VOLUME V =I OETRY AND MISCELLANY. For the Erie loon or. 'ZIW wonartqa BEIM AND DRONER. I:=3 'Tway once upon a pleasant day. When autumn's woods were bare and gray. 7' bat by tome !lives I chanced or way:, In contemplative mood; The wind was coaling from the wekt nom sunny plain and brow n bill c cert. "%Ind all things seemed to be at rest, I Except the honey brood. That they—lbe leaner and the falter— Were making quite a noisy clatter, About some . little thing or matter, TLat was lt itch interest franeht; 't Inch made them 11) about their V shackled of their heat, y gyres, E , ett ift as if their 1, ery , Au enemy there bought. ..thought my pri,enee caused the fuse, mi made the turmoil and the mu•r, ' , hike the hristitmiiimt)r thouglit 1 ‘!oli1.1 Iv gone. it suddenly the turmoil etopped, forth tile (3iieei;-lice hold, lid nit the heel' nroillid hot drop(,•• To hear her tiny tone. lid thus she spake.—" Peace! 'ware! 1% ild bets! you could now your good Queen plea.e, ' 'lmmo* of order, more of ease— I cannot th have is noise:" , ringlitu ay they , erafed their noisy humming— ratglitu ay their trembling wing; cen-ed 141)111111111g, Iticlo-er 'round her form kept coming, . . "rill all ~.tood on a poke. Fsen thus again,,heEik)ke and said, her bright lace gresl tlu.hed and red, i'rnutel Ale 55 alked is ith :gate') tread, Awonq the 'n hat foul iliftunianee thl.o Hal It ontellting I tfluell Interrupt.] the general Win., And !naked act au tittle!" rfollt the congregation came, .1 bee xt ho n as boll' old and lame— poor toot\U all honest name, Alt thus to her replid:- -Fair litteen: I thioltit no; in Valli, 'l,) try this Inntwr, 44,AvinItt, 41veti, I atilik,)ou'll not colowialti, lsor your good bees dertdo. ••I'ur man) lung and %%eau hood; * •1'I~n, wa.ion, In a sle bought the hint era, 1 To !.ttlter hone from their i!uiveri— Munching h . % r'y nt%cet;— : 4 . that %%hen t% inters tuna Otall And 1% C JlO mare abroad Can roam, Li parch,' ne. may live at twine., Aad u :lei Int ig hate to eat. "But dale are these ans,wg us now, 1.14 y drone+, of •co‘% ling brow, rL, n 111 an NN• toil and lA% eat and Loy,— Whoflite ou w hat «c h;tag,, - jltot ne%er teat, c Ihetr Clloeell rraCCS, tabroad, their t,.liott. facet., Imnt they ts ual,l , hq , lay the graei 'flue) deem :he on each t‘ tag. inl they are e‘rr in our way— Ai .e. ening'u do,k, midmorning'. gray. A'n.l at the noon-Lime of the chi— 'l'u taunt us NI WI the nociliti— .olic out.' you coarse, imktion tog fool.: VIJu working Ire... you ...metes. tool.! r e ore rutottg to higher .chool., And drink total:twice( gourii,:" •• ut on this morn. %%hen I returned. ( 'erlailimed nlth my sn.cen., hard earned 3 y old age was in pain. itiorned— They eattee 11112 to Le tierce; A / n irked drone had hired a n asp. . lii long black Istittger to nut la , p, And hold me in . lii4 giant grail', = Mid then my wide to tome: 1 11.1114 Lnlb forleaajNee Inn.lo tlivm frivt ititliet all kind, of 111 i,ery • wu the holie.t a tal l in )n'o, And fear no C 0111,11,1111.111."; ut not., fair Queen, the tow , hart come r them to lea.e our rightful hoo,e---- ttik:une fleferre ' ten ai the old tief . ce.i•ed. it Ilew. Ih»,edh :111 — the‘%orksogervw. Ito run their .nuucra through and throli4la The arts drtl•rrrlrrr !nag. the %A fide, the sharp a ar cry f u-zret-:ip :erm."'nad ••tet theta th . e! ell Lear to more atTronter):" • In quick, recce. ise tones. l eft, and as I n cut tny nay, !leering on the sad alrrai*. abought I heard a n In-per say— n ere not bees, hut men" to %%hid was corning from the nest— nn sunny plain and lino a hill crcl, id all things teemed to ho acrect. Pcept illy thoughts, I ken! Pa. P..b. 1111:MT UP-TOWN CRISIS; therLeathors's Fret 6 Friday Morning.' Mrs. Ln Il!E=:1111E! EMI no o'clock, in a certain new fonroitery house, ionablorreach of Union Square, The two ,note, with the folding doom hhenthed to tho es, were in faultless order. There was a fire to grates, to take off the smell of the now fur the chill of a November day; and just audi tick of a hhowy Fiend) clock, wound up for and expected to swing its pendulum that id thereafter, in the "first society" of New MOM ran ink-r 1 ;lase hand 1 one of t an, ABA 111. is Jim till , aning a Irk, ITT nsuspeeting and assenting clock struck one, ramie of silk down tho battistor of the stair he lady qf thp ho4se- r (tho ,Fatroldiqg pf 'Wan had fullen in)--sailed i 1,14 the roam. atcn WILS 'Dm, and tell budt "nethe 19 jtiOkinal—aro 'yoit there , " d, as shO' gavo tho 1)1(10 ctirtaiiis of the frqnt twitch each. pie tngui ndows "Ye.: er," said a voice tram tho littlo veranda olni In il l e rear. liocolate hoe!" "I tho 1 'llsn'. , Now, 11 a b ou e", mem:" udkins, you remember all Mr. Cyphers told how to behave when the ladies come in "I can' Hato' ih 11 ups 4 , 1 PO W `help it, Mrs. Loathers!" said the in yieible shout answering the (local:l23n, "but it flusters (called '.ltnikins.' so blunt slid sudden likol I t this chocolate-pot, I know I shall, if yeti coil en there's company. Why, it's just like WV. 'or, dead husband called up out of his grave, .plers!• if yon please, morn, let it be 'Betsy.' or l u dkinte—least-crisp till I get 'used to it. Soma, ,R mg p , Mn. Lea or ..ur, Bat th 111 / , treSS It. S I lb d Lt ."nt, B"'") romonstranc,e, had boon hoard before, and tho lathe aggrieved Mra. Joining paid no, attention e hail been Ls:mired, by fashionable Mr. Cy .t head maids in "first families," weo ikiro;k:s heir sur-names, for it implied A 14rViestablis 1 1 - • h two classes of servants--the chumbermaitle scurbs being tho only legitimate Sally'a and at the bell, while Judkina Nviga meditating'ano in,trance, suddenly galvanized Aye Loathere,. Huddle of the sofa, facing the door, and there COlllpeSed 71.3 if alto had been sitting on hot/ il.tr rem; '° to the I L 'll. , ,3t . , . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . - " LVVXWARD ~,a.-3 • t N i 1 . • SATURDAY , 'MI7, ORNING, MA ' ell 1849. . 1. ~ _ . . - .' i _._ for her picture, When the gentleman whose advice had just been acted upon, was shown in by the new footman Like every unfashionable rich man's ambitious wife, Mrs. Leathers had one fashionable male friend—her counsellor in all matters of taste, and the condescending guide of herself and her husband's plebeian million through the contempts which form the vistibule to "good society." Mr. Theodore Cyphers was one of two dwindled remainders to a very "old family"—a sister, Who seemed to be nothing but the family nose walking about in a petticoat, sharing with him the reversed - end ofcortmeopial ancestry. He was perhaps, thirty-five, of very g6nteel ugliness of personal appearance, good humored, and remarkably learned upon the motives, etiquette, and usageit of fashionable society. Ofa thought unconnected with the art of gentility, or of the making of a penniy, Mr. - Cyphers was profoundly incapable. Skill at thinking, indeed, would have been a superfluity, for he had had a grandfather, in a country where grand fathers aro fewer and more prized than' any where else, and ho had only to do nothing and be highly respectable. The faculty of earning something would scarcely have bettered his condition, either, fur his rarity as an unem ployed—gentleman, in a city where excessive industry is too ' universal to be a virtue, gate him that something. to be known by, which it is very devil to be without. What paid for Mr. or Miss Cy - filters' sustenance and postage, was ono of the few respectable mysteries of New York. He had now un then a note discounted by the house of Leatlitltmd Wall street: but-of course it was nut taken up a maturity by his attentions to Mrs. Leathers, nor have we any knowledge that these promises of Cyphers to pay, were still under indef.:loga renewal up to th date of the great stockholder's wife's first "Friday Morning." It was iu expectation of a proper "reception" call, that Mrs. Leathers had taken her seat upon the sofa, and on the appearance of Mr. Cyphers, she came out of her attitude with a slight look of disappointment. "I have dropped in early, my dear friend." said he, to see that everything is comme it faitt. Bless me, how light the room is! Nobody would come twice where there is such a glare on the complexion! Will you al low inc to call (2:char to shut the outside blinds? Cipsar!'! he cried, stepping back to rho entry- to recall the man who had let him in. But no Calmar answered, for the black footman had , a surname as well as Betsy Judkins, and if she was to be called "Judkins," he would be called "Furtard," and lie would answer for nothing else. "It cannot ho permitted, my dear Mrs. Leathers!" expo'stulated Mr. Cyphers. when rho man carried his point, and shut the blinds to an order given 'din by the name of Fuzzard; "a head servant . with a white craved, is the only man who can go by 'the surname in a gen teel family. A trifle—but little things show stvfe. Pay the man more wava to let Muriel[ ha called Caesar, but" call him ncrar! Pardon me!" (continued Mr. Cyphers. .iuddenly changing his tone to an epologic.il cadence.) "might I venture to suggest a little change in your toi tette, my dear Inad,1111!" "Mine!" cried Mrs. Leathers. coloring slightly, but looking as frightened as if she hail been polled from ayrecipice. "Why, Mr. Cyphers. this is the very lasi fashion, out from_ Paris! 1 hope—l trust—why, what do you mean. Mr. Cyphers?" and Mrs. leailt. , s , - ed to the pier glass and looked at herself, behind and beforeiti rapid succession. ••ror the opera, very well, my dear Srieed," ho 're !plied, appealingly, or for a btidul all, or rt fete rhampe ire. It is as pretty a three-quarter toilette as ever I saw. and sou leek quite lovely iti it, dear Mrs: Leathers, hut—" "But what, I should like to linow?" "Why in your own house, you see, it is sqlish to he, rather under-drussed; a 4 if sueing people were finch an even-day' matter, that ton,. had not thought it worth while to appear in inure than ordinary toilette." "And so every body in my own lions° IS to look well but in^!" remonstratively exvlaimod Mrs. heathers. "No—pardon Inc; morning caps and well sunned negligcs are very becoming, but is not that exactly. Let me explain the principle to you. Sitting up in showy dress to recieve calls, looks, (does it. not?) as if you made a great event of it; as if the calls, were an uuusu• al honor—as if you meant to bo extre melt' deferent's) toward your visitors." But they are splendidly dressed when they inake the calls, Mr. Cyphers!" Yes, but it is, as ono may say open to supposition that they are going somewhere else, and have only ta ken your house in their way—don't you see? And then, supposing nobody comes—a thing happen, you know, my dear Mrs. Leathers; why, there you are —in grand : toiletto--ovidontly oxpectmg somebody,. of course mortified, yourself, with the failure of your witinee, and what is worse, seen to ho mortified, by iteighbors across the wav!" "Lirt mercy of coarse!" exclaimed Mrs. Leathers, discovering. that there was a trap or two for the Unwary in "geed society," of Which she had been entirely un suspicious; "but what am I