a= THRE DECLINE OF FAITH. As In some half-burned forest, one by one, We oateh far echoes on the dreary breese, Born of the downfall of its rained wrees-— While even through those that stand slow shudderings run, As if fate’s hand were sternly laid thereon : Thus, in a worid smitien by fou! disease That pest called Doubt—we mark by sad de grees The fall of lordileat faiths that wooed the sun: Bome, with low sigh of parted bough and leaf, Strain, quivering downward to the abhorred ground; Some totter feebly, groaning, toward their doom ; While some, broad-centuried growths of old : Belief, : Sapped as by fire, defeatured, charred, dis. crowned, Fall with loud crash and long, reverbant boom | Thus, fated hour by hour, more gaunt and bare, Gloom the wan spaces, whenoce—a power 10 bless Unbourgeoned onee, in grace or stateliness, Some ereed divine, offspring of light and air What then 7 Aa! must we yleld to bleak de spalr, Beholding God himselt wax less and less, Paled In the skeptical flame-cloud’s whirl and stress, Till lost to love and reverence, hope and prayer? O Man! When trust is blind and reason reels Before some flery, fleres loonoeclast, Turn to thy Heart that reasons not, but teels ; Creeds fall, surines perish !| “Still” (her In- stinot salth)— #81111 the Soul lives; the Soul must eonquer Death! Hold fast to Gol, and God shall bold thee fast I” : —— A ———————— Priests and Bishops. ——— Important Decision in the Supreme Court in Michigan. In the Bute Bupreme Court the fol- lowing decision was filed at the June term : Alphonse Rose, plaintiff in error, vs. J hn Vertin, Roman Cstholic Bishop of Marquette, defendant in error. The Bishop of a Diocese is not, from his position as Bishop, personally lia ble for the salary of a priest in charge af a church in such Diocese. Error to Marquette. F. O. C.ark, for plaintiff in ercor. W. P. Healy, for defendant in error. Graves J. The plaintiff sued in the eharacter of assignee and owner of a claim of Joseph F. Berube for $300 on account of services by sald Berube as a priest in the now Diocese of defend- ant. A verdiet in the defendant's favor was ordered by the Court, Berube was placed on duly as an officiating priest by defendant’s pre- decessor, Bishop Mrack, and the en- tire claim in suit arose during that Bishop's time and before the defend- ant came in. The main facts of the case are undisputed, and the enly question is concerning their effect, and in my opinion they show dis- tinctly that the relation between Bishop Mrack and the priest was never that of hirer and hired in any sense implying an obligation on the Bishop to pay the priest. The Bish- op was the priest's superior, and ac- cording to the established order of things in the economy of the Church government, regulating the degrees, subordination and the methods of administration, it was the province of the Bishop to designate the place for the priest to exercise his fune- tions, and prescribe under certain limitations the rules and precepts for his guidance and control. But both were common servants of the Church and the service of the priest was not then a service for the Bishop, nor was the Bishop in respett to the employ- ment a principal. In the cour:e of the administration the Bishop assign- ed the p lest to a theatre of duty and gave him certain rules and instruc tions, and it was manifestly under- stood on both sides that the Bishop was not to be held responsible in law for the salary. On the contrary, the conclusion is anadvoidable that the council of the congregation, on whom the Diocesan regulations cast the duty to provide a support for the clergy, were wholly trusted to supply the necessary means to pay the plaintiff's assignor. I. was surely competent for Berube to serve in reliance on that resource, and run the risk of failure, and there is no doubt that he did so. Exactly simi- 1ar arrangements are taking place every day. Men are constantly oing into positions under appointment by superior agents,and where no liability for comipensation rests in the employ- ing agent, and the means of psy nent if they came at all are to come frem another source, Cases of llustration are infinite. — They sbound in business operations, and marked instances msy be seen in the great missionary enterprises which are carried on, No one sup- poses the existence of a legal labil- ity. Tals view decides the case, snd makes it unnecessary to discuss the question whether in any event the present Bishop could be held as the * successor of Bishop Mrack, The judgment is affirmed with costs, ; (The other Justices