VOL. 48. at Poo' Mown% By-and-3y, There's a little mischief-maker That is stealing half our bliss, Sketching pictures in a dreamland That are never seen in this; Dashing from our lips the pleasure Of the present, while we sigh, Von may know this mischief maker, For 1113 name is "By-and-By." Ile is sitting by our hearthstone, With his ay, bewitching glance. Whispering of the coming morrow As the social hours advance Loitering 'mid our calm reflections Hiding forms of beauty nigh— He's a smooth deceitful fellow, This enchanter, "By-and-By." You may know him by his vvinchinT, By his careless sportive air ; By his sly, obtrusive presence, That is straying everywhere ; By the trophies that he gathers Where his sombre victims lie; For a bold, determined fellow Is this conqueror, "By-and-By.- When the calls of duty haunt us. And the present seems to he All the time that ever mortals Snatch front dark eternity, Then a fairy hand seems painting, Pictures on a distant sky ; For a cunning little artist Es the fairy, "By-and-By." “By-and-By” the wind is singing; "By-and-By" the heart rep;ies; But the Phantom just before us, Ere we grasp it, ever flies. List not to the idle charmer, Scorn the very specious lie ; Only in the fancy liveth This deceiver, "By-and-By." Subscribe for the JOURNAL now, and do not wait for "By-and-13y." It is only two dollars a year. Morg-aditr. A Lesser. for I.l'ife. M Y fan and gloves, Bell ! Quick ! Mr. Crompton is swatting, and I wish to get away before Harry comes." And Laura Grantham took a parting glance at herself in the pier glass, as she turned impatiently toward her cousin, Who was assisting her in dressing. Her eyes glowed with feverish bright ness, and her manner was excited and nervous. "But, Laura dear, I wish you would take my advice, even now, and stay at home. You know Harry does not like Nr. Cromp ton, and your going eut with him may be the cause of a serious quarrel." "Not another word, Bell. I am deei deo. lam not married yet, and even if I were, my husband should not dictate to me. He has not been here for three days past, nor sent an excuse, even. I will show him that I can be as independent as he." "He may be ill, Laura. Yon know him well enough to be sure that he has some good reason for not calling." "Let him make it appear, then. If he comes, tell him I have gone to the Opera with Mr. Crompton." And she swept from the room, down the broad.stairs, into the parlor, where her ex pected escort was awaiting her. As she entered, she started on seeing another besides the one she had expected to meet—a tall handsome young man, who stood by ono of the heavily curtained win dows, nervously drumming upon the pane. His face was pale and grave, but his eyes brightened as she came into the room, and he stepped forward, with outstretched hand, which she carelessly took and drop .. .. "Yon will excuse me for making you wait so long, Mr. Crompton. I fear we shall be late." Then turning to her affianced lover, for i t was no other—she said coldly : "I am sorry to be deprived of your com pany, Mr. Masterson, but I have an en gagement with Mr. Crompton. You can certainly amuse yourself as well this even ing as yon did the last, or the one before. Good evening !" And putting her hand upon the arm of her escort, without another word or look, left the room. Harry Masterson stood fixed to the spot, till ho heard the door close and the car riage wheels rumbling upon the pavement. "And this is the woman who is—who was to have been my wife !" ho exclaimed, bitterly—"whom I believe in so thorough ly and utterly! When we parted, a week ago. in this very room, 1 believed there was no power on earth that could destroy oar faith and trust in each other, and now I find her on intimate terms with the man I hate most in the world, and treating me as if I were a stranger, instead of her be trothed husband. 1 will know the mean in..'of this 1" Meanwhile, Laura was being whirled rapidly through the crowded streets seated by the man she cared least for in this world. She was in a bitter mood, and though Mr. Crompton exerted his powers of conversa tion to the utmost, she was silent, or an swered his questions in monosyllables. Her thoughts were busy with the one she had just left, and by whom she was bound by every tie than that of marriage. She remembered, with a pang, his devo tion, his self-forgetfulness, when her com flirt or pleasure was in question, and the thousand wa,ys in which his affection for her had been manifested. She thought of him standing there as she had left him, alone in the room where their vows were first pledged, and where they had built so many happy plans for the future. She remembered the stinging wotds she had uttered, and would have given worlds to have recalled them; but it was too late. She felt that, though they might be for given, they could never be forgotten— that whatever might be the result, that night would lie like a black shadow across her life. Could she have known that, f'or the last three days, Harry Masterson had been watching by the bedside of a dying sister, and that a note of explanation was at that very moment lying where it had lain for many hours, unseen and unopened, under the litter of her dressing table, a deeper bitterness would have taken possession of her soul. She sat through the performance like one in a trance. The sweet notes of the prima donna fell upon her ears unheeded, and the more than polite attentions of Mr. Crompton were hardly noticed. She was learning the lesson she had been so anx ious to teach. "We shall meet again," she whispered to herself, "and he will forgive me. Ile may not come to-morrow, nor the next day, nor the nest; but he will come. We shall meet again." Hovimany have hugged the same cum . t _ ;; ,. / _ __,,,, 5 _„ - 1 , ..z.. t-- 1 1 g 1 _ r . TA , .4 6 -- .4.. • , P.