.MlESBEiMCjlili;. ; '-' . i ". ,1 t it" 1 ' ' ' win i " 1 ' 11 i i. s JAS. O. NUTTY, Publisher. dvotD to tdk gekkeal intiejsts or citDWiLL, watadqa, asbk ajcd adjackkt coram., TERMS : 81.50 per Aanumi:fe VOL. II. LENOIR, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1870. NO. 4. i TWICS ASLKP. BY IOOMB I. HALL. A child Ilea aleeplqg In oalm repose, As sweet and fair m a dewy roaa ; Her little whlta hand are laid at rent Over her gentle hearing breaat Sunny imllea on her red llpa play Linger a moment, then pass away. Forme and faoea of earth and air Flit through her mind while ehe there. alambera Amid the mlaty and mellow skies. Their white wlnga dazale her dreaming eyes, Until ehe awakene in mute dlamay While her fleeting fanolee fade away. She aleepe again In her laet repoee, Hhe Uee like a withered and faded rose. Over her forehead, pale and fair. Ripple her treeeea of golden hair ; Her little white hauda are laid at reet Over her tranquil and Ufeleea breaat Her voloe la silent, and oome what may, No smile will gladden her lipe of day. For the happy dreama ehe dreamed are through ; How sweet to hope that they all oame true. A Second Wife. White and silent, In the centre of the darksome room, lay the source of all the darkness, the sobs, th j black veils. "She looks peaceful, doesn't she?" murmured an aunt to a sister who was dropping bitter tears. "At last! at last!" The words sounded as If they were ground between closed teeth. Mr. Mairnmie stonned beside the colli n : . oa " ' he was taking a last look at the face that had smiled at him through a bridal veil, fifteen years before. "See how moved he looks I" whispered Mrs. Brown to her daughter. "'Ah! she was a high-strung creature not Just the one to make a man happy yet how attentive and polite he was to her I There Is not a better man in Rosevllle "It seems as though he could not get away from that coffin," remarked Mrs Prism to Miss Prune. "Oh! she was i high tempered girl ! But they seemed to get on well of late years. lie always irot her everything she wanted. What a fine looking man he Is !" Just then occurred a sudden move ment. "It Is that sister of Mrs. Ma- gogue, Julia More. She came near fainting; her aunt took her out;" the mourning crowd explained to each other. Outside : on so, dear a minute." "Julia! Julia! don't take Here, here come in here Mrs. More drew her niece Into a conservatory, and dipping her handkerchief Into the tinkling fountain Hhe soothed Julia's temples. She ceased the spasmodic handclenchlngs, but still glared at her aunt out of hot, dry eyes "There, there, cry now, dear; It will do you good," said her aunt, still laving her face. "I can't cry, auuty ; but you did well to bring me out; In another moment I should have sprung; at that hypocrite I should have turned him round to those maudlin women. I should have said 'There is her murderer I There is the man who swindled her out of her prop erty ; who broke her heart and wore out her life!' To hear those women go on about her 'high temper.' My poor darl Ing ! 'Not fit to make him happy !' Ah 1 wish I had the making of him bappy for a little while!" Several maids and widows had thought of the handsome widower which fitted into the Identloal words but not Into the gritty accents used by his slster-ln-law. "Don't, July dear," pleaded Aunt More; "I didn't hear anybody say any such thing; and I hope Margaret was as happy aa most wives. At least, she Is resting now, and perhaps the peace of heaven has already washed away the scars of earth. Do try to compose your self, and let us go baok." They went back, but we need not follow them into that dusky atmos phere, heavy with tuberose and hello trope, the flowers of love and death. A little over a year afterward, Mr Burt Magogue might have been seen bidding a reverent good night to cherflb face, at the door of a charming country house. Stepping baok into his carnage, he noticed a friend waiting for the hone oar. "Come with rae, Ross?" "Thanks! you're a good fellow, Ma- gogue." "As the coachman drove back to the city, Mr. Boas remarked : "This opera going la costly business to a poor devil, if the lady lives In the country, especially If It rains; but you are not a poor devil." Magogue laughed; "I don't oare what I spend in the campaign, so I oome out vlotor." "Then you have begun a campaign In earnest, have y6u ?" "You're right" 'Dear me I Which one is the be sieged? MJsi Ermlnla? She has fine, dark gray eyes like like your wife." "I know. It U net Miss Ermlnla." "Miss Helen? Hhe la an accom plished, handsome girl." "Too accomplished ; she has too many opinions of her own. I've had enough of that." "You want an