mmmrgjr jkttiittel - nys historic...

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PUBLISHED EVERY FKIDAT MORXISG, la Low's Block, Brinkerhoff Street, 3y W. Lansing & Son, Rates of Advertising. One sqnare 2 weeks, l!so ( Jf column 1 year,' 30.00 One square 8 month's, siso'%column 1 year! 60.00 ° I Bu8ine«» h 0arci8 1 , O °o tB o™ 3 "r5'ii'g more tban one-h Upon each advertisement ahonld be plainly wi Legnl advertisements published at tie rates p B °Oar t <fa^ou!d be takentowrite on one side only the paper need. Whatever is intended for insertion mast be t ATTORNEYS. A TTOBNEY AND 00U.N8EL0H AT LAW, au Margaret Street, Pittsburgh, N. \\ J^MES TIEBNEY, A TTOENEY AND COUNSELOR AT ward's Block, Oastom House Square—rooms ft MARTIft JH. O'BBIEN, TTOENEY AND COUNSELOR. Office, Arn BOYAL CORiSllV, * TTOENEI AND COUNSELOR AT LiUV, Platts "i. burgb, N. V. Office, in tiic Biiiloy litock, liridgi Beckwitb, Barnard & Wheeler, \ TTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LA' En, WEED «fe SMITH, YS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW: WIN8LOW C. WATSON, Jr., A burgh, N. T^'offi^corrfw Bridge and Margar- rogate's Oourt. Plattsburga, Jan. 3, 1882. C J j i R K «fc HA.T.fcl.dLW.A. A TTORNEYS AND 00US8ELLORS AT L X». ». MeMASTERS «fe feSOIV, A TTORNEYS A>'D COUNSELORS AT LAW.- PLATT, CALKINS 4 CO., General Insurance Ap Biake^s Bfockf 'lattslrarg-Ii, N, Y. j£.. C*. C A R T E R , A TTORNEY AMD COUNS Wills, Deeds, B, ed and coliectioni [llprosa Btore, P] one, Bounty, &o., r Meyer's Jewelry HOTELS. LYON MOUNTAIN HOUSE, T. P. :ETFIELD,..PROPRIETOR. The public are respectfully informed that there good accommodations are provided for the traveling T. P. FIFIELD. BUSINESS CARDS. •pit,ATTSB CB DOCK Storage, Forwarding and General Commission Business! RO3ENDALE CEMENT, CALCINED PLASTER, NOVA SCOTIA LAND PLASTEK, Of the BEST BBAHDS constmtly OB h*nil m d foi wle. PlstUbnrgh, N.X. g{ PHYSICIANS. B. S. KELL06G, M. »„ Office, 5 3 Margaret Street, 28 PLATT8BURGH, N. 7. JL»K. JE. C . L O W , Homoeopathic Physician, PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. _Offloe No. 19 Brinierhofr Street, oppasUe the P. 0, EDWARD A, CARPENTER, M. D., (HOMOEOPATHIC) Physician and Surgeon, MISCELLANEOUS CARDS. MARY L. MORRIS, Teacher of Music, No. 14= CoiaelL Street, 30m3 PlaUsburgb, N. Y. HUDSON BRO'S, TEACHERS OF MUSIC GEO. HENEY HUDSON, 40 Court Street OHAS. FEED'K HUDSON, JACOB VOGEL, MASON AND BUILDER, 29 Lafayette St., Corner Asl>, Plattsfeurgb, N. Y. Jobbing and.Bepairing promptly attended on short notice. Orders may be left at M. P. Myers & Co.'s ATTENTION; TIP TOP SINGLE HARNESS A.t Schuyler Falls S2O.OO. Full Sickle Trimmed, Oak st GEOKGE KEET.' WE AEE SELLING Rims, Hubs, Spokesjhills ASD ALL Carriage Wood Works At Tery tow Prices, and oar Stock Dry and Complete. Call and examine it before buying elsewhere We Have Lately Eeoeived Hammers aod Wrenehes, CALL AND SEE THEM. PURDY & VSLA8, I AW A-VD COJTLEU'FIOJV OFFlCfi^ REAL ESTATE^ INSURANCE & FINAKCifiL AGENCIES. CHAS. H. MOORE, Attorney and CouBselor al Law ? IS NOTAEY PUBLIC. p.,3 4 SJr'1T Beal Estate bought and sold. Loans effected. MMmrgjr JkttiitteL A Family Newspaper, Devoted to Polities. literature* AgrieaUwre, Ltocal interests, and Geneva! News. VOL. 27, NO. 41. PLATTSBURGH, N. Y., FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1882. WHOLE NO. 1394. FURNITURE. BOOKS AND STATIONERY. PUBNITCKEI FUBNITUR E. W. PIERCE, Manufacturer anrt Dealer in Furniture, Paper Hangings, FRAMES, SHADES, TASSELS, j ui. j—» Sash, Door*, Blinds, *o^ | BOOKS Al STATIONERY, e Factory, West End Bridge, DENTISTS. ~i G. G. RANDALL, D. D. S, tutal Ro»n of Dental operation DB. J. F. BAILEY, DESNTIST, A, M, WARREN, Successor to MXINEO & WABEEN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Bookseller, Stationer -AND- NEWSDEALER. Office, Low's Block, O B.T.MOONEY, 0. 0.8= i Miscellaneous Books, ase Sqnure, oppo- ScllOOl Books. School Supplies, Blank Books, mm * HIS V HIM B f ** a •* im « ntal Rooms in WJnslow's Block,! .WCmoranonm and Plattsburgh, If. Y.i MARKETS. s Oiide (LangMng Gas) a INSURANCE. Leuer Copying Books, Note Books, , j Receipt Books, ' | Drafts, I Tracing Paper and Linen, Inks of all Kinds, ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING i, | First-Class Book & Stationery Store filling family orders. WhW Goods delivered inside the Corporative. N Looli for Something New from Us each Week, amsng New Advertisement-. ^Slargaret; Streetj PLATTSBURGH, N. T. 12 GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. Something Worth Knowing 1 THE PLACE TO BOT YOK7B Groceries, r : R| Provisions, INSURE WITH HAGERTY k MCCAFFREY. HARDWARE. M. P. MYERS & G0Si Myers' Sew Block, Bridge Street, ] Dealers in Heavy and Shelf Hardware! IEON, STEEL, NAILS, Paints, Oils, &c.j &c. ;'ts for TGrwfl!lgor& Co.'s Safes. PLATT8BTTBGH, N. t. Crockery, Ciass & Wooden Ware, FLOUR. CORN MEAL, PROVENDER, FEED and GRAIN, OF ALL KIHDS, IS AT Heyworth&White's F E R X J , N . Y . ! WE HAVE PAINT A2?6 PAIST OILS, NAILS, FOR SALE! 1HE FOLLOWING LEASING ABX1« STEEL, SCALES LEAD, LANTERNS, ZINC, SIEVES, SHOVELS, " HUBS, HOES, SPOKES, FORKS, FELLOES, A Lfirge Quantity of House Famishing Goods, dec, &e. H. Plattsborgh, Deo. 18,1880. boards, Lath, Spruce and. Cedar Shingles, &c. "Wantedf at our Hill in Pern, Corn, Oats, SBCI 0,000 BralielB of Bnekwheiit for cash, at the highest Q Koarf Meal &nd Buckwheat Shorts at wholesale, J. R. EMERSON & SON, DE/LLEES IX China, Glass, EARTHENWARE. New decorated Tea Sets, Toilet Sets :r Sets, Fruit Sets, Tete-a-Tete BOOTS 6N0 SHOES. GROCERIES. iGilOlS, SUCCESSOES TO ~ Nichols, L^ode & Go., WHOLESALE &HQ RETAIL GROCERS ! 62 Margaret St., WATCHES AND JEWELRY. POETRY. THE OLD CHOIR. T^TT"VT TD PA'TTi'DTT X T ^ e opeaiug hymn, with ita Boleznn'sw ft «J '-'-tiiN ± t . U Ul IKlJ-iJU, : ^as BtiEg by the rcnsical throng" WATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SIl/FBK WAKE, &c. l ^ watches,Clocksaad Jewelry Eepalredand En- graving done to order:. 26 >m Jimb if i ped eyerything and hnnted the country He nsed i over till he found me, and brought me WILLIAM REED, DEALER IN FOREIGN AIVD AHEKICAX WATCHES AND CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, SC. P»To. 63 Margaret St., PLATTSBUKGH, N. I. ^-CLOCKS, WAT0HEH and JEWELET Repair- A I J. J, FITZPATRSCK, inic " 1nrsme ^ paidto MEAT MARKET, GSOCEEIES and PROVISIONS, No. 55 Bridge St., Pittsburgh. JEWELER. ROB'T 1YIEYER Watch Maker and Jeweler, HO. 53 MARGARET STREET, KEST DOOR TO BOWLES & EDWARDS'. I WOULD RESPECTFULLY CALL . attention to my new and complete stock for the Fall Trade, and I offer to the public an unusually large andfineassortment ol Silver Plated Ware, Watches, Clocks, JBWELRY&FMGYGOODS. My line of Silver Plated Wire now consists of {offers & Brothers' F!at Table Ware, Rogers & Brothers' HolJow Ware, Reed & Barton's Hollow Ware, Q4 otherfirst-classManufacturers, I have on hand American Watches, ihown in Plattsburgh, consiEting of Walt: „ , „ , and Springfield Movements in Gold and S Oases. Also Ladds' patent stiffened Gold Cases, Nickel Stem Winders, from 93 to I I would also call attention to my Urge vuriel , e, Cameo and Diamon, C , net, Turquiose, Topas, Amethyst and Intaglio Kings. Also, plain 18 K, and 14 K. and fancy Oarred Rings ; "Ittb'h attsb'urgh. My stock of CLOCKS ! also complete, comprising tae cheapest American 3 well as fine French Biaci Marble Clocits with Ca- I Jiavo &IBO &&ci&d to my lins of Fanoy Goods ^ine imported Bronzes, Mantle Sets, Statuettes, be. I solicit inspection and comparison. onal and prompt attenti ind the public that all W R. W. & 0. RAILROADS 3M13W I Bread and Milk Sets, unique ,. ! White China in Cups, Vases, <fec, for j la ^t !aiam e RoH?e I decorating. New styles in HangisK and | Families coin's Welt! r paiDted | Connections are the Surest! DROWN'S, lets, Celerys, Finger Bowls, and other flne glass, and many other new goods. I^Inspection of stock invited. DEALERS IN BUTTON BOOTS, Bought of beat dd t b C akcrs, and oj> ought of beat , dered to be Cut from w e . . ed Kid and Cioat LeatU. nh a full supply of good Boots and Shoes, AT LOW RATES. ! For Fall and Winter wants a large stock et Men's, j Kip Boots aad Robber OFershoes. | .sburgh, Oct. 8, 1850. I jTEAS, €AM£D GOODS, ! And Fine Groceries. 102-104MARGARET STREET, JJgW L ol the traveling public. £. T. DELANEY, WESTERN TICKET AGENT, No. 52 Bridge Street, CALL AT £.£J^.tL£ :. ADRIAN SENECAL'S HOY1L | NO. 7 RIVER STREET, FOBCHO * CE BY THE OELEBEATEI REMOVAL!:::!: , | G fOCfirieS and PfOVlSIORS, CROCKERY AND GBASSWARE. ALSO, A FULL ASSORTMENT OF FRESH BISCUITS, 1 D ,D . . n , « i CROCKERY AND GBASSWARE. j Royal Baking Powder j AM0, A mx ASSORT^T OF EAST SIDE OF THE RIVEB. AT HOME ACAIW I L. D. LARKIN, m H O HAS FOR MANY YEARS BEEN has repurchased from Joseph Bustey the market CLINTON MARKET, ON CLINTON STEEET, And is now prepared to fill all orders for FRKSH HEATS OF EVERY KTAD, FRESH FISH, SAtT fflEATS,EAR. LY VEGETABLES IN THEIR The pnbiic are cordially inyitea to call. Purchases delivered to any part of the village fr STOVES AND TIN WABE. GEO. N. WEBB IB NOW BEOEIVTNG AND HAS ON HANB The Largegt aod Most Complete ASSOBTMEST OF STOVES TYLE ASB DES0BIPTI0N, Hollow Ware, WOODEN WARE, Ware? TJ 33L3: I> SS , Household Furnisliing Goods, Plumbing Materials, &c, &c. Ever offered in this marist, at prices that Can- not be U n d e r s o l d by any establishment. Special attention given to Plumbing and all Kinds of Joft Work. NO. 17 BRIDGE STREET, PLATTSBUmS, If. T. DRUGGISTS. CITY PHARMACY. SMITH & LAROCQUE, Druggists & Pftarmacentists, V'EEP ALWAYS OS HAND A FOtt Drugs, Chemicals, Pharmaceutical Preparations, DYE GOODS, PERFUMERY, Toilet Articles, —AND— Patent Medicines. SOTE THE ADUKESS : IUZVED HAS REHOV. Royal Baker and Pastry Oook, j Ji C0MTA1M1I1S MEARLY 4 0 0 REGiPES. Smith & LaRocque, CITY PHAEMACY, A. S£.