M'Kean County Miner, The (Newspaper) - July 25, 1872, Smethport, Pennsylvania TO ASD VOL IX A i ur TII LUT w SMETHPORT COUNTY PA THURSDAY JULY 25 1872 i l Ik I Win wllk In Uf rM pilau u Moat t ruj ua I tat mj II u Air O rkIM lick I O t 1 Upm uv UMir I taid nothing did nothing but only looked at her faon and went a changed and altered being Thorn wa a world where tenon and mortice band or left not That world I had teen I had breathed iU air heard My heard of my and luid thu my out for in my young day wore boy till eighteen or old I boro it patiently What b he fit tor r every one would aak and no one antwor not oven I about the rectory la the and heard her alag I the old gudener to let the toe help him the and when I felt I entered the garden that I wa entering a Oh happy month when Mb mi i Own I H Tu I 1 at Iko IkM km In b TM tlu tl UM II t Aon I M tau ear wt r MM car kut tad Mm u ikj W r A A CETTUBT old book yellow the writing scarcely from time and evidently MR To the fire or to shelf f were my reflections I looked tbn papen of my late uncle the of a 1 look the book and for the I had my ro- ird for 1 In crabbed ir evidently written clow of life Tins I now into a more fit for my UK awkward nobody who hold awl tnd cut hb find with hb loft S taid my father and ao I It I wss awkward I wai fifteen but terrible I not make a nor aaw a pair f nor a saddle nor do that I ought to bo able to do My to have no 1 filing in them I awkward t I knew it and H know it I wtt could write and but I kward with my they loomed wills of their own and yet I danm at and a any anna I don't know what fit laid to tho rector of the IVr him to and ho Uu nearly off with an axe be went to the smith and burned U till he wa laid up for a month n i all of no use lie me more in a week than his iwy for ia a month Why other uan hb hand lod moult him to Y There I k him now cutting that back strip II with hb left hand I hoard him the knife slipped and ef leather wa divided in and utterly look at that Apiece f tho wry middle of the akin and into the bargain JV to my r while I my after the horrible labors of the weary day I nead to follow tho old gardener and hoar her ring I My old withered heart fuller and freer when the memory back to mo now my again me Bho met mo one evening in tho a I coming along tin with my full of water and mud You're tho Imy that broke tho you f I not and not reply my mo I dropped my the they away in a moment tome on which the rector tot most How awkward to Iw tlin And how angry uncle will IwP I turned and flod and from that Uiuo tho rectory gate against me I led a unhappy life for the throe yoan I had only one during tho whole of that weary time I her at church and heard ring there I boar nothing cite when ahe Bang clear and distinct above tho confuted natal sounds that came from tho voice of alono pure tweet and good It a blotted time I would not a service in church for all that might offer Throe good every Bunday there and back did I heavily plod to hoar her and feel rewarded I her and I know when happy whon a a mother know the tone of her voice to tho of onoe to -I when her heart wat light and sad One Bunday the tang at I had never yet heard her not loudly but aa ly to lovingly I knew the had loved it thrilled in luir voicu und at Urn evening service he wai I taw him A I knew hit bearing with cruel hard gray and the tang I knew it I de- a and gratitude in the notes I felt the wa to I had suffered not that I I had no voice A hanh guttural Bound all I could give utterance to I tle like a bird and often and often have I lain for houn in tho ahado of a tree and joined tho concert of tho One day I wat whittling wai my wont I wont through the street when I wa tho by an old man the cobbler of tho next pariah I knew him from hb coming to my father for leather occasionally Bam where did yon loam that T Loam That tune At church f You've a good ear Bam I've nothing ebe good but I can whittle any thing Can yon whittle me the Morning my in your own church aad God you do a well there you've done here it will be the day I have ever known my boy and your father and will wy ao too How I practiced morning noen and night for tho great day how tho old man darkly at a prodigy that wai tu bo forthcoming at the and then the day with it b vivid before me a if it were but The evening came and there ia the gallery I aat waiting with my Sam my aid my maater a great rbk if getting very full There lady laat mmi in on your book and fad what you're in the Fve brought a leather to help and he pat a of that black leather that ha a peculiar acid agent in front of me it revived me the memory of the many houn I had apant came back to me at one and I Lit a if I wen indeed there She came at but and began Oh that Shall I over forget ita the wondering of the and who came yi found in mo the awkward left-handed apprentice the prodigy of which they had Oh it wai Tho fint few of my bow gave me donon and I did woll and I knew it through the hymn through the and on to the anthem before tho sermon That to be tho gom of the evening It then new anthem I know that my liveth It inharmonious out of know not why or how but it progressed spell earned upon all but her aad i one by on the mente and were i one by one the voice died away and were loet and ahe and I alone bound together and drivea on by an irresistible impulse went through the anthem one soul one denied to animate