Cape May Ocean Wave, 23 February 1871 IIIF issue link — Page 1

^.SPWIli Cape May Ocean Wave.

VOLUME XVI. ...

CAPE MAY CITY, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1871.

-- WHOLE NUMBER 821.

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l i a» c? rro wrra Ov* Sramr. *|, •» .... .. h -SNOWED DP." J * "Oh, mother, aneh news!" cried T , Clara StjqajfaarWv^tiMj eyes fairly w black wWrazeftenwof.Wteta- roahed w in with an open letter in her band.— I* "Hkanor Slanwood io to be married w lo Mr. Oahtoy neat mMith, and hare « a grand wedding, and the wanta me to •* be one of the brtfcemaldo! THWk of T< that! And T«' been caiy all my " Ub In be bridmuaaid to aoroabody, ynu fl know; lU iuchCun! And who do you •uppoee she hao ehuaen to bo groetuo- «" man with meT IPa Colonel Lenox!" wl Wnrda are wholly inadequate to ex- *l prtaa the emphaeio and rapture with *' which thla iaat aunouncement Waa *" made. Mro. Tryon oouhl hardly help omitlog taroolf at the young giriw doitgbi. >» and laid down tar work, all interest •" to hear the letter, which ahe read aloud >1 u far aa, "I think you will ta oatlaOcd. ad Clara dear, with the oekctiou I hare eh ciara ormr. wiui toe wovm"" . *— ■ -

made tor you, and oo wiU the ouperb Cotonei. I know. Two other people, probably, wont ta oo well pleaoed— Maud Norton, who hao been doing her brat to mako a conqneat of the Colonel; I hare really been afraid . iorortlmra the - would eurceed; you know how bewitching aha can be when eta triee; and ahe looka Juat like a little French marquioe tbia winter, In the lowly Farie toilet lea the brought liotne; and, aecondly, Ctiooln Tom, who la to aland up with Maud, and who would be lu the aeventh heaven If , it were only yon. It"a oo ua» blinking the fact, dear; he Juat worehlpe tbe ground you tread on—" , cure flopped abort io bar reading, and with a brightened color, when aha cam to . tbia l'r r tape one rcaoon i, waa that "Aunt Mclleo" tad Jutt come .in, and waa atnudlng in the doorway, her atarp, worldly face taking everything in. aa uaual. 8ta became wry gracinua and betrign when Mra. Tryon had told Iter the newa. There waa but little low loet between tar niree and herself, and ao the young Udy would not read her the letter "Quite a (altar in your cap. Clara, to be ooeof Eleanor V bridramaida Tbty are vrry elegant people, the Stanwooda, and to, of conrae, thla wedding, aa it (a to be ao largr, will ta aa aplrndid aa money ami laala ran make it. I'm sorry, though, you are not to taw Mr. Tom SUnwood to stand with; ta la railed one of the tot matcher (a , • sad I do hope yon won't ta goose 1 enough to rdthae him la caac ta offers . himself." And Mrs. Uellcn threw r tack tar.ralret cloak with the air of a woman whose opinion wae law. ■ Clara's flaaibia lips curled juat a Ut- . lie, while tar nunt went on, directing , her remarks to Mrs. Tryon, who, bav- , ina bean sick, in tat am m far rewral month", bad not aean the young man. < though hU visits to New V.irk bad , ben numerous of Uto. "Ue U not , ooiy rwy rtcfc (hie Qatar left him ar imiHua fortune, you know), and of ' line family— them l> nnoe tatter In the , State— but perfectly correct In hi* tablu, and ataady"Too cold-Uoodr.1 to be anything 1 else!" raid Clara, with an Impatient ' ahrug. t "Not brilliant in cmversation. to ta aurp,'' cootiuued the old lady, 1 loftily, not noticing llio interruption, > "Now, Aunt Mellon, " hunt in Clara, "you know very well that ta it ' tbe graatnt bote In the world; never • tool an original idea U, 1,1, life; and - after yon taw laiked owr the Iaat i newa with him coorcraatiou always comes to a dead aland-alill, unku. ol course, yon get him no Ida travel* In ' Europe. And I've tried thai dodge ' With him— excn*e the slang, aunt. It's 1 tired to death of Pan. and the Nik. 1 and all the rest of It " Then the gave 1 an amused little Uugh, aa alio leaned back on Uw toungr. "Ton ought to 1 SM him. mother! Tall and slim at a I tekgraph pok! Drab hair, cyea, anil " complexion; no wannth or crdoa about L him. uakaa wtaa ha waaaa atdl1 Now. If there la anything I detest on ' a man. It's a red nrek-tlc, hair oiled J and .parted behind, ugh! and per1 fttmery. Torn Btanwoad la guilty of 1 ail threat 1 will ray though," ahe ' added, repentant, remembering aft hi* 1 gaoeroaity and devotion to her, "that ' ta haa aa kind a heart aa ewr brat: 1 and sol hope that sumo day tall (tod ' a good, stupid little wife, who will 1 adore him . and wool be me!'' the ' ejaculated, mentally. 1 The winter before the had passed " six delightful wodta in A .vfaitlng ' Eiranor Slammat, "tar moat Intimate Wend," and she raroe home fkallyr ' persuaded of two thinga-lhat Itanwaa la A a man who lowd her. I » man whom aba lowd. Aha, . that tralrad of being the same, ttay . were beings aa widely different a. tbe , poka. The man who laved tar wae . plainly Tata Staawoad ; tha other waa , ColooalLsnox. who wra aft that poor 1 Tom waa tret— bandaeune. colli rated . and ehgmt. Daring the war ta was , dlatlnguistad tor bit coolness and f "mniga, and was the idol of hU whol, , bar; and if any thing ehe could b o "»•« to render him irresistible In U the eyua of women, ttare waa the tah. k of romance shod round hltn by lbr vague rumor of a ntrat impaaaiooed it tragic lore- aflhir in hia rally youth, a supposed to ta the reaton why, at a thlrly-fiw. and universally courted by >. ~«ttars and tUughh-r*. ta was .till a ■ on

