A SR Yr PEA IT PO I NEWS OF THE WEEn. —1t was sald at the White House on he 16th that the vacancy in the office sf Assistant Treasurer of New York would be filled in a few days. — Rear Admiral Franklin, command- ng the European Squadron, reports to ‘he Navy Department that the Pensaco- a, the Quinnebaug and the Kearsarge are under orders to proceed to Naples. He savs that ‘a large number of res. ident and traveling Americans visited the ships at Villefranche, and seemed to be very much gratified at seeing the American flag in foreign waters, which is a rather unusual sight in the present low state of the American merchant marine. ”’ —The steam tug Modoc burst her boiler at Pittsburg on the 18th killing Joseph Davis, the pilot, and dangerous. ly injuring Matthew Higgids, the fire- man, and Jeff” Evans, the captain. — Pater Roth and his nephew, Abra- aam Roth, were struck by an engine while driving across the railroad at Sellersville, Penna,, on the 18th}and the young man was killed. His un- sle was dangerously injured. Abraham was married on the 16uh., —The fourth game of chess in the championship contest betweeu Messrs, Zukertort and Steinitz was played in New York onthe 18th. It was won 9y Zukertort, who has now three ames, Steinitz having won cne —The Secretary of the Navy has di- rected that a vessel of the Pacific Sta- tion be sent to the Samoan Islands, The safe in the office of the Trea- smrer of Lawrence county, Penna... at Newcastle, was blown open on the | 18th, and robbed of $200 in money, $10,000 in notes and $4500 in county | warrants, The notes were the per- | sonal property of Deputy Treasurer shaffer. payable to his order, and are yf no value to anybody else. The war- rants were signed, but, as they had all | been recorded, they also are worthless, — The Navy Department was on the | 18th informed that Commander Hay- ward died at Alexandria, Egypt on! the 10th. —The New York Assembly on the | 15th adopted resolutions in rayor of the passage by Congress of *‘the act grant- | ing a moderate pension to every hon yrably discharged solder and sailor en- gaged in the late war.”” The Assembly resolved itself into Committee of the Whole, and, after some eulogies had been pronounced, adopted appropnate | resolutions on 1eath of General Grrant. tha —The Legisiature of Kansas met on the 10th, in extra session, but many members were absent owinz to the mow blockade on the railroads. In the Senate. Miss Ells Miller, of Leav- snworth, was alected Journal Clerk, —The Maryland Legislature on the 10th, re-elected A. P. Gorman, Demo- rat, to be U. 8. Senator. In the Sen- | ate he received 21 votes to4 for Mec- Comas, Republican; in the House 79 votes to 10 for McComas. ~The members of the Dakota de-| iegation called upon the President on | the 10th, and presenied (he claims of their Territory to admission into the Union of States The resident said “the question should be impartially gonsidered from a judicial rftand-point | of night and Justice, without regar- solely to ita partisan aspects. He would | give the matter careful consideration | and would do what ha thought right in | the premises.” —Despite the bad weather and the | family’s expressed wish that the serv- | ices should be conducted as privately as | possible, Old Swedes’ Church, Wilming- wn, Del., was thronged on the 19th, on the occasion of the funeral of Miss | Katherine Lee Bayard. The funeral | Pw entersd the church a few minutes fore 2 o'clock. Secretary Bayard | passed up the aisia with his eldest | Baughter, Mrs, Mabel Warren, of Bos- | ton ; Miss Bayard entered with Mr, | Warren and Philip T. and Thomas F. | Bayard, Jr.,, with the family of Dr. | Kane, the becretary’s brother-in-law, | A silver plats on the casket lid bore the | inscription ° Kararrine Lee BAYARD, Born August 13, 1857, Dind January 16, 1886, ~The Supreme Court of Illinois on the 10th, affirmed the constitutiouality | of the Election law of that State, ~The Board of Pardons at Harris- yurg, on the 19th, refused the applica. | tion of Edward Roberta Jr,, of Phila- | felphia, convicted of larceny. The | sase of Ellis Phipps, of Philadelphia, | was continuad under advisement, owing | 0 the absence, from illness; of Attor- | ney Gendral Cassidy. ! ~The commission toJeanvas the vote for State Treasnrer met on the 19th, | in the Senate Chamber at Harrisbhrg, | Pa. Governor Pattison presiding. The | vote was found to be the same as ane | nounced last fall, namely: Quay, 324.