Wellsville Allegany County Republican (Newspaper) - July 21, 1882, Wellsville, New York AND RE N O II T H E R Art EC THE OF ITS allegany n. july 21, 1882. 29. and FRIDAY court n. eix 76 40 Canh in ifl bnt we are bo as 5re wiil pay within a reasonable 2 mo 1 50 2.00 5.0 8.00 12.00 12. Ou 10.00 8. 13.00 16.00 mo 1 f 8.00 8.00 12.00 12. 15.00 1.00 30.00 30.00 60.00 60.00100.00 Directory por 10 conta per first por lino each at ratea if cash in made quarterly witli regular RE Ii ICA N ta the nf ni Court and fa ihc Ai an In Northern VUE has ao rival nor fer Printing of any ailed at the hour and satisfaction cash on ARMSTRONG aud Counselors at N. Attorney and at k and Conn. ai N. WILDER and at N. WESLEY and lora at N. C. 11. and Counselor B. 0.Attorney end at N. at N. A. and Counselor you one quick her fair let all her young life And above with a maniac's shout And rejoiced to see her lying Strock her you in life's glad hope and faith and love and joy Were her glad and life wao like a There could not you a sadder have seen murder that was fouler I have seen sweet hope and and tender irue love unto With weapons sweet as smiles and kisses sharp blow that does not mar nor torture but lets the white go of all thu souls can Is very compared to rn in N. and at N. F. and Counselor N. E. Bolor at and Counselor at N. J. and Counselor at at N. O. at C. and Counselor at Counselor at N. JOHN and at N. A. and Counselor at N. a and eclora D. and Counselor at N. E. E. G. and Counselors at n. E. a. and Counselor at and Counselor at A 8PAKGUR.Attorneys and at and Counselor Rt N. IRA and Counselor at N. H. and Counselor a at N. and Counselor at IRA and Counselor at N. A- and Counselor at S. and Counselor ll at N. Y. and at at DEBORAH'S had worked in Aunt Deborah's kitchen till nobody expected anything else of me. I had been retained in the house on at Aunt Deborah's my had run through all his property and was only distinguished for his shiftlessness and the size of his I suppose I missed home they never came to see me nor never inquired after that T know Deborah had a great deal of being a rich anii childless and fond of Bat no one ever noticed me. I was not even for it was not worth while to snub a mere drudge like Elsie was also a member of my aunt's but she received very different treatment from that which fell to my Her father was favorite therefore she was educated and was to be certain of a home and life's comforts always and of a fortune at Deborah's I did not envy my fortunate for while I was let and at least took pride in the that I earned my own Elsie was continually being taunted with her and was kept in abject ser by constant threats of would have kind to me it I had allowed but I bad a sort of pride which forbade me to receive patronage from any 1 must be received on an footing or not at only pleasure of my life was unlimited liberty to use the books in my aunt's great and ever-increasing library My rough work unfitted my hands for a fact for which I was as it my leisure first years of my stay I read novels But one of the novels to have a noble and aspiring woman for its hero the story of that life haunted me day and and I ro solved to be something worthy of love and whether I ever received my reward or first step was to map out a line o thought and and a of My intellectual nature was to be molded by some of the best books in my aunt's and that ideal woman of whom I had was to be my moral lifting me into an atmosphere of self-forgetting holiness and I believed that if Aunt De borah's drudge never had an of showing her devotion to the human her own soul would grow rich by the quiet had been years since I formed when Mr. forming to aunt's But having company IA xt at N. John and at N. ' ' HENRY and rat N. aid at N. Y. B. and Counselor N. at n. s. and N. F. Attorney and Counselor al N. Y. and Counselor w. and Counselor and Counselor at y N. i and N. Counselor R. and Counselor and I think it an exceedingly doubtful It cannot bo expected that a kitchen drudge can intermeddle in ad delicate a matter as a love I was never in loye in all my and I daily pray Heaven to mo from any such because the man I could love wonld not notice such a person as I seem to don't said and for the time forgetting her There is something about you different from other strong and masterful { but I think you are troubled with morbid Promise that you'll help me if yoa I can make that promise with perfect I formed a little of action very That evening I went to Aunt Deborah's and being bidden to my first words suppose you mean to leave Elsie if she marries a poor replied I have secured for her the offer of a very eligible If she does not see fit to accept him her future must be whatever she said Elsie's loss will bo my I Don't fail to consider mo after she has flung away her chances for some day becoming your Deborah looked at mo steadily for a as if she felt inclined to think I was taking leave of my then she sat in her chair and laughed laughed until her round face was very red As soon as she was in a condition to she had better have practiced awhile on somo ono else before you tried to overcome my purpose with Your face betrays You are not earnest and you are most mortally ashamed of You know that I am contrary and you know that I am always angry with the person that wrongs you thought that by making me angry with you could get me to vow eternal fidelity to Not so. It is just as I have Elsie must obey me or sho will not receive a from me. As for you have strength and ability to earn your own You know how to and do not care tor the luxury that money You do not need my and I do not believe you want turned away with a bitter How little did my aunt know of my only because I was too proud to make known 1 And my intended aid to Elsie had proved a next having a leisure I went into the intending to a book up to