KEAR THE DAWNING, When life's troubles gather darkly Round the way we follow here; When no hope the sad heart lightens, No voice speaks a word of cheer; Then the thought the shadows scatters, Giving us a cheering ray— When the night appears the darkest, Morning is not far away. When advergity surrounds us, Aud our sunshine friends pass by, And the dreams so fondly cherished With our scattered treasures lie; Then amid such gloomy seasons This sweet thought can yet be drawn; When the darkest hour is present It isalways near the dawn When the spirit fluttering lingers On the confines of this life, Parting from all joyful memories, And from every scene of strife, Though the scene is sad and gloomy, And the body shrinks in fear, These dark hours will soon be vanished, And the glorious morn be here. Pain cannot affect us always, Brighter days will soon be here, Borrow may oppress us often, Yet a happier time is near; All along our earthly journey This reflection hghts our way; Nature's darkest hour is always Just before the break of day. SA ISR, LOVE AT SECOND SIGHT. “Hew do you feel now, mother dear?” | amked a tender young voice, ‘Is your | bead any better?” | “No, Mabel. It aches and aches, gntil I almost wish I could die. Lay | sour hand here,” i Mabel’s cheek paled as her mother wook her hand and pressed it against her temple, Such fire would soon burn out life's flickering taper. She wet a cloth and bound it round the fevered head. As she did so the siok woman gave a sigh of relief. She syened her eyes and turned a grateful «uk upon the girl, “Do you know, Mabel,” she said fee- | bly, “I dreamed last night of the dear 1d home where we lived before your | lather died. You were a wee toddling baby then, It seems to me, if I could have some of the flowers that grew in | the garden in front of the house, the | very smell of them would cure me,” Tears rushel to Mabel’s eyes, They lived in the great crowded city, and they were poor, Mabel could not spare | ‘rom ber scanty hoard even the triflng sum for which she could buy a bunch of flowers from the vendors who were stationed at so many different places | slong the street, i How could she get some of the fra- | ant flowers for her mother? Suddenly came a thought of an old- | fashioned mansion a little way out of the city. It was embowered in a wil ierness of bloom. Sareiy it would be no harm for her | 0 go aud ask for some flowers, they sould but refuse them, | She bent over the invalid and kissed | er. i “Mother,” she said softly, *‘‘if you | will be content to stay alone for a few | hours I think I can grati’'y your longivg, | f not for the blossoms that grew about your old home for some just like them. [ will ask Mrs, Gray to come in and give you your medicine regularly.” Mrs, Gray was a kind-hearted woman who ocoupield a part of the house in | wh ch they lived, and she readily con- sented to minister to the invalid’s com- fort in any way she could during Mabel's abgenoce. it was fot without a f(remor that Mabel at last found herself in a broad, | aeatly kept path which led to the @Gwinne mansion. A huge mastiff sprang toward her as | she neared the house, “Down, Nero! Down!” The speaker was au old gentleman, who evidently feared that the approach of the dog would intimidate Mabel, But Nero contented himself with a good- antured sniff, reserving his fiercer side {or & more suspicious party, His master looked pleased to see | Mabel pat his head fearlesely, The | truth was, now that she was in the pres- | snoe of the stately old master of the | place, her heart failed her, and she was gad ot an excuse toldefer asking for the werd, “Well, Miss,” he said courteously, | “can Ido do saything to put you in | the way of finding the person you are | seeking?” *‘It is you sir. I came to ask you for | flowers for my sick mother,” “Pick all you want, better. The more the | You are welcome to all you ean | sarry. Just then Mabel heard a clear, r ng- | ing voice shout: Grandfather!” and out | of the oool, tiled hall, of which an en- | chanting glimpse was visible h the open door, came a youth who looked § het'the some prince from a fairy L * Bhe was not accustomed to the luxu- rious habits of the rich, aud his dark- blue velvet dressing-gown. fastened b its cord of shimmering, woven gold, and the richly embroidered smoking- But the illusion only lasted for a mo- ment. A pair of brown eyes, just the solor of a ripe chestnut, glanced at her Sutiously as their owner came down the walk. “Come when these are faded,” trom Mr, face from absolute plainuess, evidently once been a woman of queenly form and of magnificent beauty. Eveu now her great fever-bright eyes and | semblance of health, but it was delu- sive, “My darling,” she whispered, ‘youn nave brought me a blessing and you shali be rewarded, To-morrow I will throw pride to thie winds and dictate a letter to my father which shall restore my child to her rights, Ob, Mabel, i { i | i | | your