Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 June 1882 — Page 8
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
STANDING ALONE.
"The baby is standing all alone!" The children shout in their glee, And father and mother and aunty
Must hurry and come to see. JSee baby—the cute little darling! I* put through the wonderful feat, Ana fondled and kissed and condemned.
For being so smart and no sweet.
With the cnnalngest air of triumph, She standing in the midst of all, While the ouUuretohed arm* of the mother
In
ready to nave a tali
And whenever the little one totters, Around her hastily thrown. *T1» very
flne fan, thinks the baby,
Thl* frolic of standing alone!
Ah many a time in the future, She'll long for the aid of that arm, When the ove and care of that mother
No longer can shield her from harm For oft when our ne«xl is the sorest There's no one to whom we can turn— And Ktanding alone Is a lemon
That ia hard for a woman to learn.
And often and often, my baby, Be/ore life's long Journey is gone, You will yearn In your hours of weakness
For norm-thing to lean upon Tien the propa upon whjrh you Arc »aken nwayor overthrown,
When the prop# upon
You will find It wea: Ho wearlxome
ou depend
risomo, baby, iduig
stand
alone.
Mary N. Prescott in our Continent.
One Way of Love.
She was a clerk in the Treasury at Washington, on a salary of nine hundred dollars a year, he was in the postoffice, enjoying the privileges afforded by an income of twelve hundred. Once in a while there was a holiday, when they would take the boat down to Mount Vernon, it it was warm, and spread .their luncheon in the shade of Its historic trees, and patronize nature aa successfully n» if they were nabobs. Sometimes they had tickets given them for a comedy or tradgedy, when they laughed or cried with the discernment of millionaires and the old families. On Sunday mornings they sang in a choir, and walked out to Long Bridge later in the •day, dr strolled in the Oapltol grounds, .and surprised the first violet in its hid-Ing-plneo. Helen's landlady told every now boarder that Mr. Van Vleck "was going with" Miss Hi Id roth, but Miss
Helen protested that ho was merely a friend that they werenoighborsathome, and had gone to school together, when thoy wero in their pinafores and tho landlady always sulfTod when she remarked, "If he nothing but a friend, I should think there'd bo a cessation of his love-making sooner ar later."
One day when they were rambling alxiut Mt. Vernon togethor Helen fell into a romancing vein. "Suppose this i«|my country seat," said sho, "and I Jtave finished it In tho (£ueen Anne style, And I'm entertaining the cremo de la «romo, just as thoy do in novels"— "A sort of Lady (ioraldine—and I am the |K)or poet, eh "All hut the poetry," mocked Helen. "Now suppose this is my manor house," suggested Theodore, "furnished in^tho renaissance, lot us say—I'm making great demand of your imagination —and I'm entoj-taining all the swells. I've lured ydu liere on the pretext of looking for a four-leafed clover, but really to ask if you will share my magni(icenoo with me what should you suy. "I should put my lesaoos in gymnastics into use ana jump&ttho chance."
And if I should ask instead: "('mm: my ooIUko,goutlj maid?" Pon't!" criotl Heloti. fit looked at hor a little blankly. "You don't mean that you care so little for iin)?'' "I don't mean anything. Don't let us (talk about marrying and give in marriage wo are happy enough as wo arc." "Hutif I don't marry you some other fellow will!' "Notiscncc penniless girls area drug in the nmrkct. I've seen misery enough from marrying on a small salory 1 ve jvmmi *ioopfo living in two rooms, on •water ami crust,' so to speak, doing their own work with no society, and no hope of amendment: people who thought love would tide them overall the quicksands—and presently the hallucination wore o(T, but the quicksands remained reproaches set in she grew bitter and unlovely, and he morose ami neglectful''— "Then you think lovo an hallucination "1 think marriage is a mistake ou twelve hundml a year. If I leeame dowdy, and hadn't time to cultivate a taste for a-sthetics, or what ever was the fashionable craze, and grew jaded and apiritless with tho uncongenial task of washing pots and kettles, and stewing over a range, and if nobody turned to look after mo as I passed, one day you would llnd yourselfdisonclianted. Then, supposing the new administration should push you out of oflloe. even for a month, or you should fall ill? No, we am happy enough Just ss wo are don't let us discuss marriage let us wait, like Mr. Mioawber, till something turns up."
