THE HILLHEIM JOlR\ 'L. rUBUSIIED EVERY THURSDAY BY Deininger & Bumiller. Office in the New Journal Building, Tenn St., near Hartman'e foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OR #1.86 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCW. Accepts Correspoiideiice Solicited. Address letters to Millhf.im Journal. NO MOTHER NOW. I have no mother now, That faithful heart is stilled; The voice forever hushed : The lips forever chilled. I have no mother now, " She sleeps beneath the sod ; Her weary heart's at rest; Her spirit is with Hod. I have no mother now: What bitter tears of woe Fall o'er a mother's toinli. No one save orphans know. But He, that Hod of love, Knows all our chef and pain; And soon the loved and lost Will give to us again. T WILL SOON BE DAY. However wild the thunder, However dark the way; Though skies seem rent asunder— ' Keep on, right ou, alway. Though sounds and shapes uncertain. Weird-like, about you play; Hod vet will Hit the curtain- Keep on;'t will soon be day. FATE AND THE FUTURE. I can almost see it yet ; the long winding turnpike road leading up the hill to the school house, dotted on eith er side with white cottages, with fringe of silver maples that formed a sort of arcade, from the town pump in the valley to the tall red house where, year in, year out, with the exception of Sat urday, grim old Mr. Nickelby Glasgow held undisputed sway over an infan tile domaiu which recognized but oue power superior to bis, and that the birch rod, which he wielded alike re gardless of jacket and wearer ; yet he was a good well-meaning soul, this Mr. Nickelby Glasgow, take him before nine o'clock or after four, and I trust he rests well iu the genial shade of the very trees he plundered to facilitate ed ucation. The old school house stands at the head of the bill yet, and the boughs of the silver maples interlace as tenderly as they did on the day that Mary Throne and I walked up the turnpike road for the last time. Let me see ;it must be ten years ago, for I was six teen and she was a year younger. I remember that I carried her satchel, auu that she trudged along very close at my side. I talked very soberly of go ing away, and she cried very softly be hind a brown veil. "Going away 1" she repeated after me, with a pitiful attempt at indiffer ence.— I "Going away ! When and where ?" "To-day, Mary," I made answer. "You know there is no home for me here since mother died—no home for me any where except the one I shall make for myself and—and you, Mary." She stopped and leaned against the trnnk of a maple, and looked at me half quizzically from the shade of the browu veil; she seemed to be lauguiDg, bnt there were tears in the laugh, and tears were trickling down her face. "But where are you going ?" A pause between every other word. "I cannot tell you, but to some place where there is a chance fora poorboy ; and it seems to me that I ought to go a long distance from here to find that." She was still leaning against the tree, looking up at me. "Are you so very poor.then ?" she queried. I remember I laughed at her question, and she accepted the laugh in reply, and continued, "Ah, ye 3, you are, I know,and it is terrible to be poor, is it not V" "I trust you may never know just how terrible it is," I said. I saw her baud fumbliug at the pock et of her dress ; by-and-by the hand was withdrawn, and I saw that the fin* gers were pressed tightly over a deli cate silken purse, on which her mono gram, "M. T.," was quaintly embroid ered in a bright shade of floss. "Here, Bob, take this," she said, pushing the purse into my reluctant palm. "It isu't much, but it will help you. Now don't refuse, unless you want to make me angry." I did not refuse ; perhaps I did wrong ia taking it, but it certainly would have boen a greater wrong had I deuied her wish. Feeling, however, I was wrong in accepting the purse,the | only chauce I saw to retrive myself lay in makiug a return of some kind. My store of worldly effects was meagre,but I had a ring which iu her youth my mother had worn. It wa3 a quaint de vice of Etruscan gold, curiously wrought, and of marvelous beauty if not worth. She had given it to me just before she died, as she laid her hand on ray head and bade rue be true to myself and her. "Take this, my son," she had said, "and some day wheu you haye found a girl sweet and good whom you may love even better than you do ine, and say that iu heaven I will watch over you both and wait for your coming." Surely I had found the "sweet, good girl," and I slipped tie ring from my finger and kissed it, then laid it in Map y's hand. "It was mother's," I said. "Wear DEININGER & BUMILLER, Editors and Proprietors. VOL. 58. it, Mary, as the seal of our betrothal ; wear it, and I know you will always think of me.' "Good-by, Mary." I meant to be very calm, very self. (Kissed ; tears were for women, I thought, loftily and repression for men ; and I looked down on her trembling little figure,vaguely outlined agaiust tho red background of the school house wall, then I looked down the road—tho road we might never walk again—and thought of all that had been, and might be, and my heart seemed to leap full in my throat and almost choked me ; and then I broke down entirely, and we were crying in concert—and, well, I was but sixteen, and she was younger. The school house bell clanged omin ously, and tang an unconscious knell to our friendship ; the moment of part ing had come. "Good-by, Bob," sho said, softly. 4 Kiss me. Bob." 1 bent and kissed her. I presume if Mr. Nickelby Glasgow was looking, his seDse of prudence and propriety was outraged ; however, I kissed her not once but twice and thrice and then— "Good-by, Bob." 4, G00d-by, Mary." We had parted. That was ten years ago, ten years of trial, privation, and final reward. At the outset I knew the world was a gainst me, and that I was against the world. But I was resolute, presever ing and, above all,hopeful. There was many a struggle, a long, long series of disappointments—moments when hope was all but vanquished and despair su preme. But I struggled ou, determin ed to conquer, not be conquered ; and what is impossible to youth, blessed with health, hope and ambition to suc ceed ? I cannot bring myself to believe that a recital of struggles, temptation and fi nal achievement, however glowing, told by one's self is interesting to oth ers; therefore I shall notlengtnen mine. Simply suffice it to say that from the position of an office boy to a legal firm I advanced to clerk, then to student, and finally to junior partnership. All this was, of course, not accomplished as easily as written. There was many a lapse from the gaol of ambition,man y a quiet heart-ache, many a moment of complete discouragement. But nothing, however paltry, was beneatli my notice, nothiug, however great, be yond my energy. From "Bob" I rose totne diguity of "Robert," from that to the high estate of "youug Halleck," and finally to the pre-eminence of "Robert Halleck,Esq. ;" and ten years had gone by since the May afternoon when in the shadow of the school house wall I had said farewell to Mary Throne. What of her, you ask V Well, to go back again too the outset of my career, I was then to miserably poor to indulge in the luxury of regular meals, to say nothing of a correspondence. But fi nally I did write a long letter, telling of my battles and beggiug a reply. A month passed, but none came ; then I wrote again, again and again, but each letter met with the similar fate. Fin ally, in sheer despair, I wrote to Mr. Nickelbv Glasgow, assuring him in an apologetic sort of way that I knew he was anxious to hear of my welfare,and dually concluding with a postscript much longer than the letter itself, in which I iuquired the whereabouts and fate of little Mary Throne. Then I waited patiently enough for his reply, which came at last, encased in a yellow envelope, addressed in large scbolary hiroglyphics, and was alto gether just such an epistle as Mr. Nick elby Glasgow and Mr. Nickelby Glas gow alone could indite. lie was -glad to hear of my health and prosperity ; hoped I read my Bible regularly on ris ing and retiring ; the former ceremony he trusted occurred not later than si x o'clock A. M., and the latter not later than eight o'clock P. M. lie feared I was wrong in leaving my native com munity, and he assured me I was greatly missed. Then he went 0:1 to say the school had rather deteriorated of late, the scholars were few, and the pay ii regular and small. He hinted modestly that the scholars, young and old—a deep line under the last clause were to make him a substantial present at the close of the term,and then referr ed vaguely to the years he had labored in behalf of childhood, and the arduous labor that it was. The letter ran to a considerable length; told me the village but< her was dead,the apothecary bank rupt, the little widow who kept the millinery shop at the corner remarried, and then--just as my patience had readied the limit of endurance—ray eye caught the name of Mary Throne. "I am very grieved," he wrote, "to inform you that the Thrones have gone I know not wither, the cause thereof being the receut reverses sustained by Mr. Throne, where by his fortune was entirely consumed. I know you will MILLHEIM, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 