UAL THE CAMBRIA FREEMAN I Mtll itaMl Wfrklj nt The larire and relia'le nrctitaM, w of Mr " Bui Kekkvas r'.mnifinl it lorlnrin'rtt'Vfoi. aoleranon of airrrt t.er. .hp fn Torf will be la, aertert at the follow line low rales : 1 Inch. 3 time ( l 1 3 month SM 1 " e months.. " a o 1 " 1 T'nr 2 ' fl months im 2 ' 1 yir ".""..! 1""0 3 months .!!!!!J.""!!! ft 0 R " 1 year H 00 fil'n 6 m"nth in "0 e month in S " 1 yr :.. oo 1 month 4 04 1 1 year ? 0 Adminis'rator's nd txecutor Notices .... M Att'li'iT't Notipff 20 Stray and Fimilar Notice. l.fco Itusiness item, first Inser'ion b-c. per line : etch iubseo,urt insertion be. per line. Xf RrxoUlt ton or ftnrrrr'mq at ffiy ctrr-f orctf or tori rt y. f rrf ( pmiirirefirtuj drnnned fo ra a.'fm ion f tftv mater of limited or i-ridividuel tntrrett9 mrtxt be paid Jor at advrrtixrmrnl. Job ri!cnsiif ullkin l n-t1 inrt xpp i t cuf ly.execated at lowest prices, lion't yculo.-gt it. j:p,K.SJ:T KG, Cambria Co., ra ' IJY II. A. Mcl'IKi:. C.Kftrantreil Circulation - l,OOS. ! slBHfRIITIOS KATES. k ,m one year, cash in advance 1.W i" i. " if not ii'd within 6 mns. 21") ? if not p'd within year.. l'.f-To nrr-'W residing outside the county j,,M additional per year will be charged to Lrto. from, and those who don't consult their J Vn n crests bv paving i:-. advance must not !e ct i be p'aecl Minium" footine a? thoe inn .1... t '-t t"i distinctly understood y m this I taic f orward. 'avtnr your P.pcr before- vou Mop it . ir -'pi you mu-t. None but scalawag do oth. D.,n i be it s.-alawlit-a "JO s"rt- H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. 'HE 18 A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MARKS Ffftl?, AND ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE." SI.50 and postage per year, In advance. VOLUME XV. EBENSBURG, PA.. FRIDAY, MAY , 1SS1. NUMBER 10. 4 ipt fit I'fl G . WOLFS BLB RELIABLE PTOSES I LD it ELI ABLE hWW. Clothing House In Central 1'cmisiflvait ia , KFAT TO POST-OFFICE, ALTOOXA, PA. i ' fTROSQ K A S Y SI US STROSG f .tvt' M u Ali.-woor. sins Qnat va rifly M K avtl CI TA II . I V SL ITS. . Fancy Rsvcrnl!' WOUsrV.V M' A.' SVITS... Large assortnu rtnf STY1 i l T SI ITS... All- tf ool Line anil 'u-, . MF.I.TOS SI ITS.... Soiille-Bre.-Kloi la;u;i SM K STIT n e Iia:;o-.al I I TA H A Y SI ITS. $v Iiwjr-wl r n-- -K COAT sins Oo f y.very-I'.--j WORKlSd TAMS gtit PA TS in t'.e n.'i for the mom u Alt-iv.i Af:;;vf.r i.r - PA fj i nn.v? of c'! st a'ld q'talititl li to 13 te.'irtt In rs; F'tf't U t rt 7 SO 8. CO 10.00 12.C0 1 ?. ro 17. SO v..oo l'f'O 17.00 1.0O S.L'j Special Bargains .Ti -s-r i:i:ct:jv!'.d FROM Ol'R LARGE WORKROOMS, (OV-I-ilS'l OF A .MI-LETS LINE OF BLUE, BLACK and BROWN . i.i. wool, rut nr.Avr.R OVERCOATS, l-;. tl. i; .ur.d, Si'.k VeJvcr (' l'..ir, gwj S T4: Lining, f r TEIST DOLLARS! ! OPEN EVERY HAY UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK, P. M ' ReversibTe Overcoats ! i J-i,e Heversible overcoat first manifeste l itself j HI year ago. but did n ' get a lair hold on puhlie ff r until tl: pre.-ent feas.jn. It Is made without j lining. ! ' '.it,-, and the featn arc avr.inaed in tuuh a way that ti.-re 1 n. it'll.' side t it. One flja ! the .t:i is r.:i -hd in a variety of style?, j laefc a .ban mi '. mix".!. to., etc., an.l the other Is S'ja"y a - ! j.-'aid or click. The pockets. ' T t-., are so ingc-.ic iis'.y col. Wived that no matter Wljich !dof the ( a i- o ;t tV'-y .ireal'vfty in the r!g).t place, rca iy f t bu-incs. We will fh .w this tffsek nil the lb ' r-i'-c t Vats we have : also, evcry ttrr in :- lire t!i.it yo.t a k i-.r. It will yv.zz, -fOU : a-k Tt at.yt'iitig w- l.nver.'t get. i ! i. a oi.r. i ' wr. it i". .n r r.m an r AT ASSIGNl-KSSALE A LAR'JK Overalls and Shirts, MAe of he.ivv d',i"k, nr.-l a- we l ave r.o room to keep them very lot.g we wilt aire our patrons tho ; bnrnt of the b.utf.ir.i vie got in the purchase by ; nUlrt? them nt HH Y C1..NTS PEli SHTT, tr nt ntKNTY-KlVK CLNrsw each article epa- i ntt'.y. They .h i worth at bait- KOI nt.K THE J- MONK.V. 9' TIT IS Vtara .l.-jwir-g. n fully a our crowded condition , w.i! pTci;'. everything; wo have in suits and overcoats; an-f e- 0 KlU'OATS We are prepared to 4k w ;i?im! aa 'iR'.iir.HoJ asrrtm tit tog !n Cbvt'-.ing and I ' r.dercbt ii men of .-try ing, but the KEr ,l ir or t:: week 1" In Overcoats of ev- ry t'.rt. v 11 '.'.i-i. to talk .it ya tho newest and Esft tiiii m It is to wear them, but not ali of yewV i-.t t i ; i. : r them. We have equal need t-i I a 'i'i;, sir;io r.t that f.m; ly keeps out the ia-nf sr. 1 ! !. even thorgh they may be a little rv. i.. Thousands who will read this to-day will fc glu. I to !e :,-n tl.it A fr ()()!) SATIX OV HHCO AT, t!iJ enough t-. aue a scn e ol warmth : Fub.tan-'- J- cgh i r the r!"i j:i"-t werr, an 1 good look : i -. ugh f.-r bet-er use. r .n t,e had here 4 I'OK j-r,.o )t; si(;.oo. Other rr.ercr.ar.f vvi'.l '.M.k w.th the same likir? fT Itiimaiix Ikioir at $n to 13.M, and the Chf--rl:ia overcoat., at -.s to : . Wf have r.o time to writ.t to r hare you patience '' ' 1 ai.vthing like an account ot what w show i T 'ek. H-re 'be i lace to use your eves and V ilgturrt. Here we wjl b; tlor.s t eforcl...!: !. ill not tire you with f KMMI'.MBllK THIS ! aatevir y n i,ny that ch r not suit jou, lfn t s- 'i t at all. c...,ie I ack with it the first minute J5n!i. Via are i ?-, j if you had your money 3 your pwk'-t. Y- u c T0r money back 7?'T P1 if ?'' -nt it : l.-v.t take gr,o I care " I -rroent for u.. , l e a , our interest in GODFREY WOLF. LATERXnR, One vt the Salesmen. Veidhoff's Block, 1HICJIF SXitliaKX. CARL. mviKMirci I , ill I UtIUO, i'tel Wa!ctmaicr anJ Jeweler, lA. TJ tn hiJ'1 '"- Tine I and rle- "'V!riL'L';i;r'''r I ' repawn Clock, ESTABLISlltn FOR THIRTY-MR YEARS. AY BSflT I 3Iniini acturerw, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, -OF- tm, coma, -AND- Sheet Iron Wares AND DF.ALEItS IN HEATING, PARLOR anfl COOKING STOVES, SHEET METALS, ! j a n n i liOUSE-rniMSHiNG GOODS GEaTIULLY. .rllin in TIN,fOPPERiSIIEET-inOS THiTMPTLV ATTENDED TO. Nos-273 280 anJ 282 Wasbin-,on Sl- JOHNSTOVH. PA. J.W.SeiRBEOGlS&BRQ., -DKAI.F.US IN- Dry G oods, Fancy Goods, CLOTHIjSTG-, GHOCEMES, &c, CAiniOLLTOVVN, TA. HEW GOODS BECEIVD WEEKLY A1 ALWAYS SOIJt AT TI?T. VERY LOWEST PRICES. AMI IAII TOR ( OIMRT I'RO II K nlien (innils arc not ilolrcil. J. W. SII.VIJHAICII A. FiKO. t'arrd'itown. Marcli 11 lSn.-ti. B. J. LYjSTCH, nnnnrartnrrr anfl Denier In HOME AND CITY MADE FURNITURE ! LOUKGKS, BEDSTEADS, TABLES, CHAIRS, Mattresses, &c. 1G0.) ELEVENTH AVENUE, Between ICh ami 1 7li Ss., Altoona. Peian'a. M-i- tlitizeni- Qf C-ambrin county and all others wish in ;r to iiurehase. honest r I KM 1 I ht.. tsc. at honest price are rej ect fully invited to give me a call betore buyin": elsewhere, a. I am confident that I cin meet evirv want aiiu pleascrverv tai-tc. IT: ' the very lowest li. J. LYNCH. Altoona, April Pi. l51.