\EGAIu yo.7Kvorstree t , Hat tsbnrEh. J65 Margaret Street, LIME FOR SALE!! —•-~- COMMON SENSE SLEIGH, TpOKi'JttEJJESTSJEIOH f No. 84 Margaret Street, LAJ&IES', GESTS' AXB CHILDSEA'8 BOOTS AND SHOES, fr °r t 1 he , maD ^ faotorie s of May Brothers, Wm. Ow- i Co., F. & L. B. Eeed, and many others. airing prompt!} S. D. OBAPPEIX. I * T%.-«^*-»*JEP«P«-57!LP 1 i . - . ' . , . * r ;..!_„ i,U \ t TIT- T>;«>-. r,-^ would have torn them limb from Jii they had offered to touch ns. He nsed i over tiU he found me and bronahi to go with me to school, and lie on the I baok. When we got home^m. door step. There were only a half-1 banged the door in oar faces and told dozen or so of white-haired children! us we shouldn't neither of us enter it that oame; they might tramp on Eex or again. Then he took me to Mrs Dur sit on him and he never offered to hnrt|kee and I bound myself out to her. Hrt them. Bat let one of those river-men at the poor-house now, but when I'm of stroll along the road, and his blood was | age, I am ' " " np. Tbey generally finished their walk i get hii and concluded t.o tarn back before they •• jaohed the school-honse. I had come' •om civilized parts, and I used to be ; )nesome, I should have been fright-' oed to death many a time if it had not een for Eex; he seemed to constitute regular protector, and he nod from the: er pealed fort! nat long ajjo aecl at the tread S ainI f ! ' o m tTeVealma ot\he dead, c ?? av ' e fanished away And the friendly ties are all broken apar And the spirit of lo^e is gone; And discord and tumutt among them rei And jealousy's flame -bnrns r' d to change her into a horse, and ridu about at night. Yoar grandmother said she told the woman she didn't be- "' eit. 'She does,' she said; 'she apart, again MISCELLANY. WITCH HAZEL. From Harper's Magazine One ol the wildest portions of Western Massachusetts is the region bordering Miller's River,—a mad little stream whioh runs frothing amid ragged rooks, id lies darkling in sullen pools shaded by dense and tangled vegetation. It joins the Connecticut by leaping riotona- ly down a staircase formed of jagged orags and the ruins of a broken dam, forming a striking contrast to the lake- like expanse of the noble river in whioh it quiets its trouble spirit. Life on the borders of Miller's River fifty years ago found its prototype in the saviDg character of nature abont it, Tragio histories are told of families who "•• generation after generation never ited a suicide. Religion was replaced by superstition ; the vices of mankind •ew lash and rank, and even woman's iture was warped and deformed by its demoralizing environment. Long after the belief in witoheraft had been stamp- ed out of Boston and Salem, a balefnl after-growth sprang np and flourished here, and though there were no execu- tions for witchcraft, there was gross credulity and infatuation, ostraoism and persecution. Riding one day through this tract of country, and emerging from a dense and dreary wood of butternut and pine, we found ourselves in a iittli char^ of neglected orab apples, growu -nto a thicket with hedgerows of tangled barberries, flanked its further side ; and a blasted elm felled by lightning, and partly stripped by the woodcutter, barred the froDt gateway. The house itself presented a most forbidding as- pect. Its curtainless windows were rid- dled as by the firing of sharp-shooters. Jom'e were boarded up ; a few stuffed nth parti-colored raga; hardly a pane vas left unbroken. Originally the front >f the house had been economically >rnamented with yellow paint, but the leather had removed nearly the last /estige of color, and reduced the whole to a uniform and melanoholy gray. My companion more familiar with the region than myself, eyed me curiously as we approached, to notice what impression the scene would make upon me. ' voluntarily I touohed her arm, and claimed, "A real haunted house !" She laughed lightly. "The old people about here declare that it is haunted. My aunt could tell you many a strange story about it. I remember when I was a child how she would make the cold p along my spine by her story of Witch Hazel, the old woman h lived here." Would she tell me ?" I asked. I don't know; we oan ask her at t. She used to teach school here n a girl." _ And my friend pointed to himney which rose from a dense mass of bushes, a solitary monument to the fact that a house had once occupied the spot. "That was the school house, and she boarded at that farm house opposite, where my grandmother lived ; it is the ily house between the Hazels' and Darken taver at th< necticut. ] ig girl to liv Miller's River with the C< was a lonely spot for a you] in. She must have been glad and tin ful enough when my grand-uncle married her and brought her away to Northfield Farms." Aunt Wealthy was an old lady of mar- elous activity aud keenness ; her hair :nder her widow's cap was white as now, but her eyes were blaok and piero- ng. Her form was thin to emaciation, bnt her health was good, and her mind nimpaired by age. She wore a black ilk dress, shiny and limp, and unadorn- d with modern ornament of jet or pleat- jg, but it was unmistakable black silk, nd a slender gold chain held her hus- band's heavy silver watch at her belt. skilled, high-backed rook- ._„ , :king swiftly back and for- ward, knitting interminable garters, and singing as we approaohed, in a high cracked voice, a hymn which argued lifcsle for her admiration of manhood. men of high degree: The ti the balance, bo"th ;ppear Extracts and Baking Powder ALL KINDS OF .utflt of Mr. ] ON COURT HOUSE SQUARE, ER & GO.Hardware, Paints, SSSSjlSi OILS, &C, "^"""^^^^ 82 MARGARET STREET. j , >TiT-" At Extremely Low Prices, j J, I H E » « VILAS,' HARTWELL & MYERS, HALE OIL, SOAP, p I Atlantic White Lead, c ' li*«,iris2 AS <>r©©njH.W. Cady's Drug Stare. Boiled and Ha. Linseed Oil. Q Q A L I.H. W, Cadyf DrUg StOfB J ^ Averill's Ready Mixed Paints. i ^i^iSi PRICES I PCBDX & r $25 worth of siZ: H. W. Cady's Drug Store. don't seem to have a high of men, Aant Wealthy,"! re- marked. 'That's becanse I've had experience, .Id," she replied. d my friend: "was he false, Aunt Wealthy?" "I've no tales to tell against Ger- ihom, now that he's dead," said Aunt Wealthy, placing her lips firmly to- jether, and humming the tune with '•Aunt Wealthy," said my friend, coax ingly, "we want yon tell us some stories ibont the witche's—" "The witches ?" '•Yes, old Witoh Hazsl, whose hus- band danced on her grave when she died." '•Yonr grandmother could tell you more about her than I can." "Yes, but grandmother died ten years "The Hazels were a queer lot; but then I don't know as any of them were really witches. The people round jnsed to think so, and were mortally 1 afraid of them, especially of the old mother. The old man declared she was 1 a witch, said she sold herself to the devil behind the barn, and he knew when she did it. She waa a frightful looking old creature, and dressed in rags from head to foot, carpet rags tied around her feet and arms, and a piece of old quilt about her body. Your grandmother had enormous dog—old Rex they cal him ; he was half bulldog and half .mastiff. There were lots of rough characters rafting logs down the Con- i necticut in those day, and putting up I at the Durkee's tavern; but we were [ never afraid of any of them, for old Bex ir failed me but ( One efter- at recess I heard the children ihing, and saw them all coming in. I stepped to the door, and there stood old Mrs. Hazel, and a horrible sight she vas, with her gray hair streaming over ier tatters, and her crazy grin. I call- id 'Rex! Rex !' and the dog came bound- Tig over the opposite fence ; but as soon is be saw Witch Hazel he howled and slunk away into the bushes. She langh- ed at me as wicked as could be, and I ran back into the sohool-hoase and bolt- ed the door, for I was scared to death. 'That night your grandmothei stories till near midnight abou She said there was one woman i and I bound myself out to her. He's »- -oor-house now, but when I'm o" n goingtowork for wages, an. --out. Mother lives all alone a the old house with|thefdevil.' "Some way the I girl's story touched me, and I put my arm aronnd her. 