10., 1884. share the regret I experienced at their removal ; they were excellent people, and Mr. Throne's name was foremost in all charities, of which tho school fund was the principal one." I tossed the letter away, and my heart and thoughts went out to the lit tle girl struggling, pet Imps, just as I was struggling, lighting the same hard battle, bearing the same heavy burden, only with less strength than I. 1 tried to And her, why, I do not know, unless L fancied it would make both loads lighter to feel the other near. But all was in vain, and year glided into year, and the yearning of my heart grew less, though my love never did. 1 laid the silken purse with its tloss monogram "M. T.," away, and laid with it the sweet hopes and memories of the one I telt was lost to me. Then I went back to the battle of life again, fortified and defiant. Yet never a speech ilid I make in a crowded court room that it did not seem to uie the influence of Mary- Throne insensibly and invisibly affect ed it. Never a book did I read bill that the purest,sweetest character in it 1 felt was suggested by and suggestive of her's. Never a fair face did I see but her's was before me, in the full bloom of her beauty whose opening tints remained in memory still. And ten years had come and gone, and the snows of an early winter lay upon the streets and house tops, and shook from the leafless branches of the trees as they swayed to and fro with a doleful sort of cadence, and sharpened the already cutting air. Yet, spite of this, the lights of the city shone with brilliance undiminished, and occasion ally aboye the sighing of the wind rose the echo of a merry laugh, a broken song, or a strain of music ; then the wiDd was uppermost again. The clock in the old Trinity was striking twelve, I had passed into Broadway, had buttoned my coat tightly about me, and was waiting for a cab to carry me homo. You see I ride in cabs nowadays ;they are one of my favorite follies, and throw money into a good channel of circulation. The last chime had died aw*y, and on ly the hum of clanging bells remained. I looked down the street in search of my cab, and straightway looked back again, at the sound of a low voice at my elbow. "I—l beg pardon, sir ; but can you direct me to the Bowery, please ?" Looking down I saw the shrinking form of a woman leaning against the lamp-post at my side. The voice was low and inexpressively sweet, and al most lost beneath the shawl which cov ered the head and shoulders so com pletely that only the white outline of the face was visible ; yet there was something about either the face or the voice which attracted mo irresistibly. "The Bowery ?" I repeated. "I can scarcely direct you, it is so very far from here." "How far please ?" There was a mute appeal in the voice and it seemed for an instant to magne tize me. I caught a glimpse of bright, dark eyes shining behind the shadow of the shawl as mechanically I replied— "At least an hours walk. Is there anything 1 can do for you ?" "No—yes—no ; 1 must find the Bowery." "At this hour of the night ?" It is very cold, and their are many dan gers." "Cold ! What is cold when the brain is aflame ? What are the dan gers to a starving wretch like mo V" She staggered back against the lamp post for support. "Pardon me, sir, for speaking so, for speaking at all ; but I must find—" The voice died away entirely now, and was lost in a great convulsive sob that shook the little figure as the beating of the storm does a reed, and me back in my life to the old turnpike road, with its arcade of maples, and the litte girl who was bidding me good-by. A spirit of the lost one seemed to pervade me,and placing mv hand on the shrinking figure I said— "lf you are in need I will assist you." "In need !" she repeated. "Oh, sir, the words are feeble ; 1 am starv ing, sir ! We are starving—mother, the children and lat home. lam 110 beggar, but we must have relief, and if I could find the Bowery I would part with this—his ring." She slipped something from her fin ger, and at the same time the shawl dropped from her face. It was I who staggered backward now, and clung white and trembling to her arm, for getful of everything but the one hope that possessed me. I did not speak— I could not—and she continued, hold ing out in the moonlight a thread-like hand of gold whose quaint design I knew full well— "Here is the ring, sir ; will you buy it ? What will you give ?" I caught her in my arms like a cra zy man. "My love—my life—everything I have, Mary 1 \ PA PR 11 FOR THE HOME CIRCLE The ring fell from her grasp, and she sprang back with a scream of joy. "Hub—Hob—o Hob !" And