Alt OLD MAN. Tbs hour far |ieiil. the h*i vest in. He goes eereue along hia way*. Hlaaol with the sunshine that befall* The Indian aninmer of hia .lava. A dear old man whom all men love. Wlm lovea all men ami rouml wtmae head, AN round the kmiwa of ancient saint*. Tin Mirer locks of minima abed. Just aa the aun cantos sifting through The Violet vapors on the hills, lluilding a land of promts* where The net* Rith new glory thrill*. 80 ahmoa hia atntle on all he mreta. A tender after glow and mild ; He aoea the other aide of hfcv And take* it awe< lly aa a child. For genial aa the antunui day That a|ielle ua with lta aoft surprise, late aeema to wait aa wavta the year. Obeying hia tvruvgnaiit ejoa. lie dreama not of a dark unknowu So . !o%- at liand. mi chill, ao drear. The lee cold and allow xi*er*.l the grave . He only eeea the aunahine here. He lifts hia eyee up to the hvlla Whence Cometh alt hia help and stayw To blcaa ua with the light that Rita The Ind an autumt r of hia days. liww'f Rt4M r '. Fnd of a Feifd n\ . k. nut. In a ivrUin quarter of the Wot. noted for lainily lends, there lived. Mime voars ago, :t voting man, named Martin Haunt. \'u fortunately, Hie Haicn- had la-en through many year* at enmity with a family named Morgan, by a ntt'iiiler of which Martin's own father had teou killed in a desperate encounter, while he was \ct a child. Martin was mw the only male member of the family left, and lie had grow 11 up to manhood 011 the old homotead, under the careful gtiardlauship ami teaching of tils widowed mother. She had not taught hint the leou Of hatred. She had told him of lit- im jiCtuoti- lather'-death —that -be luqied to M*e no more wicked iragedie- ami admonished him, although he might never like the Morgan*. i cherish m> thought of revenge. The Morgans were four in mimtor— Henry, a desperate and revengeful man, bj whose band old Mr. lla/cn bad fallen; bis two -on*, James ami Kphnuiti, much like him; and hi* daughter Esther, who w a- not like him. but who, with a lovely face, j*.*--,-—<-.1 the sweet and gentle nature of Iter mother, whom sorrow had year* before hurried to the grave. The two families lived in the same community. Martin and Esther fre quently utel—in the village, at church and at -<*'ial parties, and notw ith-innd ing the lend that had cast a shadow on both houtes, they loved each other ; and to the unbounded rage of floury Morgan ami hi* son*, who hated Martin for hi* father's sake they deliberately went and got married. Esther and Martin well knew that *lie tuu-t not dare to visit Iter old home again after that; >o she w-nt with hitn to the house of the Ha/an*, and thev did not see any of the Morgan- foi month*. But Martin wa- wanted that he was in danger, and he knew the Morgan* too well to doubt it. While he desired to live at peace with litem, he deter mined not to fall as hs* father had fallen, if he could help it. Like most people in that section, and at that time, lie went armed when away from home; and besides being one of that class of jiersons scarcely susceptible of fear he was one of the best shots, with rifle or pistols in the community. One evening in autumn, ju-t at dn-k. a few mouths after the marriage, he was riding home from the village oa a spirited bur-*', w hen the Morgan* sud denly caute into his titiml. He thought over lite strange history of the two families, ami began talking to himself, as he rode leisurely along: "How unfortunate —how foolish it is," he mused, "that thisenmlty should exist through whole generations, merely because remote ancestor,* quarreled over a line of fence, or the ownership of a truant pig! They hate me; I do not fear them, yet l\l like to be reconciled. 1 think 1 shall see ihetn and talk it over. I I believe 1 could reasost them into fair ness. How to approach them, though— He was tlien riding by a little grove of timber, frtnit which three nten sprang iuto the road. One grasped his bridle rein, while two stood with rifles leveled upon liiii). It was not yet so dark hut that he recognized hi* assailants. They were the Morgans. It was Ephraim 1 who held his bridle-rein, w bile his father ami James menaced him with their rifles. "Oh, Hasen!" said the old man, w ith au air of triumph, "we've got you!. You won't see the sun rise to morrow, you Independent young dog! You'll be with your father before that. What's more, you'll steal no more daughters of , mine. Slop that! don't offer to reach ; for that shooter!" lie -aid, as Martin's hand moved toward hi* brea*t-|Micket. , "At best, you've but a minute to live, j while I tell you why I am going to shoot you, and how glad I am to wipe out the last lla/en; but none of your trick* or you won't live a second !" Martin Ilazen, sitting in the saddle with the calmness of tail trees by the roadside—that looked, in tbc gathering darkness, like grim spectres frowning upon the U-rrible scene—felt that it no time now to reason w itli hi* enemies and lie dismissed the thought. He waited, motionless, tr Henry Morgan ! to *|M*ak again, for he knew that the revengeful man would love to gloat j over him Iwfore d.-strnving him, and I that iti* -Mm* would await hi* eotuiuaud. Henry Morgan, with rille still leveled, went on: "Ye*, young ilazen, the lit-t of our race—" tjuick a* a flash, Martin snatched III* revolver from his |oeket, ami dropping his faw ti|*)n hi* horse's mane, t i con fuse the aim of Henry and Jamc* Mor gan, lie tired at Ephraim, who fell to the earth; and the horse, startled by the crack of the revolver at hi- ear, dashed away at full *jeed. Almost simultaneously, Henry Mor gan fired at Martin's bead, missing him ; ami a moment later. James inticli **oiifused by the sudden turn of aflairs, tired almost at random, ami the bullet pierced Martin's left thigh. He had not gone far before he discovered that the shot had broken the bone, ami he began to suffer such excruciating pain that only the danger which he knew was still behind him, and his realiza tion of how itii|*rtant it was to reach home prevented hitn from reeling from his saddle In a swoon. He succeeded in reaching borne, to he met at the gate by his mother, who told him that during his absence Esther had been forcibly carried away by her father and brothers. Martin fell, rather than dismounted from his horse, dragged himself Into Hie lawn, and with the words: "The Morgans have shot me!" fell fainting upon the grass. Mrs. Hazen hurried to a neighbor's house for assistance. A surgeon was summoned. Martin was carried in and laid upon a bed. He revived, and his wound was properly attended to, with appliances of