f . McPIKEt Editor and Publisher. Tormc, E2 per year, in advance. OlXME VITI. EBEXSBUltG, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1S74. , . "HE IS A FREKMA1 wnnf rn Tor -a to . . .... to 'ji... sanr.r day f jore, ; Tvh'"rt is vninly beating, for it throbs j tcrn n more; I ' :tn life's swoet morning, or ita ". :uid cryMal ilfw, .(. ;'. wtr t liar lay beneath it such a s.-ut -n d v inning hue; j . Min 'mis riceu higher, and the dew i. . i'""'pr,, ; .... ni'Tii s swi-ct breath has withered ' -,t: ',; v-.vej-t thro' childhood's hours. I i .' ;:iili- my young ft-et threaded .-. - t he wild wood and tho dell, . ,. .v, i-l:t of other footsteps op tho -,i .-mrni'd fell, ' uic f friendly voices woke re-i,.1.Ii..n-i' rny own: i j i.-.. aiid echo only sends me back .., ;,; t-rint; tone, ; , i :i t's ;i hollow rustling at my every .. . viiifiit end r waken no more a rnstling from lull of a friend. j - -i hearts as well as voioes in the eaily youth : a 1.' se every pulse was faithful, and .': ..-e ev-ry throb was truth; j v whuse. wealth of krindly flishes Kent 1 iiiit to dearer eves , pjain will s-hine upon mc euns that 1 "vi-1 more shall rise k whose light, indeed, is hidden by the s death's fingers pressed, ' ,.i sadder, light, averted from th eyes ved the bHt. ,. inner lost tones and glances back- I : -'I !1 on mem'ry roll, . the chastened radiance of that ..it of the soul ; i vi t am searching for the sweets kh'-d hours , ,rli of early morning breathing n iiliereil tloweis: .11 ii s I am tracing while this ri"i:id me playp, riie ga'ln-red darkness beams :.! of i,:ii.-r hys. kvli: g nit runs. lAir OV T H V. WKI.SH COAST. , 1. 1 , u k-v i:d. calm as glass and Mi ii ii! miow-w niie sauii, t,.us rocks gray by day, il.- im a: nadino arch of m tlie went ward a strip .... i I tw I". M1 i ... , T;n;: n i ;ato the harbor, and sun; i.'.Ai k ,i- x-aiust the lower Hue jl.vi!.,; tz-'.-l. wl.cr-, tar lieyond, tho sun :-:t iJ ;; ! ii- li iining orb to rest lie Tl . w tv.'. i iv.t the point the topsail HI i-f a tl.r-masted vessel. Nearer, n l. n girl sjated on a heap of J c.vwi--'l. in-r pretty brown dimpled ;.vp.-'! .-'.. n t her knees, her head un i ur by a mass of black silky cur'.s, iliik aiul restiug against an old .-rn-,Tii and broken, and long dis n'.ii.h had found its last haven in i. '-'k It was all very quiet at !y and ly a step came trampling i n d nuf'Ota sauds. The young '-fk g! 'ved with a deeper red, and i: h'.tu to heave and her hands ::ir'Ugli siic wer a otru ou tue t'i its mate. ICot being a bird, however, she coquetted sat the sunset she did not see, i "vl mid almost screamed when a ' : '.m and bearded and muscular, s ;-'.-!. ',7 round the stern of the ruined ' ! i.h a short exclamation, half i' nt l a T i . f ore IV; it- at giadness, took her straight and hugged her till the j "is'-t earnest, r toe down! put mo down! now - - fvj raile, sir? Let me go, please ' 've given me a kiss, Faithie," ! i'ler. keeping his hold good-hu-" 7-'. tt.iu something of reproach in '- b.i.e eves. "What! not one af- :: .r.i::i,&- waiting? Why, laisie, I i-' jii-.i :a:ed for me a bit better nor A;'' I hungering for this minute 'jai.il hour since I left yon." '-of the reminder perhaps even Z of his arms touched her. had a warm little heart, al- 1 7( )ari ountrer and smaller than ! 5 tr- iftte' it . tit-' against which it was beatiug now. I l,vst an a true woman, tho moment ' -,rg'; she begau to cling, and put up J ;:--e for you, Kyle," she said, "only j r-": l .iv; xo," and forthwith she be- j 'likea baby He mad no answer I cr'? ki-isinz her with close, tender I - Haul eyes, till the tears were ! '' '.'! the lips pouted. ' K ", do let me go. You're so ' I 4,aij.i some one might be pass- .'.'5n:n- his hold, however, and i . iuim:i Dcti, iuua j -'i i-.i on the boat's keel be- ' has a b.;ttr right to kiss i ""n icii you, Sam Jones' j Ijr him to begin, for we 'he pier together, and sho j '"- r ope,,, and her arms j , while he was still peering on the chance of her look- .;i0;: ... M 1 an j. a bold eirl." 0:10th 'i.ose ans the manners I WOnd'T VOll alwlti't trn 14H VUP: you first came here." 1!l 'W"'n itnn-er man and his .Vs h451ftr staring; "but there, snfte'hart; and besides you kvPt a girl in Wales, or Eng- "' L !" r'l!,i ,r'eet my fancy save . . -.r,e." ver51 Jl.6'3 onS" ""l Atr. rica," f aid Faith ,!,,.