And so Van Vleck waited. Perhaps he was disappointed la Helen's views, but he refused to oonfess it even tohimrtolf sll women felt so be supposed, cared more for shadow than substanco, or mlntook the one for the other it was their poetic temperament which made poverty hateful to them and splendor their natural atmosphere, and be applied himself more diligently than ever to his idea, working far into the night at times. "You were net fat the President's last evening," one of his fellow clerks said to hi si later. "1? No should think not." "lU.t Miss Hildreth was there and Mr. Sterling, M. 0., were hand in love. I beard him ask her ,to go and hear
Lohongriu' tomorrow nignt." "Mr. Sterling is in luck/' was all Van Vleck ventured to say he did not choose to carry hi* heart on his sleeve for every clerk to j»vk at. If Mr. Sterling was fascinated by Helen, it surely was no fault pf hers many a nun bad'been bewitcteoii by Iter before this elderly CongriM&matK only Theodore forgot that they hart hll needy suit ora—and as for Heien, he felt twre of her as of seedtimoafe) harvest.
But ih one envaaion he left Us work Wrly rtmi haSMned to see her a cloud of «K'ly rutuora Uptd availed him and interfered with his tatka she should brash all tlie cobweha^ out of his heaven. He met her eotuing down the staircase in a white evening drew. with flowers in her hand—coat ly exoties^oeh As wealthy lovers send their sweethearts, such as ho had never dared to buy. "Where did they come from?" be demanded. "They grew, I 'specta—like To par,*' an«wei*d laughing uneasily. "Where did you get them, Helen?'* "You air inquisitive, Mr. Van Vleck, They were «cnt to me." •*iiy Mr. Sterling?" "Yon do eredit to oar nationality. You're a capital Yankee. Ves. by Mr. ^(••rlipt:, of onirH'*" "llebMj." he cricsl. lneath his
breath, "Helen, are you going to marry Mr. Sterling?" "I—I believe I am," she said, dropping her eyes.
Theodore never knew exactly how he found his way oat of the house he was vaguely aware of brushing against a stout gentleman in a far-trimmed ulster as he shot into the street, of a stately carriage and pair standing at the door, and a dark-browed lady leaning out to look sfterhim.
The iiext day he resigned his position in the poetofflce, drew his savings from the bank, and left Washington. It were well, perhaps, if he could -put deserts and seas sad mountain ranges between Helen and himself. It seemed to him as if the earth bad reeled from its orbit, and it required time for him to readjust himself to the situation. His idea was all that was left to him he put into it all his earnings, he deveted heart and soul to its devolopment, and he finally forgot himself and Helen Hildreth in his work and it* success.
It was seven or eight years later that they met, oddly enough, ou the Mount Vernon boat. Her vivacity was no longer the spontaneous effervescence of youth and hope she was a trifle passee, perhaps.
Wealth and splendor have not proved all her fancy painted tfcem," he tneught as their eyes met.
Mr. Van Vleck," she cried, "who would have dreamed of meeting you here?" Was the pleasure which brightened her eyes ana deepened her somewhat exaggerated dimples a remiuiscence of her power, or was Mrs. Sterling a married flirt, he wondered, "We have heard of you often, to be sure," she purred. "The newspapers have not been siient concerning you and your great invention. I've always felt rship in that invention, do yi know? I felt as if I were behind the scenes let into the secret before the rest of the outside world, when it was only a dream. I've resented every infringer uient"— 'f
Iam flattered that you remember my small affairs," said Theodore, humbly.
Remember," she repeated with a lin accent, "I have nothing else to lo.'
I come down here sometimes," she
Eaveaholiday,a
ursued after brief pause, "when we for the sake of auld lang syne, and try to believe I am seven years younger, and the world before me where to chose. I like to come when the peach trees are in bloom, as they were that day when we built our castles in the air. Mine have all crumbled into dust." "Mrs. Sterling, I am sorry to hear you speak so."
