HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1884-11-14, Page 2'4
TSS HURON SIGNAL FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1884.
1 STIRRING SONGS.
Bonne that have Moved National
4
Wiwi Wraae Mem sod cabal In.plred
Taws.
• tile. nease's wenn MM.
Lewis W iliums, who lives a an isolat- 8. Fisher ins bueht the old Forbey
ed spot tee the Pis ttelluuataiaa, N. J . farm, 76 awes, payu'g $45 per acre.
vutg wet capture ha t t • fug which Bethel Church, at Fisher's cornets,
ds
take Bare Gf ►t It neea new cuat of
MOMS.
In
as mho h tiers were no person to
he had reason 1.. believe was c►riyu►g
away his thickens, went out to look at it paint very badly.
and found it gone, The trap had been Goderich township council hare let
chatnd to • small stake in the gra cud•
the euatntt f putting t and this had been pulled up and was
The greatest poem of the war sou writ- imaging with trap and chain. Supposing
ten at Washington by Julia Waed Howe,
under the title of, 'The Battle Hymn of that the fox had been caught in the
the Republic.' It is sung to the tune of trop and bad escaped with it, Williams
'John Brown,' and commences 'Mine hunted about in the woods for some
pp iniu • culvert in
that large wadhole between Harbutlle's
bridge and Peer's bridge on the Maitland
eO•CMtlunl. It would ala) be adv'mode
for them to do something to the long hill
neer the bridge, or else some person will
slide over sums dark night.
eyes have seen the glory of the cowing trace Li it, but could find none As he A rather unusual though pleasing a•atr
Lord.' Mrs Howe wrote It early one
morning and, it is said, she penned the
lines with her eyes shut. The night be
fore she had been out ridit.t: in the (win-
try neer Washington, and her party had
narrowly escaped being captured by a
troop of Confederates As they came
into Washington they sang 'John
Brown's Body,' and the tune kept ring-
ing in Mrs Howes head all ni'ht.
When aha awoke before daylight she
-
gan to Hake verses to it, and in the fear
that she would forget them she wtote
them off, according to a habit she had
funned to save her oyes, without Looking
at the paper. Mrs. Howe is still living
and she ranks among the leaders of the
woman's rights moveinem.t.
Speaking of 'John Brown's Body, the
tune itself is an old Methodist camp
meeting :une,and the words were adapt-
ed to it by a glee club of Boston in I861.
It was lint published at ('harlestewn,
Mass. Capt. James Greenleaf, an organ
Hist of the Harvard Church, set the
notes for music. and a Massachusests i,ald eagle of :he largest size The eagle
regiment made them tin•. noted by sing- t
ing them at Fort Warren in 1861. . new (roan the ¢round and was ruing
The author of Maryland, My Mary- with difficulty towards the top of s talt,-
k n the "Maitland" wt Tues -
was returning home he heard a sudden I day of last oweek in the marriage of Henry
and great commotion a g a fleck of I Haw, to Miss Marion \dice, all ot
crime in & pees of woods a quarter of • Colborne. The adage runs, Monday for
mile or so from his house. The crows I wealth, Tuesday for health, etc., and a
were cawing furiously, and wens circling ` Pn'verb say if oin"
a maddinge
day the contractturtgsnparwsties will hav
among the tree t .os in onej particular I piles of wealth. 1f they be tree the
spot, and occasionally darted about j happy couple will surely enjoy health,
through the trees Williams walked I wealth and happiuew uver.win
over towards the woods, and as he ap-weasun. At •nyfsta if thein beat lhwisbsg
notched, the crows increased
their hub- I "f the community can have anything to
pdo with their prasperity, they have them
bub. When he arrived within gunshot I heatttly.
the withdrew to • more distant part of 'scar dosis bright day's tv non)
y 't•be:r cloudy oto. rrw"
the woods, but kept up their noise. Wil- , —
lianas had just entered the edge of the! is Perinea
stt iced by pure
chain
when he heard the nailing of al btu' d Perfect beauty
good huealthy Then acquire -
give and simultaneously an enornions, menta give the possessor a pleasant ex -
bird strutted out from behind a tree, I pression, a fair clear skin and the nay
dragging the missing trap, chain and bluoni of health. Burdock Blood Bitten
stake. The jaws o.f the trap were fasten- purify the blood and tone the entire
2
ed on one leg of the bird, which was a system t • a healthy action.