both The whole congregation listened a to an angel and ahe and like one in entrance tang filling mo with a delicious of peace and tation the like of which I have never known It came to an end at last aad with one triumphant note I fell forward iii a swoon When I recovered T found at home in my own room with the rector tho doctor and my parent there and board tho doctor I told you he would my dear am I knew he would Thank Ood murmured my My dear boy how we have feared for What a I wai courted and made much of and vury I and delightful nich were thu expressions I now heard of and any My father bought mo a fine ment and I tho hero of the far It wai tome day after that Bunday that I ventured to aak about the My dear boy aid my mother the like never heard We taw you there and wondered what you wore ing but toon we taw you with MAre We Who living and breathing on the face of thb mortal globe aan truly and one may with aa individual who d afloat hb or her perfect with UM goodt the but them under atrict aad aoon aome larking of will arbe to ahame their content never of that belong to the bellowed and when we who cheat and torment each other here hope to rrt in bond of love which aQ the former life Were perfect content to fta the lot him come up for vaas Mr Walten I thould like a fit it fur vury fragile all IUlian b and Una it with Ami I want with the motor to bring k thu taking two loath it in the bonao aad I waited in whiL he went to fetch it l with a large tenderly in thorn came from the room the of which I tound of a voice A me now 1 write thote tweet to pure it if an to me and forgot the m my hande it dropped te and wa to 1 I the rage T L tor which he Illumed in hi the came oat who had tho aboe f and I aaw her I forgot the Look at Thirty Fifty 4 u t wa there any raw you There go oat further to olt good Know any thing of mutin Bam f Nothing Like to V I'd give all I havo in the world to he able to play anything My full of mane I can t a note but I play anything if I worn Ho you Ham my Iwy Come home with me Carry and yon ahall begin at onoe I wont home with him and found that ho one of the playon in tho choir of hb pariah hb being the violoncello I took my fint and from that time a new life after and during the day I wandered over to hb ahon and while he at the boot aad I played over aad over again all the 1 get from tho church You've a beautiful fingering Bam though it to too you bowing away with your left it no ence to you You ought to be a flue player flam I but I poor I wanted an instrument of my own but I had no money and I earned earn none My parent thought and rightly that if they found me food and clothing I we woll vided for and ao for twelve month the old instrument im- proving daily It that and flagon eo rigid and tiff far every other under the eace of move with each mm and Bam my eaid the one day you Ball have aa instrument und you or my look a little awkward to day yoa ahall have an a your father ball buy it for you the whole ahall cry shame up But he don't know a word of I Never mind Bam my boy ho plana At it wai for the churche to each other and it wa he choir of our play and eing on the next Sunday morning at kit pariah church aad that he and hi e choir ome to our pariah fur the And you Ham aid ho the bow wo knew yoa mutt be the ton there'd been aa much talk about and then when tho anthem came and we all left off and they all left off playing and only you and Mia cilia kept on we were all ia tean 1 aaw even the rector crying and poor girl the at if in a and aa you it wai dreadful for me to tee you with your eye fixed on her ing her eo eagerly And then to look at her taring up at the glati window at if aha ate through it mile and mile away into the dry Oh I'm aure the like never aad then when you fall down I aad your father ran up and carried yoa down and brought you home in Farmer Blade After thU I had aa Invitation to go up to the and there in the long winter we to ait and while I played aha Oh thorn py time I when the loved me but only at a dear friend aad I loved her ail never had before or love again I do not know the kind of love I had for her I wa but a little older than tho waa but I felt at a father might feel to hit daughter a ewatt and love that made me ful to her I knew the loved a man un- worthy of her and I think at the felt thia aad knew I fait it I perfectly free at the at laat and we need to flad motto a meant of convene that our tongue not have Ah are gone She left a at laat and in a few her child came back ia her place and a I again in the old rectory parlor yean and yean after my ant rialt with her daughter beside me ala t not with her the old flood back upon me aad I feel grateful Joy in the aad fection of the daughter of htr whom I loved n ao tenderly aad eo long I ait ia the old awt ia the aad play and oaot in the year the old anthem bat the that led the old church a with a glory that day the vibrato under my withered I am bat waiting to be B her under the yew tree aad H may be nearer to her atill U the longed to ambition would Look at a What a what a brain b Throw open the far ib evea to your best room with it cortly article of will for Ask any mother and the query Krou our chant and It b our glory that the Dominion can beast of seldom if ever the wout the very spice of lift- which tho ing man through ignorance hit richo can give No ye laboren of Ood own toil en- joy tho hour