mm $hc OfohimMan, INDEPENDENT JOUflNAL, MtCHMMttMl KVKIlV HATCIIDAT. 1! Binonulmrf;, CotitntMrt Comity, 1'n. .4 MIMM. iTtro Dollars n year, In rtdvnnoo. If not lmM hi (nlviuioetrTwo Dollnrn and I'iny Cvnta, Address, U letters to uvmnu it. Moonn. Editor of Iho Coi.rMtiMS, lllooiiiflbiira, Cotmnbln (Vttnty, fa. Bo UNCROWNED KINGS. Jfr-'-' 111' TlltttKKI.r.T AIKES. 0tt;ya uncrowned, but kingly kings, '(jillftda roynl by tho brain und heart, 0f nit IVvrtli' wealth tho noblest part, "Yet reckoned nothing In tlio mart Wlioro tnon know not but sordid thlnw i All hull to thee, most Ictngly hints I tDliTyojfncrowncd, Imt kingly ldnsrn ( yiiosobrenlli mid words of llvliin, llnmo Itcivo yattonoil slavo nations from Iholr sbnmo, Aridjitd them rise In manhood's numu; hwlft as tlio curved bow backward urr h'BJ W tdllWyo, "iot kingly kings! Oil; tfo Uncrowned, but kingly kings) Wh8sd strung light arms hath oft been bnrod; "Wlior fires nf fijjhtcous battle glared; to think on yu tho llMtt epsprlhgs, Oh", uncrowned, but klnuly ttlhgu t. iOhYyo Uncrown but Idngly kHif I "Whoso burning songs', hko livii poured, ..Havosmltton llko ti twu-''d 'word Bout forth by Heaven's avenging VjtiX V4 puriio tho earth, wlioro seldom ellugtf To Ml but yc, oh, kindly kings I 'Oh ft uncrowned, but kingly kings I To whose estiitlc gale nlono Tho beautlrul Ifcaviu Ii nhown, And Mini have miulo it nil your om; lYour lavish hand urovtnd us Ulngs Earth's richest wreath, oh, noble kings J .."Oh, ye uncrowned, hut kindly kings I ..Tho honrt loaps wildly lit your thought, '''And tho bruin fires 111 If It caught "'sshrcds of ymir tnautlu; yo havo fought Not vainly, If your glory brings A'lttigorlug llsbl U earth, oh, klugsl Oh, yo uneixnwA U kindly kings t Whofig uiuIs on Maruh's fruit did sup, Avd.Vovt lu tlnry charlotu ui Wliero'cKrlh hud ilrlui',l his hemlock cup 'YfxUuds of Ood, hut tymnts' stings, UucroVuod, but still the kliijjllcHt klnpil ... fi.e TilB PERIL OF THE MINE. AN OLD LADY'S STOUT. No ono knew wliy the tiny woman who lived near Iho Krcat coal inlnu was called Aunt Mndge, although every ono know tlio instant sho caino in view why flho was callod little, for very pinull she was, not much larger than a child. This little Aunt Jluilgc had a heart go . largo that it could not live in her, but came put through kind words from her lips, and lovlug tide in iter eyes, until It fcll.abuut her, enveloping her little person so completely that she was nil heart, and when you looked at her Jou could, not see anything else; and you thought sho was as large as any ono until unothcr jieis n chanced to conio nnd jilaco flvo or six feet of human growth bcsldo her mito of being, and then you-l could not help exclaiming, " 'What a lit tlo.womau 1" .. Wlicn you were on your way to visit "Aunt kludge, and saw tho brownest Ut ile, ,'nut-shcll of a house in tho world eta'hding closo to tho mouth of tho great coal mine, you thought, " Oh, that is a nut which ripened years ago, on ono of the 'giant trees that grew to mako tho coal beds, and it has been gotting brown er o.very century since tho trees forgot how: to grow, and I know it must bo ivory hard to crack." And so yon would goup to it, and put out your hand in all ,..its;strcngth, and glvo a knock on tho place whero tho shell looked tho tliiu jicsi; and Just when you wore expect ing, to hear a great cracking noise, the cloor of tho shell would open so gently that boforo you wero awuro tho kernel would bo boforo you, and you would bo drawn into tho nut by a friendly hand ; '.ndvwlien tho door was closed the nut . twould seem to bo singing about all the riuns that had shone upon, and tho winds ihat had blown over tho great tree on Which it grew. ;Onco upon a time somebody whisper d,that litllo Aunt ATudgo had mailca great ..discovery which sho was keeping profoundly secret that sho had certain ly found tlio fountain of perpetual youth, orthoro grew not a wrinkle more on .her. loving face this year than tho last, iind tho Winters passed and "left no jsign." Tlio miners who weut below always stopped to say good-by, and for their coining up Aunt JIudge always watch x .'ed tAvith a strango, wistful look that jiovor seemed to tiro. It was this that kept her young the miners coming up rom tho mine. Her wistful look could aiot. bo diverted at tho magical hour, und no Inducement could tempt hor to tay from homo oven for ono day. During tho months of ono Summoran owner of tho great mino removed with Jits family to a small hotiso midway be tween .tho village and tho house of lit tlo,Aunt Sludge. His namo was Owen Yall?ilIo had two sons, Paul and Ar tburboys juit emerging from cliild lioodlnto that restless transition state 9HE! that