love and obedience to me 1 have, at this late day learned a lesson of duty, I was, when young, carefully educated in all but that most importan of lessons to a child, filial obedience, She was still Her complexion was rather sallow, and though her features were regular, she was undeniably plain, eyes, wore, however, suflicient to re. deem her from positive ugliness, Chauncey was still a student, coming then burying mmself in his beloved meal times, Buddenly Mr. Gwinne's health failed, and he was ordered abroad. Mabel and Miss Clay, her governess, accompanied They remained away from home mast be gratified at any cost; and when I met and loved your father, instead ot waiting patiently to gain a oonsent long have withheld to our union, we were married clandestinaly, My one to say any more, finish my story.” voiceless benediction, upon a clay-clad with it snd her sorrow, At first the desolate child—for Mabel was but fourteen—was conscious only of SOON came a brought with it such action. be Imd away to rest in the Potter's She would go to the kind old gentle maa who had givea her the flowers, and ask him for help in this tr ving hour which had come to her youug lite, She found hini at home, Then word came to Chauncey that they were coming home. They were tirnd of travel, and Mr, Gwinne had quite recovered his health, Chauncey met them at the station, He was handsome and indifferent-100k- partial eyes, meet drew near, he gave his grand- father a cordial shake of the hand, and loveliness that he was, for a moment, *‘I beg your pardon, I thought it was he said, turning to the other lady. Jat when Miss Clay's familiar feat- ures met his eyes, he asked: behind?" and the beautiful apparition he mistaken for a stranger put hand mm a the sweet life gone out of her beautiful You are nd and rich. falfil a duty which would entail long it could be accom- plished, touched a chord in Randolph Gwinne's heart, ‘Go home, little one,” he said gently, ‘and mourn for your dead, Do not ments are attended to.” After all wasover, Mabel settled down of Every week she scrupulously laid aside a portion of her earnings and them from her with ence. The child had made a contract with him, and out of respect to her the man At last the final payment was made. “Little Mabel,” he said, *'I have been of life since you sud I made our bar- I have seen your cheeks grow pale for want of the food you permsted in denying yourself, that you might bring your weekly hoard to me, and 1 wondered iI one so young would be able to carry out so high a resolve. You have sncceeded, and all your life long you will have it to remember, Now, your part is done, and mine respects you, loves you well to become his Come and make can provide, You will have no objec. torture commenoed. Mabel, who the rounded suppleness of form as well as the queenly dignity of a young Diana; and with the rich color, which had chased away the pallor of cate complexion so dark hair. of beauty would, years before, ures, and straight, though at that time, He looked upon it as upon a miracle, pression, Bat Mabel had changed things beside beauty. Now grave—now gay- Dow majestic as a child, Chauncey knew not what to make of But he was fully conscious of one her tiny feet had pressed. He was her shadow, At last he grew desperale, She should not thus hold him aloof and play with his feelings any longer, It might be amusement to her, but it was making his life a torture, 80 he captured her in the library one morning, before the rest of the family had made their appearance, and pressed his suit with au earnestness which wonld have moved a heart of stone, But to all appearance it had no effect upon Mabel, Bhe answered with a careless smile: “In a honse, like this, where ‘one in a maze of bewilderment and anger, tis grandson camejinto the room. A few words explaived his meaning, girl cey did not remember her, ciliation; and the two young hearts a walk in the garden, Winter had passed, and summer had course, grandfather, one more or less does not matter in this great house,” again to the surface and influence her future long after Chauncey had forgot- So it was that Mabel was domiciled at the Gwinnes, A governess was engaged for her, and music and painting lessons soon occupied the time not engaged in ber studies. Thus a year passed on, One morning the daily paper was brought as usual to Mr. Gwinne, as he was sitting at the breakfast-table, sip- Budden! arrested Mabel's attention. He had read a cotioe asking for the knowledge of the whereabouts of one Bashul ge Wiitss married name was Wynne, er ly surviving parent had died, and she, if living, was sole heiress to a large fortune; if dead, her children would inherit, Rachel,” said “*Well I remember poor “She was the handsomest girl I ever saw. She gave up all for love, and made a clandestine marriage with a man of whom her par- ents disapproved, Foor Rachel! 