she was erving on my breast, just as she had cried a dozen years before, and just as she will never cry again, (iodwilling ; for she is mine now, all mine, for there was a solemn and beautiful wedding next day, and we are happy as the day# are long, Mary ami I. Toys and National Traits. "Show me a nation's toys," said Mr. Crandall, the'children's friend,' "and 1 will tell you what kind of people they are. Now the Germans, you know, are a great toy nation; they go go in for quantity rather than quality. They manufacture toys and every i child in the couutiy has them. Every German child,sir, has plenty of toys. ; What is the result? Why, we lind them the most soc*uble, kindly, Imm st people in tlio world, possessed of all the household virtues; kind to | their wives and children. Then the French ; they go in for quality rather than quantity; everything they make is a work of art; their children have few toys, and those they have are very expensive, and musl be played with in a quiet, genteel way. llow do you find the French? why, very polite, refin ed, suave. "Take the Chinese. They are a great toy nation; they ascend to the sKy and decern! into the sea for ideas in regard to toys, and spare no pains in making them. and giants, and dwarfs, and strange fish, and sea serpents, and curious nondescript be ings and animals all serve, and then give the children plenty of them; result is that the Chinese are like the Ger mans, among themselves sociable, great for great days and celebrations, and very industrious. Japanese are much the same. The English now run more 011 out-door toys and games which ex ercise—projectiles, tenuis, foot ball, cricket, shinny, hoop, marbles. The boys play tag and pull-away and all such running games and the girls play ring games. How do we find the En glish? Jovial, atheletic, rough and boisterous. Again, look at the Span iards; very few toys they use. What's the result? Why , they are treacherous, harsh, implacable. Then the Indians —our own Indian s—the only toy they have is the bow. Well, now tins cul tivated and killing instincts only. What was the result? Why, we had to kill tliern all off; they were entirely un tamable. The Esquimax, he has no toys at all, and he is the meanest si>eci meu of mankind on God's footstool. For the Boys. The Wide Awake gives the following story which is all the belter for being true. Two men stood at the same table in a large factory in Philadelphia, working at the same trade. Having an hour for their nooning eveiy day, each undertook to use it in accomplish ing a definite purpose; each preserved for about the same number of months, and each won success at last. One of these two mechanics used his daily leisure hour in working out the inven tion of a machine for sawing a block of wood into almost any desired shape. When his invention was complete, he sold the patent for a fortune, changed his workman's aprun for a broadcloth suit, and moved out of a tenement house, into a brown-stone mansion. The other man—what did he do? Well, he spent an hour each day during most of a year in the very difficult undertak ing of teaching a little dog to stand on his hind feet and dance a jig, while lie played the tune. At last accounts he was working ten hours a day at the same trade and at his old wages, and finding fault with tl'ie fate that made his fellow workman rich while leaving him poor. Leisure minutes may bring golden grain to mind as well as purse, if one harvests wli eat instead of chaff. Keep the Children Warm. Half the illness and fret fulness of little children might be prevented by keeping them warm enough. They arc often so unequally dressed—some parts covered to excess, and others, more vital still, loft almost unclothed —that they are in constant discom fort. They cannot toll the difficulty; and thoughtless mothers dismiss the whole subject with the general com plaint of crossness. Warm under fiannels and good homo-made woolen stockings are a comfort beyond com putation in the winter season. When worn in the winter it is common to delay in putting them ou until the seeds of a sad cold are sown, which may last for the season or even for life. If the mother is ouly before handed with her calculations for the changing seasons, this might all be prevented. A Dakota Hail-Storm. Experience of an Eastern Engineer in tho Bracing Air of the North west. Jamkstown, Dakota, December 13. About the most striking tiling it has boon the lot of the writer to wit nets in (his land of the Dakotas was a hail storm. Cyclones we rarely have —East ern papers to the conrary notwithstand ing—but a genuine Dakota hail-storm is something to talk