THE MILLHEIM JOURNAL, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY DY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St., near Hartnian's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OR Tl.aa IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. Acceptable Correspondence Solicited Address letters to MILLHEIM JOURNAL. BUSINESS CARDS. HARTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. JOHN F. HARTER, Practical Dentis, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM PA. GEO. S. FRANK, Physician & Surgeon, REBERSBURG, PA. Offioe opposite the hotel. Professional calls promptly answered at all hours. H. MINGLE, Physician & Surgeon Gffllce ou Mam Street. MILLHEIM, PA J, SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Shop 2 doors west Millheim Banking House, MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. D. H. Hastings. W. F. lteeder JJASTINGS & REEDER, Attornejs-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. , Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum & Hastings. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office In Qarman'g new building. GEO. L. LEE, Physician &ISurgeon, MADISONBURG, PA. Office opposite the Lutheran Church. M - C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county. BpecUl attention to Collections. Consultations n German or English. J. A. Baaver. J. W. Gepbart "gEAVEB A GEPBART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High Street •JGROUKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST.,* BELLEFONTE, PA. C. G. MCMHJLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to witnesses and jurors. QUMMINS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONT, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PBOPBIHTOR. House newly 'refitted and refurnished. Ev erything doue to make guests comfortable. Rates moderate. Patronage respectfully sollci ted. sdy JRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS, LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODS CALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travel ers on first floor. gT. ELMO HOTEL, Nos. 317 & 319 ARCH ST., PHILADELPHIA. BATES REDUCED TO $2.00 PER DAT. The traveling public will still find at this Hotel the same liberal provision for their com fort. Itislocatedinthe immediate centres of business and places of amusement and the dif ferent Rail-Road depots, as weU as all parts ot the city, are easily accessible by Street Cars Constantly passing the doors. It offers special iuducemeuts to those visiting the city for busi ness or pleasure. Your patronage respectfully solicited. Jos. M. Feger. Proprietor. pEABODY HOTEL, 9thSt. South of Chestnut, PHILADELPHIA. One Square South of the New Post Office, one half Square from Walnut St. Theatre and in the very business centre of the city. On the American and European plans. Good rooms from 50ct8 to $3.00 per day. Remodel ed and newly furnished. W PAINE, M. D., 40-ly Owner & Proprietor fhc Millbrittt liitiiL R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 58. Governor Cleveland For mally Notified of his Nomination. . ALBANY, N. Y.,July 29.—The com mittee appointed to formally notify Governor Cleveland of his nomination for president met at 10 a. in., Colonel Vilas presiding, and arrangements for the notification were made, it being de oided that the committed shout 1 visit the governor at three p. m. The guests were prompt on arriving and when the members of the two com mittees were provided for there was very little extra space. The ceremony took place in the large handsome main parlor of the mansion. The ceremony was brief, but exceediugly impressive. The arriyal of the committees in a body was the signal for concentration in the main parlor. There the committee of notification took positions ou the south end of the room and the members of the national committee on the north. A space was reserved in the centre and as soon as the preparations were com pleted the governor entered through the main hallway, standing with his back to the flower banked mantel. The ladies of the party stood near the governor at his left. Ilis appear ance at the doorway was the signal for a hearty and spontaneous outburst of handclapping which coutinued for sev eral minutes. As soon as this had subsided, Col. W. F. Vilas, of Wiscon sin, chairman of the late democratic national convention and of the notifi cation committee, stepped slightly for ward and addressing the governor in a clear resonant tone and with marked enthusiasm said : s% Grover Cleveland, Governor of the State of New York : These gentlemen my associates here present, whose voice I am honored with authority to utter, were a committee apppointed by the national democratic convention recent ly assembled in Chicago and charged with the grateful duty of acquainting you officially, and in that solemu and ceremonious manner which the dignity and iropoi lance of the communications demand, with the interesting result of its deliberations, already knowu to you through the ordinary channels of news. "Sir, that august