-tf. IX OKPOIt ATrn IN- I7!5. STBICTLY ON MUTUAL PLAN. PROTEGTIGH MUTUAL FIRE IHSURAHCECOMP'HY OF EDENSDURC, PA. a lliia t'o.i W.l U 1,J - i'l't'4 Only Siz Asse sments in 24 Tears. Good FARM PROPERTIES ESPECIALLY DESIRED. NO STEAM RISKS TAKEN! GEO. M. READE, President. T. W. J1FCK, Sccretaru. F.bensbura-, Jrn. 31, 11 -ly. McNEVIiVJ Sl YEACER, masut-aci rr.ERS or Tie, Ccpr d MM f ARE, AI BP.ALEPS ly COOKING & HEATING STOVES, n.iscts, n n.A is, c., 1 10S Eleventh Avenue, . Altoona, Ta. One Poor West of Opera Houie. ItOOI INC. AND SPOl.-TINO mojlPTLT ATTE5DED TO. KEI'AIRS FOK STOTKS (.OASTAMLI OJi HAM). Altooa. tct. 10, lSTj.-tf. S U day at lioraeansily made. Costly i-uumi iree. .Vi l.-crs I rue 4- r.o.. Auguita, 31 e. " APRIL II, IB8I. IB- &d IB. Sl'KCIAI, ) I ' I ' HUIXCtS ItELLOX 15LACK SILKS il InrlieiMblr. nt SI. in, SI.50 nn! 91.73. SITjK HKVA n 'J'MKXT. Several rae New JSl.T-k Ilror.iib'?. nt $1. tl..'nd np to $J 7f per vnrd. One fpeoial lot 1 :i-tr:i 11 1 -i in.-li (ool nt -J.Oi p"r vnril that h:tve s -11 nt p r ynM. Newr2-in"h I "inbro Sirip Silk rur'I'fimminir". 20t pieces Hinek Silk nt ifLOi. 1 .-.!.'. 1 1.T; nml t.m per yard, ot llonnet l?(;lUin ml Tiiinet i'Htd less rire thfin ever Pohl nt. 500 jilLoe? Knnoy Siik. at :'.T' '.. to fl.Do per y.Tril, St r!, i 'tierks nn.l r.imiines. T.arce lot I'A.ick Satin il'I.yons. 1.)0. $1.25, $1.M, nnil up to rinet ir:iae. Satin Mnrvpil'cnx niel Surnhi, Klnek and Colors. Fine Hlnelc Silks. -J.-.'i to $4.(n ner yard. Very larire lot ami Fieeial value in Hl.tek Satin?, from tOr. up to finest trratle-. Extraordinary values in 75e . fl.O i, $1J5 and fl.M) the two latter "J-inch jruod. DRESS GOODS. One case Silk Strijunl Imported Ooods at ;. nint h ln-s thnn vsluo. All the new things in Soft Wool (loud?, from 2V. , to l.oo per ynrd. Nun? Yeilina;?. Alhatros? "!othf. Homespun Checks, lllitminnted Fieitre.a, Chevron?. FtnlcF. Crrpes, Inrfre nortmrnt of Kronen Plaidc and Stripes newest roinliinatins ,tn;I elemint desit;n.s f r cstuni''. oombinations, etc., to per yard. New Ileycrdere eftcftP in Trf-'3 (i"ood.a. 100 pieces enrh of 40 and 4(5 -inch lilnck Cashmere, at Tfc. nnd 1.00 per ynrd respectively, sur-pa-?ii jiny ouapTyJnow retailed, or liithertt 1. tiered Ht thec prices. LAhlES' JACKETS AX I) WRAPS Now open : choice Imported iannent.-, from finest to lowest irrades. Special value? in choice mcdiutn tr;id.e. Krcrv department complete with newest stvles Sprinir a.Md.-. I..Mcry, (rlovud. Trim mings, I-acep, Ktn'iroidcricsi, ine. 150GGS cc liUIIL, US & 120 Federal Si., Allegheny, Pa. Tnco Curtain, in fine qunlitie?. nt Pieei,'il low prices: lare lt of Nottlnirhnm Jtce Curtain? nt 1.04J per pair a!nut ha If v;i iue clean, fresh ir !; 3 land 4-4 Checle and Senm Clot hs, made to or der of ele:in selected cotton, nt r and 6 .,e. ; TJnrn Scrim 'li:tis. j;c. up, and A nt iijue I -ace.- and S wis I-appets for Curtains. (4-l.r,"!.-ly.in.c.) F IXAXCIAL STAT KM EST fr li.M 1 'Kl' A 1'T V K T OK liKAN TOWNSHIP for the year entlini; April 1 1, 131 : I.v:r Jirou-x, S:u er i--, r. To anuinr.t ol' Implicate '47..r0 balntu-c due Township tT r;.74 ;' oash ree'd trora unseated lauds.. P,i:'..6-I 4o.VoO fit. y work done on road5 $117. oi personal services. -i.; days r:o.7n " ord.-rs red-'enie.l :i:t."2l lands ret'd to I'utnniissioner? . . . :t.:;o 41 exoti- rations ;..:;7 " atn't l aid H. A. rUcl'ike lor puli- l!-him Stati-ii.ent. ls.i r, oo - a-n t paid l'at. I'onaln-'1, Ian To T'1 ip's share fin iridre... oi.tV "SI . 'A 'on. Ion. in full ol pi. lament :i7.50 ' Lire to and irom Klien.-Snrii :i. 13 om- day attending s tt lem't, and oath 1.75 ' percentage on l IA t 7 per eent. l .ol si.iS.L'7 at i.'.. J.:;4- .'!4."..47 ! Ilal.ince due Town-hip $14y.S:i J Jluma Na'ile. SupiTvisor, Ii:. . To amount ol Duplieato flp.i ::4 " lr.cr.ey rert"i-e( frotn taxables... 7.-7 ; " balance due Supervisor r.e.rn l-.'..r.rt ! il i By Work done on roads $l"fi.v j " persfinal services, :4:,, ilars 4H .".7 t lands ret'd to Commissioner . . . 1 :'.K j " exoneration l.lo 1 " one da attending settlem't. and ! dap'ueate 1.C0 Jl.-t.r,5 ! - ; ASSKTS. . Halanc? !ue from I. A. Iiescler, Su i prrvjser. ls7a ji n o.-, 1 fash on hand 14H..V1 1.'U 7 LIABILITIES.. O itstandinir order" 4.'i.?.- Assets in excess of lialdities.. ..Sb'7.13 We. the i:mlerinncd Auditors, do hereby ecrlify the forcio!nir t( itemeut t oe correct. -i S. A. Me! i f I ti K. 1 HV'.NMS I'.VWI.KV. Auditors. JOHN 1. IK H'tiH i:UTY, Attest W. (1. K risk. Twp. t'b rk. 4-2-J.-".t.j DTATKMKXTOr lU'.CKIPTS AND lO KM'hy 1 I It" KTtS npih I.I.I rl v lSor.oron for t ie ye:,r endinst April 11, 181 : tkotmie !: rv.i.T, Colleitor. I!t. To amount of tax on 1'npboate fjl.50 Cll. Hy amount of tax collected 2-Vi..';7 " " " exonerations .s.'ja " " ret'd to t'ominissioners. ;.i jcd.-,o I f . J. CnrtsTV, Treasurer, l!n. I Tobal.in treasury nt last settlem't .f 17 j " amount received from t'o! lector. -ea.f.T J II t C - .-. A. Criste (tines) "'i.oo " nm't ree'd buil'.line; alle' fence. . 6.u0 S57.1.54 'n. Hy orders )aid o-.'i.-, Ualancc In trensurv. . .$ SO.',!) We. the undersigned Auditors of t1llit7in Hor oui; h . ha ve exam ined the accounts ol the t 'oi lee tor and TrcAsnr.-.r. an,( fm. that they are eortect as above stated. J A cll IS KA'rAN. ) JOHN A. .M-S Ki:s. ' Auditors. Al-KKKIi ri.'OXIH.I, ) tiallitzln, April lSl.-'lt. AVi rniToirs oTin;.-,i thr o,- Court of Co'ibria Cmntir. In the mat ter of the first and final account ol J. 1. rarrish. Trustee to sell tiie rcatesfate of John Myers, bite of Mnnster town-hip. I'ambria county, deceased. And now. April 6, 18-1. on motion of'johnston 6t Scunlin, the t'ourt appoint Joseph Mcl'onald an An liior to report distribution of the fund in the hands of the Trus'ee to and amongst the parties entitled to the same. I?y the ttourt. The Auditor above named will attend to theblu tic of his appoinim-nt ly the above stated case, at the Court House In Kbensburg, on Tumdau, May l?th. Is's;, at one o'clook. r. M.. when and where parties interested inav attend if thev hink proper. J i;i'll M PONAL1I, Auditor. F.hensburg, April 'Jg. lSH.-ot. FARMFRsi are HI It I"J II 1 YVp''V if25 to f . per we.-h seilinir M , . . LU i lELl'STltATED STOCK BOOK! eriu-'POTrry Fnrmcrncfnnll.r north if. Ir i tho l.att ni'.l iri"-t rompitf wnrk cvt-r f in AmtTioa treaiiiiir t Hor"", t'attle. Shcp, their hrp"!-, hrcptl i:x, t ru i n i : . ir. fan. r of it ea hp. fymi'tnin?. an-l renif.lic?. 100 pr.itr, 400 illM!r;Hioi!3. Hichly rTnlornf 1 hr pnnh einni'i.t ant lioritie? a the l'n'i.!ont, Vic -Prrs't anil Sec'v of IVnn'a illoe uf Vrtormnry Surirery, Iltm. .f. W. OuNrln. aiitl tKrrs. Tf yuu tlosire iiroriTntile work. rnl at once f.r H IJ partHMiUin. IH'H HAiiP KKMS., 7.".r'':io-tTH'T St.. I t ! :t 1 i T i i n . I'a. A1 UDITOirs XOTICK. The undor- npil. having hon rr.M'intr I Auditor hv t:,e Co:t cf t'omin- n I'loaaa (.1 Cambria county to riHirt l:.-tributi"ii o! tho I'lnd in the hand? of H.-nry Waltor. K?) . Aiune of Iii l Smay. as shown by hi.1 first it'Vr.iint. liTcly jiive;1 notire that, he will pit at hi.- cI!u:e in Ki'eiihnrir, on TwtMy, -Vy K'th. J!. at one Vioric, r. M., to atrentl to tlie duties of aitl apjHiininnmt ; at whteh tunc and place all person.