furnishes so much material for hip-owncrs. , Day after day tho two boys wandered . .ftout over tho mountains, lingering long at tho entrance of tho mino, and . scarcely restrained from going down, jiotwlthbtandlng prohibition and warn- 3ng. ., There wero strango gases nnd myeto rlous gusts of dampuess far down, Join drcils of feet below the surfaco signs t which made (he miners give tho lips at liouiu farewells with htrong impulses clinging to them born of tho fear that thoy might bo forever parted signs which caused Aunt Sludge to watch tho blackened feature, tw they came up. ,wlth Bomothing very much liko tears in lier oyes. Ono morning it was hours after the last, man had disappeared within tho nhaft for tho day Aunt Mmlgo, open .inrf tho door of hur llttlo hut, wiw Paul and Arthur manipulating In a suspicious manner tho apparatus at tho mine. " AVJiHo sho watched, Paul sprang into tho bucket, and boforo tho little woman could reach the spot, ho hud eommencod tho fearful descent, Arthur acting as his conductor. VOL. f.-NO. 2G. " Hold, hold fasti" cried Aunt Sludge, cro her hand went out to arrest tho un winding of tho ropo; but Arthur, who had been watching long for Just that op portunity, when thero should bo no men to oppo?o at the mouth of tho mine, had no thought of bulnir stopped byawomaii, nnd ho unwound faiter nnd faster, until a 11 rm grasp was fixed upon Ids hand a-nd tlio speed arrested. "Clently, gently I" gnipod tho llttlo woman, "If you will save your broth cr's life." At the words Arthur turned white with fear, and lot go, leaving all that fearfttl strain upon tho small hands that could but Juit hold In their grasp the crank of the windlass, and tho ropo was so old that it must glvo way soon, and Might at any second; it had not been used for months. Aunt Sludge poized tho crank with both hands, and cried, "Help! help! quick!" Arthur caught it just in time; It was slipping from her grasp, nnd the two gently lessened tho motlou until tho bucket stood still. Paul had Jumped in very bravely, an ticipating a fine time, nnd atcrrlblo sur prise to tho miners bolow, when ho .should suddenly drop Into their midst ; but oven as the blue sky was shut from his sight, he gasped with nn emotion very like fear. When the rays of light disappeared ono by one, he began to tremble nnd cling fast to tho sides of tho tub, that was only largo enough to hold him. It win perfect blackness in the rihatt, and tho air that rushed up as ho felt himself to be rushing down wa not liko the sweet air that he had breathed under the blue of the sky ; it made him think of suffocation, and tho darkness wiw so dense that lie thought it was bu rying him alive; he felt its weight driv ing down upon his head. In that moment Paul Vail would havo given everything ho possessed to be safely out of the coal region. .Suddenly ho felt himself to be no long er going downward; the motion had changed to a swift circling course, that would have made his brain dizzy but for the fearful darkness. The ropo was un twisting, but he knew it not; one strand had parted. Ho shouted aloud, and from the depths his own voice thundered back to him, " Slay be Arthur cannot hold the crank any longer," and tho fearful se quence came, " What if ho lets goV" Paul Vail had never beforo been in n position of utter helplessness. He had always had his own strong arms and feet to aid him in. his movements, his eyes to tell him whero ho might move; and now he found all these gifts of no man ner of service there was nothing for dm to do but to pray. God shuts every soul in thus at some point of life, with himself, that the soul may feel after Clod, If, happily, He may bo found. It is not always in mines, or on tho ocean and billows, and nature's wrath, or in tho earthquake's tremor, that the soul of man meets this point of utter despondence on its Creator. It comes in still, small ways the friend in whom wo trusted fails us, or all our plans are crossed by counter plans, or wo watch the feeble, Muttering breath, and 4cnov that it Is going out, unless tho giver of life breathe anew upon our loved one. Paul Vail's time for prayer eamtuid tho cry went forth for help. JS'ow, my boy, hold fast, wind gen tly, and Ood willing, wo will havo bin Ntfely up," said Aunt Srudgo; but her voice trembled, and only her hands nerved themselves to the tnk. It was quite a different affair, Arthur drawing up tho bucket. Their united strength could but just compass it, and thou tho awful danger of tho ropo parting, and necessity for uniform tension. Onco or twice tho llttlo woman's eyes wandered down tho mountain; but no help came. Steadily, steadily around tho windlass wound the ropo until