concurred.) Michigan Paper. The Yellowstone Park, ——— The Yellowstone Park is simply a land of wonders and surprises, Such photographs sa I have seen totally fall to give the slightest conception of it. There is nothing like it in the world. The Bwisa Alps appear small and in- different to me afterseeing these mam- moth sulphar springs and geysers. They are literally indescribable, Their extent, their variety, their infinite ir regularity must be seen to be realized. Their incrusted forms seem t+ have a law of their own construction. [mag- ine a series of huge basins, formed as regularly as the fountains ia the Eu- ropean city, leaning over each other hundreds of feet in height, and each varying in color from a dull lake-red to snow white. There are high hills of beautiful cryatallized sulphur, countless geysers of hot sulphur water, that throw up jets and columns from 20 to 200 feet. As a great sanitarium it seems to me the park will some day be a national resort. It is bountifully watered by clear streams that abound in fish, and game is plentiful. Except the Marshall House, a rude frame structure, there is no place of accommodation there as yet, and while the trails and road ways obvious enough and fairly passable for vehi- cles, there has been a strange omission on the part of the government custo dians to erect signboaris ut the cross- ings giving the distances and the directions to the various points, A government police is sadly need- ed to prevent wanton and careless conflagrations, which have already destroyed vast bodies of valuable tim- ber, and disfigures the face of the country, There can be no doubt of the abundance of game In the park, I saw a herd of elk on three different occasions, scattered antelope every few days, and bear tracks were plenty in the snow, We had no diffisuity in procuring elk meat, and what was far better, the meat of the wild moun- tain sheep. It was the best mutton I ever tasted ; in flavor and delicacy 1 think it was superior to the famous Welsh mutton. Capt. Gorringe count- ed more than three hundred sight seers ; they came principally from the Pacific coast, We also came across companies of men engaged 1n fishing snd shooting and drying and salting the trout 0 winter use. Bagging a Bull Elephant, A correspondent of the Cape Times gives the following account of an ele phant shooting expedition undertaken by fopr Europeans from the neigh- borhood of Kuysna: “The party en- tered the forest spd after crossing numerous spor: finally came upon that of a veritable patriarch, which they followed for about an bour; but the old gentleman's wanderings be- coming too tortuous and intricate the periy decided on taking sa straight course through the forest toward the sea. Finding traces of a numerous herd, the spoor of these was followed until about twelve of our canine as sistants in the proceedings lifted up their voices and announced the vicin- ity of the mighty game. As a warning of approaching danger, such an ex- pression of feeling on their part was hardly necessary, as the noise of falling trees, the crackling of brush. wood and the shrill and peculiar trumpetings of these huge creatures was quite suffizient to cause every one who had not already raised him- self to a safe elevation to wish that he had devoted some of his idle hours to practicing the art of climbing. Buch a serious view of the case was hardly necessary this time, however, aa the berd scampered off, leaving one of their number, a fine bull, to square matters with his tormentors, The party. then rushed forward, each anxious to secure for himself the best chance of a shot, but their ardor was somewhat chilled by a sudden and angry trumpeting on the part of the elej hant, which always indicates that he is in the act of charging. Then followed s succession of extra ordinary manos uvres on his part, the huge brute tearing up trees, some of them sctually nine inches in diame ter. Two of the party just gained a friendly branch for the purpose of reconnoitering, when the elephant, persecuted by the dogs, charged straight up to the tree and stood right under the branch where they were standing. In this position it was con- sidered inadvisable to fire, as if death had not been instantaneous the ele phant might have easily osught them. Almost immediately (he ele phant was seen coming straight to. ward the party. Oa he came in good style and aftr a fashion that left little doubt as to his intentions. There was no cover of any kind, so the party stood their ground. The elephant was now within less than 20yards dis tance, aud