splints and bandages; and the good doctor finally left him that night in great |iaiu, with the consoling remark that he would "keep his bed for a good three months at least." For many days several armed friends of Martin Hazen remained constantly at the house, to defend him from a pos sible attack of the Morgans. He began to recover from his wound; but his anxiety for Esther tormented him day and night. He feared they might mur der her; but his friends assured liiin that they would not dare do that; that site was probably merely kept at her old home under strict surveilauce, ami that in due time she should lie rescued by some process or other. It was as certained, meantime, that Ephraim Morgan was not killed by the bullet from Martin's revolver on the night of the attempted assassination; that the missile had only plow ed its way through the scalp of his cranium, producing a shock that had merely stunned hitn for lutlf an hour. Finally, when Martin was able to get out of bed, and sit in a chair for a few minutes at a time, the Morgans not having made their appear ance, the friendly neighbors left, and Martin was alone with Mrs. Hazen. It was the very next night after the FRED. KURTZ, Editor ami Proprietor VOI, I\. vigil ceased that the vhair suddenly flew o|ieti, ami Kit her hurst Into the room occupied tiy Martin. U was a room on the ground floor, properly a sitting room, hut a la-d had lieen plav-ed in It tetn|Hirai lly for the w minded young man. "Ksllier!" Martin exclaimed, joy • fully . She ran to his liedslde, kis*el him. then said, excitedly : "tti. Martin, they are pre|iarlng to come to-night t>< kilj you! t overheard their plans, and I escajied hy lumping from the wdttdow ola room they had locked uie in. I'hey don't know it." "Let it* hasten tor aid!" said Mrs. Ilateii, w ho came In from an adjoining room at that moment. "It I* tvHi late! 'l'hey may In- here in a few minutes. We must carry Mai till out of the house, till, heavens!" she evrlaimcd, trembling from head to toot. "I hear their horses' hoofs now. They are not a hundred yard- away." "Bo calm," -aid Martin. "I will tell von what to do, ami do it quickly. Mother, you ami Kstlior help me, ami I w ill get out ami In- undei the led, I'hen arrange the pillow tinder the oovei so that they may think lam litng in the Usl, then both ol you gel into the next room. I'hey will prolv atilr rush in and lire, ami I wilt cr.iwl out with my revolver. Here it i-. I'heu I hey witli their empty rifles, will Is- at my mercy . Now leave the candle hum lug on the mantel. It hen 1 rap three limes 011 the w all, eotne in." The -e Instruction* were quickly ola-\ed, and a the two women with drew . Ksllier -aid: "You won't kill tin 111, If you can help it f" "No; I promise yon that. Quick now ! I hear them !" Tlie women witlulrew, and had just closed the deti, which stood in a corner of the room, and placed himself in a low chair near the door, and just a* he had attained this favorable situation, the Morgans dis covered the trick that had l**en played U|K>n them, and found themselves with empty rifles, confronted with a large revolver in the hand- of a very cool and brave man. "Henry Morgan," said Martin, "you and your -oils are at my mercy. Ivni't Uiovel You kuow how I handle tin revolver. Move but a hair'--breadth, anv one of von, ami 1 tin* to kill!" lliey stood trait-fixed. They were not cowarils, hut they did not j--e-- the cool moral courage of Martin, ami the surprise to which they had been treated completely unmanned them. To complete their confusion, Martin gave the signal, and Mr-. Ha/eu ami Esther came in. "Why. girl!'* exclaimed llenry Mor gan, "how in the—" "Not* a word!" interrupted Martin, sternly. "I will do the talking now. There are chairs near you—sit down. Do you hear?" and he pointed the re volver at each one in turn, with such rapidity that lie seemed to cover all three at once. They were so completely under hi <**ontrol, that they obeyed hi- command In the most submissive manner. "Mr. Morgan." Martin proceeded, "1 have all your lives in my hand. Out families have bi-en at enmity for genera tion*—God know* for what. You cer tainly have no reason to hate me, 1 have never harmed you. I have only offended you by marrying Esther. This should rather have made us friends. You killed my father, and have twice tried to murder nte. Now I have you in nty power, but I'm not going to kill you. iam w illittg to forgive and for get the past. Although you are a re vengeful man, Henry Morgan, 1 believe you have a generous nature. Now at tend ! If after this you trv to harm me 1 will not -pare you; but if you will be reconciled, lake iny hand and say so. | and 1 will trust you, for 1 know that yon and your sons are not men who will lie. Will you do it, or will you de|iarl with tin- same obi hatred in your hearts >" Henry Morgan had been -itting with downcast eyes, hi* einpt rifle poised upon one knee. He bad trembled at first, apparently with suppressed rage; but now his lietter nature seemed to |m>— e-* lii 111 and after a moment ot thoughtful silence lie ar<>-e, left Ids rifle standing again*! the wail, walked ai r*s the room, took Martin by Un hand, and said : "lliuh'n, von make me ashamed of myself. There's my hand. Let'* for get ami forgive all round. Hereafter yon are my friend and son-in-law." The younger Morgan*, catching the same true spirit, shook hands with Martin, ami lietween tin* brave youth and these rough men, there wa* a re conciliation tli.it was earnest and abid ing. They had tried to murder him; now tliey would have killed a dozen men to defend him. Martin to*-ed hi* revolver upon the licit, for lie knew be could safely do so. Hough men as the Morgans has tieen all their lives, there was Imih in tliein— Martin knew it. And the fend Iwtweeii tin- Morgans ami tin* Hazen* wa- at an end forever and ever! .ild and Mllver. Many people have the desire to know the value of gold and silver in bulk. The following statement from I'rof. F. L. Schlrmer, Superintendent of the Branch Mint at Itenver, may Is* relied upon a* correct. The limine** of Colo rado gold, and the calculation of value of gold and silver, an* al*o given, it i a matter of considerable value, and should be carefully preserved for refer ence : One Um (2,(100 jiouiul* avoirdupois) of gold and silver contains 29,103 troy ounces, and, therefore, the value of a toil of pure gold is $002,700 21, ami a ton of silver $07,704 48. A cubic foot of pure gold weighs 1,518 74 pounds avoirdu|>ois; a cubic list of pure silver weigh* 550,25 pounds avoirdupois. If there is one jmt cent, of