thero enme Into view tlio parted strand it was giving away fast. i "Havo mercy!" ejaculated llttlo Aunt Sludge, and bidding Arthur hold fa'it, she sprang down, cloo to tho open shaft, and with arms stretched over tho edge, sho caught tho ropo below the parted strand. Her hold was just sulll ciont to balance tho break. No mortal can tell how long the boy's muscles could havedune s-ervicoin hold ing tho crank, or how long tho bravo little arms could have dono duty over the shaft, and there. Is no need to tell, for God sent a strong hand that reached down beside tho weak arms, and unoth- and another came, and Paul Vail was drawn upward, and onco moro ho saw tho blue of the sky, that seemed so pro tons to him whon shut out from it. Arthur und Paul lmd,in theircarelcss zeal to explore tho mine, availed them selves of an old, worn-out apparatus that no miner would havo thought of rlskiog his life by, and tho miners from tho other sldoof tho mountain had arrived Just in timo to save Paul. Thoro had been heard strango noises in tho earth that day, a great groaning of gases, that gave warn ing of danger to be, and tho men wero going down to clear the depths In time, Llttlo Aunt Sludge watched tho do- scent, nnd then Invited Paul and Arthur Into her little hut. Sho did not scold them, nor tell them what bad, naughty boys they had been, but sho told them a story. And this is tho story sho told them : "Twenty years ago last Slay I camo to this bit of a house by tho great coal mine, to bo near my husband and two boys. lot that I felt that they wero lu niiygreatdangerwheullostslghlofthem going down Into tho abaft lu tlio uaorn BLOOMSBURG, lug, but then you see I could havo them by mo a bit longer in tho morning, nnd then it was so pleasant to watch for them coming up at night, nnd more than all, llttlocrumbsof nowscnnioup from tlmo totlinonllday. Bomebody would becom ing up every llttlewhlle.iind I li.nl many aclianco to drop Into tho buckets little tin paite, with a tasto of something warm, right off tho firo, or a bottlo of hot eoiree, when 1 saw my husband, or Httfus, or Charley wero a llttlo weak; and then to watch for tlio "thank you, wife," or "thank you, mother," that was always certain to como back tho next chance. Oh, I Hko living hero. 1 would not havo gone away to live in the finest house in tho land, and left my husband nnd boys behind. We had a bit of garden at tho door. I soo you laugh as you look at tho ground now ; but they havo covered up tho spot, and I am glad. I could not bear to look at It after tlio time I am going to tell you of. " Tt was seventeen years ago last Stay; when the overseer of the mine came ono night to talk to my husband. Ho took him out of tho house, nnd beyond tho little garden paling, where I could not hear what ho said; but when he had gone, John that was my husband looked soberer than I'd ever seen Jiim in my life, and ho was always the brightest soul, full of good thoughts to all men, and the thankfulcstman to our Father that I ever saw. Ho couldn't help laughing out his gladness. Ho said there was so much of it coming up in his soul that he couldn't help letting it out, and made mo feel as if 1 wasall done up in a rainbow somehow ; and then tho two boys" For a moment Aunt Sludgo" slopped, and Paul ventured to nsk : " What did the overseer want?" "He wanted my husband to go down in the mine at midnight, and examine it, just as the miners have gone below now. There were noises, strango growl ings and groaning, and tho damps had filled all tho mine. You see they open ed tho mino then on both sided of the mountain, east and west, and wero working toward each other, hoping to gain an opening through tho mountain, and some thought that it was the air rushing through that mado tho noises. Well, my husband went down. Ho never told mo till 'twas just midnight. You see it was Sunday night, and noth ing could coax him to go down on Sun day ; so ho let mo go to sleep, and when I woke up, tho moon was flooding into tho room like a great high tide, and there, right on tlio river of it, was John, kneeling on tho floor and saying ids prayern; and I heard tho little clock on tho kitchen shelf strike, and 1 counted twelve. Just then camo a knock, and John said 'Amen' quite loud, and got up. Then ho camo and looked over me nnd saw that I was wideawake, aud to kissed me anil said : "Good-by, my llttlo Sludge. lain going down to tho mino to look atsonio things they've found there. I'll be back, please God, to eat breakfast with you." "The moonlight, and the prayer, and the knock, and tho good-by, all seemed f-o strango that they dazzled me, and 1 let him go; but a dream 1 had Jut alter frightened my sleep