'I am your friend, Dyoie Hazel,' says I. «I am almost as friendless away ont here aa you; let us befriend one another.' "When winter set in, the measle* broke out in my school.' I had never had them, and they go hard with people. Down I came, aad as ba« <uu» would have it, jour grandmother had never had them either, and down she came; and not a soul to nurse us, for yonr grandfather and the boys were up north chopping. We lay there two days; eaoh of UB too sick to lift the hand for the other. On the. third day in came Dycie HazeL 1 knew yon were sickt' says she; 'something told me so, and 1 ve come to nurse you. Mrs. Dnrkee doesn't need me more than half the time. Iy anything after that tffi I found your grandmother rubbing me ana ponring hartshorn and vinegar up my nose to bring meto.She didn't ask me what had happened—there war no need—and she was glad enough for Grershom's sake. I sat and studied over the matter after I came to myself. She is a witch, I thought —she is a witch, or she never oould have done it. And then I remembered a charm that your grandmother told me Mrs. Durkee had tried for her afflicted baby, and I determined to make a cake of Will's hair and barn it, and me what woald happen then to him and Byeie. I slipped into the pantry and got some fi6ur, and then went over to the school honse, so that your grandmother wouldn't suspect what I was doing, and made a fire in the little fire-place there. I remember that when I picked up the chips the sky looked threatening. There was a great blaok okmd Mat looked liko. a hurricane bundling up ia the north- west. It was lined with a flulphar-ooior, and reminded me, in its shape, o* old Witch Hazel grown to a giantess. I locked the sob.ool-b.onse ao6r, Hid took Will's hair from the desk, and kneaded it into my cake. Then I made my fire, and when there was a good bed of coals I sat the cake right in the middle of it. It had grown quite dark by this time, and just as I sat down the cake there eame an awful flash of lightning that lit up the whole country roand, and at the same instant such a tremendous roar of thunder that it seemed as if the whole world had exploded. The light did not die out at once, bat lingered in the school room quite a while, and a ball of fire seemed to be dancing over the desks. With the darkness that followed, tile rain came down in one solid sheet I oould hear the river rowing behind, and the trees crahi it b k told j and I can spend the nights here.' And h 4 r e i ^ b e d i 4 footing it baok and forward oa 'i didnnit s 1 •htyx «ft ; but when spring eame, and the lc ?t broke up, and Will Dlrby oaWdown with his first float of logs, I was all right house at midnight, and the go by I'll whinny.' Well, < mother declared that that" ir pulled me throngh, but it wan the sight 11 of Will's face that pnt the flnishinff your grand- j touoh to the bnsii face that put the finishing the clock struck . , . is howling like one possessed, sn pretty soon there came the sound, | toride,and ipperty-clap, of hoofs cantering on the | suaded m cnpike, and in a minute after there j go. Whi waa a strange, human-like whinny at the j sitting ite that made her ver- »-i—^ 1J ' " grandmother very night, | not quite himself that spring. When , she heard | he came to the house I wail not at home sesaed, and | for Gershom had come to take me oat 1 i your grandmother had per- that it would do me good to t I came back, there he - : o — *he door gt^p piaynj« -^n very blood run cold. Rsx. He didn't say a^ythi/g, buTl g p ill e idnight, telling many stories of this sort, and they made a great impression my mind. At nooning next day, too, 3 school-children were full of them. ie of the Durkee boys said that his mother had taken quite a fancytoDyoie " il, and had had her bound out to the orchard roll o _ . „ herself as round as a cartwheel, with her fingers just tonohing her toes, There is nothing can make her mad but to call er Witch Hazel; if yon do that, she ill froth at the mouth, and Bhe will hase you like a dog till yon cross run ning water.' Then one of the Taft ehil dren spoke up: 'My father was going a hunting, and he met old Witch Hazel i] his path. "You won't shoot nothing, 1 says she. But he went, all the same By-and-by he saw a fat doe a couple of rods off, and he fired at her. She ran a little way, and then sat down and looked at him. Hefiredagain ; and took very teful aim; but she never stirred. Then .. oame over him that this wasn't any kind of game, and he remembered that heard tell if you fire a walnut plu _. _ witoh, it is the only thing that wiL hurt them. So he out a sprout, and whit- tled one end sharp, and put it in hia gun, and fired, and the creature gave a cry, and leaped into the bushes, and he .ouldn't find hide nor hair of her. But .phen he got home the first news he heard was that old Mrs, Hazel had fallen down stairs and broke her arm." After he had finished his yarn, Molly Gaswell had one to tell. Mrs. Hazel had been to their house, and wanted to borrow her father's horse to ride to Northfield, but her father wouldn't lend it. That very afternoon a bumble bee stung thi horse in the pasture, making him throi. himself and break his leg, and her father bad to kill him to p,nt him ont of misery. When he oame home, there was Witoh Hazel standing by his gate. She gave him a wioked look, and said, 'That wr~ "" " into lend yoi He always be- lieved that Mrs. Hazel had changed her- self into that bumble bee, and stnng the horse out of spite. r ou can imagine that after hearing tese stories I must have thought [ had come to live in rather a poker- lace. I confess my heart did fail and I don't know but I would given up the school and have gone if it hadn't been for Will Darby. He and I had been engaged for a long time, " Will was working on the river float- logs down in the rafting season, enever he went by he pat up at Durkee's tavern, and would come up It was my only really hap- ;hout the whole summer, 't so desolate as I might >en, either, for your grandmoth- 1 " it Gershom used to drive over span of horses as often as ek from Norfehfield Farms and take me out to whatever was going on in intry round. Qershom was smd good looking, and he prided himself, so I've heard, on drii " the handsomest span and having the prettiest girl to sit beside him in all the country round. Will Darby was as poor as most young lumbermen, and rather of a jealous disposition, but my heart was just set on him, I could tell bis figure as far as I oould see it on the river, py time through though I wasn't lave bei _ nthe slip . graceful, ' „,, logs as careless long pole to keep hi flwig n the balance, his curly hair flowing in the nd, and a crimson silk han " '' ' lotted at his throat under collar of his gray flunnel shirt. "One day I was up on the mountain- side looking for fringed gentians. T1 was late in the fall, and I rememt thinking I wouldn't go out for flow* i that season, when just before m _ _ jg girl started up. My only thought at fifat was that she was unusually hand- >me, for though meanly dressed in a idigo blue cotton gown, she was s handsome aa a picture. Her black hai;, and straight as a gypsy's, was Darse a notted i f h a careless heavy mass at the l 10k of her neck, and gre >head, shading eyes m low blaok as pokeberries. She held a knife in one hand and a basket in the other, and I saw that she had been searching lervine and sassafras. We joined other, and rambled about for an longer, talking about herbs and flowers, and I remember that I took quite a fanoy to her. At last she said, 'Your folks will be anxious about you as soon as they learn that I am out here.' 'Oh no,' says I; 'I often take long walks lyself, and Rex here takes good care ie.' 'Rex would never hurt me,' said the girl, trying to pat the dog, pinch slunk olose to my side, 'and per- taps you would be afraid yonrself if you ^new who I am.' 'Who are yon ?' I asked. 'Some people call me Witoh Hazel,' she replied. "Well, I will not say that I was not a -ittle taken aback ; still, she wasn't so frightful-looking as the old one, and I 3wered up as peart as I eoald, 'You s Dycie Hazel, who lives at Durkee's rern.' 'Yes,' she said; 'you'd be glad to live there yonrself, or in a worse plaoe even, alia ay. Thei 'o brothers, they couldn't stand things, . _id they went east to work at a maobine- shop. One day mother had afit,and •hen she oame out of it she said they -ere both dead, but that they would never be buried. Two day* after, we heard that the boiler had exploded, and there wasn't enough found of them to ke a funeraL After that mother took orse than ever, for the boys.were all sared for in this world. I ran away told me afterward that he"asked her if that sort of thing had been going on all win- ter, and she told him it had, for she wa anxious that we should quarrel, and tha I should marry her brother. I didn' think anything of his qneerness until afterward, I was so glad to see him aaain. I remembered his hair had grown pretty long up there in the woods, and I offered to out it for him; as he w as going down into civilized parts. 'Allright,Itelilal says he. After I had cut his hair * it in a paper, and pnt it in my the school room. Often and often, when I was teaching those pester- ung on he desk and stroke that p atoj ' for my tasks. "Some time after he went away I had a visit from old man Hazel. He was i curious creature. He said that Dyoib had told him that I had been kind -to her, and he wanted to thank me for it. 'I think Dycie's got the making of a good woman in her.' Til do anything in my power for her,' I said; and I asked v -~ why he had given her such a strange e as Dycie. "Sightly its Boadycie,' sajshe; and I knew that he meant Boadicea. He staid and talked quite a while, and he accused his wife of all their misfortune and of all manner of wickedness, and said that when she died he would dance on her grave. Tt you are willing to help Dycie,' he eame, and her look i d jnst as he was leaving, 'and you can help her if you've a mind to. She never had any learning to speak of, bat she's took i notion she'd like to cometoschool this erm, and Miss Durkee she's given her eave. So if you'll sort of hear her les- ons private, so as not to shame her before the young ones, it would be a great favor; for Dyoie's despnt high- sperrited.' "The next Monday Dycie jeemed to me I'd never seei. „„ handsome. The bold, hard manner which was the only thing about her that I did not quite like, was entirely gone, and she was as gentle and modest as any youog girl oould be. She did not make raoh progress with her studies, though he tried very hard to do so. She learned ) write her name, and to read in a slow, tambling fashion; that was all One day she brought some rye straw to school, and braided it at recess. I saw that she was making herself a hat, and was surprised ; for she generally went as bareheaded as an Indian. She finished it in a short time, and then took a little ramble in the woods, saying with a laugh, that she was going to the milliner's to buy some artificials. She oame back with the hat wreathed with dogwood berries. It was very pretty, bnt I screamed right out, 'Why, Dyoie, ohild, you will be poisoned ! !othing can poison me,' she replied; and looald not help noticing how sweet and lady-like she looked, so different from her old self. 