1 won- der if she 1s alive!” Mabel rose from the table, and went to Mr. Gwinne, She was very pale, but her eyes shone with excitement, “Rachel Freeland was mother's maiden name. Oh, my kind notor, how little you knew whose child it was i Smong en far al gio by Hit vs now HE oh wis now lies. She had not changed much in personel appearance carried the clusters to her sick mother, Their eyes met involuntarily, In spite of his wounded pride, Chauncey's wild love sprang into renewed life, and he held out his arms entreatingly. “0, Mabel, forgive me! careless, thonghtiess boy. It 1s the man who now appreciates you, and loves you better than his own life.” Another moment and Mabel's queen- ly head waa resting on his breast, “it waa because 1 loved yon even then that your words had power to sting me so cruelly. So amid the flowers was told another the morning which usbers in a new day, Florida Orange Groves, Harriet Beecher Stowe has a grove on the 8t, Louis river, just above Pal. atka, from which she enjoys a hand. some revenue annually besides having a that. The Indian and Ocklawaha riv- er frit is the best and brings the high- ost of the out, stute pla tod entire planted in oranges the yield would not be sufficient to suoply the demand from the three cities men. His Honor avd Bijah, “Pijah,” said his Honor, as he skinned himself out of his spring over- cont and looked out of the alley win- dow at au onion sprouting up in an ash heap, “who is muking all that noise in the corridor?” “1's a woman, sir—Mrs, ('Rearity!” “What loes she want?” “Wants to be tried, sir.’ “Well, we'll have to call the case at once, She's probably iv » hurry to get home and flx for a day a ‘he roller rink, Lead her out geutly, Bijab, Always remember that a gil of kind- ness goes further in this w. rd of ate springs than a whole barrc! of ball. dozing.” Mrs. UO'Rearity was brought out, It was geutly, DBijash carrld her as he wonld a 200 pound bsg of flour, and the way she was kicking, biting and scratching would have done credit to a | wild eat, “I'll have the life out of him!” she { desk. ‘“‘The impudence of the | bald head to bring me in before all { these people after that fashion?” { cited,” said his Honor, “Excited, your Honor! | ness, you mean! j could pitch the whole crowd of yees into the alley!" “Gentiy, female, gently, | dobtors are & uuit in declaring that | anger is a drain on the tmssues. Be | calm and candid, and let me inquire Eminent to produce the family row last night?” | ‘I never tasted a drop of { water!” “H'm, Bat you had a row?” “No, sir, put §5 of my money into lottery tickets, {and I gave him a bit of my mind.” “With a club?” “It was a hoe-handle, sir.” “Do You have these rows very often, | Mrs, O'Rearity?” | as other folks, If we didn’t, sir, I'm | thinking this world would soon get too | goody-good for the people.” “When were you here last?” “Three months agone.” “For what?" “Same old hoe-handle, your Honor,” “Ak! I remember. time. This time tue five will be $5.” Bhe turned to the audience and beck- { hie head and three strips of court- i plaster across his nose, and as he came i forward she said: “Me darlint foive dollars is dog- | cheap considering the fun we had, | Hand over the cash and we'll go.” He paid it without a word, and they went away band in hand, “Jordau Davis, the charge Is disor- derly conduct.” “Sorry, air, but 1 dido’t know as it aw, be ihiling t You were lLrowing «i wowan who passed you must be & ma her,” “No, sir.” | “Well, you are too sweet for a town like this, Officer, did you observe any | further rudeness on his part?” “] observed 8 woman smash a $0 parasol over his bead, sir.” “Ab! Gilad to know we have such women among us, Prisoner, outside of you do for a living?” “Work hard, sir.” “lt me see your hands. H'm! Guess you work with the dice box or poker chips, Your fice is $10.” “I haven't got it, sir.” “Oh, that won't bother you at all; i you will go up for sixty days. If you practice on & new pose, | trouble with your wife?” “Yes, sali—a worry leetle,’ “On the street?” “Right on de street, sah?” “How did it come about?” “She stole money outer my pocket an’ bought a pair of roller skates,” “Ah--ha! Canght the mania, did she?” “She did, sah.” “Poor thing! And you didn't want her to go?” * | de street, an’ we argufled an’ jawed an’ | got mad, an’ had a tussle.” “Tally one for the anti-rinker. Well, you were brought down. Ever here betore?” “No, sah.” “That's in your favor. Suppose I let jou go?” “| reckon we can kiss an’ make up | an’ be happy agin’, sah,” | “Well, you may try it, and if you { can’t succeed come back here and let | me give you about thirty days" Receiving New Cadets, It is very amusing to watch a plebe under military discipline. The lads who have already reported and are awaiting examination look as if they were in a state of perpetual torture, They are compelled to swallow their conceit and roll their rustic dignity in the dust before a pair of irreproachable white trousers, This morning three young