BETWEEN OURSELVES, Because hemoyes to me and you The brightest are and biuest, Shall storms arise between us two, The oldest friends and truest? She smiles on me, my heart is light, And yours is steeped in sorrow, And vet the flowers I gave to-night She'll throw to you to-morrow-— Coquette is she, 50 say with me, #1.et him who wins her wear her; And falr--however fair she be, There's many a lassie fairer,” But if it hap, and well it may, That each in vain has pleaded, If all my songs are thrown away, And all your sighs unheeded, We'll vow ourselves no hermit’s vows, We'll cross no foaming billow, ‘We'll bind about our dismal brows No wreath of mournful willow. But show, in spite of her disdain, We yet can live withont Ler, And joining hands we'll laugh again, And think no more about her! THE FRUIT FAIR. It was old Mrs. Knapp’s opinion that her Adam had condescended a great deal in engaging himself to Jane Hea- ley’s girl, Melinda. And, indeed, Mel- have were hardest Mrs. Hedley had taken in anything but farmers, and a “very good gure, the farm was small, and there was ed hard, as did his mother. think of being mistress of such a place, having a best parlor of the grandeur of the Knapps’ front room, a spare reom for company, and, no doubt, black silk for church, was a great dream for Milly Hedley, who had carried home baskets of linen to the hotel in her time. She never owned it, but she was proud of her elevation, beside being fond of \ fam. Ile nmght have been a little fonder of dauci g and less fond of reading, she thouglit; but it was “genteel,” too, to be serious and given to books, and it teel ways.” while, and she knew he would ask her to set theday soon, and had even thought ding day. ficial flowers in the milliner’s show-case salesman. He was dressed splendidly. toilet, and the gay bonnet pins, of gorgeous to Milly’s eyes, gentleman, thought Mily, and she star- ed at him without intending to do so. miring glances, . “Perhaps the young fo see these pins. thing out,” said the drummer. *‘*No charge for looking. What we strive for to please the ladies.”” And be spread his wares before her eyes. The milliner was very polite. She always falfilled her social obligations, and it struck her to be her duty to in- troduce these two persons before her counter. lady might like is Mr. Fairer, He's brought me sam- ples from New York for five years, Used to be we had to go on to purchase, We've got things brought to our doors now. I'll make a list of my orders, Mr. Fairer.” She went to her desk and began to write, and Milly and young Fairer talked. She was pretty, and he thought her flirtable. be said, “My mother lives here, and 1've got—well, some other friends on rom the East. I'll see you again. be sorry not to, for you are good for sore eyes, you are.” Milly did not know much of the world. pretty. each other again, “She's going to be married soon. Mr, Fairer,” said Miss Chip, looking after her, “to Adam Knapp, up there on the hill “That don’t make any difference to if you mean it for a warning.” Miss Chip, “and 1 only meant it for a bit of news,” But for all that, at the end of a fort- night Milly blushed and laughed to think that she had met Fairer six times. “It can’t be all chance,” said she, “The Agricultural Exhibition,’ as it was called on the bills ~the Fruit Fair, as the girls and boys dubbed it—was to come off very soon. Melinda was very busy with her dress, Ler pink bonnet, her new dress made of what the gentle- men at the store choose to call Japanese grenadine, her sash, her scarf, her low- cut shoes and bright stockings--each pulled for old Mra, Hedley's purse, as if 1t had been a double tooth, “However, I suppose you had ought £0 do the Knapps credit,” said the old her dressed in all her splendor, *‘and you do look genteel.”’ Milly nodded an assent, away. Down at the end of the tittle two-seated yehicle, smart: looking brown horse. and hurried In it sat more elegant than ever “Hop in, Miss Milly,” was his ele- gant address, ‘and if I don’t take you i” i horse. Milly was enraptured, that this was indeed style, } i | the road, in such a turnout, with such | a driver? wagon, ‘was 2 woman covered with mud, , and yuite insensible. He picked her up and came toward the wagon. ‘Mother!’ he cried, in a sort of shriek. “Mother, light the lantern. erazy it's my poor Milly.” The lantern was lit. Milly it provec to be——Milly in a dead faint, with all dous, mother, and Mrs, Hedley, believing as ter them on foot, What Adam thought he kept to himself. i | and caught a kiss, i : 1 { Milly had a vision of a brown-stone i { on the instant. How much a commer- | dressed like a prince She turned her under her glove. gold. the one cravat, fair, Adam,” said Mrs Knapp, of the kitchen window, to her son, moodily setting on the door-step. ‘I don’t think I'll go. Milly said she don’t care to,” sald Adam, gloomily chewing grass, “On,” sighed Mrs. Knapp, ‘‘I was 80 set on going, 1 did so calculate on it, What a but he loved his mother. “Well, I'll be shot if you shan’t go, then, mal” he said. “I'll fix up right Mrs. Knapp brightened, and went to they had a talk together. When it was over, Milly said: “Now, Adam I’ve told you every to break with me you can. wouldn’t let you have me knowing how I'd behaved.” Adam looked at her quietly. “Milly,” he said, “I think you need to be taken care of, and if you'll let me I’lido it. It’s well tha drummer has got away from the place, though, if he values his bones.” a —————————— Faffs And Bangs, A fashion authority on tant topic of the hair says: up switches are popular, The tuck- Thea are and with ornamental halr pins make a very pret- ty coiffure, Young ladies affect puffs which are very becoming to many, and the of some faces, “The of the American is 1am a perplexity ittle for the ar appearance style” is one management that The reputation “bang” of un- happy suggestion and not specially ten- airs from Milly Hedley, if I was yon,”’ world, nor the prettiest.” Adam said nothing. They drove slowly to the fair ground, Milly and her cavalier in the crowd. } he big apples, the bright peaches, Prizes were awarded. drank tea, People ate ice- There was a teller, and a swing that held six people, black clouds v, and the sun big began to gather in the sk Milly and her cavalier were eating ice-cream in a bower bullt for the pur pose and baptized the “Rosebud Daury;" the horse came to Mr. Fairer's side and whispered to him. With an apology he started up and ran away, returning in a moment or so, very pale and with a queer, frightened look in his eves, **Tisn't very polite, Miss Milly," said Yon can get some of your friends to take you You see my wife is pleasant surprise, and I'm to drive her back. She's very jealous; a great deal the past, so entirely out of fashion that even on iittie girls it is scarcely allow- all the money in the family, I've told It’s very mean, Ain't there some stage I can give put a dollar on the table. Milly, with a furious look, pushed it “Do you think I'd have come with youat all if I'd thought you were a jut he was off. Happily no very She waited until the brown horse trotted away, and then stole out of the Not only had she been fooled and in- eyes was the greatest wickedness possis ble~*Kept company with a married man." She plodded up the road with fourteen miles before her, and the dust of a rising storm about her, with only one wish, to hide her head in her little bed at last, and there die. Old Dobbin was making his slow way home before the K napps’ wagon Mrs. Knapp was proad and happy. Adam had received the prize for dwarf pears. The rain beat down, but the oil-cloth covering kept it off pretty well, and half their journey was over when, suddenly, Adam stopped with 4 jerk; his mother gave a ory. “What's the matter?" said she. “I'd have run over somebody next,’ he said, and jumped out, Lying in the road, straight before the An effort has been made by a few leaders of fashion to make popular the brushing of the har off the forhead, but without any show of success, The the most style of coveri:ig the very brows is so women that its abandonment ight of, least for the present, The brushing of hair back isan Eng- i fashion that few of our ladies seem forehead to to will becoming nnt ba thot at inclined to tolerate, Puffs appear in dressings and are discarded some very stylish in others, favor, i 8ay8s that curls Curls are slowly coming in letter from Par or five inches long, reaching jnst to ¢ below the ¢ } are very fashonable, neck, iignon Ornamental in plain tortoise shell are the ular among refined styles in fancy patterns are culled But few for. A lovly little shell pin, with a half ring top, is worn in five or six being used at one A larger size, with flat, square top is also handsome and very ladylike. Natural flowers are much worn for evening dress, but always preferably a gift from some loved one. lodies, evervday hair dressing a Lie, —————- I I A The Love of Praise It is an instinct as much as conscience It 18 an organic faculty as much as the reasoning faculty is. body. of that which wa call pride. But the It is the sense of