'What has come over you, Dycie ?' I asked 'You look' 'Jt lik self. W I asked. h , Dycie ? 'Just like k o k J u s t other people, don't I?' she asked. hope you will think so.' And then. had made the change. the river, just as I had, only hers was of higher birth than she, and all her new resolves to study and make something of herself was born of her desire to please him. There waa ithing touching in it that drew me irtoher. It was about this time that in her reading lesson in the Bible she came to the text, 'Unto Him that loved us and washed us.' She stopped right there, and looked at me with all her soul in her eyes. Tjhen He loved 3 before we were olean,' she said. 'I ' any one could do that bui if Christ boy ; but if ' all love Him..... i your lover,' I saiu, -jrciu »x> lake yourself lovely—' She too.' 'And because you e tryii .. —„ did n<_. let me finish : 'I will olean myself up for Christ too,* she said. "I had a great influence over that girl, greater than I ever had over any other human being. I gained it because she thought I believed in her, and I lost it because she found oat that I doubted her. God forgive me, I believe she was almost a Christian then.' Aant Wealthy paused in her narrative, and we saw that her keen eyes were dimmed with tears. "I never meant to wrong her," she proceeded, "and I do not think she would have injured me then for the world; but we eaoh wronged the other bitterly, and I was the greater sinner. When autumn oame, Will Darby stopped to see me on his way up the river to the woods, where he has to spend the winter chopping. He was strangely changed, md I could not understand it, and told lim so. 'We might as well understand eaoh other, Wealthy,' he said, 'though I didn't think I would be the firstto break. I expected that when I oame baok this fall I would find yon married to that other fellow, Gershom What's- his-name, and then there would have been no need of any explanation. 1 With that I declared up and down that I had never oared a mite for Gershom, and had sent him about his business long ago, for I loved him better than all the world besides. 'I used to feel just that way >boutyou Wealthy,' said he. 'Used tool' jaid I, for my temper was up. 'You are bewitched, Will,' I said, a minute later, for he looked so helpless and miserable that in my own torment I oould not help --•'-•- T him 'Yes, I'm bewitched,' he I, 'and yonder is the witch; but never could have done it if I had o Rare that yon loved me, Wealthy.' »ve one look out of the window, and there, strolling along the road, with her- hat trimmed with the poison-berries -ringing on her arm, and my Will's imson handkerchief knotted at her throat, was Dyoie Hazel. She smiled and and joined a show. I performed a long waved her hat aa she saw us time, dressed aa a boy; but father drop- j the window and I doa't __» crushing oa it •A moment later, and above the sound of the storm, I heard some one beating »t the school-honse door, and calling wildly to me to let her in. » wag Byrne Haset. I stepped to the door, and was going to undo it, when I remembered that thi* was the confirmation of the eharm, and that I must not let her in until the cake was burned. It was a proof that ehe had bewitched Will that she was there now struggling like a.-wild creature at the door. I walked to the fire-place; the eake was burning, and the nauseous fames of the singing hair nearly choked me but I knelt down on the floor and waited. Dycie left the door, and I could hear her at the win- dow ; she could see me in the fire-light, and she pushed against the sash until she burst it in, and it fell shivering on the floor. Then she leaped in afte* it, and springing to the fire, raked the burning cake off of the ooais with her fingers. She thrust it in my face, and laughed. 'You were trying a charm against me,'she ' ' - "^* you out.' Then of cinders in her hands. 'Yon hare suc- ceeded,' she cried; «it is all burned. What have you done with him 1 Where is Will Darby ? Then she began to ram and I saw she had lost her senses. I ran across the way to your grandmother, and we watched her through the front windows all that night. The storm con- tinued, and she did not leave the sohool- house. Tl see her L_._ oould hearh^rffigiggand chattering to herself, until the morning broke, and the rain ceased, when she wandered down the road toward Durkee's tavern. Later on we saw old Witoh Hazel hurrying down the road. Your grandmother called to her, and asked her what-was the mat- ter. She answered that the lightning had struck the elm that stood in front of her house, and that it had fallen upon and killed a man who had taken shelter ' under it. Men came up from Durkee'a and carried the dead man away. It was Will Darby. "Dyoie never recovered her senses. She went to live with her mother. At night passers-by would hear her scream- ing and singing, and her mother swear- ing at her. The old elm lies across their gateway now just as it fell. Old Witoh Hazel died at last I went to the grave. There wasn't anything that you oould call a funeral; only a few neighbors gath- ered out of ouriosity. After the sexton had filled in the earth, the old maa, wh» was there from the . . . ie poor-house, took and led hertothe Dyoie by the hand grave, and then he folded his danced just as straight and as hard as he could tramp. Dycie did not dance. She only stood and stared Mil she caught sight of my face; then she ran to me, and said, as mysterious as though it was a great secret: 'Him that loved us and washed us.' Then she laughed in a silly way, and singing, Is burnt hair caie,' she staggered away to her home. They . took her away at last, and she ended her days in the mad-house. No one has liv- ed in the house since. "I don't know as the charm had any- thing to do with the lighting killing Will Darby. I only know that I'd give all the money Gerehom left me to know that I hadn't a-tried it" Aunt Wealthy ceased speaking; and bat night, as I drove homeward along he banks of the brawling Miller Biver, and saw the moonlight stream through the vacant windows of the haunted house, I oould almost fancy that the stricken elm at the gate was the crook- ed and malevolent form of that original^ Witch Hazel. ^ * ® s ; Where the Drains Come From. GranviUe Corners ia situated abont two miles north of the Connecticut line. A large mill stream, runs through the place (a branch of the Westfield river), furnishes a number of privileges, most of whioh are utilised. Messrs. Noble & Cooley are by far the largest manufac- turers in the plaoe. They say that in December, 1863, they first made a drum in Mr. Noble's kitchen, from a board found in a barn; steamed it with a tea- kettle, and used two hog's bladders for the headB. Next day they made a dozen drums and sent them away in a boot box. They * ' ' "" '~ feet, with fii water. They have made and sold 75,- 000 drums. These were made of wood. tin, brass and nickel. They used for the heads of all these drums 30,000 sheep skins, which eame from Liver- Halted >f your readers pool, of the kind km fleshes. Let none of .._..... _.„. wonder where all the toy drums are made hereafter. This firm also made 400 gross of toy pistols, 23,000 boxes tenpins, 700 gross rolling hoops, and 42,000 boxes of wooden toothpioks.— Hartford Times. Humorous. —The ice-dealer's little venture: "You may talk about fine buildings, but it'a the ice-house that takes the oake." —Orange county, Ma., has 8,000. peo- ple and only three panpers. They all take winter boarders out there.—Boston -'oat. —The horse thief may have his wash- ing done at home, but the sheriff generally does his ironing.—Glasgow lima. —"Generous to a fault," may be said of many men. At least they are —A burglar got into the house of a ountry editor the other night After terrible struggle the editor succeeded i robbing him. —The fatherly Lowell Courier reminds penuriouB young men who go off sleigh- riding alone, that there is a law against sleighing without bells. —Tutor in Mechanics—"If a body meet a body—" Sophomore [in an under- tone, Mechanic-ally] "Coming through the rye,"—YaXe Beoord. —I'm aa astonished ghost! I didn't know before that my boy was a girl. [Phantom of Hamlet's father on seeing the Diokiaflon.1—CouHer-JournaL —A method has been discovered re- cently by which goqdjjfalking- shoes can be made from leaffletT This will have a tendency to relieve the great strain on the pasteboard market.—Hatokeye. —"But I pass," said a minister recent- ly in dismissing one theme of hia subject to take up another. "Then I make It spades," yelled a man from the gallery,, who was dreaming the happy hours away in an imaginary game of euohre. It is needless to say that he went out on the next deal, assisted by one of the deacons.