gold or silver in a toil of ore, it contains 291*63 ounces troy of either of these metals. The average fineness of the Colorado gold is 781 in 1,000, and the natural alloy, gold. 781; silver, 200; copper, 10; total, 1.000. Tin: calculations at the Mint are made on the basis that 43 ounces of standard gold, or 900 flue, coin, is wortli SBOO. and 11 ounces of silver, 000 flue, colli, is worth sl2 80. Healthful Cellars. A dry and neatly-kept cellar is a pretty gtssl guarantee of health to the family whose members are breathing the air from it day and night. Every body believes IN having pure air to breathe; but we are sorry to tell the truth that thousands are breathing im pure air on account of foul cellars. What are the essentials of a good cellar? It must be dry; it must have stone walls outside and division walls of either 'stone or brick; the floor of cement upon a foundation of cobble stones previously imbedded in the earth by means of a ntaul handled by two turn; plastered ceilings and walls; complete ventila tion by means of large windows. If these points are secured, the cellar be comes one of the most important rooms in the house. — Phrenological Journal. THE ( l ENTHE I! EP() RTER. tilings W orlli K MOW tug. Keep tea in a close cheat or canui-ti-r. Keep coffee hy itself, a- its odor affects other articles. keen bread and cake In a tin l>ox 01 1 stone jar. I'rauberries will keep all wlutct in a I lit kin of w alei In a cellai. September and th-lohei liutter is the Ive-t for w inter use. ! tttanges and lemons keep best w 1 up|w-vl (11 soft pa|Ht, and, if possible, lalil lit a draw er. The standard adopted by the t titled Stataa i- Um WlucMatM buahel, is Inches in diameter in-lde, s ilielie* deep, ami contains 'J.I.Vt I.' 1011 cubic Inches. It is the legal bushel 01 each Stale hav ing no |h , 1.11 statute bushel ol its own. A half-bushel measure should contain 1 5 21-IOU cubit' Inches. To tllld the contents of a cylindrical measure multiply the square of (be diameter by .755,3t ls ami then by the depth. KxaUlple; ts'.-XlS'... Ui.Si; .ta,g,">\ 'JtiS, SO.l, -JtsS.MltxS 150 12-100. file I uited States standard gallon measures -Jill cubit- Inches. A tvariel tonlaius tu gallons or 0,210 cubic lilt-lies. Five yards wide by '.His long contains I acre; 10 cards wide by Isl long con tains 1 acre; "JO yards wide by '.'l2 long eoutains 1 acre; 40 yarda wide by 121 long eoutains 1 acre; 00 feel w ile by 72ti long eoutains 1 acre; 110 feet wide by .fcsi long eoutains I acre; 220 feel wide hy T.rs long contains 1 acre. No. i mackerel should be not less than la inches in length from the extremity ot the head to the fork of the tail, fat, lice from rust, taint or drainage. No. 2 mackerel should Is- not l>--- than II inches in length,fat and free trom Ac. No. Ct mackerel should Is- not less than It) I lie lies in length. No. :l large should not Is- h s- than l.'t Inche- in length and in quality are tho-e (hat remain alter the selections of No. 1. No. I mackerel comprise all not in the als>ve, and -lentld Is- free 110111 taint or damage. The alsoe is the -taudard established by law in Mu-sacliu.scii.-, and i* generally ace-ptcd hy the traile elsewhere. Mackerel should he kept c '1 ere, I with brine and not ex|s>seer twos—Klsl over thir teen inches in length, ami not good enough in tpiality for number ones. Scaled herrings should be fat flsh, free from scales and when smoked be of a bright gulden color. No. 1 herring are generally small and l*N>r fish. The lie-t way to oo<>k cud fi-h—Strip it of it.- -kin and cut in piftit aland the size of one's hand ; plat e it in water and allow it to simmer on the stove until it liecouiea tender. It should never In* al lowed to N>il. Itoiling hardens and darkens tin* fl-h,am! deprives itof mm h o' its flavor. Welsh firkin* ar* so called from the factofthei. lieiug introduced b\ a We|h settlement In the northern pari of \cw York Stale. A Welsh flrkin contains atxuit lon |M.uud, ami a half-tirkin or tub .H-' |HMimls on an average. A nun moit returnable flrkin contain* from do to 70 |MHimU of butter, and a common tirkin 00 to 100 {Miiiml-. Mackerel couies ill barrels, half barrels, quarter barrel* ami kits, con taining full weight, reflectively 2**>, 100, .'H> and 'JO pound*. I'ork. full weight, should contain Soo l>iimls, hit! the standard ha- been re duced to 100 pound*; pickled beef ham* in barrels 3tNi and 230 |hmiiul; clear side- in hulk. In Uixes, ,V*i |sninds, am) in hogsheads from 800 to 1,000 |H>und*. Salt—Ashton's, Marshall's and other Liverpool brands—comes in hag-. JJt pounds; New York >tau* in barrel- ami bags, 2fo ala | •_!>( pounds; cases table -alt contain tin boxes, alsiut J pound* eacli. Salt al-.i come* in suiall packet-, put up in sack-, three sUes; J.">, 10 |M>uml (tackets; 10, (1 |siumls; ami 80, J pounds. (kilong tea* are very highly dried, f wiry, brittle leaf, ami valued according to degree of strength ami pungency, ami fr.asloin from sc some stupid toast. The mall who, thinking you ale mu sical, bores v on with Ids notions on the music of tlie future, ot w Idcli you know as little as tlie music id the *pfier< s. The man who wear* a white hat in vv inter ami -iiiok'-* :t pi|>c w lien walk ing, ami accost* you a* "old fellow" jii-l a* you arc hoping to make a gtssl impression on some well dressed lady friends. i'iic man who, knowing th.it your doctor face* Itiin at table, turn* the talk o a* lo *cl hint talking doctor's shop. 1 lie mutt who, with a hs>k of urgent buaiue**. when you ait* in a hurry, takes voir hy the hutton-bolc to tell you a bad joke. T'lie utaii who, sitting just tx-hind you at the opera, destroy* hall your enjoy ment hy humming lite air. The man who m ike* remark- on your |M-r*onal adornment. uk you where you bur your wanie*at, and what you paid for your dn • lx*.t. 'Tlie mail w ho lard* his talk w it It little scrap* of French and tiertuaii alter hi* reitirtt from a Continental tour. The man who *|oil your pleasure in seeing a new play hy applauding in wrong places, am) multcillig ill stage vv hi*|H*r* Ids comment* on the plot. Aud, to finish with tlie man who, w hen you draw bark slightly lo appre ciate a picture, coolly come* and stands in front of you, and ihen receding, also treads tip.tti your lix--. — /•* An lalllor *f 1775. In 177."> there wete tour new *]a|>rrs published lit New York. Kivlngtou's It-fill lirvioitt U*l ot the British authorities. The Wercc-e, published bv Hugh ttoiur, wa* a time server and trimmer. Anderson's (' - Mitulio 0!