' During tar vigit In A Cokmal I Lenox had beau devoted to tar at first ahawaa thagueatof hia friaad. Judge Stan wood," afterward hcauae she amused and Interested him. — never waa a girt more variable, unequal; a peculiarity of beta which ta tad aoou discovered. When pak, li sliest, and uninterested, eta hardly even pretty; in kae than an hour afterward, perhaps, she would ao transformed and so beautiful that you would hardly believe it was the ramc-tar usually quiet gray eye* ablaze with excitement »r emotion, the softest, lowliest pink coming and going in her ctaeks, tar whole (her and figure illamined and with Ufa and spirit and ewry womanly charm. Then yon did not ' wonder at the enthnabum eta excited 1 at each limes, or the power eta had over tboae who knew her moat. The ' tast of It oft was, and perhaps one I sacral oftfaa charm. tLatit area wholly i Involuntary, for she was quite uncno- ' herself of this marvelous ' changeable nr*» of bora. Aa tor Colo- i n..| I ennv ta Mllovril tllaVinff on |MT rb ncl Ixnnx, r

e, at an an Invtruromt. drawing beront, _ and quickening tar intolkct with hit, ig till even ta hlmtelf was attoniilird ie lometlmee by tar brilliancy, and then id watching her with an artist's eye and iu admiration when ta had rouaed and n kindled tar into beauty. Rather a j. dangerous paailme this, even for a B blaac man like Colonel Lenox; while ' it Tom Stan wood on these occasion* 1 i hovered near, like a moth round n d candle, In hopeks* admiration, and i If Mghlug at his own inability to "make i k her look aoapkuUd.'' a This weddlhg wah to be, aa Aunt ' MeQcu — who, knowing but lltt)* 1 I, French, was fond of introducing il i a into her coo variation -doacritaxl it. a I B moat "raahaahy" aflalr, and wot to I It come off on Thursday, the l"lh of ■ a January, at qlgbt o'clock In the ercn- 1 lu*. Tha ceremony waa to be solemn- ' ised In church by tta bishop; after that d a grand reception at the Stan wood*', ' r which eoald not fitil of being brilliant 1 e with ao tuparb ahousecutirely thrown ' r. Open for guraU, and with a host ao " ,i well known for hla elegant hospitality. 1 n The next mornlnz, after a splendid , wedding breakfast— of course, only for 1 It tta family and the guests visiting in ,f tta house, of whom there were to be ' o twenty or more —the bridal party were " J. lo leave foe New York, then to Uke ,f tta steamer for Europe. Ctarn wan 1 B to come by Wednesday no. at. a* that ' j evening ttay were all to go over to the ,t chnrch lo rebrane liw rarevnony. ' e arrange their pbern, etc.,- -a mntb-r ' , of some moment, and no small amove- ' » men I loo- prolably , with tta *U ' , bridramald* ana gruumauwu. au w 1 well acquainted, and ripe, of coorw . 1 for any flirtation* and diversion that 1 „ alioaid present tliomaelrea. Mra. 1 Stanwival had Inrttod Clara to stay a ' il few days aftrr the wedding, bat six I. bad decided in tar own mind liutl it ' d woo'ai 1*1 deviilrelly more charming to ' * return with Eleanor and tar husband h to New York on Friday morning. 1 ,f "The fact is," wrote Eiranor to Iter, 1 t "that I shall insist on mother ^ kiting 1 , you off— you know you have promised her a viait in the summer— for Colonel , Lenox and one or two other* are going 1 x on with na, and vc »ltall tare aueh a ' merry, party wilh a drawing-room rar 1 B all to ouraelves, and be together lift tbe 1 steamer aalla." ' Tuesday ulght- she wa* to start early 1 next morning - tar dreea ran*: from 1 tta dress-maker's, sod there was a 1 , general bunt of admiration from all ' r tta fhmlly tta momrnt It was utt- 1 j folded. As Itay arero nooe of ibetn to 1 lt see tar In It at tta wedding— only tar 1 , untie Charka was to go on wilh her, ' ,j as her father had au important rase in 1 „ remrt. and her mother waa an Invalid 1 # who never went any where-th-y lu- 1 , aisled on her arraying herself; thai ttay I „ might see Juat how she waa going to 1 . look. It waa a silk of tin most un it- 1 j ing, heavenly bine, and aa Clara stood 1 j before tta glass in It, whikhsr mother „ puttlwflowerainbrrhalr.andlhrdreea- ' a maker proudly apread out tta train 1 d behind, that ercry one might see "what 1 , a splendid sweep it had." ahe could ' _ Bflt hrllf til'— •'"« 1 n worn anything half so becoming in her | l( life. Her hair looked sunnier In It ' .. ber eyra more brilliant In color, the 1 ,f low neck and ahort aleevca showed the 1 r round, white branty of ber girlish form. ' , whlk excitement ami pleasure had ' , given her cheeks tta soft color or a ; . blush rose. One thought waa upperj moat, and gave tar an exquisite thrill I, of dcMghL Colonel Lenox had never ' r sera her iu toll-dreea, io tar mind's 1 .•yr now the aaw Uw quick auilu ufad- ' j miration that vrooM be sure to light up 1 hts handaome face when he should ■>.- 1 , tar forth* Orel Pure dressed like this 1 f Sorely, anrely ta could pot resist her | r lhen! Tta next morning when she woke ' up she could hardly brlicra that at last ' J the day au long looked forward to, 0 when she waa to start, for A , had a arrived; and ahe lay still a moment ' , Ju»t to realize to herself the whole 1 r charm of the aitnalioo, and Utfo "h- ' I. 'oevhaud, by autlclpati m, erery dr q. , of this foil cap of pleasure at h* iipe. ' il She waa dressing sad hummiug gayly ■ 1 , away totaraclf wbgn a diuppoiutinmit ; y arrived, io the shape ufa naearagefo nu „ iter uncle Charka, that he had Iren r suddenly taken sick wilh pnourn, n «d « "Wd he impassible for him lo u go to A with ber. „ "Never mind,'' said Clara, deter1 mined to look on the bright tide t, hU,. ; "I'm sorry; but it's only fivu hours' ,t ride, and I doot have to change cars y any Where; ao I doo't dread tta Jours' ney, and Jack can go to tta <kf»* with a ox lo are me safely oft rl Which bar brother Jade did; and I , suppose il it noeaaaary In inform any ft one intimately acquainted with tars ^ jkkbyim^ tar HHrai

