VOL. IIV. PROFESSIONAL CARDS OF BELLEFO N TE- C. T. Alexander. U. M. Rower. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFO NTS, PA. Office In Garm&n's new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BKLLRFONTK, PA. Office on Allegheny Street. QLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BKLLRFONTK, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond. Y° CUM & HASTINGS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLKFONTE, PA High Street, opposite First National Bank. C. HEINLE, ATTORNEY AT LA W. BKLLEFONTK, PA. Practices in all the courts of centre County. Spec id attention to Collections. Consultations in German or English. F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BKLLEPONTK, PA. All business promptly attended to. CoUection of claims a speciality. J. A. Beaver. J. W. Gephart. JGEAVEK GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLKFONTK, PA. Office on AUeghany Street, North of High. A. MORRISON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. PA. Office on Woodrlng's Block, Opposite Court House. * .g * * JQ S.KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. Consultations In English or German. Office in Lyon'a Building, Allegheny Street. JOHN G. LOYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. &' Office in the rooms formerly ocetipied by the late w. P. Wilson. BUSINESS GIRDS OF HILLREUF, AC. "'.i ■ ■ i p A. STUBGIS, DEALER IM Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Ac. Re pairing neaMy and promptly done and war ranted. Main street, opposite Bank.^MlUhetm, ro- T SA jj j A O DEINIXGER, * NOTARY PUBLIC. SCRIBNBB AND CONVEYANCER, MILLHEIM, PA. All huslness entrusted to him. such' as writing and acknowledging Deeds, Mortgages, Releases. Ac., will be executed with neatness and dis patch. Office on Main Street. TT H. TOMLIXSOX, DEALER IN " ALL KINDS OF Groceries. Notions, Drugs." Tobaccos, Cigars, Fine Confectioneries and everything in the line of a first-class Grocery Btore. Country Produce taken In exchange for goods. wain stieet, opposite Bank, Miilhelm. Pa. JAAVID I. BROWN, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN TIN WARE, STOVEPIPES, *., SPOUTIJKG A SPJECIJXTY. Shop on Main Street, two houses east or Bank, MlUhelm, Penna. T EISENHUTII, * JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, MILLHEIM, FA. All business promptly attended t->. collection ol claims a specialty. Office opposite Klsenhuth's Drug Store. II U3BER & SMITH, DEALERS IN Hardware. Stoves, Oils. Paints, Glass, Wall Pa per vCoach Trimmings, and Saddlery Ware, Ac., Ac. Qf p a t en t wheels, corner ot Main and Penn Streets, Miilhelm, Penna. JACOB WOLF, FASHIONABLE TAILOR, MILLHEIM, PA. Cutting a Specialty. . shop next door to Journal Bookstore. jyj-iLLHEIM BANKING CO., MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. A. WALTER, Cashier. DAV. KRAPE, Pres. HARTER, AUCTIONEER, ' REBERSBURG, PA. iatlsractlon Guaranteed. Site iiillleiitt §fnrt>L Lift i a InrJen for every man shoulder, Some may eocape from its troubles and care; Mist; it in youth and 'twill come when we're older, > Aud tit us as close as tire garments we wear. Borrow comes into cur lives uninvited, llobbiug our hearts of their treasures of soug ; Lovers grow cold aud friend*hips are slighted, Yet somehow or other we worry along. Every-day toil is an every day blessing, Though poverty's cottage and cruet we may share ;. Weak is the back on which bur Jens aro press ing. But stout is the heart that is strengthened by prayer. Somehow or other the pathway grows brighter Jut when we mouru there were uoue to be friend ; Hope in the heart makes the burden seem light, r. And somehow or other we get to the eud. The Charlington Hardness. Helen Charlington was as white as the ermine cloak which she had wrapped about her head and face. Perhaps it was the night air that made her shiver; but she faced Doctor Warren Bolton with a deter mination which needed no words 'or its ex pression. "But Helen " "Listen to me. If you cannot come to night, do not come to me again anywhere. It is the eud between us." "Helen, Helen!" Her eyes had not left his face. "Are you going?" she said 9lowly. For an instant he seemed to waver; but only for an instant. "l am goiDg, Helen," he said as slowly ; "if you ever want me I will come back to you." lie doubted afterward if she had even heard the words, so quickly did she turn away from him. He caught the dazzle of the brilliantly lighted room which she en tered, turned his face to the darkness and the cold again, and strode off where duty waited for him. The Charlingtons were called "a hard family," not from any social shortcomings, but on account of their well-known obsti nacy. Seth Charlington was one of the largest manufacturers in Riverford, and in the numerous strikes among its operatives, always held his own against them longer and more successively than any other mill owner. He had discarded his only son for some slight disobedience. Rumor