* very quaintly : "And tlie printer, l*eiiig unable to carry on liUbuiine** without the nece**.iric* of life, is obliged to af fix the following prices to hi* wutk, viz.: Fir a ijuarter of new*, l'J 1!>. of Ix-cf, |iork, veal, or liitilton, or t lie. of butler, or 7 Its. of cheese, or I* lbs. of fine flour, or half a bushel of wheat, or one bushel of Indian corn, or half a cord of wood, or -ft*' weight of bay or other article* of country produce a* lie shall want them, In like promotion*, or a much money as will purchase them al tlie time; for other articles of printing work, tlie pri'i-s to 1*- in proportion to that of the new-paper. VII ills custo mer* who have to spare anv of the almve, or other articles of of country produce, be lio|te* w ill let him know it, and afford htm the necessary sup plies, without which hi* bllsilU'** liefr must very tuxm be discontinued." It I* gratifying to IK- able to state that the sturdy |iatrlot survived the ({evolution, ami lived to revisit the city f which he had been I * M Ik 111 liii|>ro%r In one respect, at least, Americans might mend their manners—in llic pub lic exhibition of reverence for the dead. The passage of a funeral train through our streets, whether of a greater or an unknown man, elicits from the stolid s|H-ct.itors no lurthcr recognition than a stare. In I 'arisor any where in France the presence of the mortal remains of any fellow la-ing Is acknowledged even by 1 lie humblest artisan with head hand and bowed, will lo in New York the dead laxly of a Vice President is carried through miles of streets lined with people ah with their crowns cov ered. 'They take off their hal* to the living, hut never to the dead. There is no more touching and graceful custom than this bit of Freuch reverence, and none which our |>cople aeeui so slow to adopt. It is just these Utile knacks of politeness that the American gentleman who loudly imagines himself the finest gentlcman in the world, is in need of. No doubt in this and many other things lie represses iiis instincts for fear of j seeming sentimental. In the Case of so distinguished a public oftleer as Henry Wilson the rudeness of the omission was almost brutal, and the very i.:rk ness that threw an ntmospuere of gloom about his funeral procession through tiie city seemed to he a friendly shit h*. There was something appropriate he sides in tiie darkness. Tor a lonely old man, dying almost without kith or kilt, forsaken la-fore his death hy Ilia men who should have r< spoofed hia counsels after Ills death,by his ow 11 colleague* In t digress, ami hasttlv seised 111 s 111 by siii geons us a "subject" almost before the Isslv was cold, it w a a tilting pall. There is nil unmistakable revolt against these funeral |H-geants that wind their way Irnm elly lo city and prolong the ohsnjuics of a puldic man until a careless ami < apt icious public weary of the mention of iiis name in the newspaper*. It seems like an af front lo genuine gl ici to make a dead statesman tin- focus of stating crowds, and withhold Ids wornoul ldv from the resting [dace w liicli iH-longs to it. There is too much unsuccessful striv ing iiflci display, t little simplicity and sincerity, Ir > lav , let lli.it go to it* long lioiue. About t.nlls A writer ill the >4ll t raiiclsco Hull sltioti of tiieirrepa.*l, fresh fish or putrid, decayed vegetable ui.ilter, or the • •flat mil gat hag'- of tlie wharves being devoured w lilt equal relish. They are very expert in pi> king up food front the sttrfaic of the w iter, circling over It until .assured of it* desirableness, and then descending with strong flapping* of their Upraised wilig- till clo*e llpoll tlie water, when tlie prize i* picked daintily up without the bird'* welting It* feci, and tiie Interrupted (light rc stl lll'* I. \\ lieu, a* is often the -ise, several bird* dart at otue lo pursuit of tlie same IIMMMII, lex* < are i* taken, aud tlie whole IKMIV precipitate tie-niseive* Into the wave* with shrill scream* and a great throwing up of (lit water, an I if "tie i* fortunate enottgii to gain a prize, he J* at once pursued hy the re*t alid Jieched and hurt' led till Sometimes he i obliged to drop tlie f.*x|, which I* snatched by another before it reaches the vv ater, ami who in turn is as-ailed by the rest till the hit is eithrt tinally *w allowed or tot n ili pieces in the struggle. I pon tlie lx-a> lie* bey olid the city these birds are *een lu immense numbers, patiently waiting for tlo- tide to go out, or w ben it ebbs, usually en gaged in tc-diiigoii the tnu-scls, marine Worm*, snail*. A'-., left visible by the receding water*. i hey al*o subsist largely on rlanu, which tiiey clear I torn the *hell bv Ix-atlng them against the rix-k*. or, w here tin* b-a-h i* sandv , fly - ing witli tliciu lo a distance of fr>>:u tilty to a hundred feet in the air, from w liicb height lln-v are drop|Mxl to the ground IK-IOW and hrok<*u hy tlie fall; w hereutMMl the ingenious birds deseeud ami enjoy a rich feat. I |M>II these beaches tiiey may often be seen at low tide, completely gorged and fa*t a-h-ep U|K>ti one leg, aud so oblivious to all their surrounding* that the returning tide *weep* them off, still sleeping, ti|x'ii the to**iug waves, Net, in spite of their seeming forget fit I ueas to all tiieir surrounding*, It i* a ditlieult matter to walk up to them, lor at the ||ghtet intimation of danger lln-ir head* eotue ■ •lit Iroin under tiieir vv lugs with a jerk, and rising heavily they llapaway lo some more secure retreat. 'Though care lo* in their maimer of feeding they are very neat In their plumage and S|N>III| hour* every day In dressing their feathers. Fr|tieitlly found in company witli the preceding specie* are the glaucus vvliiged ami t aliloruia gull*, tiie foriiier IIIIU ii resembling it tliougli easily dis tinguished by it* larger sine and shorter wing*, w hicli make* it* flight le* grace ful aud well-sustained, and the latter Ix'lng much smaller than either of it* eompanioli*, and with lighter colored back and wings. These California gulls are a great Jx-sl to the |x-lieaus. which they closely follow in their search for final, and when they have seized a tl*h iiimhly snatch it from the O|K-II |x>tieh, often ulighliiig 011 the luhlx-rlv bird's very head for the purpose, and Ix-ar it away in triumph. 