away, and I went out nnd sat by the lonely shaft and watched all night. I listened with my ears close to the opening ; but it was all so still, anil tho great full moon walked down the blue Held, and tho dark moun tain camo ui between, and tho day be gun to break at last, and then rot up. Sfy two boys were out, early as it was, digging in Vho garden to surprise mo ; so I stole in at tho front door, and let them think I was fast asleep. "Tho little round table you sco it there was soon ready, four plates and forks and knives on it it was just large nough fur four. Well, when tlio break fast wis waiting for John, tho boys Ksamo to inquire for their father, and when I had told them whero ho had gone they never stopped to speak, but went straight out, ami I followed thcurt to tho place wlioro I had watched alii night. Just then tho miners were come, and they said Itufus and Charley must not go dowu; but my two boys could not, bo ,kept back, and tlioy bade nxi rood-bjj, and as their bright heads went out of Sight, Itufus culled back, ' Keep the breakfast warm, mother; and wo will fi)toi faser up to eat it soon.' " The placoVhoro tho coal was taken outof tho inlno was about half a mllo away, and tho men who stood at tho wnima-vs wero gouu in ii, ami i count not bear to leave tlio place, tho signal might coma at any Instant, and thero would bo no ono thero to mind It; so I staid, but no sign camo until tho sun was high in tho sky ; and then, boys, I heard a soft stop behind mo as I sat watching tho rope, dot daring to, take my eyes from it to seo who euinoTiVarer and nearer. , hero?" said John's voico. " I've come for my breakfast," aud my husband iktnnd loaniiiL' over me. "Tho bovs. John!" wasair'thatlcould utte.r,nev9r stopping to ask or wonder how ho could has'o como to me. " God pity us, wife, If tho lys nro down below," was all ho said ; In an in stant ho was gono for aid. Ho iuS two men returning from tho eoal shaft Just beyond tho gardon railing, and dazed as I was by everything that day, 1 know enough to run to tho hotiso for a bit of food, that might uovor meet tho lips it was prepared for, and to lend a hand at tho crank, as my John and another bravo soul went down out of sight. Tho silgnnl cjune to draw back beforo SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 18GG. many seconds, nnd tho two men could not lift themselves out of tho bucket when into tho air, but held on with whlto gasping faces, although wo wound up as fast as we could ; nnd when I saw them I knew my two boys would never como back to mo as they had gono from me. Hut I had my husband safe, nnd I tried to tako that Into my soul, and to make it grow thero nnd cover up tho grent wounds I had got." " ion didn't tell us how your litis Kind got out," gapod Paul, thinking of his own just escaped danger. "Ino, I forgot that, thinking of tho boys. Thero wero terrible eruptions nnd explosions down thero in tho deep blackness, and tho lamps scorned of no uo at nil, the air was so thick; nnd God alono knows how, but tho way between tho east and west shafts was opened by pomo angel, and tho poor fellows es caped death by it. At that dreadful timo the mluo was so filled up that tho old places nro not cleared nway yet, aud that is what I was waiting for. It will come soon now. John never got well, Ho went away from mo day by day, until at last I could find him no longer; but in sonio way ho left all his cheerfulness and his 'thankfulness behind for mo to ltvo by. The last words ho said were: ' I'm going to tho west shaft to watch for tho boys, you stay and watch litre.' That night ho died, nnd 1 saw tho samo full moon walk down thegreat blue field up above, and the shadow of tho niountan came up anil It wii3 nil darkness; but tho sun was shining when 1 lifted up my face; it had been shining full on my face and John's, but it was not tlio sunshine that made his shine soj; it was some thing that he saw in Heaven, and they put him away with tho light still on it." That night tho miners' brought up from the depth below something that they touched tenderly and carried with uncovered heads to tho little brown house. hittlo Aunt Sludgo need not wntch with wistful look to tho miners coming up any longer; her boys have been found. The llttlo brown nut of a houso has gono from tho mountain ; tho little wo man who had found tho fountain of perpetual youth is gono from earth to where life springs aro immortal, aud she sees tho something that John saw in Heaven ; and as to us who watched and aro left, thoro aro dark mines, aud miners ever coming up and going down waiting for us to give them a helping hand, and to pour Into tho shafts of life of tho sunshine God gives llchly to those that dwell on His mountain. THE ANGEL DREAM. 