The Laborer'* Evening Rest. 1 .*n*h, my Utile one. l*ugh wy, For gone te the weary, toilsome day ; lAi* twilight shadow* ere falling faet. And father'a hour of work i* jwet. Hark to the dleUuit vesper hell! Sweetly it* clear tone* ri# ami swell On the ev'ning breore. a* it spedt* of peace And hide the murmur of tnrmo'l oeaee, 1 -angh. my little one, laugh away: Father haa earned tliia hour of jiay. The day awe weary, gerbape. and ead j THie ev'ning honr wi"! make him glad. Then laugh, my hahy, I'll ah are your glee For the Joy Hue hour hath brought to me. ° twilight 1 .cur, o doubly bleat, Welcome oar thy tender reel! Human Life. After a while, a l>uy brain Will met from all ite tot! ami pain. After a while, Earth's rttah will ceaee. And a wearied heart find eweet release. After a while, a vanished face. An empty coat a vacant place. After a while, a man forgot, A crumbled head-etoue. an unknown spot. THE DAUGHTER'S HOW Eli. M. Desgrange#, a rucmhant retired frt.nt busiiiefts, is talking by the fire side with his wife end his daughter, and the talk is extremely animated, as it is all about a marriage. A young architect. M. Henry Grandval, has naked the hand of Madeleine, with whom ho is in love, and who is in love with him. So far. nothing plainer. But M. Gracdral senior will let his son marry only n girl of two hundred thou sand" francs, and M. Dee granges will giro his daughter only one hundred tjousand. His wife presses him to yield, his daughter tenderly beseeches him, but he refuses point-blank. A practical man and a firm one is M. Deegrauges, and tin-re is no moving him against his will. Good Madsme Deegrsnges be longa to that tribe of soft-not urea moth ers who can't speak of her child without a certain choking m her utterance. She insists,she pray*, and still finds her hus band inflexible. " 0 papa, papa! yon don't believe, tbeu, that I'm in love with Henry 1" " Of ivnrse I do," " Henry is good aud clever. Tou say yourself that he has a flue prosjwet be fore him as a architect." " That's true." " Hi* father, M. de Grandval, is A ma:i—" " Of the highest honor." " Well, tlsen ?" "Yes. well then ?" chimed in Madame Desgranges. "Well, then, let her mjurrv hixu, and with my consent, and a hundred thou sand francs for dowry. But, as to tlie two hundred thousand that M. de Grandval asks—no j" " Why r replied Madame Dea ' granges." *' Why D That's charming. Because I'm not rich enough to give two hun dred thousand francs to my daughter, without crippling myself." " Yon will have enough, all the same.'* •i. i* ¥jK>ng' . ! That's too little ; my life is full Of wan ta. * At this moment the young suitor walked in. Seeing him, Madeleine runs to meet him, and takes him by the hand. "Gome, Henry, ootne! Unite with us in our appeals to papa." Papa gnlyyapKed: " Why, yon can't htve ally heafc, ycaag man ! What, to have so pretty girl in love with you, so good, so mnll-iafomed, so affection ate, and yoU're not willing to marry her if she has only a hundred thousand franca f " But, papa—*' "% " for yon. Ah, when I minitu flfr mother, she was wfkrth fifty thousand francs less than yon, and I didn't "hesitate, notwith- IMraft." "la either do I hesitate a moment," replied Henry, eagerly. "It is hia father who refuses, mv dear."- - - —■ -> w " Yes," said Madeleine, "it is his father. As for himself* he doesn't care the leant foryonr fortune. He has told me twenty times that he would take me without any dowry ; that he would even prefer my not having any." "My mind is made np. Henrv, go and talk to your father, and try to make him renounce his pretension. What the deuce ! It ia easier to abstain from asking A hundred thousand francs than it is to give them." " But," said Madeline, "if he does not succeed in convincing his father ?" " b will be because hfe does not love you well enough- In that case I shall not mourn for him." A month after the hbove scene, the young jpeople _ ware married. A year after, Madame Deng ranges was god mother. Two years later, M. Des granges was godfather. At the end of three years we find the young boose hold and the old, the parents and the children, installed in the pretty hense at Yll len eu SsinV Georges. Henry's budget, was made up from bis wife's dowry and his own, which together bmnght him an income that would have been amply sufficient for a citizen of the olden time. But an artist a man who likes everything that is b'-antiful 1 Our young household, then, gave •way pretty often ; and if te this yon add that the husband was very much in love with his wife; and consequent! v desired that she should be charming and well got np; "bearing in mind, also, that, ii* three years; they had indulged themselves, iu the luxury of a little son and a little daughter, you will easily understand that, during the latter part of the quarter, they were very apt to be in difficulties—difficulties that broke the heart of the excellent Madame Des granges, and drew upon the bead of M. Desgranges a deluge of prayers and in vectives. "I beseech yon, my dear, to add something to their dowel.