'The abused |>ellcaii, however, seldom ren-nt* tin- theft, but calmly turns away for other game, of which, perehauce, lie is again deftly rolilx-d by his -prlghtlr and ets< ieiux-- h-ss nelghlxir. H lieu no pelicans are at hand these feathered IIIMHIIIIIIIS lx-- take themelve* to honest work, and catch their own ilsh la a very skilful manner The ring-hilled gulls are al*o pretty constant visitors to our harltor ami traterni/c with the other varieties al ready enumerated, which they resemble in general ap|iearanee, haliits,and fllglit. They are oi very sympathetic natures, and if one of tiieir number is shot and wounded will hover over it with every expression of deep solicitude, and even try to help It rise again Into the air, nor do their eflnrts cease until several shots have been tired among them, when they seem to appreciate the situation mid slowly retire lu ever-widening circles. Other ami Inter varieties are the whiic hcaded gull—a beautiful bird, easily distinguishable hy its •now-white head, hlcnilliigffiiito ashy-lead color on thc hack ami breast, and a lihsxl-rcd bill; Suck ley's gull, a miniature copy of the glancu-s-wiiiged gull, and, rarest of all, (lie Ivory gull, of peculiarly brilliant white plumage and light yellow hill. Itonaparte'* gull, a handsome and graceful specie*, smaller than any uo* la • while. in Uita wurld eo lrMi(e 'l'o liiflilon out wel re^ieia, Wo tu*v flu.l m Uoarl that la Una through ch*ug," t heart lliat never fiirgtU Hul tare aa a ruae tu llxeuilvf, A* a blul In an Arctic clttue, la a heart that '-an ever reuutiuber. Through aoirvw, and change, and tunc One* tu a while we And a friend Tnal will chiiii through good and 111 . Wlniae friciidahl|' follows nc e en tu Uio end lie it up ur adowu a bill, ltut the heart so true aud the love en louder And litomiahip'x faithful attnle Whether we dwell In aadnaea or *plru lor. We find hul onoe in a while lamina end llrbl. Men ol jjciiiin are equally ftcllc in running into (l<-ld. (•cuius has no no c*-**ary otiutierlioti with prudence or srlf-reidraiiit, nor doe* it exercise any influence over the t-otutnoii rule* of arithmetic, which arc rigid ami lufl.x tide. Men of genius arc often superior to what it iron calls "the wisdom of business." Vr( Itacoll himself did Hot follow hit own advice, luit wa ruined hy lit- Improvidence. lie was in straits ami dilticiiltic* when a youth, aud 111 still greater strait* ami dilliciilfiea when a mail. Ilia life was splendid, hut ilia excessive expeudlture Involved- hilli ill tlehla w hlcit created a p r|ietual craving for money. One day, in passing out to nia aiitc-chsinbcr, where hi* follower* were iiis sp|>eariice, he said: "lie aeated, my 111 asters; your ri*e ha* Iwrii my fall." To supply ll wants lijcoo look hrilre*, and was lhereti|wn beset by lii enemies, convicted, degra ded. aud ruined. Kveu men with a -jiecial A*-ttiti- for finance on a grand •rale may completely break down in the management of their own private affairs. Till managed the national fi nance* during a |w-riod of unexampled ditficultv, yet was himself always plunged in debt, laud f arrington, ex hanker, once or tw ice, at Mr. lilt's re |iicsi,examined liis household accounts, aud found the ipiautity of butcher*' meat > barged in the bllis was one hun dred weight a week. The charge lot N-rin|' wages, Is.jrd wages, living, and household hills cX'-cr-lod AII,AM) a year. At lilt's death tile nation votes) A-Pt.URi to satisfy the deuiauds of Ills creditors; yet his income had neter been less than Atl.tSSt a yraf; and at onetime, w it it t tie Wardeiishlp of the < Irnjue l'orts, it was nearly Al.Wsta year more. Macaulay truly say* that "the character of I'iti Would hate stood higher if, w Itii the disinterestedness of IVrlcle. aud lie Will, lie had united lliei* dignified frugality." ltut I'llt by no mean* *l great alee, and at a very early age it involved him ill debt to an eiiormou* amount. It i* • t.ited by tiibliou that on one oeeai>ioii Fox *al playing at hazard for tMrntv liolira In allow*-ion, loaillg l'll.Utai. Hut deep |>iav Ma* (lie vice of bigb life in those day, ami cheating Ma* not uti known. Srlwyn, alluding to Fox's liMiei at play, called him Charles the Martyr. Sheridan Ma* the hero of debt. He lived oil it. Though he received large Mini* of money in one May or another, no one knew what became of it, for he |uiid nobody. It eeclueU to Mielt l*>\ in hi* hand* like mow in summer. lie )ieiit 111* llrl M ife'*.fortune of £l,iiUO in a *ix week*' jaunt to H.IIII. Neee*- it diove him to literature, and per il ip* to the atlttiulu* of |iVerty Me owe '*'! he HivaU" and the drama* w hich Succeeded it. W ilii hi* *eoniJ wife he olitaine*! a fortune of £S,(KIU, and with ilj.KVi Mhieli be rrallrol by the *ale of lirury l-anr *hare he tiought an e tate In Surrey, from Mhieh he Ma* driven by debt and dun*. The remain der of hi* life was a series of hifts, sometime* brilliant, but often degrading to raie money ami evade creditor*. Taylor, of the Opera lldow, umnl to *ay that if lie took on ill* list to Sheridan ill the street it would co*t him fifty |w>timl; but if tie stopped to *|M-nk to bim it Mould eo*t a hundred. lie Ma* in debt all round—to hi* milkman, hi* grower, bi baker, ami hi* butcher. Sometime* Mr*. Sheridan would IK* kept Mailing for an hour or more, Mhiiethe servant* were beating up the neighUirltood for coffee, butter, egg*, and roll*. While Sheridan Ma* paymaster of the navy a butcher one day brought a leg of mut ton to the kitchen. The cook look it and c!ap|icd It in the pot to boil, and went up *tair* for the money; but not returning, the butcher coolly removed tiie |MI| lid, took out the mutton, and M alkcd HM ay with it on hi* Uav. Yet, while living in these strait*, Sheridan, M lieu invited M ith hi* son into the country, usually went iu chaise* ami four—he iu one, and hi* son Tom fol lowing In the other. The end of all Ma* very ad. For some weeks before hi* death he was nearly destitute of the in can* of siibsHteni'e. His noble ami royal friend* bad entirely deserted bitu. Execution* for dent were In bis house, and he passed bis la-t days In the cus tody of sheriff* officer*, who abstained from conveying him to pri*on merely because they were assured that to re move liim would cause hi* immediate •lealb.—.Mnmwl >wii**, Vtrlhnit* of Vulhora. The different met In sis our most di tiiiKuisbed author* employed in the composition of their works are worth mention. I>avid Hume, for in* twice, wrote rapidly, but corrected slowly and lab 1 inn sly and hi* manuscript* are full of erasures. The erasure* art* few tn ilie writing* of OililtottK, as lie made all hi* corrections in his mind, and never wrote a sentence until he had balanced and ■mended it to lus entire satisfaction, either seated in his arm chair or walking in hi* balcony with the Lake of lienor* below him. I>r. Adam Smith dictated to hi* clerk while walking slowly up and down hi* room. Hence it ha* lawn alleged that hi* sen tence* arc nearly all of the same length, each containing exactly as much as the clerk could take down while the doctor buik a single turn. In lecturing he was mote dependent than the general ity of professors on the sympathy of his class. 