She stared at him an instant, blushed, and dropped her eyes in the effective way Haven't you heard," she said, "I didn't marry Mr. Sterling?"
Perhaps she expected Theodore to leam with sudden happiness and rehearse the old story she had refused to ii&ear once before. "You left no address, you know," defending herself from the reproaches she anticipated. "Mr. Sterling died before tho wedding day was set. I thought you would Bee it in the newspapers. I am a Treasury girl yet, Theodore. Do you know tliat I sometimes wish that I had never seen Mr. Sterling?"
Ouly tho fates know what Vau Vleck would havo answered, but just at that moment ft bit of crepe lisse floated into their neighborhood and a voice like a summer brook criod, "Ob, my veil, Theodore!" Theodore put out a hand but it eluded him. Helen made a quick movement and caught it on the wing. "Let me introduce you to Mrs. Van Vleck, Miss Hildreth," he said. "She would like to thank you."
Mattic's Trouble.
BY HELEN FOREST GROVES. [Helen Forrest Graves]
And must I live here always?" said Mattie Fox, despairingly, as she clasped her hands on the lew ledgo of the open window. "Here" was no earthly elysium, to be sure. A lonely farm-house, perched half wav up a desolate mountain, whip-poor-wills moaning on tho edge of tho woods owls hootiMg solemnly by the lake mournful winds soughing through tho troo tops, like tho rush of an unsoen garment—all this was so different from the crowded city life to which she had been hitherto accustomed. And even as the tears of vaguo homesickness roso to hero eves, tho voices of tho old {farmer and his wife, in the room below, rose audibly up through the stovepipe hole, which had not vet been sealed for the Summer months.
What are you going to do with her?" said Mrs. Fox. "We must do the best we can," said Klihu, her husband. "She's my brother's orphan daughter, aud she's got nowhere else to go." "And why, in the name Of goodness, querulously demanded Mrs. Fox, "couldn't she stay where sho was, irtstead of rrtshing out here and taking us all bv surprise 7" •Won slowly answered the good
Well
firmer, 'M ain quite clear about all that myself Rhoda. But as nigh as I can calculate she's been disapp'inted in love. She was a shop-girl, Rhoda, don't you know and it mtms there was a genteel young man used to come there to buy neckties and ribbons, and sioh fol-de-rols. And this girl, she s'poeed ho *ra» dead in love with her. and all of a sudden it came out as he bad another sweetheart as lie was goin' to be married this verv next week. "'hlcssand save us!"said Mrs. Fox.
While Mattie, sitting silently by the window as if she had been frown into stone, felt a peculiar sensation of dull curiositv to hear what would come next, as if all this were spoken about some other person, entirely indifferent to herself. "And she i* a proud girl, Mattie is," slowl* went on honest Klihu. "It runs ,in the Foxes to be proud and she wouldn't stay there to be jeered at and made game of by the other girls. So she came herqjjegause she had no other place to come to aud that's«U I know about it. I guess we'd better see as all the doors and wfttdysts safe, and go to bed for it's past ten, and them bavin' hands will lie her« afore daylight to'see about cuttin' the twelve-asm modder."
Mrs. Fox had a **talk" with her niece the next dsy. "Mattie," said she, "I'm goin^to show TOU ing. because, if yon stay here, of course youll want to makfe rnrself useful."
how to make apple stay r&yoi 'Of course," said Mattie, listlessly. "And as it happens, hain't nogirl,'' went on Mrs. Fox. "and there's the work people, and my Summer boarders are coming next month." "Summer boarders," Mattie looked up quickly, with a red flush overspreading her cheek. She had come here for solitude, for rmt, for utter Isolation and now. almost before she had unpacked her trunk, horde of city fashionables would le upon her. "Qb,*Aunt Fox. do you keep Summer boarders?** "Rverv Summer of my life." mid Mrs. Fox. brbkly. "They comes in July and mostly away in September, with
the first frost. There aint many ways for us mountain folks to earn a bit of spending money, you know, Mattie and or course, if vou help me I shall expect to divide with you, square and even. And remember it's sinful.to spend your time weepin' and wailin' ana gnashin' your teeth for a lost beau," piously added the good woman. "There's as likely fish in the sea as come out of it and p'raps one ®f the hay hands will Mike a shine to you—who knows.