** "* " I shall take good Jare pot to do it," wa, the answer of M. Desgranges. " I congratulate myself tort Sincerely on the course I adopted. .My system is too good to be changed." "Is it possible that yon have the . heart.to see. them thus embarrassed, and to leave them so ?" * " Are they embarrassed"?'* " Frightfully, my dear." "So much the better. My son-in-law will take all the more pains to find em- plovers. /' But thy don't come, these em ployers." "A 11 the more cause for-Forkinghard to procure them." "They have additional burdens be sides their own.". i\ ' " Additional sources of happiness, yiu mean." And, as Madame Des granges made a gesture of despair, " L •me, come, Wife, no outburst. Let's talk*"it ovet calmly. Supposing that three year# ago I had given my daugh ter a hundred thousand fr#jic# more, as you wished, xAafr would have hap pened ?" - " It would have happened," replied Madame Desgranges, with mingled in dignation and- putkos.- "that, instead of living in a state of privation, au they have been compelled to live for three years ; instead of denying themselves everything—" " Stop, stop, my dear, permit me. It seems to me—" "It seems to you, indeed.? Well, then, Would you have me tell you? When lam wiik thorn -at tfaftfr home, when I see their poor little modest table —just a single dish of meat, just one . Vegetable, and no sweets -whatever — and when I come home .and .find you, yes, you, there comfortably with your chin almost upon the table-cloth, with your excellent broiled chickens and your partridges larded—for you muet needs have them lardfd-now —" "What would you, my dear ? As one grows old—" " Well, well, all this hurts me much. I reproach, myself at every goend mouth ful that I eat." FRED. Kl' irPZ, lstUtarnnd Proprietor. VOL. VII. ."I don't" > I find eur conduct revolting. ' "Be ealm, my good wife, anil come hack to the quest ou, frens which you have complete y wandered off. Follow my argument, if you are able. W* are, to-day, at the 13th of November, Our daughter, our sou-in-law, their two children, ami their two servants, have been here iu our country-house since the I.lth of August— that i* to say, three month* anil two days : and they reckon on remaining here—they, flour chil ; dreu, ami their servants —until the period of our leaving, which will be on the 2tHli of December." " Well, and would you reproach them for slaying with us now r Are you going to complain of what thnir pres ence costs you ? Hsve TOU auv idea of exiling them from your home, Irom my home* -Oh, wait a moment, I beg—" "Wife, wife!" " Depriving me of the sight of my I children—my only consolation iu life! " Why have onr daughter and our aen-iu-law been with na for three months and two days, aud why will they atav with us until the 20th of De cember ?" " A pretty question !—Because they ! love us! because they are happy it beiug with us ! because they kuow how to make their stay pleasant tq us I be cau-ie they are warm-hearted, sensi tive—" " In short, just the reverse of myself! Isn't it so ?" said M. Desgranges, laughing, and adding, as he went up to his wife, M Coeie, come, let me give jou a kiss, I cau't help adoriug you, for yon are never more than twelve wars i old r , " How?—I?- twelve?" " I ineau that you are and always will 1 be the same good erealure, simple, oon i fiding, credulous, whom I married with j so much satisfaction." " Simple and credulous !"' replied Madame Desgrangv.% somewhat hurt. " Would yon pfetend that our children 1 are not)?"* "Yes, my dear, they are all that, aud more still! But do you suppose that your daughter, with her pretty fact, j ihat she takes pleasure in showing be cause it is a pleasure to look at it—that | your son-in-law, with his artistic tastes I and hia imagination, would ieuve Boris and the enjoyment of its early winter ; i and, particularly, that ho would go there for his business every morning and return every evening, all for the sole delight of takiug a hand at piquet with a father who is beginning to be a little deaf, and a mother who would gain something is being partially dumb ?" j "But, what else can you imagine? What motive can you assign for their prolonged stay with us •" " My dear," answered M. Desgranges, laughing again, " when yon were young, and had very beautiful hair,yon were enchanted at going into the coun try, so that the parting might have a rest. Well, our children are delighted to stay here and give a rest to their purse !" " Outrageous 1 Can von suppose j r " I've no grudge against them for it. I do not accnse them, either, of ingrati tude or indifference ! lam sure that, if they had an income of twenty thou sand franos, instead of ten thousand, they would love ns' always—but not quite so long at a time. In the same way, for ins:uce, I don't know any son in-law the hxe of mine. It is impossi ble to show more deference, to pay more attention. He never allows one 1 of mv anniversaries—/:<*-day, birthday, Wedding- pass, without hasten ing forward"with an immense bouquet" "And you believe that interested mo tives only—?" *, "Oh, no, mj dear, not interest alone —no—no—an uitrrectmad*- np, half af ' feotionate, half calculated—an uncon scious calculation, of which one takes no account, but the existence of which I surmise, originating' in a necessity by wlpch I profit, while it does not vex me • in the least !