- iutTestPii mnv atTrr. l il thv seo pr- per. ALVIN LVANS, Au.Iitor. Kren!"bunr, April '-lt 1S81. XECUTOll S notici: K'tate of John Kibi.ah ax. dee'd. letters testamentary to the estate or John Kib lahan. (ate of In-an town-hip. dee'd. having b"en granteii to the undersigned, a il persons indented o ai. Testate are hereby notified to make Imme diate payment, and those havlna claim, against the same will present t i:e:n .proper: v ant bent ie ted, lor settlement. IKNN1S ttACI.KY, Executor. Dean Twp., March go. S-i.t. TTou JC F'm 'Oil COUNTY COMMISSIONER a sets Till i-vnmi.L. Kbensbttrg. We are authorized to announce that Francis Miilrehill, of Kh?nsburg borough, will be a candidate f"r the of fice above named, subject to Uem'jenitic rules, and if nominated nnd elected, he pledges himself to guard the interests of the taxpayer of the county to the best of his ability. f 3-.'..-tn. FOlt COUNTY TREASURER P. 311 or tv, L'Tefto. V.'e are authorized to an nonrco that Patrick Moran, of Lorctto borough, will be a candidate for County Treasurer, subei t to Jiemocratic rubs. 1 1 dominated and elected, he plcdg-s himself to perform the dut:s of the of fice with honesty and fidelity. f3-i.-tn.J r.M. II. SKCIILER, District Attornrii nnti Contrllor at Ijiw. Cbiice in Johnstown ami Kbensburg. itt the lat ter of which I may be found every Monday and during the sessions ot Court, and for the balance ol the time the business of the office will be attend ed to by 31. l. Kittetl. ll-8.'81.-tf.J CU'Bsr'RIHE ron tm CAMBRIA IK ELM AN. ? e Ouiy Sl .40 per veer, in a lraacc. VI.XXOIt-AKII.ITV. BY MRS. T. T. HVXDEB. All the lonit winter we'd done nothlnii bnt shovel. And from the best lions hovel in own to the venen The pnow lifap? lay piled to the tops of the posts ; And (jlenmed .In the moonliifht, liko armies of . irhosts. i Anil II I asked Smith to match my new eown. Orbrinza fw ttiinir8 from the yroeery d' wn town, 1 lie would look in my face with the sii!iest srin. j And sav. Not to day, dear, you know we're snow- ' ed in.' . ' (Smith can be dreadfully tinrea.-oiiali'.e.) It provoked me to think that a son of John Hull , Should dictate our weather and hi! our cup full I ( if north blowinc horrors. Now if 1 1 were tea. As 1 said to John Smith when he "reasoned" with i me. "TwouM be easv to throw it all into the bay. l!ut what enn you do with a storm-clouded day ? (Yes, v. hat can you do about it ? said Smith.) llut there came a Rl.nl mornini? when dawn broke at nix. And though Smith lay a snoring (it's one or his tricks) 1 hurried down stairs, the fire to liirht, A nd hasten our breakfast by pure main and mitrht And 1 had just -rotten ready the savory meal. Had tilled up the colter and was turnim; the veal, (And c;illin Smiih tor the sixth time.) vV'hcn a nnd reached my ear that made me to start : It thrilled through my fuses nnd pladdened my heart "Like the promise ot stood, lor which we've lon ptriven : "Like the smile of a friend, or a soiil-!?limpse of Heaven ! 'Twas thclrobin with tidimrs of loner-tarried Sprinir And right j o ful he seemed the z x.l news to bring. (Siiilth had just come down .-tairs.) So I said, as I passed him the butter nnd bread, 'Your prophet of evil's vile croak intrs are Tead. .1 ust lay up your duster, look up your chip hat. Your low buttoned shoes, your linen nnd all that. For a irreat'T than Ycnnor is telling ol Spring. Just go to the window and hear how he can sing." (And Smith had grace to say, "You're right, June.") "Twas nest morning at five, before peep of dawn, 1 had swept up the Kitchen, put wah water on; And was picking up scraps Iroui the iittiiijf-ruo-n tloor. When 1 chanced, for no purpose, to opn the door : I slammed it tight shut.and ran pulling and blow ing To the loot of the stairs to shout 'John Smith, it's snowinir."'. (And John Smith remarked, very emphatically, " Well. I'll be hanged.") Altoona. I'a. Chicago Srn'infl SOMF.IIOIY Oil OT II I It. Life has a burden for every man's shoulder. None may escape from iis trouble and care : 7Iiss it in youth, and t w:l I conic when we're older, And lit us as clo.-e as the garments we wear. Sorrowcotr.es int., our lives uninvited. liobhioi: our hearts ol tiieir treasure- nf sonjf ; I. overs irrow cold and li lend -hips are s ighted, Y et somehow or other we worry along. Kvery day toil Is ever; day llesing. Though poverty's cottage and crust we may share : Weak is the back upon whic h Imrdeiis a re press ing. lint stout is the heart that Is strcict in -tied by prayer. Somehow or other the path-Tcy arrows 1 rihtfr. Jest when we mourn there are none to t-efnend: Hoi,e in the heart makes the burden se:-ui liiriiter. Jim son:i l.ow or other, we g'-t to the end. THi: KLF-S.V( KIH( E. It was a western home plain ami small tbe prairit'S sti't't:-liiii! away frons jt on all sides in preon billows. Neurit was a litlle pror.p of maples, the tendi-r foliaue stin ino; softly in the t'voiiiiijr air. There v:.;ie a lew stars ont, ar.il low in the west 'JJ crescent moon hunir, look ins for the nonce Ake a bio ken tine;, ,,,1C. ,,,!,.,, half cone. This thought ean.e to Sarah Vane as she snt in the low porch, with h r face restino again'st her hand. Something i:i her heart imi.-t httve liroiujitftl if, liiitkly, while a soft blush for she sighed ji do ovt-r her flieeks. 'Everythii-.ar is ilivi.leil ji;t so in world," she ltiuinitiieil to heiself, risiup book vliieh had been King: npidi her lap the the f .ill- ihr to tne noor. Siie stivipett toi'iek it tip. and as she did so eauuht the sound of a st-ji in the di.sta:ii-e. Nearer it eapte, strona, even a ml finn, Ui-ep--inr time to a t'.uio. nn '..iiiiously thit led. For a moment the wife stood, hook in hand, listening; attenti v'.x : tUvn a look of tli. -appointment ,-li.iilo'A iiiir her (li s and itmiitfi, she went into the hoii-o. c I . i t ; u th( dcor al ter her. lint the step came I'm ward just the same, ami the tunc, aselear and beautiful as the notes of the lliiu-b, tilled the air with inu-ie. It was a frank, almost bo i-h faeo, (houidi fironzeil and heardi d, liiat came homeward that night ; just Mich a oij1 as a mother would have delighted in looking upon be en use the world had left no traces of evil upon it. The eyes were blue and fearless', and the forehead, protected from sun and wind, was as white as a woman's. Only about the mouth there was a look that would have touehed a mother's heart to see, not an expression of satniess wholly, but a grieved look w hich sometimes comes, to the laces of little children. As he stepped into the porch, still whist ling; softly, a slip of folded paper l ing upon the floor attracted his attention. lie picked it up and read his wife's name wiitb'n in a well-known hand upon the luiek. The im pulse was stn pg upon him to crush it ;n his hand, but, something restrained him : what ever the feeling was that Hashed up in his eyes for the moment, he had, or seemed to have, perfect control of it. He stood for awhile with his straw hat in his hands and then went into the house as quietly as tho' no fierce pas-ion had been gtappir.g" hard at h:s heart. His wile was sitting by the table, and with a simple, "This must be vours, fsarah," he laid the folded paper beside her. "Thank you," she answered without rais ing her eyes: and Harry Vane