And thus Aunt Fox dismissed the question of her niece's heart trials. After all, perhaps it was the best treatment that her poor, festering wounds oould receiver A sharp, sudden cauterizing—a merciful cruelty! And Mattie* set heifelf diligently, if spiritlessly, at work, helping, to feed the hog*, hangry farm hands, to shine the glittering rows of mil if pans—even to milk horned beasts, of which she was at first so nervously afraid. She learned to bake white, sweet loaves of bread, to churn butter, to raise young chickens she gathered wild flowers, and made a rude, wicker cage for a blue bird which she found with a broken wing and "treated" successfully. And she began to smile now and then, and Mrs. Fox remarked complacently "that Mattie was really quite a decent-looking girl.now that her color had come back a little."
But onedav the mountain stage, lumbering slowly over the rough roads with its four horses and luggago-covered roof, stopped at Mrs. Fox's porch, and down came the avalanche of city guests.
Mattie lightening the muslin curtaius to n.* upper windows, and hurriedly the large blue pitchers with wufei, vixen the trunks wore brought up. "Irs Mr. -^ett and his bride, all the wayfrom Bo&ton," said Aunt Fox,complacently. "Is everything ready? Because they're coming up stairs directly. And I never did see anyone dressed as genteel as she is. A regular beauty, too!"
Mattie stood quite pale and silent, with the homespun towels in her hand. Bassett!" she repeated, "and from Boston! Oh, why, of all places in the world, did they come here?"
And the next moment the homespun towels lay like a drift of scattered snow at Mrs. Fox's feet, and Mattie was gone. "Mercy on us!" said Mrs. Fox, stooping to recover the lavender seen ted treasures, "is the girl gone crazy?"
The soft crimson glow of the sunset was irradiating the lonely glen, when Harold Bassett parted the overhanging bows with one hand, and plunged into the leafy wilderness where, on one side, the mossy rock rose almost perpendicularly. and on the other a brown-waved brook ran with clamorous gurgle.
Mattie he exclaimed, stopping short, "Am I dreaming?" Mattie Fox sprang angrily to her feet.
Would they leave her no solitary spot of refuse? Must she be thus hnnted down like a wounded deer?
For Harry Bassett was the man she had allowed herself to love—the soft voiced, violet eyed deceiver who had fed her with soft'glances and whispered words, until—until that dark' day when the other shop girls, with sidelong looks h:'
and tittering whispers,had told the story of his approaching marriage to Miss Bel-
fort, the Boston heiross.
Sho made an involuntary movement to escape but he placed himself directly across the narrow gateway of rock, which alone afforded an egress. "No," said he, firmly, yet not without the lurking shadow of a smile around his lips—"you shall not leave me until you have explained all the lAystery of rour sudden departure from Boston, eaving behind you neither name nor address." "I am not responsible to you she breathed.
You are responsible to me!" he retorted. "I loved you, Mattie Fox, and you know it." "This is simple folly," cried out Mattie, "if not something worse! Go back to your bride, Mr. Bassett. It is to her ears only that you need whisper love!"
The young man opened his violet blue eyes very wide. "Mattie," said he, "what on earth are you talking about? My bride? I have no bride. I never shall have any bride but! you!" "Who is the Mrs. Bassett who camo to my aunt's house this mtirning !?aspod Mattie, marveling at tho harditiood which could thus deny an absolute and apparent fact.
Oh said Harold, "is that what you mean? It is my brother's wile. And she aud her husband are putting up their hammocks and establishing tneir rustic tables under the pine trees of the farm house at this very moment. Of course I couldn't remain with them. Is not a third person always de trop when a young couple are on their wedding trip? So I came here, and I think heaven directed my footsteps for the very last person in the world whom I cauld have expected to see was you, dear Mattie!"