body convened by direct delegation from the democratic people of the several states and terri tories of the republic, and deliberating under the witness of the greatest as sembly of freemen ever gathered to such a conference iu forethought of the election which the constitution impos es upon them to make during the cur rent year, have nominated you to the people of these United Sates to be their president for the Dext ensuing term of that great office, and with grave con sideration of its exalted responsibilities have con fidently invoked their suffrag es to invest you with its functions. Through this committee the conven tion's high requirement is delivered that you may accept that candidacy. This choice carries with it profound personal respect and admiration, but it has been ra no manner the fruit of those sentiments. The national dem ocracy seeks a president not in compli ment for what the man is, or reward for what he has done, but in a just ex pectation of what he will accomplish as the true servaut of a free people, fit for their lofty trust. Always of rao mentus consequence, they conceive the public exigency to be now of transcend ent importance, that a laborious reform in the administration as well as legisla tion is imperatively necessary to the prosperity and honor of the republic and a competent chief magistrate must be of unusual temper and power. They have observed with attention your executioa of the public trusts you have held, especially of that with which you are now so honorably invest ed. Their reliance for the usefulness of the service. They expect to exact for the benefit of the nation upon the evidence derived from the services you have performed for the state of New York. They invite the electors to such proof of character and compe tence to justify their confidence that in the nation as heretofore in the state the public business will be administer ed with commensurate intelligence and ability,with single hearted honesty and fidelity and with resolute and daring fearlessness which no faction, no com bination, no power of wealth, no mis taken clamor can dismay or qualify. In the spirit of the wisdom and invok ing the benediction of the Divine Crea tor of Men, we challenge from the sov - ereignity of this nation. His woids in commendation and ratification of our choice. 'Well done, thou good and faithful servant, thou hast been faith ful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things.' In further fulfillment of our duty the secretary will present the written communica tion signed by the committee." Colonel Vilas was several times in- MILLHEIM, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 7., 1884. ten upted by applause. At the close of his remarks Mr. Nicholas M. Prince,of Missouri, secretary of the committee, read the following formal address, pre pared by the committee : NEW YORK CITY, July 28, 1884.-- To the Hun. Grover Cleveland, of New York —Slß ; In accordance with a custom befitting the nature of the com munication the undersigned, represent ee several states aiul territories of the Union, were appointed a committee by the national democratic convention which assembled at Chicago on the Bth day of the current month to perform the pleasing office,which by this means we have the honor to execute, of in forming you ot your nomination as the candidate of the democratic party in the ensuing election for the ofiice of president of the United States and the declaration of the principles upon which the democracy go before the people with a hope of establishing and maintaining them in the government was made by the convention, and an engrossed copy thereof i 3 submitted in connection with this communication for your consideration. We trust the approval of your judgement will follow an examination of this expression of o pinion and policy, and upon the con troversy now made up, we invite your acceptance of the exalted leaders!)ip to which you have been chosen. The e lection of a presideut is an event of the utmost importance to the people of America; their prosperity, growth, happiness, peace aud liberty, even may depend upon its wise ordering. Your unanimous nomination is proof that the democracy believe your election will most contribute to secure those great objects. We assure you that in the anxious responsibilities you must assume as a candidate you will have the steadfast and cordial support of the friends of the cause you will repre sent and in the execution of the duties of the high ofiice which we confidently expect the wisdom of the nation will confer upon you, you may securely re ly for approval and upon the patriot ism, honor and intelligence of this free people, we have the honor to he with great respect." The address is signed by W. F. Vilas, of Wisconsin, president ; Nich olas M. Bell, of Missouri, secretary, and by forty-six members of the com mittee representing thirty-eight states and eight territories. Governor Cleveland, who had stood meanwhile an intentive listener, re plied as follows : "Jfr. ChcCirman and Gentlemen of the