** "Ah, yon are really too l>ad. Yon | disenchant—you take the poetry out of every thing ! One must be capable of such sentiments, in order to imagine them in others ! It is monstrous !" "By no means I It is quite natural. Old people are very much in the way. They must make amends somehow. I | make amends by hospitality !" " Say at once that onr children take I our house for an inn !" "Ah, jnst so; the 'Golden Lion I' Here are lodged and boarded certain , embarrassed children, desirous to eoon ; omize. Have they spent too much upon theatres, balls, concerts ?— * Let's go and pass a week with papa !—ls one of the children out of sorts? Send him or her into the oountry, to papa's j' And the child is sent—and they all come at the same time. And, as thev are re ceived with open arms, and as they are spared all expense, and as papa has good quarters and a good table, and as they find there good capons and good partridges that tlie egotistical father is enchanted to share with his children, why, they come, and return, and remain with ple6urel" "Ah, how disgusting! He invests every thing with egotism, even paternal love 1" > " But, suppose, on the other hand," continued M. Deagranges, without ap pearing to have heard his wife, "sup | pose that 1 had doubled Madeleine's , dower, according to your wish, what i would have happened ? That at this ' moment out ohildren, considering that i our son-in-law is somewhat of anenthn ! siast, would not perhaps be much rich er, while I should be a great deal poor er; that I could not receive and enter tain them for so long a time, nor so well; and that they would come less frequently to ns, because they would be better off at home. Ah, my near, if our children had more money thin our selves, our daughter would have dis covered six weeks ago that Villeneuve- Saint-Georges is too damp in the au tumn, and would have feared for the children the effect of the fogs from the river, while onr son-in-law wonld have declared that these daily, trips to Paris were affecting his health, litis brings me, therefore, to my conclusion, which I dedicate to all fathers who have mar riageable daughters : ' Would yon keep yonr children ?—keep your money ! Would you have pleasure in your grand children ?—keep your money I' For it is thanks to the money that the father remains the head of the family ; that the father's honse remains the do mestic rallying point—that is to Bay, an honorable "and comfortable retreat for the aged ; for the young, a place of refnge and enjoyment; for the babies, a nest, to which they will come in search of health, and sometimes for nurture more judicious than that of their mothers themselves ; for all, in short, a centre and a sanctuary, wherein occur thinjpi to be remembered—wherein suc cessive generations grow up aud grow old, and wherein are perpetuated tra ditions of respect and affection 1 Gall my foresight, if you will, calculation and personality ; for my part, I call it the true paternal love, that which con sists in making children happier and better 1 For, note well, my dear, that my son-in-law had, I am quite willing to believe it, everything in favor of his becoming a pattern son-in-law; but, withont this foresight of mine, his good qualities would perhaps have remained in a budding state only. To whom does he owe it, if they have bloomed ? THE CENTRE REPORTER I'laiuly, to roe! Morel of the fable : I shall uo add one sou to my daughter's dowry !** *♦•••♦♦ We have now reached the 80th of November, a fortnight later, but still at Yilleueuve-Haint-OeorBM; for, if ui this sketch I have slightly violated the unity of time, I Kits t least respected the unity of yiaoe. The house of M. Deegrangea is all alive. Never has he himself appeared so gay and so happy. It is the twenty-fifth anniversary of las wedding day. "Wife," aaid he to Madame lee grauges, " this ia a dav that must be worthily celebrated. N*o economizing to-day, spread all sail ! give us a din ner- just as tbough I wa# an epicure ! 1 hare particularly recommended Made leine, who haa been pneaiug a day in Pari*, I don't know on what affair, to return with her husband by the four o'clock train. Mho will find iii her room a pretty uew dress, which I should like her So wear to-day. As for yon, if you still love me a little iu apite of my defi ciencies, prove it ; make yourself charuuug also. Put on for dinner—and for the evening, for 1 have invited all the neighborhood—put on, I say, my poor mother's diamonds. They repre sent, iu my eyes, all that I have most loved in this world!