to do? I have no time to dress over again; Mrs Inguiplius might be here, and -1.1.):!" intermitted Cyphers, with a prophetic forebo ding. that (spite of his influence with Mrs Ingulphos, and the hundred and fifty "At home on Friday morn ings" which had been loft on peOple sho did not know,) Mrs. Loathers would have very few visitors for many a Friday morning yet to come, "Oh, my dear madam, yon are abundantly in time, Pray go tip and slip into your prettiest demitoileite, and take your chance of any one's coining. It looks ivell, in fact, not Mho ready when people' call: not to have eNpecled them so early, as it were. While you are gone, by'llie.hy, I will make a little arrangement of ?mir place to sit, ect., ect., which strikes] time, at this moment, as a matter we had quite oyerloOked, go, my dear Mrs. La miters:" It was upon the colt of Mrs. Ingtilpims, so confident ly alluded to by Mrs. Leathers, that Mr. Cyphers secret ly buil(all his hope of making his friend fashionable.— Mrs. Ingulphos , s carriage, seen at any door for half an hour, was a sufficient keystone for a new aspirant's arch of aril l ocracy; hut of such domenstation, Mrs. Ingtil plitts7as exceedingly chary. Tho sagacious loader of Fashion knew that her house must, first of all, be attrac tive aild amusing. Site was too, wise to smother its agreeableness altogether, with people who had descen ded, tram gremdfathors;hut, to counteract this very drowse .1 of dwindledem, ithe required of the grandfatheriess eith er twenty or talents. Mr. Cyphers, in making interest ter for Mrs. Leathers, had net pleaded her wealth, Thal was now so common as to have ceased to be a distinc tion, or, at least, it was a distinction which, in mount ing to Mrs. Ingulphu's drawing-room, Mrs. Leathers must leave in the gutter with her carriage. . Wh l at Nut Loathe,rs was lilts, after-"getting inside a door, Was the question. She might ho dull, if she was Knickerbocratic; low-born, if stylish and heantifnl; scan dalized if willing to undertake- wall -flowers and make her fascinations useful. Put she must be something be sides r ll ich and vulgar. Cyphem could plead for her on none of the usual grounds, but with a treacherous inge nuity. he manufactured an attraction which was, in fact, a slander on Mrs. Loathers. reminded Mrs. 'ITU!. phus that foreigners liked a house wheto. the married la dies world flirt, and vihispeted, confidentially, that Mrs. 4,,,eattiesti had a dull money-bag for a husband, and (to use his own phrase,) !'would listen to reason." MM. legitlphus said she would think of it, and upon this encooragenient, C}•phurs cherished a hopo would cull With tho nid of Judkins and Fuzzard, Mr. Cyphers, on Mrs. Loathers' disappearance. made some important changes in the furniture of the front drawing roem, A fancy writing desk was token out from under the pier table, opened, and set upon a work-stand in the corner, the contents scattered about in epistolary confusion, and a lounging chair wheeled up before it 4 With sonic cat echising. Judkins remembered in embroidered feot.sttiol in ono of the closets up stairs, oud Oa was sent for and placed in front of the fauteuil. The curtains Tall let down, except ono, and the sofa wheeled upwith its back to this ono entrance for the light, Mr. Cyphers saw that he could do no more. "Now my very expeditio us biro. Leather ho Said, as she entered, in an unobjectiotiable Morning dress and a cap rather unbecoming, "cue little word mOre of gener al directions. Ladies love to sit wiilt their backs to the light, in a morning call, and, as the sofa is placed now, they will easily take a sent in a becoming position, and without any inconvenient drawing up of a chair. As to yourself, sit you at this desk and write—" "Bless me! I have nothing .to write!'! - interrupted Mrs,. Leathers. "Oh, copy an advertisement from - a newspaper, if yg:u like," resumed 'her polite'instructer, "but write some , thing, and let it be upon note paper. You must seem to be passing your morning quite independent of visits, and to be rather'broken in upon than otherwise, by any ono's coming in. Fashionable people, you know, admire most those who can do without them. I think that's in Pelham." "La! and must I write till somebody comes?" "Dip your pen in the ink when the bell rings: that's all; and write till their cowing in makes you look up, suddenly and tutcousciomly, as it wore. Stay—suppose I s it in your chair, and show you how I would -reCoivo a call? You are the visitor, say, and Lam Mrs. Leath ers?" • Mr. Cyphers crossed his feet, in nn elongated position, upon the embroidered footstool, and threw his handker chief over them in imit••tion of a Petticoat. just, (thick ! sing a toe and an instep; then, taking up a pen, he went through the representation of a lady surprised, Writing. by a morning call. As, Upon Mrs. Loathers' trying to do it after, him, he found there wore several other points in is her attitude and manners which required slight amen dationove will leave these two at their lesson above stairs, and take a look into the basement parlor o& the story be low. PART H. T 111: LI. tT111:115N HASE3IENT A P.M of beautiful patridges, cooked to a turn, hud just succeeded a hags, dons in portwine sauce:the'pota toes were hot, and the pint bottle of champagne had giv en place to a decanter of bherry, at the right hand of Mr. Luther Leathers, dining alone in his basement parlor.