-iip. backward waiulering, rep aren tier lover: "whv. in the name of ah that 8 comely, you wouldn't would"urPare t0 YankeC 8irl' t,, . ,. i Tho honest lDd.gnat10n in his tone, how. ever ludu rons in ,t f, had a softening ef- vu mm. iter big brown eyes grew suddeuly wet, and her voice sank to a half- shamefaced whisper "Only I told you I wouldn't wonder if you took to a foroign girl, Kyle. Some say they're prettier than we are." "You would ha- wondered, though," re torted Kyle, promptly. ''Prettier than you! I'd like to see t lit woman. Faith, give me your hand, and turn your face this way. Do yon think 1 11 be content with the back of your head to-night?" He took her hand as he spoke, and she let him keep it; but her face was still turned away, and there was a faint quiver about the ruddy lipR. Perhaps h-r next words ex plained it : '"Father says you're going away again al most at once, Kyle." 'Aye; when he came aboard to meet us he gave me the offer. It did seem hard, a'most too hard, when I'd honed to have a little rest aside of you afore I went away aain. T.ut, after all, it will shorten the time o waiting one ft'ay, lassie." "How, Kyle?" "Didn't your father say I was to wait for you till I was a captain? I'm going as cap tain this time and only for a six weeks' trip; leastways that's what they calculate it at. Some business with the New York agents, I think; but I suppose you've heard about it?" "That the Olinda was to be fitted out for j sale and that you were to take her over an' charter another vessel to bring you back? j Yes; but won't it tak you longer?" ! "I doubt not. They're to have the boat and cargo ready. Mr Denbigh's arranged ' all that. Did you know his son the new ! junior partner is to ship with us?" ! "Yes," she said. Good Heaven! how rosy her face was now; and yet the crimson sky was fading into blues and violets. II ! was looking at her, ami the brows suddenly ! ' darkened over his eyes, giving them an odd, ' i fierce expression. His voice, however, was ' quieter than before. I j "I can't say I earn about sailing with the ! I owner's son. I'd liefer tak any other pas- : senger. They're apt to fancy that because they're boss ashore they need be boss aboard, an" I'm a masterful man myself, an' don't hold with no Co.'s in salt water. Hows' : e.-er, I shouldu't mind so much if I liked the man." j , "And don't you?" asked Faith timidly, , her color still high. ''Do )ou?" said he, stooping forward to look her full in the face. "Ile'a been a deal ; at Amlwch since I left, people tell me, an' you must ha' seen plenty of him. What do , you think of him? J "I, Kyle?" her eyes drooping beneath the sharp scrutiny "I I don't know. He's pleasant-spoken and civil. I think he's nice enough." ' "And I think him a cross between fool and ape," quoth Kyle Griffiths shortly ; "son of aea-cook! Well, Faith, I wonder " J j Faith snatched her hand away angrily. j ' "He has more manners than you." cried ! she, panting, and ruffling like an enraged j sparrow, "he is a gentleman at any rate, and I would never dream of using such language ' of peopln ho don't know more than to speak to. Oh," and here her feelings were too much for words, and an indignaut little j sigh and shiver filled the gap. Even the violet was dying out of the sky ' now, and cool gray shadows crept up from the cast, aud threw a sombre tint over the . roan's face. A small, cold wind roso out of the sea, ruffling its breast with long, fret- ' ful lines, like the. puckered face of an ailing child. "It chilled the dimples in Faith's cheeks, and blew the soft brown locks ott Kyle's stern brow ; and far overhead a gull . flew by, with a long shrill scream, like the wail of a banshee. Before it ceased Kyle spoke; "He is a gentleman, is he? I thank God, then, I am not. Had I been one I might have been betrothed to soma fine lady, i'stead o" the daughter of an honest seafar ing man like myself. Faith, twice these five minutes have you found fault with ray manners. I don t say tney re uuer uui a rough sailor's have need to be, but you never laid blame on them before. Has this gentleman been teaching you to do so in my absence this time?" ( Women are constitutionally cowards, Faith Morgan was a very woman. J?or an reply at flist 'she, metaphorically, turned tail, and took refuge behind that ever-ready shield of femineity, a burst of tears. Itwas not until they had lasted long enough to make Kyle apostrophize himselt as a oruie that she sobbed out: "Hour e-c-cruel vou are! You kn-n-now that I love you as you are better than and . ..... . - .1 U n.attr yet oh! Another oursi, nu mo & j head dropped very near Kyle's knee. In- and nights before; and the waves had wrest ir,t9rilv he laid his hand caressingly led terribly with a crazy barque which, with V j upon it. Involuntarily ms voice vou. tOOK sofreued, soothing tne. 