VOL. LV. HARTER, AUCTIONEER, REBERSBURG. PA. J C. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Next Door to JOURNAL Store, MILLHKIH, PA. (Opposite Court House.) H. BROCKERHOFF, Proprietor WM. MCKKKVKR, Manager. Good sample rooms en first ffoon Free bus to and from all trains. Special rates to jurors and witnesses. Strictly First Class. IRVIN HOUSE. (Moat Central Hotel in the CltyJ Corner MAIN and JAY Streets, Lock llaven, Pa. S. WOODS CALWELL, Proprietor. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers on first floor. JJR. D. H. MINGLE, Physician aud Surgeon, MAIN Street, MILLHKIM, Pa. JQR. JOHN F. HARTER, PRACTICAL DENTIST, Office in 2d story of Tomlinson's Gro cery Store, On MAIN Street, MILLHKIM, Pa. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office in G&rm&n's new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street. QLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond. Y° cum & HASTINGS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA. High Street, opposite First National Bank. C - HEINLE, -ATTORNEY AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre County. Special attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English. "^Y ILBUR f - KEEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA. All bus'ness promptly attended to. Collection of claims a speciality. J. A. Beaver. J W. Gephart. -gEAVER & GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High. A. MORRISON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BKLLEFONTE, PA. Office on Woodrlng's Block, Opposite Court Hcuse. g S. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BKLLEFONTE, PA, Consultations In English or German. Office In Lyon's Building, Allegheny Street. JOHN G. LOVE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BKLLEFONTE, PA. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late w. p. Wilson. ADVERTISE IN THE Millheim Journal. RATES ON APPLICATION. lie pilllriii fiitmi BEST OF ALE. The world hath very little It can give To make ua happy ; aud Its precious things What men call precious, and for which Utey live- To a sad heart are worthless offerings. For what are gents and what Is tawuy gold? And rarest spices from sweet Cyprian blooms? And silken fabrics shimmering fold on fold, The costliest products of the They cannot save the soul a single pain, Or to the weary heart bring hope again. What is the flash of wit, the salon's glow? The wine may shine, aud leap aud sparkle up, From marble tables white as purest snow. And brim blood-red ihe gold-incrusted cup; The air may languish tilled with perfume sweet, Ftruscau vases burn with roses red, And velvet carpets sinking 'neatli the feet Give back no echo from the stateliest tread: But human hearts crave something more than this— Splendor alone can never give us bliss. Far more, far more we prize a gentle t inch— The unite caress of lingers on the hair — A kind word spokeu —oh, how very much The little tokens do to lessen care, It matters little If the home be bare Of luxury, ana what the world calls good. If we have only one true spirit there lly whom our better-selves are understood. Whose deepest heart-throbs ure for us aloue. With whom 111 thoughts and wishes we are one. JENNIE'S DISAI'I'OINTMENT. It wits a rainy dismal autumn day, and the big country house where Jennie lived with her parents seemed so unu sually quiet, that a young lady (who was Jennie's cousin, and was staying there on a visit) looked up from her work—she was at work with Jennie's mamma in the drawing-room and said : 44 What can have become of Jennie ? I have not heard "her laugh once all this morning." The mamma said rather sorrowfully that it was one of Jennie's 4 bad days,' She was a dear good child, but a little impetuous aud unreasonable. Her papa had promised to take her for a drive that morning, as he was obliged to go to a neighboring town on business. 44 But of course it was impossible to take the child in the pouring rain," she added, 44 only Jennie cannot see the matter in this light, and feels deeply in jured," 44 1 will go and find her," said the soft featured lady, who looked contented and happy, although certain people had already sometimes called her 44 an old maid." And she hunted the house through, visiting all Jennie's particular huuuts, but there was no Jennie. At last she came upon her, crouched upon a window-seat in one of the corri dors looking miserable and defiant, her lips pouting, her eyes swollen and red. At first she would not speak. But at last the coaxing manner and soothing voice of her good friend melted her somewhat. She detailed her injuries. 44 They delight in promising me things and disappointing me at the last moment. As for papa, he is cruel." 