- 304; Day, 1,178; Spangler, 15,047, | Whitney, 2785. i ~The President on the 19th signed | the bill providing for the performance | of the duties of tha Presidental office | in case of tha removal, death or inabils | ity of the President and Vice President. ~The committees appointed Ly the Ohio Housa of representatives to in- | vestigate charges against members of | the House that they had accepted | bribes to vote for Senator Payne, held their first meeting on the 19th, and de- cided **40 make a thorough inquiry,and, if necessary to extend the scope of the investigation, to ask for further author- ity from the House."’ The Senate in executive session on the 20th, confirmed Daniel M. Fox to be Superintendent of the Philadelphia Mint: also the following Postmasters for Vennsylvawa: A. J, Greenfield, Oil City; W. P. Dawson, Tideout; 8, H, Smith, Oxford; Geoage Schall, Norns. town; J. G. Randall, Doylestown; M. 8. Longaker, Pottstown; John Habi. land; Phoenixville; P. A. Reed, Tyrone; J. B. Larkin, Pittsburg; C. F. Cross, Allentown, Ezra Evans, West Chester; D. W. Connolly, Scranton; J. K. Coffroth, Somerset, Charles Jan- uey was confirmed as Postmaster for Uamden, New Jersey. The Senate also ‘sonfirmed a large number of Consular, Judicial and Department nominees, € i - The President on the 20th nomina- ted Charles B. Canda to be Assistant Treasurer at New York, —~Governor Pattison, Pa on the 20th ties in place of Mr, Horner, resigned. ~The State Agricultural Soclety in ression at Harrisburg on the 20th elec- ted the following officers; President A. Wilhelm; Vice President, William M. Singerly; Secretaries, D. W, Searlesand Elbridge McConkey; Treasurer, J. B. Rutherford. — Despatches from Aspen, Colorado, report a three days’ snow storm, with snow three feet deep. On the 19th three men were killed by snow slides on Aspen and Washington Mountains, Seven men who left Aspen in the morn- ing for Maroon Pass , to return at noon have not been heard of, and are supposed Pass, —The Democratic State Committee of Pennsylvania met on the 20th, in Harrisburg, W. U. was re-elected Chairman, Luzerne; Richard Coulter, of umberland; R. E. Wnght of Lehigh; Dallas Senders, of Philadelphia, and S. T. Neill, of Warren, were elected as the Executive Commitiee, tion in Harrisburg on August 18th, Henry Lloyd to be Governor for the elected by the people, and also con- as United States Senator, —At the annual meeting of the Am- erican Yacht Club, in New York, on A. E. Bateman, H. Osgood, Rear Commodore, and Henry A. Tay- It was said that two English steam yachts would compete in the spring regattas, —The fifth game of the chess chani- pionship between Messrs, Steinitz and Zukertert, in New York, was won on The latter has won four games and hisantagonist one. The next three games will St, Louis, beginning on the 29th — Another eruption of the volcano of Colima occurred on the morning of the 15th inst, It was preceded by loud detouations, Enormous stonzs were thrown to a great and were plainly visible from the city of Colima, last Commodores; aC» counts a vast white cloud overhung the crater, bea tin below, i — FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS. SENATE, In the Senate on the 19th, Mr. Frye's resolution regarding the President's recommendation for Fishery Com- 3 1 a on Foreign Relations, Mr. Ingalls of- directing the Secretary of the Treasury to inform the Senate what amount of silver bullion had been purchased for coinage mn each year since July 1, 1884, chased in each case, and {rom instance all bids had been rejected and, if so, for what reason, and in what money or currency the payment for Presidential Count bill came up, but In the Senate on the 20th Mr. Hale offered a resolution, which was agreed to, making inquiry of the Secretary of the Treasury in regard to charges that convict labor was employed by the con- tractors for putting an additional story on the post office at Peoria, lilinois, last year. A resolution was offered by Mr, Mitchell, of Oregon, and referred fo the Committee on Foreign Rela promulgation of our treaty with China, and McPherson on the same subject, the Senate went into Executive session, and, when the doors were reopened, ad- jouined! HOUSE In the House, on the 19th, the Senate Exchange Building in New York city, for srmy purposes was reported, and re- ferred to the Committee of the Whole, A bill for the relief of Fitz-Jon Porter was also reported and placed on the calendar. Mr. Matson, from the Com. mittee on Invalid Pensions, reported back the bill to increase the pensions of widows from $8 to $12 per month. Re- ferred to the Committee of the Whole, The Senate resolution accepting the statue of President Garfield, presented by the State of Ohio, was taken up, and, after several eulogies of the de ceased