passed on, something very like a sob'i isina in his throat. "If she had only looked up in my eyes find said that it was trom tieorge !'' he thought ; "if there were not something from which she has shut me out 1 could bear it better." Wiping his hands and face and blushing back his hair, he looked his w ife over with a great yearning, eager look in his eves, and a greater hunger in hi-, heart. He thought of the time when she hud welcomed him with kisses when her arms had clung fondly about his neck when she had wlii-pered loving words in his ear when she seemed lo love him ! bnt now -he had micaress.es for him, no wifely words with which to greet him. Their lives were narrowed down to a cold, dull routine alltliat was beautiful and sweet gone from them. The husband sat down to the evening meal without a word. Somehow evervthingseom ed terribly real to him that night. Looking about the pretty, tasteful room he saw it ns he had never s-cn it befote. It stood before him like a living picture, wiih its home made ornaments, snowv curtains, and neat ly laid tab'e. And the wife too how fair she was in housewifely habits and her lady like w ays ! No matter "if she no longer loved if some one else had taken his place in her heart of all women, she stood to him the fairest and best. He was but a common fel- 1.-,,, of,.,. ..11 io, ... ,.. . i"", co on "mi 111 ne taste ior poetry or books, while (Jeorgo His thoughts startled him tvith their inten sity, and he sprang forward so suddenly in his chair that Sarah looked np wonderingly. "What is it?" she asked. The poor fellow looked info her face with wistful eyes. ' I'm afraid I cannot make jou happv," he said, in ft choked voice. "11 what shall I do, Sarah ?" "Vou can do nothing," she answered in a low tone. "I am happy as I deserve to be." He arose from the table and held out his hand to her. She did not place heis in it. She was too honest to play a double game, and she could not show a love she did not feel. He read it all in her white face and startled eyes, and turned away without an other word. The nxt moment lie was out of doors walking rapidly toward a small en closure which lay "a lew yards from the house. It seemed all the place in the world for him then, and with a great sob he threw himself down upon the grass and laid his head upon his baby's grave. Never child longed for the kisses and naresses of its mother as Harry Vane longed for the touch of the baby hands and lips at that moment-IJroken-beartert. alone, a wanderer, as it were, and oh, so terribly homeless ! he press ed the very gates of heaven to bring back his child. Above him the stars looked down coldly; the wind soughed through the ma ples and rushed alo.i the prairie jfrass as if to toll him liow barren life Iaj- before him. passionately to his breast. A flash t.f licht Vlien he had lain there a lont; time he tried i tiina revealed tlipm for a second as tln v to think and plan for the future. If, he could only think of some plan that Sarah might be tree ! She could marry the man i who was better suited to her then. He had j never thought much about divorces, nor ttied , to solve the social problem which the world j has been so busy working out foi years, but lying under the star-, with his head fin his j baby's grave and the free western wind ) fanning his forehead and hair, he got straight i at the heart ot hi- own troubles. "If she doesn't love me I hav" no right to her. My suffering is nothing; her purity and truth is everything," he thought. "She shail never look upon my face again '." lit! pies.-ed his hecks and lips passionate ly to the due-wet sod, smoothed it tenderly w ith his hand and then went from i; for- ever. The light was shining brightly from the cottage windows, but he turned trom it resolutely and walked with long rapid strides forward into the darkness. It was ten miles to the nearest lake town, but he was accustomed to walking and the distance was no.thTng to him. He only pray ed that he might lind a boat ready foi sailing at the landing ; for now that he lind resolved to go, he could not brook delay. He knew every inch of the way; he had travelled it many a time when his hard-worked horses seemed to need rest more than he needed it himself. It was his way to shield and care lor every dumb animal tenderly. When he worked in the fields, the birds flew about his head, hopped at his very feet, instinctively knowing there was nothing to fear from his gentle hand. The road ran straight along by his own farm : broud green acres well feiwed and carefully tilied. How hard he had worked but oh, how hopefully looking forward to the lime when the laud should bring him solid wealth for his labor when everything beautiful that his wife craved or longed for he could vield her with generous hands. Hut that was past now ; his back was turned to his home and straight before him the great world lay, its arms ever readyto take in for good or evil those who were alloat and astray. As he walked on he tiok his hat from his head and let the cool wind play over his fore head. It was hot and feverish with pain. Once in a while a night-bird screa.e.ed above him, Hying on through space. Oecasionally a dog liowied in the distance, and the crow ing of barnyard fowls smote on his ear with a lonesome sound. As he neared the town he noticed a black low lying cloud in the south, and thought how frightened his wife would he if a storm should come while she was alone. While he was limking at it a carriage passed him, coming in fiom one of the prairie roads and rolling rapidly forward. For a moment he stood iu;te still, his heart thiobhing painful ly. He did not know w hat it meant; but, sensitive and keenly alive to every impics siou that bight, nothing escaped him. He ran forward without knowing whyhedid so, the rumbling of the carriage leading him. jt went his own w ay, too, straight for the binding, and t in i ling a corner he sa w a steam boat lying ;it the w. iter's edge. He was in luck, "after all, he thought: this was the j boat Hero, and almost ready 'o start. The he'd was- ringing kistry, but the plank was still out and a tew pas-engers were making their way across it. He hurried on board l and got back into the shadows where, he could see without being seen. The perspir ation was standing in cold drops upon his forehead and face, and he trembled so that he could hardly stand. He had always lfen a plain, straightfor ward fellow, littie given to noting the partic ular bases of his own mind : and ntw,with no ev idence of his senses to assure him that it was so, lie could not understand why he believed so firmly that his wile and (ieoi'ge Way wereou boaid the Hero with him. lie had not seen them, he had not heard them, and yet that subtle, indesfiil able something call it a new sense or what you will had felt and recognized their presence. The' steamer glided out into the stream and went sailing smoothly, forward, its great . lights making a shining path on the waters. '1 he cloud which had been lying in the south was i ising find now coven-d ha:i the sky, an occa- ional gleam of lightning Uniting from if. The wind was i ising, too, swtfj ing across the deck in strong, -feao'y" gt:-ls. Leaning upon tee deck tailing Harry Vane watched the rising tempest. He saw the cloud had n reddi.