individual have a right to judge you, and what sr A AAS i. 0 Losing Three Millions at a Sitting, at one poker sitting that I saw on the Comstock, on which occasion he pock- eted a good $10,000. Bill Gibson lost in two nights at poker just $15,000 next. The work of those two nights, by the way, cost him a huge fortune, He had just got a sure pointer on Crown Point, which was then selling at 87 or $5, and had started down to givean or. der for as much as his $15,000 cash in hand would cover. On his way he stepped into his house and found the boys waiting for him to open a poker game. The result was that he sat down to play with them for a little while, took a header in bad luck, and dropped his cash, entirely forgetting the pointer that had been given him. Crown Point went up to $1,900, so that Gibson if he had carried out his original intention, would have cleared anywhere between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000, | FOOD FOR THOUGHT, {| Associate with the wise, and their | knowledge will cling to thy skirts, | ‘I'he truly valiant dare everything but { doing any other hodv an injury, Nothing is so eredulous as vanity, or | 80 ignorant of what becomes itself, Truth, wherever found will draw i forth homage from the pure heart, The desire of appearing to be persons { of ability often prevents our being so. It Is one of the sweetest tests of { friendship to tell a friend of his fault. The man who commands bimself is | greater far than he who commands Lhe world. Time doe not end all at once, It is ending in part, every day and hour and i moment, Wisdom prepares for the worst, but | folly leaves the worst for the day when it comes. In this world, full often, our joys are only the tender shadows which our sorrows cast All other knowledge is hurtful to one who has not the science of honesty and good nature, (God sends us ten thousand joys but | we will not even streteh out our hand { to grasp them, Charity is not a meteor which oecca- sionally glares, but a luminary that is i forever shining. What are the best ! Those in which we who was traly such Tears are softening showers which cause the seed of heaven to spring up in the human heart Do not feel proud at baving suppor ted your misfortune, How could yon not have supported it? To most men experience is like the stern light of a ship, whieh illuminates nly the track it has passed, Our attention little things is the index to our character, and often the balance by which it 18 weighed. The life of a mere worldly man is an African river that wastes itself days in memory? met a companion 4 0 LA are less wealth than is learn- wisdom cannot be stolen or 8 therefore thy best friend, must be excessively stupid, uncharitable, who believes virtue but on his own side. as well as there 8 no Thera Crissy, is nothing lower than hypo- To profess friendship and act enmity 1s & sure proof of total depra- vity. Both erudition and agriculture ought be encouraged by wit will come of them- and Selves, i 16 government: manufactures thie and may A wise best, hope for worst whatever man ought to epared for the bear with imity happen. Mua prove in iL respect of re 0 Mian 1 Wy Cogn sublimest anda the smallest iuty the remarkable has a author's ore the ife, and repeated, would ous = ay Appears art, when it nishes from ’ yd po wood Fhuegd wrnuen i SMR aia dividual happiest ’ grealost % thing 1 alent of success I d 0 Wii whatever wilh t of fame, oF yon i $8 runs ood WIOUEZH A+ $iey 5 HLS, we to become aged crowded so mueh of anguish, that seem fo live years; yes, in a brief space, If to do were easy as to kpow what were good to do, chapels had been churches, and poor men's cottages princes’ palaces, The greatest evils in life have had their rise from something which was | thought to be of too little importance to : be attended to. A wound from a tongue is worse than a wound from a sword, for the latter affects only the body the former the spirit—the soul. There are natures which blossom and ripen amidst trials, which would only | wither and decay in an atmosphere of | ease and comfort. To have his tongue cut out, and to were preferable (0 his condition who cannot govern his tongue. Have the courage to show your re- | spect for honesty in whatever guise it | appears, and your contempt for dis honesty and duplicity, by whomsoever i exhinted, Of all passions jealousy ia that which | exacts the bardest services and pays the bitterest wages, Its service is to watch the success of our enemy; its wages to be sure of it. Keep your promise to the letter, be | prompt