said that his wife, who had died when the boy was born, had gone gladly out of a home in which she had never known happiness. There was but one other child, a daughter, "the image of her every oue agreed, and the impression prevailed in Riverford that she was exactly like him in disposition. A few who knew the facts asserted that she had taken her brother's part with such determination that both of them had been ordered to leave the house never to return to it; Helen being pre vented from doing so only by the refusal of her brother to allow her to sacrifice her self to his interests. That Helen and her father were too much alike to agree was well known, though their lives ran in such different directions that they seldom clashed. Mr. Charlington's time was spent among the looms and spindles of his factory to which he would not wholly trust any overseer. His daughter was a social favor ite. Sne enjoyed a life of singular free dom, and with abundance of money at her command, gathered about her in her father's house whatever friends she pleased to select. Mr. Charlington was glad to see any display which could be made with his money, although too busy in making more to take time for any comfort of his wn. Helen, after her engagement to Doctor Bolton, found herself for the first time in her life in a position where she was occa sionally called upon for some self-sacrifice. For this her previous life had wholly un fitted her. Much as she loved Warren Bolton, the new relation between them had not existed six weeks before they had many stormy times and words. He was a popular young physician, with a large practice among the mill operatives, and Helen, though neither a jealous nor capri cious woman; was exacting and unreason able. She ignored the poverty and wretched ness of the world. That there was a good deal or it she knew in a vague, general sort of way; for Doctor Bolton, he was content to have it so. It been his first instinct to shield her from any thing disagreeable or painful, had she needed such protection. But for himself he reserved the right of ministering to the afflicted, asking no help in his work, but submitting to no interference. His own comfort and convenience he was always ready to sacrifice to her, that of his patients, even the poorest among them— never! and slight as the causes of their quarrels had been, they involved a prin ciple vital to both. The old New England fashion of a Thanksgiving dinner had always been held in the Charlington family, and Helen's in vited guests always made a gala day of what would have been in Seth Cbarling ton's house a very sombre festival. On this particular occasion she had arranged a little different programme. The preced ing summer Mr. Charlington had built a fine cottage on the bluffs by the seaside, five miles south of Riverford, and it was Helen's fancy to invite the guests, who at different times had sojourned there with her, to a Thanksgiving party by the side of the sea. Her father humored what he called one of her many unaccountable whims. The sleighing was fine, the weather perfect, and it would have been hard to find a merrier party than the one assembled at the ocean at that Unaccus tomed season. But Dr. Bolton was absent. Helen had not waited for him. She had received a note from him before they left the city, saying that business detained him, and he should, if possible, drive down to the cottage later in the day. She was terribly annoyed at the disappointment. She had always made Thanksgiving her greatest holiday of the year, and never be fore had anything occurred to mar its pleasure. "Heartless and selfish where I am con cerned," was the feeling with which she crushed in her hand the little note. It was surely too brief and curt to be loverlike, that was true, but Helen refused to con sider under what painful pressure it was probably written. The whole day passed without his ap SOMEHOW OR OTHER. MILLHEIM, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1880. pearance, every hour intensifying Helen's nnger against him. It was nearly ten o'clock iH'fore he entered the house, pale and worn, ami, without removing his over coat, he made his way directly to Mr. Charlington. A few animated words passed between them, evidently disap pointing the doctor, who, crossing the room to Helen, Raid hurriedly. "Come this way one minute. 