111 v jdjInii rmnn M WOO A OIijQll JUJJUJIJJHJ JLllAJi. JUL OIU PPLEMEN VOL. X--No. 147. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 18G8. TRIPLE SIIEETT1IREE CENTS. CHRISTMAS COLUMN A CHRISTMAS CAROL. JYcm London Society. They are ringing, they are rluglng, Oar merry Christmas bull, Id the village, in the city, In the dale-church, o'er the fells. Be our ways of life so varied, Be our fort ones poor or bright, Hand in hand with all our brothers, We are one at least to-night. Nor the noble in bin mansion, Nor the sovereign on his throne, Nor the beggar in his hovel Will enjoy themselves alone. We all seek the kindly greeting Of some dear, familiar face; We all know that hermit feeling For to-night is ont of place. Bnt one night 1 Why not for ever Should we bind the golden chain That shows man his poorest fellow Was not sent to earth in vain I That each sorrow hath a purpose, That each gift hath an alloy, That ever finely balanced Are the scales of grief and Joy, Spare a little, then, ye rich ones, From your laden coffers now; Bring to poverty a sun-ray, Bring a smile to sorrow's brow. Take it gratefully, ye toilers, Toilers up earth's weary hill; 'Tis a green spot in your desert, 'lis a good sprung from your ill. Yea I be rioh and poor united, 'Tis most grand in Ileaven'a sight, And a blessing, not earth's blessing, Is on all the world to-night 1 ASTLEY II. BAIDW1S. Andrew Walter's Christmas Eve. CHAPTER I. vox porou. f The whole town said, with scarcely a dis senting voice, that Andrew Walter's misfor tunes, and this last misfortune in particular, were a judgment upon him. For, as the reader may have noticed, communities have Titually much less difficulty in peroeiving disasters to be judgments than they have in perceiving prosperity to be a Just reward. One inipht have been disposed to call the town a village bad it not from time im memorial returned a member of Parliament. Bat, in the pride of that distinction, East Wykeham held itself far above villages. We are not sure that the East Wykehamites are yet agreed as to which of th.Jr own sins it is that has called down the ludgment which has fallen upon them in the loss of their mem ber by the new Reform bill. In fact, the great majority of the pure and incorruptible consider that by the disfranchisement of their borough a gross injustice has been done them, and that they have sustained a definite and calculable pecuniary loss for which they have an equitable claim for compensation from the state. Should the reader be disposed to ask further. 'what manner of plaoe 1b Flast Wykeham f we are sorry we cannot say it is pretty well, or pretty lively, or pretty clean, or indeed pretty anything, unless we say it is pretty nearly the embodiment of dullness and stupidity. It is a plaoe that has fallen out of the track of modern improvements. When other towns subsoribed for railways, East Wykeham petitioned against them, stuck to its canal, and now beholds with envy the main line that passes at eight miles distance, and with disgust its own slimy, weed-grown, deserted wharves. (East Wyke ham is trying now to get up a branch line.) When that new-fangled, dangerous explosive called gas was discovered, East Wykeham stuck to oil and candles, by which alone to this night its streets are illuminated. (East Wykeham is negotiating now for a seoond hand gasometer, retorts, etc, outgrown at the neighboring junction.) But it would have to be a very bad light indeed that would not be good enough to exhibit the ooutents of the High street windows, or the grass that grows down the middle of the High street itself. The tradesmen, who are much given to standing at their doors and talking to each other, chuckle and rej jice over the extremely small sum it takes to keep their streets in good repair, and on the whole they don't ob ject to grass. ' As for society, there are the usual two doo trrs, two lawyers (one of whom was never known to have a client), the vicar, two or three dissenting preachers, two grooers, two drapers, two tailors, and the rest; in all num bering a population, according to the last oensus, of we really cannot say precisely how few. At any rate they have never been too few for the development among themselves of every known variety of evil speaking and nn charitableness; nor were they, as we began by saying, too many to agrea iu the case of Andrew Walter that his misfortunes were a judgment upon him, and that to sympathize with him would be little short of impious. If he bad not sown the wind, they argued, he would not have reaped the whirlwind. If he had brought up hU boy better, aa they, for example, had