echo?" "Well, If you like to put it so, I do want an echo. I want a little, artless, affectionate, docile, clinging sort of wo man. I am going In for Miss Effle." "Miss Elite! Why, she's hardly out of school." "Hardly. I know what I want." "She would scarcely be much of a companion." "I don't want a companion." "But she is a dear little thing to pet- sweet, timid eyes, quivering Hps you can't speak te her but the color rises in her face. What flossy, flaxen curls she has? On the whole, why don't you get a Skye terrier?" "I know whaj I want," repeated Ma gogue, a dark smile on his fine features. Presently a new engagement enliv ened the Rosevllle tea table. "So soon?" sighed Miss Prune. "Soon?" echoed her brother, "why, his wife has been dead a year: she wouldn't be any more dead If he waited three." "So childish I" said Mrs. Prism. "That's Just what he wants," said Mr. Prism, "a sweet, little, clinging, docile thing." "An echo?" "Yes, an echo. I guess he had enough of Independent opinion In his first wife, if the truth were known." So handsome he Is, fascinating and so rich," said Mrs. Shrimps. "It Is a fine thing for Effle Keene, youngest of the three-" Ills first wife had a good deal of money," said Mr. Shrimps. "I've heard say that he kept her pretty short, though." Of her own money?" asked Mrs Shrimps. "My dear, after she married him It was her husband's money. I think she waa inclined to be extravagant. A high spirited, self-willed thing she was as Margaret More. I don't think they were very congenial; and I am afraid this Is not going to be any better a sweet, pretty, babyish thing and prob ably spoilt." Julia More saw her brother-in-law one day. Ho waa In a jeweler's store, gently fitting a gold ring upon an olttn finger. All Julia knew of her sister's unhappiuess she knew by a blind, cer tain Instinct; the scene before her caused an Intolerable pang of reminis cence. Then she glanced again at the slight littlo figure, the sweet-eyed, cherub face, and the tall, dark form Impending over them. Pity devoured her heart. "Poor child! poor child!" And old nurse, who had reared all the Keene children, watched the pair sauntering up the steps that night. 'Lh ! a fine handsome man he Is, and how sweet to her! But he'd better have taken Miss Ermlnla or Miss Helen Poor Mr. Magogue !" But Mr. Magogue had found exactly what he wanted at last. When he tried to explain to her that Tllden, preslden tlal candidate, had never been mixed up with Mr. Beocher's affairs, but was "the man who, more than any other man In the country, represents" how sweetly she shook her flaxen curls ! "I'on i try to put an mat into my poor nine neau. rvnicn man are you for?" "Tllden." "Then I'm for Tilden." This was delightful to a man who re membered seeing his first wife, when an erratic child, weeping passionately because Buchanan was elected Instead of Fremont. Mr.Magogue considered It unfemlnin for women to Interest themselves 1 politics. To be sure the fair child Francis Walslngham, first attracted her knightly lover by her Intense Interest In a certain phase of politics. But then her lover waa not Burt Magogue, bu Philip Sydney. Mr. Magogue and Miss Efile Keene were to be married in the spring. Sweet Effle could scarcely make up her mind to leave the country where she had been reared, where all her friends lived, and go to live In the city, which suited Mr. Magogue's business. "We will go away on our tour, my pet," said Magogue, at one of their last partings under the stars. "When we come baok you can make up your mind.' The smile that adorned his features after his back was turned was not one which his bride elect would have recog nized. Her predecessor knew It well. On the tour she was all sweetness, gaiety and grace. Coming back they stopped at her father's. The next morning Mr. Magogue addressed Effle : "Dearest, you know I would like to consult your wishes in this aa in every thing but my business requires that we should live in the city." "Does it truly, dear f" rolling up her sky-blue eyea; but how bad that Is, for you know my health will not stand the city." Mr, Magogue's brow darkened. "You know," said his bride, sinking upon a cushion, rolling her flossy head upon his knee, "how I would love to live In the city, so as to suit you, but you see I should die there. You don't want me to die, do you? 80, if you really can't live in the country, I shall have to stay at papa's, shall I not? But you'll come out and see me, won't you." And she rolled up the long-lashed eyes. He was angry, baffled, bamboozled, but he stooped and kissed her. He hired a pretty house In the country. As to living at her father's not for him ! How