44 1 cannot bear to hear you say that, child." Jennie's cousin seemed transformed. She looked almost angry. Jennie felt a little ashamed. 44 Why not?" she asked. 44 Because I once said the same thing, and was so bitterly punished for it," was the reply. 44 Tell me," asked Jennie, subdued. 44 1 did not mean anything wrong." 44 That is a poor excuse for your hasty words, Jennie. However, I won't preach. My little story will do that." Then she began : 44 When I was a little girl like you, Jennie, I had a very dear father. Ho was a clergyman, and tnougli my love for him did not keep me from being troublesome and disobedient to him, I thought I loved him very dearly indeed. 44 My mother had died when I was a baby, but I had a middle-aged governess, who was good to me, in her prim, dry way. 44 1 had birds, two dogs, a pony, and a most beautiful cat. Children in the neighborhood were often invited to spend the day, aud we were often allowed to roam about the gardens and grounds as we pleased. Then I went to spend the day with them. 44 1 had some cousins, big girls, and when I was but a little older tliau you, a grand party was given in honor of the twenty-first birthday of the eldest one. The latter wrote to my father, and begged that I might be allowed to come, and he consented. These cousins were rich and had a big house in the city. 44 1 was of course very anxious to go and made great preparations hut the day before the one fixed for our departure, I fell violently sick of a cold. 44 Next day I got up a trifle giddy and very hoarse, but determined to persuade them all 1 was quite well. I talked and laughed and made a great show of being very hungry at dinner time. But I did not like the grave look on my father's face. Surely he could not be thinking of forbidding my going to the party! He would not be so cruel! " But my misgiving proved true. He said that on account of my illness I could not go. "You are cruel!" I said, springing away from him and rushing away. "And stubborn and angry, I went to bed, refusing to speak when I was spoken to. And next morning I got up late. I heard my father calling me from below, and wheels on the drive told me the carriage was coming to take him to the station. Then, as I failed to appear, he came up stairs, and knocked at my door. " I made no reply. Miss Jones, com MILLIIEIM, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1881. ing into my room at the moment, said in u low voice, 4 Mary, you ought to he ashamed of yourselt,' then opened the door and said I was dressing and would not he long. 1 heard him take out his watch, and say iu a disappointed tone that he could not wait ; then he said, 4 Good-bye, darling, God bless and keep you, 1 shall soon be back,' so tenderly and sadly, that for Ihe moment my hardness melted—l longed to throw my self in his arms." 44 lint he was gone. 1 saw the earriage drive out of the gate and disappear where the road turns ; then a dreadful sense of desolation eame over me, that I never had, either before or since." 44 The morning seemed as if it would never pass. There were to be no les sons. After dawdling about I went to the window which overlooked the road, and the drive to the front door." 4 4 4 Whatever can these men be doing?' 1 thought, as four or five men 1 knew by sight came in at the gate, slowly, each one seeming to talk without listen ing to the others." 44 1 felt something was wrong. I watched the men till they disappeared behind the hushes; they were going round to the baek door ; then 1 listened and waited." 44 Suddenly I heard a seream—mv heart seemed to stop —then some one rushed in." 44 It was the housemaid looking so white and scared." 44 4 Don't you go down, Miss Mary,' she said, 4 it's only somebody got a fit or something,' but she shivered and wrung her bauds." 44 1 made oue spring and darted down stairs. But nurse caught and drew me aside, I don't know why, but I felt I had lost my father." 44 There had been a serious accident to the train by which lie was traveling. The car he was in had been overturned, and a fellow passenger who knew him saw him taken out from among the ruins lifeless, and had brought the terrible news back with him. I lay like one half dead too on Miss Jones's bed, listening to the cruel tale, and half hoping it was a cruel dream, a nightmare from which I should awake. 44 Then, the storm of sorrow sjH'nt, I was worn out, and fell asleep. "When I awoke, the last rays of sun set were streaming into the room. Some one had drawn up the blinds and the noise had awakened me. Dreamily I listened to a whispering behind the cur tain of my bed. 4 Do you think it would be prudent to*tell her to-night ?' Miss Jones was saying, 4 Certainly !' Then followed a long sentence delivered in a voice I recognized as that of the village doctor. I caught the words 4 joy does uot kill.' Then bv their very mock ery I remembered all. I pushed aside the curtain and cried: 1 Why do you come here to torment me ? Why did you not let me sleep ?' 