each of them brought up theirs (and as he, having only one boy, surely might have done), ha would not then have been lamenting the lad's loss at sea. It was an established axiom at Etst Wyke ham that going to sea was about equivalent to oing to penal servitude. And though a encb of magistrates may be found here and there to give a man three weeks' hard labor fcr ploking up an apple, no one gets -penal seivitude if he has done absolutely nothing to deserve it. Andrew Walter, a man living on his own land, had sent his only son to sea, the excuse being that the toy 1 ad a liking (or It, and had no taste for farming. But East Wykeham knew better than to set any value on such an exouse as this. A lad living in an inland county clearly had no right to have a taste for the sea. To have such a taste showed a natural depravity of character, whioh a Jadi oious father would have subdued with the proper number of stripes. And as he had not subdued it, it was only in the nature of things that he should hear in due time that the ship, the 'All is Well,' had gone down with all hands, and Bhonld see himself left without the one who should have been the prop of his age, and the help of his motherless youog daughters after he should have gone. Neither were the townsfolk pitiful as re garded that matter of the bond. He had much better have never learned to write at all than show such fatal facility in writing his name. What matter that it was his own brother for whom he had become bound Likely enough the brother might have paid his debts, and everybody had their due, if he had had his health. But ho had never known what health was for years-a puny, sickly young man who never ought to have got married; and as a matter of course he LM. die d deeply Involved in his mill, and leaving wife and family quite unprovided for, whom people did say Andrew Walter had maintained ever since his brother's death, which, if true, was clearly reckless extravagance. Could any one wonder, reckoning up the loss he had on his brother's death, the expense ever, since of maintaining the family, the'eost of his son's vessel, and of the valuable cargo with which he had freighted her, tht all these things together had found the end of his resources ? The latest report, indeed, was that he had just failed to effect a farther mortgage on his property; that the present mortgagee, who had given notice to foreclose at the end of the present quarter, could not be pacified or paid, ind that there must be a sale. 'And so,' concluded Mr. Botley, the grocer, to Mr. Skinner, the draper (each of whom had a bill of a few shillings against poor Andrew Walter) 'and so it is one makes bad debt?, and loses one's money by other folks' fault, as doesn't care to work so hard for it.' 'Just so, said Mr. Skinner. 'And no doubt we shall have our fine gentle man here in a few days,' remarked Mr. Botley igair, 'to offer us half a crown in the pound.' 'And,' said Skinner, 'if he comes I shall be sure to give him a piece of my mind; I shall be sure to do it.' CHAPTER II. IN TIME OF TROUBLE. Andrew Walter's house pleasantly over looked the town, both house and inmates being happily litted above their neighbors' spite and unfriendliness. Though not to be too hard upon the town we will bear in mind that it it is not always the people who say the un kindest words who do the unkindest deeds, and will hope that East Wykeham, too, should Andrew Walter ever have to ask it for bread, will at least not give him a stone. If, as the winter day closed in, the reader could have walked up the well-kept gravelled path, defended by choice shrubs, and could have stood at the bright window, whoaep&uea Hashed beneath the firelight, this is what he would have Been inside as snug a room as ke could wish to look upon. First, a man somewhat past the middle age, wed knit and sinewy, with a face kindly and pleasant, though not without lines of care, and at present full of perplexity, lie sits with his elbow on his knee, and his chin upon his hand, looking steadily into the tire, in whioh he does not seem to read any clear answer to the question he is asking. This is Andrew Walter. Next, a girl of about eighteen, but looking older and us if a premature responsibility had sobered her merry face. She eits at a table which is covered with evergreens, and is busy stitching ivy leaves on Btrips of cardboard which in a little while will be shaped into letters. This is Maggie, Andrew 'b eldest daughter. Next, another girl, some four years younger, wonderfully like her sister, but more like her father. She, too, is busy constructing, with wire and string to