could ho be master in his own house, there? But he was not quite satisfied. He had a vague sense that he was not hav ing his own way; he scarcely knew why. To his first wife he had handed out her own money discreetly; from her he had required a strict account of every cent. But this was such a child ish creature! He would teach her, though, in time; there was no doubt of that. Was that she in that jeweler's shop? Impossible! But It was his Effle, and the Jeweler was just handing her a box. She caught sight of her husband's ex cited eyes; Bhe skipped toward him at the door. "0, look here, dear!" She held him the open box ; on the white satin sparkled a cross of alternat ing sapphire and diamond. Effle ! I told you I could not afford that!" Oh, don't look at me like that!" she pleaded, shrinking, rolling up her lips. "I know you said you could not afford it; so I borrowed the money of cousin Charles ; he said he would as soon lend It to me as not. For these sapphires, I must have them; they just match my eyes; they belong to me; see?" With such a smile. But Magogue could have kicked him self for smiling back at her as he did; but what was he do with such a child? Thinking It over, he began to see that he was belug cajoled; he, Burt Ma gogue. He must put a stop to this; It was time he came out In a new charac ter, or men would call him doting. "Cousin Charles," indeed I Where was he drifting? A day or two afterward Mr. Magogue was riding home in an unpromising humor. Some of that first wife's money, very wisely Invested, he thought, had just sunk out of sight and reach. To is annoyed him. He was a man who needed a good deal of money. Nene of your goody-goody, two cent fellows was he. The the long, dull, country ride annoyed him. What a fool he had been to give in to her about living In the country. "She must have a lesson," he said, shading his head, grasping his whip, and touching up his gray horse. Another turn brought him round into the broad elm-arched avenue that led to his door. Arriving there, what does he see? A groom with two horses; one beau tiful, snow-white, bearing a lady's new saddle. Burt Magogue sprang up the steps; he crossed the piazza at a stride, the hall at another ; he looked In at the ante room door. A lady waa glancing at the long mirror; a petite lady, smiling at the petite double In navy blue riding habit with silver buttons, navy blue velvet hat with ostrich plume, a flame of geranium at her throat, a silver mounted riding whip In her little hand. "What does all this mean, madam?" shouted the flower of Roseville chivalry. She turned round bowed, walked up to him : "What did you say to me, sir?" she asked graciously. "I asked, what you mean by this?" She laughed a silvery laugh. "Oh! Why it means that I am going out to ride. I like riding. Cousin Charles went with mo yesterday to look at a horse. He says he Is a splendid fellow, and you see how handsome he Is. The bill for him will come In to-morrow. Don't I look nice, dear?" He clenched the whip still In his hand. "I'll pay no bills for any horse ; that la going back where he came from with the groom. And you, madam walk up stairs, take off that gear, and put on something decent, and then come down to me." She looked up at him, Hps apart, from under the curled, navy blue rim of her riding hat; then clapped her tiny hands and burst Into sweet peals of cherub laughter. "Madam, are you mad ? Do you think you can behave like this? You didn't know my first wife, she's dead." He spoke in an ominous tone that lowered the color in Effle's rounded cheek ; her lips curled back like those of a child when first confronting some strange, unpleasant animal. Burt Magogue went on : "She was a spirited, high-tempered thing, but I brought her down. Would you like to know how I brought her down?" "Yes I should," the answered with that ourlous.fearleasglanoe, just touched with something that might have been dismay bad it not been more like scorn . "HOW did you do It?" "I conquered her with the lash !" Little Eflle shuddered and looked down. Her delicate face was working with horror, with pity for her prede cessor, with terror for the gulf sud denly open at her feet, swarming with the misbegotten wrongs that follow the meeting of irresponsible power and weakness. Or was It only terror for herself, hopeless in the power of her natural protector, lowering over her In his vast superiority of physical strength ? He wished she would look up; these baby faces can be as baffling as the time less brows of 8phynx. At last those golden lashes lifted; the timid eyes rose Op and up, until they met his ; they gave him a disagreeable sensation ; he would