Bellefonte, Pa., January 10, 1890. MY PSALM. I mourn no more my vanished years: Beneath a tender rain, An April rain of smiles and tears, My heart is young again. . The west winds blow, and, singing low, I hear the glad streams run; The windows of mv soul I throw Wide open to the sun. No longer forward nor behind 1 look in hope or fear, But, grateful, take the good I find, The best of now and here. I break my pilgrim staff, I lay Aside the toiling oar, The angel sought so far away I welcome at my door. # ® # # # # The woods shall wear their robes of praise The south winds softly sigh, And sweet calm days, in golden haze, Melt down the amber sky. Not less shall manly deed and word Rebuke an age of wrong ; The graven flowers that wreathe the sword Make not the blade less strong. But smiting hands shall learn to heal,— To build as to destroy ; Nor less my heart for others feel That I the more enjoy. All as God wills who wisely heeds To give or to withhold And knoweth more of all my needs Than all my prayers have told. Enough that blessings undeserved Have marked my erring track ;— That whensoe'r my feet have swerved, His chastening turned me back ;— That more and more a Providence Of love isunderstood, Making the springs of time and sense Sweet with Eternal Good ;— 8 And death seems but a covered way Which upens into light, Wherein no blinded child can stray Beyond the Father's sight;— That care and trial seem at Through memory’s su Like mountain rangeso The purple distance fair ;— That all the jarring notes of life Seem blending in a psalm, And all the angles of the strife, Now rounded into calm. And so the shadows fall apart, And =o the west winds play; And all the windows of my heart I open to the day. —John G. Whittier, aged 82, December 17. MR. CACKLE'S CARPET. “Carpets, young man, if you please !”’ said Mrs, Cackle. “What sort of carpets, ma'am? Mo- quette ? Wilton? We have some very desirable importations of royal velvet” “No, Brussels! The cheapest thing you have in Brussels that is any way decent.” Mrs. Cackle sat up on the eighth floor of Meddle & Minturn's great store, her silken flounces rippling around her ampie form, the bird of paradise plume on her hat nodding, as if to give extra significance to every word she spoke. Her tan kid gloves, glistening with many buttons, were fas- tened with a gaudy diamond set bar, and her plump visage bore the traces of pearl powder and cream of roses, laid on with no sparing hand. Beside her sat her dear particular iriend, Miss Rosina Rufford, who al- ways played the part of Damon to her Pythias, and invariably went shopping with her. “You see, Rosina,’ said Mrs. Cack- le, who was one of the kind that talk very load in public places, and indulge in ail sorts of details, “it’s for a wed- ding present. Lemuel gave me a check for a hundred dollars,andtold me to buy a nice parlor carpet for his cousin, who is to be married next month” “Mr. Cackle is always so generous,” smiled Miss Rufford, whose new set of ialee teeth made her smiles very smil- ing indeed. “A hundred dollars, did you say, dear ? That will buy a very nice one, indeed!” “It would, ” said Mrs. Cackle, “ ff I was goose enough to buy it. Bat I don’t mean to. Cackle’s only a man, and men never do understand things. ‘What do these out of the wilderness people understand about carpets? And what do they want of the best grade? No, young man, I don’t want any of the dollar and a quarter lines. That's toe high. Haven't you anything for about a dollar, or ninety cents? It needn’t be the very finest quality, IT tell you. If I spend fifty dollars on it,” turning once more to Miss Rufford, “it'll be all that is necessary, and the extra sui I'll investin a new satin gown for myself. Ha, ha, ha; Cackle 18 80 very close with his check book, that now and then I have to circum- vent him.” “You are so witty, dear,” tittered Miss Ruftord. “Nothing under a dollar and twelve cents? shrilly repeated Mrs. Cackle, as the salesman came back again. “I couldn’t think of paying that. Have you no unsaleable patterns nothing that nobody else will buy ? The people that I want this carpet for are dreadfully old fashioned, and never will know the difference.” “Oh, my dear, vou are too funny!” said Miss Rufiord, behind her fan. “We have one,” hesitated the young clerk—*a ‘scarlet ground, with im- mense olive-green pineapples all over it. We haven't sold a yard oft it. Everybody seems afraid of it, and I don’t really think” “Let me see it,” said Mrs. Cackle, promptly. The porter presently wheeled up a mammoth roll on a hand barrow; the clerk unfolded itz hideous, glaring pro- portions where, against a scarlet ground, some mouster vegetables en- twined itself among impossible scrolls. “You see, ma'am, it's quite unsalea- ble,” said the clerk. “Mr. Meddle was talking of donating it to the reception room of the Blink and Doodle Orphan asylum, at” -— i “It ig a little peculiar,’ said Mrs. Cackle, eyeing it through herlorgnette. “Quite-—ahem !