slw,aa wc+veel
That is daily bringing toy to the hewer
of thousands by saving measly of their
deer +cues from an early grave. Truly is
Dr. Kiwg's new Dimmer, for Consump-
tion, Coughs, ('olds, Asthma, Bronchitis,
'Hay Fever, Lusa of Voice, Tickling in
the Throat. Pain in Side and Chest,er-
auy disease o the 7ltreat and Lungs, •
positive cure. Oseramt ed. 'Peal But
des free at J. Wilwa's Drug Store. Large
size $1.00. (ti)
land, lives at Washington, and you may
see him in the press ealleriesof Congress
almost any day during the session. He'
writes gossipy lettere to the Augusts
Ilarorticfe. His name is James it
Randall, and he is a modest looking-,
dant1 ned man of 40. He
dead tree when Williams. fired at it.1 The
charge took effect in one of the eagle's
wings. and it fell to the ground. Think-
ing to capture the animal alive Williams
approached it, out in spate of itscripplyd
wing sed the burden of the trap on its
The Soot Act excitement has died
out
Miss Allen, sister of Mrs. R. H. Collis,
is at present the guest of her sister.
Wasatearro!t, D.C..
May 15th, 1880.
(lattrtswgv—Having been • sufferer
for a long time from nervous pr istratien
and general debility, I was advised to
try Hop Bitters 1 have taken one bot
ole, and 1 have been rapidly getting bet-
ter ever since, and I think it the hest
medicine i ever used. 1 am now gaieibg
strength and appetite, which was all
Witte, and I was in dryer until I tried
your Bitten. I aw w well, able to go
about and do my own work. Before
taking it 1 was completely pretratet'
Mar. Maul STt•aaT. .
The following officers were installed in
Maitland Lodge, No. 304, L O. G. T.,
for the ensuing quarter :—A. T. Mc-
Donald, W.C.T.; Alice C:ark,W.V.C.T.;
most have been very young when he John \\'ilscn, W.S.; Isabella Habkirk,
wrote that beautiful poem. His ideas leg, the bird flew at him and attacked W A.S.; M. E. Sturdy, W.F.S.; W. D.
are treader now, and he us .a. liberal in him with such fury that he turned and Wilson, W.T.; Kate Csswell, I.G.; R.
its stews as any member of the gallery• fled from the woods Hurryinr hack Clark, W.N.; S. Beadle, \\'.Dost.; J.
America was written by the Rev. Sam -Acme \\iliums, without .a mp• anything Casady• 0.6. ; Wm. Downs, chaplain.
eel Francis Smith, in 1853, and it was to elite, procured a stout rope and a The following were elected officers of
tint sung in Boston on July 4, of that P p 'Court Dufferin, No. 46, C. U. F. fur the
veer. Like the Battle Hymn of the Re- large feet,-lvag. cin his way back- t +the, the term ending 1st of May, 1885 :—las.
public, it was inspired by a great tune, woods he noticed that the crows which' Youtig, C.R.; Ruht. Sprung, V.0 L;
tamely, God Save the King. This tone had attracted his attention to the spot in f A. C. Jacksc n, R.S. ; J. P. Brown, F.S.;
is in use in nearly every country, and it v Fish ti W •
has been ascribed to Handel. The writ-
er M
of the words still lives in assachu-
setts, and he says he wrote the song at a
sitting. He is now 76 years old. and he
I. graduated at Harvard at the same class Wendell Oliver endell Holmes
Paynes Howard Payns Home, Sweet
spit, was writt*n fur an opera, and he
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T. JORDAN, Medical Hall, Goderich,
Keeps constantly on band • Select Stuck of limits.
Medi Iitt". ere , ,ataromr.• senses.