my room but becoming interested in the volume had selected I forgot my and seated myself near a window in an obscure Not long after the door and Mr. Gleason He spent some time searching among the and at last turned to the door with empty hands and hu air of Then I rose and that I might perhaps able to find for him whatever he turned and surveyed me for a brief then Whom do I the cook and floor I was searching for a work on and am disappointed at not finding because I wished to settle a warm fast descending to which I left in full progress in the I am sure I establish my point if I had the book saw here c. and - N. a. and N. L. and 6cloat N. and at N. and N. Y. and Bel N. and and aad Counselor at N. in Book and Job Printer S Faay for in the Slimmer had come to be a settled and all company meant to me was more drudgery and less time to was no prophetic voice to whisper to my heart on the morning of Mr. arrival that my my hope and my my and my bad come to He was only one more to be cooked for and to bo waited upon by the day Ebie came to me with her weak face and must help said Help you do child keep Aunt Deborah's and marry Mr. You see Mr. Gleason is very and if aunt threatens to disinherit me it may lessen my chances of getting think my astonishment and disgust showed themselves in face you so little in your promised yet willing to be hia wife don't she slowly and has not yet asked mo to be his but he I am be He does not love me very bub when we are married and he my devotion it will be her in my that she had many How can I help you I doni her you am Aunt Deb jon are to fa to an yon rn and produced the volume I had been perusing with jq much is probably what you were looking I took the volume from my hand with evident pleasure and just do not usually care for sort of he when he saw that I had read bis I replied Ladies have little incentive to care for such society promptly and most emphatically discourages all such indications of strong Of course it can make no difference to a woman whether the house she lives in is built in Doric or or has no style at In her affectation of childlike simplicity is considered very if she can be why need she aspire to become think you are Miss I think the days when a woman was admired for her ignorance may be named in the past You are a of and ought to my small field of observation has shown me that at affect frivolity and simplicity in the presence of company from 1 inferred that society mires that sort of Perhaps it after a Miss the Boepler of was never yet wrested from an intelligent by an even the bril liant woman baa a much face than the People love to be en one who can wit d wisdom without pedantry is can tp list of have you not forgotten to return to the you for the Miss may I venture to hope that this will not be our last as I told a and prefer not to be We met by If I shall not smiled said shall and turned felt vexed with myself tor having conversed so freely with a and made sund ry good resolutions by which my was to be do not there was in the trifling event just narrated to stir my but that night I did not close my eyes till 3 I began to hate myself for having remained bo long in a menial position without a above it. A beautiful thought came to me at with the suddenness of I had in many instances proven myself to be a good nurse for the I had than once administered simple remedies with in the absence of a t had been fascinated by the study of anatomy and why not add a of - Why not become a among women and children? The thought was healing oil to my troubled and I was soon happily ignorant of the long struggle entailed upon me by my of the cost of medical and the difficulty of persuading patients that a woman can be fit to undertake a was wonderful how often Mr. Gleason found it after to come to the pump at the kitchen door for a and how he persisted in not noticing the glass which 1 placed there for his but must always come into the no matter how busy I and trouble me to get one for and pause awhile to found out one I could and no ono had ever tried to draw me out i was not alarmed when I found that watched eagerly for 1 told myself that no one whose was for had ever before treated me like a rational being and an and that had this friend been a my love would liave beea just the talked on every from the lore of legends to international and I never dreamed that it was more than the pleasure of speaking on subjects remote from puddings and pica that made me cire for Mr. had a terrible One day he was just leavin g me when a voice on the lawn was heard to ciUl Where's Mr. Down iu the I courting the was the more suggestive than was not the heat of the stove that made my face bum at that and the thought flashed into my mind that I had an unquestionable right to be just as Mr. Gleason the room and said coarse jest on the lawn has mode me resolve to ask you now what I had intended to defer to a later I lovo Miss Allston will you be my Mr. Gleason f Where is your to trifle with the affections of then seek to wed me I am surprised beyond I thought better of Go I cannot tell what you may have ho replied with a stem I have certainly been no more attentive than courtesy I had dared to hope for a of a clever woman who ban liad but new dresses in four a correspondent of the Newark asserts that the grand secret of this woman's and stylish appearance is the perfect care she gives her She earns her own living and knows the value of a After returning to her home her dress is taken off and carefully brus cnd examined to see if any stitches are If repairing is the costume folded and placed in a largo box or no matter if it must go on to it keeps it new and fresh When the braid on the bottom of the dress begins to look 1 put on a new and if I happen to get a spot on 1 get it off at generally with ft bit of cold water clean 616 If my or leather