1 must go directly back to the city." Her tirst impulse was to turn away from him. Her second to make him answer for what she considered nothing less than an insult. She followed h'm without a word to the front door, where he stepped outside so as not to l>e overheard ; but one glance at her face made him realize the useless ness of words. "You must trust me, Helen," he said, "until I can explain," but she would not listen making her own terms. And so they parted. "If you ever want me, 1 will come to you." Over and over she heard the words, and hated herself for hearing them, as she moved, smiling and brilliant, among her guests. Her father was apparently at his ease, but she knew from the led spot on his forehead that something had disturbed him. The Thanksgiving party was a great success. At precisely twelve o'clock the sleighs were brought to the door, and all returned to the city, separating for their several homes with many hearty congratu lations to the host anil hostess. Mr. Charlington s tace was still flushed. Even the drive in the snowy air had not lessened his color. Helen removed her wrappings, and sat dewn facing him. "Doctor Bolton had some news for you, father. What was it ?" lie glowed at her angrily. "Nothing pleasant for you to hear, Helen." "I have heard things before that were not pleasant," was the answer, "and I have a special reason for wanting to know." "Doctor Bolton made a discovery in his visit to-day. Your brother Edgar is in Riverfork Hospital, brought there yester day, he tells me, from New York." At the mention of her brother's name Helen sprang to. her feet. "And you " she gasped. "I am in no way responsible. Edgar took his own course. I told him that if he left the house that night, he need never return to it. For once lie obeyed me." "Father, father! And you can be so cruel! It is Thanksgiving night." "Did you forget that," ne sneered, "when you sent Bolton away with almost the same words. I heard them—acci dentally. Appeal was useless, Helen knew. With out another word she left the room. At six o'clock that morning she was driven to the hospital, and shown to her brother's room. Doctor Bolton had spent the uight there; but that very hour Edgar had passed beyond the need of any human friends. Helen stood rigid by her brother's bedside. "lie is to be brought to my father's house," she said, without looking toward the doctor, who waited silently, aud with out another word she passed him. At the door she hesitated an instant, looking back at the living and the dead, the only two she had ever loved on earth. But Warren Bolton's face was hidden iu his hands, and, crushing the impulse that had moved her, she made her way out into the street. Her father was alone at the breakfast table. "Edgar will be brought home to-day," she said, sharply. "You had your way with him when he was alive, I take mine now he is dead," and she passed on her solitary way up-stairs. The paths of Helen Charlington and Warren Bolton never crossed each other, lie heard of her often as a brilliant mem ber of the society to which she pre-emi nently belonged. She knew nothing of him, as hi 9 work and time were given to a class of the community with which she could have nothing in common. Thanksgiving had never been observed in the family after the day spent at the seashore. Father and daughter passed it separately, and if it was an anniversary for either, it was never spoken of. It was four years afterward that Helen, a few days before the annual holiday, announced her intention of spending it ai the seaside cottage. It was really a delightful month, a prolongation of the Indian summer, but Thanksgiving Day dawned as bleak and cheerless as the heart of the lonely woman by the sea. Toward noon a storm came up, the day wore away in a tempest, which lulled at nightfall. Helen, wrapped in her solitary musings, and watching the roll of the enormous breakers on the beacli, was Interrupted by her maid, "One of the fishermen from the shore would like to speak to you, Miss Charling ton. " He entered as she spoke, an old weather beaten man, evidently in great distress. "It's my boy," he explained, "hurt, my lady. They brought him ashore, and the Riverford doctor has come down to see him, but it's a bit of the brandy that's wanting, lady, and I thought may-be you would have it to give me.'.' % A# the maid left the room to get the needed supply, she asked, "Doctor Bol ton ?'' "Oh, yes, lady, the doctor who is so good to the poor fisher folks. He always comes when we need him, God bless him, though it's little of the mOney he gets from any of us." The old man hurried away with the brandy. A few minutes later a servant was dispatched with an immense basket of provisions, and a note which ran ; "WARREN, you said if I ever wanted you, you would come to me. If there is less hardness in your heart than in our family blood, come and spend Thanksgiv ing evening with "HELEN." It was fully three hours later before Doctor Bolton stepped upon the cottage piazza. It was duty first then, as it. had always been. But a woman met him at the door, eager, impetuous, radiant. With one look into his intense, loving eyes, she threw her arms about him. "Take me back," she cried, "here, in the very spot where 1 was so cruel years ago. I have vented you all the time, Warren." And as he folded her close : to his heart, he realized the love which could conquer the Charlington hardness, was a love worth waiting for, and to both it was indeed a Thanksgiving. French Mcul-MitrkcU uml Uenuturttiitn. The restaurants, hotels, and pastrycooks, shops