i her traveling-hag and laariii Clare l laughed to see him rariBi; JMk afeft* . .petal witoil -bra it wo****, late. ■ antT thought bow tbey vmfHnWae him 1 • at home. ' jf. "1 aha-nt need any timf to m i i ra it'a no matter," she said, Anerfofty < i to hmelfi Detadrd girK hrfo dmfeha i drram that before another twcljlj fool « hour, ahe would, for htrtlger, almoat to weep at the remembranra j of the lemptiug raodwicbee and the i freshly baked delicious cake which her ' mother hod put up for tar lo that very 1 bag! In bllaafol Ignorance of what a was before her, she leaned roatenhslly 1 back In her seat, and gave tarvelf up • lo reading '!Vanlty Fair." wondering • all tbe whlk how any one rauljl take < such a dreary view of tbia happy, bean- ' tiful world! The sky all the morning • had looked dark and leaden, ns if bar- " deoed wilh masses of snow, nod ttay " tuul hardly Started before the quiet d steadily to increaK', till Clara made 11 up her mind that "they were certainly b in fur ii regular little anow storm." — * - anntr-rtorm.*'—

r This dul nut disturb her. for there was , anmcthlng soothing iu the noiseless , aaftm-m of the filling snow; ao she i watched It, and tta houses and fences i and tnaa dying paat, dimly in through i a while veil, till her eyes were almost | dizzy; and ao for relief sta amused l here- If by taking a long, "exhsuitive i survey" of her fellow passengers, but . found nothing particularly interesting , in them. Returning to "Vanity , Fair. " ilia taraiua noas|d. 1-ly aWorhed i till, after more than an hour. >hu wns . roused by a vlokul gu»t of snow driving against tta glass, and looking up i was atnued to sec how fttriously it was . snowing. Ttay had evidently ridden i the storm rather then nwny from , it. Tta snow fell so thick and fast ■ i that it was blinding; one could harelip j r distinguish olqert* a few fret off. while . tta wind roared Uke a hurricane, tak- i . ing the anow up and whirliugil round ; ; —in soia- places piUng it np in huge drifts, iu oltara having the ground al- ; most bare. Tta cars labored slowly, , as If at any moment they might atop. , She heard a man behind Iter exclaim another: "Mark my words, if this isn't going . bo the biggest storm known for , years!" which, ton enough, It was; for who doe* not retnemh-r the great atviw-storm of 1867? "i'll bet every thing wv get biactad , up. and don't get into a before midnight," raid another. Chun's face began to grow painfolly worried, and, shutting up tar lawk. , ata sat with tar nose Ifallenc i anx- . loualy against the window, trying lo out. Presently tta train came to , full Slop. The men hurried out to What tta trouble waa. tho astral and anow mailing in with a Uinding swirl aa ttay opened tta door, ahd closed It wilh an expressive "w hew!" After a while they all came bock, and stood round the ztorr. stamping the , off their boou. and talkiirg loudi ly. Clara heanl, "Never aaw such a norm!— snaw-plmr perfectly usekas. and frighUul tlrifta ahead! - trying to , shovel tint, bat It's no go!" She began to think how drtvulfolly | lonely and forlorn it waa to la: "an on- , protected female," w ith no.,ue even to ' tell tar what the real danger waa.- ■ How she wished for her lather. If ncle i Charka. Jack ercn, nay body to look out for her a little iu case ttay wcre anowrd np.;or ttare was a collision, or , uohmly knows what dreadful thing ! that would certainly hapfam! After a i time, hpwcv. r - divrreifkd by . nuiatu ba. king- and fillings— tta train , actnally stxrtol again with a Jerk, and , on bravely. Every body cheered and Clara ami!nl lo think of the , nffanu-holy forebodings in which ahe i had liecn indulging, and loaning tar . hend comfortably back on llie seat, . gave tareelf up out* more t > happy , thoughts of die morrow. One thing, aim folly reaolivd upon, nod that was I to kerp out of Mr. Tom Stan wood's . way at much aa possible; yes, even to . snub him if necessary, ur do anything | ward off tbe declaration that ahe , fell was coming, because. In reality, he gone much farther than any one i a,, tad drawn!, «nrt liftl hnn w . fearfully near offering himaelf the very time she taw him that, if she had , not resorted to all aorta of ludicrous . stratagems to prevent il, he would done It then and there. Hho | Mould have trouble with him at the Stanwond'a. ahe was certain of that; hut just ae aure a* he attempted to be . ol that kind, ata would— do something terribfc, probably. Judging from ber , expression ; bat her meditation* were , off sh irt by Uw care suddenly - . becoming motionkaa. Then ttare waa another commotion among the pasaeo- . grre. and more going out and coming in, with bat* and costs |wwdrred thick . with anow, and eollars turnsd opto [ tta rare to keep out the biting wind ' Now we are a fixture! " rays una. j, "Xhifla before and behind like moanL tains; one of the wheels off the engine , and telegraph wires broken; enmmunicaliaa iinposailiie with tta next station- . Have to stay here all night, and no i one knows how much longer, till the . ; storm is over!" j "Well, hut are shall starve!" sugI I grots s stout, red-foctd man. , ' Freexe. more likely!'' muttcra a thin one; "tta wood ran list btfTafcw | hours looger." Every one now begin to look dit- . tressed or anxious; i sirkly looking woman In front, who had s terrible rough, drew » threadbare chuk more , ch-c.y rnutui her thin staaMcre, srilli . the . xprsmtao of one who bra brar l ( her death-warrant; children hearing the word* "freraiog" and "starving," , though hardly knowing whs I was sni.u set up a doleful ery, and ttalr mother* i gstb-.-red Uiem up in their arms with Sorrowful, l iving races. And poor Clan! wilh sll tor Joyous ristous vsnisbsd. how sharji was U r -eow: of dira :£zs. - What' -toy low. fort sour three days ■ *r a^ttotags hspp^uisg J'tita^-