'Am I cruel, Faithie, and to you? Nay, then, don't cry. Majhaps I was over iharn. but I was met on landing by ill talk about young Denbigh an you. Ihey sani he had been taking my place, an though I wouldn't believe if, r.or even u, -thefoul-tongned gossip5, it rt cnt nie when you spoke up for him. Faith, lassie, I love you more than many a husband. If yon were to play me false with any one, 1 think I'd feel hke killing him an' you too." He looked like it at the moment, and she , ,i vi i Mo, 1 at the min2li2 ociieveu uiui, aim -- - of nassionate tenderness and wrach in his ' tone. Instinctively she turned and cl.tspcd his strong hud in both hers, her face turn ed upcoaxingly. "Din't think o such thinRS.Kyle, love: you know I never could. What's Mr. Den bigh to rflC but father's partner?" tlo ,t. . .. ... , , . ing down into tho sweet eves. The moon, just ri3ice- K,it,ered " something which! unnoticed by her, had escaped from the folds of her neckerchief-a golden circle, with the portrait of a man within. "Faith," said Kyle Griffiths, in a tone ' which strove for steadiness, "you're wear- j in' a grand new trinket since I saw you i last. Who gave you that?" I He spoke too suddenly. With a quick, J frightened gesture she snatched away her hand, as if to hide the bauble. With a face ' deeply, terribly red, the red of cowardly ' consciousness, she stammered out, "I I it's nothing father's I mean I bought it." j Without a word Kyle loosed her wrist and rose up. Without a word he turned ! from her; only when lie had gone ten steps i he came back, aud said very hoarse and low, "Faith Morgan, you have told me a lie, j an' you know it. I can't, say if it was for j the first time, but I can say it shall be the ! last. I wondered" and his voice sank : deeper sti'.l "that you shou'd shrink when i I took you in my arms a while ago. I won- j ,i , , . . . . .... . ; or uo vou uareu isi me uo it, wr ln?t man n face lying between my heart an youi's. Go to him now, as you will; I want no wife on whom I can't depend in word an' deed." He was gone the next moment; and Faith, sobbing bitterly with grief and anger, went home to find Philip Daubigh at the garden gate waiting for her. He had been courting her for the last two months; and she had coquetted with him. Flirting is not an amusement confined to the upper ten. I have heard of a young Tata gonian squaw who was as finished an adept at it as any Ttelgravian beauty; and Faith, an only child and the prettiest girl in Aml wch, had been wonderfully fond of trjing her fascinations on th "weaker" sex, till the arrival of a new first, mate for her father's favorite vessel, the vessel he had command ed himself until he was admitted to a part nership iu the firm of Denbigh & Co., his em ployers. Kyle Griffiths, big as a giant, true as the '.icht of day. and masterful as he said himself, had ".cut out" all the rest in no time, and won Faith for his own undivided pro perty. She never even eared to look at any one else when he was by; and, I believe, loved him as entirely as was in her nature, with most worshipful affection; but when Kyle was away at sea and young Mr. Den bigh came to Amlwch Mr. Denbigh, who Was what she called a gentleman: some one ho wore fine clothes, and had white hands, and a curly moustache and when this hero testified an immediato and violent admira tion for herself, how could she help going back to the old habits? She did not help either. Mr. Denbigh made love; and she smiled and flirted, all uu conscious in her flattered vanity of what the neighbors were saying, until, just three days before Kyle's return, the suitor brought mat ters to a crisis by a declaration. They had a tift" about a pho',oof Faith, which Denbigh had stolen and put in his locket; and he had brought her a fine gold locket with one of himself in it, and begged her to accept it aud take the donor into the bargain. Followed a wakening for sill little Faith, and the confession, "Dot I am engaged !" Followed an( er (from the gentleman) and tears (from the lady). Followed tremendous scenes of masculine woe and anguish, and feminine contrition and soothing. Finally Denbigh left the house, determin ed to try again on his return from America; and Faith remained with the locket, which she had at last consented to keep and wear as some small salve to tho giver's wounded affections. She loved Kyle far, far better than his rival; but Phillip Denbigh was so handsome and sweet-spoken, it would be downright cruel to refuse him such a tritle as hanging the trinket round her neck for a day or two; and no one need ever know. Nevertheless bome one did know now; and the sweet-spoken gentleman got a sav age snubbing on this afore-mentioned eveu iug. "Kyle will hear I refused him, and come back. He'll