in Paris, are visited by a special set of inspectors, whose business it is to ascer tain whether the kitchens are clean and the cookiug utensils free from verdigris. The Grand Hotel and Cafe Anglais are amend able to this inspection equally with the meanest eating-houses of the suburbs; and if the inspectors discover any ground of complaint they visit the house day after till the owner mends his manners. Butchers, fishmongers poulterers aud pork-butchers have also a set of inspectors specially ap pointed to watch over them, and many ex cellent laws exist in France for keeping the premises of these tradesmen in a healthy condition. Thus, the butcher's shops must have nothing wooden in their fixtures ex cept the chopping-block. The floor must be covered with enamel tiles, and in place of shutters there must be iron bars, that fresh air may pour into the shop at all hours of the night. No slaughtering is allowed on the premises of butchers of pork, the giant slaughter-houses at La Villette I icing sutticient to meet the requirements of all Paris. Here the cattle and pigs aie brought along the outer lioulevards between ten o'clock at night and nine in the morning, so that there may be no passing of flocks and herds through the city in broad day light: and all the delivery of meat must be effected before ten A. M., in carts having white cloths to cover the quarters of beef and mutton. Bad meat may lie so chop ped up with pepper, spices and garlic that ail tell-tale flavor will be disguised; but the meat must be bad, for the pork butchers so undersell the butchers, that they would ap parently have us believe that halt a pound of veal and a similar quantity of ham can be mixed up with spices and sold as pie, for about three pence cheaper than a pound ot plain veal! I.**t us pass lightly over this delusion. The inspectors can only do their best, and if they discover offal or tainted meat on a pork-butcher's premises they im mediately report the man to the Tribunal de Simple Police, where he is scolded -.nd fined; at the same time bis shop will lie watched for weeks, till perhaps on some dark night a lad will be discovered stealing in with a sackful of dead cats, dogs, and rats, all ready for consignment to those terrible steam mincing machines, which make chopped dog look like hashed beef for you in a trice. Coming now to the pastrycooks, grocers, and bakers, the honest folks have to put up with a great deal of inspection, the gro cers and bakers in connection with their weights, the pastry cooks because of the poisonous coloring matter which they sometimes put into their sweetmeats. Be fore the "liberty of baking" liad been de creed, which was only about a dozen years ago, absurd raids used to be made upon bakers to see if they sold pastry, and past ry cooks were heavily fined if they sold bread. To this day the bakers form a cor poration governed by rather peculiar laws, which compel them to sell common bread in two-pound or four-pound loaves accord ing to the tariff, which never varies in best or worst wheat seasons. A "Caisse de la Boulangerie" indemnifies the bakers for the losses tliey may sustain in time of war or famine; and they repay the fund out of the profits they clear in years of plenty. Thus the gains of the trade lie wholly in the sale of fancy bread, which is not tariff ed, and it was because the profits in this direction were so small that the state ended by reluctantly conceding the principle that no harm would be done if bakers took to oaking cakes and tarts in their ovens. French pastry cooks enjoy the privlegc of selling liquors, wines aud beer without a special license, provided they retail it to customers who are eating on their premis es; but the only ones who seem to make an extensive use of this faculty are the proprietors of two or three big Parisian houses patronized by the English. These sell a great deal of port and sherry. To ccuclude with the inspection of food, an admirable feature in connection with it is the perfect incorruptibility of the agents employed in this work. They are armed 1 with very wide powers; they are poorly paid, and consequently exposed to many temptations; yet the cases in which they have been known to abuse their trust are so rare that they must be regarded as inev itable exceptions to a rule of entire blamc lessness. in the halls where quantities of edibles—and notably fish—are condemned every day, the market women loathe the inspectors, but no one ever ventures to ac cuse these useful public servants of tamp 'ering with their duty, either for fear or favor. Brought to Book. A funny scene occurred at a recent city 'election in New England, which neither political party has appeared anxious to publish. Managers on both sides bad a hand in it, with an axe or two to be ground. It was needful to work in some raw voting material freshly imported, but some of it couldn't read. To overcome this difficulty, and meet the constitutional reading test, a