fellows came up from a school somewhere down the river to report, They were evidently the sons of well-to do parents, and possibly with the inten- tion of making an impression rat- tied up to the headquarters build in open carriage, with their commission papers sticking out of their coat ke ets, The army officers did not out to greet them, and they stood for some time on the granite steps bef “Well?” The adjutant’s tone was not ho Su The ho bis commission “ to breathe, Iis companions peeked at him through the door and audibly snickered, ‘*‘Come, none o’ that,” said an orderly. The adjutant merely gian- ced at the paper, tossed it aside with a heap of others, and touch-d a bell, In less than a minute the three lads were on the way to the surgeons, feeling only about half as big as they did when they arrived, They were marched into a plainly furnished room, and not with- obeyed a stern order to take off all their clothes, Each man stepped on a scale to be weighed, and was catechized as to his habits and previous mode of living, This done, the surgeons examined the boys from head to foot, sounding their lungs and their chests, testing their ears, their eyes and their teeth, looking out very sharply for weak spots. Back again they went to the adjutant, de- lighted at having passed the first ordeal | successfully, Another slip of paper, | another orderly, and they were soon in { Treasurer Spurgin’s office, heaping up | their money on the table, “Is that all you have?’’ asked Capt. Spurgin, “Yes, sir,” said all three, **Have you loaned any since you left home?" **No, sir,” said two of the boys, The third held his tongue and tried to look as if he didn’t hear, The question was repeated, “Oh, yes," he said, **1 let —— have 0 “Well, I want you to get it back at | once and let me have it to-night.” { It is only occasionally that a boy re- sorts to a ruse of this kind to keep a | little money in his pocket. He invaria- bly gets caught, and wonders how it is that army officers are so exceeding sharp. *'I wish you would let me have { 25 cents of that back, sir,” sald one of | the lads as another orderly was getting | them toward the door. “What for? asked the treasurer, “Well, sir, my folks feel kind 0’ anx- { lous, and I want to telegraph them that { I have gone through the doctors,” he | explained, with some embarrassment. “If you were an older you i would have to make that reques | writing. Suppose you begin now,’ { Capt. Spurgin, pointin pen cadet g to and g paper i The <0 cents went into the treasurer’s safe credited to the boy's aecount, The orderly marched them all over the co mandant’s headquarters, bestowing few sharp words of command | greatly to his own gratification Here they were met by the officer ¥ rg wit fie Spsat » # W BPeCliiC insiruct on | WAY, charge given a fe with caution to be sure and obey them {| if they wanted to be comfortable, and | then sent over to the quarters assigned them in charge of another orderly. These orderlies are enlisted men on the st, LI Ons, i on AAI PS Steeples, | In speaking of the usefulness of church steeples, we would not have it understood that their only use has been in connection with the! Along the { coast there can that they were often used as wiore the : At Hap inction of lght-he sleepie Wiis, be no doubt bead i UA, in Norfolk, a lofty the ever-grasping nigh worn s i} burgh, WO) DEAT has had its by the continual fic to We know, too, how “bro fierce the came forth on Ei stately fane,” when Lhe alarmed at the approach of ¢ Armada. Now-a-days « made to serve more utilitarian purposes in carrving vanes, Ks and flagstaffs. Although very rarely indeed met with in the churches themselves, ancient fireplaces are by no means | common in steeples, They are usually | on the first floor, flues going ito the top in the thickness of the wall, | It has never been satisfactorily proved | for whose use they could have been in- i tended, deme have supposed that such towers as have them must at some time | or other have been watch-towers; but | in remote inland districts 1t seems more | reasonable to suppose that recluses | dwelt in such places, With bare walls and narrow loop { holes, they must have been at all times | wretched habitations; but peture, if | you can, such an abode on a windy | night. The gloomy surroundings, the waves steps w ¥ ta 4 # RYT HG its PTH. & x Ag BAT y 8 Ww Ly became he Spanish ir sleepies are weathercocks we ai- and Lave ling in the turret-staircase,the creaking of the tree-tops, s sense of loneliness in all this uproar, Can any situation be more conductive to madness? But now-a-days we mount our steeples only flag. An Fecentrie Yierst, Samper Hartwell, the octogenarian hermit of Shirley, Massachusetts, is dead, He lived and died in the room where he was born. He passed half his tife in a locality where he oconld hear the locomotive whistle daily, yet he never rode on a train of cars, and | British Consols, | As the price of