1 luring a whole session a certain student, with a plain but ex pressive countenance, was of great use to bim In judging of hi* success. He sat conspicuously in front of a pillar. He had riiui constantly in his eye. II he leaned forward to listen all was right, and he knew lie had the ear of his class ; but if he leaned hack in an attitude of listlessiiess he felt at once that all was w rung, and that he inusf change either the subject or the style of his addreas. Amrrlrnn Titles. Since the war the extraordinary mul tiplication of "colleges" lias made civil ian titles a* cheap a* military —let its be thankful they are not hereditary. The other day there was an account in the l>n|K't> of an "Illinois inter-collegiate contest, eight of the leading colleges in t he State participating." Think ot eight leading colleges in Illinois, to say noth ing of the modestly subordinate ones! I wonder how many readers of this page ever heard of five out of the multitudi nous colleges of Illinois. Well, sonie b sly has been showing from the reports of the Bureau of Education that there a o no fewer than jl'2B "universities and c >1 leges" in our favored country, which c inferred last year .'i.-ViO degrees in Terms: $2 a Year, in Advance. oniric, and 111 booorary degrees. This s <|"lte independent of" the thirty-five agricultural college*, with tliefr .'k'>2 di-gret**, Ihe - | .itiou in tiim—w hat have childreu to ! do with u<-li trlfl,-*? Matters more iui|M>rlaiit claim tln-ir attention; are j there not h<.|. and skipping rot** and ' luncheon? I knew a little girl who j was found sobbing In bed ope night, j unable to close her eye*, long after Iter osutl time of similiter. With much re luctance and after long cro**-exauiiua \ ilan, she owueil thai her sorrow relate,! solely to the w oea of "Ixmg Tall" and "Blue Kye#," two devoted r*ls, whose highly-wrought adventurn# she had > ju.t facet! read lug in a child'* magazine. "Blue Kye*"' hail been caught In a trap from which "long Tall" had finally re*cud her, but their suffering* ha I tieen so vividly described that it s< j long Is-fore she ntulil he induced to view it a. anviliiug hut a real tragedy, j Is-** easy of jwfr.oa*ion wa# a child once under my cliarge, a boy of twelve, i unusually *Lroug and active, *|M-nry of' "t'udine" U *ucli exaggerate,! etno-j llon that he lay awake, tlie greater part of Uie night in an agony of tear*, which grew sure ami worse till I hit ujioii a lutppy thought, aud imagine I for him a wiiollv new ending to the lab-—-bringing Cinline out of the water aud returning Iter to llildebraml, m that all should live happily ever alter, iteiug offered thl# entirely ideal refuge from an equally Ideal woe, my jmor little pupil dried up hit tear# and wm* a-leep In ten minute**. It U a common thing for children to live iusoure world of their own, apart from all tlielr daily dutb - and belonging*. In one house hold of my acquaintance two little girls !*.*, *: a private fairyland named j "Blab." All their play hour* are |MWd LII it; it* MYH-U are knuwli to them only—even th-lr parent* are n<* j admitted, hut their hahv i*tr. not yet { tuoreiri old, U by birthright * citizen , of of the realm, and aria with great dig- j nlty her |art In It* pageants. They I liave invented for thit enchanted land a ! language, both spoken and w ritteu— their fatiier it should be (aid, U an euilneiit HuguUf—-and ther have de > i-ed novel combination* of letter*, to express sound* not represented In the English tongue. I knew an< liter child M ho sjwnt her -umnier* on a charming rotate by the sea-shore, with her graml father achief playmate. They jointly jn-opled itii a fairy world the wood* and roch around them; every rocky cave, every hollow tree, every hole In ; the ground wa* full of enchantment. There were path* and ravine* where It Wit* forbidden to walk fast or *|ieak aloud. The two playmate would steal off by tbcuioelve* and hold secret eon verae for hours concerning the* won der*, till, on one unlucky day, the elder conspirator forgot hltnarlf to far a* to *|*'ak dl*re*|ectfttllv of the prime minister of the Court of Fairyland. No actual |M-ril could have taken more ap |ian ut hold of the child'* imagination. She walked up and down, wringing iter hand*, and endeavoring to propi tiate the *up|*o*cd w rath of these being* unseen by Mtch highly wrought ap tieala a* till*: "I come to implore you j in behalf of my beloved grandpapa* 1 Spare liiiu! t) respectable (.rceii Bird! do hi* doom lightly!" I knew a little • girl who spent a Winter with two maiden ladies, and who had been pre sented by one of them with a paper doll, gorgeously arrayed. She named It the Marquis, and at once assigned to that nobleman the heart and hand of her younger howl***. He vnu thence fortii alwaya treated with the respect ilue to the head of the house; a chair and plate were assigned him at the table, though for reason* of practical convenience, be u*ually sat In the plate. "Good morning" must alway* be said to him. The In st of everything must lie offered first to him, or else Lizzie wa* much hurt, and the family were charged with discourtoou* neglect. ln deed, slie always chose to take the tone that he did not receive quite the ctinaideraUou to which Ids rank and service* entitled him; and when she first awakened In the morning, -he Would give reproving lecture* to his suppo-cd s;aue. "lie dooaenrerything for you." the child would say to this lady; "he earns money, and buys you all tlint you have; tie shovels your pat lis for you"—this being, perhaps, on a snowy morning when that process was audible —"and yet you do not re member all lil* klndtie**." The whole HSSIIIUIHI relationship w ae treated a an absolute reality, and the lively farce lasted, with undiminished spirit, dur ing the whole of a New England \\ inter.