i with no mm to ran fur tar, er protect < I tar from any Insult of word or look | . which tome of ttara rough-looking i i mea might offer tar— a yonng girl < without escort— suffering, too. with 1 I Stddaad hunger, whlk bar friends were t Leafing and dancing amidst bright 1 , nrtnand warmth and mnsic and flow- t ■ ere! Nat see Eleanor, whom ata tared t ao dearly, married! and lose all tta en- 1 1 with Colonel Lenox, tta very b thought of which had.wti such an In- v cruel! and she drew iu tar breath u almost with a sob, aa aha pushed open h tta window to Judge for herself of tta p state of things, lt was a wild, gloomy a! ■erne that sta beheld as sta peered tl through tta blinding snow and gath- h eriug darkness though It was but lit- a tic past noon— a wide, dreary stretch p of country , uot a sign of hsbitathm near u nothipg to be iron but mountainous p of snow on every aiik. nothing f, lo ta heard Hot tta- rasUocboiy wail- fi and shrieking of the wind. il was a. cold, and she closed tta window p \y outcnycoio, anu sue cioeoi too winnow

_ with a shudder. At this moment she u, felt another gust from the opening door and looking round aaw that a Utile crowd ol gentlemen was entering from ,, the rear car. Judge of tar astooishh ment and relief when she beheld among ,t the to— Uueaa who, my readers, j "Colonel Lenox," respond at onco „ the young and romantic ones, still ta,t liering In ttieh glorious posslhllltlea. s Alas! no. Bat It was Torn Shinv wood! Y ou see, (his is in the main a j truo story , and I am bound to tell j things jutt aa they really happen to .. most of us; so, of course, it wouldn't p ta "tta superb Colotwl," you know. s Totff taw tar hutahlly, and fprang" b forward with a beaming (ice. " 1'ou i, hero. Miss Tryon! Why. I understood l tliat you ware going on with your unj- ele biat evening! 1 had to go lo New ! ri.thwith all might yesterday lo get ,1 ; through, so tlisl I might go ou to A e in tta same train with you. I . vi as tremendously cut up when I found , I couldn't; and tare you are, after all. i. Til never scold about my hod luck it again.. Why, where't your undo?" (ill, the fickleness of womans nature! • It was so dehghtiul to poor Clara to r sro a gentleman she knew, and one so ; glad to take care of her, Uto instant t m use <d' protection and relief was so refreshing In her loneliness and dis1 tresa, that ahe forgot a( .ojee how dise grevabte aha had thought him auch a little while before, and brid out tar , Imnd and made room for him beside , her with an eagerness and warmth . that were almost gushing. Tom, for , 0 joy and surprise at this change since , he last saw tar. waa quite carried < away, and, as ta brushed the anaw off J his tosg light whiskers, nud settled , j. himself beside tar, would not have 1 given up hi* place in that colli, dirty ' car, and that bard, red-plush scat, for 1 a bower of roses In the Garden of Eden, o Andnti wonder ta felt ao for Clara's . distress had quite demoralized her In t a way that ia shocking when one re- , members aft herstern resolves; and apti patently reckkaa as to consequences, slw was so charmingly helpless and , c uiidiug and sweet; ao altogether gra- . rlons, that the poor fellow's head was „ completely tnrnod; ao that ta soon made up lilt mind that there never . could ta a more fovorabk timo for ; prraaing his soil, and resolved to ime prove it. In tta mean time, however, r there waa not tta taut prospect of g their reaching A before to-morrow a so ttare nead ba no hurry about It. and y ta might give himaelf up now to his n present good fortune, il After a while, as ttay still remained J stationary, and tha afternoon son e slowly on. conversation began to tlag as e usual with Tom, who was neither angr costive nor equal to keeping up a topic , nllrr It was started. It Is exhausting t to he always starling new ones; and then ta had a high, monotonous, una Interesting votro, that was wearisome ■ to Clara, lo whom s psrson's voire was a far more that hia flue. AU tar old ; feelings began to come hack. At sta e looked at him tta topi thinking. If it e only "might have toco;' Colonel Lenox a sitting beside her, sad talking In that a. hnr.dwuMi rja y wouldn't hare rar^TiT It had token d them a month to reach A . Oh, is why couldn't things hare happened In d that way Just foe once? The contrast ie was galling; so sta sold sta warn sleepy ie and lired, and, curling up In tta cori ; nee, aa far at possible sway from Tom, c she pretended to sieap, though tar 5» heart waa in reality for too heavy for g that. The hours dragged drearily on, :r and the night tattled down on tta v snow-bound train with "a darkness that might ta felt," the fory of the i- anow against the windows with a rtog fence that seemed enough to burst k them in. Within, two feeble lamps o only made darimeea risible. By midI. night tta Dree had gone out, and there was oo more wood. Tbe cold torn me I- trrribfe. Meet of the tiaaacngerx bore e all in nncomptztaing si fence; but the i- children, of whotp fortunately there u. were but few. kept up a few, mournful IO -sobbing, not only wilh cold huthnnic ger. Clara Just before Tom apprared, hail insisted oa wrapping up the eick woman, who coughed constantly, in her traveling ehawL Sta began to a fori the need of it now keenly; alio w could not keep ber troth from chattering. and sta shivered from haul to " foot. Before she knew what ta was Ig g'dng to do. Torn had get np and tale ken off hto orer-crat, which he w rapped re gratly round tar. When sta looked h up to thaafc him ate mot auch a look I of trndeniem that sta suddenly flush .1 g up. bring fairly frightanrel. " "Irnlned. 1 don't nead It,"sl«> said, la tilling up. "I would latter ynu kepi r* il lor yourself." :h "Jtira Clara," said Teen, osrusstlr. ar "1 would rather gin np every thing I it- have In tta world than see yon suffer. " You ate that'* because I— I—'' Ma courage wae beginning to foil Ware "well then -I love jtso; that's tta rJ whole of A " - tad got started sow, and nothing

