A Little While, Oh, soul, a little while And thon shalt be released, And fortune shall have ceased To frown for thee or smile. A little, little space, A few brief months or years, Too brief, Oh, sonl, for tears, Then to thy resting-place, Oh, wherafore art thou stirred With weak and idle rage To beat against thy cage Like to aloaptured bird Be still, poor soul, be still ; He soos the sparrow’s fall ; Thy woes He knoweth all; Hush, hush, and wait His will, VOLUME XIV. Unwritten Music, Wo hear its low and dreamy tone Like some sweet angel spell, me to take a chair, while what my work was to be, writing a history, or text he was an enthn wanted it d for the pre work of re-wniting the whole thing legibly was more than he wished to un de rtake, advertised Amanuensis, After this had been explained to me Mr, Humphroys started up. “Get Meott, I want to show you Among the wood-haunts wild and Jone, Where the young violets dwell ; Where the deep sunset flush hath thrown AT, HAs COP IRS, ts glory on the sea, Wa linger for its ceaseless moan That wordless minstrelsy ! 50 he for an The primal world its echoes woke When first the anient sun, Ia all his freah’ning day-spring, broke, His regal moe to run; It floated through those lonely skies, Each immemorial hill, Where now such countless cities rise, The might of human will | ¥ you The cavern'd depths of the wild sea That gather in their lair Such shrieks of mortal agony, Such pleadings of despair, Upon their turgid billows wreathed Such lulling strains have sped, As if their charnel waters breathad No requiem for the dead. know whether away now, bu Th TEE i ¥ vive hy The diapason of the main, bomet 1 ow, and perh mare reasonable. \ next dav Mabel Oh! earth hath not a lonely plain Unblest by mystic song; Its anthem to prolong, The seaman, in his home-franght dream Upon the moonlit waves, Hears, in its undulating stream, The chant of wat'ry caves, thran before, Wold nail Was av Through recogn " A ROCHSIRTENney I'o every old rt 1 , b ttle disappo Its storied legends clung. thie asapix It &lled the wild Baotian hills With fabled visions bl And murmured through t 3 hud pleased 100K A malady unspent, 3 friend not § hanghtiness, hardly gust? Whatever I had expected, nothing at all but pleasant, meaning loss w ords, great ) 1 had ¢ with, and could have intimacy that form Mabel Humphre cott he was one man another. And so the days and she was always friendly with father’s copyist. Toward the phreys came Butter-Scoteh Steele's baptis unt he had friends Bntter fondness f Foon — | I upon the wind, rlorious dower ; politeness, great civil ity hing A vol ; By every glade But most, at twilight’ co the forest ri Wl % i i Half shadow and half A FASCINATING GHOST. wim. roung gentleman who kno loathed. wl wathed him sc . : ’ } ¥ wus a rumor afloat { salary is | was making up her mind & the bangs and ban an advertisement I cut out | 8nd henceforth stick to Butter Post one spring after- | Of course this of itself was enot An. ; IoREe me contemplate placing In the old davsI had been book- | traordinarily bent pin om his chair, keeper for the late concern of Skinflint, | converting aren! Pou Starvehimout & Co., and while with repository fo m I had been getting a good salary, | But independently « to my sorrow said, lived distinct and positive y it: so as I made noth. | loathed the man just a i failure of the concern, and be ever succeeded in xn t wy place as well, I had come | OF not. Of course it was n down very low. I had saved a little, | business, but it did seem a pi nore by good luck than from fore. DY aud see her become the: thought, and this little, used with the | thereby completing the strictest economy, and added to by a | Such a molly-coddle. few dollars made here and there in odd | On? morning I was stan ways, was all that had Zept me alive for A Piszza—just finishing a very However. I didn't Mr. Humphreys had presen the day before, with the he didn’t mind a man smoking a while, if he smoked tobacco, | sbominated ecabl n 11 came out. “Mr. Wolcott,” she g to be busy fora 1 le 80 nen there This was 1 Nis ( r af } er Of | 1 r it elt Wis, whet i Mal py to eighteen months, feel quite disposed to go to the dogs et, for there was always a chance of something turning up ’in a great city like New York. As I looked around my room that evening I realized how bare it was of . either furniture or adornments; how 80 3 kor 4 unlike— Ah, well, there was my paper; | _ 1 SHENK Dot, Wo] ; and I nnfolded it with all the glee of a Humphreys doesn’t Hh child over a mew story-book. There Dbalf an hour yet. was, of course, the usual political news, | “Then will you : - : the usual number of railroad accidents 8round and finish your cigar there? and -eriminsl proezedings; there were * Certainly,” I items of interest to investors and | Pleasure.” : theater-goers and travelers; but nothing: * Iver to the croquet ground we strc for me. I had no money to invest, or and Mabel sat down on one of the r for theaters, or traveling. So I skipped seats, Without preamble of any k all that and went on to the advertise. | She began: - : 1s ments, and the only one of them all “I know you have a friendly feeling worth reading twice was the advertise- | for us all, Mr. Wolcott, and I want to ment quoted above. ask your opinion and advice. . I read it two or three times, and then I bowed, for she was unquestionably decided it was worth trying. So I atc, "are few minutes: replied. fo 1 thin il 1 you come to the croquet answered: * with right about my friendly feeling, but 1 hunted up a sheet of paper and ad- wondered what was coming. : dressed X— as follows: She went on: ** What do yon think of “ My Dear Mr., Mrs., or Miss X.: T| Mr. Steele? Why : : ) Well, that was a poser! What did 1 notice your advertisement in to-day’s ew WOE A DE se issne of the Evening Post. My hand. | think of Butter-Scoteh ? That he was a writing yon can see for yourself. My fool, of course; but I reflected it wonldn't Dy . . . J Ty A 11h a . ion la s 3 f 'O Wak spelling, I think, is nsnally correct, and do to tell her so, particularly if she was there is uo doubt I am a gentleman, | 800g to— Ob, nol it wouldn't do at As to salary, I don’t know what to say— ® I dort wish to value my services at : ri o more than they're worth. Shonld you “I will tell you frankly. There is a mean by ‘remain in employer's very strong inclination on papa's part to 1 ” i HY + ’ house,’ that I would be boarded and | Duy the store house. 