Committee: Your formal announce ment does not, of course, convey to me the first information of the result of the convention lately held by the dem ocracy of the nation, and yet, when, as I listen to your message and see-about me representatives from all parts of the land of the great party which,claiming to be the party of the people, asks them to entrust to it the administration of their government and when I consider, under the influence of the stern reali ties which the present surroundings create, that I have been chosen to rep resent the plaus, purposes and policy of the democratic party, lam profoundly impressed by the solemnity of the occa sion and by the responsibility of ray position. Though I gratefully appre siate it, I do not at this moment con gratulate myself UDOU the distinguish ed honor which has been conferred up on me, because my mind is full of an anxious desire to perform well the part which has been assigned to me. Nor do lat this moment forget that the rights and interests of more than 50, 000,000 of my fellow citizens are in volved in an effort to gain democratic supremacy. This reflection presents to my mind the consideration which more than all others gives to the action of my party in convention assembled its most sober and serious aspect. The party and its representatives which ask to be entrusted at the hands of the people with the keeping of what con cerns their welfare and their safety should only ask it with the full appre ciation of the sacredness of the trust and with a firm resolye to administer it faithfully and well. "I am a democrat becauso I believe that this truth lies at the foundation of PAPER FOR TUF, HOME CIRCLE. Cleveland and Hendricks, Democratic Candidates FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT. true democracy. I have kept the faith because I believe, if rightly and fairly adrainisteied and applied, democratic doctrines and measures will insure the happiness, contentment and prosperity of the peoplo. If, in the contest upon which we now enter, We steadfastly hold to the underlying principles of Our party creed, and at all times keep in view the people's good, we shall be strong because we are true to ourselves and because the plain and independent voters of the land will > seek by their suffrages to compass their release from party tyranny, where there should be devotion to the people's interest. These thoughts lend a consecration to our cause and we go forth not merely to gain a partisan advantage, but pledged to give to those who trust us the utmost benefits of an honest administration of national affairs. No higher purpose or motive can stimulate to supreme effort or urge us to continuous aud earnest labor and effective party organization. Let us not fail iu this, and we may confidently hope to reap the full reward of patriotic services well performed. I have thus called to mind some sim ple truths, and trite though they are it seems to merwe do well to dwell upon them at this time. I shall soon,l hope, signify in the usual formal manner my acceptance of the nomination which has been tendered to me. In the mean time I gladly greet you all as co-work ers in a noble cause." The governor spoke extemporeously and not without evidence of deep ear r.estuess and feeling. He seemed to realize the weight of responsibility which rested upon his shoulders as the standard bearer of the party. The ad dress was not only a model one in thought but was delivered with rare grace and effect. The congratulations that were show ered upon him by the many distinguish ed leaders of the party at the close were sincere and hearty. After sometime spent in 1 social interchanges, the doors of the dining room were swung open and refreshments partaken of. An iu formal reception was held at the Fort Orange club on Washington street late in the afternoon. MR. HENDRICKS' ABLE ADDRESS IN RESPONSE TO THE FORMAL INFOR MATION OF HIS NOMINATION FOR VICE PRESIDENT,JU LY 30TII. Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee—l cannot realize that a man could even, stand iu the presence of a committee representing a more august body of men than which you represent. In the language of another the conven tion was large in numbers, august in culture and patriotic in sentiments,and may I not add to that, that because of power and greatness and the virtue of the party which it represented,in every respect a very great convention. [Ap plause.] The delegates came from all the states and territories and I believe, too,from the District of Columbia.