selected passage was agreed upon in ad vance, and drilled in to the applicant. Upon liis appearance before the proper officer "to be made a voice," he promptly read (from memory) the sentence pointed out, and was accepted. Among these candidates was a preterna turally stupid son of the Emerald Isle. In vain he tried to commit to memory the single line from the second amendment to the Constitution of the United States, "The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." A half hour of hard work left him still uncertain, though hopeful, of his ability to repeat the words. Time was up, and he was ushered into the presence of the keen-eyed guardian of the franchise. The preliminary questions were answered with a frankness and accuracy which left nothing to be desired. Then came the cruicial test. "Can you read ?" "Oh, yis, to be sure." "Well, read this."—pointing to the line before mentioned. The Irishman took the book, gazed at it intently, turned It upside down, remarked incidentally that "radin' seemed to come hard this mornin'," scratched his head, looked around in vain for the cue from his "coach," and almost gave up in despair, but finally shouted: "Be gorra, I have it. Ivery man shall be allowed to carry a goon /" Mri. Clruiupcr on Ilaby Sliowa. The other day a lady called on Mr. Grumper's wife, informing the latttr jier son that she (the visitor) was on the com mittee for iuviting babies to the prize baby show, soon to lie given. "No," said the old lady, "I can't do nothing for you, becoz, in the first place, 1 hain't got any baby to begin witli, aud in the second, I don't believe in baby shows." "For reasons herinafter to be express ed, " put in the old man, as he detected a significant glitter in his wife's eyes. "Now," began Mrs. G., "there was that baby show in Milton, when rue and Josiab lived there and Wilberforce was but a tnirtecn months old, and a dear, sweet, un complaiuin' child." "Ah, hura-m!" from Mr. Grumper. • 'The neighbors said he was the finest boy tliat ever sucked paint off a red-colored rattle or cut teeth under disadvantgeous circumstances. He was such a nice, peace ful child, he was; never getting out of hu mor, alius good, seeming like he knew that yelling wouldn't help him through any quicker. The folks down there at Milton got up a baby show, and the first prize was a twenty-five dollar cradle, to be given to the finest baby exhibited inside of three days at the town hail. Josiah knows how I fixed Wilber up and combed his silky locks until the first day of the fair came, aud how when it did come I took him over on an old wheelbarrow. I sigh to think of it—of the lair. When I got there they was about forty brats arranged along the wall in cradles, and in I wheeled, toting Wilber and wheelbarrow up along 'ginst the wall. 1 took him back aud forward the whole three days, and at the end ef the third day the time for prizes was at hand, and I was all of a treuiule. There was five deacons on the judge's committee, and towards evening they all come down to where I was sitting with the wheelbarrow, coming to insfiect my baby, I found. The first one grabbed him by the nose, and when the poorinfunt gasped, the big brute laughed and shuck his finger at the rest. Another one stepped up and says, 'Good woman we must test the physical qualifications of your child;'and then he lifted the poor chihl party near out of the barrow by bis ears. My blood begun to boil, when up came another savin,' '\> e must examine bis plireuologistic capacities.' Then the son of-a-easter-egg began ruppin' bis knuckles about the child's bead, much to the amuse ment of the rest of the committee. I could stand it no more, so rushin' up to the skinny brute I gave him a smart lick in the right eye with one hand and punched his ribs with the other. I treated his associ ates to a siniiliar do9e, and airing my opinions of their individual selves, I trun dled the wheelbarrow out, invoking disas ter to the whole concern. Since which time," the old lady mused, wiping the prespiration from her brow, "I hain't been to no prize baby shows." "Thank heaven 1" said Josiah. "But wliat became of the other babies ?" queried the committee lady, as she arose to go. "Who got the prize ?" "I ain't certain," said the lady, "but I beard they give it to the minister s brat—a yaller-inouthed, frecklefaced, red-beaded little brat. Good day." The Irlali Karl'* Stratagem. The Castle of Mogeely, two miles from Tallow, was a principal seat of the Des mond family. At this castle resided Thomas, the great Earl of Desmond, who had a favorite steward that often took great liberties with his Lord, and, by his permission, tyrannised over the Earl's tenants equally with his master. This steward, unknown to the Earl, gave an in vitation in his Lord's name to a great number of chiefs of Munster, with their followers, to come and spend a month at this castle. The invitation was accepted, and crowds of gentlemen flocked in, to the great