—her, who gave them to roe for you—you vonraelf, who have worn them for my sate aud hers — your daughter, who will wear them for all three of us!" And thereupon Mr. Desgranges walked off to conceal soma slight emotion. Why did not Madame Dear ranges answer him ? Why did she remain for some time immovable and with her head souk down ? Why did her daugh ter, coming in, carry bar off to her own room, in tears ?' Why was the son in law so gloomy ? Why did the dinner bell mine them all three Btart ? Why, on entering the dining room, did the mother give a trembled look at her hn#- band ? Why did M. Desgranges, on observing it, utter a few words that were almost a reproach ? Why ? The words themselves explain alt "Yon have not got on yonr dia monds !" cried the father. As her sole reply, the mother threw heraelf, weep ing, into the arms of her husband. The daughter) took his hand, and kissed it, on his knees liefuro lain. "You have not got your diamonds, what have you done with them ?" The wife and chil dren were silent. "You make no re ply!" continued the father, in a harsh er tone. "Itis I then who must tq-*k oat. You have sold them to cover the imprudence of your son-in-law ! Y< a, because he was pleased to associate himself with an ill-devised enterprise, because he had the folly to make him self responsible for scamps who have deceived him, you have been obliged, iu order to pay oue-half of his debt— for he still owes twelve thousand franca —yon hare been obliged to tear away (rem pa the dearpsl *wutvnir of my poor mother, and u.o most precious voucher of aur owu sflvstion, and you have even embittered the enjoyment of this special day! Ah, it is too bad !" Madame Desgranges endeavored to mutter excuses. " That ia enough 1" said M. Oesgran gea, interrupting her. " Here are the servants. Go, take yonr place# ! Mother and children wcut silently to the table ; but suddenly, as she unfold ed her napkin, Madame Desgranges ut tered u loud exclamation. Iler son-in law did the same thing, and both lean ed forward over toward M. Desgran ges, their eyes filled with tears. The mother had found her case of diamonds under iter plate, and her son-in-law had the twelve twonsand francs that he needed. " Ah, niy dear I" " Ah, father ?" " It'a all right, it's all right!" replied M. Desgranges, disengaging himself from their embraces. " You will not hereafter oall me an egotist. It seems that there was some propriety in my foresight; and you comprehend at last that the fatbor ought always to remain richer than his children, were it only— J were it only, my uearouss, that ho may be able to help them at a pinch, and save them from a catastrophe. Never theless Henry, don't do the same thing again, because I shall not be able to re peat my part." Spring Styles. Block net veils oovered with Baal 1 beads are again in fashion, coming just to the tip of the nasal organ. They are said to be very injurious to tL eyes. * Pompadour fans are the most fas! ionable just now. The shape is odd. and, withal, pretty. Th#y are made of ivory, pearl and ol viuuine tortoise shell. There is quite a mania among nltra faahionable for jewelry ofyintiquc coins. Home very peculiar necklaoes, bracelets and earings are shown, made of coin. Htancling collars, very English in character, have in a greßt measure taken the place of the Elizabethan rnff. They turn over in front and look quite janu- The fashionable walking boot but tons at the side and sorrier n few inches above the ankle. In Paris some ladies have appeared in the new Russia leath er shoe. In Paris the " coffee" colored lace handkerchief is very popular, and soon will be liore. , The color ia produced by soaking the handkerchief in strong black coffee. Looping of street dresses is formed from the side seams of the front width, puffed and caught up with strings to produce what the Parisians call a "pouff" at the back. Blecvelesa jackets will he more or less fashionable during the ensuing season. Those of lace are generally ad mitted to be the handsomest possibly, because they sro the most expensive. Ladies now carry, as the Paris ladies do, a small note book enclosing a gold pencil. They are covered with blue or purple velvet, and have a gold clasp. Most people think they are prayer books. Bridal wreaths of late years have grown smaller and smaller, and beauti fully less, and uow the bride of the period thinks sho is doing well to in sert a couple of orange blossoms amid her tresses. The newest ornament ia a change box for the ladies. It is of pearl, in the shape of a ball, and dangles from the waist belt a# the umbrella did Inst sea son. They are not booked to be gener ally fashionable. Home of the leading ladies of the bean monde are wearing their hair in a series of small puffs covering the entire sides and top of the head, with small, light and airy eurls at the back. This style does very well for the house, but the new bonnet will not ride easily on so many puffs. Less false hair is worn now than for many years past, vet a lady who haa a fine head of natural hair nowadays don't get credit for it. Talleyrand wrote to a lady on the death of her husband : "Ah, madame 1" The sympathy he felt was fully expres sed. Boon after he beard of the ludv's new marriage, and wrote, " Oh, madame 1" Indignant surprise could not have been more eloquently mani fested. CENTRE HALL. CENTRE CO.. PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1874. THE K 11.1.1 Nil OK TUO.fiAM Ht'OIT. ra SfurUvr with wltlrh t.oul* Itnll I* *!