-h tinge and that it still hung low. Something like fear thrilled thro' hi- heait. not for hiin-elf he was past that but for the woman h-' loved, ay, still loved. If he were wrong if she were still at home and not in the steamer at home, alone, how dreadful it would t e for her ; again, if she were in the Hero, if a great danger came to them, how might it fare with her '.' These thoughts were flashing "through his mind when the tempest came in its full fury. The boat was caught up from its course as"a plaything is lak?n in the hand of a child, then dashed forward. No sound was heard, no shriek nor cry, nothing but the nrl roar of the winds and the teriiule crashing of the thunder. Like some goaded, maddened beast the Hero rocked, plunged ami leaped, its timbers crashing and breaking, the f jam rising in great sheets above and about it. Then, it seemed hardly a moment's time, tli wind lulled to a calm, instead of the hurri- j cane's roar was heard the screaming of chil dren the groatiing of strong men. : "The steamer is sinking to the life boats, quick 1" some one cried in a loud i Voice. . And then shrieks followed, and half-clad women and children clinging to their moth- cis,' breasts, their sweet lips frozen with fear, i men, helpless with terror, rushed out of the cabin and state rooms to the side of the sink- : ing steamer. I A few, nerved with. stipeihuman energy, i put out the boats and helped tint passengeis ; into them. One man stood, tall and sliong , above the lest, a very Sampson in strength, i the bravest among the btavt. IJruised and , stunned by tailing timbers, ret he had been the first to rally the men to their duiy ; and, j now he stood drenched to the skin, lifting I women anil children into the boats. j They were ail in at last and he stood alone. ! "Come ?" some one cried, reaching up a ! hand to him ; "there is no time to lose ! There is room enougli here." i "Aie you sure that boat will not be over- j burdened."' i lie spoke rapidly and in a low tone, but from the boat below some one gave out a j smothered cry. He had no time to say more ; a strong hand pulled him forward and the j next moment he was in the heavily-laden life- ' boat. j ' Let us make for the shore," one man j said. j "Move easy if you value our lives," an- j swered another. "The boat is filled to sink- j ing." Ileyond this was silence. Now and then i the lightning flashed over them, showing white faces, shivering forms and figures i crouched and trembling with fear. In tht; j end of the boat, quite near the brave man i who had fought so gallantly to save them, a 1 woman sad, her hands clasped about the arm - 1 of a man whose face seemed shrunken and aged wit h terror. Whatever there had been of beauty in the regular effeminate features, it was pone now, leaving only a weak cow ardice. The woman was Sarah Vane, and 1 the poor fear-faded creature beside her, for whom she had deserted her husband, was tieorge Way. 'We shall sink if we go on this way. The boat cannot carry this load," some one said. "How many men can swim?" "Swim? It would be death to try it," was the answer. "Then we shall all go down together." Sarah Vane turned to the man beside her. "You can swim, George," she whispered in his ear. "Hush ! do yon think I want to die ?" She shrank away from him, a look of su premo contempt sweeping over her face This was her hero, her god, then but the poorest of clay in the time of need. She sprang to ber "feet. She a woman, would show him how to die. Before she could speak her husband's voice sounded, striking down upon her heart full of its old music : "I will try swimming, gentlemen," he said. The wife caught his hand in hers, "I will go with you, Harry." He tried to put her away, but she clung to him with desperation. "I am not a coward, whatever else I am," she whispered. "For heaven's sake, let me redeem myself?" He wound his anus about her anJ held her stood there clasped in each other's embrace"; men without a word they went over the boat's side together. All in the life-boat were saved and thev perished. ! STOKIKS OF N I.NTEK. j "We're linvincr some pretty wintry weath ! or," saiil old Daddy Wolherspoon to I'ncle i Samiviy Ilonni well, as the two centlenien met near the City Mall, New Vork, on a recent ; occasion. "i:i2,ht forward weather fur the season." -! i-st so, jist so." conceded I'ncle Sammy: j "reminds ni of the fall of IK.'U. It coin- . nieHCIll 'lo.?l( tbo fitro n:irt iif X' oi-r.n t.-.- i froze stiff ti7 sr-.-h. c;fHd. sniart weather. too. J rrmemher it was so cold in ?rook!yn that November that b'lin' water froze over a hot fire." Daddy Wothorspoon looked at lilm and braced himself. " Vos, yes,"aid he, "I mind it well. That's the fall the milk froze in the cows. Rut the cold season was in lf'JT. It commenced in the middle of October and ran through to April. All the oil froze in the lamps,' and we didn't have a litiht till sprins set in." "Ay, ay!" responded I'ncle Sammy, 'crow inn ricid. "It's just like yesterday to me. I walked a hundred nnd forty mi les due east from Sandy Hook, on the ice, and siid back, owin? to the convexity of the earth, you know. It was down hill com inn this wav Hut that wasn't as cold as the winter of I'sji. That season commenced in SVptember, and the mercury didn't rise a decree till May. Don't you remember bow we used to breathe hard, let i freeze, cut a bole in it and ftawl in for shelter'. You haven't forpottcn that?" "Not I," said Daddy Wotlieipoon, after a short pause. "That's the winter we used to cjivV the horses lead to drink, and keep a hot tire under 'em so it wouldn't harden till they got it down. Hut that was nothintr to the'spell of 117. I cot through that whole spell by livinc in an ice house You remem Iht the season of 1S17. We wore undershirts of sand paper to keep up a friction." "Well, I should say I did," retorted Uncle Sammy. "What, remember 117 ? 'Deed I do. That, was the spell when it took a steam Crindstone four days to licht a match. Av, ay ! Hut do you know I was uncomfortably warm that winter?" "How so?" demanded Daddy Wother spoon, breathinc hard. "Runninc around your ice house to find out where yon cot in. It was an awful speli, thonch. How lout; did it la-t ? From Aiicust to the rtoth of June ! I puess you're right. Hut you mind the snapot lsi.i' don't you ? It commenced on the first of July and went round and lapped over a week. That year the smoke froze in the chimneys, and we had to blast it out with dynamite. 