44 Then I stared in astonishment! Miss Jones, beaming, smiling, kissed me— wildly for her—and said, 4 Mary, com pose yourself, make up your miiul for a great surprise, a great mercy.' 444 He is alive !' I cried, and would have rushed to find him, but they held me lawk." 44 The good Doctor sat down and talked to me, quietly and gravely. It was true that my father was not dead, as had been supposed ; but he had been brought home iu a most critical state, and his recovery depended entirely upon quiet." 44 For mai.y weeks we did not know whether he would live or die. But at last he began to get better, and before winter set in he was being wheeled about the garden, and I was walking by his side, an altered child, because the daily auxiety had taught me more than I had learned during the years I lived in the world; I knew how selfish I had been what a useless life was mine com pared to that precious one I had so lit tle valued, and had so nearly lost. "I have told you this story, dear, as a little warning. I cannot wish you to learn the value of your parents at so great a cost." "I shall not said Jennie wiping her eyes, and nodding her head, "next time, I will indeed think before I speak: I did not really mean what I said, you know." A" 01<1 Acquaintance. Charles Chapman, who was in his day the foremost criihinal lawyer in Con necticut, once so ably defended a man who was charged with the crime of murder, that he got him off with man slaughter, although there was scarcely a doubt of his guilt of the graver offence. A very prominent citizen who was con vinced of the man's guilt was so annoy ed to think that Chapman had saved the fellow's neck from the halter that he re fused to speak to the distinguished ad vocate for a long time after. A number of years later Mr. Chapman's door bell rang,and a visitor was announced. 4 4 Good morning, Mr. Chapman," was the salu tation. 4 4 You have the advantage of me," replied the lawyer; "I do not recognize you." "My name is—. Don't you remember that you got me off for ten years for killing so and so?" 44 Yes I do remember it and I got through with you then and there. I want nothing more to do with you," 44 You needn't be so up pish about it," muttered the fellow. "The way you talked to that jury almost made me believe I didn't do it, and now you've gone back on me;" and he walk ed disconsolately away. The Iron Vli'Kiu. Please do not imagine from my title that I am uhout to relate any thrilling tale that has to do with the so-called "Iron Virgin" of the Middle Ages which crushed a man in its iron embrace as easily as you would crack a uut. No! my heroine belonged to what at the time my story opens was the smull toviu of Springfield, in Massachusetts. When it was, comparatively speaking, in its infancy,there stood on S street, little away from M street, a stove store, and visited its door byway of sign, stood the figure of a girl, made of iron. Ido not know what the connection was between the stoves within and the interesting female, ex cepting the material of which they were both composed; but there she stood, eight feet in her shoes and weighing perhaps 800 pounds. She stood there year iu and year out, one of the notable signposts of the place. The suns of summer la-ut down upon her until heat visibly irradiated in every direction from her. Many a winter's cold had sent a freezing chill through her and had given her a nightcap and epau lettes of snow, and formed icicles on her nose; and yet she had borne all with the most supreme indifference, —kept her place and remained faithfully on her post. If you put yourself in her line of vision she would stare ut you in the most impertinent manner, though to tell the truth, she had not a particle of lu*ass in her composition. She was in a countijr town and in truth she was a rustic object generally. Every summer, however, her owner, "Old Steele" as he was* called, had her scrubbed and polished with stove-polish and she would come forth resplendent. She was ail old friend of the small Imys. Not even their annoying tricks had power to move her—not even the indignity of u putty-ball on her nose. In summer when the sun had made her burning hot, they would entice some green hand to touch her and would shriek with delight to see him jump. In winter when Old Steele was not by, they would i>eg snow balls at her until she broke out into a rash of big, white spots all over her body. But she was cast iu an iron mould. She bore all with the most ironical in difference. One exciting incident, a little while before my story