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Page 1: MMmrgjr JkttiitteL - NYS Historic Newspapersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn85026976/1882-03-10/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · CHAS. H. MOORE, Attorney and CouBselor al Law? ... C0MTA1M1I1S MEARLY

PUBLISHED EVERY FKIDAT MORXISG,

la Low's Block, Brinkerhoff Street,

3y W. Lansing & Son,

Rates of Advertising.One sqnare 2 weeks, l!so ( Jf column 1 year,' 30.00

One square 8 month's, siso '% column 1 year! 60.00

°IBu8ine«»h0arci81,O°otBo™3"r5'ii'g more tban one-h

Upon each advertisement ahonld be plainly wi

Legnl advertisements published at t i e rates pB°Oart<fa^ou!d be taken to write on one side onlythe paper need.

Whatever is intended for insertion mast be t

ATTORNEYS.

ATTOBNEY AND 00U.N8EL0H AT LAW, au

Margaret Street, Pittsburgh, N. \ \

J^MES TIEBNEY,

A T T O E N E Y AND COUNSELOR AT

ward's Block, Oastom House Square—rooms ft

MARTIft JH. O'BBIEN,TTOENEY AND COUNSELOR. Office, Arn

BOYAL CORiSllV,* TTOENEI AND COUNSELOR AT LiUV, Platts"i. burgb, N. V. Office, in tiic Biiiloy litock, liridgi

Beckwitb, Barnard & Wheeler,\ TTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LA'

En, WEED «fe SMITH,YS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW:

WIN8LOW C. WATSON, Jr.,

A burgh, N. T^'offi^corrfw Bridge and Margar-

rogate's Oourt.Plattsburga, Jan. 3, 1882.

C J j i R K «fc HA.T.fcl.dLW.A.A TTORNEYS AND 00US8ELLORS AT L

X». » . M e M A S T E R S «fe feSOIV,

ATTORNEYS A>'D COUNSELORS AT LAW.-

PLATT, CALKINS 4 CO.,

General Insurance A pBiake^s Bfockf

'lattslrarg-Ii, N, Y.

j£.. C*. CARTER,A TTORNEY AMD COUNS

Wills, Deeds, B,

ed and coliectioni[llprosa

Btore, P]

one, Bounty, &o.,

r Meyer's Jewelry

HOTELS.

LYON MOUNTAIN HOUSE,T. P. :ETFIELD,..PROPRIETOR.

The public are respectfully informed that there

good accommodations are provided for the traveling

T. P. FIFIELD.

BUSINESS CARDS.

•pit, ATTSB CB

DOCKStorage, Forwarding and General

Commission Business!RO3ENDALE CEMENT,

CALCINED PLASTER,NOVA SCOTIA LAND PLASTEK,

Of the BEST BBAHDS constmtly OB h*nil m d foiwle.

PlstUbnrgh, N.X. g{

PHYSICIANS.

B. S. KELL06G, M. »„Office, 5 3 Margaret Street,

28 PLATT8BURGH, N. 7 .

JL»K. JE. C. L O W ,

Homoeopathic Physician,PLATTSBURGH, N. Y.

_Offloe No. 19 Brinierhofr Street, oppasUe the P. 0,

EDWARD A, CARPENTER, M. D.,(HOMOEOPATHIC)

Physician and Surgeon,

MISCELLANEOUS CARDS.

MARY L. MORRIS,

Teacher of Music,No. 14= CoiaelL Street,

30m3 PlaUsburgb, N. Y.

HUDSON BRO'S,

TEACHERS OF MUSICGEO. HENEY HUDSON,

40 Court StreetOHAS. FEED'K HUDSON,

JACOB VOGEL,

MASON AND BUILDER,29 Lafayette St., Corner Asl>,

P l a t t s f e u r g b , N. Y.Jobbing and.Bepairing promptly attended on short

notice. Orders may be left at M. P. Myers & Co.'s

A T T E N T I O N ;

TIP TOP SINGLE HARNESSA.t Schuyler Falls

S2O.OO.Full Sickle Trimmed, Oak st

GEOKGE KEET.'

WE AEE SELLING

Rims, Hubs, SpokesjhillsASD ALL

Carriage Wood WorksAt Tery t o w Prices, a n d o a r Stock

Dry a n d Complete.Call and examine it before buying elsewhere

We Have Lately Eeoeived

Hammers aod Wrenehes,

CALL AND SEE THEM.

PURDY & VSLA8,I AW A-VD COJTLEU'FIOJV OFFlCf i^

REAL ESTATE^INSURANCE & FINAKCifiL AGENCIES.

C H A S . H . MOORE,Attorney and CouBselor al Law?

IS NOTAEY PUBLIC. p. ,3 4 SJr'1T

Beal Estate bought and sold. Loans effected.

MMmrgjr JkttiitteLA Family Newspaper, Devoted to Polities. literature* AgrieaUwre, Ltocal interests, and Geneva! News.

VOL. 27, NO. 41. PLATTSBURGH, N. Y., FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1882. WHOLE NO. 1394.

FURNITURE. BOOKS AND STATIONERY.PUBNITCKEI FUBNITUR

E. W. PIERCE,Manufacturer anrt Dealer in

Furniture, Paper Hangings,FRAMES, SHADES, TASSELS, j ui. j — »

Sash, Door*, Blinds, *o^ | BOOKS A l STATIONERY,e Factory, West End Bridge,

DENTISTS. ~i

G. G. RANDALL, D. D. S,tutal Ro»n

ofDental operation

DB. J . F. BAILEY,DESNTIST,

A, M, WARREN,Successor to MXINEO & WABEEN,

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Bookseller, Stationer- A N D -

NEWSDEALER.

Office, Low's Block, O

B.T.MOONEY, 0. 0.8=

i Miscellaneous Books,ase Sqnure, oppo- ScllOOl B o o k s .

School Supplies,Blank Books,

mm • • * H I S ^ » V H I M B f * * a • * • im «

ntal Rooms in WJnslow's Block,! .WCmoranonm and Plattsburgh, If. Y.i MARKETS.

s Oiide (LangMng Gas) a

INSURANCE.

Leuer Copying Books,Note Books,

, j Receipt Books,' | Drafts,I Tracing Paper and Linen,

Inks of all Kinds,

ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING

i, | First-Class Book & Stationery Store

filling family orders.

WhW Goods delivered inside

the Corporative.

N

Looli for Something New from Us

each Week, amsng New

Advertisement-.

^Slargaret; StreetjPLATTSBURGH, N. T. 12

GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS.

Something Worth Knowing 1THE PLACE TO BOT YOK7B

Groceries,r: R| Provisions,

INSURE WITH

HAGERTY k MCCAFFREY.HARDWARE.

M. P. MYERS & G0Si

Myers' Sew Block, Bridge Street, ]Dealers in Heavy and Shelf

Hardware!IEON, STEEL, NAILS,

Paints, Oils, &c.j &c.;'ts for TGrwfl!lgor& Co.'s Safes.

PLATT8BTTBGH, N. t .

Crockery,Ciass & Wooden Ware,

FLOUR. CORN MEAL,PROVENDER, FEED and GRAIN,

OF ALL KIHDS, IS AT

Heyworth&White'sF E R X J , N . Y .

! WE HAVE PAINT A2?6 PAIST OILS, NAILS,

FOR SALE!1HE FOLLOWING LEASING ABX1«

STEEL, SCALESLEAD, LANTERNS,

ZINC, SIEVES,SHOVELS, " HUBS,

HOES, SPOKES,FORKS, FELLOES,

A Lfirge Quantity of

House Famishing Goods, dec, &e.H.

Plattsborgh, Deo. 18,1880.

boards , L a t h , Spruce and.Cedar Shingles , &c.

"Wantedf at our Hill in Pern, Corn, Oats, SBCI0,000 BralielB of Bnekwheiit for cash, at the highestQKoarf Meal &nd Buckwheat Shorts at wholesale,

J. R. EMERSON & SON,DE/LLEES IX

China, Glass,EARTHENWARE.

New decorated Tea Sets, Toilet Sets:r Sets, Fruit Sets, Tete-a-Tete

BOOTS 6N0 SHOES.

GROCERIES.

iGilOlS,SUCCESSOES TO ~

Nichols, L^ode & Go.,

WHOLESALE &HQ RETAIL

GROCERS !

62 Margaret St.,

WATCHES AND JEWELRY. POETRY.THE OLD CHOIR.

T ^ T T " V T TD P A ' T T i ' D T T X • T^e opeaiug hymn, with ita Boleznn'swft

«J ' - ' - t i iN ± t . U U l I K l J - i J U , : ^as BtiEg by the rcnsical throng"

WATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY,SIl /FBK WAKE, &c.

l^ watches,Clocksaad Jewelry Eepalredand En-graving done to order:. 26

>m Jimb if i ped eyerything and hnnted the countryHe nsed i over till he found me, and brought me

WILLIAM REED,DEALER IN

FOREIGN AIVD AHEKICAX

WATCHES AND CLOCKS,JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, SC.

P»To. 63 Margaret St.,PLATTSBUKGH, N. I .

^-CLOCKS, WAT0HEH and JEWELET Repair-

A I J. J, FITZPATRSCK,i n i c " 1 n r s m e ^ p a i d t o MEAT MARKET,

GSOCEEIES and PROVISIONS,No. 55 Bridge St., Pit tsburgh.

JEWELER.

ROB'T 1YIEYER

Watch Maker and Jeweler,

HO. 53 MARGARET STREET,KEST DOOR TO BOWLES & EDWARDS'.

I W O U L D R E S P E C T F U L L Y CALL. attention to my new and complete stock for the

Fall Trade, and I offer to the public an unusuallylarge and fine assortment ol

Silver Plated Ware,Watches, Clocks,

JBWELRY&FMGYGOODS.My line of Silver Plated Wire now consists of

{offers & Bro thers ' F!a t Tab le Wa r e ,Rogers & Brothers ' HolJow W a r e ,

Reed & Ba r ton ' s Ho l low Ware ,Q4 other first-class Manufacturers, I have on hand

American Watches,ihown in Plattsburgh, consiEting of Walt:

„ , „ , and Springfield Movements in Gold and SOases. Also Ladds' patent stiffened Gold Cases,

Nickel Stem Winders, from 93 to II would also call attention to my Urge vuriel

, e, Cameo and Diamon, C ,net, Turquiose, Topas, Amethyst and Intaglio Kings.Also, plain 18 K, and 14 K. and fancy Oarred Rings ;

" I t t b ' hattsb'urgh.My stock of

CLOCKS! also complete, comprising tae cheapest American3 well as fine French Biaci Marble Clocits with Ca-I Jiavo &IBO &&ci&d to my lins of

Fanoy Goodsine imported Bronzes, Mantle Sets, Statuettes, be.I solicit inspection a n d comparison.

onal and prompt attentiind the public that all W

R. W. & 0. RAILROADS

3M13W

I Bread and Milk Sets, unique ,.! White China in Cups, Vases, <fec, for j l a ^ t!aiameRoH?eI decorating. New styles in HangisK and | Families coin's Welt!

r p a i D t e d | Connections are the Surest!