1 Os “Why do vou ask, Miss Humphreys?” lodged at your expense, my price—that | Y¢8 I know there is.’ is, asking price—is five dollars a week. “Yours respectfully, “James W. Worcorr.” The next afternoon I heard from my friend X., who proved to bea man, His letter ran thus: “James W. Worcorr, Esq.: “ My dear Sir—You may be a gentle- man, write a good hand, and know how to spell, but you're a fool. I inclose sixty-three cents, the fare to — You will take the 7 a. ». train to-morrow morning from Grand Central depot, and when yon arrive at ——, ask for my carriage, as it will be there to meet you. “Yours, ete, “Sor. HoMpureys,” Sol. Humphreys |-—the last man in the world I would voluntarily have written to, and for employment, too! Two years before I had a very nice little flirtation with pretty Mabel Humphreys, and it had gone go far that if the erash in mv affairs had not ocenrred, I believe the might have been an understanding, ii not an engagement. But as it was I put away all thoughts of love and love- making and dropped pretty Mabel very And now to think I had fairly got “And I don't want he to.” “ May I ask why not?” Jecanse it's haunted.” “1 don't see how that Steele—he isn't haunted.” Mabel langhed. “I don't suppose he is, But that isn’t what I mean, I want to know if he is conrageons enough to go there and see if it really is haunted “Oh, I guess he's preity brav says he is, and Mr. Huampbrey 80 too, I believe.” “Yes, papa is so enthusiastic over Mr. Buot—I mean Mr. Steele's kind heart and religious feeling; he thinks he must be a good man, and not easily frightened.” Bhe looked at me squarely. “And 1 want to know if he's a man fully to be trusted —" “ With untold wealth ?” “No; to see a ghost,” “Ah! I see!” “ You're brave, too, aren't you, Mr, Wolcott?” “You're very kind to say so, but 1 assure you there never was a worse coward than I am. I've no conrage at all--I'm all brain! Now there's the dif ference between Mr. Steele and my self.” Mabel rose. affects Mr. « ha : h : hin leq 8 thinks “Yes, 1 see the differ- 1 might not see much of Mabel, after all. Bo much the better. Bread and butter was a necessity and I must go and make the best of it. The next morning I caught the train, but missed my breakfast, and by the time I reached the house I was decid- edly hungry. Mr. Humphreys met me at the door, and I was pleased to see he did not seem to remember me at all. He put up his eyeglasses, and inspected me from head to foot. “So you're James W. Wolcott, are you, young man?” 1 told him be was not mistaken. I always had that name—born with it, I believed. “And you think you're a gentle- man?” I begged his pardon—didn’t th nk anything about it; it was a self-evident fact. The old fellow grinned. “Suppose you come in and have some breakfast. You haven't had any, I suppose ?” I said I had not.” . « Well, come in and have some.” After breakfast Mr. Humphreys led the way into the library and motioned I wasn't sure whether he would Brain is a good thing, | so is courage; I prefer a happy mixture.” { And with a pleasant little nod she sailed | off. | Inever saw until afterward what a | comparison I had made—one all cour- {age and no brain, and the other all | brain and no courage. I had muddled | things badly, that was evident, and the | worst of it was that she never gave me an cpportunity to let her know I had not intended any disrespect to her future liege. All this time Sol. Humphreys never ceased talking about buying the stone house. At last Mabel made the propo- sition that some night we three, Ned, Butter-Scotch and myself, should go there and stay until morning, and if our report was “no ghosts,” she would not scheme; bnt if anything diabolical or mysterious happened, that her father Icditor and we advanced upon the ng about ed by rior were Eh ¥ 0ClOok, th 0 INA in in il Si A mune and bolted after us, ny 1 BAKO OU axplorations in d escendad, ald be opened instants wed ghost were disp pnt d to be gi t 11 1 3 ¥ y . & Or use language unfit fo I was thinking h there a crash house, . ped Ned, : t you i 11 3 followed by an assortm POON, 18 and fire ROOSI8 It was entertainix £, bul 1 th, he was sl epy. 8 there somethi Was } 3 dg KNowi- t was where me courage; it was 1 pleasant as a woman's, y arms and grasped It shrieked and start d, , and the ghost was 't get away. I didn't contrary, it id, BO didy feel afraid of it then: on the it seemed afraid of “ Dear “1 won't hurt you. The answer “* What ¥ me, 3 * » ghost, sweet 4 "0 came are rn iy that's ¢ yw do you know she is? “Oh, I know well enough. Yon must be a smart ghost not to know that “i She doesn't love him." “ Oh, yes she does. My sweet little phantom, you're entirely mistaken. Come, I'll see if I can't light the lan- tern, if that insane booby hasn't smashed it all to pieces in getting out.” “ ot go, please,” the begged, in a very polite manner, and as it spoke the words sounded to me very much as from a human voice disguised, and vet I couldn't see for the life of me how anything human could have got into the house after we came in, or how anything human conld have made such an everlasting row, and rattled its bones go unpleasant jut the ghost's hands had flesh on My curiosity was aroused, so 1 “No, 1 cannot let you go.” “It's wrong—hugging me, when you love another.” “Whom do I love ?" “Mra, Butter-SBeotch, of course, know all about it," “You do, eh? Then I suppose you know how it all happened 7” “Yes, of course I do.” “Do you know why I stopped ?” ‘‘ Becanse you hadn't money enough to ask her to marry you.” “You're perfectly right, my dear lit- tle ghost, but neither you nor I know whether she'd have married me even if I had happened to have plenty money. I wish vou'd tell me that.” “I won't do anvthing of the kind. I'm perfectly surprised at myself for talking to a mortal so long, Good-bye, man, Go back