adout. List summer some Jamestown capitalists concluded lo run a railroad from that cily south ward iu search of new town sites to boom. This search for pastures new usually is the moving impetus to the construction of branch roads here is the Northwest. To survey this road a bran new corps of engineers was brought out from the East and set to Wcrk. We had battled successfully with the mosquitoes and tin other con comitant pleasures of plain life for a week or more and were beginning to congratulate ourselves upon the stoicism with which we roughed it when this particular hail-storm, talking us—as the thunder took the toad—off guard, knocked all the conceit out of us. Wo were just finishing supper one evening, when, to some one's observa tion that it was getting (lark mighty fast, our chief looking up, dropping knife and fork and yelled: "Thunder! boys, it's going to rain. Hurry up! get the things inside the tent." Get the mischief! for pitter patter—whiz-bang! and one of the ivorst hail-storms that ever swept the plains was upon us,driv ing us all—a round dozen in number— into a little eight by ten tent. Three minutes after the first drop fell it would have cost a man his life to have gone any distance from shelter, for the ice was coming down iu blocks of six inches in circumference and in perfect sheets. Our covered wagon started off on a trip across the country -proving itself literally a prairie schooner—and brought up in the river beyond, and, de spit the efforts of a dozeu stalwart men, our tent came nearly following after. All around inside the men were either on their knees holding down the canvas or hanging on to til* ridge-pole with might and main, while the hail pelted the roof, sides and ends of our tent with such force that no one could stand against the canvass, and through the hollows which the stones knocked in our supposed tightly-stretched tent the water poured in volumes. The mules of our outfit tore loose from their pick els and rushing wildly about sought shelter along the high banks of the riv er. One wise old ass called Balaam backed up against the lee side of our teut and assisted not a little in keeping it from blowiug over. One particular mule—the meanest brute that ever wore long ears —too stubborn to run, stood kicking throughout the storm, which lasted about twenty minutes. We were about a mile away from the nearest point of shelter—a village of rough clap board bouses, which had been run up inaday or so with the first talk of building a road. So,"after the storm, for this village we started. Wet to the skin we waded across the intervening plain, raeny places over shoes in ice and water, and to add to our misery it kept getting colder and colder as we splash ed through the water and ice. Arriv ing at the only hotel iu the town we found the usual Western hospitality. To our demand for a fire by which to dry our clothing the landlord replied that we should have one just jjis soon as ho could hunt up the neccessary fuel. In the course of an hour the fire was started anb around it we clustered, turning a dozen pairs of shoeless feet up tothewarmth, and by alternating "fore and aft," drying the outside and wet ting inside,we finally succeeded iu res toring circulation. A heavy lain now set in, and how it can rain out here on the prairies! Our landlord and his son stood in the hall sweeping back the water as it Hooded in under the door—a practical illustration of King Canute and the flood and a bout as successful. Bed time arrived and a dozen stiff boys, shoeless, coatless as well as less several other articles of attire which need not be mentioned, all of which were left belliud to dry by the only fire the hotel offered, marched out through the wet hall climbed a lad der to the loft. Ilere we wrestled man fully with the bugs tiil near morning, when it began blowing sucli a terrific gale that a dozen fellows came to a sit ting posture to debate the question of hunting the cellar. One of the regular boarders awakened ly the diu fettled this question by calling out You infernal fools; there's not a cellar in town ; lay down and sleep; it's better to be on top than under any day." We lay down. In the morning our landlord brought up our shoes, clothes, etc., in a bushel basket and empt'ed them out on the floor to be scrambled for. On going out the worst scene of devastation it has ever been the lot of the writer to see met his eye. The day before large Terms, SI,OO per Year, in Advance. fields of grain, ripe for the sickle, could be seen, stretching away in all diiec tions. of which not a stalk remained standing; gaiden growth of all kinds utterly destroyed; hardly a