1 think that was the wort we over l ad. Ail the c'ocks froze up so we didn't know tin; time for a year, and men used to set fire to their b'.iild'mcs to raise the rent. Yes, in deed. I ej,,t t,it a month for four burnin' bu'ildin's. There was a heap of Mifferin' thtit winter, because we !i,ved on'aleohol and phosphorous, till the alcohol froze, and then we ate the brimstone heads of matches, and jumper! round till they caught lire. Say, jou- Hut Daddy Wotherspoon had fled. T statistics were too much for him. Too MrcH for Hi T'if.ty. Horace G rep ly used to afhnn that newspaper men were the most patient people, as a class, on the earth, and he was not far from right, though there are times when patience ceases to be a virtue with the most enduring. Nearly everybody in the western part of Michigan knows i;"n r. who used to start a newspaper about once a month the year around, generally bringing thetn out in (riand Ilapids, but sometimes making a fly ing trip to other points. Uurr could st md to be told that he lied a-lio-at circulation, wis on the fence as a poli tician, and thai he didn't know anything about publishing a paper, and when men threatened to sue or thrash him he onlv smiled a sad smile and wished that mankind wouldn't got excited. During a religious re vival at titan. I I.'apid.-, liuir was converted, and it freoj.ioUiv happened that religious people called nt his ofliee to talk w ith him. One day a mini-ter came in and, after talk ing a while, he proposed prayer. He was in t'.e net of kneeling, when l is foot struck one of the outside forms, which was leaning against a leg of the stone, ready to be lifted up. and over it went, making about half a bushel of "pi." r,urr;looked at the ruin wrought, thought of the two weeks of over work, and commenced taking off his coat, saying, "I'm trying to be a C hrist: m and set a good example, but rat my buttons if I can't lick you in just two minutes !" i ne clergyman uacned down stairs in no time, dodgitig the lye brti.-h on the way, and Tlitt-i 1 i'i n L-) i i 1 fi f nnoA ei ii,t -.-.;..-. r.urr backslid at once and sent down'stair for a pint of stimulant. SHF.i:r that Divk fhom Cliffs. John! Muir, the naturalist of the Sierra, writing of tiie wild sheep of the Sierra and of their well-authenticated habit of diving from precipices and alighting nn their horns, re lates the following anecdote : "At the base of Sheep l.'oek, one of the winfr strongholds of the Shasta flocks, ' there lives a -.tock-rniscr who has the advan- tage of observing the movements of wild sheep every winter; and. in the course of a conversation with him on the subject of their j diving hsbit. he pointed to the front of a 1 lava headland about a hundred and fifty feet 1 high, which is only eight or ten degrees out 1 of ihem perpendicular. 'There,' said lie, T followed a band of them fellows to the back i of that rock yonder, and expected to capture 1 them all, for i thought I had a dead thing on i them. 1 got behind them on a narrow bench that runs along the face of the wall near the I top, and comes to an end where they could I not get away without falbng and tieing kill- ! ed ; but they jumped off, and landed all; right,. as if that were the regular thing with i them." 1 " 'What' ! said I, 'jumped a hnndredjand ' fifty feet ! Did you see them do it '." ! " 'No,' he replied, "I didn't see them go ing down, for I was behind them ; but I saw : them go off over the brink, anil then I went below and found their tracks where they J struck on the loose dchri.t at the bottom. i The' soiled r'ujht fff, and landed on their feet right side up. That's the kind of animal i they is beats anything else that goes on 1 four legs.' " h'cribnrr for May. Used to Suck 'Em. A young college stu dent was visiting his grandmother, ami at the breakfast table he took an egg, and hold ing it up asked her if she knew the scientific way of obtaining the contents without break ing the shell ? She replied that she did not "Well," said he, "you take the spheroidal body in your sinister hand, and with a con venient diminutive pointed instrument, held in the dexter hand, puncture-the apex ; then in the same manner make an orifice in the base; place either extremity to your labials, and endeavor to draw in your breath ; a vac uum is created, and the contents of the egg are discharged into your mouth." "La !" said the old lady, "when I was a girl we used to make a pin hole in each end, and suck 'em." C'ritiors 1 LLrxriN ations. The Faris Fi garo gives the following method of obtain ing light instantaneous!-, without the ue of matches and without danger of setting tilings on fire : Take an oblong vial of the whitest and clearest glass, put in it a piece of phos phorus about the sie of a pea, upon which pour some olive oil, heated to flip boiling point, filling the vial about one-third full, and then seal the vial hermetieallv To use it remove, the cork and allow the a"ir to enter the vial, nnd then recork it. The whole empty space will then become luminous, and the liglrt obtained will be equal to that of a lamp. As soon as the light grows weak Its power can he increased by opening the vial and allowing a fresh supply of air to enter. In winter it is sometimes necessary to heat the vial between the hands to increase the fluidity of the oil. Thus prepared the vial may be used for six months. This contriv ance is now used by the watchmen of Paris in all magazines where explosive or inflam mable materials aie stored. TIIK LOST LIM'H-riN. "It's r.o use, Suv, we can't find it. I'll have to take the whipping." j There was a dejected thrill in the sad chiid-voiop, telling alike of the physical diead and of utter hopelessness of spirit. i "Wait a minute, Kobbie," answered a cheerier torn'. "Wait until 1 look tinder the hay-bed. A liuch-pin's little, j mi know, and it might roll. I can't bear to give up yet." And as the girl spoke she swung hT lanlein I under the iuiuie vehicle, and stooping, began to search carefully among the loose ehatT and ! wisps of hay scattered over the tl.ior. The scene was the threshing-lbmr of a ' Ian." barn, with great mows frowning dark j ly above on either hand, and vast grainaries stretching away in the reat, and the speak ' crs were a little orphan boy who had lost a , linch pin, and the sympathetic kitchen girl ; of the farm. As the latter rose from her : fruitless search the bright clow of the lan tern loll full upon her, revealing a face, not j prettjr, cettainly, if virwedfrom a cultivated, I arlistic standpoint, but fre-h and girlish, and : just now giorified bv a halo of womanly : pity. i "Oh, Kobbie ! I'm so sorry," shi slid, 1 rising. "Can't vou think where vou had it I last'."' "No, Sue, I can't. I've tried and tried. 1 ! reckon old Heeson will nearly kill me he did the last time." Then with a shudder, throwing hischihit-h arms around her waist, "t)h. Sue, he's awful." "l'oor baby 1" cried tho girl, clasping hint closer, while her soft, giey eyes filled with tears. "I wish 1 could save you. How did you ever come to be left with him, anyhow ?" "Why, when mother died, there was only me and ('litis., and Chris, ain't like me. He's strong and sniart, and afraid of noliody. So he thought he would go away and make a fortune for us both. His name is Cbri-to-! pher like Christopher Columbus, you know ', and lie meant to d some great thing, t'y. Not in a ship, though, but in a big city. He i had read of poor boys making money there, ; and as the homestead was gone he was boulid to try it. And then old iJocson offered to ! keep' me while he was away. Hut Chris. never meant forme t be abused. 