to the Humphreys and tell them what you have seen. If the old man buys this house won't I make it hot for him! Good bye, mortal.” But I wouldn't let go of the ghosts arm. ‘Please let me go now,” the phantom beseeched. A bright idea came to me. “Can 1 trust you? good for anything ? With great dignity “ Yes: I never lie.” : “ All right. If you'll promise to meet me to-morrow evening under the old apple tree on Mr. Humphrey's place at 10 o'clock, ’ll let you go.” Andas Ire leased my hold the ghost seemed to vanish away, and I opened the door and went ont. My senses were dazed in the open air; the evening had been so strange, so almost suspicious, that I could not fathom it all at once. Be- | sides, I had allowed the ghost to go be- fore it had given the promise to | meet me again. I remembered my stupidity with regret, but somehow I felt the ghost would consider the prom- me ghost Ye iv them. aad] ala. I of I said: Is a ghost’s word it answered: trysting-place, was to give up the idea. "Our consent > | persuaded to enter that house again being asked we cheerfully gave it, and | until daylight. However, the thing was decided to make the experiment that | our report unquestionably, but with night. ; : | great regret, and the next morning Ma- Armed each with a stout stick and | bel was informed of the result, At last IRE HALL, Mabel had retired with a head the rest of us smoked : AS peared 10 1 arose nd strolled off to the old I had been there but a fow | saw a white figure ap if the adjoining Hn ii straight to me and if ing from IY and stopped at my si I lifted said, The nanto iittia il came de my hat. *“ Good evening," 1 ni responded with a neat “ Mortal, 1 ostly courtesy, ver tell a lie,” it said. “Will vou shake hands? Truly a "8 Wi rd ean be believed,” : The phantom me its hand, buat aftor L had bh decent length of time, tried t« possession of it. “ Does the old ge ntleman HON Save eld it a } Fegain believe asked the ghost, “ Yes; it's all right he won't buy the house now, You can remain alone in it in undisturbed possession.” to stay alone in it : phantom, 1 don't how you're going to fix it. Haven't ny relatives to come and help you " sweet “No, none.” “That's bad. I know the dust-pan ire-iron business is jolly, and then yand awfully cheerful to have downstairs; but it’ illiards ts monotonous any one to play with.” for?" 1 rhost Would vou like to be an ommon mortal person ¥ And get married?” I don't know." fond of 5 80 very dear you, ‘ont. You're fond of I, well; you told me that before, and I don't deny it; but, my sweet little ph ntom, she don't two » now,” “ How do you know “Oh, I know it very well ** You're wrong. Why don't you go and ask her?’ “ I'm not going to insult her.” “Do you call that an insult?" ‘Yes—from my position Sweat ghost” 1 NINE Nearer, “let's make believe you're my angel,” my arms around her, and draw- Care one in said, o yon don't love her?" e contrary, it's because I love hat I want re Miss Mabel." t submitted t forgot “James I” arried me to make be- with a good her assumed rhostli- she said, and the voice back two years, and my § POY aled tO me, I said, Al YOu ove vy Lh #4 » * . r I was aclerk on a good salary, an A 18 later Mabel and I were married. jut the secret of our i the stone house and under 00 was never told, and from orth 1 had no fear of ghosts particular little shield and my protection, ga © my owl SL Was m Psy & ] Precious ow ¥ 3 5 WISE WORDS, Whoever conquers indolence ean con- quer most things, Gaming is the child of avarice, In the parent of prodigality. Applause is the spur of noble the end and aim of weak ones. We cannot think too highly of nature, nor too humbly of ourselves. Act well at the moment, and you have performed a good action to all eternity. minds, our True benevolence is to love all men. Recompense injury with justice, and un kindliness with kindness, Flowers sweeten the air, rejoice the air, link us with nature and and are something to love. jnnocence, The firmest friends have been formed in mutual adversity, as iron is most strongly united by the flercest flame, This al thine own self | And it as thi Thon eanst not then Ie wo adl--to must { Ww, Nua kespeare, It is by what we ourselves have done and not what others have done for us’ that we shall be remembered, — Francis Wayland. To pronounce a man happy merely because he is rich, is just asabsurd as to pronounce aman healthy because he has enough to eat Right habit is like the thread on which we string precious pearls. The thread perhaps 1s of no great value, but, if it be broken, the pearls are lost. Were we as eloquent as angels, yet should we please some men, some women, and some children much more by listening than by talking. Wherever the slanderer is found, there humanity is arrayed against itself, and there the honey and balm of life are turned to gall and nettles. If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead, either write things worth reading or do things worth writing. Benjamin Franklin. A firm faith is the best divinity; a good life is the best philosophy; a clear conscience is the best law; honesty is the best policy; and temperance the best physic, Usually the greatest boasters are the smallest workers, The deep rivers pay a larger tribute to the sea than shallow brooks, and yet empty themselves with er in the erannied wall, kK you out of the erannies: on here, root and all, in my hand, Tow but if I could nund« nre, reatand 3 root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is. Tennyson, Je careful that you do not commend yourselves, It is a sign that yonr repu- tation is small and sinking if your own tongne must praise you; and it is full- some and unpleasing to others to hear such commendations. Speak well of opportunity, Never speak ill of them or anybody, unless yon are sure they de- serve it, and nnless it is necessary for their amendment or for the safety and benefit of others.