statesman, agreed to. Ad- journed, ~In the House on the 20th, a bill was reported authorizing the voluntary | retirement of navy officers who have | rendered conspicuous serviee in battle | or have had thirty years’ service. Mr, | Matson, of Indiana, called up the bill | Increasing the pension of widows and | dependent relatives of soldiers to $12 | per month, Pending discussion the | morning hour expired and the bill went | over, © House went into Committee of the Whole, the real pur; being to continue debate on the enh $i, The first bill on the calendar, however, was the Senate bill for the purchase of the old Produce Exchange building, in New York City. Mr, of Colo. ado, being recognized chalr, said “that was the precise bill he wished to talk about,” and he immediately proceeded to deliver a long speech in tion to the of gllver coinage. When he had finished the bill In hand was considered, and final reported to the House and passed, wi an amendment which sent il back to the Senate, The House thon adjourned, It is not Always Night. The weary soul in volceless prayer Breaks from the verge of dark despair There sees no ray of welcome light; But Faith cries out with sturdy voice, That makes the waiting heart rejoice, “Tt is not—is not—always night!” With tired feet and longing eyes, We guze athwart the leaden skies, And at the distant mountain height; Then hope shines o'er the dreary way-— We see the gleam of dawn and say, “It 18 not—is not—always night!” Be strong, O soul! Be brave, faint heart! Bid ev'ry doubt and fear depart, For God will make it all end right; The promise is for me and you-— The shining shore comes into view— It is not—is not—always right!” NPE Se SIR ALGERNON’S INTENTIONS, Sir Algernon Tudor was eminently aristocratic and exeeedingly good look- ing, but not altogether so wise as a baronet with a rent roll of £10,000 a | year ought to be, | was, as everybody knew, the prettiest | mateh even for Sir Algernon. of the tender feeling she had inspired, | and was even prepared to reciprocate it | as soon as the gentleman gave her chance of doing so, without oversteppiug the | bounds of maiden modesty and reserve, for Dolly was a very d young discreet Jady, and knew better than to make readily, or doing any of the love-make found this sweet, unvarying friendli- ness very trying, for he was dreadfully in love, and anxious above all things to propose and get that difficult ques- tion off hus mind, and yet he never seemed able to arrive at the desired goal. But one morning he screwed his Fortur had been n- couarge to a very high point. 10 he house where Dol- to remain favored him, for the had vited to lunch at and he was for a su lance which was to follow on the same evening, so thal pass many consecutive hours in the m- | mediate neighbortiood of his idol, and that the day it was all but could pass without giving Lis 1 pOSEL n the de- sired opportunity. “1H { all to-day,” said propose self with the most scrupulous go over early w ised to try with me. ith those daetls she prom- That will give us | ourselves, and when the | out with her. 1 believe she cares for me, and 1'll make her give ma my an- swer. Ican't live a day longer in this suspense, *’ Fortune favors the brave, and Sir Algernon, who tried to persuade him- self that his courage was unbounded, soon found himself alone with Dolly and his duets in a delightful Little bou- doir, where it was most likely they would remain undisturbed all the morn- ing. Dolly, in the most charming of morn. ing wrappers, looked more like an augel than a young lady. and the tender way in which that fascinating pair sang sen- timental duets was truly romantic and deserved a more appreciative audience ple who were enjoying the music just | outside the door, Now, it must be explained that Dol- ly Castleton had a very mischievous brother, who had reached the merciless age of 19, Of this fact Sir Algernon was aware, and always took care to do his love-making beyond the reach of that young man’s sharp eyes. But be was not aware of the existence of an | equally mischievous younger sister, be- cause she had only just appeared upon the scone, and very much astonished and disgusted was he when, just as he had summoned up his resolution, and was about to pour into Dolly's ears the story of his hopes and fears, the door was flung open and these two audacl- ous individuals rushed noisily in, fol lowed by & mastiff dog of so flerce an aspect that Sir Algernon fled precipita~ tely into a corner and barricaded him. self with a table and two chairs, Dolly pouted and looked daggers at her brother and sister, but her voice was sweet