' NGEL of the parting P p/ fH year. Nj wy* Mi 1 Winging hack to -JzJ Heaven thy -> 'xSa/' flight, Sad the burden thou ? must hear From the darkness Into light; Burden of my wasted days, Fragments of my broken hours. Budding promises that grew Never Into fruit or flowers. Happiness I might have won. Worthy deeds 1 might have wrought, Wrongs I hate, but did not shun, Good X crave, but never sought; All my proud and lofty aims, Withered now to vain regret- Feeble, foolish as the will To no noble purpose set. Take them all, my griefs, my Joys, Kay them at the Father's feet; He will search if yet there be 'Mid the chaff some grains of wheat. He will fan my faint resolves To a purer flame ar.d clear, Hear to Heaven my heart's desire. Angel of the parting year. And angel of the coming year. Though thy face Is vailed, 1 see By the glory round thee shed, Thou hast some good gift for me. Is it gold, power, or fame? Perfect peace from toll oroare? Or some sweeter, greater bliss I had never hoped to share? Nay, 1 know 'tis none of these; Still I walk my narrow ways; Still does lowly labor fill All the measures of my days; This the treasure thou hast brought, Prized in every age and clime, I-lfe no greuter boon can crave— God's most precious gift of Time. Time to shape my common cares Into duties high and sweet; Time to learn that patience smooths All rough ways for tired feet; Time to scatter here and there. By the wayside, love's small seed. Knowing lowliest hands may oft Minister to highest need. So may each day be a cup With life's sweet flavirs fraught; Every hour a shining pearl Strung on golden threads of thought; Every moment a bright flower Shedding perfume far and near. thy grace to make it so, Angel of the coming year! —Susan Marr Spalding, in N. Y Weekly. RDIXARILY the •'fall term of school \ ' lroun dis- Xlf TBBllTMliik Ir ' et wou 'd have closed before the ' ( holidays, but this j year t li e r eh a d !<'tation. had talked edifyingly on the "advantages of an eddication" and the "proper training of the young," and the teacher had spoken a few words of modest farewell. At last all was over, the last scholar had said good-by to the teacher and gone. The young master seated him self at his tabie and sighed deeply as he looked around the now quiet room, es pecially as his eyes rested upon the seat cf Helen Hathaway, the charming daughter of the director. The schoolhouse, on whose interior lie was so disconsolately gazing as the setting sun shone through its win dows and lighted up the familiar ob jects—the charts and pictures on the walls, the neatly executed maps and drawings, the specimens of "busy work"' done by the children, the mottoes and diagrams and quotations on Ihe blackboards—had been indeed a pleas ant place to Herbert, save for the one disturbing incident. Many a cheerful inoe, was aroused from his reverie by a rap at the door, and before he could collect his wan dering thoughts a curly-pated lad, breathless from running, stumbled in to the room with a letter in his hand. "Say, teacher," said the boy, "1 was down to the 'corners' to get Dad's mail and Mr. Jones wanted me to fetch this letter for you. He said it had been in the office 'most two weeks." "Thank you, Charlie; my corre spondence is so limited I had forgotten there was such a thing as a poet office," and he took the business-like envelope in his hand and wonderingly tore it open. 11 retid as follows: New York, Oct. 3, 1895.—Office of J. W. I'ennimari, Attorney and Counselor at Daw. Mr. H. W. Allen. OakvllloCorners, Mich, j My Dear Sir: For the past two months j I have been looking for your address and have just this day learned It. I now ! hasten to Inform you of a very agreeable | turn In your affairs. When your late la ! mented father became Involved In financial j difficulties one of the largest and most val | uable of Ills steamships, the Dolphin, I bound for the East Indies, was reported | lost In a tropical hurricane. Without at ! tempting to inform you of details, which I I can better explain in person, I will simplj say fJiat the supposed loss, followed by Inability to obtain the Insurance, came at a critical time and brought on the failure. It now transpires that the report was lr«- ! correct. On the 20th of July, only three weeks after your father's death, the Dol j phin arrived In this port with an exceed iriirlj' valuable cargo. By W>ls unexpected stroke of fortune you are again a rich man I have very gladly taken charge of your business Int< rests, believing, sir, that you would wish