pane of glass was left in tlie village ; the fol i ige of the trees was so cut and mang led that 1 tie limbs looked bare as in winter time. A belt eight miles in width and twice as many in leugth was entirely cleared of vegetation. TRIPLET MAXIMS. Three things to do—think, live, act. Three things to govern—temper, tongue and conduct. Three things to cherish—virtue, good ness and wisdom. Three things to love—courage, gentle ness and affection. Three things to contend for —honor, country and friends. Three things to hate—cruelty, arro gance and ingratitude. Three things to teach—truth, industry and contentment. Three things to admire—intellect, dig nity and gracefulness. Three things to like—cordiality, good ness and cheerfulness. Three things to delight in—beauty, frankness and freedom. Three things to avoid —idleness, loquac ity and flippant jesting. Three things to wish for—health, friends and a contented spirit. Three things to cultivate—good books, good friends and good humor. SIXTY FEET UNDER THE SEA. 44 ] was once a diver —not a wrecker, but a pearl diver—and hard business it was," recently observed the captain of a Spanish brig to a reporter of the Cal ifornia limes. 'We worked off the Mexican and Panama coasts, princi pally on the pacific side. Sometimes we worked alone, but generally on shares, and sometimes for pay. We went to the grounds in small sailing vessels, the n we took the small boats and covered as much ground as poss ible. Each man had a basket, a weight and a knife. For sharks? yes, but it is a poor defence, for it is almost imnoss ible to swing the arm with any force under water. The best weapon is a' short spear. When you reach the ground you strip, put your feet on a big sinker, take the basket that has a rope for hoisting, drop over, and soon find yourself at the bottom. "Then your business is to knock off as many oysters as you can and pile them into the basket before you loose your wind. It is a terrible straiu, but I could stand it in those days for six minutes, and I have known some men who could stay down teii; but it is sure death in the long run. If the ground is well stocked you can get twenty or more shells, but it is all. When the bas ket is full it is hauled up, and after you come up for your wind down you go a gain, being hauled up with a small cord for that purpose. It was on one of these trips that I ran afoul of the an imal that gave me a lasting figlit. You will smile when I say it was only a star fish, hut that it really was. I went down sixty feet with a rush, and land ing onj[the edge of a big hunch of coral, swung off into a kind of basin. The basket was ahead of me, and as I swung off to reach the bottom some thing seemed to spring up all around me, and I was in the arms of some kind of a monster that coiled about my body, arms and legs. I tried to scream, for getting that I was in the water, and lost ray wind. u lt was just as if the plant had sprouted under me and threw its vines and tendrils about uie. There were thousands of them, coiling aud writh ing, and 1 thought I had landed in nest of sea snakes. I gaye the signal as soon as I could, and made a break upward, part ot the creature cling ing to me, while the rest, I could see, was dropping to pieces. They hauled me into the boat when I reached the sur. face, and pulled the main part of the animal from me. It was oval, about three feet across, and the five arms seemed to divide into thousands of others. 1 probably landed on top of that one, which at this time was the largest I had ever seen. I afterward saw the body of one that was washed a shore on the isthmus that must have had a spread ot thirty-five feet. Their power of grasping is considerable, but touch them in a certain way and they throw off their arms in a regular show er, and are soon reduced to an oval body." Murderer Loom is' Dying Tes timony. Itum lies at the foundation of all my sorrows. It found me a motherless boy, with no one to influence me to discard its use. I followed on, fore I was aware of it it held me like a slave. The more I used, the tighter were the chains reyited about me unti now I find myself about to be hanged on account of what it has done for me. I hereby warn everybody, both those who sell it or in anywise uphold its use. Let my fate be a warning to the young and old, that the safest way is to touch not, nor taste the cup that has robbed me of home, friends and life. N0.2- NEWSPAPER LAWS. If subscribers order the discontinuation of newspapers, the puMlshers may continue to send them until all arreaniges are paid. If subscribers refuse or uepieot to take their newspapers from the office to whtehttiey are sent they are held responsible until they have settled the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move toother places without In forming the publisher, and the newspapers are sent to the former place, they are renponbible. ADVERTISING BATES.""" 