•* WHS Having ruuiiulllcd— A 1.1 r -Wan Stlltil In lil> ( uffln. John Bruce, of Manitoba, who on the first organization of the Previsions) , i lovoruuK-ut, at the time of the Red : Hirer rebellion, wu named na l'rei deut with Louis Kiel as Hccrotary, hna written s letter iu which lie puriM>rt to give nn authentic account of the execu tion of Thornae Hcott, with whoec mur der Louis Rsel is charged. Riel Una been elected a member of the Dominion Parliament from the dis trict of Proveneher to Manitoba, and in apite of the fort that a reword of BA.OOO ia offered for his apprehension, end that detective* have oixtii seeking him for mouth*, lie visited the Goveruiueut buildings ia Ottawa the other day, sub scribed hi name on Uie roll of the House to which he has been elected, . aiid then disappeared aa mysteriously 1 vs he had come, au event which has ' caused intense excitement throughout | Canada. i At the time of the Bvtt tragedy, Mnrch 4, Rie! won acting aa I rom | dent of the Provisional Government ! and Beott was a political prisoner. Bruce says; j Hi* soldi.-re had been chosen to shoot ) Scott, I have here again to write tlie uaiue of a man whose behavior in that | circumstance reflects ou him the great est honor. Angus tin IVrisiea, one of the six soldiers, declared openly that he would uot shoot at Hoott; sod, iu fact, he took off the cap froni hi* guu before the word of command, " Pre sent," waa given. Of the fire balls re > roaming only two hit tlie poor victim, j one in the left shoulder, the other in t the upper part of the chest above the ' heart. Had the other soldiers missed the mark unintoutkmaliy, or had they : willingly aimed too high, too low, or aaide t It is unknown. However that may be, aa the two wounds were not auffirient to cause death, at least sud den death, a tuaii named Guillemetto , stopped forward and discharged the coutcutH of a pistol<4os to Scott * head while he was lying on the ground. This boil, however, took a wrong direction. It west into the npper part of the right check and came out aomewlicro about the cartilage of the nose. Scott was still uot dead, but that did uot prevent hia butcher* from placing him alive, aud still speaking, in a kind of coffin mode ct four rough boards. It vraa nailed and placed in the southeast cm bastion, and an armed soldier was placed at the door. This would seem like a story made at utu-'a raw if there were not several witneaae* full of life who heard teivem the hours of five and six in the evening the unfortunate Seott speaking from under lire lid of his coffin ; aud it ia known that he had been shot at hal/ paet twelve. What a long aud horrible agony I and what a ferocious cruelty on the part of hia butchers ! The words hoard and under stood by the French Metis were only these: "My God! toy God f' Borne English Metis, aud others speaking Scott's tongue, heard distinctly these words: " For God's sake take me out of here or kill me !" Toward eleven o'clock, that is after tea and a half hours of frightful agonv- a person, whose name 1 shall withhold for the Craeeut, went into the Imation aud gave tm the finishing stroke with a butcher knife, according to some ; with a pistol according to other*. The corpse was left in the southeast ern bastioo a few days, being kept by soldier*, relieved each in their turn. Ou the third or fourth night, I could not nay precisely which, the corpse waa taken toward tlie Bed river, and stopped abont one mile and a half from the fort, nearly opposite the river La Heine. Br means of a large stone tied to thecorpn'v the body of Thomas Bcott wont to the bottom of the river to eome thence no more. A tow words more and I am through this horrible tragedy. It was in the afternoon of the day when the execu tion took place that the coqrse was placed in the coffin, and It was later taken ont of it in the bastion ; but, in order to avoid suspicion, a grave had been dug inside of the gate faring the Asoiniboinc river, a few steps to the right, and it in there the coffin which was thought to contain Bcott's body was lowered. Tlie Ahantee Warriors. A correspondent write# from the field: The Ash ante** fought like demons. They were present in enor mous numbers, pouring on onr gallant troops by the thousands, yelling and screaming hideously. Although our firing told on them immensely, they had to be driven from (xunt to" point, and even when ptndied out of the anc cessive villages returned to tho attack. In-the thickest parts of the brush they cliiniicd tho trees in order to fire more effectually upon onr troop#. The order of advance from Inaarful wa# a# fol lowti: The attack wis nv\do in the form of square, through tho middle of which ran th 9 main road, and the liuo extended about 300 yard* on either side. The Forty-oco. rod Regiment, preceded by Lord Oifford and