me to do so, and shall take the liberty to act In ttiis capacity until I hear from you. I No doubt you w>'l at once communicate I »lth me, but thinking It might be an ac CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1898. commodatlon to have a little ready cash I Inclose draft 011 New York for sl,ouu. subject to your order. Awaiting: vour fur ther Instructions, 1 am your obedient serv ant, JOHN W PENNIMAN. Herbert read the welcome news in a dazed sort of way. He reread it more carefully, and ns its full import dawned upon him exultation took the place ol despondency in his breast. He picked up the draft with a feeling of elation "This is indeed a New Year's gift! This little piece of paper is worth ten times as much as I have earned this whole term. No more need to worry for the future! The news is too good to be true. Now I can bid defiance to thai august body, the school board of the Drown district!" Just then his eye happened to rest upon some very neat algebraic char act era on the blackboard which he had purposely directed "not to be erased" in order to attract the womdering atten tion of his visitors that afternoon. An instant change came over his spirits. "Still I would have enjoyed another term in this district. It is a shame that one's efforts are so little appreciated!" The gathering dusk of a winter's day admonished him not to lineer further, and he began to gather up his l>ooks with a constantly sinking heart. He had nearly completed his task when heavy footsteps and deep-toned voices in the hallway attracted his attention and in walked Director Hathaway. Moderator Stevens and Assessor Sim mons. "Good evening, gentlemen," was the pleasant salutation of the ex-scliool master. "Good evening," replied the director, in a somewhat embarrassed tone. "We hardly expected to find you here so late. But we've jest had a board meet ing down to my house anil was 011 our way to your boarding place. Seein' the door ajar, we thought maybe as you was Mill in the schoolhouse, and so we stopped in. As I was a sayin', Mr. Teacher, we've jest had a board meet in', and we liav;- come to the unanimous conclusion to reconsider our former ac tion and ask ye to stay the winter term. As I've been savin' to Mr. Stevens and Mr. Simmons, perhaps we was a little hasty in our course. The teacher lias taught us a good school, there ain't 110 gittin' around it.and 1 guess we've been a little prejudiced. 1 know my Helen never took so much interest in her studies before. Then another thing that has convinced us that we ought to reconsider our action was the solemn way in which the scholars felt 'bout jour leavin'. There's my daughter, for instance, she has been rnopin' around ! the house ever sence we Kent you notice, j and last night after school the whole crowd of scholars came traipsin* down | to my house with a petition askin' us j to reconsider our vote. So, Mr. Teacli j er, we have thought best to yield to all ! this pressure and ask you to stay. What j is more, we've decided to raise your wages to $:i() a month." During this long speech the spirits of the young man again rose to an exult ant pitch, but ln» replied in a calm and dignified tone, which the gathering darkness helped him to assume: "Gentlemen, it is indeed gratifying to me that you have thus vindicated me from the suspicion of failure in my work. liut whether 1 can accept your olTer at this late day is a question which i cannot decide without some reflection. The generosity of your offer to raise my wages is appreciated, though 1 shall decline to accept the increase. 1 will carefully consider your kind offer and leave my decision with Director Hath away to-morrow morning." The interview was now ended, and the board solemnly and wit'.i some surprise at the independent bm perfectly cour teous manner of the youthful master, j withdrew. Xew Year's morning, as the young ! teacher repaired to he home of the di j rector, lie felt that he had been doubly blessed. Yesterday he was but a pooi i and unappreciated school-teacher. To day he is the possessor of a snug for tune and stand: vindicated before tin school distric ! Does the reader won cer whieli t lotiglit gave him greater pleasure? And the answer which the young ped; gogue gave to the directoi that morUng; if anyone doubts its character, the joyful smile which li• : up the sweet face of the director's daughter when she heard it would have made further questioning useless.