DROWN'S, lets, Celerys, Finger Bowls, and otherflne glass, and many other new goods.

I^Inspection of stock invited.

D E A L E R S IN

BUTTON BOOTS,Bought of beat

d d t b Cakcrs, and oj>ought of beat ,

dered to be Cut from w e . .ed Kid and Cioat LeatU.

nh a full supply of good Boots and Shoes,

AT LOW RATES. !For Fall and Winter wants a large stock et Men's, j

Kip Boots aad Robber OFershoes. |

.sburgh, Oct. 8, 1850. I

jTEAS, € A M £ D GOODS,

! And Fine Groceries.102-104MARGARET STREET, JJgW

L ol the traveling public.

£. T. DELANEY,

WESTERN TICKET AGENT,No. 52 Bridge Street,

C A L L A T

£ . £ J ^ . t L £ :. ADRIAN SENECAL'SHOY1L | NO. 7 RIVER STREET,

F O B C H O * C E

BY THE OELEBEATEI

REMOVAL!:::!:

, | G fOCfirieS and PfOVlSIORS,

CROCKERY AND GBASSWARE.ALSO, A FULL ASSORTMENT OF

FRESH BISCUITS,

1 D , D . . n , « i CROCKERY AND GBASSWARE.j Royal B a k i n g P o w d e r C§6§ j AM0, A m x ASSORT^T OF

EAST SIDE OF THE RIVEB.

AT HOME ACAIW I

L. D. LARKIN,m H O HAS FOR MANY YEARS BEEN

has repurchased from Joseph Bustey the market

CLINTON MARKET,ON CLINTON STEEET,

And is now prepared to fill all orders forFRKSH HEATS OF EVERY KTAD,

FRESH FISH, S A t T fflEATS,EAR.LY VEGETABLES IN T H E I R

The pnbiic are cordially inyitea to call.Purchases delivered to any part of the village fr

STOVES AND TIN WABE.

GEO. N. WEBBIB NOW BEOEIVTNG AND HAS ON

HANB

The Largegt aod Most Complete

ASSOBTMEST OF

S T O V E STYLE ASB DES0BIPTI0N,

Hollow Ware,

WOODEN WARE,Ware?

TJ 33L3: I > SS ,

Household Furnisliing Goods,Plumbing Materials, &c, &c.

Ever offered in this marist, at prices that Can-not be Undersold by any establishment.

Special attention given to

Plumbing and all Kinds of Joft Work.

NO. 17 BRIDGE STREET,PLATTSBUmS, If. T.

DRUGGISTS.

CITY PHARMACY.SMITH & LAROCQUE,

Druggists & Pftarmacentists,V'EEP ALWAYS OS HAND A F O t t

Drugs, Chemicals,Pharmaceutical Preparations,

DYE GOODS, PERFUMERY,

Toilet Articles,—AND—

Patent Medicines.

SOTE THE ADUKESS :

IUZVED HAS REHOV.

Royal Baker and Pastry Oook, j J iC0MTA1M1I1S MEARLY 4 0 0 R E G i P E S .

Smith & LaRocque,CITY PHAEMACY,

A. S£.\EGAIu

yo.7Kvorstreet,HattsbnrEh. J 6 5 M a r g a r e t S t r e e t ,

LIME FOR SALE!! —•-~-

COMMON SENSE SLEIGH,TpOKi'JttEJJESTSJEIOH f

No. 84 Margaret Street,

LAJ&IES', GESTS' AXB CHILDSEA'8

BOOTS AND SHOES,f r ° r t

1he,maD^ fao tor ies of May Brothers, Wm. Ow-

i Co., F. & L. B. Eeed, and many others.

a i r i n g p r o m p t ! }

S. D. OBAPPEIX.

I * T%.-«^*-»*JEP«P«-57!LP 1 i . - . ' . , . • * r ; . . ! _ „ i , U \ t TIT- T> ; «>-. r,-^

would have torn them limb from Jiithey had offered to touch ns. He nsed i over tiU he found me and bronahito go with me to school, and lie on the I baok. When we got home^m.door step. There were only a half-1 banged the door in oar faces and tolddozen or so of white-haired children! us we shouldn't neither of us enter itthat oame; they might tramp on Eex or again. Then he took me to Mrs Dursit on him and he never offered to hnrt|kee and I bound myself out to her. H r tthem. Bat let one of those river-men at the poor-house now, but when I'm ofstroll along the road, and his blood was | age, I am ' " "np. Tbey generally finished their walk i get hiiand concluded t.o tarn back before they ••

jaohed the school-honse. I had come'•om civilized parts, and I used to be ;

)nesome, I should have been fright-'oed to death many a time if it had noteen for Eex; he seemed to constitute

regular protector, and he

nod from the:

er pealed fort!

nat long ajjo aecl at the tread

SainIf!'om tTeVealma ot\he dead,c ? ? a v ' e fanished away

And the friendly ties are all broken aparAnd the spirit of lo^e is gone;

And discord and tumutt among them reiAnd jealousy's flame -bnrns r ' —

d to change her into a horse, and riduabout at night. Yoar grandmother

said she told the woman she didn't be-"' eit. 'She does,' she said; 'she

apart,

again

MISCELLANY.WITCH HAZEL.

From Harper's MagazineOne ol the wildest portions of Western

Massachusetts is the region borderingMiller's River,—a mad little streamwhioh runs frothing amid ragged rooks,

id lies darkling in sullen pools shadedby dense and tangled vegetation. Itjoins the Connecticut by leaping riotona-ly down a staircase formed of jaggedorags and the ruins of a broken dam,forming a striking contrast to the lake-like expanse of the noble river in whiohit quiets its trouble spirit.

Life on the borders of Miller's Riverfifty years ago found its prototype in thesaviDg character of nature abont it,Tragio histories are told of families who"•• generation after generation never

ited a suicide. Religion was replacedby superstition ; the vices of mankind

•ew lash and rank, and even woman'siture was warped and deformed by its

demoralizing environment. Long afterthe belief in witoheraft had been stamp-ed out of Boston and Salem, a balefnlafter-growth sprang np and flourishedhere, and though there were no execu-tions for witchcraft, there was grosscredulity and infatuation, ostraoism andpersecution. Riding one day throughthis tract of country, and emerging froma dense and dreary wood of butternutand pine, we found ourselves in a iittli

char^ of neglected orab apples, growu-nto a thicket with hedgerows of tangledbarberries, flanked its further side ; anda blasted elm felled by lightning, andpartly stripped by the woodcutter,barred the froDt gateway. The houseitself presented a most forbidding as-pect. Its curtainless windows were rid-dled as by the firing of sharp-shooters.Jom'e were boarded up ; a few stuffednth parti-colored raga; hardly a panevas left unbroken. Originally the front>f the house had been economically>rnamented with yellow paint, but theleather had removed nearly the last/estige of color, and reduced the wholeto a uniform and melanoholy gray. Mycompanion more familiar with the regionthan myself, eyed me curiously as weapproached, to notice what impressionthe scene would make upon me. 'voluntarily I touohed her arm, andclaimed, "A real haunted house !"

She laughed lightly. "The old peopleabout here declare that it is haunted.My aunt could tell you many a strangestory about it. I remember when I wasa child how she would make the cold

p along my spine by herstory of Witch Hazel, the old woman

h lived here."Would she tell me ?" I asked.I don't know; we oan ask her att. She used to teach school heren a girl." _ And my friend pointed to

himney which rose from a dense massof bushes, a solitary monument to thefact that a house had once occupied thespot. "That was the school house, andshe boarded at that farm house opposite,where my grandmother lived ; it is the

ily house between the Hazels' andDarken taver at th<

necticut. ]ig girl to liv

Miller's River with the C<was a lonely spot for a you] „in. She must have been glad and tinful enough when my grand-unclemarried her and brought her away toNorthfield Farms."

Aunt Wealthy was an old lady of mar-elous activity aud keenness ; her hair:nder her widow's cap was white asnow, but her eyes were blaok and piero-ng. Her form was thin to emaciation,

bnt her health was good, and her mindnimpaired by age. She wore a blackilk dress, shiny and limp, and unadorn-d with modern ornament of jet or pleat-jg, but it was unmistakable black silk,nd a slender gold chain held her hus-

band's heavy silver watch at her belt.skilled, high-backed rook-

._„ , :king swiftly back and for-ward, knitting interminable garters, andsinging as we approaohed, in a highcracked voice, a hymn which arguedlifcsle for her admiration of manhood.

men of high degree:The ti

the balance, bo"th ;ppear

Extracts and Baking PowderALL KINDS OF

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ON COURT HOUSE SQUARE,

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Averill's Ready Mixed Paints. i ^i^iSiPRICES I

PCBDX &

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don't seem to have a highof men, Aant Wealthy,"! re-

marked.'That's becanse I've had experience,.Id," she replied.

d my friend: "was he false, AuntWealthy?"

"I've no tales to tell against Ger-ihom, now that he's dead," said AuntWealthy, placing her lips firmly to-jether, and humming the tune with

'•Aunt Wealthy," said my friend, coaxingly, "we want yon tell us some storiesibont the witche's—"

"The witches ?"'•Yes, old Witoh Hazsl, whose hus-

band danced on her grave when shedied."

'•Yonr grandmother could tell youmore about her than I can."