Dyetuf s
I'rrfswery. lis., to Toilet Itrt
t articles
ew
Tb.saadsnaya
T. W. Aitkins, Ginn!, Kan., writes :
1 never hesitate to recommend' your
Electric Bitten to my c stamen, they
give entire satisfaction and are rapid
sellers.' Electric Bittersare the purest
and best medicine known and will posi-
tively cure Kidney and Liver complaints
Purify the blood and regulate the bowels
Nofatuilycan afford telxtwithout them
They will save hundreds o.f dollars in
doctor's bills every year. told at 50 cts.
a bottle uy J. Waken. f 3J
tint -place, were hoterieg •
over the F• stalker, Troas;
J. Gncieton, J.W. W. .B. W, Stevenson, SAL:
place where he had left the eagle, and [ R chard Sproat', J. B ; B. T. Ernst,
fromtheir peculiar cries and frantic ac- chaplain.
tions he inferred that something unusual
had occurred during his absence. ,The
crows, knowing by the wonderful in-
stinct they possess that the eagle was
wounded and hating as they do all large
Lirds, had swarmed down upon the eagle
and attacked it in his crippled condition.
This attack had been disastrous to the
crows, for when Williams again reached
the sput throe lay dead near the enraged
eagle and several others were dragting
themselves away out of its reach, utter -
nom go
atone
stone in Oak Hill cerautery. It was first
sung in the Covent ( en theater at
tLondon, and orate a big hit, One hun-
dred thousand copies were sold the first
year, and by the end of the *scowl its
publishers had cleared $10,000 fr'm it.
Robert Treat Paine wrote : "Ye Sone
of Celumbia, early in 1800, under the
title of -Adams and Liberty,and he was
paid $750 fur it. Paine was the sod .•f ing the sharp, guttural cry which they
• Independence. He was christened Tom
tomb -
t an thin for it but his tomb-
dote of the signers of the Declaration of „til utter when wounded or in trouble.
Paine, but on account of his dislike to The eagle nu sooner saw Williams ap
Tom Paine's infidel tendencies, he had prwching than it rushed at hint with
the Massachusetts Legislature change his all the force at its command, 'impend
name, and give him what he called a
Christian one.
Foster got $15.000 for writing 'Old
Folks at Home. • Crouch the writer of
•Kathleen Mavoureen, received $25 fur
the production, and afterwards became a
boggia$,irsus, while his publisher could
have built a brown stone front not of its
sales. George 1'. Morris wrote 'Wood-
man, Spare thee Tree; because the pur-
chaser of a friend's estate wanted to cut
down • tree which his grandfather had
planted.
'Hail Columbia' was written by Joseph
Hopkinson, in the summer of 1798, and
it was first called the 'President's
March.' It was always sung when Wash-
ington same into the theater, and one ot
the objects of its writing was the cultiva-
tion of • patriotic spirit among the peo-
ple of the new Republic. It was fins
put to music by a German music teacher
at Philadelphia named Roth.
'The Star Spangled Kanner' was writ-
ten by Francis Scott Key while watching
the bombardment of Fort McHenry, in
1814. He was in • small vessel among
the British ships.and he saw hiscountry-
ten win the vict.+ry. All thr ietth the
Vet he watched anxiously to tee if the
Sag was still standing, looking for it at
night by the flash of the bwmhshells, and
ainaioua)y waiting the dawning. The
song was printed in the Baltimore .1ntor-
fntw, eight days :after the battle. under
the title of 'The Defence of Fort Mc-
Henry.'
Kiri people will he surprised to learn
that 'tanker Doodle is not of American
origin. Even the words date back be-
yond the days of Queen Anne. and the
time is still older. In the wars of the
Roundheads, says Cvlswod ,re Preble,in
his book of the rhited States, 'Yankee
Doodle,' was applied in derision to
Oliver Cromwell, and Prrfess•r
hanit, a prominet't .ntsician of London,
wrote • song directed at Cromwell under
this title. The jingle of these two songs
is abet the tame, and the words are not
mesh different, I)r. Shuchburg first in-
troduced the song into this country in
17114, and this was also in contempt of
the ragged colonial soldiery. At Con-
cord •ed Lezintton the British,when sd-
vsnang to fight, bravely played 'Ond
Save the Kinin,' and after they were de
tested the Yankees, ae they watched
their r.tre•t,struck up 'Yankee Doodle.
t
1
t
i
A illegal wistabe.