help, a long rope or ropes of leafy green. Thid is Edith, the second daughter. Last, the Mite; as Andrew often calls her, sadly, 'the widower's mite.' She is a wee maiden of only six years old, but persuades herself she, too, is usefully busy, with needle and thread, making a necklace of the scarlet holly-berries, ller name is Lucy. The girls, it is to be notioed, are all in black, seemingly of the newest and deepest; and there seems to be but li'.tle speaking amongst them. One could not look upon the man without feeling that he was a man of strong passions and allectious; nor on the girls without feeling they were all in all to each other and to him. Until within the last year the current of his life had flowed smoothly and prosperously, lie had had but one great sorrow the loss of his wife; and that sorrow having befallen him when his little maid was born, had been soft ened by time, though not (and not to be) for gotten. Now, however, he was indeed in troubled waters. That town's talk about money matters and an impracticable mort gagee was in the main correct. He had, in one way or other, lost nearly all he had. And at his time of life it waa hard to have to devise plans of keeping the wolf from the door. All kinds of pecuniary loss, loss of position, loss of comforts and luxuries, were, nevertheless, but deprivations of things he might hope to win back again; or, failing that, he could face the want of them with, manly fortitude and resignation. The one loss to which he could not bring himself to be submissive (being loss of that whioh no strength of arm or activity of brain could ever briug him back agaiu) was the loss of his boy. 'The sea, indeed, tthall give up its dead,' he said to himself, 'but not to me.' lie took from his pooket-book and read once more the account, cut out from a Calcutta newspaper, of the great catastrophe in the llooghly which had bereaved him. It gave, as far as was known, the names of all vessels lost, with the port to which they belonged, the captain's Bame, and a brief description ot the nature ef the damage in each case. The entry in which he was interested read thus : A'nne vf 11 U Weil Of it-hat Name of, Name of Jrt Not kuown. Owner, i Cnit tin R, murks. Sot ku.wo. J. K. VVatler. O ev wnd orgU All lout, Now his son James had sailed from England not for Calcutta bat Hong Kong, and it was clear he must have encountered such terrible weather as had first driven him far out of his course, and, at the last, compelled him to run for the llooghly, just at the time when that river was a vortex of destruction to every craft that entered it. In addition to the partioulara got from the newspapers, he had obtained, through the consular agency, this further information: The evidence on which the name of the cap tain had been published as 'supposed J. E. Walter' was that, entangled amongst the wreck of the 'AH is Well' had been found a portion of a captain's coat, in the breast-pocket of which had been found several papers, all of which were quite illegible exoept one empty envelope, the address of. which had been de ciphered as 'Captain J. E. Walter, the "All is Well," Cape Town.' The English postmarks were 'East Wykeham and 'London,' date illegible. This envelope Andrew Walter had procured to be forwarded to him, aud had found the handwriting upon it to be his own. After seeing which he hail given up all the faint hope to which he had clung, and had treasured this old envelope as the last link of communication which he knew to have paused betwee n(i his Bn. Restoring the piece of newspaper and ths envelope to his pocket-book, he lit a oandle, left the girls at their work, and went into aii adjoining room. Leaning against the wall was a package wrapped iu matting,' small, but somewhat heavy. The contents, when, un wrapped and placed upon the table, proved to be a plain, white marble slab, bearing this in scription: ' Iu remembrance of Jamks KmvAKii W'altf.k (only son of Andrew Y niter, ot tbls place), who wbh drowned In the Klvcr Hong lily, ifougul. curing llie groat hurricane of latH AgeJ 'ii yearn, ltev. xxl, 1.' lie had chosen to append this reference to a text oi Scripture, rather than the text itself. Those who cared to turn np the passage in their Bibles, as they sat in church, would see that the comfert he found in it wa3 in keeping before him the thought that though hereafter there should be a new heaveu, and a new earth, there should be 'no more sea.' The father called the girls in for a minute to look at the slab, and they real the in scription silently and tearfully. Then he covered it up again, and they went back. The stone had been worked elsewhere and sent home to him that he night himself (as he had wishtd) superintend its erection over his own pew. Thus, he and his daughters had each a duty in church to-morrow his, to go early with the mason and put up this stone; theirs, to go later and help the vicar's wife to affix the Christmas decorations; for the morrow was the eve of Christmas Day. And, moreover, there wai one little chaplet of cypress and yew which Maggie and Edith had prepared to hang upon their brother's monu ment. 