opens, had varied the monotony of her existence. One night some "larkey spirits" (called so, I sup ]Mse, because they rise to early—alnmt 10 o'clock P. M.) some larkey spirits, I say, removed her from her position, and set her at the door of the Union Bindery where a sign gave notice "Girls Want ed." That same night, the "jovial band of ardent spirits" removed two large coffins that acted as signs in front of an undertaker's shop, and placed them by the door of a "Dye-house" much to the amusement of passers-by in the morn ing. "Mr. Steele, the owner of the stove store, was n queer, old fellow, and we boys delighted in playing jokes on him. lam going to tell you of one that we played on him, which was connected with the "iron virgin." Mr. Steele's and we boys Iwmrded at a small hotel, a few blocks off from Mr. Steele's store. One evening, a few days after the "virgin" had been placed in front of the Bindery, we boys felt like some mischief. So we concerted the plan, which I shall unfold to you,in my story. We first sought out the hotel-keeper, a man named Sharpe, full of fun, aud a prime favorite with us boys. We un folded our plan to him and he promised to help us as much as he could. Mr. Stelle was in the parlor warming him self before the fire. We went in and joined in conversation with him; one by one, however, we boys feigned sleepi ness and started off apparently for bed. But before Igo on, I must explain a peculiarity of Steele's. You have seen a piece of seaweed hanging by the side of a wharf at low tide—how dirty it looks and how list lessly it hangs there ? And you have noticed, too, what a change comes over it when the tide comes in—how its color becomes bright and how it is tossed about by the waves? Well, so it was with Mr. Steele. Ordinary subjects stirred him but little, but when politics were touched upon—O, he was all ex citement ! His face shone and his arms gesticulated wildly, as the discussion stirred him up. After we boys had gone out, Sharpe turned the conversa tion to politics, and immediately Steele became very excited, so excited that when I slipped into the room in my stocking-fact and took the key out of his outside pocket, he did not notice it. This I was the easier able to do since he wore a style of coat very common at that time, with very large pockets styled ala prop rid aire. He invariably kept his key in the right pocket—at least I mean two of his keys—his store-key and the key of his room in the hotel. Chuck ling with delight at our success, we hurried down to the store which, as I have already said, stood about four blocks off from the hotel. Having brought our prize, the iron maiden, out from her retirement from beside the stove that glowed dimly in the darkness of the store, we carried her to the hotel, Oh ! but it was a hard pull carrying her. It was bitter cold, and the frost bit our fingers that could not help clasp ing the cold iron from very stiffness, It was fearfully heavy too, for our five pairs of arms, and we hud to stop and rest several times before we arrived at our destination. There a new difficulty presented itself. How were we to got it into Shade's room, for that was what we contemplated. There was no back stuirway, and tin* only one ran in full sight of Steele in the parlor. At last we succeeded in hauling our burden in at the window by the help of Sharpe's well rope which welairrowed. Then af ter snugly tin-king her up in bed,we left her iu quiet, and softly made our way down stairs. We had occupied but a short time ami Mr. Steele had not vat emerged, so h> speak, from his fit of excitement. Af ter replueing the keys in the same man ner by which I had stolen them, we boys dropped casually in one by one so as not to excite suspicion. When all our number were seated around the fire, Sharpe changed the subject by asking Mr. Steele if he hud not had his sign post stolen. Mr. Steele, his late ex citement all vanished carelessly answered "yes." "Ain't you afraid of having it stolen again?" said Sharpe. "No" answered Mr. Steele, "I lock it up every night in the store." "Well!" said Sharpe, "I'd being will ing to bet you she's in your bed now." Steele immediately set up a roar, we boys joining in. "Ho ! ho !" cried he, "that's a good joke!" "Why he continued, taking the keys from his jxx-ket, "here are the keys of the store and of my room. What have you got to say now V Why I'd be willing to treat these boys here to all the eider they wanted out of the that cask you bought recently, if it was so!" And he laughed at the idea. 4 * All right !" said Steele, quietly. "I'll tre -t 'em ut my own exjiense if it is not •o." "All right !"said Steele, still laughing, "the boys are sure of their cider any how !" Upstairs stumped the old man with