1 It is a great mistake 1.. suppose that
dIrmiesmia can't be. cured, hut must be
epstllaad, and life made gloomy and mie-
is thereby. Alexander Berns, of
Clebegspp, yammered after suffering fifteen
L Burdock Bleed Bitten cured
2
Me body of James S,mps.n the King -
/IAD cabman who has been miming for
Aayr, was found in the harbor there
moraine. The corner decided
timpani was necessary.
Pills are Mswrpeseed as a
yet lioeeseh, pY1eetfre, set -
spell Rewarded.
A liberal reward will be paid 1.. any
party who will ['nature s case 11 Liver,
Kidney or Stontach complaint that Elec-
tric Bitten will not speedily cure. Bring
them along, it will cost yon nothing for
the medicine if it fails to cure, and you
will be well rewarded for your trouble
besides All Blood diseases, Bilious-
ness. Jaundice, Constipation. and gene-
ral debility are quickly curia. Satisfac-
tion guaranteed or money retunded
Price only fifty cents por bottle. For
sale by J. Wilson. [51
Smart Weed and liellationa combined I
with the other ingredients used in the
best pt'rous plasters make Carat's S. W.
& B. Backache Plasters, the hest in the!
Prof. Low's Magic Sulphur Soup is
highly recommended for all humors and
skin diseases. lin.
kens'. Field Lisbtui.a
Is the only instantaneous relief ter Neu-
ralgia, Headache, Toothache, etc. Rub-
bing a few drops briskly is all that is
needed. No taking nauseous medicines
for weeks, but inc minute's application
removes all pain and will prove the great
value of Kaam's Fluid Lightning. 45
cents per bottle at George Rhyme drug
store. l+
market Price 25 cents. le. -
•
Ir. the history of medicines no preps
ration has received such universal com-
mendation for the alleviation it affords,
and the permanent cure it effects in kid
ney diseases, as Dr. Van Buren's Kianey
Cure. It■ action in these distressing
complaints is simply wonderfuL Sold
by J. Wilson. 2m
Prof. Lops Magic Sulphur Soap is
highly recommended for all humors and
skin diseases. lin
and crippled as it was. and forced the Prominent among nye esat h mt -trii t
t ditcoverte+t, by the many cures It has aKectd-A
cGregor s Speedy titre leads the van. tlnb-
fi kiting at once. Williams had trade . M
>; tented to the minutest chemical analysis, it
a noise in one end of the rope he car-
ried, and when the eagle flew at hon he
waited until it was almost upon loin, and
then quickly threw ,the noose over the
bird's head and it slipped down around
its wings. Williams drew the none
tight and fastened the other end of the
rope to a tree. The eagle was now shorn
of the great strength of its wings, but it
pulled the rope tight in its efforts to get
at its enemy. As it stood thus. strain-
ing at the rope, Williams succeeded in
slipping the bag down over its head. He
then clasped the bird around the body.
Although now blinded and pinioned and
doubly crippled. the eagle was still un-
conquered. As Williams stood with 1 is
arms around the great body of the bird,
endeavoring to secure the mouth of the
bag around its l gs, the eagle suddenly
sprang against h:m and striking Sim in
the breast with its one free talon, with
one fierce, downward stroke ripped his
clothing from him and tore the skin from
the flesh in • long strip clear to the
waist. Williams quickly releastd 0c.
bird and made haste to reach his house,
supposing that he was terribly injured.