his scout#, formed the front line, with two of Baft's guns in the centre. Gordon's Honssas in n dense corner of jnnglo. It really seemed aa if nothing but tho failure of their ammunition would drive them out. Now at oue point, now at another, along the hill crest they poured down crushing volleys. Lifo they counted at no prior tf only a white man could be killed. It was tho same des perate obstinacy we had seen at Abra krampa. They climbed trees to fire with more deadly effect, but tho mass just lay down and shot till shot them selves or short of ammunition. Discoveries hy the Microscope. Leuwenhoeck tells ns of animated insect# seen with the microscope, of which twenty-seven millions would only be eqnnl to a mite. Insects of varions kinds are observable in the cavities of a common groin of sand, Mold in a forest of beautiful trees, with the branches, leaves, flowers, and fruit fully discernible. Butterflies are fully feath ered. Hairs are hollow tubes. The surface of our bodies is covered with scales like a fish ; a single grain of sand would cover 150 of these scales ; and a single scale covers 500 pores; yet through those narrow openings the sweat exudes like water through a sieve ; how minute then must be its particles ! Tho mite mukos five hun dred steps in a second. Each of stagnant water contains a world 4t ani mated beings, swimming with as much liberty as whale# in the sea. Each leaf ha# a colony* of insects grazing on it like oxen in a meadow. A Bov BHOOTH HIMSELF FROM FEAR OF His P'AntEß.—William Bang, aged fifteen, a messenger of the Western Union Telegraph Company in New York, received a month s wages. Ho purchased a small pistol with a portion of the.money, the rest he spent In dis sipation. When nightfall admonished him of the necessity for returning homo, the dread of meeting his father rendered him desperate. He opened his Bhirt, put the muzzle of his pistol almost over his heart and fired. The ball missed the chief organ at wliich it ■was aimed, but lodged very near it, and ttia boy died. A Wasted Life. Within the last woik, says the New ! York fMtpAie, the pride of an honored | iionsehs* (recti humbled, but uot by the I fault of either of its partners. Yet one | of thou had a fault which the hard of J heart are uot ready to forgive. He j WR* generous auu trustful. Before lie had become rich he had a bosom frieud named Bailey, who afterwards died poor and left a widow and one son. When the New York merchant learned of the*# foots he provided a home for tha moans of earning her own liveli | hood, and took the youth iuto his em- I ploy. The boy, Frederick, grew un into a shrewd, active man whose busf j lies* capacity pleased all the members of the firm. As time went on he was : advanced from one position of trust to another uutil, five years ago, he was ' made chief bookkeeper of the concern. His benefoctor was pleased, and the mother now had hope that her declin ing years would be happily passed amid pleasaut surroundings and cheered by ibe love of tho sou who was her stay and pride. To all outward seeming the young man led a oorrcct life. He apjieared to live within his means, had novice# that showed upon the surface, and no evil associates. The only drawback to liia mother's hsppiucs was the fact that he was often cut until late iu the uight and looked weary aud haggard iu the morning. Byway of excuse he pleaded that be had to remain late at tlie office. Thus the young man lived, s( home, at ehursh. in society, iu the presence of hia employers, a life of rectitude. But there was another current, deep and black, ynnuing beneath this outward calm of his existence, aud it was rapid ly sweeping him away to destruction. * The young man haa lived the Ufa sf a thief and debauchee for three years past. In hia midnight revelries iu the company of abandoned beauty and at the gaming table he has squandered 3100,000 that belonged to hia Irenefac tor and the firm. By day his slull doc - to red ths books uf the firm so that they should betray no secret, and his smiling face was made to mask his viliaimm* in gratitude. He hat) a wife at home, but her lore did not suffice to keep him from sin. He was tempted and he fell. Into evil courses and companionship, deeper and deeper in the mire of vice he stopped down nntil concealment was no lunger possible. But he had cov eted his wauderings well during the three long years in which he lived his double life. It could not hare been a happy life. With every morning's dawn he must have looked into the face of a felon and hated him aa the furtive eye# met his owu. The praise of hia employ ers turned to gall at hia taste. At la#t there came a day when this double life became unendurable. He fled. It was only last week that hia flight was discovered. Then slowly the truth came out, to shame the hearts of mother and wife, embitter the life of hia benefactor, and bring a cloud over an old and honored firm. Whether he took a companion in hi* flight and how mncn money went with him is not kaown. To-day Frederick Bailey ia an outlaw, and must