—what [should call an art carpet.” i rte eb “Oh, my dear Louisa! giggied Miss Rufford. 3 “But very striking,” said Mrs. Cackle. “Quite so, ma’am,”; said the clerk, coughing spasmodically behind his pocket handkerchief. ; “What will you let me have it for?” said Mrs. Cackle, in a business like way. . “Eighty. cents, ma'am,” said the clerk. “Say seventy-five,” spoke the custo- mer. “We conldn’t, indeed, ma'am. It cost us more than that to import it.” “I'll take thirty yards,” said Mrs. Cackle. “Let me see” (calculating on the fat tan colored fingers where the rings bulged ont so obtrusively), “naught’s a nanght, cight times naught—that will come to twenty: four dollars, won't it, young man ?” “Twenty-four dollars, ma'am!" said the clerk, scarcely able to repress his amazement that any one in their senses should buy so ugly a carpet. “And that will leave seventy-six ou} of the check,” said Mrs. Cackle, glee- fully. “I'll tell you what, Rosina—I can trim the black satin with the very nicest Kscurial lace. I suppose those back country barbarians will invite me to the wedding, and I'd like to wear something that will just paralyze them! And my husband will never be any the wiser. Do you look, Rosina!” nudging her companion. “What a beautiful moquette that tall young lady in the black silk suit is choosing! I’ve got to have something new in my reception room next year. I wish I could affors” “% “The address, ma'am, please!” said the clerk, pencil and pad in hand. Mrs. Cackle hesitated. “Well, I don’t know,” said she. “I suppose it had better be sent at once, with our card, to the bride. Give me the paper, young man, if you please. I'll write it down, so that there can’t possibly be any mistake.” “I tell you, Rosina,” she added, as she sat in the elevator, being lowered down to the level of the surface world, “I wish I knew who that elegant young lady was looking at the white-and-pearl moquette carpet! I'd like to ask her for the pattern of that shoulder cape. I'm sure it must have come direct from Paris.” “Well, my dear,” said Mr. Cackle, as he sat down to the soup and roast beef of the plentiful table at home, “what sort of a parlor carpet did you buy for cousin Erminie?”* “Oh, a beauty!” sail Mrs. Cackle, spreading out her napkin to protect her dress. “Did you use all my check ?” “Yes, every dollar of it,”’ answered Mrs. Cackle, salving her conscience with the recollection of the black satin aud the Escurial lace, which were al- ready in the dressmaker’s hands. “I hope they'll be pleased,” said Mr. Cackle. “l1t’s very essential to make a favorable impression, I beg you to remember, my dear, on these rela- tions, for the young man Erminie is to marry is a r lative of the head of onr firm, and could, I have no doubt,recom- mend me for advancement.” “Why didn’t you tell me ail this be- fore?" said Mrs. Cackle, with a pang of tardy remorse. “But how on earth did your country cousin come across such a good match?” “Oh, I don’t know. I believe he came out to Glassybrook fishing or gunning or something. Minnie's very pretty, they tell me.” “Humph !” said Mrs. Cackle. **Red cheeks and black eyes, and hair cut in a pointed bang right down to the top iF of the nose—I know what these rustic beauties are !” The time for the wedding arrived. The Cackles, in their holiday attire, traveled down to Glassybrook, and there, on the drawing room floor of an elegant semi-Italian villa, Mrs. Cackle recognized the very white and year) moquette carpet that she had so covet- ed at Meddle & Minturn’s. And the bride—already in her white silk and floating veil, to whom she was intro- duced as Miss Erminie Brooks, soon to become Mrs. Howard Crespigny—was none other than the elegant young lady in the Paris wrap and the per- fectly fitting gloves and boots who had heard every detail of the bargain for the unsaleable carpet I” If the cracks in the floor under- ueath the moquette colors conld have opened and swallowed Mrs. Cackle np at that moment, what an indescribable relief it would have been ! “I have to thank you, Mr. Cackle, for your present,” said Erminie, in her slow, queenly way ; and her smile was a riddle. “I hope you like it,” said honest Mr. Cackle, looking down at the rose-and- pearl shades of the soft pile, that closed around his foot like forest moss. “It certainly is a pretty pattern.” Mrs. Cackle shot an imploring glance at the bride—-a glance that said, plain- er than words, “Don’t betray me!’