Two men who were threshing buckwheat
for Kinn were then informed of the prea•
ence of the eagle in the woods and they
went to the spot and sueeeeded in over-
powering it, It was bruught to Wi:-
lumnl and tied to a post in the barn.
the tiap being removed from its leg. The
eagle will measure at least eight feet
from tip to tip of its wings and s'anc's
neatly four feet high. Theon buds still
neat in the wild and rocky eletati,.ns is
this region, where it is barely possible
(.r human beings to gain scene. They
frequently visit the sheep pastures of the
farms in the neighh.-rheod, and :the
poultry yards in defending her chick-
ens kgainst one of the hold mauraudere
one day last summer. net far from the
Williams farm, Mrs. Jane Urban ws
compelled to fight it for nearly as hour,
during which time it tore her clothing
from leer and larcerate.l her flesh terri-
bly with its beak and talon. She final-
ly killed it with a fence rail.
been found to contain none of those in-
jurious inppredients charactertaing the worth -
has spccifcs daily offered to the public.
Every ingredient ptrssesees a peculiar adapta-
bility to the various complaints for which it
has been compounded. and its efficacy is bring
established by testimonials hourly received.
We are therefore Confident that we have a
preparation whirs woo can offer to the public
with the assurance that it will be found not
only a relief but an absolute cure for Dyspep-
sia. liver complaint, indigestion. constipation
and itnoure blood. Free trial bottles at Geo.
Shyna. Drug store. Yui
c7alTIS Is.
"Maiden. Mass., Feb. 1. IND Gentlemen
1 suffered with attacks of sick headache."
Neuralgia. female trouble, for years in
the most terrible and excruciating man-
ner.
No medicine or doctor could give me
relief or cure until I used Hop Bitten.
'The first bottle
Nearly cured me ;'
The second made mese well and strong
as when a child.
'Anil I have been so to this day.'
My husband was an iuvalid for twenty
years with a serious
'Kidney, liver and urinary complaint,
'Pronounced by Boston's best physio
cians—
'Incurabte
Seven bottles of your bitten cured
him. and I knew of the
'Lives of eiglt persons'
In my neighborhood that have been
These a*slid Fasts. e
The best blood purifier and system re-
gulator ever placed within the reach' of
suffering humanity, fruly is Electric Bit-
ten. Inactivity of the Liver, Biliousnes
Jaundice, Conatipatiow^ Weak Kidneys,
or any disease of the urinary organs, or
whoever requires an appetizer, tonic or
mild stimulant, will always find Electric
Bitters the best and only certain cure
known. They act surely and quickly,
every bottle guaranteed to give entire
satisfaction or money refunded. Sdild at
fifty cents s bottle by J. Wilson. [4]
Yew UA fee remittent Weakened ey lee.
ease. Debility tel Dissipation.
The Great Gerntan Invigorator is tine
only specific for impotency, nervous de-
bility, universal lassitude, forgetfulness,
pain in the hack '.r sides, no matter how
shattered the system may be from ex-
cesses of any kind, the Great German
Remedy will restore the lost functions
and secure health and happiness. $1.00
per box, six oozes for $5.00. Sold by
all druggists. Sent on receipt of price,
postage paid, by F J. Cheney, Toledo,
Ohio, sole rgent for United States. Cir-
culars and testimonials sent free. Sold
by Geo. Rnynas, sole agent for Code -
rich 3m :
FARMERS'
Why use poor OIL on your Reapers and Mowers, when you tan get
.t�/e,CCC'iOZ.lZl�ls
LARDINE OIL
Su Cheep. It has no opual. Try it and you will use 00 other.
M114OOLL BROS. & Co., TORONTO.
For sale by
R_ epi_UODZBIMcS-NZ2Ca
GODBRICH BDII,BR ifORIS
Have oust received • large stock of
BRASS & IRON STEAM FITTINGS
—IrOn—
BOILERS ENGINES
New Salt Pans and Boilers
National Pills are unsurpassed as a
safe, mild. yet thorough, purgative, act-
ing upon the biliary organs promptly and
effectually. lm
Te the 1ledleat FrMwssea, and all when
11 may enure..