—>' i ihucr/or ■Aiauury. Old Sanies The |>erverslon of names of localities is sometimes very curious. Thus we rend tliis morning in an official dispatch that "the Lighthouse Hoard give* notice that on and after November 10th, a first-class steam siren w ill be sounded at Skilligalee Isle, Lake Michigan." ll would Is* no wonder if this bail sindling had become official, for nobody formally years has called that singularly lonely and dangerous i*lnml near the straits of Mackinaw— Mlchiliniackinae—any other name than Skilligalee. Traced to its origin It is one ot the old and always torso and descriptive French names left by Father Marquette. It is /. prefer the pipe before all oilier methods of tobacco using. Tliere I'lkt objections —but ne.rbet sre Si. I'eter's dome and the Medice*u Venus wholly saliafa, lory, though OU the whole the bed of the Itiod. There ere time* and places tolerant only of Ute rigairtte-. tenderly wlitte and sweetly tragranl: a gntny pipe ta no fit sight for the dark eyed daughter# of warm Castile. Aud have we dined Willi delicate •utuplouiuieaa ; haa er11 stirrewire viand from pearly oyater to perfumed Stilton.at nine run ninitly relieved the palate from what went before, and subtly stimulated it for what wa to route; JU abort, haa Ihe repast lieen an epicurean aonir of lineal harmony -hardly mm we play the epi logue upon a pipe. More tittliiK thete wilt la- the it lined llaliana. dark and tapering, yieldiiiK aln IU white column of moulded a*h, which may be broken from ita tiery base, but crumble* not. let the elderly dowager. with blah aimed unit', and the silk vlu'kinfiHl Fi curl, man of the old regime, i-nslrtiue themselves in their gold luuff IKUM. Aud be not ev en tbat other preparation of the weed too much condemned A hoiseriiiU] oner, ou a twenty-four luar gallop, condensed all nourishment into a mouthful or two of "chewing tobac co," aud it bi ought lulu successfully through. But, after all is *aid, we turn to lite pipe on, e mote, It is belter than chewing and auulfmg. because we tat the nre-email, ipau-d soul instead •( tlie unrefined mate-rial part; better than the cigar, because tiae rigar is a ni,-re *t ianger a parsing aequaintauce; though touch of the line gciitlciuan lie in htm, lie is dry aud formal. Begin ning the conversation with any w.wds of captivating savor, hia language graalually grows stronger, till at tire end he sinks into rank and bitter re pinings; now i* be gone forever and forgotten. No romantic association* can cling to bun; hi* history iacom pr>ed Ui a single event. Ficturewiue lie i# not ; an atlarhe of the fashionable world, it is beneath his dignity to eou sort with such |*ople aa i'euirrs drew ; nor will Iw enroll himself among the familiar spit ita of (met* and philiae pliers. Sliak, .pewie with a i'artaga be tweea his teeth ! Milton wrestling with MII lutitnidad! Dsote puffing a cliejmd' We cannot entertain sucii images. But 1 a quaintly carved pipo-tiowl, **ihie to be independent, j And what i* the way to aiuipa** this j "gloriou* privilege?"' The method Is J very simple. It onu*l*ta in one rule. ] Limit your w ants; make them few and Inexpensive. To do this would inter- j fere hut little with your real enjoy- 'j ment. It i* mostly a" matter of habit, i You require more, or vou are satisfied ; with less—just as you have accustomed j yourself u> one or the other. Limit ! your wants, estimate their cost and never eii-eed it, taking pains to keep It always inside ol your income. Ihu# you wHI secure your lasting indejiend enee. Young men, thiiik of this. A great deal of the happiness of your lives j depends U|MMI it. After having made ' your money. |>eiid it a* ywi choose, hou^-tly; hut he sure you make it first. I slhrr ■■# How. There are tw o regular patrons of the police station In K|ringrield, Mass.. fa ther and sou, of w limit the Union Ihu* •peak*: "When Uie old gentleman get* Into Umbo the sou ap|M.*ar* and proceed* to read him a long lecture on the sin of drinking ami its attendant evils, usually winding up with, "It's good enough for you. I have iloue all that a son could do in make you iive properly, and vou haw no one to blame but yourself." Money is raised to pay tlie old mail's fine, and then tlie son lakes his lura at getting drunk aud *iua*hing thing*. Straight way the lather apjH-*r> at the station home, and, with a benign expression on his countenance, plaintively in quires: 'ls this the example which 1 have set you, ami am 1 to he thus re paid for all my watchful care and ten derness?' The family pay the son's tii.e, and then it is the old man's turn. Tlie funny |tarl of the aflair is that fa ther ami son have been lecturing each other in this way for about nine year*, and neither of them seems to hare the slightest idea of the extreme ludicrous lu-s* which their continued exhortations have attained." Home IwUnewee. Homn, wliich are the nurseries of children who grew up into men,aud w omen, will IK- good or had according to the power that governs tliem. Where the spirit of love and duty pervades the home—where head ami heart liear rule wisely there—where the daily life is honest and virtuous —where the govern ment i* sensible, kind, loving—then may we expect from such a home an Issue of healthy, useful and happy being*. ca|Mhle, as they gain the requi site strength, of follow ing tlie footsteps of their parent.*, of walking uprightly, governing themselves wisely, and con tributing to the welfare of those about them. On the other hand, if surrounded by ignorance, coarseness ami selfishness, they will UiioonselonsljT assume the same character, and grew up to adult years rude, uncultivated, ami all the iuore dangerous to society if placed amidst tlie manifold temptations ol what is called civilized life. "Oive your child to lie' edm-ated by a slave," said an ancient Greek, "and, instead of one slave, you will have two." Übirrvallou of Woman The foot is tlie point of deiiarture for the w hole toilet She who can prettily dress her fret is very easy to costume elegantly, hut a Wolnan who dreads to cxpaae lier feet can never lie well at tired. Tlie German who lias generally big feet, is always badly dressed. Tlie American lias a little foot, so she Is ele gant. The Kiissiau is ravishingly at tired, for she lias little feet. The Span iard is elegant—tier foot is small, hut she dresses it badly. The French wo man has a little foot, and her boot is the height of perfection. HIWS IN BRIIF —lUlooi* liaa a unllbi —d and equip ped militia force of 1160 men. •—California's wool clip l expected to reach 60,000,000 pound* neat season. —The rtrht to Sell pop-corn al the Centennial expoailloii t.a* been sold for 13,00(1. A Corry (fa.) jeweller claims to have a clock that was made In the year Mil. — l Theatrical performances for the f-nnflt of churchy* aru vum wiu In San Francisco. —'The export# of Boston last year ex cnerled In vitltie those of th* preceding year more than seventeen pr cant. —A mongrel yellow dog Is the mail carrier between Httmesof* and Dakota, Michigan, a dlatanoe of slaty miles. —The carpet manufaetares of I'hlla •lelithla are looming up proudly, aggre gating twenty million dollars a year. —'l he members of the National Re publican t onvcuUou will Ire called to uioel at Chicago on the fSth of June. A piano voted to s popular Jmllan ajrolls man at a ladies* relief basaar was immedlstelv seined by die Sheriff to satisfy a debt. —Tlie school children of America annually pay $.