'I remember, said Andrew, 'teaching him all about India, and the Ganges, and this very Hooghly itself, years and year3 ago; little thinking ah ! little thinking.' The girls only shook their heads gently anl sighed. And I doubt and fiar it was my teaching him so much geography that filled him full of longing to Bee the world, and th ways of Htrange people, and first made him impatient of this dull place.' 'Impatient of it, but never of us, papa. Let ub be thankful for that,' said Maggie. 'Tired of us? No, Indeed,' said the father with proud affection. 'I have known some sad days, and I doubt there are more in store for all of us; but the saddest day of all would be that on which I should think my children were tired of their father or each other.' A little band had stolen into his as he spoke and a little mouth had been upturned to kins him, while two other faces had turned to him with looks more eloquent than words. He took the young child upon his knee, and wound her curls about his rough, strong fingers, as he spoke again. 'And J won't say that he was wrong to choose the sea. Could any lad have done better at it than he has done ? Would not his masters have made him captain at twenty-one of their own vessel if I had not bought him a ship myself, and freighted it ?' '.And he never once,' said Edith, 'spant a holiday anywhere but here.' 'I wonder if it was the name that did it,' pondered Andrew, who was not without his superstitions. 'I wonder if I tempted Pro vidence when I would call the ship no other name than "All is Well!" ' 'The shlpB that went down in the storm that day had names of all kinds,' said Miggle, 'and one name had as little protection iu it as an other.' There, a3 the outer darkness deepened, they Bat by the fire and talked. The little one ou Andrew's knee. It seemed a transition almost from night to day when they passed from talk of the lost boy to talk of the mere loss of money, so much had the greater trouble exceeded the less. But it was not till Maggie had peeped over her father's arm iuto the small face and said 'she's asleep,' that they spoke, quite freely of their pecuniary difficulties. The father had taken his elder girls wholly iuto his confidence, knowing that he could trust them. And they seeing themselves so trusted were cheerfully making the least of all difficulties. The Bolicitor through whom all Andrew's money transactions had hitherto beeu arranged was an old schoolfellow of his, whose prohity and kindness of heart he had long kuown. His position was rather that of an ialiunte and affectionate family friend than a legal adviser, iiut the letters of this friend, which had of late been many, had, in spite of all his wishes to serve, come to be looked on almost with dread. Their appearance aud their priiu little teal were well kuown by all the family. Even little Lucy knew so well that these letters were different from other letters, that she had a way of propping them up and lecturing them seriously before they were opened, aud some liweE even went the length of whipping them very severely, with a view to impressing upon them that they really must be good and try to please papa when he opened them. A mole of treatment which had aa yet produced, to her regret, no salutary effect. Andrew had written to this friend a few days before, making some final suggestions towards the renewal of the mortgage, and though he had but the faintest hope of the reply being snoh as he could wish, his heart sickened that he had got no reply at all. To-morrow there will surely be a letter, he t aid; 'and if there ia I shall quite dread to read it.' For indeed it depended on this letter whether they should stay in their old home, or go out at once into the world and seek another. 'But now, Maggie,' he said, 'aa this may be the last Christmas we shall have here, we must not keep it quite like a oommon day, even though we cannot keep it as we used to do. Put on your bonnet and go into the town with me. Poor little Mite, how soundly she deeps; see, she has not waked by my patting her on Edie's knee.' As the door closed gently on them, however, up sprang little Loo and drew aside the cur tain, peeping after them, and laughing. 