11V (I. o. CitisnTi In hnnd stood n sculptor tmy, Willi bis murhlf block boforo him, And bis eye lit up wllh u gleam of Joy As an ungcl du'iutl p:ws'd u'er hiin. Ho curved that droam on u Khapch'ss fatone, With many n i.li.irp liu-lslim; That migul dmim ho had liimlo his own Ho had caught Hint angel vision, rVuIplors of life nro wo us wo stand, Willi our souls uncarved befuro us Watting an hour, when at ibnl'i command, Our Ufo-drcam p iises beforo us. If we enrvo II then on n shapeless stone, WlHi iiriny a sharp Incision, That angel diuim MmU bo our own, Our own that angel vUloii. .Yew l'orl: x-cr. A. WAHD AT SIIA.KESPEAEE'3 TOME. Sir.. Pu.vcir : My J)atrSir,Va been liilgcrin afJUioI tomb of tho lamei-lcd Shakespeare. It is a succei'S. 9 ltflonot lies'tatotopronouncoitJtasiieh. You may make any u-e of this opjfi- ion you seo lit. If you think its publi cation will subswerve tho causoof litter iitoor, you may publicato it. 1 told my wife Hetsy when I lefrrmine that I should go to-tho birthplaco of ' Olheller" and other Plays. Sho said tus lounjas I kept out of Newgato sho did'ut aire where I went. " But," I said, "don't you know he was tho great-" est Poit that ever lived? Not ono of those common polts, liko tho young idyll who wrfft's vJrscs to our daughter, about tho Roses as growses, and the breezes as Ulowses, but a Uoss Poet ab.ua philosopher; iiNoamaii whoknew tigroid deal abotft everything." She was packing my things at tho time, and tho only answer sho made was to ask mo if I was going to carry both my red flannel flight caps. "A Yes. I've been to Stratford onto the Avon; tho birthplaco of Shakespeare. Sir. U. is now no more. He's been dead vcr tnreo Hundred (uuii) years. Tlio pooplOjjjf ills native town aro justly iirotid ofhtm? Thoy cherish his mem'ry, aud them asi sel.1 plcturs of his blrlh- plaeo,'etc., mako it profUbltr herishln It. Almost ovcrybodyibTiyaujdctur to. put into their Alblom. jAjjI stood gazing at tho sjlot whero Sjiakespearo Is s'pvsed to havo fell down on tho ico and hurt himself when j boy (.this spotennnot bo bought Jho town authorities say It shall uover,,bo taken from Stratford), I wonderod if three hundred yxrSnenco plcturs qf my birth plaeo would bo intlymand? Will tho people of my imFivo toAvn bojud of mo in three humirou yearsvr l gucms thoy won't short of that time, beatuso they say tho fat man welghlnono thous and .pounds which 1 exhibited thero was st aired out with plllora and cush Ions, which Ito said ono very hot day in July, "Oh, bother, I cant stnnd this and commenced pulllti tho pillers out from uuderhls wwkit, and commenced hoavln 'em at the audlnce. I nover saw a man loso flesh so fast in my llfo. The ntidlcnco said I was a pretty man to como ehlsleln my own townsmen lu that way. I said, " Don't bo nugry. fel- lcr-cltlzcn. I oxhibited him simply as a work ofart. I simply wished to show that a man could grow fat without tho nltt of cod-liver nil." But thoy wouldn't listen to mo. They aro a low and trrov- clln set of people, who excito a feelin of Ioathin In every breast where emotions and original Idecs havo a biding place. I stopped at Icanilnglon a few min utes on my way to Stratford onto the Avon, and a very beautiful town it Is. I wont Into a shoo shop to mako a nur- chls.and us I entered 1 sawovertlmdoor theso dear familiar words, "By Ap pointment: II. II. It. ;" and I said to tlio man, "Squire, excuso mo, but this Is too much. I havo seen in London four hundred boot and shoo shops bv Apppointincnt: H. It. H. ; and now you're at it. It is simply onposslble that tho Prince can wear four hundred pairs of boots." "Don't toll mo," I said In a voice choked with emotion " Oh, do not tell mo that you also mako boots for him. Say slippers say that you mend a boot now and then for him ; but do not tell mo that you mako 'em rcg'lar for him." Tho man smllt, and said I didn't un derstand these things. He said I per haps had not noticed in London that dealers In all sorts of articles was by ap poiutmont. 1 said, "Oh, hadn't I y" Then asuddeu thought flashed over mo. " I have it I" I said. " When tho Prince walks through the street, ho no doubt looks at tho shop windows." The man said, ". No doubt." "And tho enterprisin tradosman," I continued, "tho moment tho Prince gets out of sight, rushes frantically and gets a tin sign painted, ' By Appoint ment: H. U. H.l' It is a beautiful, a rx.ito idee!" I then bought a pair of shoe-strings, and wringin the shoemaker's honest hand, I started fir tho tomb of Shakes peare in a hired fly. It lookt, however, moro liko a "spider." "And this," I said, as I stood in tho old churchyard at Stratford, bcsldo a tomb-stone, " this marks tho spot where lies William V. Shakespeare. Alars! and this is the spot where " " You've got the wrong grave," said a man a worthy villager ; " Shakcspearo Is buried inside tho church." "Oli," I said, "a boy told mo this was It," (ho boy IitrA'd and put.lho shilling I'd given hiin into his lefteyo in a Inglo rious manner, and eoihmencod niovlii backword toward tho street. 