the cane which he always carried, un locked the door and entered the room. "There !" he cried, pointing to the bed, 4 "nothing there !" He went up and struck it to add force to his words. I never saw a face change as his did. We hid the figure up very cleverly but the clank of the metal when struck betrayed her hiding place. He fell back a step or two with his mouth open. 44 8y JUJH !" he cried, a favorite exclamation of his, 4 "she is here." I wish you could have seen him. It is useless to try and dcscrilie it. A more wonderstruok man was never seen. They say jwople enjoy a thing which they have fairly earned and I can assure you we IH>VS enjoyed that cider and the laugh oil Ml*. Steele. llow h IVoiiiitu Doe* It. Some crusty old curmudgeon thus tells how a woman goes to work to mail a letter. It is a libel ou the sex. Some of the girls will make it red hot for him if he is discovered. Any day when you have time you can see how she does it by dropping into the postoffice. She arrives there with a letter in her hand. It is a sheet of note in a white envelope. She halts in front of the stamp window, opens her mouth to ask for a stamp, but suddenly darts away to see if she has made any errors in the names or dates. It takes her five minutes to make sure of this, and then she balances the letter on her finger, and the awful query arises iu her mind : 4 "Perhaps it is au over weight." She steps to the window and asks the clerk if he has a three-cent stamp, fearing he hasn't. She looks over every compartment in her portrno naie before she finds the change to pay for it. The fun commences as she gets the stamp. She fiddles around to one side, removes her gloves, closely inspects the stamp and hesitates whether to "lick it" or wet her finger. She finally concludes it would not be nice to show her tongue and wets her finger and passes it over envelope. She is so long picking up the stamp that the moisture is absorbed and the stamp slides off the envelope. She tries it twice more with like success, and getting desperate she gives the stamp a "lick" and it sticks. Then comes the sealing of the letter. She wets her fin ger again, but the envelope flies open, and, after three minutes' delay she has pass her tongue along the streak of dried mucilage. She holds the letter a long time to make sure that the envelope is all right, and finally appears at the win dow aud asks : "Three cents is enough, is it?" 44 Yes, ma'am." "This will go out to day?" "Certainly." 44 Wi1l it go to Chicago without the uame of the county on ?" 44 Just the same." 44 What time will it reach there?" "Tomorrow morning." She sighs, turns the letter over and over, and Anally asks : "Shall I drop it into one of those places there?" 44 Yes, ma'am." She walks up iu front of the six orifices, closely scans each oue of them, finally makes a choice and drops—no she doesn't. She stops to see where it will fall, pressing her face against the window until she flattens her nose out of shape, and she doesn't drop it where she intended to. She, how ever, releases it at last, looks down to make sure that it did uot go on the floor, and turns away with a sigh of regret that she didn't take one more look at the superscription, HlrdJe. Everylnidy about the depot knew Chub, the basket-boy, for he was always limping through the rooms cry ing "Apjfles ! Peanuts—Peanuts —bin cents a quart! Apples—two for a penny ! Right this way, Mister, for your fresh baked i>eanuts and ripe red apples !" Where Chub came from, or to whom he belonged, seemed a mystery. He was always at his |x>st, from early morn ing till nine at night. Then he would disapjieur, hut only to return punctually the next day. He wasn't at all communicative, and said little to any one in the way of gen eral conversation. Yet everybody liked him ; his pale face und withered limb were sure to apieal to their sympathies. I used to like him myself, and it always pleased me to see him get a good day's custom. But it's over a year, now, siuce Chub sold apples and peanuts at our depot, and I miss him yet. There is a real lonesome place over in the corner ; here he used to sit and eat his lunch at noon time; it was his favorite seat, and it never seems filled now. I often hear our agent and workmen remark, "It seems kind 'o lonesome not to see Chub around." I rememlier, as if it were but yester day, the lady coming in leading that little witch with a blue silk Ininuet crowning her curls. It was the sweetest baby I ever saw. As she ran al>out the depot laughing and singing, she hap pened to espv Chub limping his rounds. She ran right up to him, and putting out her tiny hand, touched his crutch. "Oh, oo pair 'ame boy," she cooed, "I'se dot a tins for oo." Chub's face fairly glowed with delight as he bent his head to receive the kiss from the rosebud lips. He reached her a handful of peanuts, which she took and placed in her little sack-pocket. 