'I've never been asleep a minute, Edie,' she raid, 'only pretending.' Whereupon Edie having first assumed what the supposed would be the appropriate man ner of a lady of about fourscore, talked down to the young deceiver from that great eleva tion, in an impressive way, and having rung for Martha, inexorably told that maid to take her off to bed. Then she herself set to work again with lufy fingers amongst her holly leaves, her ivy and laurel, until she had got length enough, as the thought, of bright green rope. After which she gave the finishing touches to Maggie's letters, and fixing a white table cover ugainst the piano, pinned them on it, the acred monogram to try their effect Against the clean white linen of the communion table. Last of all, making haste, the swept away her greenery aud had a cheerful, homely supper on the table when father and Maggie came in with the heavy nigut-iime Hanging on tnem. '1 hey had made the little purchases for the Christmas Bay, buying on a humbler scale than usual, and, as Maggie told her, had sent to the widow's house at the mill exaotly the same as they had bought for themselves, for Andrew's dainties would have had no relish had he thought those who were so near to him, and had been so dear to his dead brother, did not chare in them. CHAPTER III. 'ALL IS WELL.' Next morrdng Lucy was up earl v, and the f eascn being one of those mild and open ones which have of late taken tne place ot the se verer CLnstuiases of our fathers, she ran out and amused herself, as children like to do, by digging. ;ihe place sue chose lor digging was just in side the garden gate, where bhe was aoous touied to wait on line mornings to get the let ters from the post office. The garden gate was not quite visible from any oi the windows of the house, the path being curved; but Edie running out betimes (for they were all early risers) found the child busy there. She had exoavated a very neat little grave, aad waa just giving the finishing touches to her work. 'Who are you goiDg to bury to-day, Loo?' the asked. 'Oh, I know,' said the child, 'yoti go idong. It's not you; it's a wickeder than you.' '1 see the poetniaa coming round the cor ner,' said Ed.e; -run in aa soon as you get Ibn IctteTS;' aud Loho left her. In another minute the chill hal the letters from the postman somefot!'' or live; and in an instant (as soon as his back was turned) had selected the wicked one (the London let ter with the prim little seal, which she ha 1 so often whipped in vain), had pitched it into the little grave, deftly filled in the earth, and made all smooth above it, then ran into the house with the rest of the letters, out of breath. 'Nothing again,' said Andrew, as he turned them over. 'But I doubt no news is not good news this time. Franklin would have writ ten, I am sure, if he had had anything to write which would do us good. Sure you have not dropped any letters, Loo?' Bat when he looked round he found the child had slipped out of the room, and nothing more was said when she returned. Neither he nor the girls indeed made any mention of the letter which had been ex pected, or of the subject to whioh it should have referred; but that subject weighed not the less heavily on all of them. To each of them it wa8 clear now that in this matter of the mortgage nothing could be done, that the money mubt be paid, and that to pay it there must be a sale, and they must leave the dear old house. As they passed irom room to room that morning, or from walk to walk in the garden, a feeling grew upon them all that they were taking farewell looks of all. And aa the girls decorated the piotures -and mirrors with the Christmas holly, they thought sadly that when Christ mas came again other hands would cut the thrubs aud trim the rooms for other people. Happily those duties which lay nearest to each of them were sufficient iu great measure to distract their minds from dwelling too much upon the future. Let come what would to morrow, to-day had its own work waiting for each of them. While the girls were busied therefore about their household morning work, doubly diligent that they might hurry to the churoh, Andrew Walter went with the maxon aud saw the me morial he had provided for his son erected over his own pew. This did not occupy htm long, and he was soon at home again, walking briskly in his fields, perhaps hoping to find in weariuess of limb some rent for over-anxiety of spirit. As lor the fine old chnrob, when the bright hUtlight poured iu through the many-oolored window panes, and