revenge It upon her some day though she waa almost too pretty to be crushed. "You dld-dld you ?" She had taken In his remark, It seemed. Then she walked up to him, clenched her fist to the size of a magnolia bud, and fixed him with eyes whose cherub blue was lost In a glitter, like bayonets In the sun. "Well If you ever lay so much as your least finger's weight on me don't you ever shut your eyes again, for the first time I find you asleep I'll cut your throat from ear to ear. So hear me every saint In heaven !" She turned at the door and flung back a laugh : "This is your second wife !" With this "echo" she left him. A horrible sensation clutched Burt Magogue. He fought it as If It were paralysis. What waa it? And what being was this that he had marrried this mocking, spirit-like thing whom ne couia not terrify? He knew all about women yes, the bravestof them : flighty, provoking, but nervous; "na turally subject to fears ;" docile as sheep to one who showed them a little resolu tion. What manner of woman w:is this? He turned quickly at a sound without. There she was mounting that snow-white steed, and there was nothing reassuring In the smile she flashed him ere she whirled off in a nfght-cloud of draperies. Was she some witch sent by Hecate, queen of night and of the dead? Burt Magogue believed Just as much In one religion as he did in another; you see mortal flesh and blood It could not be that had threatened him with Efile Keeno's soft lips, and transfixed him with her liquid eyes. Could It be some Unsleeping ghost arisen, taking posses sion or a sweet familiar shape ! Faugh ! why had he ever read those uncouth horrors of Hoffman and Tieck and Ed gar Poe? Burt Magogue has always defied the supernatural. Can a shadow of It keep him so docile as he Is to his elfin wife? Why, the men growl now and then : "He Is get ting to be the mere echo of his 'echo.' Blaring;. Singing requires of the vocal organs functions very different from those re quired for speaking. Furthermore, a good physical constitution and perfect regularity in the functions of the organ Ism, are of inestimable value to the artist. In the emission of the voice the respiratory movements must be per formed without strain or effort; they must be regulated so as to make the In spiration short and easy, and the expi ration slow and prolonged. There is a struggle between the organs which re tain breath and those which expel it; practice, youth, and good health, are the conditions upon which an adjust ment must be based. In the highly gifted artist the larynx holds its ordi nary position notwithstanding the vari ations of intensity and pitch of the sounds produced. Being implicated in some of the more energetic movements of the tongue, it rises or falls, but to no purpose. The larynx of the singer, while fixed in its position, multiplies its performance; the suppleness of all its parts is a matter of prime impor tance. The vibration of the local lips and the resonance of the vestibule de termine the timbre of the glottic sounds, the configuration of the pharynx of the buccal cavity, by modifying the sounds formed in the glottis, produces the tim bre of the voloe. This cannot be altered to any considerable degree by even the most powerful effort of the will. Pro fessors of singing Injure their pupils by prescribing In too absolute a manner the mouth arrangements which they themselves find most serviceable. Each individual must follow Nature, and M. Mandl had good reason for begging singing-masters never to forget this truth. Popular Science Monthly. Feaeatle Partly. All the influence which women en joy In society their right to the exor cise of that maternal care which forms the first and most Indelible species of education! the wholesome restraint which they possess over the passions of mankind; their power of protecting us when young, and cheering us when old depends so entirely upon their per onal purity, and the charm which Its casts around them, that to insinuate a doubt of its real value Is wilfully to re move the broadest oornor-stone on which civil society rests, with all its benefits and all its comforts. viae Life. At the opening of the century the public facilities for anatomy were less than now ; so then robbing the church yard was quite a trade, and an egotist or two did worse they killed people for the small sum a dead body fetched. Well, a male body was brought to a certain surgeon by a man he had often eniployed.and the pair dumped It down on a dissecting table, and then the ven der received bis money and went. The anatomist set to work to open the body; but, In handling it, he fancied the limbs were not so rigid as