(Ap plause.) They came clothed with au thority to express judgement and opin ion on all those quest ions which are not settled by constitutional law for the purpose of passing upon those questions and selecting a ticket for the people. That convention assembled. They de cided upon the principles that they would adopt as a platform. They se lected candidates that they would pro pose to the party their support and that the convention work was theirs. I have not reached the period when it is proper for me to consider the strength and force of the statements made in the platform. It is enough for me to know that it comes at your hands fiom that convention addressed to my patri otic deyotiou to the democratic party. [Applause.] I appreciate the honor that is done me. I need not question that, but at the same time that. I accept the honor from you and from the convention, I feel that the duties and responsibilities of the office rest upon me also. I know that sometimes it is understood that this particular office, that of vice presi dent, does not involve much responsi bility, and as a general thing that is so, nut sometimes it comes to represent very great responsibilities and it may be so in the near future, for at this i time the seuate of the United States stauds almost equally divided between the two great parties, and it may be that these two great parties shall so ex actly differ that the vice presideut of the United States shall liaye to decide upon questions of law by the exercise of the casting vote. [Applause.J The responsibility would thf n become very great. It would not then be the re sponsibility of representing a state or a district. It would be the responsibility of representing the whole country, and that the vote when thus cast should bo in obedience to the just expectations and requirements of the people of the United States. It might be,gentlemen, that upon another occasion the respons ibility would attach to this office, it might occur that under circumstances of some difficulty. I don't think it will be the next election, but it may occur under circumstances of some difficulty The president of the seriate will have to take his part in counting of the elec toral vote and also allow me to say that the duty is not to be discharged in obe dience to any set of men or to any par ty,but iu obedience to a higher authori ty. (Applause.) Gentlemen, you haye referred to the fact that I am honored by this nomina tion in a very special degree. I accept the suggestion that in this candidacy I will represent the right of the people to choose their own rulers, that right that is above, that lies beneath ail, for if the I>eople aie denied the right to choose their own oflieers according to their own judgement what shall become of the rights of the people at all ? What shall become of free government if the people select not their officers ? Shall they control the laws, their administra tion and their execution Y So that in suggesting that in this candidacy I rep resent that right of the people. As you have suggested a great honor has de volyed upon me by the confide nee of the convention. As soon as it may be con venient and possible to do so I will ad dress you more formally in respect to the letter you haye given me. I thank you gentlemen. [Applause.] The Origin of Dixie. On a Saturday night in 1859, when Dan Emmett was a member of Bryant's Minstrels, New York, Dan Bryant came to him and said : "Dan, can't you get us up a 'walk around ?' I want something new and lively for Monday night." Dan went to work, and by Sunday afternoon he bad the words commencing "I wish I was in Dixie." The expression was not Southern, but appeared among the cir cus people of the North. In early fall, when nipping frosts would overtake the tented wanderers, the boys would think of the warmth of the South, and the common expression would be, "Well, I wish I was in Dixie." This gave the catch-line, and the rest of the song was origiual. Ou Monday morn ing it was rehearsed and highly com mended, and at night a crowded house caught up the refrain and half of them went home singing Dixie. The song became the rage, and W. W. New eomb's Buckley's Minstrels and others gave Dan $5 each for the privilege of using it. Mr. Werlean wrote to Em mett to secure the copyright ; but without waiting for a reply, published it with words by a Mr. Peters. Pond, of New York, secured it of Emmett for S6OO ; but Werlean sold thousands of copies without giving him a nickel. Not only was Emmett robbed of the profits of his song,but the authorship of it. Pond brought the matter before a music publishers' convention, and set tled the authorship ; but Dan reap ed no benefit from this tardy jus tice. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth ? If so, send at once und get a bottle of Alas. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING. Its value is Incalculable. It will relieve the poor little suf ferer Immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there Is 110 mistake about it. It cures dysentery and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach and bowels, cures wind colic, softens the gums, re duces lnllainination, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. MRS WINSLOW'S SOOTH ING SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING is pleasant to the taste, and is the prescription of one of •the oldest and best female muses and physici ans in the United States, and is for sale by all druggists throughout the world, l'rice 2 5 cents a bottle. SUBSCRIBE for the JOURNAL. Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. NO. 31. AN ESSAY ON SLEEP. U.K. Munkittrlck, In Puck. We beliove it was Sancho Pedro who thought an all-wool Messing should be bestowed on the individual who first invented, filed a caveat for, and pat ented sleep. This leads us to believe that Sancho had a level head, and was a man whose opinion was entitled to some respect. Take a hen, for instance, and she will fall asleep right in the middle of a dusty road. And there that hen will sleep for hours and never tnoye, except to skin her eye occasionally to see if there is any danger of being run oyer. And if she sees a wagon coming, she will pretend not to see it, and she will sleep right on until the wagou-wlieel\ is within a few feet of her. And then she will suddenly jmnp up in a manner to show how annoyed she is, and stapd on the side of the road a.id look at you. in mingled indignation and astonish ment. A dog will lie right in a doorway where people are traveling back and forth, and sleep for hours. He knows that if he is stepped on he will be hurt, and that if some one comes along and kicks him out of the doorway he will be bruised and made to feel uncomfort able. Yet, there he will lie and sleep, and dream the balmy dreams of inno cent and unsophisticated doghoocL And, like the cat, he will lie close to the stoye, and sleep by the hour, and never open his eyes unless he hears the carving kuife being sharpened. And if the kettle boils over on him, oi a lot of hot grease flies out of the pan, and takes handfuls of hair out of him, and leaves him looking like a crazy-quilt, yet will he return to the stove and make that his favorite sleeping-place again. A dog is so fond of sleeping when burglars are in the room at the dead of night. In this respect the dog is not unlike the policeman, who is perhaps the great est sleeper we have. He is so fond of sleep and its refreshing influence that he will climb noiselessly into a murky coal-box and stretch himself out ou'tbe coal, and fall into a sweet, long doze that nothing can break. There may be a murder within ten yards of where he is lying, and the cries of the murdeien may be sharp enough to cut right through the toughest sinews of the toughest spring-chicken that was ever put on a table ; but the policeman will sleep right on, his S3ul made rosy by the gentlest of gentle visions, and nev er open bis eyes until the last star has melted in the sunlight. When a man is traveling in a rail way-train, he pushes aside the latest novel that is thrust at him by the en teiprising train-boy,and closes his eyes upon the delightful landscapes that the railroad finds it profitable to advertise, lays the back of his head on the seat, draws his hat over his eyes, and makes every effort to get into dreamland. And, in spite of the jouncing and jolt ing of the train, he does fall a9leep,and for the time is utterly unconscious o* bis debts and other tribulations. And there he sleep 3 the sleep that is not disturbed by the bell, the whistle or the brakeman. It is is just the kind of rosy sleep that he can not get in a sleeper ; for when be stretches out in a sleeper, or rather a waker,he does noth ing but roll and toss about all night long. The only time be feels like sleeping is when it is time to rise in the morning. Then he is sleepy* be cause he has exhausted himself by the rolling. After he has rolled in the sleeper all night, he could easily fall a eleep on an osage-orange hedge, or barbed fence. What is pleasanter than a good sleep on a cold Winter morning, when you know it is .time to get up ? Nothing that can be named surpasses the pleas ure. Every fresh knock and 'Get lip, now, the breakfast is getting cold, and it is after eight!' makes the bed seem more comfortable, as you draw your head uuder the covers,and gather your self into a ball for a fresh nap of just a few seconds more. And then there is the Sunday morn ing sleep, which is about the sweetest of all sweet sleeps. Because then you have plenty of time, and are not hamp ered by the bells and whistles that ring and blow on week-days to let mortal man know that it is time to rise and proceed to earn his daily cake. On Sun day morning you may close your shut ters, and haul down the shades, and make the room so dark that you may sleep right along until your head is small enough to tit your hat, and then it will'be about three in the afternoon, and time for breakfast. Swinging in a hammock out among the honeysuckles, or between two old apple-trees, on a quiet afternoon, is not the worst way in the world of getting into Jslumberland. As you lie there looking up through the branches at the fleecy clouds floating along, and try to make fanciful figures cut of them, such as snow-men smoking pipes, and patri archs dancing on smol>e, and beautiful Circassian women floating about on va- . j fj JNEWepfrER L*W4 iiil tjl | If subscribers order tbe dfwratletinWß or newspapers, the publishers may continue to send them until an arrearages nre paid. It subscriber* ivfMe or uefrteet i* fftk* tf elfc ne wspajwrs from the office to whleh they are sent they are liekl responsible until the*AatoeetOed the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move to other plaoes without In forming the publisher, and the newspapers ate sent to the former piaoe, they kidm*pom>ible, ADVERTWUm RATUM. ' 1 wk. 1 mo. j 3 mos. £ mqs. Liear 1 square *2 do ♦ toe'i * SOd ♦ > 3FB W '.column 100 . 