1 pursood and eaptered him, and after talkin to him n spell lu askarcactie stile, I let him went. Tlio old church was damp nnd chill. It was rainln. Tho only person there when 1 entered was a fine, bluff old gen tleman, who was talkin in an excited manner to a fashnlbly dressed young man. "No, Kamost Srontrosser," tho old gentleman said, "it is idle to pursoo this subjeck no further. You can never marry my daughter. You were seen lust Sronday in Piccadilly without a unibreller! I said then, as Ivay now, any young mnn as venturs orjt in a un certain climit liko this without n uni breller, lacks foresight, caution, strength of mind, and stability, and lie is,ntlio proper penpn to intrust a daugjitr's happiness to." i-slapt the old gentleman on thoslipnl.- tler, and said, " Yqu'ro right. YoiiTris one of thoso kind of miffTSvou-Hee ' He wheeled suiITIonljwroTt indignant voico'itoiilf, "iGo Is is iimjvlt inffrvo way I nils is a urivit lntfrvoo I didn't stop to enrich'tlTo oh man's mind williJUjA'oiiversal infuu-ed that, he WRTPt iilined t' en (0,1110, and so I wont ..on. BlTt :lw wasright about tlui'ffJii'briiUeT. -iWh really dolightedwltjr this grand M country, Sir. Pimch.Jju.t vou must niS-4'ij mit that it doesVaiWrut hortyoomt; otisjy hem-' Whether this is dwingtojj inonerWu fonrnXof gov'mentAir ntfor, Jhjayo all candid aud unprejudiced pur-' linns to say, ' .,,, r, i . Yiinain-fn Jcesirfco wasl born in Stratford in 1 tors. Shakesnoivan sehaJars. etsctrv. aro 1 11.1 . . . I . f . 1 . - 1 A lilllD.'S , - agreed on mis, wincn is auou.tmvuiuy thing they nregreed mm regreedeau' ilr regard toLlUw, ttjiUiipecteil, at tio botloju oflovo, inn, except that his mlmtleflwti'raillWTOorhiMa tliis Is a speolaj quality of ut or dramatist ik)i. rAWUUiior, wuh"lts sadness and tendon onto auv noet or dramatist much. "SrtWUi fUero Is nowouul if these commentators ..... . If and parsons Jcoutlmier luvesligatin Shakospoare's'earrs; wo shall-jTot, Jny crocus on a child's gravSfnovor ap doo timo, kmfw ifiytin."rabouWit all preaching closer to a perfection than in When n:norolad,tlittWiyilluiu1atteno sonio passages of Sir. Hawthorne's cd n Grammar School, Jiicauso, as hgJ auifttjioiirammar KciiooiAwouiuiri n Ujejju mm. this remar citfrnt uoiii inn.' BiJ jmia Ik! I uieuiarKiw id liffixneitSr onced', setopldS thinklfi thoro inlglTKif this youth thoy comprehend It, seo ijosomothliilnthfcilnd. Ho subsequent ly wrote "Hamlet" nniL." GoariroBarn- bgyi'-Wnou hJjSJklnd teache went to iioiiuon to accept a position in mo uni ces t thoJUotropoliton Hallway, llttlo William wasejiftijon by his fellow pupils toJelivfiPa f.iroj.YelliuJIlress. "Go on, dr," ho0nld, " In a gjorus career. Bo ji.io ii eagio, irrnt soa, aim urn sourer ilto Ji eag you gwSio nnifb weWlall all bo grati fied! 'Hint's so;V jl nSly .y$ung readers, who wjslrfo know apoui. onaKivmjjiuu, jK llk&, nv "- vallyijbWenmjl I retarnedMo ksfrSmed.' young married couple, thoy asked me If I cuuld direct them to thohotel which Washington Irving used to keep? " I'vo understood that ho was onsuc ccssful as a lau'lord," said tho lady. "Wo'viUdi.rstoud,"suId tho young mau, " iljaf ho busted up." PRICE FIVE GENTS. 1 told Ihem I wai it stranger, nnd hur Hod away. They wero from my coun try, nnd ondoubtodlv ronrescnted n thrifty lie well somewhere in Pennsyl- vany. it s a common thing, by tho way, for an old farmer In Ponnsvlvnnv towako up some morning and find lie squirting all round his back-yard. Ho soils out for 'normous price, and Ills children put on gorgeous harness and start on a tower to nsloniih people. They succeed lu doln It. Sleatlnm tho iio squirts and squirts, and Timo rolls on. Let It roll. A very nice old town is Stratford, and a capital inn is tho Bed Horse. Kvery admirer of tho great Shakcspearo must go thero onco, certainly; and to say ono Isn't a admirer, is ciiuiv'lcnt to saying one has Just brains enough to oeoome a etllclent tinker.