—8ir Matthew Hale, — A tramp with his arm in a sling called on Gilhooley for a quarter, alleging that 1i8 arm had bsen injured in the recent railroad accident near San Atonio, “But yesterday you bad the other arm in a posin’ I had. Don’t you think a fellar's Beside, I have got concussion of the brain and can’t remember half the time which arm was broken,” — Zexas Siftings. B 00. PA.,, LANDING A SWORDFISH, i i A Cemmunicntive Skipper Dilates so the Fan of Catohinglin General, ““ Now, then, all together!” A swing on the peak halyard of a trim smack, and a fourteen foot swordfish rose in the air and was skillfully low ray that had been backed i Ww, ered into a d call vessel said, “That's what 1 eaptain of the holding aside the nendable pride, 80 that the re porter could eateh its points, “ Just that sword, Bee how sharp | ; and | then over the body-—-how the lines round up. The whole fish is made for speed-—a regular privateer, F 1714 ing a roarer,” the | piece of canvas w ith « cast your v& over | @ t 1 1 al » the market, it weighed 400 kind of y meat i= white and rieh and RC KE i: fact, y mackerel family, 80 nr ne ¢ ¥ sy rover t y i one goes t lge that make the finest On in i ey ' mn sport hem, but vou get used to it, hing . I've wenty-two vears, and have eanght some pretty big fish, I can tell you. We nailed this fellow up the Bound, off Montauk, on our way to Martha's Vine yard, and as 1 had se freight here 1 brought hi coast catching like every in the business g at great been t : l t t else, t offer to bring in my- is the around “il wy Si dl 10 give you of the by nds are canght S200 000 In busi ind for Liverpool. ni day off the eel when a 08, only fe there was OI 6 gull il Was ght, ches of wats r, a going off and had started a nto Tynemouth, | gland, where the bark | iy d¢ ck. v4 ak we wit 3 aL 3 ruck was damaged n the was sl { x 1 Owiliers © & own X 1 alll companies, who ¥ vi t not % ti Hey were to Wo k, kind of a a hoo Coax them rigged on top sings ow to fol low him 3 young Bos m fellows out last yead ney hired i anted to do They or the places, and w' Hole Was w%, another was themselves, ono I rees at the helm, and another lashed in like Farragut there was no end of ¢ sighted : } we got port. iwich, and when v in the bow let i the tail, and stling over the ovel iy ~ $ nt, Liu off he went, the rope side and the boys a d mad to keep ont of y 3 make the line fast to a barrel and it over and let the fish tire himself out; but this didn't suit, so they made it fast to the painter of the dory and launched her, and tumbled in just as the slack taut, The dory jumped shead down went in a heap, and one them tumbled clean overboard. We picke d him up and filled away after the boat. First they tried to hanl the fish in, but this started him in another direction, and the rope got foul with the rowlocks and over she went. They all piled to the wind'ard and managed to keep her up, though she half filled. He towed them for about two miles before he let up at all, and then they to take it, and such hanling and getting hanled you never saw. One minute they would make ten or twelve feet on him, and the next he would make a rush, tearing everything and dragging the dory into the water, so that one had to bail out all the time. Before we got up to them I | saw a coat waving, collar down—a sig- | nal of distress—and, as they had worked to wind'ard, we sent the dingy after them, and soon had them in tow, They had ull the fishing they wanted, and were glad enough to give it up. Their hands were all cut up with the rope, end thoy were wet through. One said the rope got wound round his leg and nearly broke it, and altogether they had enough to lat them over night. It was a big fellow, though, and weighed four hundred pounds." “Don’t they grow larger than that?" “ Bless von, yes,” continued the skip- per, who was evidently on a favorite topie. “1 erossed the Bay of Bengal | once, and one evening, it was a dead calm, mind you, we saw some kind of a craft tearing down on us about the size | of a ship's cutter with a leg o' mutton | sail rigged fore and aft, It came with a terrible rush, the sail a waving to and | fro, colored blue like, and in a minute had shot by astern, and we saw it was a swordfish near thirty feet long, If he had ever struck us, They generally 108s CRIN and $ w ney ‘ { t of h } gil commenced good-by ©, fin is about fifteen or sixteen feat high when they are on the surface it stands out of water just like a sail, and the! when cut off would be about thirteen feet long and a good lift for a | man. The fin 18 colored a beautiful | blue, and as they come rushing along, | the sail whistling in the wind, with a | wave of foam ahead, I fell you it'sa| pretty sight. 1 afterward saw a boat | smashed by one. The natives along | the coast tackle them, and have a big | log fastened to the rope, and when they | strike they toss the log over, and get | out of the way as fast as they can, and when the fish is all played out they tow him in. The one I saw had about five boats around him. As soon as it was struck it made a rush and went clean through one, and ent at the pieces right and left.” The men managed to get away and so did the fish. I saw the boat on the beach afterward, and some “Yes; I have often seen a swordfish rush into a school of menhaden. They ish are the thickest, apd you can sectually follow fishes, When they have killed enough they sink, and pick up the pieces as they sink, They're great jumpers. I've one clear ten feet into the air, and thrash around as if crazy, dart off on the surface and turn over, all on account of a little parasite that bores into the skin and drives them almost erazy., In the Bouth sea the people use the bills as swords, fixing some kind of a handle on them, and in some of the large ones, where the sword seen both hands, and form terrible weapons in the hands of a large wan, who could bring down two or three persons at a blow. “Sawfish and swordfish never seem to get along together,” continued the skip per. * I was coming out of Chesapeake bay once, drifting along about five miles to the south'ard of Cape Charles, it being a dead calm, when all at once we saw a great splashing around about thirty yards astern. 