'con fession,' as they called it, and this -confession Polly would never make. Of her "misfortune" she would say nothing, at any time or to any per son. Only she as8ertetirwith her grand slr,'SrMy skirts are clean;" from Which dccular saying the dea cons might have inferred muoh, If they bad been less eager or curious or more Christ like. So she soared about in Sharpsville in an empyrean of her own which was well ; for in a thinner air, how soon her poor, broken wings would have brought her, stained and humil iated, to the ground I And after all what was anybody in Sharpsville that he should throw stones at her? t guees that a keen sorrow of Polly Frank was that serpent-toothed one of her son's alienation. He never cume near in all her long life ; and she never Whispered, but to herselfj his name. In those Weary years, whloh could not be called repeutant ones, had she not paid pressed down and running over, in her hard, dis graceful life, for the sin of her young, foolish days? Of oourse, people cannot all begood and we needn't have expected it in Sharpsville. Nevertheless, there are reasons. Polly Dexter, who was well to do, well enough oonnected, had no story, no mystery, no excuse, and was a "professor" besides in good church standing, had no business to be so heartily disliked and dreaded as she was, in every house where rents and holes made her advent necessary. Polly Dexter was as mustard and vinegar to the feast, nay, rather like cayenne or horse-radish ; so biting were all her 6ayings, so persistenther fault-finding, so faithful her trans mission from house to house of every Item of information unsuited to such travel I For all that, Polly was as necessary to Sharpsville as the air she filled With her mischief-making, for who. In her absence, could or would undertake the accumulations of carpet-mending consequent on limited means and so olal ambitions? From six in the morning (for she preferred breakfast ing with her'customers) till nine at night, she made her needle and tongue fly, transforming, with god- motherly skill, rags into hall ureases, and making darns at which the elev en thousand virgins would have hew itated. Aud then the modest way in which she announced, after many years, that she must raiBe her price from tweuty-flve to thirty-two oentsa day, because "wood has raised !" What was seven cents more or less. When put In competition with skill and patience like hers? She had a dark, bony body, with coarse black hair tightly drawn back in a knot. She wore her thin lips drawn from her teeth ; andj her black eyes , restless and roving, saw every thing they shouldn't, and seemed like the child's description of Satan, "walking up and down, seeking how he might catch somebody." Her arrival was the unwelcome sig nal for the portcullis of silence to de scend before our lips, and the small est among us, without understanding why, knew better than to talk before Polly Dexter. It was reserved for farther experience to show us that it makes all the difference in the world to whom a thing Ib said, and that a remark as innocuous as a drop of fair water may fall on some minds poison ous as one of hemlook. Being in structed to "shut up," before Polly, we naturally associated her with the restraint of our position ; but indeed, 6he never said or did anything to make us like her. So, as I didn't and don't love her, it may bo with a slightly accldulated sense of justice that I describe her, and feel a certain pleasure that, on a life like hers, bear ing as it did only thorns and thistles, not the srauziest shadow of tender re membraiice need be thrown ; but that it should be life bare a reminder and a warning to carpet-mending and car pet traders as well. I mention the last, because it is a Bad thought that the vices slip unawares into all floors scandal being harbored so frequent ly, even in parlors, as to have given rise in some quarters of the imputa tion of depravity in the general heart. How are we to excuse a person who has not even fallen ? one who is poor spirited and mean by nature, and haB not been so placed as to remedy, edu cate, and destroy bad qualities? For, perhaps, no good-natured friend told her of them. Only everything "shut up" aa well as they could when she was by ; and, except in a general way when informed that with many mil lions of the same species she was a sinner, how was she to know? She was rich. She owned three houses in Sharpesvllle. But she was snappish; scandalous and mean. On the other hand, she gave her money to the church when she died. The church at least ought to tread lightly on her grave ; and be sure the deacons al ways gave her "the elements." In another world, must she not be somehow made over, with tentacular instinctB which may dimly reach to wards something higher," something unknown and undreamed of here. No doubt, in that future state whioh is to clear up all the mysterious of this, the