— and the bride began to talk with some- body eise about something else. She did not enjoy the black satin dress with the Kscurial trimmings so much as she had expected. The Paris costumes of the ‘back Zcountry cous ins” left her far in the shade. “I'll never go to that dowdy dress maker again,” said she, in a rage. But she did, for Miss Biggs was cheap, and Mrs. Cackle was economi- cal. On the very first call she made there after her trip to Glassybrook, however, she gave a great start and stared around like . one who beholds a ghost. “My goodness me!” exclaimed she. “Where did you get that carpet ?"’ “Isn't it nice?” said Miss Biggs, beaming through her eyeglasses. “It was a present from Mrs. Howard Cres- pigny. Her mother was once a custo- mer of mine. Wasn't it thoughtful of her ?" Mrs. Cackle made a little noise as if she was swallowing something, and said yes, she thought it was. 1 Mrs. Howard Crespigny was the, bride. The carpet was her own wed- ding gift—the identical “unsaleable pat-’ TE a wera.’ aud Mi. Cackie never received promotion in the firm of Harriman & Crespigny on the recommendation of his new relation-in-law. Mr Cackle thought it very strange; Mrs. Cackle didn't.—Helen Forrest Graves in Philadelphia Saturday Night. TL LL R———————— Innate Hoggishness, “Now just stand beside wae a minute and notice how much innate hoggish- ness there isin human nature,” said a conductor at the Boston and Maine sta- tion last night to a Globe reporter. “The 5.45 train is just backing in. Watch.” The long row of empty cars slowly rolled into the station. The large plat- form and the little platform between the tracks were covered with men and women waiticg to get seats as soon as the cars stopped. But as the speed of the cars slackened somewhat a wmove- ment began all along the crowd. Men jostled against each other in frantic at- tempts to board the moving cars, clutch- ed at the rails aud stumbled all over the steps, trying to clamber aboard ; and when the cars came to a full stop near- ly every one of them was almost filled with men comfortably reading their pa- ers. P As for the women. Well, one or two brave but careless souls may have tried to step upon a car before it stopped, but for the rest there was nothing left to do but wait while the men, unencumbered with skirts and petticoats, jumped in and got good seats. “Not only do the men steal all the seats,” remarked the conductor, “but they never think of offering a woman a seat. Street-car etiquette sort of half compels a man not to allow a lady to stand, but in a steam car she gets a seat only when she is able to fight for it. Some one will get killed jumping on those cars some day, and then perhaps you will see a change in things. Women have no divine rights I sup- pose, but they ought to be allowed a fair start in the race.”’— Boston Globe Mark Twain's Boyhood. “He was always a rascal,” said R. E. Morris, the painter, at 520 South Fourth street, speaking of Mark Twain. “I was born and raised in Hannibal; and know when Mrs. Clemens (Mark’s mother) moved from Florina, Monroe county, to Hannibal. Mark was a;dull, stupid, slow-going fellow, but he was full of pranks, and while he didn’t do the meanness, he planned it and got other boys to do it. We went to school to Dr. Meredith, and Mark always sat near the foot of the class. He never took any interest in books, and I never saw him study his lessons. He left school and went to learn the printing business, and soon after that left Hanni- bal and went to steamboating. “I staid at school, got a good educa- tion, and am a painter, while Mark is a millionaire. It is a scandalous fact that as a boy from 10 to 16 years of age, Mark was a dull, stupid fellow, and it was the wonder of the town as to what end would be his. He was pointed out by mothers as a boy that would ‘never amount to nothin’,” if he did not act- ually come to some bad end. And he was the most homely lad in school, too. Pranks? I can think of a dozen of ‘em, and his ‘Huckleberry Finn’ is full of Hannibal episodes worked over. I read that with as much interest as I would a diary of Hannibal kept during my school days. Mark is three years older than myself, but he was alwaysin a class of boys two or three years younger than himself.” —S8%. Joseph (Mo.) News. Thomas Jefferson. A Pen Picture of the Third President of the United States. Jefferson was very tall, six feet two and a half inches in height, sandy-com- plexioned, shy in manner, seeming cold, awkward in attitude, and with little in his bearing that suggested command. * * % One of the greatest of modern writers first made himself famous by de- claring that society was founded on cloth; and Jefferson, at moments of some interest in his career as President seemed to regard his peculiar style of dress as a matter of political importance, while the Federalist newspapers never ceased ridiculing the corduroy small- clothes, red