— A fire of bituminous coal burned very brightly - 'in the grate. Dividing her attention between watehilig the the blaze, and looking up placidly to the face of the stock-broker as he soliloquized over his dinner, sat a hunchback girl of nineteen or twenty, carefully propped on a patent easy-chair upon wheels. T There .was no servant waitimr ea. table. The hrstod i.,,1 irntor Iva... within Ar. Leathers's reach. and tho bell-h edit was nt the right hand of the pale and patient looking little crip-': 1 pie in the corner. "Lucy, my dear gill," said the carver of the partridge., holding up a bit of the breilst of the bird upon his fork, "1 wish I could persuade you to lake a bit of this. See how nice it fouks" I know oil wish it,"lshe answered, 41 an affec tionate half sMile, "and you would give me your own health to enjoy it, if you could, but I have no appetito to. day—c mit sympathy with you's." Leather s was a shoit,'Stottt man of about fort. He had a face roughly lined with anxiety, and a knit con traction of brows, which showed a habit of forcibly con, eentrating his attention at short notice. The immediate %%entity of his mouth, howeVer, was pliablef and good humored, and in fait, looked as if neither care nor" meanness had ever beet' permitted to luive a pull upon it. His hair was pushed rudely away from a compact, well-filled forehead, the lids were habitually drawn to gether mound his small twinkling gray eyes, and his head was set forward uiton his shoulders, in the attitude of one giving close attention. A very carelessly tied cra vat, coat sleeves turned hack over the wrist, and hands that tividontly never wore a glove, showed that the. pas sion fur fashionablV life, which reigned up stairs, had lit tle influence on the thoughts or toilettes in t to baiement below. Yet, to the policy or proceeding of his wife, to her ex pensiveness, or her choice of friends, her hems Of go ing end coining, her intimacies or her ambitions, Mr. Leathers "mode no manner of objection. He differed wholly from her valuation of things and people, and per haps, there was a little dislike of trouble Mikis avoidance of the desperate task of setting tier right; but thorn was another and less easily divined reason for his s strange let ting of Mrs. Leathers have her own silly Way, so 'entire ly. There was u romantic chivalry of mind, laid awo, undeketed and unsuspected by himself, is a corner qf his cayacious brain, and, silly.wonlau as she l was, ho had monied her for love. In the suburb where ho had found tier, she was a sort of school girl belle, and; as ho had not then struck his vein of pi osperity, and was but a poor clerk tvith his capacities unsuspected, her station in life was superior to his, and ho had first taken her to ids bosom with the feeling of a plebeian honored with the condescending affection of a fair patriciom To this feeling of gratitude, though they' had' so es sentially changed places—he having given h 3r a carriage as a millionaire's wife, and sho having only grown silly, and lost herbeauty—ho remained secretly and sUpersti tiously loyal. It was his proud pleasure to give her eve. rything sho could ask for, and still retain his not i nitml at titude as the receiver of favor. He never, by look or word, let Mrs. Leathers understand that rho promise of eternal love was not a promise, roligipusly to pay. Of the dis-illusion in Ills heart—of his real judgment of liEr character—of the entice ultandenment, by his reason, of all the castles in the air - for which ho had romaMically married—she, fortunately never had a suspicion, Or ask ed a question, and ho would have cut off his hand sooner Allan cnlightenlier. In public ho assnmed 6 Manner of respect and devotion, because his good sense told him there might be those who would think ill of her if, ho did not. Ignorant of the motive, and his APpeararteo nat being fashionable, Mrs. Leathers would often rather have been waited on by Mr. Cyphers, and this the husband saw without uneasiness, and would have yielded to, but for the wish to servo her, in spite of herself, With this sinffle exception of occasional contradictoriness, end the exercise of quiet and prior authority es to his own hours of dining, and his owu couthuts, and those of hunChback 4 1 ucy. in the basement % the stock-broker and his estobt thihruent wore under the apparently Complete onntrol of Mrs. Leathers, and thereby in a state of candidacy far admission jut° the. list of New-York fusing::nide aristoc 15:521 Of course. Lett(here, tho stock-broker, had a hottrWand like other hearta. bumen and disappointed, it might have buried it. hopes without a funeral, and sought coueola lion elsewhere without a dream. It was necessary that he should !eve and love well; How long a want of this nature may go unexplained in the breast that feels it—the love-needing man being ri:iserablo ß ha tinows ,n,c4 dopetias on circa ning to turn-his 1, upon himself to to get it, he was ac Et nominating coma house. Compeller report upon the co ed to see, in one of whose pittiful dud His unemployed F her, and took her and horses on the her—and thencofo i (engrossed with be void in his existent Lucy had no otk was enough. Het pick up in en alms passionately fond o not at home, she w chair, or with her her except at brenk an. angel, and so, h tear in his throat, it night and morning ty lies sighed in v. every day, Leather, own house, having liege, on her way eager happiness, u: basement door and Lucy dined with hi ment of his enterim lion, for anything I: involuntary smile, a against his heart in said. She showed talked most about I of the conversation of his mourninOhi tointments. MEE He did not conic self, why this or th. there was sympath . Iwith earnest attontit , tted at heart by he ftis daily recital, usually occupied th with his good diunc up his chair to Luc the passing of his newspaper. _Little stuff for po try ns there would seem to be in Wall-street mornim,s, Leuthi•rs was not undramatic in his view of his own worldly position, and his descriptions of Guinness operations to Lucy. lie had, early in life, cl looked askance, w th some bitterness, ut people with whom he could no or compete, and refinements and advantages he cool never attain. Too sensible a Mall to,play a loosing gale nt any thing, he had stifled his de sire to shine, and lo Iced down the natural chivalry, for which, with his had of graces, he wai so certain to lack appreciation. In g ring up all hope of distinction in matters of show, however, he had prepared himself to enjoy mine keenly tho satisfaction of controping thoso promacyoiier the.very thro9o of the empire that had ro. jected and exiled him, which gave his hush's's: the rest of a tourney, and mode him dwell on tie details with de light in Lacy's eager anti syttinpathelie The houshold, itt short, went on very haynoniotuly Mrs. Leathers was never up at breakfast, and usually made her dinner of the lane!t in her boudoir, lat which M'r Cyphers daily played a pa`rt, mid drank hir bottle of champagne. Leathers was asleep when A.; went to bed, she asleep when he got up; she spent lunacy with out stint, and used her carriage as she gad ML Cyphers pleased, and that made nil coinfortablC (Mors stairs Balpip. Loathers was autocrat undisptited, and all was happiness there, WII I. MRS. t,la I 0 By the French clock, it was getting towards half-past four in the drawing room. At five minutes to four Mrs. Leathers ba i d ordered Fuzzard to oil- the joint of the door bell, for it was inconceivable that nobody should have come, and perhaps the bell wouldn't ring. Ladies itt good society would give up .un acquaintance rather than split \ their gloves open with straining at a tight hell liandle=l4o Mr. Cyphers seriously assured her. The afternoon worn on, and still no sign of a visitor. Of lrer unfashionable acquaintances she was sure not to sec one, for, on them, Mrs. Leathers had left "At Home" fur Saturday, to preservo an uncontaminated ridW' for the list made out by Mr, (cyphers. Mrs. Leathers walked the room nervously, and at every turn, looked through tho faro curtain of the front window,' "I'll more from this house," said the unhappy Ao. mon, twisting her handkerchief around her elbow and thumb, "for them aro those Sned9n girls opposite, with their bonnets on, peeping through blinds, and if no hady comas, llu y'll sink away thernselves and tell every. body else. Mr. Cyphers! if .somei ca9iago don't stop at the door before dark, I shall did! Haw ennui you to put thoso nasty Snedons on the list, Mr. Cyphers? To leave a card and not to have it remitted, is so mortyfy ing?" : "Nasty iSinedelis ns you say," it's no 11150 despise people till y rofilso. Wait till they want to coin Mrs Inguiplins is corning!" "Why do tho Snedons know 1117. !algid!)ln's?" in quired Mrs. Loathers. half incredul usly. "Know horl—sho couldn't liyoJitlomt them!" and glad of anything to takci off the nt !blot) of his fiieml from her disappointment, and enliven the dullness of that very long morning, Cyphers- proceeded M 'define the Snedeno, . oThoy are of a class of famiiica," ho continued, "corn - mon to every well-regulated aids, nod all regular failures—a sort of . eollapsed looking troop of yekting ladies, plain and good for nothing, but dying to bo fashionable. Every stylish person at the bead of a set has ono, such family in her train." "But what on earth can tho Sll6 s liellS do for Mrs Ingulphus?" inquired Mrs. l i eallAers, rather listlecsly. "Why, they piolt up her scandal, do her cheap shop, ping, circulate what she wants.knowit, put down reports about her, collect complements, entertain bores, praise her friends and ridicule her rivals—dirty work. you may say, but lots to be done! No 'position' without—l assure you I have come to that conclusion, Its natural history thero is a corresponding class—jackals. As clever what-d'ye-call him says, ty leader of fashion withollt a family . of girls of disappeiuted prospects, is like a lion starying to death far want of jackals." - "Twenty minutes to live!" digressed Mrs. Leathers; .elwonder Whirs. Inguipbus is sick! Oh, Ztir. Cyphers!" she continued, in a tone of as inttelt anguish as she could probably fool, "caul you go round and implore her—beg ltorv—anything to make her conic—only this once! You told me you knew her so well, and abe was certain Who hem t" Cyphers„ in FBA, had about given up Mrs. Leathers's "Friday morning" l as a failure; but he went on cons*, lint. The light perceptibly lessimeti in the room., It was exhient:that the evening, without any regard to Mrs. Leathers's feelings, was about to close over the via. stances; but as Leathers was begin- - 1 1 -escapable business faculty of attention o what the deuco ho wanted, and how cidentally appointed, by the whim 'of tnittec, one of the :wardens of a poor for his clutracter'S sake, to visit and dition of this es:ablislunont, he clia:zc• f the wards, a little orphan hunchback, clicate face excited his compassion.