monkey-like malice linger ing, in the undeveloped humanity of Polly Dexter will have dropped away and given her an equal chance with her fellows. Till when, what is there left in life for such as she, but to be pitied, avoided, and not to put too fine a point upon It bated ? But Polly took her betters every day and all day ; and she had no op portunities and no beauty She might be said to have, in her expressive ver nacular, "no nothing." And so Pol ly Dexter may have at least a good a chance as Burns gave to a worse spir it. Like all New England villages fifty years ago, ours was full of original characters, sharply cut and definite In tbeir manifestations. Even the mindless ones had their individual notions, which they carried out with dignity and vigor like the harf-wlt-teu Luna, who; beirig supplied daily by nr-'Hrotrrer frost feer own-' table; sent the foifowfng iaessags Co hit' benefactress l "If Miss P. is goin1 to send me roy dinner every day, J want UholJ" Which was reasonable, di vested of conventionalities; and the rebuke was meekly accepted, with a Corresponding reform. Polly Forest, my third and best, owned a farm, or rather a part of one, in Sharpsville Swamp; and might have lived at home, had she so chos en, or if she had been afllicted with that disease of false and foolish pride which brings bo many girls, In our days, to bad lives. But boing neither self-important nor self conscious, her affectionate raatuie and religious faith led her to devote herself to the Inter est of her employers with an assidui ty and faithfulness tha.t even the Apostle Paul might have made an ex ample of. Also, beoailss ahe was self reliant and independent, Bhe despised putting herself forward, or out of her place, as she phrased It; ilnd sha kept that of servant with a pertinacity on ly equalled by her modest dignity. At the same.tims she held herself as the dear friend of ub all, and an un wearied correspondent wheri we were away from home ; giving important particulars of the cat and fox, which she suspected might be forgotten in our parlor correspondence. Being a great reader, with also a pretty taste for verse-making, many were the pa ges of rhyme Bhe sent us always un der the seal of secrecy, for she was far too modest to make any talk of what she was, or had learned But in fact hers was, "A dreadful life (a silent voice. ') My Polly the third had sorrows of her own, as well as Polly Frank, but not like hers. Indeed, I doubt if Cu pid ever so much as brushed a feather of his wing against her red cheeks. They were those hard unspoken sor rows, that admit no sympathy. An intemperate, lazy brother, and a mother, so proud, so unreasonable, and so reticent, that bj no chance did a kindly or affectionate word ever escape her. To drunken Joe she ad dressed all her worldless kindnesses, insisting on Polly's outdoor services in his place. Insomuch that one day Polly came near bping torn to pieces by the bull, nnd only escaped by climbing a small tree. Here, at the distance of a few feet from the roar ing creature, tearing at the slight trunk with his horns and ploughing the ground with angry hoofs, did she await the threatened destruction, whioh, indeed, seemed inevitable. But for drunken Joe and a neighbor, who with much clubbing changed the bull's mind, where would have been my Polly? Polly always ad dressed her mother in the third per son, as if she spoke to some potentate. "Would ma'am like to have the door shut?" or "Shall I get the Water for ma'om?" There was nothing to be afraid of, that I could Bee in Mre. Forest, who seemed only a pale, stiffish woman ; but to lier daughter she was an object of awful deference, and she obeyed everv token of her will more like a slave than a child. I think Mrs. Forest had no objec tion to Polly's "going out to live," for a year at a time, though she never said so; nnd Polly always formally -asked ma'am's leave when she came to us, though she was twenty-five or thirty years old. There were no "base laws of servi tude" between us. It was always a love matter. It was understood that she was to have the highest wages in town (four and sixpence a week, and time to mend her own clothes after nine o'clock at night;) but she earn ed it well In a family of sixteen, and with children about in all directions, hindering as well as helping her. Before the kings of Ireland overran this land, and before the Yankee ten dency to patent inventions had been so stimulated by ignorance and stu pidity that a pall of water cannot be drawn from the well In anatural way, our Polly used to go smiling into the garden and gather eight or ten kinds of vegetables for dinner, preparing each for the table, And they had a sweet freshness and flavor found in no market produce now. Her skilled eye detected the full oorn In the ear by the look of the husk, and she knew by the swell of the pod when the peas were ready for boiling; she knew wliatsquashesnot