usual, and he took another look. Yes, the man was dead; no pulsation either. And yet somehow he was not cold about the region of the heart. The surgeon doubted ; he was a hu mane man ; and so, instead of making a fine tranverse cut like that at which the unfortunate author of "ManonLescaut" started out of the trance wlt'u a shriek to die In right earnest, he gave the poor body a chance; applied hartshorn, vine gar and friction, all without success. Still he had his doubts; though, to be frank, I am not clear why, he still doubted. Be that as it may, he called In his as sistant, and they took the body into the yard, turned a high tap on, and dis charged a small but hard hitting column of water on to the patient. No effect was produced but this, which an unscientific eye might have passed over : the skin turned slightly pink lu one or two places under the fall of wa ter. The surgeon thought this a strong proof life was not extinct; but, not to overdo It, wrapped the man In blankets for a tlme,and then drenched him again, letting the water strike him hard on the head and the heart in particular. He followed this treatment up, till at last the man's eyes winked, and then he gasped, and presently he gulped, and bye-and-bye he groaned, and eventually uttered loud and fearful cries as one battling with death. In a word, he came to, and the sur geon put him into a warm bed, and as medicine has its fashions, and bleeding was the panacea of that day, he actually took blood from the poor body. This ought to have sent him back to the place from whence he came the grave to wit ; but somehow It did not; and next day the reviver showed him with pride to several visitors, and prepared an article. Resurrectus was well fed, and, being a pauper, was agreeable to He In that bed forever, and eat the bread of science. But as years rolled on, his preserver got tired of that. However, he had to give him a suit of his owu clothes to get rid of him. Did I say years? I must have meant days. He never did get rid of him ; the fel low used to call at Intervals and demand charity, urging that the surgeon had taken him out of a condition in which lie felt neither hunger, thirst nor mise ry, and so waa now bound to supply his natural needs. It is In the country that the soul ex pands and grows great. The town de- veiopes, cultivates and amplifies all the senses, but Its tendency U to contract that incomprehensible impulse of being we call soul. Out where the rugged hills point heavenward with ten thou sand sturdy evergreen figures; where stand the woods in royal majesty; where the brooks dance along and clasp hands with the rivers, and rivers sweep on with unimpeded flow to the bosom of the sea; where the rocks rise like brawny giants, their nakedness covered with mosses, and drink In the sunshine and the rain proudly, disdaining to show how the elements caress them slowly Into dust; where the birds sing their most jubilant songs, and the wild flowers wear their brightest hues; where the bees hum in laiy content from honey cup to honey cup; where nature rules supreme and man becomes a pigmy-there the true soul, unabashed arid undismayed, aspires to compass all the profound mysteries of creation and reads eloquent lessons in everything. Where villages dot the hill-sides and nestle in the valleys; where the throb bing clangor of the church bell is the loudest sound heard ; where the fields teem with homely promise of the com ing harvest, and the voices of men are drowned in the prattle of nature there are magnificent souls hidden beneath the humblest exteriors. The hand that holds the plow and scatters the seed may be hard and brown, but there is a whole heart in its grasp; the face that has been snowed upon and rained upon and blown upon, ia neither marred nor scarred, but grave and gentle ; it shows in every lineament how ennobling is close communion with nature. The eye that sees the first tiny hud on the trees, the first blade of pale green grass, the first frail blossom of the woods, watches the covert approaches of spring with a glow and lustre that we do not often see la the dissipated town. A desire to say things which no one ever said makes gome people say tilings which nobody ought to say. FOOD rOR THOUGHT. Domestic magazines Wives who blow up their husbands. If knee-breeches come in fashion the biggest calf will look the best. Courage consists not in blindly over looking danger, but in seeing ft, and conquering it. It Is every man's duty to shake car pets the word "shake" to be used in its popular sense. , Why is a horse the most miserable of animals? Because his thoughts are always on the rack. The amount of water dally