British conwols (an | abbrevation of “consolidated annui- | thes” and pronounced either con-sols or | con~sols, but naturally the latter way) is a certain mark of the feeling of se- { curity or msecurity of financiers of all kinds in London, the reader may just now be in necd of the reminder that by far the greater portion of the national | debt of the United Kingdom has been | funded into a perpetual obligation of 3 per cent interest per annum to the | holders, The British Ministers, when | they desire to borrow money, instead of | offering a $1,000 bond at 6, 7, or B per { cent, principle payable in ten or forty | years, as was done in America, say to | the money lender: “We will pay 3 per { cent on everything we borrow. Now, | how much of a bond do you want in | return for $1,000 7’ The money lend. ler bas received as high as $1,774 and as low as $008, according the degree of | credit enjoyed by the government, In this way the government has piled up | an imaginary obligation of $3,500,000 i or, in reality has written an annual pen- sion-roll of §145,000,000, Now let us | suppose that a man desires to “lend money to the Government” -—that 1s to | take the place of those who have 850 { lent it, or those whose ancestors have {80 lent it. The investor takes $1,000 | into the market, If Napoleon has just | signed the peace of Tilsit, the lender { obtains, as af bond for $1, 714, on which he ever afterward is to | draw 3 per cent, If Disraeli have just torn up Russia's treaty of San Stefano and taken Cyprus, the lender gets only 1 an even bond for his $1,000, Again, | if time pass, and a Premier without { the governmental requisite of an iron will allow the government to drift | into a position of Isolation with most {of the world and hostilities toward { the good fighters, then the holder sells | his bond for $040, and may be glad to { get that much. This holder has before | beld bonds for which he paid $1,000, {and sold as low as $800 and as high as $1,020, Consols have not been so low | for seven years as they are at this crisis but tiey are still firm, as 80 would be sidered very low and 100 very high. thie consol, wherein it 4if- American consolidated ie principal may vary in it we interest never. This makes book-keeping for the Treasury, but exposes the Treasurer to all the greater temptation to borrow. oresaid, a “cleared” once This d: called the the greatest of fina vances in the world. Tue actual | ments of money balances at ing mount into the hundre 50 the investor may 3 { cash or for the t, which, when the account is weeks away, | makes a difference in valu “spot | wheat’’ and ** in ! American Boards. are Pris ¥ month. aii u accou BOVE es, like nt) nid seller the mo S———I 5 - Gambling in Paris r the police know there 15a in the inferior cercles of bly reaches a total of VEar Were the m, great as it exceeded ; Croupiers would and what casinos must be prodigious The suppression of any to some extent in France. new cercles started up oO supply the cravings of those games- who used to go to Baden-Baden and Hamburg and run back when they were cleaned out The contagion spread. Horse-racing, which De Mor- ny promoted on the grounds that it {improves horse flesh and circulates money briskly, has steadily fed the fev- er. So has the lottery which the gov- ermmment has encouraged under the pre- text of forwarding patriotic and charit- able enterprises. One commercial re- suit of the spread of the hells is the ruin of the cafe restaurants. Hardly any of the first or even the second: ciass restaurants are able to make both ends meet. If French ladies were not fond of going for a change to dine in cabinels particuliers and the demi-monde were not still a power, Bignon's, the Cafe Anglaise and Peter's would have to fol- | low the example of the Cafe Helder in winding up. The spreading-out of Paris to some extent draws out the rush of life from the old boulevards : but the restaurants could, never the less go ou prospering were it not for the bells, I know of a grandiose hell where | a dgjeuner is provided at from three to | five francs, which would be charged twenty-five francs for at Bignon's, and could not be furnished at a second-rate house, All the vices are now and then glorified in its salons, at soi- rees artistiques et dramatiques, At tnese entertainments special reviews, { charades and comediettas are played. If not written in Latin, they brave Uhonnetete. They are not mere gaulod, series, intended just to raise a laugh, but are caleulated to unloose the brute beast which lies hidden in so many civilized beings. These divertissements get to the head like 4 wine, and attach young fools still more old fools to the disguised hell, ¥ ’ “ ry ¥ tas s lost watering place wa tri lifer § gad ii = 80 inst violently decade Hago's Manner of Working. 's own description of his od of work given in a letter written not long since, is curious: —* ly work on a number of o EEI:E" 8 Fg L &