. could hare stopped him; so ta topi ou pouring forth procrataftoaa of devotion, while Clara listened to him In silence, with tar hand* aqoeczixl tight together 1 In ber lap. a choking sensation lu tar throat, and a nervous dread under all he should raise his voice so i hat those near should hear him. Sta ueed not hare feared, though, with the roaring of tta wind, and the crying of a baby behind them. He flnistad, and watched her faro anxiously for an answer. Clara oouhl not utter a sound; uot a word came to her iipa; yet tta she sat speechless the more oppressive tbe silence grew. Oh, how wished that sta could get away! i be very snow would drift over and hide her! any tinny to escape answering, and giving this man the pain of knowing that his love was utterly wasted, thai sta had not one particle of affection to give in return the wealth of it ta had laid at hrr She made a trenfendons effort, and locked up at him; she saw the shining in his homely, lioncet - it. ii- mining in ins uoincij, lioness

* eyes, and that broke tar down. * , "i do with i could lore you, but i* i do uot iu tta least, and 1 never ■> shall!" |" Then ahe just laid her head down ou ' b the top of the scat tic fore tbetn, and cried under hrr veil. * There was something in the lone " and manner, even more than in the words, that carried conviction tn i - Tom's heart. he made one or two : x feeble attempt* to obtain a more favor " able answer, or to win permission to 1 ° wait, and hope that at some future ' day ahe would feel differently toward •Jliim, But in vain. Clara knew her- ' c self too well to let him hopc.ouly to bo ' 1 again disappointed; yet, though firm, 1 1 she was not hard, but en womanly and 1 - lender, so truly grieved, so folly ap- 1 ' preciativc of tbe lore which yet she ! could not accept, that poor lorn, 1 though tasrt-brokro, never in hia life ' 1 had Isvcd tar as ta did now. Long 1 ' as it seemed nt tta time, it did not ' * Uke long iu transpiring, and at the 1 * end of it our two travelers, to auy one ' ' passing through the car, would hare ' _ seemed to be conducting themselves in ' the most inattcr-of-fsct manner poesi- 1 " hie. The young lady, probably a little ' 1 tired, resting tar head, with her veil down, against the side of the window , 1 1 tta gentleman, liaving kindly wrapped " his cost round ber feet, was sitting 1 ' wilh hta arms folded, and his tat a 1 1 good deal tipped over his cyea, in a 1 ' quiet brown study, or dozing perhaps. 0 But what a storm of conflicting pas- j 1 sions was going on under those culm ' exteriors'- ' Tta gray morning light began to 1 ' dawn at last, revealing, within, tli* ' i tdnc, forlorn fiices of the shivering pssssngvra, huddled up In tbelr cloaks ' * and shawls in vain attempts lo keep j [ warm, while, without, the storm still , raged, nud the pitiless snow kept on ' piling up it* mountainous drifts around ' the motionless train, which was its ' 1 helpless prisoner. Tta cold uovr in tta cur had become »« great that they , were actually in danger of freezing- so j a little party— including Tom— vat- _ luted forth, determined to dig or , shovel themselves out in »otue way. If a only to get fence rails to supply tta ( t stores, (iooe a long time, ttay re- , turned with n little wood, and tta ( news that they had discovered a little house not Cor off. which some of them | |! were endeavoring to reach, iu order to { r bring hock food. And thin was the ( ■ iqiemng of the happy wsddmg-day to t * which Clara had so eagerly looked for- | ward! Silting ttare, cratfiped, cold. , j anil faint, with a heavy heart every | t time alio looked at Tom's sad, set fata. . b It seemed ts tar a* if she could not be . the same girl who, twenty-four hotira ( c before, had sprung so gayly from lirr , , lied. -feeling that iifo was a paradise ■ j just opening before her. It seemed as , if all that were ages ago, and now sta c wae going on, or rather standing still, . t In some drcadfol nightmare that would r "Of oounu ttare ia no chance of our t reaching a in time for tho wed- - ding,'* sta said to Tom, trying to look i cheerful. a "It's barely possible," ta answered; a ' bill it we tlotit, SlxtlO .m.rloimit , Colonel Lenox ran join and take onr B places, which will be no dlnppolnt- , ment to tar, but hard on the Coioy nel'" Clara was not to sore of that, and , felt a Jealous pang at the thought It ^ was a possibility the had not thought ir of before, and it redoubled tar eagrr- , nee* to reach a . The foraging a expedition returned rejoicing in the a possession oft few eatables, which ttay e distributed; sod Clara rating thankt folly tta little square of gingerbread y, that wae her share, wished tta could lt have faeeu heroic, mud refused It, but a tta was n hungry. I. By noon It was evident that tta storm had begun to abate. Sod ttare a came also the joyfol news that, alter ,e great labor, th* conductor had sac- , eroded in reaching a telegraph station, „ not so far off as ttay had feared, and ,1 had telegraphed for ahl. Altera while il arrived, In the shape of afi engine and a snow-plow, whichj had broken II' oat the drifts before them. At last n ttay actually ststn-d, and wrre onco 0 more moving oo their way, and the IB faces of all brightened at oore. r. "If .we meet with no more otetrurJ, tions," said Tom. "we may arrive at „ A by stven o'clock, la time for the wedding, after all. ^ Hope sprang np In Clara's breast; d berragrrarastogrtoahccainelnter.se, >t now that ttaoe-sras some chance of It. •d If it would hare tallied tta Mr ou (toy, sta would itladly m*v«®ot out sod i ,! pnslral il Itcrself wilU lor slender pi shoulders. Mic coukf not talk for watching tta engine laboring heavily . along through tta tuow. To bi sure. tta neither looked nor felt like * 'a "blooming bridesmaid,'' with great cir,U c6t under tor rjrsa, tar )nd aching _ I and a viofenl sore throat coming anta No matter, »to thought, txdlenwnt sod a cup of strirag coffee would make ug her all right if they might reach A