and placid as ever, “Sir Algernon, I must present you to my sister Freda. (Freddie, do send that horrid dog away). People think we are very much alike-—sometimes we are mistaken for one another.” Dolly and Freda were alike in featl- ure and in voice, but the likeness was not easy to detect, for Dolly's face was pensive and demure and her voice low- toned and gentle; whereas Freda was always laughing, and her mischievous, saucy looks and ways were singularly unlike her sister's. “Alike!” echoed Sir Algernon, as he slowly advanced with his eye om the dog. “I cannot see the smallest re- semblance. Why, nobody in his senses could mistake you for a moment—im- posmble, Still, { am delighted to make Lady Freda's acquaintance, 1 really did not know." “Did not know of my existence!” heard oceans and oceans of stories about you. Indeed, I am quite tired" “I ush, Freda!” interposed Dolly's gentle yet commanding tones, and | Charley stopped any further talk by | bursting into a roar of laughter. He | was standing by the piano looking ab | the music, which stood open. “Just Listen to the words, Freda; did | Here fol- | i lowed some extracts, In which senti- ment certainly preponderated over | sense, aud which produced such an outbreak of mirth from the irrepressi- | ble brother and sister, that Dolly look- | od vexed and Sir Algernon discomfited; both made excoses to slip away from | the room, though not together, “Isn’t he a muff?” laughed Charley. “*Well; rather; but I dare say he'd He isn’t bad looking, and I think they like one another,”’ “Oh, 1 don’t want to hinder thei love-making! 1'd give any thing to hear what he says to her when they're alone. Oh, Fred!” with a sud- den gleam of inspiration, ‘‘you make yourself just like Dolly Couldnt you contrive could if you 10 come across him in the dusk and give him a | It would just serve him right for Freda’s face dimpled into laughter, with her head on one side, “We are going to ride this afernoon, she does not care to seem to habits; and I ean contrive that he shall not see me before we start, If you'll | get him alone in this room at dusk, I'll | Then 1 come in y, @nd surprise him in ¥ listening gallop home. can quite innecentl any to know that and | how he says it." more he says, “First rate!” cried Charley, ecstatic -s “Won't he be wild when he finds | You're a brick, Fred, and we'll | out! “If only she would come again! If could see her now!" quoth Sir | ie boudoir at dusk. “If only I could her again alone, I would not let the had got point, if only that dreadful brother and | not, Oh, If 1 could hh ansthe hota rans 6 ova vs 119 i anolher caance again. hance slip. 1 g0 near ihe | sister had come only gel suc The d fori at £303 Lure stood por opened quietly and a dark in the doorway, A soft voleoe asked: “Are you there, Freda?" and as the sprang eagerly forward the | girlish figure started violently. Algernon! You bere! seen anything of Freda? out riding. She isso Hour Have We lost her reckless 1 | end one of these days.” “I have not seen your sister, but, Lady Dolly, please come in. 1 have s0 | wished to speak to you-—to see you | alone again. Take this chair. Give | me the chance to finish what I had only | begun to say this morning.” | The graceful, girlish figure in the | riding habit advanced readily, and | seated itself against the dim light. The | veil tied tightly across the face could | not conceal the wellknown contour of | so betwitched him. “Lady Dolly—dear Dolly!” he ex- | claimed, rapturously, ‘ ‘you are the love- best woman in the world" Had he not been so precccupied by | his own emotions, he might have heard a faint giggle from the object of his | adoration as he made this admission. | “Yes, the loveliest—the most adora- ble. My heart has been on fire ever | since I first saw your face.” | “I'm afraid you must bave been | awfully uncomfortable,’ said the soft voice, that seemed to quiver a little. | “I have been living ever since that | time in a strange, sweel dream, in which I have been hauuted by your fair face as—as—as one is haunted by a vision in-—in—ig———? “In a nightmare,” concluded the soft voice, still tremulous, *‘I sm very sorry.” “Sorry! Why should you be sorry? It has been the joy, the delight of my whole life, Dolly, dearest Dolly!” In a moment Sir Algernon had flung him. self upon his knees at her feet, and had seized her hand and covered it with kisses, ‘you know that I am yours, that I love you with my life and soul. Say that you can love me, too, a little, Dolly, bid me hope-—say you will be mine, and I shall be of all men the most happy.” But the usually self possessed and gentle