of rest ter no of tho day rounded with an family with mure true aost than the of the marble whoso brain b full of of ment and who b too to cultivate the finer feeling of home life The discontent at the lot by one whose cannot be I believe to be the real secret of so many throwing back the pure and wifely love inborn in tho heart of every true woman and tho result grief do I the weakness of the week seeking for that abroad denied the starving heart at home And the children gifte Ood help them end their future with thb life example before their no ing no carem to stir the fount of tender feeling tho discontent betrayed in the home will be carried out into tho world and like all Matter its abundantly j In world of sin and laiaory I know of but one instance whore may bo truly said to reign Oo with 1110 to tho bedside of confirmed in- and hearken to their swoot guage of in tho moments of acute agony Their faith and they havo no with that it should bo otherwise Happy thrice happy ye suffering for your cross b your crown and thaT content tho glory of your come would barter yoan of existence te obtain Speak for yourself dear brother or sister have yoa the secret of happiness y Content I am told the mystery but our longings and are ao numerous so indigenous to our humanity to thb boon beyond the power of frail and frequently our after contentment only tend to agitate some emotion and Tragedy of the a ahort of the n ere aear Fort yoar not having received the of the Mr Leahy who ar- from Beeaom-a few Jay ago I have received a fuller account of give it to yoa aad the public awn ia known and elaim ao targe a circle of He wa very aad liberal well Bad taken to the called a pulper by wreathe removed the beans or ay eor o i aad the palp are in another direction and are and for aro to teen for BOTeral boon ao at to off any remaining or matter the the aHa by winnowing after which to aad wa withal aad doah A flea of yoang wife with him to live there On the of Mr -i to ride to the herd which then about eighteen at a point known as Ute Greek They arrived early ia the aad were quietly enjoying little their cap of joy would bo turned to aad what a terrible would oon bo upon them About even to not T M they a party of nine Indian approaching tho camp Mr concealed and a Henry rifle to approach any party or a of the farmer atea coming over a bluff nearby The Indians te bo friendly and to convince Mr Hopkins of tbb they laid down their gun him to do the same finally persuaded that they intended harm ha gave up hb rifle bat kept hb not ia all depend eo maeh upon the or of its aroma bat thne cannot be therefore in boy awa fa being thi NO 40 waa at A badly T Be te the b to aw that the ased aro not by or In whole coffee the catoi can be detected the rolatil oil and the acid to which the aroma and are dae which before were latent ia the being by the heat la the the awd loas ia bat The principle oi and hi identical to family ship knew no i they ale Jy of the by Mr Hopkina and soomed to kb ol the number who spoke Spanish well ed Hopkin ing genuine friendship from the fact that he kept on took off placed them in a r and given a seat in the centre ostensibly the poet of honor He now entirely at their mercy but they must needs carry the deception a little farther They asked him a thousand questions ing the military camp at tho of troop stationed there eta etc Having thus their hunger and cariosity and gained all the information required the troops etc they drew the arm they had concealed under their blanket and fired upon the unsuspecting heat dling his body with balb and Hopkins who had boon until thi time now made her ance and almost by the appalling her Her body was mutilated aad he waa i with that of tea it aot at a the brain preventing deep or and burial and abont the dog With n at whole over each terrier maniff and oar bat WM immensely relieved by not that the of De- troit attempted after a Barren be of food aai ody and away before her Tery She too one aide of oat our of mind yet in all our aad lack of bear in mind the comforting of a known poot more adapted te the heart than any I can now b going on the Presbyterian papen of the jr led by UM New York on Tea Quite a in the Presb try Too Many and Why It there are about fifteen hundred men ia that church educated at the expense of charitable contributions who are without and entirely from work Thb does aot include and teach on and and of the various The U b owing to the any with the idea that he would like to be a preacher bast should at first have made evident that he should never enter UM profession la other a free education te the pulpit b a premium of- blockhead and doH to make the their calling Letten are from prominent laymen Law and her at bat from the of a Uttle Mexican harder boy wh been ia their employ pleading fa and her M wanting to take her to Kalp her aad her at bat from the ho had far her r they far the time bat eat off her long of hair ae a of the battle on Ute They then ordered her to off and watching her op- thinking the wai to by into a pool of water re- mained here with only her head abore water wai by the aad ordered to come oat to the cabin they a dance the body In honor of the they had greater ty It b also said by lUto repair or prevent ia remarkable degree the too rapid of the tissues ar that life can on a quantity than would be the caw without of A yery simple teet