— cart sprang to the child—ho adopted tome—gave Mrs. Leathers a carriage -auto day, to tippet's() and propitiate ward hitd an object of affectios, which, siness as ho was,) sufficed to fill the I e. .., or !ante that she knew of, hut that education had been such as ihe could house, but she was fond of reading and f music, and when her benefactor was as -happy with her books in th e arm piano, and Mrs. Leathers seldonn saw fast. Lucy thought the stuek-broker her, he was. He loved her with a nd kissed her small white forehead at with a feeling many a brilliant beau= in to awaken. At half-past three, alighted from the omnibus, at his perhaps, passed Ids wife in her car up from Wall-street, and, with un !explained to himself, went in at the I sat down to his punctual dinner.— in or sot by the fire. From tho mo she had no thought, wish, or ntton- I him. Her little thin lips wore an rid her soft blue; eyes fairly leaned up a l their complete absorption in what he lthe moat pleasure, however, when he !itself, and by questions and !endings she drew from hini daily, the history hopes, successes, obstacles or disap. Is to, her, for he did not confess to him. t '•operation" had pleased hint, but • in-having its mere mention heard eness, and he felt expanded and light• smile or MA of congratulation.— •ith its interruptions, and digressions, hour of dinner, atd then, genial and his day's work, Leathers drew 's and had no earthly desire, save vetting between her talk 'und his PART 111 choed Cyphers. "hot tt have sotethitigt to to a party itemise iting r hour. Meantime. however. a' scene had been go ing;_on in the basement. which eventually bud an imporp taut influence on Mrs. Leathers's "Friday mornings," and of which we must therefore, give the reader a glimpse, though (our story is getting so long) we must confine ourselves to its closing tableau. PART IV. wit Vl' BROUGIIIIIIS. imatzrues. A !UIDDLE-AVED man, ft a very high-bred mould of feature, sat on the forward edge of a chair, leaning far over the table toward Mr. Leather. He was dressed for n dinner party, and a pair of white gloves lay on thd cloth beside him; but his face looked very little like that of a man on his way to a festivity. The sweat'stood in large drops on his forehead and upper lip. His closed left hand was clutched in the palm of his right; his el bows were crowded to his side; his drawn up shoulde'rs crushed his white cravat into a wisp under his ears, arid he sat with his mouth partly open and eyes glaring upon the stock-broker; 'as if expecting lite or death from his immediate decision.' Lucy sat on he'r chair looking on, but not with 'her ordinary calmness. Her lips were trembling to speak, and her thin hand clutched the heti die of the lever which moved her patent chair, while her little bent back was lifted front its supporting cushion, with tho preparatory effort to wheel forward. Leathers, on whom her moist oyes were intently fixed, sat gazing on a bundle of papers, with his under lip pinched be tween his knuckle and thumb. "Think, I implore, before , yon decide," said the visi tor, at last, breaking the silence. "You aro my last hope! I could not plead with you this morning in Wall-street. ruhrld betray myself to people coining in. I did not (lieu think of asking you again. I went home, despair ing. Afraid—yes afraid—to stay alone with my own thoughts, I dressed to go out. My wife will be hero in a moment to toko nae up, on her way to a dinner party. Oh God! how little she dreains we ma y bonars to morrow!" Ile pressed his forehead betwee his two hands for a moment, and crowded his elbows d&wn upon the table. Lucy rolled her chair a little foiivard, but Leathers motioUarlier back. "You may i think," he re:mined, "that I) might go to others—more intimate friends—in such o,stretnity—fami ly friends. But I know them. It would' bo utterly in vain, Mr. Leathers! I have no friend, much less a rel ative, in the world, of the least use in misfortune. I had strained my credit to tlurlast thread before coining to you, in Wall-street. Why I suddenly resolved to conic to yon, here, with no claim, and at such an unfit hour for busi ness, I know not. Instinct proinpted. It seemed to me, while I was dressing, liko limo whisper of an an gel!" Leathers, made a movement as if to veal:. "Take c f ore. sir! Tor God's sake take aro! With on.! %void yen /nay bind mo to von while I live, with the grat itude of de . peration, or you plunge me i nto ruin!" Tha stack-Molter took up the sehedalel of property ‘vhich lay before him, and, after an instant's hesitation, pushed (Mint across the table. During the half-hour, Mille prou l i d ingttlphus, the milliondire, had been plead ing with him for salvation front ruin, ho -hid not been osaminint these, though his eyes were bent on them.— ha hod astisfied himself of their unavailable value, be fore his refusal of the morning. The struggle in his heart Mftween pity and prudence occupied him now:— 110 Loow that the chances Were against 1)14 ever seeing again the very large sum necessary to proveut the pres ent bankruptcy of Ingulphns, and that a turn in business might make the same sum urgently necessary to filth self te.morrow—bUt his compassion was moved. lie would have refused over again, entl.ight and without cm oniony, in IWall-street; but,ingulphus had taken him at a business disadvant4ge, with his heOtt uppermost and open, and tt pleading angel listening at d looking on. Ati,the three sat silent, pity gradually overcoming the reluctant_prudence of the stock-Maker's judgment, there was a dash of jvhetals and hoofs upon the clean pavement pear the cmh-stone, a sudden pull-up, mad the splendid equipage of the intfulphus"s stood at Leathers's door.