surprise of Desmond, who began to be alarmed lest sufficient provisions should not be found for such a number of guests. They had not stayed many days when pro visions in reality began to fail; and at last the Earl's domestics informed him that they could not furnish out a dinner for the next day. The Earl knew not what to do, for liis pride could not brook to let his guests know anything of the matter; be side, liis favorite steward, who used to help him in such difficulties, was absent. At length he thought of a stratagem to *ave liis credit; and inviting all his com] pany to hunt next morning, ordered his servants to set fire to the castle as soon as they were gone, and pretend it was done by accident, The Earl and his company hunted all the forenoon, and from the ris ing grounds he every moment expected with a heavy heart to see Alogeeley in flames. At length, about dinner time, to his great surprise, hi 9 favorite steward ar rived, mounted upon a fresh horse. The Earl threatened him severely for being so long absent at such a juncture. The steward told him be had arrived just in time enough at the castle to prevent hii orders from being executed; and further, that he had brought a large supply of corn and cattle sufficient to subsist him and his company for some months. This news not a little rejoiced the Earl, who re turned with his guests to the Castle, where they found sufficient of every thing they wanted. Bad Fenmanahlp. The first Napoleon had so little mastery over Ins pen that his letters from Germany to Josephine were at first sight taken for rough maps of the seat of war. John W. Brooks, the railroad manager, wrote to a man living on the Michigan Central route, threatening to prosecute him forthwith, un less he removed a barn he had run upon the Company's property. The recipient did not read the letter, for reading it was im possible ; but he made out the signature, and arrived at the conclusion that the man ager had favored him with a free pass along the line. As such he used it for a couple of years, no conductor on the route being able to dispute his reading of the document. 11. W. Beecher can hardly be considered a model scribe, seeing that one ot his daughters owned that her three guid ing rules in copying his manuscript were that if a letter was dotted it was not an i ; and if it was crossed it was not at; and if a word began with a capital it did not com mence a sentence. Horace Greeley's dis charge of a compositor by note, we all re member, was used as a recommendation of character, which brought the bearer honor and position. Theodore Parker, who was about the worst writer hereabouts within the last thirty years, took the premium when at school for the best penmanship. • A Wadding Trip. They seem to have a queer way out west of of treating a man on trip. Some time ago—this according to the reliable local chronicler —a beautiful and timid young girl, in company with a particularly ugly looking man, got aboard a train on an lowa railroad. They attracted the attention of the passengers at once; the girl appeared so uneasy and the man so anxious, that the most dreadful things were easily imagin able. After a while it ocurred to some of the more chivalrous that the ugly man was ruuuing off with this beautiful young girl in away that he had no right to do. So certain were they of this that a meeting was held in the smoking car, and a vigilance committee appointed to see that the ugly man was put off the train and the girl protected, At a very lonely place on the road they proceeded to perform their whole duty. The train was stopped, and while the beautiful young girl went into a swoon the vigilance committee bound and gagged the ugly man and threw him from the train into the swamp. He was left there, while the train went on about its business. In the course of an hour the beautiful young girl came to and asked for "him," and the chairman of the vigilance committee, in the simple language of the prairie, said : tl Cheer up, sissy ; we give him the grand bounce ofTn the rear plat form." The beautiful young girl went into another swoon, but she finally recovered enough ot her senses to tell the impetuous gentlemen who had appointed themselves her protectors that the ugly man was her husband, that he was a Sunday school teacher, and just too sweet for anything. The vigilance committee has retired from the business of rescuing beautiful young girls from ugly-looking men. The Buiband't Commandments. I. lam thy husband, whom thou didst vow to love, honor and obey; for I saved thee from old-maidism and the term of sin gle blessedness. 