one of the party fired, but the shot falled to stop him. The mat- ter was getting rather serious; he was now within eight yards, making straight for the party. Another gen- tleman, who was armed with a double gun of powerful calibre, now fired but having only a very imperfeet footing * on the stamp the recoil pushed him off and he fell right in the enemy's Way, His shot, though splendidly aimed, passed, as was afterwarde ascertained, through the elephant’s trunk, and glancing off under the ear, did him little actual damage. He was now within a stride of the stump upon which all were standing. The others, who seemed to be reserving their fire too long, now let him have it, and six bullets were put nto him; these told, he turned outside of the tree snd stubbornly retreated. Bo close did he pass that almost every one of the party could have touched him with their rifles. As he retreated, the gentleman who fell had recovered himself, and gave him a parting shot in the side, the result of which wasa very percepti- ble stagger on the part of the elephant, and was the first ¢y nptom he had y t shown of getting the worst of it. He now charged at the dogs, and having covered a distance of about thirty yards was again brousht to bay; this time he received a volley of bullets snd displsyved as much indifference about the matter a3 if he only received a shower of mealies, Up to this he showed great coolness a.d command of temper. Another volley at aboat fifteen yards distance efl:cted a won- derful change. Then commenced such terrific screams and yells of rage—the brute knocking over everything he came in cantact with—as surpass description He was now thoroughly aroused ; the firing became general, and it was every man for himself, Right snd left he charged, the thick bush giving way before him like bulrushes before the wind. His course could be easily seen by the swinging motion of the trees as he pushed by them or smashed them beneath his feet. This, the fir:t really serious exhibition of temper on his part, caused the entire party to draw together. They took up a posi- tion between two small trees, and upon an old stump about eighteen inches high. It took ten more shots to finish him. He made his last stand at the foot of a large yellowwood tree, against which the sagacious brute leaned for support. Three times he charged from this tree, and as many times returned. He was now showing signs of weak ness and his trumpeting became less frequent. Collecting all his strangth he made another rush for his enemies. This time he was hit hard ; he staggered, trumpeted ones more, and with a tremendous yell sank heavily to the ground and died in 8 few seconds. He had twenty seven bullets buried in him. i AAAI cs sons A Human Monster, Mr. Paul Bert has lately sent to the editor of La Nature from Geneva, two photographs of a human monster ex- hibited there, living and sged five years, having been born at Turin in 1877. It has two heads, four arms, and two chests, but one abdomen and pelvis, and two legs ; that is, it is deu- ble above the middle of the body. The fusion of the two bodles begins at the sixth rib. From due examination and from what has been observed In previous monsters of the kind, they were named Xiphodyme by Isodore Geoffroy, 8t, Hilaire, It may be af- firmed that there are four lungs, two hearts, and two stomachs ; the small intestine is double at ita commence- ment, but is in grester part simople. They are really two individuals The right leg obeys only the right in- dividual, who alone feels any one pinching it; and similarly with the left. The sensibility of half the body is in exclusive rapport with the head of the same side. The two individuals were baptized doubly under the names of Jean and Jacques. They are equally developed from physical points of view, except a slight club foot on Jacques’ leg, and intellectually they are much alike, Their intelligence is normal ; they reply the questions of visitors in French, Italian and Ger man, They seem to be gentle and amiable, alse lively, often playing to- gether while lying on cushions, or on the knees of cheir reputed father, It is said that they have never been ill, It has been shown in the case of other double monsters, that one may have an Inflammatory fever, while the other oontinued well; but the like could not occur with infectious dis- ease or poisoning. Beveral cases of these Xiphodyme monsters have been recorded in history, but very few of them have lived. Irish Times. The Cock-Tails Did It, Invisible lemon: A man recently fell down on Warren