— Lue'y's. heart sank within her, for she had been praying to H eaven, with all her might of sympathy and inward sympathy and inward tears, for the success of the plea and she felt that the influence of this ostentatious arrival was unfavorable. Leather's looked over Ms shoulder in- to the street, and ruse from his chair asibe footman iat livery crossed the sidewalk to wring the bell, "For God's sake!" gasped L thQ despereto !deader, in an agonized tone,knittitig hichandS together. and turn ing his face with tho movement as the stock-broker took his stank before the lire. There was refusals in the attitude of Leathers, and in his brow, compressed with t h e etlin.t to utter it. tkin, whit° fingers of the' little hunchback gently took the hand of her bentfractor---now brought within her reach—and held it to her lips, while the tears drop ped upon it ficely.. tuy sak,..."'` tite murmured, in a tone of appealing and earogßing tenderness, which a moro Itard•lioarted man than her Lonecantor would havo been troubled to re- rued and opened his large eyes with an Isudddea tendernev upon her, Leathers tt expres,ioa of "Fur pow givitp4 her a l ake be it. then, my suieot child!" ho said •i 53 with a rdpid moFetnents, as if his lly broken through its restraint with ilia 'ad lent it. bent had joy inipulso sho I "And now' ho continued , fur ihe }aka of this angel, Mr, lug!'lyhtts," • But the sudden rush of hope, and the instant 're. taxation of dtApair, were too lunch for the high-sttung frame of ther p roud suppliant. Execited to tho utmost tensiett by anxiety, and dotthtr less far mouths utmost overdone with sleeplessness and fatigue, his nervous 4stem gave way, and as Leathers turned to him from Lucy, he fell fainting front his chair. To ring the hell and send suddenly to the carriage for `Mrs, Ingulphits, was the wink of a moment; and, to the astonishment of the Snedons opposite, and the mingled relief and surprise ofCyphors and Mrs. Leathers, mite were peeping at the carriage from the drawing-room win dow, the Queen - of tho up-town fashion run up the steps, In fall dinner dress, and wont in at the Leathers's: A present of a bouquet with the Snetlens's card the next morning a•'as the beginning of Mrs. Leathers'ii rec ognition by the discriminating paste-board of fashion--L ' hut there aro many; Who (till they road this story,) have considered Mrs. Leitthers`s adiniSsioit to the "Ingul phus's set," es one of the most inexplicable mysteries of this astounding century. • MAXIMS ON MONEY.—Tho art of hying easily as to money, hi to pitch yourscale of living one degree below your means. CuriaeYt and enjoyment are more dopen ;lent upon eeriness iu the detail of expenditure, than upon ono degree's ditibreuce in the twele.• Guard against false associations of pleasure with expenditure—tho no tion that because pleasure can be purchased with money, therefore money cannot he spent without enjoyment.-- Whit a thing costs a man is no true measure of what it is worth to him; and yet how• often is his appreciation governed hy no other standard, as if there were a• pleas ure in expenclittiroper cc. Let yourself feel a want be fore you provide against it. You are more assured that it is real want; and it is worth while to. feel the relief front W it. _ When you aroundecidedas to which of two courses you would like best, choose the cheapest. This rule will not only wive mopey„ but save also a good deal of trilling indecision. Too' nuch lobo, leads to expease; because when 'a - man is in want ofobjects, it occurs to him that they are to be had for money. and he invents expendi-, tam in order to, my the time, +Weasel to Rock of Nora Lolly, or TIIE I. O. fir O.F. nt Rocky Mount: Wearied, thirsty, nod distresbcd. punting for the cooling "bunt. Israel's children totrayi:d to rot, Asking in Jehovah's uame, Furth refreshing waters carpe, Thus, whilSt in this world of tare, Oft; as helplesi brothers come, lAA them Kin your bounty •bare, Finding in your heart a home; And in you a Horeb pro% Daubing at its sprinz, of lot c. And n fell e'er in 6,,rrom.'s Brother+ of our ctiaskir baiter Call in truth, 0, may )on light 'fht• Of l os I`, vtilt FriendArip'a hand, ('hanging nn ith it , cheering ray Sorrue,'., night to dos vtl3 day ,ch 10, 1910 31:1 6 FAN POSITION OF GERMANY The Frankford Nssembly, with a prescience for which we had cored to give her crod:t, has come to a resolu tion which will establish tlio German unity, and raise that country into one of the greatest powers of Europe. It has resolved to put Austria out of rho question In Its plan of intigration, . and to treat if as a neighboring state. - By l this meansfit takes a most ample and practi cal revenge for the contempt with Ivhich Austria has treated it, and for the 'murder of Robert. Blem, its envoy. Hitherto, all advances of the Assembly towards Austria, • have been met with the most marked • discourtesy.— Windischgrata retused to ace the envoys, and, to put the, matter bey nd remedy. 'actually shot ono of them. The Assembly Towed to avenge his death, and it has done so in the most conceivably masterly manner. It had no armed powe r; it not, therefore, inflict a punk. meal th? sword. But it has exorcised a legislative power which has sti tick' far deeper. Austria has alwa:ts that is. since the cleCtion of the !Ions() of Hapsburgh to the ituperitil dignity.;claimed the imperial crown of Ger many its a sort of heqloom. If there was ono country mole than another on which it looked with jealousy, it was Prussia. In thii 'Mind pride,_and in its irritation , , , , , agaitr , i. a piepte risen from tura , itioin .tt , etter nich policyl to assert its freedom, it forgot for a Moment the prosinisto greatness of Prussia. It saw only a con federation (if people c,x l oreising rights most hateful to its domineering tomper. l and 'assisting its own subjects to assert thdo l fame. It mado no scruple, therefore, to en - no deavor to stamp on this great popular poWer: it used disguise in expiession t,f its hatred and contempt. It pooh-bootie(' its advances, it violated its sacred charac ter, I and the law of nations, and shot its envoy. \Vhavt this pulley - i no more den'it than of our own exiiteneo that dietatild by the old arch foo of freedom. %Y lizivo never for- a moment believed that front this country he still rules Austria.