never leave me so. He must ask my pardon first," thought the weeping beauty, that night. He did not ask pardon, however, nor come back. The Olinda sailed three days later, and Faith's two lovers sailed in it. Kyle had a beautiful black retriever, which he hail ljeea uged to jCilve behirul to "take care of his lassie love w hile he was gone." He took it with him this time; and Faith nearly wept er lovelv eyes out, that she had been too prouj t0 OWn her folly and seek a reconcili- ation fore he went. Patience! it would be backi an,i she would be" geod so good and meek He must forgive her theu. Eight weeks all but two days when tho sun went down in stormy grandeur, one cold eveuing, on the Irish Sea. It had been blow- 1 m-r- eritna 1 1 1 r II V fttlfl for TTT .1 11 V itarR creaking timbers and leaking pores, with ! strained and naked masts bending beneath ' the gale, at every lurch they seemed like to bury themselves iu the foam-crested waves ! tumbling mountain-high around them, had 1 striven like a living thing to weather the cruel storm. 1 Where teas she now ? The huge breakers, crested still with foam, turbid and purple Btained, dashed themselves, moaning and roaring, against t'.M gray and iron-bound ; cliils of tho Welsh coast, flinging up great I fragments of timber, torn and twisted scraps 1 of sail-cloth, and battered, shapeless things, ' too awful in their piteous mutilation for any human name, against the pitiless rocks, only to suck them back again mlo the black and boilinggnlf below. Above, great storm-reut Clouds, black too, but fringed with fire, wcro gathering thickly over tho threatening vault ; and low 0.1 the horizon the Min, like a blood red hand, pointed from between th-.-m t something black aud broken, over which tho j sea was breaking in unresisted fury the steam of a vessel with the broken bowsprit and foremast just visible amongst the foam and spray. Greatly as the wind had lessen ed that sail looking red now before the angry sun was all the captain of the pilot-cutter cared to show even now to its tender mer cies. It had been a work of danger to get uear the wreck at all, banging as she did in a nest of rocks; aud there was a look of relief on more than one hardy, sunburnt face, when the order was given to tack and 'bout ship again. Suddenly the captain caught up his spy glass, which was lying beside him, and after a hasty glaiu e through it, roared to the men to "hold all hard." "There's summat liviug arter all," he said, pointing to a ridge of low outlying rocks, where some object was plainly discernible even by the naked eye. "There! just above the line o' high water. Can't none o' ye see?" "A man down on all-fours!" cried one of the crew. "Look, he's moved a bit higher. Poor fellow! he must be a rare plucked uu surely to ha' kep' life in him so long." "Lower the boat," said the captain sharp-It-. "?C(iw mv lmlQ rsltp -ill .tim" "tnoi. out puot;, "give us a coil o that lute. v e mayn't be able to get over near him; an, I say, one o' you lubbers, chuck a lottle o' rum inter the stern-sheets quick!" They are brave, kindly men, those Welsh pilots; I have owed my life to them, aud know; but I am afraid they thought their courage and kindness wasted when they found the objectof it was only tik0og! They hauled him into the loat none the less, al most too much spent, poor fellow, to second there efforts; and then, while he was trying very feebly to lick the hands that had saved him, his beautiful eyes full of a dog's grat itude, they saw he had a tin flask tied to his collar. The captain opened it. "To Miss Faith Morgan, Amlwch" he said, reading some thing within; and then, not being a person of refined delicacy, ho took the paper ovt and opened and read that. This was what it said: "Boat just left with the crew and Philip Denbigh. No room for my ; but uo wish for it. Unmtnbvr that. I give mine on board, with willing heart, to him you gave it to ashore. God bless yon, sweetheart. Forgive me rude words as I forgive your falsehood. There's a Saviour more merciful than we are, an' to him I pray to care for you, an' make you happy, as 1 would ha' tried to, had Ho been willed to let me." They gave that paper, with the dog a beautiful black retriever to Faith Morgan. It was all that ever came" to port of the ill fated Tride of the West, tho ramshackle old barque, which hail been hastily patched up, and thought good enough to last one voyage more. Boat and crew wero never heard of again. They must have perished with their fine young owner in the vain attempt to reach land, that stormy night; and there was no tongue left to tell of those bitter eight weeks when the "sweet-spoken" gentleman strove, by every vulgar boast and innuendo, to torture the man whom he considered his successful rival the man who was no gen tleman, but who had the grand old knightly feelings that would have made him bear any thing rather than, by word or retort, drag the name of the woman he loved into an un seemly dispute the man whose unswerving discipline aud tireless energy had alone pre served them even so long the man who, when the ship had struck, aud the cowardly scoundrel who owned it was cliuging in fran tic, helpless terror to his knees, when the men were shouting for the captain 1o join them and cast ott, lifted in the miserable wretch first with his own strong arms; and then, seeing there was no room for more, cut the rope that held the boat to tke sinking ship, and stayed alone to die! Anil Faith? Faith is living still. I met her yesterday coming np th high street at Amlwch, with her married daughter, each holding a hand of a wee, toddling, brown eyed thing between them. A bright, bonny old woman she is too, with as comely a face as if the eyes had never been washed in salt tears, the brow never wrinkled under a cloud of care. "I must be goin' home to my old man," she said, stopping at the corner. "Kiss gran nie, sweetums," and then turned just at the churchyard-wall where stands a rough stone cross, "To the memory of tho captain and crew of the Pride of the West." Kyle's prayer has been granted perhaps better by his death than if he had lived to carry it out. As Faith says: "He was a rare good man, but hard, over hard and stern for ord'nary folk." Davciko and Fault-Finding. Iiev. Mr. Nightingale contributes to the Spring field Republican the following story of Ilev. Dr. Lothrop, an eccentric parson who offici ciared in West Springfield: "A young lady, a roemler of Dr. Lorhrop's church, went on a visit to a neighboring town, aud while there attended a party and danced. Tidings of her sin reached home before her. On her return she was visited and called to most severe accounttor the disgrace she had thus brought upon the church, and which had been found out, notwithstanding it had been done among strangers. One staid maiden was specially earnest iu her rebukes, and the poor girl felt very bad. What shall I do?' she asked. 'You had better go and see Dr. Lothrop.' She did go, and told him all about it. 'And so, my dear, you went to the party and danced, did you?' 'Yes, -sir.' 'And did you have a good time?' 'Yes, sir.' 'Well, I am glad of it, anil hope you will go again and enjoy yourself. And now I want vou to tell me the name of the woman who lias been making all this trouble.' She told. i 'Go to that woman and tell her from uu; j that if she wants to get to heaven she had ( lietter make more use of her feet and U-ss of ' h.:r tongue.' " ' Old yarns darned stockings. The Light or Stars. The night i com-, but not too pooa : And sinking silently. All silently, tiio little iuoon Drops down behind the sky. Thcro is no light in earth or heaven, But the cold lijht of stirs ; And the first wa.i of nilit is given To the red planet Mars. Is it the tender star r.f love? The star of love and dreams? O no ! from that blue tent above, A hero's armor gleams. And earnev-t thoMirht" within me lis-. When I lchold alar. Suspended in the coning skies, The shield of that reofstur. 0 star of strength ! I w thec stand And smile upon my pain : Thou beckonest with iliv miiilcJ Laud, Aud 1 am stroug agar.i. Within my liren-t there is no liVit, But the" cold liht of stars; 1 give the fir-t watch of tlie 1.1 tjlit To the red planet Mars. The star of the uneonquered will. He rises in my broa,t. Serene, and resolute, and sti'J, Aud calm, and sell -possessed . And thou, too. whosoe'er thou art, That rcadest thi brief p.alui. As one by one thv hopes depart, Bo resolute anil calm. O fear not in a world like this And thou shalt know ere long. Know how sublime a thing it To tiutler and be strong. The Maniac. The maniac was a giant. lie had broken his heavy chains as Sampson had broken his withes had torn open the door of his cell torn the keeper literally to pieces hurst open the door killed tlie watchman with a heavy iron liar he wrenched from the door and escaped with his formidable weapon into the city. Tlie whole place v;is aghast at the news; ami we students at the hospital and dissecting-room, who were connected with the asylum, had to nerve ourselves to help capture the escaped wild beast. I had gone to the dissecting-room alone, and was ulout to commence using the knife on a subject. There was a storm raginir, and with a low .sob the wind swelled through the long aisle of forest trees-, and Cashed