• _,;" -110 rIA, - • iTP. al i irigdon • fort, "we shall meet again. to their souls, and how many times that meeting has never come. That night Laura Grantham did not sleep. She loved Harry Masterson with all the strength of which her soul was capable, and she felt that in very wanton ness she had struck a blow at his heart which might kill forever the affection so lately existing there. She would have given worlds could she have recalled her words and deeds of that evening. The more she reflected upon them, the more in excusable they seemed; and as she turned upon her sleepless pillow, she shed tears of I bitter regret and self-reproach. The next day passed, and the next, but Harry Masterson did not come, nor did he send any message. Vainly the long day through did Laura watch for his coming, with a heart that grew heavier as the hours went by. On the evening of the third day a sum mons brought her from her room to the parlor. Her eyes were red from weeping, but she bathed them hurriedly, and ar- Iranged her disordered hair with trembling hands. "At last !" she said to herself, "at last He shall forgive me. It was only a little quarrel. He must forget it." She opened the door. Seated carelessly, in an easy chair by the grate, was, not Harry, but Mr. Crompton, who arose to meet her as she entered. "Yon are looking ill, Miss Grantham," he said. "I have not been well for several days," she answered, keeping back the tears with a strong effort. The disappointment was a bitter one. "I met Mr. Masterson this afternoon, with a lady upon his arm," continued Mr. Crompton. "I fear, Miss Grantham, you have been cruel. We poor fellows are al ways the victims of your sex." A sharp pang of jealousy, not unmin glad with self reproach, entered Laura's heart. "Mr. Masterson is nothing to me," she said coldly. "If chooses to call himself a victim, or you to consider him one, I I have no objection to urge." I It was evident that the subject was not a pleasant one, and Mr. Crompton felt that he had gone too far. In vain he strove to retrieve his ground, and after a few min utes' forced conversation, rose to take his leave. At that moment the door opened, and Harry Masterson was announced. The face of Laura Grantham, a moment before so pale, reddened to the temples. Mingled shame, pride and mortification filled her heart. She felt that the pres ence of Mr. Crompton, at that moment, made the barrier betwixt herself and her lover more difficult to pass. She had longed , to meet Harry alone, but he had found her with the man he had hated as his rival. She felt angry with herself, and angry that Harry should have come so inoppor tunely. As Mr. Crompton passed out of the door, Harry advanced. He was dressed in black, and his final was very pale. "Laura—Miss Grantham—why do I find that man always here ?" he asked. "I am not aware that yon have any right to dictate my choice of friends, she an swered hotly. Harry bowed, but with an effort choked down the answer that rose to his lips. At last, after a pause, he said : "I have no desire to recriminate. My heart is too sore for that. What we have been to each other I need not recall. Once you were dearer to me than life itself. But one short week afr o, I believed there was no power short of death that would sander the tie between us. I have learned better. You have awakened me from a dream, which I thought realized. Oh, Laura! could you not have chosen another time to strike the blow ? Now, of all times, I need sympathy and comfort, aid it is de nied me." Laura longed to throw herself into his arms, but pride fbrbid. "You speak as if the blame were wholly mine "she answered. "Have I nothing to complain of?" "I do not complain," said Harry. "I do not blame. You have told me I have no right." "Have you not slighted me ?" she con tinued. "Have you not spent your even ings in the company of others, when I sat expecting ycin, without even a word of apology 1" "Laura," interrupted Harry, hastily, "can you reproach me for that? I sent you a message. Remember where those even ings, and days even, were spent." He glanced at his black clothing as he spoke, but Laura's eyes did not follow his. "That does not matter. You have a right to choose your company. Ido not ask to know who it is, or where you seek it. It does not concern me. She spoke bitterly and defiantly. "You teach me my duty," said Harry. "I came to-day hoping that our misunder standing was one which could be explained, and that we might again be to each other what we were before. Your words show me how impossible that is. God forgive you, Laura—you have shadowed my whole life. We may never meet again, but you will some time know how l have loved you:" The door closed and he was gone ! For an hour Laura sat as if in a stupor. She repeated his last words over and over without seeming to feel or understand them. Then, in the silence of her room, her pent-up feelings burst forth, and with aching heart and feverish lips, she bewailed the foolish pride that had lost her the one great treasure of her life. . The next day Mr. Crompton called, and the next, but she would not leave her room. On the third day, when his barouche stop ped at the door, and his card was sent up, with a respectful invitation to join a party of friends, for a turn in the park, she hesi tated. . "I shall die here I" she said to herself. "Harry will never visit this house again, and if I go into company I may meet him. If it were only any one else but Mr. Crompton !" And she sent down word that the invi tation was accepted. "We have only a few squares to go to join the rest of the party," sain Mr. Cromp ton, as lie handed her into the carriage and took the reins. The horses were of high mettle and sprang immediately forward as the servant let go his bold of the bit, nearly tearing the reins from