--
Phtsrphatine, or Nerve I!oou, a I'hos-
Orate Element based upon Scientific
Facts, Formulated by Professor Austin,
M. D. of Ruston, Mas., cures i'ulAxon-
ary Consumption, Sick Headache, Ner-
vous Attacks, Vertigo and Neuralgia
and all wasting diseases of the human
system. Phosphatine is not a Medecine,
but a Nutriment, because it contains no
Vegetable or Mineral Poisons, Opiates,
Narcotics, and no Stimulants, but limp,
ly the Phosphatic and Gerrie Elements
saved by your bitters, found in our daily food. A single bottle
And many more are using them with is sufficient to conviriee. All Druggists
sell it. $1.00 per bottle. Loupes &
Co., sole agents for the Dominion,
56 Front Street East Toronto
great benefit.
'They almost
1)o miracles
lm
Mrs. E. 11. Slack.
a *turnout elsre..e1 DANIEL GORDON,
CABINETMAKER
that his wife had been troubled with porn
d that
Win. Johnson, ..f Huron, Dak. , write.
acute $conchitis for many years, an
all remedies tried rare no permanent re
lief, until he procured a bottle of Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds, which had • magical
effect, and produced a permanent cure.
It is guaranteed to cure all diseases of
Throat. Lungs or Branchial Tubes.
Trial battles free at J. Wi s.,n's drug
store. Lowe site $1.00. (51
Salt Rbe.s towed.
Are y^u troubled with Salt Rheum,
Rough Skin, Pimples or Canker Sores ;
if so, go at ones to Ga.. Rhymes'D
Store and get a package .f McGregrtr
Parke's Carbolic (`wrote Price Si ciente.
It was never kaown to fail. b
• Wide swot erws=041-
3. Wilson is always alive to his Web
M a purifier, Ayer's Sanpaanlla sees nem, and spares no pains to sewer'* the
directly and promptly. A single bottle tiest .d .very artiele in his hse, He has
will pewee its series. Many thousands secured the agency fdw theoelsh•etedDr
of pasple ars yearly cored frets danger- King's New Discovery foe Oosssasplies,
ems Weis bre the *levels* of $ little the only serenetem .
)es tee Otos-
timely erre privet ly eleaasseg the
myosin byby** ass of this nmeiiy.
Irene IrePowders ars seta fr
Leading Ulldoflaor,
Inas on hand now the LARGEST $Te►r R et
First - Class Furniture
Built on Shortest Notice.
Mail orders for new work andsrrpa.rs
revrise prompt attention.
CHRYSTAI, & RL_A('I:.
Works near G. T. R. Station.
alodericb. Feb. 2S, MA. to
in the County, and as i new pert -tine fee cash,
will not Mt undersold wT aay oto.
1 offer Tapestry ('arillt't lonettgen Iran fuss
upwards {(± batwMa, e',od. from
now Back Chairs from 371•. sp, Sol even -
thing els In the same peees tiee,
AT THE ()i,I) STAND
astweee the Pea Office & Bank of Mostree
4:51HOD1BRIC)73_
Ost tat►. ninth ISM
GO for
13 -
Mr th• working class Newel Vesta
for perlaee, and we will swan yew
rasa. • Royal. valuable bet of Y
tray of Instils. sir roes that will pal rip la [ha
mere mosey la • Aso Mira
ever thought peasitee. at aay be.ieass No
shushed. We will start
yysaM�.tjYeewgpia
wwurkwor[ 1. tie' "r' s.,t d► }w est,.
Tie
~RNwealle
�pD1M7tZCS
PLANING MILL
ESTA BLIS II EDlttt,.:+.
Bnchanan,LaWSon s Robinson
NI A,( VA:Tt•aaRS or
Sash, Doors & Blinds
n[aciras t:c ALt RINDS OF
Lumber, Lath, Shingles
and builders material of every description.:
SCHOOL FURNITURE A SPECIALTY.
LtAll t!rdcn promptly attended to.
Ooderieb. Ase. 2. 1513. 11152-17
CIGARS. CIGARS.
IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC
THE BEST ASSORTMENT IN TOWN
A,full line of all the Lt aoling 1't: e•nt Meeficines always kept on
(Physicians Prescriptions a Stecialty.)
GEORGE RHYNAS
haat'
IILAKE'S BLOCK. THE SQUARE.