tell on the sweet patient .aces of tbefle girls as they wreathed the pulpit, the communion rails, and the grand columns of the nave as they decked the holy table itself with living green aud scarlet, and expended all their loving Ingenuity and taste in the decoration of the quaint old rood soreen, it was by no means a place of gloom. Even i he time-btained monuments upon the walls the ancient knight and lady still uplifting stony hands in 6ileut prayer the grotesque laces of the corbels all seemed to wear a blighter, tenderer aspect under the influence of the Christmas green. The old deal stone and the young animated faces seemed alike touched with a new aud deeper expression under the influence of the gracious season and the work that in itself was surely a sort of worship. As column after colnmn waa finished, and arch after arch showed its rich free outline in blight green; as one after the other the branch ing candelabra grew into graceful bushes of leaf and fiuit, the sun sank down and the shadows crept out. Tnen when all was finished, aud 'the old sexton with one solitary candle was sweeping up the scattered fragments from the floor, the vicar's wife and the rest of those who had been at work shook hands and parted. When all the rest had gone, however, Maggie and her sisters stayed behind. . And with them stayed their cousin Minnie, frem the mill, a girl of about Maggie's own age, who mourned for the lost sailor lad with a bitterness that waa intensified by thinking that she had let him go when last they parted with her love still nnconfessed. The girls sat for a while all silent in the family pew. Maggie held little Lucy in her arms, and Edith rested with her head on Min nie's knee. The moon rose and poured its light with a glory of crimson aud gold full on them acd on the new marble slab, beneath which Maggie sat with her face buried on the young child's shoulder. It was Minnie who was organist at the church, and being there she must needs play over one of the anthems of the morrow. Elith went with her to blow the bellows. For a while Maggie continued to Bit with bowed head, still weeping, but soothed and calmed by the strains. The hymn waa 'Hark, the herald angels sinp ;' and as the player forgot Ler sorrow more and more in the exultation of the musio as the notea swelled more and more Jubllaut filling the chuTch with grand old melody, the little voice ot Lucy rose in Maggie's ear sing ing the well-known words, and Maggie herself unconsciously joined ia them and lilted up her head. There in front of her, clearly defined by the moon, stood her brother the dead brother who had been lost at sea. Maggie neither ecreamed nor fainted. He had been so entirely present in her mind she had aa yet been so wholly unable to think of him as anything but the bright, cheerful brother of all her life that to see him there seemed at first only natural. Then in a moment, however, the recollection of all that had befallen in the last mournful months flashed up. No fear came with the recollection; only an intense surprise. Why should she fear, if even this were the spirit of her much-loved brother f She clasped the little child (whose face was turned away) more closely to her, and leaning forwards iu the pew, she shaded her eyes from the moon and looked steadily and earnestly into the face. The hands and arms of the figure came for ward, stretching towards her in the pew. A voice came from the figure: 'Maggie, it is I;' and in an instant another voice the voice of Lucy ecreamed, 'Oh, Maggie 1 that is Jamie I my own brother Jamie 1' and the child sprang from Maggie's knee, and was in his arms. 'A lid why should I have thought anything too hard for Ood J Why should I not have had faith that he who raised Lazarus would raise my brother too ? Neither Martha nor Mary sorrowed more for their brother than I for mine.' The word3 did not shape themselves; but this, in all it3 fulness, was the thought that in a moment of time had passed through Maggie's mind. Then she was also in her brother's arms. For indeed it was he and none other, alive ard well. Meanwhile the music had ceased, losa be cause the player had been interrupted by any noise than by reason of that subtle in stinct which bo often telU na, we know not how, that something wonderful and strange, in which we have an interest and a share, is happening near at hand. One moment more and Edith aud Minnie also were clinging to him, sobbing for joy, and the secret of Minnie's heart was a secret from him no longer. They tl) sat down for awhile and looked at each other with an exultation strangely min gled with doubt. Joy was so much stronger than curiosity that none of them thought of asking any questions. It was enough that he was restored to them: it mattered not how. At last he pointed to the new marble above the pew, and said, with a shaking voice 'Oh l what giief it haa been to you. We must have that down to-night.' 