with the gathered force of an ocean wave against the dead-house. Simultaneously a hand struck the light door, and the yell of u maniac rung through and through my brain. Above the door, through the small venti lator, tlie face of the madmau aiid thj murderer peered down at me. " Ah, ha ! I have caught you at ln-t here and alone I have been waiting for you. You took me once, didn't you? Ha, ha! Let me in ! The coolness of imminent peiil brought my powers to action. I held Ids eye an instant; but it was evident lie was too wild for that : his bloixl was up. aud it roved with er.ger ferocity through tho rontn and over the frail walls. With the light lioiind of a leopard I gained the d ior and shot the double bolt. A gleam of rage darted from his eyes; but he laughed, " H.s, ha! you think that will keep 1110 out? " lie leaped to the ground. In au instant tlie light was out. " Wait," 1 cried. ' I have a weapon in my hand keen as a razor. It is .jis uied by the d:id .itly I Into; b.n working .in. B ust the door, and I'll plunge it in your heart. If it but touch yon, you arc a dea.l man. You may kill me, but I'll you also, a. certain as fate ! " The swarthy giant shook the door until its hinges creaked and groaned beneath his hand. Then, laughing again low t himself, mattered, " Fool, I "II outwit you yet," and stole off in the darkness. I heard him, for an instant, pressing against the wail of the building, and it swayed and bent inwards with the weight. Then silence. The din of my pulses made thunder in my ears, as I tried to hear his ste-.iiing tread, und the sobbing wind rising anew with weird, unearthly .shriek, made my efforts fruitless. A thousand limes I heard his low, mur derous laugh. A thousand times I felt his brawny strength against the door, anil saw his wild face looking down at me through the gloom; but still he did not come. I tried to think he had abandoned the design, and slunk ofl' discouraged ; but I knew it was not so I knew he was crouching in some corner, on tho watch to spring on me when I passed- Could I stay there all night? Xo, cer tainly not. An hour more, and Harry Leigh (my young wife's brother) would come to seek me eoao unconscious of the danger, until a bloodhound at his throat would choke the brave young life down there forever. I listened in the intervals of the now fitful storm to hear if he was breathing near me; I waited for tlie next lull. It came that deep hush that follows tho g'Jsfy wind. I put my soul iu the sense of hearing, hut no human shadow of sound greeted it. When the storm swelled again I drew the lH!t and looked into the night ; a black pall hung over the earth and sky. I had as good a chance to pas him in the obscurity as he to catch me. With my knife in my teeth, a-.id tlie m:is.sive thigh bone of a sktleton u foil him with, if I must, I drew otV my shoes and stepped out into the darkr.ess. sud den whir! of the tempest almost took me off I.iy feet, Vtl-.d a brick, di-lodd fr.eu one ,.l j the chimn. Vs, yru.e-l 111 head i.i i..- ji.; hh-1 broke in half on tin: pavemc: t. With bated breflth, :md s s I:'.- the tread of a panther scenting his prey, I parted the ti.ick darkne-v- and Mrncd my face towards tbe hospital. He m:;!a he either here at any -t p ii!nn the paag.- or hid in the anjjle of the v.a l :t the d'hr ' through which I nui-t enter. This seemed most prol-be ; hut there ;:s another -Lior known only to the do' ! r. ! I thought I would elude him. With infi nite caution I lieg in t staile the l.iJi Wa:I, dreading horribly le-t some sudden l.rca'.v iu the sky might reveal ns to thv wild eye : thai wttched for me hut r--. ! Safely pa-s-iug the summit. I threw niv leg ' over for the de-eer.t, m.o felt ray '1 seized. ' It was hut the ciiaihii jf tenuiil of a wild 1d, skirtif g the wall. Grasping my knife i; n;y right hand. 1 e. ;-pt along the h.i-he-i for f.'tv vrirds, then struck across the lwn for the side entr;: The i; .;:icss per plexed me, but I thought I was .-teeiiug straight. Suddenly ir.v f.i.t strexk V-.iV.s. What wa? this? 1 tried to re.?!!eet. There was no pavement round thai part of the l"-jital. I I pushed on tv.-iecT-'.ain'y : an 1 feeling a : weight in the air, p. it out my band to g'.ope for some clue to my whereabout. I was in an alley Hanked with stone walls far above rny head. I gave a sudden turn. In an in stant I knew I was in the subterranean pas- i sages of the asylum. -Turning to retrace my '. steps, the opaque density of some heavy lod v crouched between ine and the outer air. I heard its stifled breathing its stealthy tread approach me from the very door of the dead house here! A struggle for life with a mad man in these narrow, gloomy vaults to lie in the pool of one's own heart's blood in this ; undiscovered totuh and my young wife, ; Constance! was maddening. i For an instant my brain was on f.re. Then 1 I thought there might le an exit other de- : vious windings in which I could elude my deadly pursuer. Going deftly backward.