street, He was a large Individual, and took up lots of the sidewalk, and a bystander thought it the proper time to be fun. ny. “How did you come to fall?’ he inquired. “Oa a bit of lemon— “Yeu, sir; ona bit of lemon,” replied the corpulent one. “Bat I see no lemon,” replied the funny man. “Well, who said you could ?" savage he got up and dusted himself off with his handkerchief. “Can any one see the lemon in half a dosen cocktails, say A Smmple Way of Making the Stars Regulate Your Watch, It is not generally known that there is available to every one a most simple and accurate method of regulating a clock or «atch, when acoess to stands ard time at short intervals is inconve- nient cr impossible, It consists sim- ply in observing the time at which any particular star sets, or passes the range of two fixed objects on different nights. It is necessary to have the gorrect clock time to start with ; after that, a clock may be kept within a very few seconds of standard time for any number of vears without any difficulty. The sun cannot be used for this purpose, for the reason that there are only two days in the year when it is on the meridian of a place at noon by elock time, It may be a much as fourteen and a half minutes fast, or sixteen and a quarter minutes slow on different days; and besides, the determination of its alt’ tude with any degree of accuracy requires the use of special instruments, and much skill in observation. To determine the time by observa. tion of a star, on the contrary, is a matter of great ease, and no instru- ments are necessary. The mode of operation is as follows: Beleot two fixed points fora range of observation. If a westerly window can be chosen which faces any bullding anywhere mors than twenty-five to thirty feet distant, we have as good a post of ob- servation as we can desire. Drive a nail or stick a pin into the window jamb ; or, if anything more substan- tial is wanted, fix a thin piece of metal with a very small hole in it to sight through In any convenient place, so that you can observe the time any star sets or sinks below the roof of the adjacent bullding, or whatever may be chosen as the more remote sight. Then choose some well-defined star, the brighter the better, and with your timepiece set right, to start with, observe the time it passes the range of your sights. The exact time, as well also as the date of this observation, should be recorded ; then to flud out at any subsequent time, how much your watch has varied from correct time, observe the same star, and recol- ject that it sets just three minutes and 55.90014 seconds earlier on any given night than it did the preceding night, Thus {four first observation was taken some night when the star set at nine hours, fifteen minutes and twenty- three seconds: and at our second ob- servation, taken just one week later, set at elght hours, foriy-seven mine utes, and fifty-two seponds, we would know that our watch bad kept oor- ract time, If it set at eight hours, fcr y-five minutes and fifty-two sec. onds, we would know that our watch or clock had lost two minutes during the week. And similarly for any other variation, If the time at which it had set had been eight hours, forty- nine minutes and fifty -‘wo seconds, we should see that our watch had gained two minutes, and so on. If the location of our sights admit of it, we should select a star 90° as nearly sa possible, from the pole star, for its apparent motion will be greater than that of one nesr the pole, and the liability of error will be diminished. If a suitable selection ean be made, the error need not be more than three or four seconds, and it will not be accumulative, From the fact that any given star sets nearly four minutes earlier each night, it is evident that it will after as while begin to set during daylight. Before this occurs it will be necessary to transfer the time to some other star, which sets later, Thus we see that the later in the evening our first obser. vation is taken, the longer the same star may be used. To transfer the time, of course is very simple, you merely have to observe the star you have been using, note thejtime, and also the error and rate of variation of your watch ; then as late as con. venient the same evening, select the new star, not too near the horizon, observe its time, and from the data of the first observation, calculate the exact time of ita setting, or passing the range of your sights, This is a very simple matter and requires no explanation. Then use the new st.r as long as possible, and transfer to another, and so