— • a l ns are now aware or' this, and publicly avow till not be long before we Shall see that arch es of depotism again on his way towards Aus- In this case he has met with a master stroke Baron Viin Gager!). Von Gagern, immedi he !mirth+ of Blum, hastened to Berlin. His a mYsterv—it is now clear. Ho saw that coin mittttd itself he.tond remedy, by tho etre ei•ocution• that it had made a deep in heart of the German people, and opened Oirect union. with Prussia. The result is the Frankfort Assembly has passed a resolu in;:r. Austria no (Millen of the German empire. t-17, that there shall be nn emperor, oerial clown shall be offered to :one of the There can ho no other than PrusL this dignity. This is felt, and al ie other princes. The King of Pres - f Germany. Germany will become t empire, and the gerionn union Otl!c r than The Germ it. No sit Mepitistopl trig. But of policy in atelv after abject was Austria ha. cious act ofl wound in t the door to complete lion declar and, by a ii! and the im Kings - of; ' sin who cult EOM= aspire. to detl trr lb ready cone siu will bo. i miporor o nd coiltpa' Llinhc . one great a l will be esta We cannot me 11 a century which ca b Gagorit. Itllta4 at of tour and blOod-guilty the German union. stroke of police during the present put in comparison With this of Von co avenged Germany of the hau insole nee of Austria, and has sitv ed The rrankfort Assembly was fast sinking hal eontemp power to 'enforce tber and Prussia i had re-sr Inoue° woL Itl have h • ... It passed &tomes,' but had no n. Had it only waited till Austria ttled their affairs, the certain conse that tli tld hr ,1 _hey won. -Javo unites iembly, and scattered the; union be toldiers. Von Gagern saw this, and f statetnanship, lto has at once se uNtria front each other: punished its insolence, nog attached Prussia I nd its ambition to the Germanic it is the honor and" greatnoss of the a. Austria now aces this, and otraee the bliinder. It hastened to I hostility towards the-confederation, t—i t only waited till its oWn affairs i.ow wait lung , onongh. Tho die is and put don the As fore a half million of: by this (441 d'ourn voted Pcusida and Austria coldignly fa with all it 4 nterests union. Ili iiceforth, 'German cbnfedcpii would g,:ve l a world t dot-Vitro tha it had n felt no contempt far p are oettled.l It ma) casti and P end placed pride of pin rankle fore topics once and Germ, allied to the great Germanic nation. V at its head, wilttower above Austria in the kce,, and ra i nutin a thorn in its side that must ver. Thns is the great Menernich-Mephis. more check-mated. Thus hi Robert Blunt fly avengezl, and thus is the unity of the Ger: saved! All honor to Von Gngern. =2!IIMI ha our it thu hateful tvo are inelj of the nu 4 splendid ati tional Assi, 'ofonnd satisriction iit tho blow thus given to policy and the sanguinary :crime of-Austriit, Lned, in a great degree, to overlook our disliko inn King, and to hope that at the head of so empito - ,' and with the check of a Constitu el tnblv ho will be more careful to act as , be gat monarch. Ilis threetest and deepest in e to maintain the freCdont and prosperity of It will ho a glory such as-no King can des a people Of Filch a character, and of 40,000,000 in lhp spitit'of intelligence and freedom. It comer' d gr , Ceres{ will y Germany. piso to rnlo in number, will bo his 1 on the dos cafelii slid wisest cour,e, Ifho attempts to put , otic sere*—thero stands Austria, ready to lis4 and to-avail herself of it to regain ucuco at his cost. We behold, therefore, in • ► o f tiiings, the strongest guarantee of Ettro.'• Tho bend of a dangerous alliance of the ten to any her lost this posiiian Peon periee. thrco Northern Powers is broken—that is, of alliance against public liheity.—France.' were it 50 inclined, would find such a !Germany rim will, now consolidate itsell;.l;e power is bo insulted or invaded with • Peace and friendship will bo the ohvi- impunity ous policy.i But there is ono consideration for oursave# arising out [ of this new turn of affairs, of the deepest im part. Germany, and espec;ally Prussia, has long had ambitiousyearningsl for a tleeti-a great merchant float, protected diy a national Davi . . Germany under such auspices will seek. and that earnestly. eagerly. indefati gably, to tt l lauttracti n o and -to trade. That it will iudutgo it s envy jo.dous.‘of our greatnees, is felt by every ono conversant with 'Germany, and is already shown by sending to i tho United States; • and not to England. for Wilms to 41.rgiiiiize-tho now Hoot.L?ndott Standard. I qy Says orals-occasion - in which SOMflt3 made . "Seattus 'rose last. He spoke little more runes. lint every' ward was full of weighty d when he sat down his reputation as an era oustituticinal lawyer was established." Our rotors will do well to ponder this 'live minutes heir henna. hlvr.tav a speech than five matter; a for and a Congress opsech,in NUMBER 44, OM