-, I ; turned the angle in the wall, and then plunged at the utmost -peed or a young and active man along the back passage. In stantly I knew I was pursued. Meeting another crossed path. I struek into it in the opposite direction. The maniac instantly 1 followed me. What a race through those cavcrnoiis depths of the und-h.iusi-! What . tragic pitfalls might lurk at evctystep? What black and stagnant pools lie wailing to eugulf me ! What deeper depths of iev blackness into which to fa" and lull for ever ! The pa-sag"- grew narri-wc. We were, perhaps, under the very oeutr ; of th. build ing, and fiirthe-t from ti e outer air. I had tried to breathe ni.Isei.--.ly ; the eil'.rt ex hausted me. I knew nothing of th laby rinths; could only g icss at. our position by the distance from the entrance. I hud counted the turnings we l.;vl msle. I thought I could retrace them. My strength was failing. I was the th-etest, but he was nil st en L:ri::g. l're-.-nt'y he w-.uM run me !.-. It v;;s a terrible ventere, bet the n.-e-s-.-ity was eminent : I would try ir. huhe! ing all my foree, I dartel like an anow 011 into the diirknes--. The -irl leune-s of my increased seed bullied him. I su. ee--!. 1 in putting fifty yards between us, gained ai.d turned the next angle ; then, drawing my-elf against the wall, with every nerve and nuiM-le straineil into prcternatin-al tension, with the mighty heaving of my spent c.hc-t crushed into silence by an iron ctTirtof despairing will, I awaitel for him to puss me. I heard him coming rushing on with new strength through the blackness, reach the angle, turned ft. suiting his mtt-rvf Ixxly niriitist the jutting stones. I heard him spring like an animal along the track I felt his hot breath like steam the foam of l is set jaws Hung across my face and he topped. I felt that he was feeling for me ! that he was crouching on tlie stone--. I saw the red of his eyebulis glare opto inc. through the darkness. I felt the touch of his icy flesh . on my hand. Like lightning he raised him self, arid throwing his vast weight against me, pinioned me to the stones. And the manage of a mad man et bay surged i.p- wards to my brain. I.cla-je 1 iny knife con- vuisivciy, and seized him by the throat, rc- solved to die hard. It was l ain.- it was shaggy. The hands against my chest had a thick coat of fur. I clasped him to my brea-t. It was Lion my d g, I.k-n. ; i "Great heaven, Keene ' what kept you the whole night in the dead house? h is near day ; the door has been oponid this two j hours, and Derby and King have '- en asleep. I was getting on my boots to look for you '.'' 1 " Why in the name of comin-.i) sen ;e dl 1 yon id tins uog out arter iue Ui you tell . me that?" j "Why he howled liks n mania-, and clawed at the d.-or till I thought you were in r,me danger, and I coulJ r.ot kwrp him '!'-' j "Darker! Well can't u'.k now. Kouse yourself; I have had an interview with your maniac, and be is prowling around the grounds after me r.ow. Call i.p the men. I mast go ufier Philip imme- di itcly." " You don't say so?" i "Yes; don't waste a seeond." j In five minutes the whole foice of the ho- ' ... , .. ; pital was out in the ground-. U e took lum in the angle of the gr.it door, crouchcl be- ' hind the jutting wall, waited for mc ! lie j drew his 'lips ba.k over his teeth, in the' dumb ferocity of u mad brute, as he saw me, i .i ..v.-vsv-ttle into a d.ii!. Inril --hire. impos-; s-ible d. (-1 c, as he hi -e-l out, I' this js twiee tvviee w.1',1 1:0 the ti'.il time!"' Ai'iimi the hla.t.iug gia: 1 j'ni ti 1 t.;.;..! ; hour oi' the tempes:-t :..--i. J night, v.o -iiooi hands over the feI.:dlijo-s of oar z?:.1.a. ; 1 ..c., a. . t- (. '- '- fr-t.and the. 2a.igi-t.-v att.-t l!t ei. .- or my adxenturr). and 1 -. -A,d Ki-.g 1 n l left. :-.nd Hurry I.eigh a-.i i I st. d at thn v ii-d'-w viatchieg the young win:-', d v v'.-n i'tr the h!!', t'n re wa- someii.rig v--ry likei t.-e.r- i.v.-r the hold, brig'it blue ..f l.js eye us !, point " ! to tho gn;"i:e w:'!I of t'-o tii:td-hoi;-e. mid mM, (.' u.-la.nf v-eild !.;,, ;n.r.e there !.-e:ie, i r tlie.!. a,:d tuino mo -.lid :i'. e N en a i,c:r. y, A I ire Lji-iiu ii ay .i.e :i:ur. Mora!. I 1 -1: -iti r ic r en '.: 'f-a-ne-l of the way n l.-s- .in. I ; was in the ' ; of t..: f r but t'-e i i'.'.e engoi-vr wa 11 .4 i man, and ;:.