1
n
0
33
V
0
0
m
H L f)4
rVp*W
AmpH
jigs/ 7-, Aim
tj E
ov
'nig r?), 1)1
teid
01 C;1 0
CO
[p K
j
oQ
O O • 4
mil 0
r m H
Alfr
,g,
w
Art Dcsigos in Wall P al cr •
)new t*lee time. it you with owe or two nice meow st bommite sear ntl.r's retro pane!
He bas over
20,000 Rolls of the Latest Designs
ptle•wN*sl settee. s..1 at y t lies wow ie ttooth inferior Diods. eas. son meet bassi& roll aid s., the m
TY� 1tts1 png Bazaar
aid Fas6ioas,
THE PETERS
• We',:, ezclaimed Fermi
he sutured the kttt.hen on
meriting is January, 'Juin
has bought the Peters faro
'You don t say so,' said
ting down the pie planner.
to till and tomtit are'
face to tier heehaw', 'whit
cease t'
'Not in our day, said
turd farmer, glancing at
who sat at the window wit
head beet ,over her task of
'Hey, Phebe, aren't you
welt r
'Of course I am,' snivel
merely lotting to him a I
her mother's. That she
shouldn't 1 be r
The Paten farts was .ane
and oldest in Hanover.
down from Una gertlittli4
and had now ponied ont .
name. The ..Id house up.
stood the hand of time we.
having been kept in good 1
generations. lts lean-to ti
chaeged, its marry angled
had nut been repaired awe
one throw a dormer win
build an alcolve there and
balcony in another place
quite In Queen Anne ata
went clear thrush the h
tach side were large ro•,tu
eled
• s
pillar
doili.mg , dated 1
cornices. In two of the
and two of the upper 00
fireplaces, where sparkling
comfort and plenty when
tilled the old house with
Four gtneratior.s had been
up and passed away fn'nt
place, and young l'aul Pel
ed the fifth. Why he st
home of his fathers may pi
ere ; but let me tell you —i
cause he did not love fermi
Joey Stockbridge, the fon
was a lone man. No fathi
no brother ur sister aces
along the walk of hie.
front a far distant town
lad in pursuit of work wine
found, as dotes every one w
the pursuit. The go:,d W
over had learned to reaps
man fur Ilia earnest, s1
manner of life, and when
Peters farm he was camel
most wave 01 public apprec
Phebe \Williams, Ferule;
ly daughter, lad ne lac.. u
counted Paul Peters and
bridge among them. Nut
give you to understand th
teeny count her toren off
as she stopped to think ah
whenever she graced ant
ti nment by Ler pretty
f young men .1•...d ready
reiched in safety t.. her
Thus far she tout shown
but di mu-ely accepted tl
tie first tha: had the euur
her. In the enjoyment of
fair of face and slight of
neatly and plainly, not fri
loved iu the extreme of ft
a treasure to the farmer
wife.
Joey- Stcckbridae was
build and hands once tam
Paul Peters, and in her
the fair Phebe lo 'ked v
young men with more f
any of her numerous adn
was really very much
told that Paul had sol
hoose and well -cultivated
many a time allowed him
side from the ha'I wh
Rath ,rings were held. an
with quiet pleasure t.. t
mellow voice, but he has
ed to her his dislike of
Joey Stockbridge, when
attention, had often all
sight into his inmost ea
lontings for • farm too a
den. 1t must be net
hart beat just • trim
thought, 'Well, he has a
wish him success,' whi
father was saying when
scion of his presence an
'Yea, so do I,' mid Mi
• fares is eurious propert
no women to help him o
'Ob, he has found a f
fond a woman as well,
farmer, laughing and rul
with delight rather than
Spring has come: the I
his joyful note in the br
elm by the door, and 0
by, hunting for a place 1
a :3 oversee the ripening
Paul Peters had put at in
he got for his farm,
board at the village hi,
trade, M for awhile fou
but being naturally an e
soon got • chance to
wagon, and with his dial
d nurse succeed in soh
took, and always foul
M.
M•sewhile Joey bol
leggy hams, bnught It
M sole Dowd ortahie, hu
wean to help us the tan