And you are not married?" repeated Mattie, with a great overwhelming thrill of happiness at her heart. "No he answered with emphasis. "And it was your brother who waa really to be married, when I believed it was you, and broke my heart over what I considered yonr treachery and deceit?" she pursued. "Well, it certainly was not me J" declared Harold Bassett "for now and here, at your feet, dearest, I speak the first declaration of love I ever spoke. I love you, Mattie! I have been wretched in your absence. Let mo take you back to Boston with mess my treasured wife."
So Mattie, shy and beautiful as some drooping wild flower, was brought back to the farm house to be presented to the city bride and. husband as Harold's enfed wife.
Irs. Hardy Bassett put up her eyeglasses and smiled condescendingly. Very lovely!" said she, in an audible sotto voce, "and so sweetly unsophisticated I can always tell these country rosebuds at aglance." "But I'm not a country rosebud,"said Mattie. crimsoning. I have only been here at the farm for a few weeks. I am a shopgirl, Mrs. Bassett."
The bride stared first, then simpered. "How very romantic," said she. "Exactly like a novel."
Mattie might almost have been vexed, if she bad not caught the suppressed laughter in Harold's eyes.
And Aunt Rhoda declared that the Fox farmhouse had never been so lonesome as it was after Mattie went away to be a grand city lady.
But she has promised to comeback every summer," said Mrs. Fox. "She says the old farm will always be the dearest place in the world to her."
ayes vi E, Ohio, Feb. 11, 1880. I am very glad to say I have tried Hop Ritteis, and never took anything that did me as much good. I onlv took two bottles and I would not take )100 for the good they did me. I recommend them to my patients, and get the best results from their use.
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Dyspepsia and uck headaabe do not return to those who have used the Great German Hop Bitters. 2m)
TTERKE HAUTE SATURDAY EVUNDSTG KAIL
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with
A
THE DIN6EE
Toronto, Ont.l
A
Str*|i.)
A
CO.
Sole Proprietors, 181 and 183 W. Madison St., Chicago, Ills. Sold by Cook & Bell, Tern Haute. Indiana.
ADIES£UfHjTE UOUSE
ft of the kind II
The ONLY Book evar pub'* NEW EDITION.
(TTtKTnTion to he preient tirot. witlt over anSteel Portrait, of'V Itlir White Mottic. with »ie» ofm*ny of the Home* of the Pre*i.Jen»'.. kwn .-irrbotl*ery vicceMit,' in jiWatitecl
MENDELSSOHN PIANO CO.
Music sent
0. LANDRETH & SONS, PHILADELPHIA.
A oomhinaHtm of Pro(ssM«o/ Iron., J'rruvinn Bark and.
la my
Ire rears ianedleiae. bareocrrr (amdssrate does. Is many eases of herroes ITortradon. «... «t.i. s-1 aast vwmWtr haa In
'A
pNUFACTUBEO BTTRS DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. 213 K. UA19 ST.. ST. LOUIS-
PhomphomtM in
teethfBo charaeteritticof pthfr irmm preparations.
practice, and in an experience of
"'—to nlve the rtsnlln that Da. if a giro's 'acaaia Diseases. Dyspepsia, aad aa lnv toy bands, made mSmilUlcan*.
SIU1 aoas
I in irasa IiM!aeaka*BaaBaaBBBB»«Bo
fT
WO SB. I AttKitra
AMN
ore Cure for Chills 50.50.
The Great Malan*lAntidc«e. Soldfcy Druggists, or Dr. Moore, 78 &>rtl*ndt St. New York. XanhaUt to ovary family*
CHEAPEST BIBLES&ra^^fr& traftstarw. BathSewTaMMMtaarvw lifilfTTR FOKSHBB A McMACKlN.CIndnuti.O. AvhflK lfAHftiO
MBIT EASILY
0PIIJM.
OURKD With DOUBLE KEDK ofOOLD.