get, and where were the crispest cu cumbers. Indeed, she had the na tive talent which induced cows to give down their milk, even without the promise of a silk gown ; that wit to make hens lay and chickens live, nnd rising, like the virtuous woman In Proverbs, while it was yet nicht. her washing was hung in snowy lines before her breakfast waseaten. What soever her hands found to do, that did she with her might. She wns so fond of flowers and so patient with them in their short-comings and their ever needed pottings that I think she must have a garden now somewhere in par adise, and croons Methodist hymns over her flowers as she used to here, about, "The Lord Into his garden comes ! The spices yield a rich perfume. The llllles grow and thrive," and so on ; fox I don't see how Heaven-is going to change one's tenden cies unless one Is made over; how a queen is to take up the role of peas ant, or a nhilosonher that of a stock broker; merely by another place of fpq H n P f My Polly ! In that Btate or place where j'ou have gone, do you find any one to minister to, to serve with lov ing diligence, with heart-full, un wearied teuderness, as you did here There was a tie between you and those you loved closer than that of a maid to her mistress, and that tie ma3' remain In another world. She whom you loved so much, and in whose arms you died, when she, too, went to the world of souls, must have found you, I think, waiting for her with the same simple devotion as when you left her, to take up your old relation of unselfish love. Like most country girls, Polly could drive a nail and split wood if necess ary, which I fancy it often was at her house. She was a pretty good car penter, and, besides tinkering the house on occasions, could give form to her own inventions with some skill. A board for scouring knives of her own make, with sundry contrivances and conveniences, lasted In my kitch en until silvering them came into fashion. The greatest treat we had as chil dren wa3 to go to Polly's farm be tween whiles to visit her. I remem ber vividly the queer, long, narrow passages to remote parts of the' house, which defied all rules of architecture, and v-bicb- led nowhere with a capti vating mystery. I was glad to find1 something that .illustrated the "Ro mance of the Forest," doubly glad when! got only Into the back kitch en and wo3 relieved from the fear oT seeing a skeleton. Mrs. Forest was gen-eyaHV to be found there untiring ly' f ciBlving; ni yery dtefcn pans and tubs, lingers in mv meraorv to this day, as also the impression of the nuuic jubiubui me uweiiing iresuiy whitewashed always, boards as well as plastering. It was fearfully and wonderfully clean at the Forest farm. Then, not-having the dread of the bull before our eyes, having ascertain ed that he was tightly confined, we strolled off into, the woods that skirt South Mountain, where we gathered the tender check erberrv-leaves. or. if PaHv In fYta Pfl4nn tlw ll.H hurriu: I themselves, and the delicate Mayilow - J - - . WVU, ...w .W. UV..... er. Afterwards, being refreshed by ma'am's hospitality of rye and Indi an bread and cheese, we set off at dusk, on our two-mile homeward way and Polly stood at "the delectable gate," as we called It, guarding us with her smiles, till the road bent, and shut her away from our sight. I know, my Polly, that the record ing angel never set down against you Ihe little whiffs of temper that made you Borne times even throw the Chairs out of the window, or the little injus tice that made my brother Ralph hate yoa. To me y ou were alwa3's kind, gentle and patient; but who pretended you were perfection On ly I would that I could find a helper to my domestic infirmities one hun dredth part as faithful, as clean and capable, faults all counted in ; would there be any question of wages be tween us ? Think of Polly "going to leave- oecause tnere is sickness in the family! Think of Polly with drawing from the store-room portions of groceries, under some ethical de lusion familiar to the Celtic imagina tion ! .Think of Polly at all the same category with locks and keys, with modern notions of hire and service! The whole thing is as different as if we lived on another planet. She was such a large part of my cnild-life. that it is difficult to look back without seeing her constantly. Now that she is gone, I naturally dwell only on her excellences ; the more when I contrast her solid vir tues with the flimeey ghosts of such that I uow Bee in every kitchen her faithfulness-weary feet, that with au-gel-like persistence ascended and de scended to minister to the wants of others; all her thoughtfulness, her sweetness, her patient energy ! At' lantic Monthly for June. JUSCELLAXEOUSt Mediocrity is often garrulous. The Indianapolis Journal alludes to n "widow woman." Prof. Wise, the balloonist, ought to take a skyeterrier along. The English railways are flooded with comic