remain a fugitive un less he ia brought back tospend the best years of hia life in a felon's stripes. The worst of auofa an example is that it hardens men's heart# and teaches them distrust. They will make it an esense for refusing help to the needy, pointing to the black ingratitude of the man who robbed his benefactor. But Uie one lesson taught above all others ia that the man who leads two lives may be sure that his sin will find him ont, One Poslblf ( suite of Fire. A correspondent of the Boston 7VBM script relates as follows the results of an investigation following the acciden tal discovery of a narrow escape from house burning: " One day last winter poking abont the by-waya of my cellar, I came across a demoralized lxittoni part of a trunk which was among the receptacle* naed for holding kindlings. It WM comfort ably MB of burned naper, charred kind litqre, and a miscellaneous medlev tng- { festive of a place where a sluttish par or girl had tipped up the content# of a parlor cuapadore, which proved to be Uie fact. Well, there wa# no fire, but tho disoovety wa# interesting, aud in the interest of domestic economy, art. and science, I investigated, and, as wilt straightway appear, I myself wonld have been the most cnlpnble if a fire had come of this matter. Thus it wss, carefully ridding the place of the burned stuff, and scrntiniaing the resi duum, there appeared at the bottom, with the rest of it, ntimcroua used-up matches, suggestive of the scratch, the light, the brimstone, the puff ia the pipo, snd, of course, Uie UMUI into the cuapadore. Ho far, so good. No ad vance yet in domestic economy or safet v of the individual. But I {wraiateX Presently, plain to bo seen, were num bers of little brimstone ends of match es, fresh and potent as they catne from the primeval dip. Indeed, here was food for reflection- I took one, relight ed my pipe, and thought it ont. Haid I to myaolf, and was sure of it, ' Why may not that cureless fellow up in the parlor who runs this bouse, and thiuka neither master nor mistress ever does a stupid Uiing, doing always as he pleases —why my not he, I aay, have taken a match some time, and wool-gathering over a problem not half a# consequen tial aa this, jnst scratched wildly, snapped off tho life and light-giving end, and tossed the whole into UIA ous padore, and tried another ? Aud why may not that little end of a match, in due course emptied here, have met it# fate, (a little attrition,) and, responding to its destiny, produced a flame, and that flame set fire to thi# ma*s ?' Even before I had worked out this problem to this wise result, I caught myself breaking a match and tossiug the unc les# to me, but nevertheless dangerous fragment somewhere ! Y'ea, that must have been the way, and had not my cel lar had a brick floor, with a brick par tition next to the kindlings, and seme other safety notions, penulventnre good lnek, too, who knows bnt ray honse might have burned up and the mystery of the fire never have been fathomed ? ' Consumptive Milk. With simultaneous zeal in the pur suit of disagreeable knowledge, M. Clianveau, of France, and Dr. Klol s, of Germany, have demonstrated, by a long succession of experiments, tliat tho milk of a tuberculous cow ia capa ble virtually of infecting the partakers thereof with consumption. The virus, which is in the serum of tlie milk and in a dissolved state, is not destroyed by boiliug. Worse than all, tho lacteal yield of one phthisical or tuberculous now will contaminate all milk added to it. The person diseased by it hits first a kiwBl this. At' time* the ' bowl of a wolf or the hooting of au owl will stirt'e the cattle from slutnl>er, and away they run In alt directions, to be brought together again only after much hard riding, w<>rk, boiheraUoo and profanity. Should a herder have occreUm to rise In the night for auy cause, lie must move with i great caution, lie wiii crawl out from un - Oer his blanket. It may be that seme of the route ore awakened. They open their eyes, lift their beads and tiaten fur the next disturbing sound. If a horse should jump do. It rosy t>e a rare for miles, till (he putauer and purnird are far away (ban and oat of sight of the main benl. If the cow boy lias but one animal to rhare, the work Is quickly done. The lasso i* used and the enact animal has the kink so taken out of him that he Is con tent to travel In company. In tbrniaand* of case* the ripe U not used, but tho animal 1* thrown without it# aid. Tlie mode of operation is this: Putting his horse to full rped. the herder ride# close alongside lite omnia', reaches down, and catches it by the tail. Going at a rrra'cr rate of teed, the man on the horse Uft# the animal partly from its feet, or lifts and pulls sideways, when the steps >- lishing the names of persons giving. In 1 a few clars money began to ponr in, and in a little over n week 275,000 franos were raiaehe exclaimed, in great bitterness, I• There! Oerrit South has ruined me f* He belived this, and never forgave the man alio had prevented that trade which would surely have made hia for tune. Steamboat Frank's Pursuit or Kaowl* edge. One month ago Steamboat Frank tad Sehouchiu Pete, the leading Modoc* as the new Modoc nation, began learning to read bv means of a pictorial chart, and are progressing very rapidly. While Frank waa reading for the benefit of the strangers he aaked his, wife what j-u-g spelled. " Jng," waa the reply. " Who make it?" "Good man." "Whstdowithit?" I "Pnt whisky." "What do then?" " Driiik whisky." " What do then ?" " Rsise thunder," which ended the questioning. Strange to say, Long Jim, who is very melsncholy over the killing of his pappoose by a soldier and the loss of his wife, laughed at this. " THK FBH TB MMHTIXK THA* THU Swouo."