11. Thou Bhalt not look upan any other man to love or admire him; for lam thy husband, who will visit the sin of the wife upon followers; therefore kep thou faith fully to thy marriage vows. 111. Thou shalt not backbite thy hus band, nor speak lightly of him; neither shalt thou expose his faults to his neigh bors, lest he should punish thy perfidy by a deprivation of sundry items, such as bon nets, dresses, etc. IV. Thou shall purchase cigars for thy husband rather than ribbons for thyself. V. Thou shalt not go to the opera or eve ning parties without thy husband; neither shalt thou dance too frequently with thy "cousin" or thy "husband's" friends. VI. Thou shalt not listen to flattery nor accept trinkets from any man save thy husband. VII. Thou shalt not rifle thy husband's pockets for money when he is asleep; neither shalt thou read any letters thou mayest find therein; for it is his business to look after his own affairs, and thine to let his alone. VIII. Thou shalt conceal nothing from thy husband. IX. Thou shalt not make false repre sentations of the state of the pantry, thy purse or thy wardrobe. X. Remember to rise early in the morn ing and be prepared with becoming good humor to welcome thy husband at the breakfast table. XI. Look for no jewelry from thy hus band on the anniversary of thy wedding, for it is written: "Blessed are those who expect nothing, for they shall not be dis appointed." laming Animals. The ancients apparently knew lilLe of natural science. The Romans domestica ted some animals, and acclimated many more than we have yet done in our day. Rome, in her degenerate days, saw astounding collections of hippopotami, ostriches and giraffes, hundreds of which were let loose into her gigantic arenas, with whole packs of lions and tigers; but the only object of these sanguinary shows was to gratify the brutal appetite for slaughter shared alike by profligate emperors and a degraded people. The only remarkable success' obtained in those days was the skill of the numerous professional tamers, who seem to have done wonders. "They tame the tigers" says a poem of early imperial date, "they soften the rage of the lion, converse with the elephants, and render these unwieldy masses flit for human arts and duties." Nor was their skill confined to dancing apes or talking parrots, to dramatic dogs and acrobatic elephants; they seem actually to have been able to change the nature of the fiercest brutes, for Marc Anthony rode about Rome in a chariot to which two lions were yoked; and Berenice, the Egyptian Queen, had a fav orite lion, wno is reported to have eaten at her table, and to have licked her cheeks. Up to the fourth century it was a regular profession to "make bears, bulls, and lions fit for intercourse with men." A Bird Baby. The phenomenon is a baby, in France, aged six months, named Augustine Lavir, the nape of whose neck has the singular gift of producing an uninterrupted succes sion of feathers. Twenty-three have al ready sprouted, reached maturity and fal len off, to be carefully stored up by the in fant's father, a workingman, whose future may be considered made if the amazing story turns out correct. The manner in which these feathers grow is thus described: A pimple forms on the nape of the neck, quite close to the roots of the hair. At the expiration of a certain time the pimple blossoms into a feather, the child, at the moment when it appears, seeming to ex perience a slight uneasiness. The feather, which is curled and gilded, attains, when fully grown, from ten to twelve centimetres in length, When it falls a few drops of w r hitish color issue from the pimple, which then heals, leaving no trace of its existence for a while until another appears, inclosing the germ of another feather. A curious circumstance, says tne Vigie, is that the feather remains six days on the infant's neck when fully grown before falling, and that its successor takes as many days to sprout as its predecessor to reach maturity. The father of the phenomenal child in tends taking it to Paris within a few days in order to ask science to investigate the cause ol this freak of nature, which, if it really exists, it is certainly one of the strangest heard of recently. —William H. Vanderbilt employs twenty-seven thousand seven hundred and six men. The Bewitched Clock. About half past eleven o'clock on Sun day night, a human leg, enveloped in bine broadcloth, migbt have been seen entering Cephas Barberry's kitchen window. The leg was followed finally by the entire per son of a lively Yankee, attired in his Sun day go-to-meetin' clothes, It was, in short, Joe Mayweed who thus burglariously, in the dead of the night, won his way into the deacon's kitchen. •'Wonder how mnch the old deacon made by orderin' me not to darken his door again ?" soliloquised the young man. "Promised him I wouldn't but didn't say nothin' about winders. Winders is just as good as doors, if there ain't no nails to tear your trowsers onto. Wonder if Sal 'll come down? The critter promised me. I'm afraid to move here, 'cause I might break my shins over somthin' or other, and wake up the old folks. Cold enough to freeze a polar bear here. Oh, here comes Sally!" The beautiful maiden descended with a pleasant smile, a tallow candle, and a box of matches. After receiving a rapturous greeting, she