1 went aloft and saw a sawlish and a swordfish fighting like mad, The sawfish's best chance was to keep in close quarters, and the way he pounded that swordfish was a caution. The saw wonld swing so fast you couldn't see it, and then the fish would back off as if he was trying to tear the other. The swordfish hacked away at the same time, but the skin of the other was too thick, and so they had it, now out of water and now in, for about ten minutes. All hands were watching in the rigging, but all at once the swordfish made off, leaving the other lashing away as if blind with rage. It wasn't a second hardly before a big fin was seen ten feet off, and like a shot the swordfish had struck the other and jammed his sword clean through him. 1 hey both rose in the air with theshoek, and then the struggle commenced again, swordfish was fast and couldn't haul out, and the other was half dead, 80 right here we took a hand, lowered a boat and harpooned them both, rigged a tackle and got them aboard. The sword had broken the backbone of the other fish, aud it was so wedged in that they would both have been gobbled up by the first shark that came along.” Here one hailed the skipper with the information that the tide was on the ebb, and we parted company. New Y ra Sun, some Annoyances of Editors, Not editors alone but nearly all busi. Hess men daily receive communications from individuals in whom they have not the slightest interest, but who, neverthe- loss, feel terribly aggrieved if the most senseless inquiry isnot immediately an- swered by the long-suffering portion of humanity whose trials Job himself could scarcely have borne with patience. Some persons seem to havea mistaken impression that the business of other people conldn't be carried at all withont “valuable suggestions and ad. vice ym themselves,” said **advice” in a badly spelled, en missive, informing the “he's an 1diot, the writer always knew he all dissatisfied cor. ondents don't express their opinions straightforward manner, , in the end, really amounts about the same thing. As a rule, editors are not unwilling to answer respectful queries, or those in any way benefit the ques- tioner or the public; but when, during a political campaign, somebody wants to know if the aspirant for gubernatorial honors really did throw his mother-in- law over a mammoth two-inch boulder into a roaring, rushing, foaming, fathom- less washtub below, or why it isn't grammatical to say “them ink bottles is mine,” the average editor is apt to pine for a “lodge in some vast wilder NOGRN, Another annoyance is caused by as- pirants to literary honors, who begin by saying: and asking why they can't write length. wise and and diagonally across the paper when they send an article for publication. If some such original genius didn't take special pains to say be took the pen in his hand, al- most any editor would be just foolish enough to imagine that the writer shoved it up under his left optic, or tied it to a lock of his auburn hair, but the positive statement that he holds the pen in his hand precludes the possibility of any conjecture on the subject, thus saving the editor's valuable time, as he might otherwise spend several precious minutes speculating on the matter, Then there are the * chronic grumb- lers” who never were satisfied with anything, and never will be, and who send delightful autograph letters to the unfortunate publisher of some paper, complaining that he * prints too much trash, and too little sense, or too much sense, aad too little trash,” anything in fact that will do to growl about, and make people think the sun is under a permanent eclipse. Then, too, the “ gwoet affection” that exists between the editors of rival papers must be a source of intense gratification to all concerned, and be accused of conduct. ing any publication simply from merce- nary motives, when everybody knows that editors are dead-heads, and poverty- stricken beings anyhow, must soon cause regret for the vanished days of happy childhood, when they could play “mumblety-peg” with the tolerable certainty of hitting somebody with the deadly weapon need in that delightfel game, These are but a few of the daily trials to which editors are subjected, although * life is not all dark” to them anymore than individuals who follow some other profession, Most people have as many friends as they deserve, and doubtless the delight of occupying a conspicuous position at circuses and public entertainments more than coun- terbalance any trifling annoyance like the few herein mentioned, —/na 8. Hud- som, in Detroit Free Press. RII Lions in Afriea on coming ritt Ww SOUTHG » above BRAY Wh that can CrosSswise, A recent traveler in equatorial Africa gavs: Lions are one of the dangers between Zanzibar and the great lakes. They sometimes hunt game in packs of six to eight. Some animals show fight against them successfully, Lions never venture to attack the adult elephant, and even avoid the buffalo, unless they are more than two to one. In general they do not attack caravans, and never in daytime. while passing through the brakes and jungles. Bat it is otherwise at night. When lions scent the caravan from afar, of burden, they approach and announce their ,vicinity by terrific roars. Never clear the obstacles, and marksmen from behind palisades can pick them ofl’ with almost unfailing aim. There is danger only when the camp is not completely inclosed, or when those inside go out to attack them, w—— lishment, Sn OA 2.00 18, 1881. $ SCIENTIFIC NOTES, In a recent sun disturbance a pro. tuberance was thrown up from the sur- face which was 205,000 miles long, but in a few hours it subsided to only 18. 