belt begins to loek wern or I take equal parts of black ink and sweet rub them with and it has a good I never put away my bonnet without brushing and my is always in the same I generally smooth out my veil and place it under a large so that next time I wear it it appears Yon have accused me of That parts ho was The same day ho departed from my Aunt sudden fancy for sketching among the Never thinks of anything but his complained the The day Elsie's engagement was announced to the Deborah had chosen for She could not live without plenty of moneys she years during the most of which I was not in communication with Aunt Deborah or any of my having with one refused to forgive me for being and in the study of were hard work and almost unendurable I engaged in professional labors in a village in day a is great haste to call me to the bedside of a stranger who was very perhaps No male physician was to be Would I go 1 but a JSow was I afterward that I obeyed the bf and cast aside that of prudery t It was he days he for my and is what I have been praying l have found you was five years and now have been married just four years aad and subject to the ague and their ever hope Ui ou mamage I the Northwestern tribes of Indians innocence is as marked among the girls as their The impression that the red maiden does not entertain a high standard of morality is an for sho is taught as other girls are and grows up with well developed ideas of the responsibilities of life and a firm to discharge Educated in that she was ordained to she trains herself to undergo hard and at sixteen age is sturdy and brave against fatigue and a She may not possess notions of but she takes no a little pride in her personal and in the arrangement of her lodge she displays somo crade ideas of taste and a certain amount of If she marries a white man she makes him a good wife while she lives His homo is her sole and his comfort her sole She thinks of him and for and makes it her study to him and make him respect and in him une of a superior and by her dignity and devotion endears herself to him und struggles make him At the agencies of the upper frontier thousands of men are and it is not an exaggeration to say that the majority of them have Indian and live They are not sought after by the for the girl's custom is to remain until the marriage contract i3 made and the marriage portion paid The husband must have the with which he must invest his projected mother-in-law before the ceremony takes The process is a little out of the usual and its description may be of The aspiring bridegroom must be well-known in the tribe before he can hope to win a Her people want to understand him and know if ho can no only but also her in the of a He must be a ' kind-hearted with a temper warranted to keep in any domestic and ho must have a good at least half a dozen If he bo and have aII he can Selecting the he makes application to her and at a council the price is fixed If a girl is especially her mother will demand a two horses and a lot of blankets and A he must furnish enough to amount up 4o to Then he tries to beat the dame and if ho succeeds he knows there is some reason for letting the girl it he understands that he has made a good courtship is left entirely to the skirts are gaining fans are teff should be very capote is the dress bonnet of and coaching toilets are made Of the brightest richest but and very ugly ones at are inflated with corsages of some very handsome costumes are up in front instead of pelerines are and come in a variety of simple as well as many fantastic stockings abound in tints of old amber and blue in all the new hats shading the with indented of largo will be much in use at the belt or sash no longer defines the waist but is placed at the bottom of the long pointed Leghorn hats with white yellow plumes aro most popular because they can be worn with costumes of any of the colors now in lace in patterns like those of rose point is the most elegant trimming Jor the Canton crape dresses worn latest largo London called in a soft fluffy puff on the ridge of the of the cotton satines that aro too striking and bizarre for dresses to bo worn in tlie city will bo effective for country prettiest laee is the double of guipure net with a full frill of the lace on its and black velvet ribbon bows to tie it in is tho new French fabric for It is stamped with figures in bright or else it is plain cream as beaded are favor and are about to bo relegated to the Indians who first wore it is announced real gold real and puro amber beads are in vogue in have Watteau of large figured with a skirt of crevette colored satin trimmed with puffs and white Bows of dark red velvet ribbon trim the corsage with with old blue or dull rod velve collar and are worn hotels by ladies whose fair complexion will admit such a trying with is a fashionable con trast of colors in imported A pale blue foulard with dark brown figures trimmed with brown ribbon is one of the prettiest of tho blonde has tho figures of Spanish lace on a very thin grenadine It is mode up over colored satin of contrasting as black over red or white over OF are more fools thiein and among eages there Is more folly than is of all in youth it is a in old age a goodness is like the it shines most when no eyes rove those of heaven are upon is like the as We journey toward casts the shadow of our burden behind There is ways of getting of a back and the best way is to keep the great has it is never our tenderness that we but our of trusting children is the be thrown on the troubled waters of of the best rules in conversation is never to say anything any of the company can reasonably wish had been left people so discontented with their own lot in ia the mis taken ideas which they form of the happy lot ol ban themselves splendid mental wherein they call their ordinary