'It went up only this morning,' said Maggie. 'Then you have not get the letter this morn ing,' he asked, 'whioh was cent to tell you of my coming, and ail auout it r indeed i am bure you have not.' 'No,' said Maggie. 'It was enclosed from London by Mr. Franklin.' 'In a blue envelope with a little red seal,' said Lucy; 'and I buried it in the garden, be cause those letters have always been naughty, and vexed papa.' In spite of all, what could they do but laugh at the child's explanation 1 even were it only to make her lift up her head again aud be less ashamed of her guilt. 'The letter was to tell you how this sad, sad mistake has arisen, and to say that Mr. Frank lin and I were coming down to spend, as we tball find it, the happiest Christmas we have ever known. You were to send and meet us at the Junotion, aud we were to have been with you two hours ago, if we had not had to walk.' And have you seen father f ' the girls asked 'Ne; he was not ia the house. So I have left his old friend there, while I sought you and him. The orgau was playing aa I came to the church door, and that told me where totindjou. But let us muke haste home to bim.' Andrew Walter waa at home when they arrived, and had heard from the old lawyer tie story of his son's return; but had as yet nvt succeeded rn convincing himself that the grt-at joy was teal. Not, indeed, until he had the jourg man iu his arms did he fully be lieve it or dare to bay, awe-stricicen 'The sea has given up Its dead given up its dead even to lue.' We will not dwell upon that meeting of lather and son, neither oi whom had ever known what it was to doubt or mistrust, or waver in hia affection for the other. There are some moments of bliss so unalloyed, so great, and so beyond the force of mere lan guage, that only the human heart (which responds alike in high and low, when the great master hand of Nature sweeps the i hordf j can oonceive tueir periectnesa. To cive the necessary facts aa briellv as i03 bible, this ' was how the circumstantial evi dence ly which the young captain bad been declared to be dead, and hia ship lost, was thown to be worthless. Innocent of plagiarism aa Andrew Walter had thought himself iu choosing for his vessel the name 'All Is Well,' there was really another ship afloat, Bailing from a German Lort, but owned by an Englixh master, which ore the same name. When James Walter failed into the harbor of Cape Town, he was amazed to read the name of his own craft as bavins arrived a week earlier from the liiltio. ALd having found out that this namesake of hia vessel was still in port, he was notlorg before he Bought her out and made acquaint ance with her captain. The two vessels Bailed afterwards from Cape Town on the same day, Captain Jaoobson bound for Caloutta, he him self for Hong Kong. Before parting they had got to like eaoh other, and promised teat on getting into port they would write and let each other know what sort of voyage they had. Walter distinctly remembered writing hia own address in penoil in ride an envelope which had contained his father's letter received at Cape Town, and giving this to Jacobscn. The next he heard of Lis poor friend was that his vessel and he were lost in the Hooghly. This he learnt from an Indian newspaper somewhere in China, and saw that the captain was supposed to be himself, though how they had got hia name he had never known till now. He had instantly written home to allay the feara of hia family; but by a strange fatality the mail steamer whii h bore his letter proved to be that very one which struck in the Red Sea, and whose nags were lost, contrary winds had made his voyage home a long one. and he had ar rived in London only the day before. Then when he called on their old friend, Mr. Frank lin, he had, to his utter sorrow, learnt that he waa sun counted amongst the dead, and that these other troubles had fallen on them be sides. Mr. franklin had advised him not to come home that first nieht. but to write first, enclosing under hia own envelope, the handwriting on which would help to save them from the shock of so sudden a lov. And this waa the letter which Mixs Lucy had so dexterously buried, and which, by the aid of a lantern and that youne lady to point out the grave, they now exhumed. 