—The late Lord Dnndonald, wlto was something of an author in hia time, had a proper respect for bte brethren of the quill, for on being re stored to the honors of the Bath, of which he had been unjustly deprived, he immediately sat down and wrote a letter, not to the qneen by whom he was restored, but to Douglas Jerrold, whose writings in Punch and other quarters had helped to bring it about. COOUKP HIM OFT.—A Corning {la.) vonth paid his attentions to two yonng ladies and proposed marriage to both. They found out about it, and invited him to the house of one of them, asked him to take a seat between them, which he did, sitting down in a tnb of water over wliich a covering had been nicely spread. Then they politely requested him not to be in a harry to go, bathe went The Rhode Island Legislature says " No 1" to the proposed amendment to the State constitution giving to men and women equal political rights. r .-onal re- I j Y ~ i The text of OOTTmrnF is the rrroem I brenee it Irevre behind H* M* is esteemed ibihrii'.frd financier whose npcmUan? w ungainly. 0 £• Bilalal ifulllnftlirflih tender •- tier In whteh tfaoy ethtoenh) old taaida in When "i IlWihllNiriWl mr conduc tor quit* tji* rw*. *<#•! him * re tina peeler. " . * To cum a batohelor'* oeh** -carr* to the patient, efc*on yard* of •ilk,™ a woman in i*. ft Ama who travels bunfoot aremnd hia bed-room, otten fliul* himself on the wroog (ack," (towml .roaof ladi i Wiaoonaiß latelyiuwpwl lor • •itrmr.modal. Ton moaflwraat won. A Vhtm man -nam! J §•*•*• J*P the mwrf time to save three outa, and Heret hi* all. L.W, u He doesn't like whttky. 11 gunpowder ht> (mmwl with xpir ite of tuJpeotme, the latter oaly, when ignited, will burn. The miners *W day to a girl who had refused him nsgbkr • times. She j wanted to see if he sully loved her. A man gives the following reason why the colored race it superior to the white: " All men am masie of clay, and like the meerschaum pipe, they are more valuable when highly colored. " A New Orleans gentleman reoently wrote to the Mayor of Cincinnati, sta ting that he waa engaged to be married to a lady in the latter city, and would be glad for information concerning her. A boy of sixteen and ltia horse were Wiled by light rung at Athens, Tenn. When found be had one foot in toe stirrup, and jbie clothes were torn off - from the waist np, and scattered around the road. ' A Delaware man committed suicide a day or two ago because some one left a babv on bis doorstep. He waa too frail for tola oold world if he couldn't look hia wife in toe eye and deliberate ly declare that it waa a put-up job to make trouble. The bones of five Indians, in a sitting posture, with a succotash kettle in front of them, were recently found in Nian tic, Ct, by some men wbo were digging a cellar. Another Indian skeleton, in a sitting posture, was unearthed by laborers at Everett, Mass., lately. The ScoUrnan, a prominent Scotch newspaper, says tost a Bible, bonud in calf, and bearing the name of William Sim," a Dundee man, and the date 1880, had been discovered in the stomach of a codfish recently. William Sim went to sea in 1834, and ban not sinoe been heard of. A lady at Madison, Ohio, thinking pleasantly to surprise one of her board ers, put a gold ring which he had lost in a pancake and placed the production en bis plate at breakfast. But the boarder bolted the pancake in such largo bites that too presence of the ring was not discovered, and now it is lost •gain. II tha last oensn* is gocd authority, fafnpirfi don't make, much money. There are exceptions, however, in tue great West. A lawyer bought 2,000 acrea ,of land near Webster, lowa, for $24,000, and sowed 1,700 sen a in wheat. In two years ha has netted s.*>,ooo from his crops. What a chance for hundreds of half-starved attorneys in New York who are trying to reap a livelihood by sowing discord between families. The queerest object iU nature is a Spanish beggar, for these beggars beg on horseback, and i| is an odd thing to see a man riding up to a poor foot-pas senger and asking aim*. A gentleman in Valparaiso, being accosted by one of these mounted beggars, replied, "Why, sir, you oome to beg of me, who have to go on foot, while you ride on horse back !" "Veir true, sir," said the beggar, " and I have the more need to beg, as I have to support, my horse ss well aa myself.