44 1 loves 00, poor 'ame loy," she said, softly, "tause oo was dood to me." 4 'Come here, Birdie," called the lady. 44 N0, mamma, no! I's doing with jK>or 'ame boy," she said, resolutely sticking close to Chub. But the lady eame and took her away, and Chub hobbled into the other room. The lady was busy with her l>ook and didn't notice her child slip out; but I did, and every now and then caught a stray glimpses of the little ligure as she ran up and down the platform. Bv-and-by I heard a whistle. 'Twas the fast mail going up, but it didn't stop. I thought of the baby aud so did her mother. "Birdie," she called, but no 4 Birdie' answered. Just then I glanced out, and there stood the little one iu the silk l)onnet right upon the track. I fairly stopped breathing from terror. The mother rail shrieking forward, "Will no oue save her? will 110 one save her ?" 44 Yes," shouted a voice. I saw Chub limp wildly out and snatch the little form from its perilous position, and throw it on one side just as the train thundered by. The baby saved ; but uiou the track was a crushed and mangled form. They lifted him sadly, and laying him down on one of the seats, went for help. It was too late, for he only opened his eyes once and whispered, "Is she safe ?" They brought her to him but he did not heed. She stroked the still, white face with her tiny hand and cooed in sweet baby fashion as she looked around U]H)U the crowd : 4 'Poor'ame boy done fast seep! done fast seep." About l)'Htli'N Doing*. What mouth most people die in and what they die of is interesting question,an to which the last bulletin of the National B< >ard of Health makes an answer for 1880 based on mean population of 8,100 000 representing the majority of the cities in the United States. The answer is given in tabulated form, with death rate per thousand. Nine diseases are given as the chief causes of death. They are consump tion, acute lung diseases, diphtheria, enteric fever, malerial fevers, scarlet fever, measles, whooping-cough and small-pox. This list follows the order in which the greatest number of deaths occur, aud it must please nervous people to learn that small-pox is the least cause of death. For consumption the highest death rate is 3.32 j)er thousand in December, and acute luug diseases, beginning with Jan to the lowest rate is 2.59 in June. The .uary at 2.32 per thousand; rise regulars- April, then decline regularly to August, with 1.04 deaths per thousand; then again it rises to December, in which the rate is 3.20 per thousand. The highest death rate for diphtheria is 1.49 per thousand in November; the lowest 0.56 in June. Malarial fever is highest in September and October, with 0'65 and 0.58 as the death rate, while naturally it is very low from December to April. Scarlet fever runs unevenly throughout the year; the highest death rate being 0.65 in Decem ber and the lowest 0.33 in July. Whoop ing-cough runs very evenly throughout the year, the highest rate being 0.27 in March and July, and the lowest 0.11 hi December. Small-pox did not rise over 0.10 per thousand except in November and December, when the rates were 0.17 and 0.36 per thousand. The highest death rate from measles was 0.46 in May and the lowest 0.03 in October. From this it appears that above all other lung diseases carried off by far the largest number of persons last year, and that such diseases far beyond any others are the bane of American city life—a fact which has often been maintained before, but not so thoroughly shown as by this black table and chart of th§ National Board of Health, "I Forgot Mina." On Dupont street, not very far from Market, Han Francisco, is the shop of a young German theatrical "shoemaker, who is doing a thriving busines, and who has every reason to be contented with his lot. Among tlie treasures he had brought from the Fatherland on his arrival here, some three years ago, was a pert little bullfinch; whose merry piping —for bullfinches can be taught to whistle almost any tune—kept time to the cordwainer's hammer. A more in telligent and companionable bullfinch never lived, and this one's aptness was the wonder of all Heinrich's customers and neighbors. It was his companion, liis encourager, his "bird of luck," and his only friend. But there is no rose without its thorn, and it was Heinrich's one grief that among all its accomplish ments the bird positively refused to learn the one air dearest to all German hearts. "The Watch on the Rhine." Day after day, and hour after hour, the shoemaker would patiently whistle and hammer out the tune, but without suc cess. Either from inability