"Yes, but grandmother died ten years

"The Hazels were a queer lot; butthen I don't know as any of themwere really witches. The people round

jnsed to think so, and were mortally1 afraid of them, especially of the oldmother. The old man declared she was

1 a witch, said she sold herself to the devilbehind the barn, and he knew when shedid it. She waa a frightful looking oldcreature, and dressed in rags from headto foot, carpet rags tied around her feetand arms, and a piece of old quilt abouther body. Your grandmother hadenormous dog—old Rex they calhim ; he was half bulldog and half

.mastiff. There were lots of roughcharacters rafting logs down the Con-

i necticut in those day, and putting upI at the Durkee's tavern; but we were[ never afraid of any of them, for old Bex

ir failed me but ( One efter-at recess I heard the children

ihing, and saw them all coming in.I stepped to the door, and there stoodold Mrs. Hazel, and a horrible sight shevas, with her gray hair streaming overier tatters, and her crazy grin. I call-id 'Rex! Rex !' and the dog came bound-Tig over the opposite fence ; but as soonis be saw Witch Hazel he howled andslunk away into the bushes. She langh-ed at me as wicked as could be, and Iran back into the sohool-hoase and bolt-ed the door, for I was scared to death.

'That night your grandmotheistories till near midnight abou

She said there was one woman i

and I bound myself out to her. He's»- -oor-house now, but when I'm o"

n going to work for wages, an.--out. Mother lives all alone a

the old house with|thefdevil.'"Some way the I girl's story touched

me, and I put my arm aronnd her. 'Iam your friend, Dyoie Hazel,' says I. «Iam almost as friendless away ont here aayou; let us befriend one another.'

"When winter set in, the measle*broke out in my school.' I had neverhad them, and they go hard withpeople. Down I came, aad as ba« <uu»would have it, jour grandmother hadnever had them either, and down shecame; and not a soul to nurse us, foryonr grandfather and the boys were upnorth chopping. We lay there two days;eaoh of UB too sick to lift the hand forthe other. On the. third day in cameDycie HazeL 1 knew yon were sickt'says she; 'something told me so, and1 ve come to nurse you. Mrs. Dnrkeedoesn't need me more than half the time.

Iy anything after that tffi I found yourgrandmother rubbing me ana ponringhartshorn and vinegar up my nose tobring me to. She didn't ask me whathad happened—there war no need—andshe was glad enough for Grershom's sake.I sat and studied over the matter after Icame to myself. She is a witch, I thought—she is a witch, or she never oould havedone it. And then I remembered acharm that your grandmother told meMrs. Durkee had tried for her afflictedbaby, and I determined to make a cakeof Will's hair and barn it, and me whatwoald happen then to him and Byeie. Islipped into the pantry and got somefi6ur, and then went over to the schoolhonse, so that your grandmotherwouldn't suspect what I was doing, andmade a fire in the little fire-place there.I remember that when I picked up thechips the sky looked threatening. Therewas a great blaok okmd Mat looked liko.a hurricane bundling up ia the north-west. It was lined with a flulphar-ooior,and reminded me, in its shape, o* oldWitch Hazel grown to a giantess. Ilocked the sob.ool-b.onse ao6r, Hid tookWill's hair from the desk, and kneadedit into my cake. Then I made my fire,and when there was a good bed of coalsI sat the cake right in the middle of it.It had grown quite dark by this time,and just as I sat down the cake thereeame an awful flash of lightning that litup the whole country roand, and at thesame instant such a tremendous roar ofthunder that it seemed as if the wholeworld had exploded. The light did notdie out at once, bat lingered in theschool room quite a while, and a ball offire seemed to be dancing over the desks.With the darkness that followed, tilerain came down in one solid sheet Ioould hear the river rowing behind, andthe trees crahi it b k

told j and I can spend the nights here.' Andh 4 r

e i ^ b e d i 4 footing it baok and forwardoa'i didnnit s 1 •htyx «ft

; but when spring eame, and thelc?t broke up, and Will Dlrby oaWdownwith his first float of logs, I was all right

house at midnight, and thego by I'll whinny.' Well, <mother declared that that"

ir pulled me throngh, but it wan the sight11 of Will's face that pnt the flnishinff

your grand- j touoh to the bnsiiface that put the finishing

the clock struck . , .is howling like one possessed,sn pretty soon there came the sound, | to ride, andipperty-clap, of hoofs cantering on the | suaded mcnpike, and in a minute after there j go. Whi

waa a strange, human-like whinny at the j sittingite that made her ver- »-i—^ — —1J ' " —

grandmother

very night, | not quite himself that spring. When, she heard | he came to the house I wail not at homesesaed, and | for Gershom had come to take me oat

1 i your grandmother had per-that it would do me good tot I came back, there he

- • : o — *he door gt^p piaynj« -^nvery blood run cold. Rsx. He didn't say a^ythi/g, buTlg p ill e

idnight, telling many stories of thissort, and they made a great impression

my mind. At nooning next day, too,3 school-children were full of them.ie of the Durkee boys said that his

mother had taken quite a fancy to Dyoie" il, and had had her bound out to

the orchard roll o _ . „herself as round as a cartwheel, with herfingers just tonohing her toes, There isnothing can make her mad but to call

er Witch Hazel; if yon do that, sheill froth at the mouth, and Bhe willhase you like a dog till yon cross run

ning water.' Then one of the Taft ehildren spoke up: 'My father was going ahunting, and he met old Witch Hazel i]his path. "You won't shoot nothing,1says she. But he went, all the sameBy-and-by he saw a fat doe a couple ofrods off, and he fired at her. She ran alittle way, and then sat down and lookedat him. He fired again ; and took very

tef ul aim; but she never stirred. Then.. oame over him that this wasn't anykind of game, and he remembered that

heard tell if you fire a walnut plu_. _ witoh, it is the only thing that wiLhurt them. So he out a sprout, and whit-tled one end sharp, and put it in hia gun,and fired, and the creature gave a cry,and leaped into the bushes, and he.ouldn't find hide nor hair of her. But.phen he got home the first news heheard was that old Mrs, Hazel had fallendown stairs and broke her arm." Afterhe had finished his yarn, Molly Gaswellhad one to tell. Mrs. Hazel had beento their house, and wanted to borrowher father's horse to ride to Northfield,but her father wouldn't lend it. Thatvery afternoon a bumble bee stung thihorse in the pasture, making him throi.himself and break his leg, and her fatherbad to kill him to p,nt him ont of misery.When he oame home, there was WitohHazel standing by his gate. She gavehim a wioked look, and said, 'That wr~

• "" " into lend yoiHe always be-

lieved that Mrs. Hazel had changed her-self into that bumble bee, and stnng thehorse out of spite.

rou can imagine that after hearingtese stories I must have thought[ had come to live in rather a poker-lace. I confess my heart did failand I don't know but I wouldgiven up the school and have gone

if it hadn't been for Will Darby. Heand I had been engaged for a long time,

" Will was working on the river float-logs down in the rafting season,

enever he went by he pat up atDurkee's tavern, and would come up

It was my only really hap-;hout the whole summer,'t so desolate as I might

>en, either, for your grandmoth-1" it Gershom used to drive over

span of horses as often asek from Norfehfield Farms and

take me out to whatever was going on inintry round. Qershom wassmd good looking, and he

prided himself, so I've heard, on drii "the handsomest span and having theprettiest girl to sit beside him in all thecountry round. Will Darby was as pooras most young lumbermen, and ratherof a jealous disposition, but my heartwas just set on him, I could tell bisfigure as far as I oould see it on the river,

py time throughthough I wasn'tlave bei

_ „ nthe slip. graceful, '

„,, logs as carelesslong pole to keeph i flwig n thebalance, his curly hair flowing in the

nd, and a crimson silk han " ' ' 'lotted at his throat under

collar of his gray flunnel shirt."One day I was up on the mountain-

side looking for fringed gentians. T1

was late in the fall, and I rememtthinking I wouldn't go out for flow*

i that season, when just before m„ _ _ jg girl started up. My only thoughtat fifat was that she was unusually hand-

>me, for though meanly dressed in aidigo blue cotton gown, she was s

handsome aa a picture. Her black hai;,and straight as a gypsy's, wasDarse a

notted if h

a careless heavy mass at thel10k of her neck, and gre

>head, shading eyes

mlow

blaok as pokeberries. She held a knifein one hand and a basket in the other,and I saw that she had been searching

lervine and sassafras. We joinedother, and rambled about for an

• longer, talking about herbs andflowers, and I remember that I tookquite a fanoy to her. At last she said,'Your folks will be anxious about you assoon as they learn that I am out here.''Oh no,' says I ; 'I often take long walks

lyself, and Rex here takes good careie.' 'Rex would never hurt me,'

said the girl, trying to pat the dog,pinch slunk olose to my side, 'and per-taps you would be afraid yonrself if you

^new who I am.' 'Who are yon ?' Iasked. 'Some people call me WitohHazel,' she replied.

"Well, I will not say that I was not a-ittle taken aback ; still, she wasn't sofrightful-looking as the old one, and I

3wered up as peart as I eoald, 'Yous Dycie Hazel, who lives at Durkee'srern.''Yes,' she said; 'you'd be glad to live

there yonrself, or in a worse plaoe even,

alia ay. Thei'o brothers, they couldn't stand things,

. _id they went east to work at a maobine-shop. One day mother had a fit, and•hen she oame out of it she said they-ere both dead, but that they would

never be buried. Two day* after, weheard that the boiler had exploded, andthere wasn't enough found of them to

ke a funeraL After that mother tookorse than ever, for the boys.were allsared for in this world. I ran away

toldme afterward that he"asked her if thatsort of thing had been going on all win-ter, and she told him it had, for she waanxious that we should quarrel, and thaI should marry her brother. I didn'think anything of his qneerness untilafterward, I was so glad to see him aaain.I remembered his hair had grown prettylong up there in the woods, and I offeredto out it for him; as he w as going downinto civilized parts. 'All right, Itelilalsays he. After I had cut his hair

* it in a paper, and pnt it in mythe school room. Often and

often, when I was teaching those pester-ung on

he desk and stroke that pa t o j '

for my tasks."Some time after he went away I had

a visit from old man Hazel. He was icurious creature. He said that Dyoibhad told him that I had been kind -toher, and he wanted to thank me for it.'I think Dycie's got the making of agood woman in her.' Til do anythingin my power for her,' I said; and I askedv -~ why he had given her such a strange

e as Dycie. "Sightly its Boadycie,'sajshe; and I knew that he meantBoadicea. He staid and talked quite awhile, and he accused his wife of alltheir misfortune and of all manner ofwickedness, and said that when she diedhe would dance on her grave. Ttyou are willing to help Dycie,' he

eame, andher look id

jnst as he was leaving, 'and you can helpher if you've a mind to. She never hadany learning to speak of, bat she's tooki notion she'd like to come to school thiserm, and Miss Durkee she's given hereave. So if you'll sort of hear her les-ons private, so as not to shame her

before the young ones, it would be agreat favor; for Dyoie's despnt high-sperrited.'