made up a roaring fire in the cooking stove, and the happy couple sat down to enjoy the sweet Interchange of views and hopes. But the course of true love ran no smoother in old Barberry's kitchen than it did elsewhere, and Joe, who was making up his mind to treat him self to a kiss, was startled by the voice of the deacon, her father, shouting from her chamber door: ••Sally, what are you getting up in the middle of the night for ?" "Tell him it's most morning," whispered •'I can't tell a fib," said Sally. •'l'll make it a truth, then," said Joe, and running to the huge old-fashioned clock that stood in the corner, he set it at five. •'Look at that clock and tell me what time it is," cried the old gentleman up stairs. "It's five by the clock," answered Sally, and corroborating the words the clock struck five. The lovers sat down again and resumed the conversation. Suddenly the staircase began to creak. * 'Good gracious! It's father!" "The deacon, by thunder!" cried Joe. "Hide me, Sal I" "Where can I hide you ?" cried the dis tracted girl. "Oh, I know," said he, "111 squeeze into the clock-case." And without another word, he concealed himself in the case and drew the door be hind him. The deacon was dressed, and sitting himself down by the cooking stove, pulled out his pipe, and lighted it,and commenced smoking very deliberately and calmly. "Five o'clock, eh?" said he. "Well, I shall have time to smoke' three or four pipes, then I*ll go and feed the critters." "Hadn't you better go and feed tne crit ters first, sir, and smoke afterwards," sug gested the dutiful Sally. "No, smokin' clears my head and wakes me up," answered the deacon, who seemed not a whit disposed to hurry his enjoyment. Bur-r-r-r—whiz-z—ding—ding! went the clock. "Tormenting lightning!" cried the dea con, starting up and dropping his pipe on the stove. "What in creation's that ?" "It's only the clock striking five," said Sally tremulously. Whiz! ding! ding! ding! went the old clock furiously. "Powers of mercy I "cried the old dea con. "Striking five! It's struck a hun dred already." "Deacon Barberry 1" cried the deacon's better half, who had hastily robed herself, and now came plunging down the staircase in the wildest state of alarm. "What is the matter with the clock ?" "Goodness only knows," replied the old man. "It's been in the family these hun dred years and never did I know it to carry on so before." . Whiz! bang! bang! bang! went the clock "It 'll burst itself!" cried the old lady, shedding a flood of tears, "and there won't be nothing left of it." "It's bewitched," said the deacon, who retained a leaven of New England supersti tion in his nature. "Anyhow," he said, after a pause advancing resolutely toward the clock. "I'll see what's got into it I" "Oh, don't," cried the daughter affec tionately seizing one of his coat tails, while his faithful wife clung to the other. "Don't chorused both the women to gether. "Let go my raiment I" shouted the dea con, "I ain't afraid of the powers of dark ness." But the women would not let go, so the deacon slipped off his coat and while, from the sudden cessation of resistance, they fell heavily to the fioor, he darted forward and laid his hand on the door of the clock-case. But no human power could open it. Joe was holding it inside with a death grasp. The deacon began to be dreadfully fright ened. He gave one more tug. An un earthly yell as of a fiend in distress came from the inside, and then the clock case pitched headforemost on the floor, smashed its face and wrecked its proportions. The current of air extinguished the light —the deacon, the old lady and Sally fled up-stairs, and Joe Mayweed extricating himself from the clock, effected his retreat in the same way that be had entered. The next day all Appletown was alive with the story of how Deacon Barberry's clock had been bewitched; and though many believed its version, some, and especially Joe Mayweed, affected to discredit the whole affair, hinting that the deacon had been trying the experiment of tasting frozen cider, and that the vagaries of the clook case existed only in his distempered imagi nation. _ _ Bed Hot Item*. Colonel Bagahot, of the Chodunk, Pa. t Union, recently left his paper in the hands of an assistant, while he took a trip to the city. On his return the Colonel found the whole town with a big club in hand, in waiting at the depot. The assistant, ac cording to the voracious Lock Haven Journal , had inserted several "red-hot" items, of which the following are speci mens: "Religious Intelligence.—That whited-sepulchre, Deacon Marsh, was no ticed last Saturday night, trying to open the coal hole in front of his residence with his night key. The deacon was as full as a goat, and couldn't tell moonshine from green cheese." "Military Jottings.— Major Biim, that tattered old beggar, who hid in an oyster barrel during the battle of Bull Run, wears a wi£ He ought to be shot in the back with a baked apple." NO. 28.