'Mine, said Mr. Franklin, 'yon need not read; for, aa I said, it ia only to tell you the mortgage business is all settled in a way be yond all our hopes. The old sinner,- as Boon as he knew that the money waa ready for him, or course turned round and was particu larly anxious not to have it. ' 'But aa he haa given notice,' exclaimed Jamie, 'he shall have it, whether he wants it or not. And, let me have one more voyage like this, then we will offer to lend him a little money ourselves, on equally as good seourity us he has had.' For Jamie had disposed of his cargo in the China seas to unhoped-for advantage, and had come back freighted, he hoped, with wares which he could at once dispose of as profitably in England. Compared with this resurrection of the dead, and this recovery of lost wealth, other plea sures and surprises of that night were trivial. But nevertheless whan the huge load of luggage arrived which had been brought in a cart from the Junction, the unpacking of the boxes was a eight worth seeing. Jamie had forgotten nobody. Not to men tion the quaint monsters in bronze and ivory, and the piotures from Japan and China which were fcr no one in particular, there were the beautiful inlaid and carved work-boxes for each of the girls (both at home and at the mill), there was the set f wonderfully-carved chess-men, and the extraordinary pipe for father; there was a cage of brilliant birds, and a dog so small you might almost have called it microscopic, for the Mite; there woro ondleaa shawls and silks to adorn the girls, and drive i he townsfolk wild with envy in short, there were so many things rich and rare that the house before half of them were unpacked wore the look of an oriental bazaar. 'Wsa it,' he almost asked himself, 'was it the Eolid ground he stood upon, or was it the air V as he ran with Minnie to her home, having wrapped her well in some of this new finery and loaded her and himself with pre sents for the widow and the children at the mill. He could not stay there, nor anywhere. He hardly gave them all time to kiss him before he was off again, declaring he had fifty things to do that night and could not spare a minute apiece for doing them in. But he did not leave before he had made them all understand they had to go to dinner at his father's on the morrow. Then to the church, first finding Mr. Stone mason, who took down the lying monument, as he declared, with much greater pleasure than he had put it up. When down, the vicar, who bad heard the news (aa indeed all the town had), begged the stone to keep as a curiosity, and almost dislocated Jamie's arm by way of expressing his own gladness. The singers were gathering at the church aa they came out, for in half an hour they would begin the peal of Christmas Eve. Said the vicar 'Now, my men, cannot you give us one special peal first for the lost one who is found, and the dead who is alive again?' Said the sexton, who waa also chief ringer 'We are two men short.' Said Mr. Botley, the grocer, and Mr. Skin ner, the draper, who were standing by We'll take a rope apiece;' for they were ama teur bellringers, and could pull with a will, and had forgotten all their fears of half a crown in the pound from Andrew Walter. Whereupon he for whom the peal waa meant, like the coward he was not, took to his heels and ran home, seeing reason to fear that if he did not do so he might be carried shoulder-high. The clear voices of the bells overtook him nevertheless before he was half-way homer mid made him turn to look back upon the daikling town, blessing it and them. For never since the bells were cast had they seat foith a heartier peal than that they flung upon the air that night; Botley and Skinner having defied their coats and warmed to their work with mutual emulation. Mr. Franklin did not make it quite clear to Lucy either that night or next day what had made him be so wicked as to write those vexa tious letteis to papa. But after dinner next day that is, Christmas Day when that young lady had almost danced him off his legs although, for au old gentleman, he did dance quite wonderfully she so far repeated of her past severity towards him as to promise that if he would write often she would neither whip him in person nor whip his proxy, and that under no clrcumstanoes wouli Bhe ever ain bury another of his letters, prematurely. The organ in the Mormon Temple at Salt Lake City is said to be "8000 voice power." Eugenie is Jnnt the leat bit bald, aud covers the "damned spot" with a frizzle aud sosette. Queen Isabella says that if sh'e had kno vn how nice Paris waa she would have ab lie Ued years ago. A Frenchman has composed another opera of "Komeo aud Juliet."