n tn time, and It really scented uow as i, IfUwyahould. a 11 at once Uwy stopped q | short. r "Good Hcavcas! what cau ta the i r matter now?" exclaimed Tom, while ' ii Clara opened tta window nnd looked ! t out, in a fever ef Impatience. It was 1 a tremendous drill, which il took them i . at least half an hour to get through. x "Well, u we reach a by half i 1 past seven," said Clara, determined to ' j bo hopcftil, "we shall still barn half i ; an hour to dress In, and who wants i t more?" i Once more they were ou their way, i r and onco more they were brought to a > ! dead stop, and another hour waa gut*- ' r before ttay were free. Clara and Tom ' • looked at each otter in despair, and " ! gave It ail up. i "i don't care uow when we gel i there!" ejaculated Clara. a i "Perhaps in time few the wedding * ■ breakfast to-morrow morning," ( , answered Tom, with a melancholy v : laugh. * i It was precisely leu o'clock when t. the train entered the depot at A . I ; It was evident they were not expected, h lucky travelers, auil It was with * i difficulty that ttay secured a car- y i riagn to themselves, so few wen- iu s "The fact is." said the liackuun, aa " : he took their checks, "that all the n i carriages are in demand to-night for h i the great party at Judge huuerood's; a there was a big wedding in the church ji ' ""tta i ked i i 4 l pressively, hut without a wool.— b , Clara's traveling dress was soiled, her t, , hair tumbled, even tho feather* hi Ithr v lunging limp and askew, and the r stared a little when Tun told , [ to drive them as quickly a« |*wslto Judge Stnu wood's. The house, *< -tikk ssuog >n a hill, looked splendid y , ly when they drove up to it, illuuii- t, , natid as It was from lop to bottom; fi rows of carriages, comiug and p , going, lined tta street; through th- h , curtain itay could tee tho tail- *: , moving throng within; and tta ( ready dancing, wa* borne wilh taut.il- d iring dlttlnetncas to their eyes. "Oh. how crowded It looks.nnd how 'Don't, for mercy's sake, let us drive p up to tta main cnlnuiro, and arrive in a this plight in tta midst or tta gnrai* \ their satins and tarlatan-, " k "No; lire hacktnau slull uke us round lo tta aide-door," answered s Tom. Which he did. hut uot to tin- .Kie ! ttay intemtal. In her hash- to get in n somen here before auy should see tar. g Clara did uot notice wirere they cuter- ,, ed; and. the first thing she knew, ttay ' |, were standing together in ablaze of j ligld Tight among the brilliant crowd, j under the a retail opening bailing from i b tta conservatory, where, wilh the e; groom, the bride was standing, re- j p splendent in tar shining satin and j (| flowing veil, to receive her gur*t»! h , f, the most conspicuous place lu the f, rooms— the very or#, too. where, under „ happier chances, she wnulil have taen , . bunding with Colonel l-nox! tlwcb- ta gant dresses, the light, ami music, ami ! (l flovrn, all mingled in one inazi' is fore j j, Clara's daxilcd, terrified eyes. She ' saw but one thing distinctly— Maud | ,, Norton, radiant and beautiful in her i u lirldesmaid dresvand Colonel l-nox Is - 1 side tar, looking into iter eyes with an „ 1 air of devotion ltis brown, curling ! ^ 1 mustache almost touching tar c-ar n» j „ ' bent over and murmured some- j thing, at which sta looked down and , u blushed, tl flashed into Clara's mind j what a contrast il was to be standing , ' there. With Tom htanw.ssl, travel- ! ' stained, worn, and weary; then every- j „ thing began to swim around and grow ; ' black aa she turned quickly to tweape, ; ( ' and the would haw fallen had not i 1 Mrs. SUnwood caught sight of tar, , > and putting tar kind, motherly arms c ' around tar, led tar, with Tom's as- ( ■lstancc, tenderly away. Clara Itail ( ' never fainted before In tar life, but all ^ ' tho had gone through was too much , : for her, and when sta opened tar ejes, | ( tome minute* afterward, it waa to fiml , i htcbltlrifig to, jta ',1' "■ejirony^. 1 chamber which had been reserved for j a r tar, Mrs. SUnwood lathing tar head, j ^ ' and tta bride bcraelf. looking liko a j ^ ' beautiful vision, stooping down to kiss | ( tar. She was so tired that she wished ( 1 only for quiet; to. alter a while, site t 1 persuaded them all to leave tar it j , 1 was a sharp trial with tar throbbing i ' head to lie quietly in tta darkened 1 room, listening to the ^festivities of ! which shews* deprived; and tta was ' thankful when tta music erased, snd _ ' the last carriage rolled sway from the | 1 door. But It wa* no lots hard wlreu. ( ' next morning, on attempting to get up. | ' anddrest, sire found berthroat swollen ^ snd sore, and every bone in tar body ' aching to that she could hardly more. ' And It arat also hard to hare lo Uke ' tar breakfast In lied, and littls comfort * liial it was to daintily, exquisitely • served; and bear all tta while from the ' dining-room below the laughter and • murmur of the uierry voices or lire gay ■ breakfast-parly. After that she wrmW " get tip and ta dressed, anil then was 1 assisted across the lull to whst Mrs. 0 Stanwood railed Iter "raoralug-room," * because, as Eleanor said,' "it wouldn't be quite so dismal for tar ttare." It " was u charmiug llufe room, wilh its ' great how-window a howcr of plants " iu bloom; birds In glided rages tinging in tta morning sooshlue; elegant nick- " itackt for rending 'and writing, nnd '• great soft chairo. Wheuthowascom- - fortsbly arranged in one of them. h"A0 it'S lr 'hough pale lo tar white d i arapp#, a gay Afghan thrown over r ' tier lap, tar DUle »li|-pcrctl feet /bating * | on a toft crimson foot stool, sbs Itsld a r little reception. s. Flat tta bride rams ID, all ready for tar Joaracy. in tar quiet, handr- some traveling suit; nod silting flowu 5 by her oh a low test, and caressing , her hand in ber greitle, afli'Ctionale itay. l«td her Imw they hs.1 nil mimed bar at the wadding- tta only tiling , » tfest tssd happvood to mtr tar perfect — Imp; linn-- sod how dirapyointed she