on, To facilitate observation and calcu. lation, the following table from Trot. Ngnt. Hr, Min, 6 50.47 10 46.88 14 42.29 i 288 & BESEE 5 £a2uze3-x 53 FsE = GREECSeraavans wl EPR EET TERRI “ZETA BRENE: So En - ned - 1D Bk Sk kk Bk dh Be Bh Bl kk Bk ~ST2LSRESRES SEBERENREERELED g &I8B2338us + 3 2832 Love's Echoes. —— Her Answer, Through a garden decked with myrile Wandered I one Bummer day, B ¢prd above the robis slinging To bis male a tender lay Hoard the reaper's merry whistle As he glewned the golden wheat Walching oft a dark-eyed maiden Binding sheaves about his feet, Man and bird alike are happy,” Bald I, “darling, this is love,” To sweet Neille walking near me This, whieh life por death ean move. “Can you doubt 117” then I asked her, As she gaged In silence still At the busy Ruth before us, And the reaper on the bil, “Doubt 11?” and her blue eyes softened, As she raised them to my face, With a timid, witching shyness, And her nalive maiden grace, “Doubt iL 7” and I bent to iisten , An she whispered under breath, With her head agalost my bosom “Love 1s stronger, dear than death,” Swinburne. Iflove were what the rose is And I were like the leaf, Our lives would grow together, In sed or singing weather, Brown fields or flowerful closes, Green pleasure or gray grief, If love were what the rose is And | were like Lhe leat, 1f 1 were what the words are And love were like the tune, With double sound and ingle Delight our lips would mingle With kisses glad as birds are That get sweet raln at noon, If I were what the words are And love were like Lhe tune, 1f you were April's lady And [ were lord in May, We'd throw with leaves for hours And draw for days with Sowers, Till day and night were shady And night were bright like day, If you were April's lady And [ were lord in May. Only Then. I read a poet's tender lay; The printed words seemed bright, Bo wisely eloquent were they Of love's deiight ; Then heard it, wedded 10 a strain Most musically sweet ; The blende! meaning of the twain Grew more complete, But when [ turnsd 10 look on you, Who listened toere bedde, And met your eygs of violet hue, My love, my bride, Then, only then, that song's deep heart Lay beautiful and bare, I felt the ears unbidden start With raplure rare ; For words tell much, and music more, But despest meaning lies In those clear fountains of lovelore— A woman's eyes, A Ghost. Love will you let sae In ? Iamikaoxia: ai the door, Lowe, ean | shelter win Close bexide you, as of yore? Of my grave | am aweary, Narrow narrow, dark and dreary Wildly from (ls clasp | flew, Love, just 0 look at you, iam so white and enti Love, will you slirink away ? If you wil not kiss me still Do pot let ma in, 1 pray. I have crosa’d Lhe mighly river; Wiliyou fear me? Do you shiver? If your arms refuses 10 woo, Death 1s more kind than you, Love, if YoU were a ghost And | were alive and warm Ab, perhaps~] will Bot BORE i might shud ler atl your form ; I might fles befure the presence Of an unembodied essence, Hush! hush! it is not true, Love, I should know "twas YOU, The Wolt Boy. SR One morning, many years ago, Mr H—, who happened at that time to be a magistrate and collector of Etawah distnot, was oul riding, sccompanied by two sowars, or mounted orderlies. They were passing over a portion of the road that lay in the vicinity of the river Jumna, when two half grown wolf cubs crossed their path, and, fol- lowing them more slowly, came a very remarkable looking creature, which shambled along on all fours in an extraordinary uncouth fashion. This proved to be a wolf child. Letting the other two go en their way unmolested, the thr:e men pro. ceeded to huntdown the human cub, ard succeeded in bringing it to bay. As they wished to take the creature alive, and were altogether unwilling to hurt it in any way, they found the greatest difficulty in attempting to secures, as it fought, bit and clawed with extreme flerceness and pertina- city. Indeed, having driven it into a corner, Mr, H— and one of the so- wars had to mount guard, while the other native proceeded to the nearest village and got a stout blanket for the purpose of throwing it over its head, and it was by this means that the oap- ture was at length eflected. All the way home; the wolf child, behaved like » mad thing, screaming and howling, now piteously, and now in a paroxysm of impotent rege. It was, however, taken to Mr. Hs house, but it would not be comforted, and for a long time it refused every kind of food, Including raw meat. The creature was & boy of about eight years of age; and it may here be stated