000 miles, : A Paris manufacturer claims to have discovered a process for substituting the leaves of the eucalyptus tree, which in burning emit a delicious perfume, for tobacco leaves in making cigars, The director of the bureau of statis- ties at Vienna has 1aale some interest ing researches concerning the compara tive longevity of women and men in Eu- rope. He finds that out of 102,831 in. dividuals who have passed the age of ninety-nine years 060,303 are women, and only 42,628 are men. In Italy 241 alleged centenarian women are found for 141 men of that age. A spider's web affords an excellent barometer. An old sportsman of Cold: water, Mich., claims that one preserved in his house has proved almost invariably correct. When rain and wind are ex. pected, the spider shortens the thread which suspends the web. When reefs are let out, fine weather may be certain; but if the spider remains inert, rain will probably follow within a short time, Near Bchunga, on the western shore of Lake Onega, Russia, a new kind of coal has been discovered more highly carbonized than any formerly known. On analysis, it gives about ninety-one per cent of carbon, seven or eight per cent. of water, and one per cent. of ash, In appearance the coal has an adaman- tine luster, and it is very hard and dense. Its specific heat is set down as 0.1502. Although the proportion of carbon is so high, it yields none of the reactions which would justify its elassi- fication as a true graphite. At a mesting of the Physical society, London, on June 25, Dr. Guthrie showed a new experiment in magnetism. When s magnet is suspended over a disk of copper and the disk rotated the magnet is repelled upward, In the experiment a horseshoe magnet was suspended from one end of a scale beam and coun- ter weighted, As an explanation of the phenomenon of repulsion it was sug- gested that the vertically resolved force of induction current before the et might be greater than that ~t the a mag behind the magnet, The printers of Vienna propose to celebrate the four hundredth anniver- sary of the introduction of Gauten- burg's art in that city in a manner be- fitting so memorable an event. Anillus. trated book, prepared in the best style of the printer's craft, and treating of the history of the art in the Austrian capital from its infancy, is to be one feature of the celebration. Another will be an exposition of all the inven- tions and improvements made during the gradual development of printing. Twenty prominent printers and pnb. lishers of Paris will attend the festivi- ties, and all the leading cities of Eu- rope are expected to send representa- tives, A Forest Scene Beside the Amazon On the third evening after our de- parture from Bogota we encamped on the banks of the Rio Patamayo (a tribu- tary of the Amazon), in a grove of ma- jestic sdansonias or monkey fig trees, High over our heads we heard an inces- sant grunting and chatiering, but the evening was too far advanced for us to distinguish the little creatures that moved in the top branches of the tall The next morning, however, the noise recommenced, and we saw that the grunters were a sort of small rac- coons, and the chatterers a troop of monos or capuchin monkeys. After a consultation with the Indians we fastened our monkey, Billy, to a string, and made him go up the tree as high as we cou'd drive him without be- traying our presence to his relatives We had no traps for catching them, but our plan was to let them come near enough for us to shoot one of the mothers without hurting her babies, Billy's rope, as we bad expected, got entangled before long, and finding him- trees, the attention of his friends in the tree. top. We heard a rustling in the branches, and presently an old ring-tail made his sppearance, and seeing a stranger his chattering at once brought down a troop of his companions, mostly old males, though. Mother-monkeys those in the tree-top seemed to have some idea that all was not right. and nearer, and had almost reached Billy's perch, when all at once their leader slipped behind the tres like a dodging squirrel, and at the same mo- ment we heard from above a fierce, long-drawn scream; a harpy-eagle was circling around the tree-top, and com- ing down with a sudden swoop he seized one luckless mother-monkey that had not found time to reach a hiding- place. The poor thing held to her branch with all her might, knowing that her life and her baby's were at stake, but the eagle caught her by the throat, and his throttling clutch at last made her relax her grip, and with a sin- gle flop of his mighty wings the harpy raised himself some twenty feet, mother, baby and all. Then we witnessed a most curious instance of maternal devo. tion and animal instinet-—unless I should call it gres*noe of mind; when branch after branch slipped from her grip and all hope was over, the mother with her own hands tore her baby from her neck and flung it down into the tree, rather than have it share the fate she knew to be in store for herself. 1 stood up and fired both barrels of my gun after the robber, but without effect; the rascal had already ascended to a height of at least two hundred feet, and he flew off, with his vietim dangling from between his claws.—Dr F. Oswald, in St. Nicholas, ‘recious Dirt, Great care is taken in the shops o jewelers and others where articles are manufactured of gold to prevent the waste of the precions metal. Every preserved for the assayer. wheels on which gold or silver are pol- ished, when they are worn out, are particles of the precious metals that cannot be seen with the naked eye. Even the sweepings of the shops are | kept, and are worth about §70 a barrel after the most scrupulous care has been taken to prevent stray pieces getting in to it. It is said that the Scotch assayers are most successful, Sometimes assay- | ers will buy the sweepings of a shop at | of what they will yield. Whenever a shop floor is to be taken | that the dirt accumulated in the crevices floor. Jewelers say that the value of the shop dirt is owing to the dust of metals that is blown about the place, | and not from any carelessness.of work- | men. Even after the assayers have got | hough the loss on jewele:s' stock is i generally about two per cent, This in- cludes whatever ‘may be taken, if any- thing, by dishohest workmen.