tor the presence of in b to drop a little ia a tambler of cban cold water b the particle will immediately the bottom of the tambler Inserting at once to the water a deep amber the coffee particle will float for a much longer time aad the water will be but colored The most satisfactory way of purchasing coffee however b in the whole state and to grind it it b wanted when all the of the aroma obtained in the infusion the lady hint that told hi bore rifle the ty Car owa Idea by a Having paid their yean By thb amount b being that now very that the dama florin one in the country The by the ia the moat having been de- aa rapidly and What bLong Alfred Townsend thu tersely answers the above question in a recent letter to the Chicago Long Island bad re- and capital enough to make a great maritime It b divided into only three counties of which Kin the whole plan are with young men who have to pay their way from the and then quite tarve for five or tea yean before winning a ing practice and there beno want of candidate it b tended if the yatom of free entirely U quite certain no help be given a for the it imply a of ting a living nor to who would abandon all thought of the pulpit if hb of ind the little herder boy were enabled to get away and made way to arriving there by daylight after walking a miba both very maoh herder with them daring all thb time bat wa pared and wa te tho within would inevitably be he kb only chance far escape was to run far kb life He did so and had run bout forty from the cabin whoa be was shot down by the and another added to their tion They remained in camp from three to five houn ao that the troop who were eat from were only a few houn behind During the within half a mOe of the In- but the had given out the mea had taken no and they were to return without chastising of the asat of Brooklyn City b only twelve nub by seven aad yet while which of the bland and b 110 by ao contain only The middle county of has people The an Brooklyn Here more than te or or Florida or or or or Nevada or New Hampshire or Oregon er or Vermont All oar added together do not equal the of Long Island It b twelve time greater in sonb Ana Nevada bat it never expect to get even one United State Senator The old eastern county of ha been yoan doubling H only twelve In water thuir had no tinie to ea 700 too were carried away aad railway aad embankment It b aid of a now and oral brother that when tbS water yean my with me Wa with Wu i penon i to Penitentiary te the United coste on an ft to the sum of aach capital taken from tive and ing aad feeding ftl to of the real coat of crime A-1 nt Ik ii iJt about The b not only a time than the cure bat it b ia the ead Kvery and In feet old then bad half a many ae New York City and County Long Island which probably regarded a Bart of and equal te population to Con- which Boand The ridges of hilb of Long like and to have been broken from the rJH land by an earthquake and the ocean poured te the furrow of the earthquake to make the Bound for the rocks ally identical with thoas oat Isle of be be- come the of n very number of It eat b owned by bm than nearly of tbb than a acrea labor b In the yean from 1830 to 1871 wen The end of the appor t be withdrawn It b not wJT to give young men too help padded may gi and 1 Three men wen being hoisted to the top of a tower ia IU the other day te aa elevator and when at the height of one feet the rope broke them to the ground One of the men truck a wire suspended at some from the ground and was out entirely in two and both the were M badly that they lived but a ehort time too well do now and then bat the the a pony The should a man before it a The not far o maeh to-day bat real te the a good deal more day he saw rare pleat aad While at full speed be a clothes Una which hit him te the mouth Hb momentum carried the line back to tension and the rebound threw Urn eight or tea feet the line left hb mouth it took out three teeth and all that part of the jawbone te they were imbedded so that they now remain solid together te the part it Considering the fact that the of our life whether a f are mostly Tided by the ft ta known of the derive oar from a Although the fat g about thb article to our of the tbe lo to b with goad to be a arth of the part of the point of having from thene into it b mad to bay bean flnt For about MO the whole of on fream after which It ea an high and bold 80 feet at Montauk 900 near tho and there are of rock and turf 330 bet of and rook higher then 100 The ocean aide of the bland a which b a minatare of that to the north navigable for and protected from the ocean by a bar of and it head tack into New York dty one flake of ib tail at 190 away to the the other fluke out into Flam end the flake far thirty waU w into Central America and other of the of iato Karop took pl than nearly midway in Inland which aon of nod land are Beye great and Hard-hearted it may that a poor boy During Weat bdb received The are to be and work plantation then thT liberated men Many of the Utter kayo aa ambition to work far them own walk ni any at at tt drou bit of luck far the teea the General acre of m r the boy bnt the that very maeh afraid that it will of other little bova rut ap unnumbered and of the mind the middle of the fourteen yean before the Two The of the rofle Uee when I a tax of nwy W to bOf ttw d vane to mad that b from want of rof their they would