plush waistcoat and sharp- toed boots with which he expressed his contempt for fashion. * * * For eight years this tall, loosely-built, some- what stiff figure, in red waistcoat and yarn stocking, slippings down at the heel, and clothes that seemed too small for him, may be imagined sitting on one hip, with one shoulder high above the other, talking almost without ceas- ing to his visitors at the White House. His skin was thin and delicate, peeling from his face on exposure to the sun, giving it a tettered appearance. This sandy face, with hazel eyes and sunny aspect; this loose, shackling person; this rambling, brilliant conversation, belonged to the controlling influences of American history, more necessary to the story than three-fourths of the of- ficial papers, which only hid the truth. Jefferson’s personality during these eight years appeared to be the Govern- ment, and impressed itself like that of Bonaparte, although by a different pro- cess, on the mind of the Nation. [n the village simplicity of Washington society he was more than king, for he was alone in social as well as political pre-eminence. Except the British Lega- tion, no house in Washington was open to general society ; the whole mass of politicians, even the Federalists, were dependent on Jefferson and ‘‘the Palace” for amusement. * * * He showed his powers at their best in his own house where among friends as genial and cheer- ful as himself his ideas could flow freely, and could be discussed with sympathy. Such were the men with whom he sur- rounded himself by choice, and none but such were invited to enter his Cabi net.— Henry Adams’ “History of Jef- ferson's Administration.” ——The Pittsburg Labor Tribune, edited by a Republican, says that there is now only two cents 4d ton difference in the labor cost of producing Bessemer steel in this country and in England. But the $17 a ton tariff tax must be kept up to ‘‘protect American labor’ against the two cents a ton. Ye gods! what is this tariff business coming to, any way? ’ ————————— Electrical Execution Described. The preparations necessary for electri- cal execution are very simple. The con- demned criminal’s cell is visited by the prison authorities and his hands and feet are saturated with the weak potash sol- ution which so rapidly overcomes th» skin's resistance; during this space of thirty seconds or less, his electrical resis- tance may be measured, though Mr Edison’s researches in this line have rendered even this unnecessary. Sh:d in wet felt slippers, the convict walks to the chair and is instantly strapped into position ; his feet and hand: are again immersed in the potash solution contained in a toot tub connscted to one pole and in hand basins connected to the other. With this perfect contact there is no possibility of burning the flesh and thus reducing the effect of the current upon the body. Dials of elec- trical instruments indicate that all the apparatus is in perfect order and record the pressureat every moment. The depu- ty sheriff closes the switch. Respiration and heart action instantly cease, and electricity, with a velocity equaling that { of light, destroys lite before nerve sensa- tion, at a speed of only one hundred and eighty feet per second, can reach the brain. There is a stiffening of the muscles, which gradually relax after five seconds have passed ; but there is no struggle and no sound. The majes- ty of the law has been vindicated, but no physical pain hasbeen caused.—Har- old P. Brown, in North American Re- view. Herrmann's Poker Story. “I never play cards in earnest,” said Hermann after the show last night. “Those who knew me wouldn’t play with me anyhow, and of course, I would not take any advantage of those who don’t. But 1 remember one night, nota thousand years ago, that in order to amuse a few friends, I sat down to a quiet little game of poker. You see, it was this way’: I met the friends, and was introduced to an innocent-looking youth of the dude persuasion, whose fuee was as vacant in expression as a pound of putty. This youth had been bragging of his powers as a poker play- er, and had made the others so tired that they whispered to me to take the conceit out of him for the fun there was in it. T was ready, and we sat down.” “In Philadelphia ?” “Bless you, no. They don’t play poker in Philadelphia. This wasin—— Wel’, when we began the game I allow- ed the youngster to win in order to get him interested, and the better to enjoy the circus, the others dropped out and my victim and I had the table to our- selves. Of course I was to give him back whatever I won from him—that was understood. We didn’t play with chips, as we had none, but made the game a quarter ante and a dollar limit, so that we could use the money without making any awkward change. Every time my callow friend won a pot he put the silver and bills in his pocket and would chipin the stuff’ as he needed it. After he had won a respectable pile I began to get my work in, and by hand- ling and dealing the cards in my own peculiar way 1 soon had his pile in a fair way to innocuous desuetude. Oc- casionally I would let him win, just to keep the fun up, and I don’t know but what I enjoyed my opponent’s inno- cence as much as did my friends. But all things must have an end. Finally I cleaned him out much to his surprise, and ordered a bottle. My friends could not keep in any longer. “I say, old man.” said one, “do you know who you’ve been playin’ with ?”’ “Yes,” replied my victim calmly: “Hermann, the magician, and he's a good player.” This was somewhat of a surprise all around. But I laughed and handed him back the money I had won. He wouldn't takeit. No sir. Said I had won it; had he won mine he would have kept it, and under no consideration would he take it back. That was not his way of plaving poker. It was no use for me to protest, to teil him that I had deliberately robbed him. He was sorry that he had got in with a man who didn’t play a square game, but that it was his lookout. He ought to have seen that he was being fleeced, but as he had been fleeced and with his eyes open, too, he was not the man to squeal. I tell vou I telt mean. I didn’t think it half so funny then as I did before. But all I could do or say made no impression on my vietim, and with a dignified bow he lett us,” “All TI can do,” T said to one of my friends, ‘will be to give this money to some charitable institution.’ : “Then I gave the waiter one of the bills I had won to pay for the wire. He came back with it, and the information that it was a counterfeit. Yes, sir. That guileless youth had won my good money and rung in over a hundred dollars’ worth of paper on me that wasn’t worth a cent a pound. I'm pretty good on handling cards, but poker is a mighty uncertain game--mighty uncertain. — Philadelp aia Inquire. He Was Big Enough for Three. There is a story of a lately deceased portly Bishop, who never lost sight of himself and his importance to the flock. He was a kindly, good-hearted old gen- tleman ; but it cannot be denied that his bump of self-esteem was abnormally developed. Once, while making the rounds of his conference his’ duties brought kim to a certain church, and a friend persuaded him to make a pastoral call under somewhat unusual circum- stances. An estimable lady had lost her reason. The Bishop was asked to call upon her in the hope that he might say something which would rouse her from her despondent condition. At the house the Bishop was ushered into the parlor, and there he ensconced his portly frame in a large old-fasiiioned chair, and await- ed with serene benignity the appearance of the lady. The door opened, and it was immedi- ately evident that she was in one of her queer spells. She came toward the Bishop, walked slowly around him, ey- ing him closely, and peered timidly at him. Finally she seemed to summon all her courage, and said in a frightened way as her glance dwelt againon his well-rounded form... ‘Please, sir, are vou the Trinity ?” cured by Dr. Sage’s Remedy. ALAR nt Senatorial Tipplers. What the Senators Like in the W y of Drinks. Many of the Senators do not like to go into the public restaurants and take their refreshments. In the Senate cafe at room is kept apart for the use of Senators only, and the vulgar public is not expected to break in there and watch the great men eat and drink. But the vulgar public does break in and orders its own luncheons and cold tea precisely as if it had a right there, says the writer of the Washington letter to the Philadelphia News. Robbed of this privacy, the good old Senators who like a quiet “nip” are thrown upon the resources of the com- mittee rrooms. The resources of the committee rooms are usually equal to the emergency. Many sensational stories have been written about the gorgeous drinking places kept in the Senate committee rooms. As a matter of fact, the buffets are usually very simple affairs. No at- tempt is made at display, and the stock of glassware is usually limited to three or four pieces. Two or three decanters stand on the shelf in a secluded corner, with the glasses and the hydrant water conveniently near. That is all. In Senator Pendleton’s day the Li- brary Committee had a tolerably exten- sive array of glassware, but that was owing to Mr. Pendleton’s fondness for fancy, mixed drinks, and to his posses- sion of a messenger who was an artist in that line. Mr. Pendleton himself knew all about the mysteries of absinthe. vermouth, maraschino and benedictine, and, it is said, could mix a patriotic red, white and blue