and exact, and it will save you { much trouble and care through life, and win you the respect and trust of ! your friends, Never be cast down by trifles, If a spider breaks his thread twenty times, twenty times will he mend it again, Make up your mind to do a thing and you will do it, Charity makes the best construction of things and persons, excuses weak. ness, extenuates miscarriage, makes the best of sversthmg, forgives everybody, serves NEW SOFTHEWEEK | ~ Thirteen Senators and fifty-five Representatives attended the joint con- vention of the hilinois Legislature on the 7th, Two votes were cast, one for Black and one for Bishop, and the con- Garland was on to the Ja urney-ureneral Oth formally presented predecessor, ex-Attorney General —Areneral Grant’s condition was re- ported better on the Oth, He ‘felt much refreshed, and was in a more cheerful frame of mind than for some ~The resignation of Thomas F. Day- aware was read in the Legislature of that State on the 9th, In the House a from the Senate, -In joint convention of the [llinols Legislature on the 9th 15 Senators and 58 Representatives answered to roll call, Two votes were cast for U. 8. Senator, one for Black and one for Morrison. — Reports of great mortality among | to come from the Indian Territory, One 9 the Creek Nation reports | 5000, | On the Cherokee strip it is An earthquake was felt at Lancas- ter, Penna., at o'clock on the Bth, p= the services temporanly suspendsd by the The earthquake was felt at in Lancaster county. The vibration was preceded or accom- panied by a rumbling sound, The wWele of Presiden held on It was devoted almost wholly to | consideration of Federal appoint- | first meeting the of the appointments in his department | which he deemed necessary proper administration of public bu: under the new regime. The lis to the | in which a change ig desirable at onc solictor General Phillips has sen esignation to the President, to take 3 upon the appointment and quali -In the Senate of Illinois on the 10th | a Lill was introduced to prevent pooling of the f that Both 5 railways of Houses unanimously adopted a resolu- Stale The lLegisia- § commend. bash Railroad strikers, ture also adopted a resolution ing the acti of Congress in placing General Grant the retired list, In joint convention of the Illinois stare on the 10th, member resent, one Nenator, 51 Hi 13 oa 101 was 5 being i U.B. vole 4 af the if the * Xs sen leans Exhibition hat r $1 ad Al ever wWiiea Wess AL . # 5 Mountains, ~The Rock Glycerige Junction, three m Penpa., was demolished on the 10th the explosion of a magazine containing 6000 pounds of nitroglycerine. H.W, Herrington, one | the proprietors, and H. V. Pratt, an employe was Killed, The Central Hotel and stores and houses, in Newbern, — —————— nitro-giycerine factory of th Jompany, at Howard Bradford. * % wy from les twenty North is estimated at $1,000,000; insur- ance, $50,000, The Castle House block tel and several stcres, was burned on Loss, $45,000, —Jt was estimated, on the 10th, that “Farmers in the neighbor. 18 a prominent military officer’’ of by letter that “there are 3500 Fenians ~C. ¥. Raggin, a respected citizen of Lavington, Illinois, shot and Killed his He was 00 years of age. It is Jos, ville, in the Indian Territory, on the Oth, by shooting ber through the breast It is said he was epamored of another woman and wanted to get his wife out of the way. —————— pr IT ent on the 11th, nom- inated Edward D, Clark, of Mississippi, to be Assistant Secretary of the Inter. jor, and Sidney D, Jackman to be U. 8, Marshal for Southern Texas. Secretary Manning on the same day, appointed Eugene Higgins, of Maryland, to be Chief of the Appointment Division of the Treasury | t, in piace of C. 8. Trevill, of New York, resigned. General Grant's condition contin. ued favorable on the 11th. He has not complained of n in his throat for SevEMl AMpR. . Douglas saia last night: “While General Grant had slept but little on the 10th, he had rest ed comfortably and arose before noon time feeling better than he has for sev- eral days. He gato of nourishment in liquid form and his pulse was lower than on the 10th. — Republican State Con of Michigan met on the 11th, J Cooley was mated for Justice McAl gents of the University. - SA PHA SR On eBcanarnR —The town elections in Essex coun- ty, New Jersey, show slight Democratic gains, but the Republicans retain con- tro! of the Board of Freeholders. A public sale of imported Alderney cows took place on the 11th in nore, Although the autendance of fancy cattle breeders