- I t- -r.. .,!. i."mg so liv.le ; he said 1 r.o rum, iog aid sho.it;. :;r is a .'ire ' j.-jt it out vn. vi.. -7 r;,; I Hut l!.e:c u a- th.' " - order, hriir'it and i l -un. : v..:- i . V II. thing ' l"i.e; r p.a-e. kin 1 to t.ie: thero D. :i ! like a . . .v J i A 1 t! en ;'..-!! it I. VIM., e ousel i.;s t I: ftroke were like ju:i-:i: i e:s . it seemed to slaekni a h;'!- started up vnli renewed vigor, and w,-knew that far otT, at the other t-n.l of the lis. , in work told. The engineer v. a- qui -t a-; i ea'm . now I n opened the door and U-t-.l at th.-lire; now he touched a valve whc'.c the pre m re wa t.xt great, and let the -team e-e iji.-; n. -.v ho added more fuel; ne h..- ii.t-i . ,.u -omo lt-hes. And another in.::, '.i:h oi; touched the machine here and there, where the fiie tioii was tierccst. They did not look at the f.re, did not go near, and y.-t t! .- w r.- .1 ii ig tht ir cliie-t. You iui:;ht leave sail t! e . i. ,k no iiuere-1 in it, that they ven- wanting iu leeiing; there were plenty ' !'p ;! who made mom talk, and leint-nted t ' r the po-ir man who w.is lo.-h.i; l is ;X'J. p.rh:i:.s; but after all, win. was doing :in-t .' There is n story rent in Hpj. lies l-:i;K a- a fi.it v. hei; , ti..; s as to i hut which d :ii i-.:t which h :i u-k pies Oot e.eiCern t;.:-m. " There was a in 11 in (-av X.-w ,Jerv r-T ".ny where) v. ho m-ide a large loit Ju--. Do y.ni know how he made it " X " I'y rti5tn,i-g hi- wu b-'.-irte I thought of this at the tire. r.d ir rt a'l I took the le son oi whi.-h I -poke. In OirL-- vc.lV " likss.-d is be that shall xt'inu in .'us ,f, in the e::.l .1 t!i.- d iy-." We w-irt :n r I. " n i-ti ins ;' tho--e tn'-n at the engiti , who -hall si.-idily an-1 earnestly do the,.- j.- tr; mul itn.-od to thr.r own busi,;,--: d-::i with no s(,...tij; ml;, b.jt .t, 1. Siisaiant .e ; it h. alio a ::! t--.!-d. in. r finds this fra as.mt stimulant. :" Th, . to be a ve t-ant - viii! toiiis whi h w!ii n tea-n. ison- ing prodm in a patient not inured by lia'.i; di-:i;.pear in the seasoned tea-drinker, leaving only a e.-rt-iia exhilaration whieh ajp.-ars to l- perfectly i '11'f.e..ms. If tea i-i n safe slhria'.ant. it is i-.-i tuiuiy an ag;eeih;- one, and there seems to ! no valid reason why b;ain-w .rh the solace. t' -i mi l refuse themselves i- c's::i';'.y Flench people fnd in c. ll'-e the most cilienciou-remedy for the .'eiiipooiry torpor of the mini which result- from the proee-.-es of digestion. Balsae di-.n.k great -juauiiti.'- of collh-e whilst he wrote; and this, j: is llieved, bioug'it on the tt-rrihle nervous di-casc that accelera ted his end. Trie lv.t j.i,,f that tea n.l colT:;e arj favorable to intellectual expression is that ail tuitions use one or the other as aids to conversation. In Arabia, there is never any talk without the inev i tabic cofi'e that flagrant Aiahian b-erry j.r.-pared with sach deiieate cunning that it v ieids the pe fect aroma. Ti;e vvis,hin 0f oe.sisionnlly using these various .stimulants for intellect ual purposes is proved by a single coi.sidora- ti0"- 0l us 5::ii n 'Ui'e cleverness ami a great deal of shiggis-i .stupidity. Ther are certain ocetvd ms vvhen we absolutely nec-l the little cleverness that we ;e-srs. T!ie orator needs it when he -peaks, the poet when he versifes, but neither ear' how stupid he may become hLi-h the oraii-.n is doiivere I, siii the lyi ie set d e.vn ei p.i;er. The slim .!ant sei v-s to b, i;.g t the talent vvhen it is waote 1, like the wtwJ in the ;-i;is .f an o'-gan. Lalttckv Ha is. Tindirioo yjrith t!.-rc a-e j. st thirty-two dnys ii. the y,-Hi- i.r, ,., which iii to j.,"m lir.n.ls, nr.m-.-ly: t'-e first, s,v..r:d. third, f-.arth, s,., :-;.; ? , a.vj twelfth of Jan- ,;ry: the fwst, sisth ami eighth of March ; the sixth and ele.eeth of Ap.il; the SAft, -5 :, ami s.-rei th of M: - ; the cr.;h and f ilectith of J '::o ; thj il.lU -o.d i.inr-.ventli of July; tiia tvclfi.' si sevt..u-e.tb of August ; the sixti and seventeenth of Son- tombcr; th -ist'.i ofOctol-r; the fifteenth nnd ri.ieteetith of X. vci.iVr, and th,. l.f- te-nth, sixteenth and seventeenth uf Decern-, her. As to the b.-st day of the week, w 1. : " Monday f.r wealth ; Tuesday for health; tH. vf aIL llnirsday for enc-ses ; ., j,ay t.ir j.jj - Saturday no Jack t ail." -- A rm.r jmih.-sop ur tnas ur.o.udenej himself ..n one of Woman's weakness-: "J:.n. d- m -ii .hm't wake sacn f..-;ls .if ne-eives, lb.M n.c-i a- 02 Wiiifi.!: Jd u"Ut m :i. Ird-v ; i- k u d- ;i.'-.-:i iy s.-t .1 :y.in in it : u -ii If d y ; a ;.ves. rt: -b'.i'-.T, i:"" s uu n ; i -'- r .; iou iioos-r ue j bed he I thing t nigh: to rod a man. A i y, ' I n.-'. - look and-- nv '' ' '"' ; - ' .'": .-