Morphine Uter
200 pp. $1.00
LB&LU} B. KBSIJSITM. D.. DWIQBT.UL
TRUSSES
The World's Recognition of Uerit. London-1881 -Announcement. At tli« lata
Iht» r!atiom*i. Mkdiual a*i
viwy«iU*i
Am«rico'« tuoit
,»nr
aiBiTio.t, tho World's mo»t pompotunl Ju.1(p» rots^ui* their
uwNmne b_? granting tiif
ONLY "AWA2D 0T KXSIT"
TQl
TBU33S3
"TO I. B. SBKLKY. PHILADELPHIA. U. S. A (Over
Sixtr-Elftlit l\ai|.ntri,)-a»iitinninr
tlttlr hi
iiitin
ii»le.i Snrg^.n*
/.ONHON KxNIBITtON JL'IMJI.:—nil*'!, ft Y? K. Chrtttophtr Jlfiltk. P.
ff. ,S.,
johN
wv.rf,
Mg.l.
CONARD CCS
BEAUTIFUL ETER-BLOOMING
ROSES
rkum.t* .MihU F. K,
r.
A-, A.
KiueStMl Spring', inMih .• Rulib«r. M«l« anntrtniiwiU.i n»ii(trial«l. unoqii*llol in i|r.iltty, ll.i Unatftpt..! lv m«. iii« Alwnvi Rrllablr.
1
t: a
SEELEY'S AIM) iU'KHl TIU'SSI.
willi In 'tilr !l»
ili.or-.hle I'dtte-tt .• iili 1* l.iv^'. C*m. '."tali. '1'ir*: i. :iti.l I fit. if. .1 •.Mi.-irn.1tl ,r uinni'L.v '•«.
HI
Iniliii.
Prlfw i^l ilrctl to
tli« populur rti-m nl^ SJW t.v ail Dru^ .u tie*lem i»t tho mnsl -.i.-««:ii!ii..n To Amid Sj.nri lniii«t»ui. «Ji-n.nli«r Mutnr (3prinn und
"I. II. .So«-l•,•» W
Establishment, 1347Chestnut S'. fhii .n mia,0.S BRANCH E8r*8I'SHMfnr ?4 hi nN.f *". Th*»Corr"o( miii! Sklllitil
KKKNIA oiriinsTitK u.i N Under ««ii /Vo.N
Urnm
t\trk*r, W. H. /*anroant, /«•.
7
A* iucc^m ttnJs iintfat'pi-' a«k tu
DR. CLUIC'S
Liver Cathartic
CURING AUL DISEASES Arising from Disordered Llrerand Impure Bltx cleansing the System from all imayriUes, thus moving nearly all dlxcases that afflict mankfeul
A sure care for diseases of Liver and Kidm also of Rheumatism and Neuralgia. Compound of the choicest iagredicnti of the vegetable kit dom.
61um Compounding 6o„
REOWINO, MINICESOTJ
W8M0 »T ALL Dsuooim. DURIWO THE PAST TWO TEARS there has been sold, through our honne, ovei THREK THOUHAND Ix^ltlea of "GLUM'1LIVER CATHARTIC,"
of
PojnUnrUv
Htrenoer evldenc
and
Merit
could scarcely b*
prodaced. Resp^tfully. 1CK 4 BK1 GUL A BKRRY. Drugglsl*.
You Can Eat
In
SEND US YOUR BUSINESS CARD FOR TRADE LIST.
moderation, anything your appetite era* to matter how Dyspeptic you are,
if
you ..
A BPgKDY AND POSITIVE CURB FOl
S E S I
It will Cure your Indigestic
It will Prevent Rour Stomach.
It will Cure Sick Headacf.
It 1* a Oe atle Laxative.
It will Cure Heartburn.
It in Pleasant to take.
It will Regulate your Liv^
It Is Purely Vegetable.
It will Assist Digestion.
twill Core Ilabitaa! Constipation, Tone Dixottire Organs, Purify the Blood,Cleans*System from all Imparities and is a MectTa Me Faailr Me41tlae. Get a bottle and be Cu: A Bottle will cost you one dollar, and do mora gootS than anything you ever tried. Bottle. Ten Cent*. Just tor It onoe.
Hoi 1 by GVLU A RKftRV,
Tern
HiaV
POPHAXN A9THJ1A HFKCIP1C relieve any ca* hi live ralnute«. j!1 by Druggt^K.