— New York Sun. y —— cto ————————— 5 ARH TA ASIP I TASTE WL RA in Advance. NUMBER 32, sors rome “OLD HICKORY'S"™ NOSE. Licutennnt Randolph's Attack on Presls dent Jackson, A Washington letter gives the follow- ing socount of an affair which created a great stir at the time it occurred, Lien. tenant Randolph's attack on President Jackson in 1833 : Lieutenant Robert B. Randolph, of the navy, on board the frigate Constitu- tion, was appointed by Captain Pattor- son, in the year 1828, to assume the da- ties of acting purser, in the place of John B, Timberlake, the purser, who, | ina fit of drunken delirium, had com- | mitted suicide, Timberlake was the | first husband of the future Mrs, General Jolin H. Eaton, nee Peggy (Neal, who eujoys the dabions honor of having | eansed the dissolution of Genersl Jack- | son's first Cabinet. Randolph took | charge of the office or duties of purser, | and, in his statement of the ease, he com- plains that the survey and inventory re- | quired by the regulations or the law’ were not made, and that he was held | accountable for an amount of stores which were not on hand. After some years he was found to be a defaulter, on | what he insisted was an assumed state | of facts, when he took charge of the pursership. A court of inquiry was ap- | pointed to investigate his accounts | Their report exonerated him from an intentional misuse of the public - 1 erty, but not from the defanlt. They | reported him to be careless or neglect. | ful, though not dishonorable. Other- | rendered the country valuable service. | On this report General Jackson dismiss- | ed him from the service, in spite of the strenuous efforts of influential friends in his behalf. It was to avenge himself | for this injustice, as heregarded it, that | he made the violent assault upon the | President. The friends of General Jack- son were never willing to admit the fact, | but his opponents insisted that Ran- | dolph pulled the old hero's nose. That | seems to have been the purpose of the | ruffian, st any rate ; and the blood upon | the general's face would seem fo prove that the attempt was succeseful. The opportunity for this outrage was | farnished by a {trip of the President, a’ portion of his Cabinet, his private secre- | tary, and other friends, down the Poto- mac to Fredericksburg, in Virginia, to witness the ceremony of laying the cor- per-stone of the monument to the memory of the mother of Wash. | ington. The boast stopped at Alexandria for a few moments, and while there a number of persons came | on board, and among them Mr. Ran- dolph, the late lientenant in the navy, | who had recently been dismissed from the sorvice. He entered the eabin where the President was seated and en- | gaged in reading a newspaper. He ad- vanced toward the President as if to ad- dress him, and seemed to be in the act fo drawing hisglove. “The Presiden,” says the account in the Globe, “not | knowing him, and supposing it was. some person about to salute him, and | seeing him at some difficulty in getting off his glove, stretched out his hand to- | ward him saying, ‘Never mind your | glove, sir.” Randolph having then dis- | engaged himself from his gloves, thrust one band violently into the President's face, and before he could make use of the other received a blow from a gentle. man standing near by him with an um- brella. Almost at the ssme time two other gentlemen in the cabin spran upon him, and he was dragged back gn thrown down. “The moment he was assanlted the President seized his cane, which was lying near him on the table, | and was forcing his way through the gentlemen who had crowded round Randolph, insisting that no man should stand between him and the villain who | had insulted him ; that be would chas- | tise him himself. Randolph by this | time had been borne toward the door of | the cabin, and pushed through it to the deck. He made his way through the crowd on the deck and the wharf, being | assisted, as is believed, by some ruffian | confederates, and made his escape. He | stopped for a few moments at a tavern | in Alexandria, and passed on beyond the district line. The grand jury, then | presentment against him, and the court | issued a bench warrant. A magistrate | had just previously issued a warrant, but beforethst officer pould arrest him he was gone.” An eye-witness, writing to the Rich- | mond Enguirer, gives some additional | sarticnlars, as follows: “When the Pe riaant said, ‘Never mind vour glove, | sir,’ Randolph said in a low tone that he | came to ‘take his revenge by pulling his | nose,’ suiting the action fo the word. ! The President exclaimed in astonish- | ment, ‘What, sir! What, sir!’ Ran-| dolph on the instant was struck by Mr. | Potter with an umbrella a very severe | blow, which knocked him against the : YK ae 0% x i, Yel *ng among the sheaves, where one ay —— - In uobvn with Gog, oar as} ia rosight The 0 ui future Fivud fn cy And ours the grate : Comen day by day thdT¥i00 whence The hope, the trust, the plPonse; The fountain and the noonda¥e, Sayed, John 1, HUMOR OF THE DAY, “1 love thy rocks and drills.” as the | voung fellow sang to the rich miner's daughter, — Salem Sunbeam, Rocking-chairs wonld be more com. fortable if they were less tidy. Chaff rot aa wi, occu {4 oil on r, ways. us a head-light,— Statesman The hen now sits on the garden fence But ean no mischief hatch, b Because the seeds have all come 8p; Plants are too big 100 scrateh, «= Wit and Wisdom, “ A rolling stone gathers no moss” but one that sticks in the same place continually gets so covered with moss that it can’t see its way out.~~58i, Lowis Sprit. It is the easiest thing in the world to write fun. Allyou've got todo isto sit down and think of it and then write it. We could write columns of it—if we could think of it, —Mildletowen T'ransorivl. a 1 hy i Lenshent t lion recently held at ay was read showing a large : a defect in sight among scholars, whi would seem very nsturally to arice from the disorder of the pupils.—Sta/esman, One can't be too careful with fire. arms. A Marathon boy carried a pistol in his coat ket, and one day last week while was in swimming pistol unexpectedly went off. He has no ripen an bo who took it.