Dolly seemed quite taken aback and frightened by this sudden declara- tion and tried to draw her hand away and escape. “Oh, I don't know! How can I tell! Oh, dolet me go. I think I hear somebody coming.” “Say that you love me! Say you will be mine I’ pleaded the young lover, with ever-increasing fervor. “Oh, my love, my darling, say that you will marry me!” “Oh, yes, yes—anything you like; please let me go, Oh, yes, I'll do any- thing—only I'm sure somebody is com- ing. Do, do go away—l know it's Charley.” The dreaded name acted like a spell, vanished like a dream, : a victory more easily gained then he anticipated, Charley entered, shaking with laugh. ter, “Well, you've been and gone and done it now, Freddie, I never enjoyed a thing more in my hfe, It was as good as ten plays.”’ “Oh, Charley, who could have thought he'd propose? It was horrid when he began that, What did he say?" “You accepted him, my dear, and very wisely, too. It would have been Y ou acted wisely and well.” “But he’ll think he's engaged to some horrid al the dance to- night. I ought to tell Dolly, but 1 don’t like to. She'll be so wild,” Boene advised Lhe eve “Don’t you say a word,’ wily Charley. 1'll keep an on summon you, and we can explain, 1 think they'll soon make it up belween them afterward.” Sir Algernon was in a state of ecsta- he dressed himself for He had done the deed last, al bold as a lion. “Poor little love, how frightened she self-possessed and calm. Perhaps she was not as much prepared for it as I Well, I will finish all I had to say to-night. We will make up for that second interruption. That dreadful brother shall not disturb us a Now that she bas promis- ed to be my wife I can face the whole world, My tenderness shall drive all her fears away, sweet darling!" Sir Algernon descended to the danc- ing-room, where a wallz was going on. Dolly was dancing, and she was en- gaged seven or eight deep already; but of his position. At last he had her in his arms and over the smooth first in the with a growing desire to hear her voice again. “Dolly, my Aariing I! darling! She drew her self slightly away, and a way he did not un derstand. “My sweet love—my Dolly, Do not be afraid. Lo one Sir Algernon, you forget yourself sald Lady Dolly, up her head in her most stately way, Sadly dismayed at such a rebuff, Sir strangly!’] rawing “My dearest—my own us in the boudoir to-day. had said e’’ “I said nothing which could war- employed. Iam much surprised and displeased,” said Dolly, in her haugh- tiest tone. “But. Dolly, dear Dolly.” YCall me Lady Dolly, if you please.” “But, indeed, you did promise’ “] have promised you nothing, and you know it.” “But oh, FOU? The door burst open once again-—in- terruptions that day seemed inevitable. Freda and Charley appeared, flushed and laughing. saucy girl, ‘‘don’t quarrel and be angry with one another. It's all my fault, in the dusk, Sir Algernon, to pay you us, Ie proposed to me, Dolly, andl was 80 frightened I bad to accept him, because I thought that is what you would have done in my place. I'm awfully sorry, and, indeed, I'd no idea he would do anything more than say a few pretty things. I never was so found out what 1'd let myself in for. Please don’t quarrel, because it was all my fault! I think that’s all. Come, Charley, we shall lose our waltz if we stay longer.” Brother and sister vanished as quick- ly as they had appeared. “Oh, Charley, said Freda, with a long gasp, “I'm glad 1've got it off my mind, Ido hope I haven't dome any parm. I didn’t mean tn make mise chief.” “Never you fear, said Charley reas. suringly; “they'll make it up fast enough, now they're left alone to- gether,’ The irrepressible Freda enjoyed ber dances very much after that. “It's all right,” sald Charley, com- mg up and whispering to her some three quarters of an hour later, *‘I peeped in through the keyhole and they're still there. sitting together on the sofa; and he's got his arm round her waist, and she’s put her head on his shoulder!” “Oh, I am glad!” ened Freda; and, then, bursting into a merry laugh, she added, “sooner she than 1, Charley, all the same!" A — Woman's sphere-—that she won't wie Husband get Siete 18, yor dons 9148 4 FOOD FOR THOUGHT. ——————— One to-day is worth two to-morrows, In talking or writing, let your words be few but well chosen, Nothing has so many ties binding if to the earth as a railroad, No man was ever as bad as his rivals and enemies thought him, , Experience does take dreadfully high school-wages, but he teaches like nc { other. Never be idle, but keep your hand: or mind usefully employed except when | sleeping, { In the opinion of the