pousse cafe. ‘When Senator’ Pendleton left the Committee Senator Beck took charge, and he reduced the stock of pretty glassware to a basket-covered demijohn and a tin cup. Mr. Mahone used to keep some very fine fruit brandies in his committee- room, and Senator Edmunds is and for many years has been a moderate drink- er of brandy. Mr. Riddleberger took his liquor, good Virginia whisky, from the mouth of a quart flask, without the interposition of cup or glass. There is quite a rivalry between sever- al of the Senators as to the quality of the liquor which they keep on tap for their friends. It is conceded that up to this time Senator Blackburn has carried off the prize with some very fine old hand- made sour mash from his Kentucky home. Senator Voorhees is one of the best judges of whisky in the Capitol, and Senator Walcott, of Colorado, %is an authority on fancy drinks. Lincoln Skinned Him. How the Lamented President Won a Widow's Suit. “If I can free this case from techni- calities and get it properly swung to the jury, I'll win it,” Abraham Lincoln used to say, when confident of the jus- tice of the cause he represented. He was weak in defending a wrong case, for he was mentally and morally too honest to explain away the bad points of a cause by ingenious sophistry. Instead of attempting to bolster up such a cause, he abandoned’it. Once he abandoned a case in open court, being convinced that it was unjust. A less fastidious lawyer took Mr. Lineoln’s place and won the case. Mr. Herndon, in hi “Life of Lin- coln,” tells a story which exhibits his ability in getting a case he believed in “properly swung to the jury.” A pension agent, named Wright, se- cured for the widow of a Revolutionary soldier a pension of $400, of which sum he retained one-halt as his fee. The pen- sioner, a crippled old woman, hobbled into Lincoln’s office and told her story. It stirred Lincoln up; he brought suit against the agent, and on the day of the trial he said : “I am going to skin Wright, and get that money back.” He did so. The old woman told her story to the jury. Lincoln in his plea drew a picture of the hardships of Val- ley Forge, describing the soldiers as creeping barefooted over the ice, and marking their tracks by their bleeding feet. Then he contrasted the hardships of the soldiers, endured for their country with the hardened action of the agent in fleecing the old woman of one-half of her pension, He was merciless; the members of the jury were in team, and the agent writhed in his seat under the castigation of Lincoln's denunciation. The juryreturned & verdict in her favor for the full amount, and Lincoln made no charge for his services. His notes for the argument were unique : “No contract—Not professional ser- vices — Unreasonable charge—Money retained by Def’t not given by PI'ff- - Revolutionary War—Describe Valley Forge privations—Ice—Soldiers’ bleed- ing feet—Pl'fl’s husband —Soldier leav- ing fer army—Skin Def't-—Close.”’—— Globe Democrat. Establishing Their Genealogy: It was at the depot in Macon, Ga. A colored man from the country stood looking at the locomotive when the col- ored fireman called out : “Hey, vo’ nigger, what yo’ lookin’ at?” “Who's nigger ? other. Vo! Is.” “So is vo.” “Look out, dar, nigger. no sass ofi’n shucks!” “Yo! is shucks yo'self.” “Hump! Do yo’ know what my fad- der sold fur befo’ de wah?” “No.” “Fo'teen hundred dollars in gold, sah, an’ dey reckoned dat was $200 under price. Who was yo’ fadder, sah?” “He was de gem’lan who bought vo’ fadder fur a waitah, sah, an’ he allus lowed he paid a thousand dollars mo’ dan he was worth.” demanded the 1 doan’ taka a ———————— “What are yer doin,” you young rascal ?”7 said a farmer to a remarkably small boy, on finding him standing un- der a tree in nis orchard with an apple in his hand. + Please, sir, I was only goin’ to put Chromic nasal catarrh positively | this "ere apple back on the tree, sir; it had fallen down, sir.’ —Judge. . I EE A TY CE TET TI SE TN The Biggest Earthly House. i The ‘‘Friehaus” (free house,) situated {in Vieden, a suburb of Vienna, is said | to be the most spacious building on the | globe. Within its walls a whole city of | human beings live and work, sleep and | eat. It contains, in all, between 1,200 - and 1,500 rooms, divided into upward of , four hundred dwelling apartments of | from four to six rooms each. This im- mense house has thirteen court-yards— five open and eight covered—and a large garden within its walls. A visitor to the building relates that he once spent two hours in looking for a man known to reside in the house. Scarcely a trade, handiwork or profession can be named which is not represented in this enor- mous building. Gold and silver work- ers, makers of tancy articles, lodging- house