that no female child has ever been heard of or seen. It is not easy te assign a sufficient reason for the faot that no females have never been = ingly repulsive; his features were blunt and conrse, snd their expression brutalized and insensible. As to his habits they were exactly those of » wild animal, Mr, H—— caused minute inquiries to be made throughout the neighbor-~ ing villages as to whether the inhabit ants had lost any children through their having been carried off by the wolves, and if so, whether they could recognize the human wall thai had been recovered by means of birth. marks or other indelible tokens, Iu the course of a few days, the father and mother of the lad were discovered. They identified him by means of cer. tain well defined marks about the breast and shoulders, and stated that he had been carried away by the wolves when he was about twe years of age, His parents, homever, found hiw most fractious and troublesome—ix fact, just a caged wild beast. Ofien during the night, for hours together; he would give vent to most unearthly yells and moans, destroying the slum. bers of hie neighbors, and generally making night hideous. On one oo casion his people chained him by the waist to a tree that stood near the hu! which was situated on the outakirte of the village, Then a rather curious incident occurred, it was a bright moonlight night, and two wolf cubs undoubtedly, those in whose come panionship he had been eaptured-- attracted apparently by his cries while on the prowl, came to him, and were distinctly seen to gambol about and play with him with as much familiarity and affection as if thay considered him to be quite one of themselves, They only left him ow the approach of morning. The woll-boy, however, did ue¥ survive long. Accus‘omed fo the wilde f r at least half a dozen years, esp tivity, and the change in his mode o life appeared not to agree with him for he gradually pined away and died He neyer spoke a word; nor did» single rav of human intelligence ever shed its refining light over his poor, debased features. Bn A A oT — - Showing His Displeasure, Col. Fergusson cites a most amusing instance of the exaggerated import ance which the Earl of Buchan at tached to his public censure. The then youthful Dragon of Whig idols try, the Edinburgh Review, published in October, 1808, an article on Don Pedro Cevallos' account of the French usurpations in Spsin, the unpatriotic tone of which alarmed even those Whigs which bad been diligently lending their countenance of Bons parte as a means of embarrassing the Tory ministry. This article was the work of Brougham ; and though Jef frey had endeavored to take the sting out of the more offensive passages, it raised a tempest little less violent than that excited by the Chaldee manu- script nearly ten years afterward. “It is recoreed that Lord Buchan, at his abode in Castle street, with the utmost solemnity after having directed his servant to open the door and $e take a number of the Review contain ing the offensive article, and in techni cle phrase, fee it in the innermost part of the lobby, personally kicked the book out of his honse to the centre of the street, where he left it to be trodden under foot of man and beast He never doubted that this perform. ance would be the death-blow to the entire work.” We have heard thst Jeffrey in person happened to be pas- sing when the “blue and yellow" like stone from a oatapault was hurled out at his feet; but the conjunction i» probably too apt to be true, Fault-Finding at the Table. W cee etic © man married to's man who systematically growls at the table. Life brings her neither peace nor happiness? three times a day her tyrant growls and snarls like any other wild animal over his food. I knews man of this kind once, and how I pitied his wife and daughters. One of the lat ter married in haste, one day--joined tively poor man, not exscily in the same set as she was accustomed to live: in, mumply to have her meals in peace. It is said she made her future husband: swear that he would never make fase over his dinner, and I understand thas today they are the happiest couple lw ing. Reconcilistion took place before: they were married, but they left before: the nuptial break fast—we ali remarked” that-—-and now, though of course she. visita the house, nothing could ever in duce her 10 take a meal there, She ln poor woman! Maybe in younger daysshe might have thought of possible relief by means of divorce, and they do say, but [ do not sssert ic, though 16. came from a distinguished jurist, thet on at table—he wa -