1 wk. 1 mo. I 3 mos. 6 mote 1 year 1 square $ 2 $ 4 001 f8 00 #OOO SBOO S " 700 10 on 15 00 30 00 40 00 1 " 10 00 15 001 25 00 45 00 75 00 One inch makes a square. Administrators* and Executors' Notices $2.50. Transient adver tisements and locals 10 cents per line for first insertion and 5 cents per line ror each addition al insertion. HUMOROUS. HE HAD SOME FUN. —About 8 o'- clock yesterday morning a man, smok ing plug tobacco in an old clay pipe, walked out of a Michigan avenue ho tel with u rat in a trap. He looked neither to the right nor to the left un til lie had reached the middle of the street Then he placed the trap on the ground and whistled for his dog. If ho had a dog the animal did not respond, but the public did. In less than two minutes 30 men were rush ing to the spot. "Hi! there! Don't let him out till I get my dog," shouted one. "Hold on! Wait for the dogs," yelled half a dozen voices at once. "Keep cool and form a circle!" commanded a policeman, as he took a firmer grip of his baton. The man with the trap spread a large handkerchief over it and waited. He was not a hit excited. On the contrary, lie was as placid as a chip sailing in the wash dish. "Whar' did ye ketch him?" inquir ed a newsboy. The placid man did not deign to re ply. "What'll ye take fur him ?" asked another, but his inquiry was treated with the same silent contempt. Then four or five men came run ning up with dogs under their arms, and ten or fifteen dogs on foot follow ed behind. There was a fight between a bull dog and a Newfoundland, and there would have been a row between their owners had not a second police man appeared. Order was finally re stored. The dogs were arranged in a circle and held by their collars, and the placid man slowly knocked the ashes from his pipe, looked carefully around, and then raised the trap and shook the rat out. All the dogs made a rush, but in ten seconds each and every canine walked off on his ear and seemed to be hurt in his feelings. A boy stepped forward and held the rat up to view. "It's a crockery rat!" be yelled as he whirled it around. "Yes, it vhas a groghery radt, and he cost me den cents!" calmly replied the placid man as he walked off with his trap.— Detroit Free Press. HEROIC MR. SPILKINS WISHING TO EARN A PENNY BY SAVING IT HE SHOV ELS TITE SNOW FROM HIS PAVE. —"No," said Spilkins to the small boy who rang his door bell askingif he wanted his sidewalk shoveled off, and who off ered to do the job for a quarter. Spilj kins had just been reading a book in which a lot of pernicious aphorisms a bout the desirability of economy were set down, such as "A penny saved is a penny earned," "A groat a day is a pound a year," etc.; therefore he said to himself, "I will save the quarter that the job of cleaning my sidewalk would cost, and do the work myself. Besides the exercise will be good for me." He told Mrs. S. of his resolu tion, and she, like all true wives in these eases, told him that he was a fool to think of such a thing, and that to do the work himself would be ten times what it is worth. But Spilkins has a mind of his own, and he put on his rubber boots and mummified him self by means of a long ulster, a com forter and a fur cap, and went out to his self-selected labors. As he emerg ed from his door he struck a piece of ice on the top step and went into the street flying and got a lot of snow up his sleaves aud trousers legs and down the back of his neck ; however, a little profanity relieved his mind in this respect and he fell to work. The job was harder than he antici pated, but be stuck to it, and at last went into the bouse again, bathed in perspiration and triumph. But on sit ing down to smoke, as was his custom after anything particular, he found that in his fall down the steps he had ground to snuff three twenty-five-cent cigars which he had in his pocket and the next morning woke up with an in fluenza which has given him the aspect of the weeping philosopher and the temper of a bear ever since. He there fore says that economy is a frand and has thrown his book of maxims into the fire. A boy with a patch on his knee cant be hired to go on an errand to the next house, but he will follow a band wagon all over town and never realize that he isn't dressed in broadcloth. According to the New York Express, it is the boy OD top of the molasses hogshead who sings: ,4 Oh for a thous and tongues."