keepers, book-binders, agents, turners, hatters, officers, lock-smiths, joiners, tutors, scientific men, govern- ment clerks. three bakers, eighteen tail- ors, twenty-nine shomakers and many other tradesmen live in it. The house has thirty-three staircases and fronis on three streets and one square. One day the postman’s delivery has amounted to asmany as 1,000 pieces in this single but Titanic house. To address a letter to the person it is intended for does not as- sure the sender that the person to whom it is addressed will ever receive it. In order to “make assurance doubly sure,” all letters addressed to the ‘‘Freihaus” must be provided. with both the given and the sur-name of the person for whom intended, the number of the staircase and the number. of the apart- ment, otherwise it is as apt to go astray as though addressed to a city unprovid- ed with directions as to street and num- ber. At the present time 2,120 persons live in this immense building. The Man Who Laughs. Dr. Peppenbrook writes to a St. Louis paper that, contrary to the general im- pression, wrinkles are caused by laugh- ing instead of worry. It is just as well that this statement should be given as much publicity as possible because there has been a good deal of sympathy wasted if the doctor isright. A person whose face is all wrinkled up is currently be- lieved to have passed through a sea of troubles. The reason for this probably grew out of the fact that, when the hands are kept under water for any Jength of time, the flesh becomes crink- led. The natural supposition was that the skin of the face would do likewise when subjected to the waters of adversi- ty. There seems to be reason in this deduction. Yet the doctor cannot be wrong or he would not be right. And the wrinkled ones of the race must now be considered as the people who have had a good time. The creases and fur- rows mark the rounds of pleasure they have taken, and it will be danger- cus for any joker to try any chestnut on them unless he is proof against the chest- nut bell.— Herald of Heath. Oracular Utterances. They need much whom nothing will content. Nothing overcomes passion more than silence. Earnestness in a good cause can not stop short of fame. Victory is foreshadowed by the effort put forth to bring itabout. People sure of their own social posi- tion are never afraid to condescend. Often the “nicest kind of people’ be- come snobs as soon as they get money. A helping word to one in trouble is of- ten like a switch on a railroad track, but one inch between wreck and smooth rolling prosperity. Time washes away the customs and opinions of mankind, but human nature remains the same in its essential quali- ties or principles. Many persons consider themselves friendly when they are only officious. They counsel not so much that you may become wise as that they may be known as teachers of wisdom. The power of a strong intellect is mightier than that of kings. Wealth and station unconsciously yield obe- dience to it. All instinctively honor it, and are influenced by it. Health Hints. Don’t shake a hornet’s nest to ses if any of the family are at home. Don’t try to take the right of way from an express train at a railroad cross- ing. Don’t go near a draft. If a draft comes toward you, run away. A sight draft is the most dangerous. Don’t blow in the gun your grand- father carried in the war of 1812. It is more dangerous now than it was then. Don’t hold a wasp by the other end while you thaw it out in front of the stove to see if it is alive, It is generally alive. Don’t try to persuade a bull-log to give up a yard of which he is in posses- sion. Possession in a bull-dog is ten points of the law. Don’t go to bed with your boots on. This is one of the most unhealthy ha- bits that a man, especially a married man, can be addicted to. Fashion in Fragments, The small bonnet will survive as a chapeau de theatre and reception cap after it is dead for street wear. Charming evening gowns for young ladies are made of asparagus green veil- ing trimmed with white, black or green, and gold lace. Even Carrick capes are made of tar- tan, lined with a matching or contrast- ing silk, and trimmed with a deep turn-downed collar of Astrakhan or oth- er fur. The tartans or plaids most in vogue are of dark shades of green, brown and gray, combined with rare skill, and fine streaks of vivid yellow, red, white and black. Apricot, a lovely yellowish shade of pink, is in high favor for evening silks, tu'les, mousselines de chiffon, mousse- lines de soie, fish nets and other evening fabrics. Pelisses lined with silk are frequently made of two kinds of tartan, and then combined with velvet or plush for the "collar and cape, the sleeves or cuffs, and pockets. Astrakhan is also seen on such long wrap:.—New York Sun.