- Some kind ptirson has sent mo Chaw- cer's Poems. Sir. Chaweer had talent mt ho couldn't spol. No man hits a right to bo a llt'rary man on loss lift knows how to spel. It is a pity that Chaweer, who had geneyus, was so tm- edleated. Ile'ij tho wuss speller 1 know of. I gttess I'm through, and m I lay down the pen, which is more mightier than sword, but which I'm afraid would stand raylhera slim chanco besido tho needle-gun. Adoo! Adoo! AltTEMUS Wahd. i YOUTH AND MATURITY. TitnitK is a certain even-handed Jus tice; anil for what ho takes away, he gives us something in return. Ho robs us of elasticity of limb and spirit, and in its place ho brings tranquility and repose the mild autumnal weather of tho soul. He takes away hope, but ho gives us memory. And tho settled un fluctuating atmosphere of middle ago is no bad change for tho stormful emo tions, tho passionate cries and suspenses of tho earlier day. Tho constitutional melancholy of tho mlddlo-aged man is a dim back-ground on which tho pale flowers of life aro brought out in tlio tende rest relief. Youth Is the timo for action, middle ago for thought. In youth we hurried ly crop the herbage; in middle age, in a sheltered place, wo chew tho rumina tive cud. In youth, red-handed, red ankled, with songs and shouting, wo gather in tlio grapes; in middle ago, under our own fig-tree, or In quiet gos sip with a friend, wo drink the wine free of all turbid lees. Youth Is a lyri cal poet ; middle ago Is a quiet essayist, fond of recounting experiences and of appending a moral to every Incident. In youth tho world is strange and unfa miliar, novel and exciting, everything wears the face and garb of a stranger; In middle ago tho world is covered with reminiscence as with a garment it is made homely with usage, and It i3 made sacred with graves. The middle-aged man can go nowhere without treading the mark of his own footsteps. And in middle age, too provided the man has been a good and ordinarijy happy one along with his mental tranquility thero comes a corre sponding hwCetyoss of tho moral atmos phore. lie haTseen tho good nnd evil there is in tho world, tho tips and downs: tho almost general desire of tho men and women therein to do tho right thing if they could but seo how and ho has learned to bo unconsorious, humane ; trudtrlbute the best motives to every action, and (o bo chary of imputing a sweeping and cruel blame. Ho has a quiet smile for vainglorious boasts; a toiidd'fiijftH,Ii)fn,spix;t for tbesliabby-genleel virfucVE ilty for threadbare tfarmonls pWdiyW) llyowi, and for tho napless hat 1 intTiioro than pristine brilllan- glazed iutw cvjroin lroiiucjii nrusiung niter ram. e. IfL&Wmld lTfyiiJf allrical for tho world. Ho htm no liujffnLbf scorn to point at anything uiidxjir,iho sun. Ho has a 'hearty "Ymon" for every good wish, juuiu uiiworanrtiscs nu n-uiia iu u vut- of not, p'roven and along with thlpleasant blnnd ireuiud charity, a oortal'n grave, scri- usuiumor, "asmllo p,u tho Up, and a riii tho eye," Is nnticablo frequently ii3TnTTlillo aged personsa'a phase of hu- inctf pscullnr to uiatW-ripiiuf life, as thoVjantlieuiunf.tgK'ee.uflier. Pity lies at ttho bottom of it, Just as pity hit tenderness, its mirth with the heart-ache, its travetv SgTown out of deepest seriousness, llko a writings, who was a mlddlo-aged man from earliest boyhood. And although mlddlo-aged persons havo lost tho ae- kual possession of youth, yet In vlrtuo all around it, enter imaginatively into every sweet 4tnd bitter of It. They wear tho key of memory at their gir dles, and thoy can open every door In tho chamber of youth. At an examination In ono of our youug ladies seminaries, the other day, the question was put to a class of little oues, " Who mado tho laws of our Gov ernment'.'" " Congress," was tho reply. "How is Congress divided?" was tho next question; but tho llttlo girl to whom It was put failed to answer It. Another llttlo girl In tho class raided up her hand, Indicating that sho could an swer It, " Well," said tho oxamluer, " Sllss Sallle, what do you say thodl vision Is?" Instantly, with an nlr'of confidence as well as triumph, tho nn usver came, " Civilized, half-clvlllzed, and savitfjo." cn!i of gji!uci'iijiiit0. OnoRcninre.onofif Hugo Itivilloirs II Mr I'jvh sufmrijuenl Insertion lew Ihnn ttdrlrvn, M Onn Ro.unro ono lFHmlh.,,,, .,. , J to Tnr " goo Thrro " " ...,.......,.....,.., f, to Four " " A U Half column " ,..., . 