i nud Mr. Oakley vrere that tta was i not able iu gn With liwtii this noou to New York; there would hart teen 1 such a pleasant [isrty of them, for IMaud Norton was going and Colonel "i didn't know Maud was going," •aid Clara, quietly. '%or i llll Juat now." answered ' "The fact Is, i strongly su«pcct that ttay are engaged. Sta made wonderful progress with him the hut few weeks, and all the latter part or the reception last evening. of dancing as usual, tta was walklog in the conservatory with tta Colonel, iu the most occupied, engaged and a little hint she dropped to this miming makes nic tliitik it's on settled." Clara kept jicrfectly still, uot even nn eye lash quivering, and Elcannr. stopping a moment to arrange the foot-stool more comfortably for tar. went on In a lowered tone: "i'm sorry, because she Isn't In tta least equal liiiu; but then, that's always tta way! Here am i, you know," a proud, siuiki coming into tar fare, "married to a mau twenty times my superior! And, by-the-way. ilenr, do know tlul even body will i* pro Nothing cvrtninly coubl list, l.en more lorer-likc than his kiuvinr last night, lie wouldn't dress aud come in to the reception, though he might lust on account of your nhsiuiv; so we j all thought; aud this morning ta was j «» ahseut-minded ami sad si the that it tvas quite !su*Li:i j> —a". hint, t >uo would liavc tujtpoais! . were at tta |wiut ..f slralh with j typhus fever, ills', vd of laid up wilh j Erery word Efeutwr said vat like a , stab to p'Nir CUra, who began lis re- i voire in tar mind what she cud do ! tl. prevent the real .tale tin fronrtbug known, and qure Tmnfe | lirlde .'uncnusXu, »f "h" ' ,rein | she was lufUctiug. and attributing i unwonted tileueo wholly t" > sum throat, samliutlal her efforts ol j (livening Iur: ' Colonel L-nox spscinliy rnvm-d , impressed at swing y.ut and Ti«o*t arrive togcUier a. you did. Ho ex- j pre.se,! the kindest, mrat friendly are nooV his farorltre. you "Eleamu! Eiranor!" eallct Mrs. i She sprang up quickly . "i must : son me; sta said she couldn't Mil me i | g-Rsl hr down stairs with everybody i I then-.' And so. with a warm em- j j they parted. Then at me Mr. Oakley, n gran-. ) man to say gond-by to tar, | j and with him Colonel Lenox, who ( regret at the storm which had deprived j tar illness, its such n -y nqnth.-tic, ! , mode Clara's heart Iwal high w ith ' j kept saying to herself, "lie i. eugsgnl to Maifd Norton, nud I -am 'mm of to Mami -Norton, aud I— urn

Tlwn Maud Iwraeir ran iu, nifh a ' | scorning little traveling tat on. ami or two other*. Ami immediately . - alUr tta carriage* came, ami ttay ail ■ ' j », -hfaiid Clara stood at the window ' a | stair* together, watching uiem, till j tta carriage turned tta corner and was ' 1 | out of sight. Ttan Clara Irancd licr ; ' they both cried, tta otic because tar 1 j daughter waa gone, tta other because ' i she was sure tliat all tta charm aud ' \ of life for tar was tied for- ' - ever. Hut tiod does not allow oar i young lives to be craslu-d so easily as ' hat, awl In spite of itself youth i* ' clastic. So— though now the would ' uot tare telicvod it possible- it was ' hardly two years from this when, oac winter's morning, Clara ' stood, a happy, iovsly bride, at tlm 1 , side of Colonel Lenox's younger lira- ' j tlier, Dr. tanox, studying in Euro|w ' | and ns ignorant of Clara's existence | as sta was of his. He was s man less | than his brother, but ofdccp- ! culture, aud greater force of cliaracj aud as far at any earthly lore can satisfy, sta found tar nature satisfied his. So that when tta Colonel, with hia wife on his arm, curoo up to . congratulate tar, handsome and tiegant us aver, tar heart brat not onr throb the quicker; nnd when soma allusion was made lo the unlucky snowstorm of two years before, she gave one ol those genuinely merry, catching • tight which It does one good to tear, | at ihe remembrance of ail the dire mishaps that is- chi tar ttan. As for | the Colonel, he sighed to hlmtelf n« ta , , turned away wilh Maud, who wearied . Iiiin always now. nnd no wuudcr, since _ ' there was really notldng or licr tliat | | could liavc a lasting charm -like a f ; glass of soda-water with its »|iarklc aud effcrrescencr all gone, ullerly ltisl|>id. ( And he fell when lie looked at Clara Hut sta woo Id be aiwayi fresh and inleresting, been use always developing . and growing— a woman who could forever retain licr husband as a iorer Willi tha ardor of pursuit, since tta would ta ever Just beyond him, somro | thing "not yet Ihlly alialned. a Young latdy hraluting tta a lj word ip draeritilng tta character of a ' rejected suitor. "Ha it not a ' tyrant, not exactly domineering, ' bat—" "Dogmatic," suggested tar r friend. "So; Is: hat not dignity 1 enough to tint; I thiuk pupmntic ' would rouvvy 111. mraulng admit*- , \ -y- _ - Ax Ohio itsn wffo passed around j lis- idate St areliglsus meeting for , n.ntnbnUn!Ri lor the heathen and ' thrtl pnekrted the money, lots been ; agjifSgfgag 7 tta grentesl bra Own Itay knew, and b ttarefiwe Jimly entitled to tbe moiry.