1 heard ; him say that I was to go to school, and be well treated, and that he would pay foi my board and expenses when he came. back. ' I',ut 1 reckon he'll never com now." And the poor child's tears fell last at the thought. ' "Oh, maybe he will." answered the girl, soothingly." "We'll hope so, anyway." "Well." mavbe," he assented, drearily. ! "lint, Sue: "if 1 were only of age, like you, wouldn't 1 go to seek him '." Then, as if struck bv a sudden thought, "Sue, what luaies you stay '.' Vou w ere ot age six months ago." "1 know," she said, and patt-ed as if the question was an unsettled one with herself, then. with. the light still upon her nrow, "1'ai tly for your sake, maybe, Kobbie, and part ly "because I do not k-iow where to go. 1 don't mind working, and I must do that in anyplace. lit sides, it is better forme ; I'm in tlie house with Missis, and llobbb", she isn't like him. Many a piece of bread and meat she gives to the hungry beggars, ami manv a poor tramp she allows to sleep in the barn when he ain't aionnd." Tin last clause was unfortunate, for the bov. clinging vet clo-er, cast a shuddering ie glance upward" toward the great mows where the shadows were scarcely disturbed by their feelde glow of light. "Oh, Sue!" he cried wihllv. "What if he should make me stay ail night in the barn. He has threatened to many a time. Oil, Sue, what can we do ."' The poor excited boy sank dow n in des pair We might prnv," said Sue, timidlv. "I'shaw 1 He prays." Th'-re wa- ; whole volume ef recipient skepticism in these three bitter words. "I know," answered Faith, dely puzzled vet clinging to h'T ai-hor. "I know, but it don't sound lik" the prayers I used to hear at the Vylum. There they spoke to some one close at hand, so gentle, so loving, and yet o m; .!.! y. "oh, Ibdibie, now I just reiivaib'-r the words, s -strong ! deliver.' Who know but lb- might save yo.i. There was the man in the d-ii of lions, and the three chil dren in tiie fiery furnace." "It's no use, Su,-," he answered sadly. 'Tin re's no deli vert l for me but Chris., and he'll ;icer come now. (. on to the house and tell the old man that I can't find it. It's as well to get it over." "l'oor lamb !" -aid the tender-heart'd girl kissing the quivering lip- that were trying so hard to be brave! "1 il leave t lit light, . and I'ii beg hard for you." And repressing a sigh over the hopelessness of Icr ta-k, she glided into the starlight, leaving the poor lit tle victim to await a cruelty which, consul j ei ing the centuries of Christian progress that have elapsed since the slaughter of the in- noeenis, notoniy out Jteroos iieroo, out is one of the darkest blots upon our six-ia! 1 .... 1 . eali Just here mu-t I pause to offer a plea for the children, the most defenceless objects in all God's creation. We sigh over the miser-, ies of poor Smike, over little D.t' i.l Coppor fiehl's sorrowful journey ; alas, tiiat magic hand which so moved us has vanished for ever, but I can match those thrilling narra ties with true stories of a child rendered idi otic by continued cruelty, and of .a lit; Ie fugi tive boumi boy who, litter weary days of hunger and ti.wel, sank blistered and faint ing at his mother's feet. I can tell of a wo man think of it a woman ! who, for some childish fault committed during the day, followed nn orphan b'.j to his bed wiih a horsewhip, and then, w hen there was no pro tection save the one little thin night garment, broke upon his innocent slumber with .-tinging blows. And, upon the evidence ot the laundry-girl, when the same little garment came to the. wash, it was striped with blood. This is not pleasant reading. It is far from being plea.-ant writing. "A father to the fatherless is God in his holy habitation !" Think of this, O mother, wluse household contains one of these chil dren of the Highest Think of it as you gather your littie ones around the glowing iire.-i.le lor song or story, and make room for the stranger within your dotrs. When vou divide the hoarded store of cakes and apples, I remcmltor that his own milk teeth ate as eag- er for sweets as your own darling's, and bo 1 there much or littie, give lion a snare. lien vnur hand is laid caressingly upon vour own ehi'dren's heads, let its light pressure also touch his young brow. ho knows but it may be there like a consecrating chrism, an noiiiting him for noble deeds for God and humanity? Do these things, and do them now. Check not vour kindly impulses until it is too late, until the thin hands are crossed within the cotr.n, and the sad eves hungry for a mother's kiss have pone to tell their pitiful story to Him who has said, "Suffer the children :" or worse, until a young soul shall have grown hardened ; and little one, offended by yon. shall have become a curse and clogging millstone upon the neck of society. liut-to return to my story. Left alone in the great bam, the sensitive child endured the two fold agony of nervous terror and an ticipated suffering. Rut he had not long to wait. Soon the heavy boots of old Heeson were heard tramping across the cow-yard in to tho barn. Robbie stole one fugitive glance as he entered, sa w the hard set face ; saw the long black whip trailing from his hand, and the last vestige of hope was gone. "Now, you young rascal, I'll pay you for your carelessness," cried the cowering form; and seizing the trembling boy by the arm, he raised the whip like a great stiffening ser pent, high in the air. But why did it not descend ? The boy, who had closed his eye, and set his teeth Hard, wondered at the d?lay. From some wlice above came a rushing sound, and the cruel, uplifted hand was grasped and held within a grip of iron. What could it mean? Had God sent one of his mighty angels down to rescue the little waif, too hopeless to im plore his protection? It .e'H. might be so, for our Father is not indifferent to the trou bles of His suffering children ruit tli eyes of his glorious deliverer weie gteannng with too much indignation and human passion for a heaveii'v visitant. "Chris !" The one glad cry burst from Robbie's lips, and then, unnoticed by either, he sank sobbing among the hay and straw littering the floor, "Coward ! hvpocriti ! traitor !" These were the words that broke impetuously from thw young man's lip-Si anJ with each epithet. a stunning blow wa- p!ant"d in the hrea-t of Jho farmer. "Is it thus you treat the little brother I entru-ted to your t are ' Were it not that site-e I have I n away from your vicinity I hae leained to be something of which you do pot even know tho Meaning a gentleman I would take the horse w p ami day you within nn.itich of your life. Well, indeed, it oocuriod to n e to te-t Jour f.ii'hf ilr.ess in treating him kindly before 1 cave of my hard framings for my b v's board. Here in my o. ket is four hundred dollars de.