American books. Several Iowa towns prohibit the sale of newspapers on Sunday. When an Indiana paper mentions "The Stalking Monster" cholera is meant. The second volume of Mr. Beech er's "Life of ChriBt" is in an advanc ed stage. The death of the newspaper ex change system has brought down the price of shears. Elihu Burrit calls his forthcoming autobiographical volume, "Five Min ute Talks." The people of California are clam oring for a paper currency forty three newspapers for and fourteen against it. A Milwaukee boat club has adopt ed a light uniform, described as" u handkerchief around the head and one suspender. A Connecticut paper speaks of a reign of terror in that State because a man has been arrested for stealing an umbrella. Seup for the poor in Boston cost about $4,000 last year, and "refresh ments" for the poor city government $41,000. A floating cannon-ball is one of the sights at Vienna. It weighs fifty pounds, and It floats in a cauldron of quicksilver. ' The London Saturday jRcvicivBaxs that Bret Harte is a story-teller of true genius. So is B. B. soys the Courier-Journal. The Parsons, ETan., Herald records a suit for breach of promise, and says the plaintiff wants the jury to award her $2,000 "buck pay." The New York World has coined a new adjective. It speaks of certain crossings of Broadway as the "jam medest" spots in Its whole length. A Rochester man lay drunk in an alley all night with $800 in his pock et. It is only necessary to add that the Rochester folks didn't know it. Probably the most recent American ism is that constructed by an Illinois paper, whicUsajs that Edwin Booth will "iragediate" in a certain town. General Wise In his prime couid write an editorial fifty-six yards long, but he is getting old now, and don't push them beyond forty or therea bouts. Country papers come In weighed down with editorial correspondence, ever since the convention. This will be continued until the passes issued shall expire. A traveler says that in Spain um brellas differ in Bize from an ordinary dinner-plate to a small tent, and their colors are as various as the tints of the rainbow. "What's the date of your bustle ?" was what an anxious papa of Coble skill asked his well-dressed daughter, after searching for the last copy of his paper. Twenty-eight different kinds of i'bitters" sold in Rhode Island for "strictly medicinal use" are undergo ing analysis by the State chemist from an excise point of view. A contemporary, speaking of the difficulty of a newspaper editor pleas ing everybody, says i "Even if one sounded the praises of his Maker the devil would be offended." "Bitten by an alleged mad dog," is the mild way in which it is put in Baltlm'ore, to avoid hurting the dog's feelings, should he merely be labor ing under a temporary aberration. A citizen of Connecticut, recently introduced to a newly-married man, congratulated him warmly, and said : "Ah, these Litchfield county girls make clever wires I've bad three of 'em." Athol's oldest Inhabitant 13 Mrs. Dolly Graves, aged ninety-five; the" next is Asa Hill, who Is in his uifte ty-fifth year; the fattest Is D. E. Cbamocden, proprietor of the Sum mit House, 264 pounds. Mrs. Mary J. HartwelT, of Colum bus, Ohio, heard a-voice say trie Other night i "Your brother WiHiata is dead," and she awoke the old man wifh her screams". A letter earner next day from Dayton announcing that her brother was werr and had a paving contract. XAXADLER. He Tell About Hopkins' "Vox Bnna B" Stop and FIJI Domestic Life. From the Saturday Evenia j Post. HorKrxs' stop. When Hopkins was organist 3t S. Abed iego's Church, he gave a concur . for the benefit of the Sunday school, Hopkins would fib sometimes, and he had told some of his brother orgauista that he had a vox. humana ston in his ' organ. a several or tneiu were com ing round to. the concert, Hopkins de- leruiineu to prevent mem. trom de tecting the deception. S& lie engaged a friend of his who sang tenor down at the minstrels to come up and get into the organ case and sing. It was arranged that Hopkins was to give -a certain signal and that the minstrel was to tune up and warble an air, while Hopkins went tbroogh the mo tion on the keys. When the eoncert came off the schemo worked snlen- dldly. Everybody exclairaed : "How beautiful !" "Elegant, isn't it V "Sounds exactly like a human voice."' Then there was an encore, and anoth er air was sung, right in themiddleof it the vox humana stopped suddenly. Then it was heard using the mooC dreadful language inside the orgon it yelled for help, and Hopkins dash ed arourid to the rear to ascertain what was the matter. He found thafr I his man had been standing on the? bellows, and that the Ijlower objected to the extra weight, and finally began ! a combat with Hopkins' frien And now the bellows blower had the vox humana stop down on the floor in side the organ, and he was nibbling: at vox humana's nose aud