* MlSCELLEJnr. el Commodore ficuddzr, of tta Uuttmt Statra Navy, had a donbitsnoeed " pointer dog of which ta hogged a good deal, and las which be would *] hare refused » larger sum than wra ly creroffered far a dog tine* the creation » of the world. But he it dead now— j u not Commodore Sasdder, but hi* dog. :r Like tin- famous hound Gvlrrt, *ta I 5. died a martyr to his high sentr ofhoo - is or. The Commodore told mt tta ie story, d "i went ..ot hunting partridges one i „ day." tasaid, "and took tta dog oloag. -. lie haden'l much luck at first, but after a while 1 luster— that was th* n dog's un mo— stood and painted at a r. coTcy of tta tracst birds i ever saw lu ie all my Imru day*. TIk-j wore squatr, ilug dowu iu the low gnus, a dozen n yards off. in plain sight, and i detcr- ,| mind to tire at thorn a* ttay fay. i r! Hftnl my gun, took deliberate alio, i, and would hare kilkd u dozen atku.l; but before I could pull tta trigger a j u courier dashed up with a dispatch 0 which lie raid required immediate at"in sci vol my fire aud read the disi, pilch. It aasau onkr friau tta Nqvy ,t Dcjiartiuciit to procusl, without a tiioc incnl's delay, to Phlfodciphfa to take t Command m u -quadroij whi.-h was . alxiut to soil to the Mediterranean, i | was so much cxcihd. you uufentaui! ' a ; hal i Uld dow n my gun rigid ou the r »|«it. and went off. leaving Bust- r , ttare pMuliug at thus.- Unfa like Us v d were -uortlirlariuuUhi'-uasaiuariifcv ■ |, t.Miipasq to to speak. i forgoi ,|l i, ' shout him; hut ta w.u a faithful dog, ' llltzier was— aud like Casta Isata*. htiv j woul'hithaii- h-ft a bnrqlpg ship wilh- . - : '"J onhr „ , "Well, i Went to tin- Mediterranean. laud cruised around for thrc-' years, , j having a first-rate unw. When i , . rvturueJ at lis rani of the cruise, ojil occurred to uk*. as I stepped r i'hilsdi l|«hiz, to go out , snd see how things were at the ,i j pin,,- where i wrnt gunning. John .■ml 1 went -and th>- firat thing i came ,l screw* w.t* my gun, lying uw, wfth-,-n , ihcls.rr.ldVcred'clthnisltodWokeu :- l-U-wii off tta rslten stock. Bat wb- t t j Was my sttrprizi-. upon going a few . picra farther, to find the skeleton of II th.1t to-renc. double- nosed pointer, .landing up Just where I had left the I. dog three year* before! Uc had never budged an itirh, Mr. Quill, not a tin1 gk- solitary Inch, that double-no. ed -• |kmiiter liailn t; fait Ik had stood there - , and pointed at th- bird, until he had v p-rishc.1 ill |,is track*! Well, air. after -h.-, Cling a tear over my depart..i friend. i went a lew yards ahead -. and— (Ac*, —re t to ,( etriont of Hast . ftruuga! i n-gaid thte a. the mo*i n extraordinary .-in-iimalaocn that ever d | .-sine under uiyoWrvution; bat if any d mzii presumes to doubt my wonl, iu v| shnwt Mm on the spot- i will, by . it was queer, that story of temblor's i, ! about Ills dog. hui it wouM hardly be safe- 1.1 ray what i think about il. il ' - —

A man was killed up in Forest county last wrek by jablHng himself tlie eye with nu umbrella! Ho was iiitoxiatrd, and ta had a queer idea that hi, umbrella was a telescope; so, wliik' Ik- was endeavoring to examine Ur- sohfr system through it, ta fed) over and tta umbrella killed him. There is "lily nun physician In Forest county ami lite learning Is not cxtcnvivc. When the corwucr held the inquest the doctor sold that "the ferruginous tcriniualiou of tta umbrella was projigted a dexter hand oftta- corpse through th" "p«« ww int.. Ita cavity of the cerebellum, whence, glancing trans - vr tsaly to ilia a|ilgloftts. it pierced th. |«-ri.-anlium nnd- caused a cataplasm of the larynx; ami this producing asphyxlu a, a natural result, clotlcl MinsI pam.l Intn the tympanum, tta left Iota of tta brain became Irritated and suppurated in purtlclra, undastippresslno Oftlie Vital forat cftsnd!',ir hen tta jury hsanl this ttay boiled with In - diguaUoti.' and tta foreman siad that i i i u toft U m fwnf OMftdui outrages ever prrpetralcd against a citizen of a free country. 11c said no man bail a right to soil an umbreUa wilh one of those things on it, (specially to a man who was afflicted wilh such horrible diseases. Tta relative* of tta deceased have saod tta doctor for libel.- Tbey say ttay know that tlie dead man never had a single ouc those things with hard names anywhere in imoug hi* internal economy, and Itay want ihc report oootradlctol. tetanic people may think Uiey arc hereditary aad will refttac to uiarry into th* family. a paragraph In an English paper inform* us llmt "lu Germany ten do! ■ lays is n high price for a popular lecturer for oik rvvolug." "ITiatlsUic way ills tare with a good uiauy icc-tim-ra who beguile the public into giv- , loan grrut deal more. Wo have heard hvlurvr* wlio wiatkl ta conaidcred 'lo -h" ir ttay pokl each jmratm In 1 ih. .iidwuoc n n dollar* few coming to ; guided brings iu tlx bosiossz who ah wav. impress tta latdligsta panoos in tlR-ir aud knees with tta cooviatiau tlul ttalr prraeara upon Urn platform is au ouirage at tta rerr Baas wtau Ite-re are tears In tta wooda, and «annltafa In Ocraolat who mmsufflufas from Imager. a Harristeirg pflKT ask*: "WhjHfo^ il tliat there are so many unal ail CXplusiona?" tie never hta to decide Ilo.- quiallous hastily, but wc think w c may safely hazzard tho reply In lids case that U isiitohahlybacauzc t* much|conl oil cxphzln. t'ndorsUnd wc don't commit a |*pcr poalUvtiy ' p. this theory, and »o cfalm tta privi1 k g. ufbncklng uul If wc arc Avcd I- \ ta Wpoig. Wc only Uirvrepoul Uc: i ItoU sx a i«uibly viluibW: conI triteillno to tta sri-nfffic kwowfadgr , of tta day.