—De ' troit Free I'ress. J/EW you flnil tt rer " /ffidfoi, ,aln la, ' k u U'"si£tWLm l In of It ii your back i At a threatened * ■ n TSY-P fierce attack, Jußt the hour That you need your every power, Look a l tired and : — hungry, lie had been walking all •lay and hail not been well treated. \t many houses he had been turned away without ceremony; at others work had been offered. Only one woman had taken him in and fed him for nothing, and she had given him soda bread which always disagreed with him, and cold tea. The profession was not what it had been cracked up to be. thought the tramp, and he began to think that the burglar had the best of it after all. He had always called himself an honest man.and he now and then split wood, when he could not get food without, but. after all, was honesty the best pol icy? He knew burglars who had their little houses as neat and pretty as any one would ask to see. Texts round the walls, too, "God bless our Home." an l all that. The tramp liked a pretty text This very afternoon lie had been walk ing with a burglar—they separated when they came to the village in mu tual though friendly distrust —who was going home with a New Year's present for his little boy—a gold watch it was. He had taken it from an old cur mudgeon who kept it locked in a box doing no good to anybody. That bur glar was going home to have a eozv time with his wife and child, and here was he. a tramp, an honest man.and not able to get a bite of supper. Decidedly, tramping was not what he had been led to believe it. He thought he should try stealing, after all; he stopped, full of thought, and looked around him. A bright light shone from the win dow of a cottage hard by; the blind was up; the tramp stepped to the window and looked in. A neat, bright, cozy kitchen, a little old woman busy over the stove. No sign of tnasculine pres ence anywhere. "I'll try here!" said the tramp. He opened the door without knock ing and went i... The little woman looked up. "Good evenin*!" she said "1 didn't hear ye knock. What can Ido for ye?" "I want some money." said the tramp hoarsely, for he had made up his mind now. "Well. I haven't got a cent!" said the little woman, "and if I had I wouldn't be fool enough to give it to you. So there it is, you see! But you can dc something for me!" she added, bright ly. "You've come just in the nick of rime. 1 want this soup taken to a sick, hoy round in the next street. His mother is sick. too. and can't COOK things nice as he ought to have 'em; hasn't means to get 'em. neither. T ex pect; and I set out that lie should hnv something good and hot togo to sleep on and begin the new year with nour ishment inside him." All the time she was talking the little woman was busy getting out a bowl and cover and finding . clean napkin. "Here!" she said, and she poured some of the steaming broth into a gmall cup. "See if that ain't good! 1 glless likely 'tis." The tramp glowered at her, but drank the broth and said it was gaod "Then you take this!" said thewttle Woman. "Go round the corner to the fourth white house and say it's lor Tommy. What ye waitin' for?" "I didn't come here to do errands!" E»i'J tJie t:amp. "Yes, yon did!" said the little woman, sharply. "That's just what you com •» for. I've been waitin' the past half hour for the Ix>rd to send some one—l can't go out at night myself, fear of tli* asthmy—and He's sent you. Keckon He knows w hat He's about!" She pushed the tramp out gently but decidedly and shut the door on him. "Well, I swatj!" said the tramp. He carried the bowl safely to the fourth white house from the corner. Once, indeed, he stopped on the way and muttered to himself. "Tommy!" he said, and his tone ex pressed deep injury. "You'd think they might have called him William, or something else. There's names enough, you'd think, without hittin' on Tommy. But that's the way! A man don't have DO chance!" A horse and buggy stood before the white house, and when he knocked the door was opened by a short, square man with "doctor" written all over him. "What's this?" asked the doctor. "Soup!" said the tramp, "for Tom my !" "Who sent- you?" asked the doctor. "Old woman, brown house round the corner? All right! If she sent you I suppose you are a respectable fellow. Just jump into my buggy and drive to 140 Gage street! Give this note to my wife—Mrs. .Tones—and bring back the medicine she will give you. Hurry, now! I can't leave this boy, and I've been waiting half an hour for some body to come along." He nodded, and shut the door. "Well. I swan!" said the trampagain. Tie pocketed the note and drove rap idly away. He did not know where