"The next Monday Dyciejeemed to me I'd never seei. „„handsome. The bold, hard mannerwhich was the only thing about her thatI did not quite like, was entirely gone,and she was as gentle and modest as anyyouog girl oould be. She did not make

raoh progress with her studies, thoughhe tried very hard to do so. She learned) write her name, and to read in a slow,tambling fashion; that was all One

day she brought some rye straw toschool, and braided it at recess. I sawthat she was making herself a hat, andwas surprised ; for she generally went asbareheaded as an Indian. She finishedit in a short time, and then took a littleramble in the woods, saying with a laugh,that she was going to the milliner's tobuy some artificials. She oame backwith the hat wreathed with dogwoodberries. It was very pretty, bnt Iscreamed right out, 'Why, Dyoie, ohild,you will be poisoned ! !othing canpoison me,' she replied; and looald nothelp noticing how sweet and lady-likeshe looked, so different from her oldself. 'What has come over you, Dycie ?'I asked 'You l o o k ' ' J t likself. WI asked.

h

, Dycie ?'Just likek

o k J u s tother people, don't I? ' she asked.hope you will think so.' And then.

had made the change.the river, just as I

had, only hers was of higher birth thanshe, and all her new resolves to study andmake something of herself was born ofher desire to please him. There waa

ithing touching in it that drew meir to her. It was about this time

that in her reading lesson in the Bibleshe came to the text, 'Unto Him thatloved us and washed us.' She stoppedright there, and looked at me with allher soul in her eyes. Tjhen He loved

3 before we were olean,' she said. 'I' any one could do that bui

if Christboy ; but if 'all love Him.. . . .i your lover,' I saiu, -jrciu »x>lake yourself lovely—' She

too.' 'And because youe tryii

. . —„ did n<_.let me finish : 'I will olean myself up forChrist too,* she said.

"I had a great influence over that girl,greater than I ever had over any otherhuman being. I gained it because shethought I believed in her, and I lost itbecause she found oat that I doubtedher. God forgive me, I believe she wasalmost a Christian then.' Aant Wealthypaused in her narrative, and we saw thather keen eyes were dimmed with tears.

"I never meant to wrong her," sheproceeded, "and I do not think shewould have injured me then for theworld; but we eaoh wronged the otherbitterly, and I was the greater sinner.When autumn oame, Will Darby stoppedto see me on his way up the river to thewoods, where he has to spend the winterchopping. He was strangely changed,md I could not understand it, and toldlim so. 'We might as well understand

eaoh other, Wealthy,' he said, 'though Ididn't think I would be the • first tobreak. I expected that when I oamebaok this fall I would find yon marriedto that other fellow, Gershom What's-his-name, and then there would havebeen no need of any explanation.1 Withthat I declared up and down that I hadnever oared a mite for Gershom, and hadsent him about his business long ago,for I loved him better than all the worldbesides. ' I used to feel just that way>boutyou Wealthy,' said he. 'Used tool'jaid I, for my temper was up. 'You arebewitched, Will,' I said, a minute later,for he looked so helpless and miserablethat in my own torment I oould not help--•'-•- T him 'Yes, I'm bewitched,' he

I, 'and yonder is the witch; butnever could have done it if I hado Rare that yon loved me, Wealthy.'

„ »ve one look out of the window, andthere, strolling along the road, with her-hat trimmed with the poison-berries-ringing on her arm, and my Will's

imson handkerchief knotted at herthroat, was Dyoie Hazel. She smiled and

and joined a show. I performed a long waved her hat aa she saw ustime, dressed aa a boy; but father drop- j the window and I doa't

__» crushing oa it•A moment later, and above the sound

of the storm, I heard some one beating»t the school-honse door, and callingwildly to me to let her in. » wag ByrneHaset. I stepped to the door, and wasgoing to undo it, when I rememberedthat thi* was the confirmation of theeharm, and that I must not let her inuntil the cake was burned. It was aproof that ehe had bewitched Will thatshe was there now struggling like a.-wildcreature at the door. I walked to thefire-place; the eake was burning, andthe nauseous fames of the singing hairnearly choked me but I knelt down onthe floor and waited. Dycie left thedoor, and I could hear her at the win-dow ; she could see me in the fire-light,and she pushed against the sash untilshe burst it in, and it fell shivering onthe floor. Then she leaped in afte* it,and springing to the fire, raked theburning cake off of the ooais with herfingers. She thrust it in my face, andlaughed. 'You were trying a charmagainst me,'she ' ' - "^*you out.' Thenof cinders in her hands. 'Yon hare suc-ceeded,' she cried; «it is all burned.What have you done with him 1 Whereis Will Darby ? Then she began to ramand I saw she had lost her senses. I ranacross the way to your grandmother,and we watched her through the frontwindows all that night. The storm con-tinued, and she did not leave the sohool-house. Tlsee her L_._

oould hearh^rffigiggand chattering toherself, until the morning broke, and therain ceased, when she wandered downthe road toward Durkee's tavern. Lateron we saw old Witoh Hazel hurryingdown the road. Your grandmother calledto her, and asked her what-was the mat-ter. She answered that the lightninghad struck the elm that stood in front ofher house, and that it had fallen uponand killed a man who had taken shelter 'under it. Men came up from Durkee'aand carried the dead man away. It wasWill Darby.

"Dyoie never recovered her senses.She went to live with her mother. Atnight passers-by would hear her scream-ing and singing, and her mother swear-ing at her. The old elm lies across theirgateway now just as it fell. Old WitohHazel died at last I went to the grave.There wasn't anything that you oouldcall a funeral; only a few neighbors gath-ered out of ouriosity. After the sextonhad filled in the earth, the old maa, wh»was there from the . . .ie poor-house, took

and led her to theDyoie by the handgrave, and then he folded hisdanced just as straight and as hard as hecould tramp. Dycie did not dance. Sheonly stood and stared Mil she caughtsight of my face; then she ran to me,and said, as mysterious as though it wasa great secret: 'Him that loved us andwashed us.' Then she laughed in a sillyway, and singing,

Is burnt hair caie,'

she staggered away to her home. They .took her away at last, and she ended herdays in the mad-house. No one has liv-ed in the house since.

"I don't know as the charm had any-thing to do with the lighting killingWill Darby. I only know that I'd giveall the money Gerehom left me to knowthat I hadn't a-tried i t "

Aunt Wealthy ceased speaking; andbat night, as I drove homeward alonghe banks of the brawling Miller Biver,

and saw the moonlight stream throughthe vacant windows of the hauntedhouse, I oould almost fancy that thestricken elm at the gate was the crook-ed and malevolent form of that original^Witch Hazel. ^ * ® s ;

Where the Drains Come From.GranviUe Corners ia situated abont

two miles north of the Connecticut line.A large mill stream, runs through theplace (a branch of the Westfield river),furnishes a number of privileges, mostof whioh are utilised. Messrs. Noble &Cooley are by far the largest manufac-turers in the plaoe. They say that inDecember, 1863, they first made a drumin Mr. Noble's kitchen, from a boardfound in a barn; steamed it with a tea-kettle, and used two hog's bladders forthe headB. Next day they made a dozendrums and sent them away in a bootbox. They * ' ' " " '~feet, with fiiwater. They have made and sold 75,-000 drums. These were made of wood.tin, brass and nickel. They used forthe heads of all these drums 30,000sheep skins, which eame from Liver-

Halted>f your readers

pool, of the kind kmfleshes. Let none of .._....._.„.wonder where all the toy drums aremade hereafter. This firm also made400 gross of toy pistols, 23,000 boxestenpins, 700 gross rolling hoops, and42,000 boxes of wooden toothpioks.—Hartford Times.

Humorous.—The ice-dealer's little venture: "You

may talk about fine buildings, but it'athe ice-house that takes the oake."

—Orange county, Ma., has 8,000. peo-ple and only three panpers. They alltake winter boarders out there.— Boston-'oat.

—The horse thief may have his wash-ing done at home, but the sheriffgenerally does his ironing.—Glasgowlima.

—"Generous to a fault," may be saidof many men. At least they are

—A burglar got into the house of aountry editor the other night Afterterrible struggle the editor succeededi robbing him.—The fatherly Lowell Courier reminds

penuriouB young men who go off sleigh-riding alone, that there is a law againstsleighing without bells.

—Tutor in Mechanics—"If a bodymeet a body—" Sophomore [in an under-tone, Mechanic-ally] "Coming throughthe rye,"— YaXe Beoord.

—I'm aa astonished ghost! I didn'tknow before that my boy was a girl.[Phantom of Hamlet's father on seeingthe Diokiaflon.1—CouHer-JournaL

—A method has been discovered re-cently by which goqdjjfalking- shoes canbe made from leaffletT This will have atendency to relieve the great strain onthe pasteboard market.—Hatokeye.

—"But I pass," said a minister recent-ly in dismissing one theme of hia subjectto take up another. "Then I make Itspades," yelled a man from the gallery,,who was dreaming the happy hoursaway in an imaginary game of euohre.It is needless to say that he went out onthe next deal, assisted by one of thedeacons.