amount of of a woman's lifo is more like the aurora with its strange fitful The phenomena have never been illusions fall ono after the like tho parings of tho fruit is its savor inay be still it contains something that Boll in and I them I My and I mj own I wmt I bave hats I bare bave The lark is my 8o, jolly the Long Ufo and to ths original ice man should not an under a If himself good has won 880,000 by hii akOi with the and that is good green lithe fashionable for but it's bad for It is a for a Yoa shall my ' f ribbon comes in again as a dress blue is the newest shade of pab gray plat an important part in lawn color arein high Flowers are the extravagant the mitts and mousquetaire worn almost silk pongee redingotes are white and ficelle gray is the of all shoulder have a thick of or materia around the scarf arranged as a pelerine is straw trimmed with are much to er twine bonnets ean be worn witi kind of tot Old Rail am told by foreign tourists that while many of our fences are reflected in those of other the counterpart of the zigzag fence is to bo seen in no other It is typical of It is known as of Virginia and as a relic of a lavish era of unlimited History does not chronicle the name of its but I have long since learned to cherish a profound respect for tho memory of this i It is hard for me to imagine in person of this primitive rail-splitter the picture of an untutored and I never follow the of one of those feeling a certain consciousness that its original builder must hayo seen his work through eyes artistic well as careless abandon of its repetition of form in which repetition is continually defined by the capricious convolution of the for there are no two rails made in the same gray satiny their weather-beaten stains of moss and and the play of and shadows fiom the waving weeds and make the old rail fence truly an object of real in our Often have I lingered in ifas and a hundred times have I thought of the host of and which might fill a book to the glory of a fence Soake who resides in exhibits a and oyer the reptile family astonishingly In the creeks or wherever he finds a it matters type of deadly poison ud venom it may he succeeds in ing it suffering aa little from the clasp of its fangs as if it were an ordinary He handles and fondles them about his with as much indifference as if they were so BTe wiU the rattlesnake to deliberately consequences from the By a certain weed or growth of vegetation he claims destroy tho effect of the When bitten he chews - is inth as with the leas m Cod Any one driving in the fall of the perhaps during the month of over the sandy says a Sandwich would be surprised to find almost every spot of low and swampy without regard to size ot the thickest cranberry which great numbers of the people are The or are usually vary greatly in size and but are generally laid out in the form of by screams of which the double of drainage and overflow the latter for protection from frosts of in the from very destructive insects pe to the Where there is no water the bog must be left to the mercy of these destructive Stretched across tho bogs in time of harvest is a phalanx of industrious a few feet working hard fill their Although the prices paid for picking are hardly ever exceeding one and a half cents per even at this the older pickers can make from 82 to 33 per while the younger ones can earn 81 know of ladies leaving their homes in being fatigued by the noise and excitement of city and the air incident who come to aoine village on the roll up their glove their and at once proceed to the picking of these after inhaling the fresh bog mingled with the air from the salt which borders both sides of they return to their homes improved in health and the first of on the some eighteen years this industry has grown to be an The cape berries are tho are in prompt They white and as you see in but are of a bright ahd sometimes of a dark and are of a good and uniform These berries are up Into new barrels of a regular holding one hundred quarts if picked over and the frozen and wormy ones they Will command the highest on the other the frozen ones will barely reach half about village on t may be seen in time teams driven by people of alf colors and their way to the nearest shipping station loaded with the Stormy does not interfere will bring in the thoy before the keep their berries for 1& the they bni keeping ia does not or c f fall out of A balloon and be obliged to walk wanta a foe laziness Let him try dynamite mine in fa noi nearly so as a brand Msr dollar silver mice In you yon most exclaimed the 1i caught an to skip Sd say this play is taken from life I t should say rather that the life ii from the poultry asked of a city Of was the the little shell .im got noses for f asked ehUd of her who had seen up at poor was the with boys in the iMd know that the boys have md doesn't whipping doesn't last kill they the would-be ef and his wife bave of the fa aoi but the neighbors say she used the scepter to stir SMp and set on fourteen duck eggs in his kingly Blow bas simply raises ructions a For he meets his girl at whan homo from And he has to ask her if like to exclaimed as he approached the patient's seems to bo suffering from the sick Her name it's and we're only besti six H. yott give vaf recipe for fence reply in your next We do it. We have asked and all of them say they never tried believing that it would take too and that the wouldn't of a But they say if you want lo know how fix matoes or can flood you with inH 4 are to New for It fa to how of these go out of the Gape towM in and hudor to mate the into A good soil fa ia good condition reap 150 As the present per this pf who was the of the ments the The with look pf I should M. Lake 8Me i toek as three He's in il ia - ' - io kfa his victim's aeek ia pressed ia opened the little kry I ym m Ste