0 (JO I IV 00 15 00 18 00 - ' f nw 83188.88 *B>- One Inch makes a japtare. Administrate * . and Executors' Notices 12.50. -Tmiaint Mfoav tlsements and locals 10 cents per line for first insertion and 5 cents per line for each addition al Insertion. ■• <• v, ■* J pory couches, etc., you are lulled sleep by the hum of. insects, and the song of birds, and the airy rustle of the leaves, stirred by the breeze that keeps you in a gentle swaying motion. And when you wake you hay© the im pression of the netting buried about an inch deep in your face,* and leave the impression of your li§ad on the ground just where you landed when you fall out. • * 1 > > And then there Is the sleep of boy hood. The sleep that every man would like to sleep over again. The sweet,tin disturbed sleep in which the boy dreams about the orchard in which the reddest apples grow ; and the best re ceipt for bird-lime ; and the beet way to swap— 4 fen seein's'— the handsome and attractive knife- handle with no blades in it for the superior knife of a companion. The gentle ten-hour-with out-stopping sleep, wherein he lives his exploits over again, and falls out of the cherry-tree, and is chased by the farm er, and goes over a cascade on a raft; and fires a gun into h hornets' nest,and sets off iire-crackers close to the old Shanghai rooster. Ah 1 What are so sweet as those dreams of boyhood ? Tender dreams, that are only disturbed ►>. when the boy is lifted out of bed by tlie ear,and hurried down-stairs to chop the wood that he forgot to chap last night. There is nothing on earth so sweet, un less it be the sleep of the baby ; because the baby can sleep all night and all day • and never has to get up. And the baby can never haye unpleasant things of this world. And if the baby wakes up, and cries or becomes tired out, it is im mediately put to sleep again. It dosn't ' have to go to sleep itself,but is actually put to sleep. And then every effort is made to keep it asleep as long as poss ible. Ah, if we could only be put to sleep, in this cruel work-a-day world, and have some one to lie around and al low no one to come near and disturb our repose—then would the hackman lie down with the tourist, the plumber with the landlord. But if we should eyer haye to lie put to sleep, we should prefer to have it done through the me dium of a good old brandy eggnogg. Kisses to Grow on. She was only a baby, bnt she held up her sweet red lips, shut the bright eyes and went the rounds from one member of the family to another, re peating the phrase she had just heard from her yonng mother's lips, "Three kisses, and one to grow on." They caught her up,tbe darling, and kissed and kissed her fair baby face, pulled the soft curls,squeezed the dim pled shoulders, and followed her every movement with wistful, worshiping eyes, until she. came to the sour,disap pointed member of the family, whose words were all hollow, and dolls stuff ed with sawdust. She tiptoed up to the stern, bearded face, and put a fat, chubby little hand on each unyielding knee. "Three kisses, and one to grow on." 'What does aH this tomfoolery mean ?' iuquired the gruff, grumpy voice. 'Baby is three years old to-day,' said the young mother, feeling how hard it is to explain a simpie, foolish custom that has no particular mean ing, 'and so we give her a kiss for each year and one to grow on. But you needn't kiss her Uncle Ben, if you don't want to.' What was it the old man saw in the limpid eyes lifted to his t —a vis ion of the green fields and still waters of paradise ? or did some prescient knowledge possess him,that he caught her up in his arms as he had never done before, and kissed her again and again ? 'Not want to kiss her ?' he said, in a broken voice, 'why,l should as soon think of refusing to kiss an angel from heaven. There 1 pet; there! and there 1 Now may you grow on this one even to the heights of beaven—never short * of their standard, little one. That is the old man's prayer.' Three kisses and one to grow on;' three short and beautiful years, and now— Her age I cannot tell, :For tbey reckon not by months and years Where she has gone to dwell' But I often wonder if we would not all reach nearer the gates of paradise if we had more kisses to giow on. 'To the height of the sinless angels The little one has grown.' Oh! great family of humanity,learn all your weary, wandering ones up the divine heights by kisses. They are stronger than blows ; they have no stings like bitter words;they are bless ed memories that blossom in our crown of thorns when those whom we kissed have gone from us a little way beyond tears and kisses; grown on the precious nourishment into the higher life, in the city whose builder and maker is God.