was large, the prices were low, the range being from $55 up to $135. —Thomas H. Trippe and James Earle, while driving near the railroad depot | Easton, Maryland, on the 11th, were struck by a train and Earle was killed, Trippe being dangerously, if not fatally injured. J. D. White, a passenger an Fast Tennessee Railroad train, was killed near Knoxville, on the same day, by putting his head out of a ¢ win- dow while the train was crossing a covered bridge, dest ail fi OF ai —The works of the Michigan Saw Company at East Saginaw, Michigan, were destroyed by fire early on the Lith. The loss 18 estimated at $60,000; the insurance at over $30 C00., The works had been recently rebuilt, having been ~The court-martial in the trial of General Hazen met on iith in Washington, General Hancock presid- ing, and the trial of accused was begun, on the charge of the the “conduct wo the prejudice of good order and military sex $1243 discipline in violation of the 62d of war.” — Mrs, George wealthy widow, at Seiple’s Lehigh county, Penna., was visited on the 10th by a man who represented himself as ““a New York attorney, who desired to settle some matlers in connection with her deceased husband’s estate.” During the night of the 1 the visitor blew open the family safe and fled with some valuable papers. It is thought his object was to secure $10,000 which Mrs. App jreceived on Monday the sale of iron mines, but which was deposited in an Allentown bank. article A Wp, a Hp station, el Iota — Four more ineffectual ballots for U. 8. Benator were taken the 11th in m of the lines Legisiatu On the votes, E431 joint sessic One hundred voles were cast, ballot Morrison received and on the others 99 voles, At, rat f frst mn FOBRTY-EIGHTH OONGRE::— SECOND SESSION, BENATE. In the U, 8. Senate, on inations of President confirmed in executli There was no debate and Riddlebrger relapsing 6th all Cleveland ve Bession. objection, into silence, V accepi~ members of d the comm is- Chey the Wie Same Ga { hy i the resignations of ti : oy pons of the new Cabinet the upon In the U. of On ne S, denate, Mr. Van Wyelk Sth ¢ reiative Backb { Lhe ie Te ming hours WSL LOoUl Wis Called made a s) in the Ast Administration Van Wyck n reflecting BENET Administration. Mr and historical state- He declared ths of the hat Was Ws Case 4 4 11 t and aid to do justice wrongs, Mr. Teller Va: assault of the Mr. Van Wyck's his action in the mat- was simply 0 compel The attempt had two pens 1 Greneral Burnet and the whol y showed the loose methods ing in the executive branches government, where the laws were de. fied with impunity. Senate adjourned. in the U. Senate, on the 10h resolution offered by Mr, Hoar on the Oth, that Henry W. Blair be sworn in as Senator from New Hampshire to fil} a vacaucy, was taken up, After along debate, Mr. Vest leading the opposition to the resolution, it was carried by a vote of 36 to 20, Mr. Jones, of Florida, voted with the Republicans in the af. firmative, Mr. Blair was then sworn in by the Vice President and the Sen- ate adjourned. In the U. 8, Senate on the 11th, only two nominations were secured, were Edward C, Clarke, of Mississippi, to be Assistant Secretary of the Inte- rior, and Sydpey D. Jackman, of Texas, to be United States Maishal for the Southern District of thal State, Mr, Clarke was a Colonel in the Con- federate army. He is 45 years of age, and an intimate friend of Secretary Lamar, When confirmed Mr. Clarke, who is now bere, will relieve Mr, Joslyu, who will return to his home in Xlinois, After the Cabinet meeting of the 10th, it was confidentially expected that a batch of appointments would go to the Senate to-day, including a sprinkling from each department. Those on the anxious bench cannot understand thas hesitation to provide them with places. They don’t seem to realize that the Lime of the new secretaries has been almost entirely occupied in listening to the ap. peals of the office seekers and their friends and that no opportunity has vet been offered to consider the claims ana fitness of the applicants. Hereafuer the secretaries will follow an established rule to see no one in quest of office ex- cept between certain hours, The adop- tion of this rule has oon found ae neces. sary in order to gain to attend tu The Presi. Jer ht ond YW VCX HS I 4s the - hin 3 Bas be upon e- WO - * “ sentatives at a stated time each day to t the claims of their fnends. The t will receive no papers on be. half of a : } be presented to the prope: executive department, This course save the President much time and