rolling around against the pipes and ma chinery in a manner that threatened general demoralization to the machine and the more the combat deepened? the more the vox humana 6top howl ed. They were separated by the war deus and the concert proceeded in a minor and melancholy key. But the next day they discharged Hopkins from St. Abednego's and now he wishes the bellows man had murder ed the minstrel man. FIJI FASHIONS, Housekeepers will be surprised tc learn that the custom of sending in to a neighbor to borrow a little butter or sugar or other articles of diet, is quite common among the savages of Fiji. When a lady in Fiji has some friends to dinner unexpectedly, she goes over to the woman across the way and says : "Yak yak and his family have just droppecWh todinnerr and I bavn't a thing in the house. How do you think your hired girl would work up into a stew ? Can I borrow her for a few days ?" Then she seizes that domestic by the hair, aud drags herover, chops her up with parsley, and carrots, and celery-tops and cloves, and lets her simmer over the fire. Or may be the other woman sends over and says : "I'm entirely out of meat, can you lend me your little William Henr3' for hash or your Mary June for a pie ?'' And over go William Henry and Mary Jane, and they are stuck,with a fork and basted and put on to cook gently, and the debt is paid otf the next week by the borrower sending back her aunt, al ready boiled and suitable for cutting cold for tea, or one of net twibtwljorn ed so as to make a nice lunch. Some times a woman in this manner will work off a couple of her mothers-in-law, or a rich uncle, or a plump, sec ond cousin, nnd then ehe wilt sit a& her window and sniff them as they are cooking in the kitchen next door, or watching one of the company in the diniug-room nibbling at the el bow of her late hired girl. The cus tom seems to ns an excelent one. par ticularly when it is applied to hired girls. We have had girls whom we would hove loaned to a neighbor un der a solemn promise that they should be butchered and boiled as quickly as possible. TnE woftLlr's ttsir. We have heard from our old aify", Professor Plantamour, again. Last vear he prophesied that we were to be burned up. Since then he has chanced bis mind. Now he declares in a paper just IssCed in Paris, thai everybody will be frozen to death in the year 2011. We nre glad to haver the date accurately fixed, for we shall arrange for our life insurance policy to expire in the year 2010. Tbe first news of the freeze will appear in tha Saturday Evening Post for January lt 2011, and we shall offer as a premium to clubs that year, on all-wool over coat four feet thick, with an alr-tighc stove in each breast-pocket, a gas heater in the tail, and an open grate arranged at tbe collar. Tbe getter up of two clubs will have o pair of skates and a double-breasted pink un derskirt thrown in. Persons who wish to compete for these prizes can send their subscriptions now from this year to 2011, in order to make the thing cerL.in. No paper shall beat U3 if we have toget up a corner on double breasted undershirts and create a pan-' ie in the market. VERY ABSENT 3rrNDED; The most absent minded man' we? ever knew was oar friend Gener&r Mumm. He lost one of his legs In the late war, ond he always wore a patent artificial Teg, full of springs and joints. Sometimes when he star ted out in the morning ha would get his leg on hind part foremost, and then he would gostraddlfngdown the street with one set of toes pointing" east and the other set pointing west. His right feme would bend in one di rection and his left would bulge la another, and the old man would bob up nnd down like a Jumping-jack worked with a string. Prespntly he would meet us, and come jolting up to us to suy that he wished we would pitch into tbe highway department for leavinjr the pavements Iti snob, a rascally condition that a man couldn't walk straight. Previous to the war. While he was down at Cupe May one summer, he took a bu5-bab early in the morning, and while in the7 ifKtef he got to meditating upon ome ,j struse subject, nnd forget'frjrliimseir. he came walking out upon the bench? nnd up the street to thfe hotel dressed in nothing but a sad,weet smile.jut as the' p&o'pte were coming' down to breakfast. Only a eiort time ago he bitched his horse to a 3ei key with the animal's no3e pushed close up szainst the dasher, and start ed off backwards without noiiorrr-rthf direction. At the end of tfie first half mile the vehicle jammed up against-a tree, and the General shot out over the horse's tail. If fie doesn't get out of his coffin at hJs-own funeral; and insist upon going 03 a pall-bearer, it will be singular. Conundrum from the Chicago Trib une; "Why is it that lightning neve? strikes ofgSff grinders, that they nev er fall into the river and get drowned, that they never starve to death, and are never biiiea by mad dogs J' I