#0,000,000 for school book*, of which it U said the publish ers pocket $33,o0(i,0()0. —The Ma>avitle Bulletin offers the suggestion that patent medicine alman acs for 1*76 arc rather green yet lor good kindling purpose*. —'l be number of men called under arui# by the United Stains government for the suppression of the retielllon lion NHIOU tiled to 2,7M.Mf1. —!>Uneati. Sherman &. C-o. have been adjudicated Involn iitary bankrupts ou a petition signed by over SOU creditors, whose ciaims aggregate $2,16#,000. —Estimate# of pork pneking at the *it bdhjle a falling off last year of about-bO,UUU hug*, as compared with 1M74. a decrease of tusarl) ten per cent. —Tlw Boston t 'xmwerclal Exchange ha# voted adversely upou a proposition to Invest $10,0(10 in the l'oughkeeiisie liridge and direct Western route pro ject. —Petitions are being circulated throughout lowa pray lug the ture u> introduce nonneoiiatltv' Into the tnedical d|wrtiiient of the State Uni versity. —Early In the year Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher will resume the management of a department of die Ctoistbt* VmUm, to be tond# < ted iu the interest of bouae keejK-rs. —lnventive progress. From a thou sand patent* a year in 186U, the average * .yearly- number of patent# granted in thia country ha* grown to thirteen thousand. —The second trial of Fiper for the murder of Mabel Vooog, at Boaton, haa been put down for February 1, the Cre# of butioess preventing an earlier earing. —Wabash College forbid* gambling among the students, and the buys plain lively inquire bow they can'be ap pointed Minister to England without a knowledge of poker. —The mercantile tonnage of all nation* foot* up 19,6k9,31Mi ton*, the nnmlH-r of seagoing vessels being S>7 * ik> under sail and 6.6 ik under ate* n making a total of (13,777 vessel*. —SotiM-hody who is curious in reft-r --ew to Uie statistical at • stiuuuee tiuti 880 mv were run in i this country during 1875, and S3BO,(KM) changed hands ou that account. —The ifcpr# of Li.. I), hu been con ferrrd on Governor Belle of New Jersey, and tlie degree of D. D. on Prof. Brigg# of New York t'ulon Theologi -1 '*l Seminary, by the trustee, of Prinoe ton College. —General Sherman it authority for ! the statement tiuti there ia one otftcer for every sixteen o*-n in the effective > fort* of the army. Is there no occa sion for demanding a reduction iu the ! uuuibcr of officer* J —"The Silver Thimble." la the rather neat title of a young ladies' so ck-ty at Ik-chora. low*. The society's uooea# is more than MV-MW, too, tor at a late fair it re tilted several hun dred dollar* for charitable purpose*. —John Montgomery Seam, son of the late John Seara, of Boston, came of age Christmas Day. lie own* more titan S4.(JUO,(XX) of real relate iu Boeton, and ia wrytu many millions more in mortgagee and bonds of various kinds. —The favorable impn**lou made upon traveler* by the Philadelphia line of steamship# Is shown by the fact that during the part year, the American and Krd Star Hues carried *i,BS passengers, against 10,071 for 1874. —Mrs. Abraham Lincoln, who has been in Springfield, Ul. alnoe her atay in the insane asylum, continue* to im prove in beallli aud spirits and visit* among her friend*. She lives with the family of Mr Xinian Edwards, her brother-in-law. —The eo-educstiou of the sexes has been practices) at Cornell College, lowa, from the start, aud the teachers and trustees of the institution are well sat • isited with the workings of the system. Of the 145 members of the alumni fifty six art* females. —A. I- O. K. ;Mi.*s Charlotte Maria Tarher). well known in England ami America/u. a writer of entertaining Sunday whool looks, has eon* freui Kugland to India h> en gag** in Zenana mission work. Miss Taeher is a grand niece of J*nr B<>*well. Dr. Johnson's famous Uograpber. —Wyoming Territory has a new county named Crook, not named alter crooked whiskey, hut after Gen. Crook, who cotnuiaiids'the 1 tapartment of the Piatie, and who tuts done more effective ami Judicious work among the Indian# during tlie past few years thau all the brigadiers ou the frontier combined. —Alanson Palmer, who a few years ago, owned some ul tlie finest steamers on the great lakes, ami whose great wealth, made hiin one of the powerful citixetis of Buffalo, died the other day in au insane asylum, penniless and crazy, at the age of eightv-oue years. He lost his wealth in veckn ss specula tion. —Miss Anna Looiae Cary, the prima douua, has made an engagement to go to Vienna in the spring. She will te turn to America late Fa the summer, and will probably give a concert in I'ortlaud, Me. iu September. She will sing In opera in this country uext *ea sou under the management of Max Strukosch. —A Washington correspondent who has been examining tlw literary tuft of prominent senators, finds that Bay ard la given to reading Constitutional Law and Modern History; Thurman to light French works; Edmonds to English poetry and fiction; Got don to English oratory; Crinkling to the w hole range of llterrfuro; Morton, Schorr, and Logan to cramming on particular subjects. —A sheriff at St. Albans, Vt. having two insane persons to convey from the St Albans jail to an asylum tor the in sane at Brnttleboro, Vt., called one of the lunatics aside and asked his aid in keeping waU li on his companion during the journey, and then did the same with the other. The two lunatics sat side by side, Silently eyeing each other through the whole route, and they have, continually kept guard over each other iu the asylum ever since- The Wind. With what a spirit-like voice does the wind soar over and hatuit the earth! its earliest hymn is low, soft and holy, like the breathing of an infant iu a dream; hut lis tones awaken sooner to louder echoings, and aft the spirits of the air rejolee around It, with the loud shouting* of an aerhd hosannah. Thus it goes on, careering irumanie boundary to the other of the realms of space, re joicing with a great ami exceeding joy in the wild ami nothing sw iftneso oi its tligiit. But it hath also a voice for tiie storms, wild, savage and lonely, scream ing and shrieking, and shattering the wearied air with the terror and woe of | its mighty blastings. • ? /> ffl t SKr.'.k? ttfi#