world marriage ends all. The truth is precisely the re verse: it begins all. Never does a man portray his charac ter more vividly than in his manner of portraving another’s, | What is necessary to make one for bearing? A great deal of good sense { Joined to a little piety, Evil ministers of good things are a | torches light to others, a waste t« pone but themselves only. It is better to sow a good heart with kindness than a field with corn, for the heart's harvest is perpetual. Compliments of congratulation are always kindly taken and cost one noth- ing but pens, ink and paper. The discovery of what is true and the { practice of what 1s good, are the tw | most important objects of life, {| As the bee collects honey and depart: ! without injuring the flower, so let hin who is wise dwell on the earth. The universe is but one great city | full of beloved ones, divine and human | by nature endeared to each other. Beauty isa cliff on which and another man seeks to shipwreck himself, because it lies full of pearls and oysters one tis not uutil we have passed through the furnace, that we are made to know how much dross is in our composition. who oblain infaithfully and That family is t ! not unjustly, keep not spend in a way that pro tance, ¢ + Dest yduees no reg ye The fickle multitude, like the light straw that floats along the stream glids with the current still and follow for tune, No man does his best excepl when be is cheerful, A light beart maketh nimble bands and keeps the mind free and alert, : Certain thoughts prayers. There are moments when, whatever be the at- titude of the bo is on its knees, It is 1 | maintain; believe, an: { belleve it are ne soul believe what nian what Fyoar you you ause you If we would begin by tl for all the joys we owe IIim, we should have little time left to complain of our vexations, g God IAnKin [ost wealth may be dustry, lost kn ywiedg | health by medic gene forever, replaced e¢ by study, lost im * ne; bat e is do not take too much ather depend on yourself, Without a belief Be self reliant; i advice, but r in personal immor- . hke an arch | resting on one pillar, like a bridge end- | ing in an abyss. A woman's heart is the true place for a man’s likeness, An instant give: | the impression, and an age of sorrow | and change cannot efface it. It is an oriental idea that the spider | draws its venom from the rose; and thus it is that too often from the sweetl- | est sources comes the blight of happi- | ness and human affections. | You turn exactly around. Food is meant to serve lite, but life, forsooth, | serves food. Clothes are to serve the body, but the body, forsooth must serve clothing, and so blind is the world that it does not see this. The rainbow is beautiful, but without | a storm, without a passing cloud, with- out decending rain-drops, it does mot appear. It comes after darkness and | gloom, and the contrast makes its light the more charming and effective. Oh, there is nothing holier in this fife of ours than the first consciounes: of love, the first fluttering of its silken wings, the first rising sound and breath of that wind which is so soon to sweep through the soul, to purify er destroy. When weare young we waste a great | deal of time in imagining what we will | do when we grow older, and when we | are old we waste an equal amount of | time in wondering why we waited so | Jong before we began to do anything | Meek young men grow up in libraries, the | views which Cicero, which Locke, | which Bacon have given, forgetful that i Cicero, Locke and Bacon were only | young men 1n libranes when they wrote | these books. | No enjoyment, however inconsider- | ble, is confined to the present moment. | A man is the happier for life from | having made once an agreeable tour, | or lived for any length of time with | pleasant people, or enjoyed any consid. erable interval of innocent pleasure. | We feel a kind of reverence for the | first books of young authors. There is | 80 much aspiration in them, s0 much | audacious hope and trembling fear, so | much of the heart's history, that all | errors and shortcomings are for a while lost sight of in the amiable self-asser- tions of the youth The ordinary life of a locomotive en- gine is stated at thirty years. Some of the small parts require renewal every six months, The boiler tube lasts five and the crank-axles six years; tires, boilers, and fire-boxes, seven to ten years; the mde frames, axles and other paris, thirty years, Good manners is the only thing which keeps in fashion all the year round. It is always in good taste to sqy something kindly, ‘or do a generous dead. The gurely