consumed in London Is 113,800,000 gallons, or 41, 637,000,000 gallons a year. A tourist, who was asked in-what part of Swlzerland he felt the heat most, replied, "When he was going to Berne." "I'm saddest when I sing" exclaimed a Sunday evening warbler. "And so is the neighborhood," aighed a voloe from the street. We are very apt to ask of God what we are unwilling to give to our neigh- bora mercy. If we were really for- ven only as we forgive we should ave a hard time. Spilklns says that all the perils and horrors of a maelstrom aren't a circum stance to the horrors of hearing a fe- ' male storm on the piano, next door, from morning till night. Albert Smith's literary signature "A, S.," was onoe shown to Douglas Jer rold.at which the wit remarked, "Ah I '' that's a fellow who never tells more than two-thirds of the truth." An Irish guide told Dr. James John son, who wished for a reason why -Echo was always in the feminine gender, that "maybe it was because she always had the last word." . , The Hamilton rubber company of Milham, a suburb of Trenton, N. J., has failed. The liabilities are about 160,000, and the at sets are variously es timated from 130,000 to $50,000. One of the most important recent en actments in Massachusetts was that of the Legislature or 1874-75 requiring, towns and cities to cancel their debts within a period of thirty years. She was very particular, and when the dealer informed her that all his toe was gathered winter before last, ehe wouldn't give him her order. She said he couldn't palm off his stale Ice on to her. The past Is disclosed, the future con cealed in doubt. And yet human nature ia heedless of the past, and fearful of the future regarding not the science and experience that past ages have un veiled. Would a man frequently calculate his income and expenditure, he would escape many a bitter reflection ; for he must be lost to every generotta feeling of pride and honorable principle who wantonly incurs debts which he can not discharge. Dr. J. R. Nichols, of Haverhill Mass. has offered to give the town of Merri mack, in the same state, one thousand books as the nucleus of a public library the only condition being that the town shall form a Library Association in ac cordance with the laws of Massachu setts. Condemn no man, says John Wesley, for not thinking aa you think. Let every man use his own judgment since every man must give an aocoiut of himself to God. Abhor every approach in any kind or degree, to the spirit of persecution. If you can neither reason or persuade a man into the truth never attempt to force him into it. If love. will not compel him to come, leave him to God the Judge of all. Jean Paul said : "Play is the child's first poetry." It was a wise and poetic saying of a poet. But Froebel, the kiudergartner, was not a poet hut a school-master and a philosopher. He went deeper, and said the supreme word about play when he called it the "first work of childhood." It Is the child's chief business. Use play to serve the ends of education you may, but to do away with it is the unpardon able sin of the prevalent method of teaching. Character. How difficult is the human mind according to the differ ence of place! In our passions, as in our creeds, we are the mere dependants ef geographical situation. Nay, the trifling variation of a single mile will revolutionize the Ideas and torrents of our hearts. The man who is weak. generous, benevolent, and kind in ' the country, enters the scene of contest, and becomes fiery or mean, selfish or stern, lust as If tha virtues were only for solitude, and the vices for a city. Recreation does not mean idleness and it may mean labor. A wise man will so arrange his labors that each succeeding one shall be so totally dif ferent from the last that it snail serve as a recreation for it. Physical exer tion may follow mental, and then give place to it again. A man equally wise in all other hygienlo measures, who could nicely adjust the labors of mind and body in their proportions, might hope to attain old age with all his mental faculties fresh and vigorous to the last. A father may turn his back on hie child; brothers and sisters may become , Inveterate enemies: husbands may de sert their wives, wives their husbands; but a mother's love endures through all. In good repute, in bad repute, In the face of the world's condemnation, a mother still loves on, and still hopes that her child may turn from his -evil ways and repent; still the remembers he Infant smiles, the merry laugh, th joyful shout of his childhood, the open ing promise of hit youth ; and she can . never be brought to think him all ua worthy. Wa$ktgton Irving. ' ' 1