to master this strain or from some peculiar orni thological perverseuess of its own, the finch remained provokingly mute. Even a day's deprivation of its food did not bend the stubborn little will of the saucy pet, and Heinrich was about giving up in despair when something occurred that engrossed his whole attention. The hearts of shoemakers are not quite so tough as the leather they hammer, and one fell in love. His sweetheart was a pretty and shapely young girl, who was playing minor parts at the Baldwiu, whose gorgeous stage shoes he had made, and whose symmetrical 11 last he had professionally fallen in love with from the first, A month or two rolled by, and as poor people have no time for a long court ships, Heinrich's wedding day came around, and the handsome and hearty young couple were married amid the good wishes of everybody, the bride groom's wedding present being a pair of white satin shoes, whose perfection of workmanship rendered his rivals in the trade ready to wax their own latter ends with envy and despair. The bridal trip lasted just a week, and was quite a journey through fairyland to the simple-minded and obliviously happy couple. As the train that brought them back again to the city entered the depot, however, a sudden change come over the groom's happy face. "What is the matter, man ?" said his wife, terrified at his emotion. "The curses of heaven will follow me for a heartless wretch. / forgot all about Miruz /" It was indeed true. Absorbed by his happiness, and in the hurry of depart ure, he had left the bullfinch locked up in the dark shop with only one day's seed in his cage. Leaving his wife to look after the baggage, Heinrich sprang from the scarcely stopped train and tore through the streets like a madman. He dashed into the corner store where the key had been left, snatched it from its nail and hurried to his door. As he placed the key in the lock his trembling hand refused to turn it; and, sick with dread of what he was about to see, he leaned for a moment against the door frame. Hark ! Faintly from witliin came a weak, quavering chirrup, painfully striv ing to form a familiar tune. It was "The Watch on the Rhine." After exhausting all its repertoire to fetch its cruel master back to its gloomy prison, the little starved thing bethought itself of one last means to bring what it considered its punishment to an end,and strove to whistle the disputed air. But the succor, so pitifully pleaded for, came too late. It gave one little, feathery fiuff of joy as the door opened, and the next moment the master, as he knelt beside the cage, saw, through the tears that wet his cheek, the little head droop slowly over as the song and singer died together. # Colic m Horses. Attacks of colic most frequently are the result of carelessness, and generally may be traced to a horse having drank cold water when heated, or imme diatly after being fed, by being gorged with food after long fasting, or be ing chilled by currents of cold air. Some horses are constitutionally more liable to it than others. The first symp toms are a general fidgetiness accom panied by lifting of the feet very quickly, followed by violent rolling. These symp toms also indicate other disorders, re quiring very different treatment from colic. There are two that distinguish colic from inflammation of the bowels. In the former, the horse will strike his belly violently with feet between the the paroxsms of paiu; but in the latter, though he may lift his feet, he will not strike, and the pain is continuous. Wheu colic symptoms are accompanied by constipation, the first care must be to empty the bowels by "back raking" and injections of warm water. Here, clearly, the stimulating medicines prop er to flatulent colic would be inappropri ate and most likely produce inflamation of the bowels. Flatulent colic is the more frequent and sudden form, requir ing prompt treatment, and perhaps with what may be at hand in a country place. A horse got quickly well after the ad ministration of one-quarter pint of gin, and two ounces of ground ginger mixed with water to fill a soda water bottle, from which it was poured down his throat. Equal parts of whiskey and milk, and from half a pint to a pint at a time has been useful. A veterinary prescription for colic, is: Spirits of tur pentine, four ounces; linseed oil, twelve ounces; laudanum, one and one-quarter ounce, to be mixed, and given every hour until the pain ceases. Bathing the belly with lior water, and friction, are both useful. If a horse is led about quietly, not galloped, as will be done by ignorant grooms, it will aid the action of tlia medicine, and prevent a horse from hurting him self by rolling as he w ill be apt to do, during the paroxysms of pain. NO. 35.