10 (0 One column " HW Kxccutnr'nntiri Admlnlslrntor'n Kollcru 8 to Auditor's Nollets 2 M TUlllbrlal Notices Iwenty etnls jxrllne. Other rulvcrtlscnicutu lnscrtod noocrdlin: to sr clnl cuntrnct. A CONTINENT COVEItED WITH ICE. Pitor. ArtARstss comes to tho eoncltt' slon that thocontlnentof North Ameri ca was onco covered with Ico a inllo In thickness, thereby ngrcclng with Pre fessor Illtclirock nnd other eminent geological writers concerning tho gla cial period. In proof of thlscoiicluslon, ho says that tho slopes of tho Alleghany range of mountains are glacial worn to tlio very top except n few points which weronbovolho level of tho ley mass. Mount Washington, for Instance, lti over six thousand feel high, and tho rough, unpolished surfaco of Us sum mit, covered with loose fragments, Just below the level on which tho glacier marks como to an end, tells that It lifted its head alono above t ho desolate waste of ico and snow. In this, then, the thickness of the ico cannot have loon much losd than six thouvand feet, nntl this Is in keeping with thosamo kind of evidence In other parts of tho country, for whoa thomotiidains nro much belowslx thous and feet, tho ico seems to havo parsed directly over them, whilo thofuwpcaktt rising to that height nro left untouched. Tho glacier, he argues, was God't) plough, nnd, when tho Ico vanished from tho face of the land, It left it pro pared for tho hand of the husbandman. Tho hard surfaces of tho rocks wero ground to powder, tho elements of tho soil were mingled in fair'proportions, granite wasearrledintotholiino regions, lime was mingled with tho more arid and unproductive granlto districts, nnd soil was prepared for tho agricultural uses of man. There are evidences all over tho polar regions to show that at ono period tho heart of tho tropics ex tended all over tho globe. The i''o po- riod is supposed to bo long subsequent to this and noxt to the last beforo tho advent of man. CAUSE OP FEVER AND AGUE. ExiT.niMr.KTS to ascertain this wero commenced by nu examination of tho mucous secretions of patients who had been most subjected to tho malaria, and in these was detected a largo amount of low form of life, such as algln), fungii, diatomaccea, aud dismidea. Some of these wero found to bo invariably asso ciated with aguo. Other bodies, which wero constantly present in such cases, arc described as being "minuto," ob long cells, either single or aggregated, consisting of a distinct nucleus, sur rounded with a smooth cell wall, with a highly clear, apparantly empty spaco between tho outer cell wall and nucleus. From theso characters it is concluded that tho bodies nro not fungi, but be long properly to tho algie. Theso bod ies were not found above tho level at which the aguo was observed. In or der to ascertain oxactly their source, ho suspended plates of glass over the water In a certain marsh regarded unhealthy. In tho water which condensed upon tlio under surfaco of theso plates, ho found an abundanco of these structures. From repeated researches it is, therefore, con cludedFirst, theso spores aro carried aloft above the surfaco at night, in tho damp exhalation which appoars after sunset; second, theso bodies rise from thirty to sixty feet, lienor above tho summit of tho dampniglit-oxhalUilion, aud aguo Issimilarly limited; third, tho day air of aguo districts is free from llicso bodies. TOLITENESS IN BUSINESS. Por.rrr.XEss in business is a largo ad- tuuon to your capuat already invested. I (keeps your customers In n good humor, and gains new ones for you every day. H ia tho charm that smoothes and soft ens tho rough paths of business. It is tho " philosopher's stono" which turns everything you touch into gold. It in vests commercial life with most of tlio poetry which ever adorns it. It makes mefi liko you, and lovo to deal with you. It gatna you tliq kind words aud good ofilces of thoso with whom you dally como in contact. It has been humor ously and truly said by ono that ho pre ferred making his dealings with a po lito merchant, who would cheat him t Mile, than with a rudo, rough, and ha bitually Impolite one, who would honest him a great deal. Honesty and honor are commendable and shining qualltr, It Is trtii; but thoy nover look hotter than whon they aro found in a setting of gcuuino politeness and good breed ing. QUAKItELLINQ. Ir anything in tho world will mako a limn feel badly, except pinching his lingers iu tho crack of a door, it is, un questionably, a quarrel. No man ever falls to think lias of himsolf after it than beforo. It degrades him In tho eyes of othors, and, what is worse, blunts his sensibilities on tho ouohand, and Increases tho power of passlonnto Irrltabllity.on tho other. Tho truth is, tho moro poacofully and quietly wo get on, tho better for our nulghbora. In nlno eases out of ton tho better course Is, if a man cheats you, quit dealing with him; if ho Is abusive, quit his company; and If hu slanders you,iako earo so to Hvo that nobody will bellcvo him. No matter who ho Is, or how ho misuses you, tho wisest way is to let him alono; for thero is nothing bet ter than this cool, calm, aud qulot way of dealing with tho wrongs wo moot with. A an and boy havo been arrested lu Philadelphia for robbing forty stores. Kxm.ixn cannot man her navy or mercantile marine.