-igned lor you payment ot v vei y w -ek ho has oeen hen but not one copper ot it will von see now. On t :: nt 1 at v, I sll:l it to prose-cute vou to the utter limit of th law." And liekept hi- word. Tl i-youth, whose energy nml pluck bad won the vieto'viu a hand to-hand -tnggle with tiie world", was not hke'v to be luti'ded with morbid pity for l i- a her-ary : ami with Sue's fair, hon est fact on the witne -box, not only was the full luea-iite of justice obtained, but the hard, gi asping farmer was di-graced lorcver in the eyes of hi-f 1 ietnls and neighbors. Aside from the triumph concerning hi- lit tle brother, the tt "ul resulted m-i-t happily tor Chris, ami him-elf. While seeking to re dress an in.iti-t ice and a wrong, like his illus trious namesake, he oi-eoveied another fair realm even the sweet old Kldorado of love. And now, when the western sun sinks amid the flowery prairies of Missouri, his last beams gild a cottage porch, wheie often s.ts a slender student youth nnd a broad-shouldered, bronze-faced pioneer the rescuer ami the rescued : while above them beams the) soft, womaii'y face of happy Sue wife nnd si-ter loved and honored beyond all the world. A Sermon to tilrN on Iro. Mv lr..it Gini.s : Vou aie perfect idiots to go on in the way you do. Now, stand 1 with me at my oftiee window, and see a lady pass. There goes one ; Now isn't tha a pretty looking object '.' A big hump, three big lumps, a wilderness of crimps and frills, a hauling up of the dress here and there, an enormous, hid-ons ma-s of lalse hairorbaik ' piled on the top of her head, and on the very ' top of that, a little nomle-cript thing orna mented with bits of lace, birds' Clils, etc. ; : while the shop windows tell us all day long of the padding, whalebones, and springs, which occupy most of the space within that . outside ring. In the name of all the simple, wet t sptiti meiits whicjcluster about a nom 1 would a-k. how is a man to fall in love with such a compound, double and twisted, starched, comical, artificial, touch ine-not wriggling curiosity? This dress checks your movement. With I that wisp wai-t, your lungs, stom tch. liver and other organs squeeze,! down out of their .place, nnd into half their natural size, and i with that long trail dragging on the gi annd, how can any man of sen-e, who knows that lite is made up of use, rd service, of work ; how can he take such a partner? He must be de-perate to unite him-elf for lite w ith such a deformed, fettered, haif-breathing or nament. It I were in the matrimonial market, I might many a woman that had but one arm or one eye, or no eye- at all. if she suited me ' otherwise ; but as long as Gd permitted me to retain my senses 1 could never join my fortunes with those of a woman with a small wai-t. ' ;A small wai-t ! I am a physiologist, ami know what a small wai-t mea'ns. It means the oigans of the abdomen jammed down into the pelvis : it means the organs of the che-t stufied up into the tlnoat ; it means a weak back: it means a delicate nervous iti- vadd : it bi"ans a suffering patient, ami not a vigorous iic'i'ina'.e. Thousands of nun dare p,.' venture, be cause t hey wisely fear t li.it . instead of a help mate, they will get an invalid to take ca-e of. lle-i les, this bad health in yu, ja-t as in men. makes ti e mind, a- well a- the lortv, fad lie and efb b.biato. Vou have r. power, no magnet ism. I kiio-.v you giggle treelv. and u-e big wolds, such as splendid, av.l'ui, etc. : but then this does but deceive us : we see through all that sort of thing. The f.u-t is yuu are -iipei fa cial, a'l'ecfed, sillv. Vou have none of that womanly s! rengh and warmth w hich are so a-stuing and attractive to s : -ib'e men. I know a woman, twenty five years old and as big as both my grandmother pti tto gether, who insists upon being called Kitty, and her real name is Catherine : and although her brain is big enough to conduct liie af fairs of Slate, she hes nothing in oompany but g'ggle, cover up her face with her hand ami exclaim, "Don't now, yon are real mean." How can a sensible man propose a lite partnership with -uch a -illy goose ? My dear girls, if you would get husbands, and sensible ones, dress in plain, neat, be com'mg garments, and talk like sensibl?, earnest sisters. Dr. Dio Lev-it. Eatint. His Own IlAtn. A singular rase exists in Thompson avenue, above the I'enn , sylvania railroad roundhouse, and near the Seventh street Presbyterian church. Phi'a ; delpnia. It is that of a child about seven ; years old, which eats its osn hair. It has 1 pulled out one-fourth of its hair, plucking at j one spot until it has it all out, w hen it cotu ; inonces at another, in which it has persisted I until it lias pulled the hair on one side of the head from the bacK of the ear all out, leav ' ing an entirely hire sp it 011 which new hair : is growing. The child eats all the hair it thus pulls out of its bead, and seems to re j g.itd it as a luxury. We forbear to give the j name of the child. It lives with its brother , and sister ; its father and mother being o-otti : dead. It lias become very intractable, re i sisting ordinary control, wayward and pas sionate, when " reprimanded for its habit. : On the side of the head from which the long i hair has been pulled, short hair is now grow ing, the child having began to pull the hair from the top and left side. It will take a long tress and eat at it until it has devoured I it entirely. This is unquestionably the j most singular case of this kind of which we j lrave ever had any account The Lath.fst of Alt. Toy Factoi-ief. The largest toy factory in the world stands in Eleventh street, avenue A. New Vork. ! w here playthings in tin are manufactured , literally by the million for the amusement of the "voting and rising generation" ail over t lie world. It stands five stones high, nnd, turns ont lbo! distinct varieties of tin toys. No. 1, of course, is a tin horse ; No. 1,07 is a menagerie. The. output of circular tin whistles is 12,000.000 per annum. Everr- ' iiung is made in me estaolisliment excepting j wheels, which are ordered in lots of thirty ! tons at a tim from a foundry in the east. 1 wo nunure.l men, women and boys are con stantly empiowert in tov-making. 10 make a tin liorse twelve incfies long dies have to be cast, co-t ing 0(io. Toys ar? exported from New York to all parts of the world. The children of different countries have dif ferent tastes. The passion of the younir Ira7.ilian is for a toy water-cart, while intne I "states, the rage of the American boy is for tin horns and putty blowers. Tin swords are wanted all over the world, th military instinct being as universal in the nurseries as in the courts and cabinets of the woild. ExEnri-Es in Artictiation. Let your elocution class ivraetice the follotviug sell - j fences : Thebittei, hlusterina. blast blew o er tne bounding hillow. The cautious cat contiiven to catch the i'iiniilA.1 er.iW- I Deep in the depths of dark, dnk de'.ls, he ! drew his deftly down. j Full-fledged, from fancy's fearful tttglit, he j fluttering fell. . ! Grim, gaunt and gray, he grasped the enz- 7.1 v groom. ' 'He hustled hard Ui hurl the heavy hero I headlong hence. - -vJ'he Jews for justice join, ana juuge mm Low. Jn the level lands the long lank leo pards iay 1 he inadiy moaning main much misery makes. Yorvr. ladies pnd elephants attain their growth at eighteen. But here analogy ceases. One trunk is enou;h tor n e!t pliant A'ii 'i .' CoM't'-r. 0 O