— Mar “Will coming man ily? is the conundrum that the Somerville Jowna, man is wrestling with, and thinks it will Ww think it he afte 5 8 4 more whether the coming woman an poker, Danbury hes a baseball nine called the Aquenuckaquewsok club. Whena member is seen with his jaw tied nit is not known whether be stopped a ball” with his cheek or simply atte iy again pied * The Chinese written Ia con- sists of one hundred Row Jen, oft 05 acters, All the natives of high northern lsti- tudes are short, measuring little more than four feet. Let him who regrets the loss of time make proper use of that which is to come in the future, The Druids gathered their sacred mistletoe with a gold knife when the moon was six days old. In domestic animals, such as the horse and cow, the coat is of a some what lighter color in winter than i summer, the body of a deer, wool of a sheep and neigh of a horse. Leland mentions a feast given reign of Edward V., oe y a sheep, 2,000 geese, 000 custards were consumed. It is asserted by Sir Gardiner Wilkin- son that Egyptian mummies have been discovered with teeth stopped wi gold. There is nothing new under the sun. Ordi rate of speed per second of 8 ping is four feet, of a horse twelve feet, a hare cighty-one feet, a twenty-four pound cannon ball eighteen hundred feet. An suk’s egg was sold in London not long ago for $500; only fifty of these eggs are known to be in existerce, but the fabled roc’s egg could scarcely command a higher price if offered for sal 5 a, The objection to horses with white feet, though mostly considered a mere caprice, is reaso enough, for white hoofs are more brittle than black ones, and are much more liable to break and contract than those of a dark color. In some countries, especially in the East, obesity is considered a beauty, and Tunisian young ladies are fattened before marriage. the contrary, used to daughters before the ceremony, to give them leanness. There are few printing offices so ele- vated as that of the Brothers Benziger, at Einsleden, Switzerland, a village on a mountain lain, more than 3,000 feet above the level of the sea, and at the foot of the far-famed Mieten. All kinds are printed there, and as the plsce is one of the four most famous re- work done at Benziger's is in some way connected with foe of Sharaster o the lade, and a great is done in pic- re of the saints executed in chrome- lithography. Feat of a Surveying Party. Ambrose Lomprax, of Natchitoches, 1a, was with a party of surveyors that were attacked by Apaches south of El Passo, in the State of Chihuabua. Lom- rax says be joined the the day ore the attack, and that night he lost berth, Captain Brown June} bi a a howe aias hired DO saw what dragged him with violence m the he ed as signs of the presence President, and Major Donaldson rushed | Indians in the neighborhood. The next toward the table in his anxiety day the party started, and he lingered to protect the President. It was gbout half a mile behind. When the the work of an instant. The President = party reached the Sand Hills the fight- exclaimed, seizing his stick, ‘Let no | ing began. Lomprax says the parly man interfere between me and this per- were well armed and were brave men, sonal assault; I am an old man, but but they had no leader, and did not perfectly capable of defending myself know how to fight Indians. He tried to against, and punishing adozen cowardly ' join the party, but was prisoner assassins.’ It is said that a person by the Indians, and would have been named Thomas approached the Presi- | killed had not his lost Mexican boy ap- dent, and, tendering his hand, observed | and told she Indians that he was he wonld murder the dastard. The | was secured and could not see the fight. President put by his hand, saying : ‘No, | The surveyors, thirteen in number, gir; I donot wish the majesty of the | fought desperately against the Indians, laws insulted for me. I am capable of | who numbered forty-five or forty-six. defending myself against insult.” Six of the latter were killed and nine cn —————— | wounded, and al of the Whites were : ‘killed, six of them being dispatched Bow Literature Pays. ' while lying on he field RE Lame Milton received $25 for * Paradise | prax says the Indians were under Lost;” Pope $40,000 for his * Transla- | most rigid discipline. After the battle tion of Homer;” Edgar Allen Poe 810 | they took Lomprax into the Sierra for “Ihe Raven;” Dr, Holland $12,000 A Madre mountains, where they buried for “Bitter Sweet,” $8,000 for ** Ka. | their dead. For more than a week the trina” and $5,000 for the * Mistress of A Indians depredated under Uuris in So- the Manse:” Mr. Bonner, of the Ledger, | nora, committing a number of m paid Tennyson $5,000 for a single poem; ' They went down the coast of the Gulf Augusta Evans Wilson, author of of California, snd in crossing to an « Beulah,” has made $100,000 in eight | island Lomprax made his escape and years out of her novels; Sir Walter | got safely to Guaymas, after a severe Beott made £259,000 out of his; Bret five days tram Lom says the In- Harte received 510,000 for * Gabriel dians were under the command of Vie- Conroy,” Dickens $15,000 for the copy- | torio, as he knew that chief very well right ‘on * Barnaly Rudge” for six | by sight. months; Stanley has already received | £50,000 for his “Through the Dark! A board of trade return just issued Continent;” Shakespeare got $25 for | shows that the mortality in the British « Hamlet;” Boucicanlt $250,000 for | merchant service from all causes was “The Shanghran.” | 4,100 last year, an increase over the me ——— year before of 408. This increase is The First Lady Smoking a Pipe. nown to be far in excess of that which roperly have been antici “Aye!” remarked an old man on Sat- e improved condition the urday evening, as the people gazed upon | oarrving trade. The record appears the White House windows, wondering | gti] worse when the deaths through then show that 675 more sailors-were + dtowsed:by wheel £ in 1880 thaa in the previous year, the respective totals being 1,653 and 978, Of the 4,100 sail- ors who lost their lives last year in the teen are returned as having died muhiral ousiges Tiamugh be ever, eaths cy diseases are excluded fled i cop — 1 1 might from I entered that house I was told I should find our President (General Taylor) in to the right. As I walked song a my olfactory organs, I entered the room, and ice, gentlemen, I saw Mrs. General Taylor seated at tl eside smoking a clay eg ar Queen, In England, as late as the Reforma- tion, eating flesh in Lent was rewarded with the pillory. :