Mr. Crompton's grasp. With an exclamation of anger be struck them a. heavy blow with the whip. In spite of his endeavors they broke into a run, and dashed with fearful rapidity to ward Broadway. Vainly he tried to turn their course into one of the side streets. Vainly did the by-standers attempt to stop them by shouts and cries. On they plunged and there seemed to be no possi ble means of escape from death for the oc cupants of the carriage, when amen sprang suddenly from the excited (Told, and, with a desperate grasp caught the nearest horse. by the head. The affrighted animal reared wildly and then dashed forward again, dragging the rescuer beneath their feet. The neat mo ment there was a wild cry, a crash, and the crowd rushed into the street. The horses had fallen. Mr. Crompton had been thrown from the carriage, but Laura, who had clung to her seat, sat with tightly closed lips and a face like marble. The horses were rapidly disengaged from the carriage and a bleeding form was carefully raised from under their feet and borne to the nearest physician's. As Mr. Crompton caught sight of it he shuddered. "Don't let ker see it. for God's sake !" he whispered. . . She had seen it. Even in her terror she bad felt who it was that strived to save her. . "I must go to him," she said. as they lifted her from the carriage. Nothing would dissuade her, and they led her in, amid the wondering and pitying looks of the crowd, which could only guess at the secret of her grief. Stretched upon a sofa in dreadful white ness, crushed, mangled and bloody, lay all that was mortal of Barry Masterson. There was a smell of camphor in the room, and the dootor, who had been kneeling over the body, rose and gravely shook his head when she entered. "There is no hope," he said. "his heart has stopped beating." Laura yearned to fling herself upon the corpse, and pour into the dead ears the wurds she had refused the living; but cold and curious eyes were upon her, and she shut up within her heart the feelings that strove for utterance, "I knew him," said an elderly gentlen:an who was among the by-standers. "He was a noble fellow. Hardly a week ago he buried his only sister, and besides that he has lately bad some trouble which made him careless of life." The words fell upon Laura's heart with crushing weight. In them she read the true story of that neglect with which she had so cruelly charged him, who was now past answering. She had left home with a breaking heart—now it was broken! When she again crossed the threshhold of her home it was to bid the world a fare well for many months. A weary illness followed. The leaves &fled, withered and fell. Winter came and went, and the balmy airs of spring crept in at the open windows of her chamber, bringing life and strength. Then the color came back slowly to her cheek, and the light to her eyes—a strange wondering light—not the old light of intelligence; that had gone out forever. Alta,aiug Gov. Hartranft's Inaugural Address. Gentlemen of the Senate and House of Representatires, and Fellow Citizens : Permit me, through you, to tender my heartfelt thanks to the people of this Com monwealth for their partiality in selecting me as their Chief Magistrate. In obedience to law I have appeared before you to pledge my fidelity to the Constitution. Its obligations and the re sponsibilities it imposes are, I hope, fully realized. In the administration of public affairs, it is my earnest prayer that I may be guided by Divine wisdom, and that all my actions may reflect the people's will. My predecessor presented, in his annual message, his recommendations, and much valuable information, so fully and so well, that it appears unnecessary to enter into details. My views are in accord with the general policy of the State administration for the past few years, although I. believe some changes might be for the public good, and to these I shall briefly allude. Hav ing been closely connected with the finan ces of the State since 1866, I speak know ingly when I say that the revenues have been faithfully collected ; extravagant ap propriations have been avoided; taxation has been equalized by the repeal of the I most burdensome taxes ; and, by strict economy and good management, the public debt has been largely reduced. The poli cy of paying off the entire indebtedness of the State is, I believe, fully indorsed by the tax-payers, and it shall be my aim to adhere to that policy. The public debt, however, decreasing while the revenues are increasing, it occurs to me that a fur ther reduction of the latter should be made during the current session of the Legisla ture. The increase in the value of our real estate and the products of our manu factories, the steady development of our resources, and the expansion of our rail way system, are rapidly enriching our peo ple. If we measure the aggregate of our wealth and its growth upon the basis of the late census, we can readily understand how a lic , l,ter tax imposed upon the pre sent taxed property will meet all our ne cessities in the future, provide an ample fund for the liquidation of our debt, and give a decided impulse to the useful enter prises thus relieved. I sincerely trust, however, that in any attempt to lessen the burdens of taxation, the Legislature will exercise a wise discretion and properly dis criminate in favor of our industrial inter ests. In every part of this Commonwealth are found rick deposits of minerals. To make them available and productive should be our earnest aim, and shall receive a large share of my attention. It can alone be done by the intelligent employment of la bor and capital. This is an object of im mense interest, and can best be subserved by first providing the highest possible knowledge of the character and location of the most valuable minerals. Labor can be made inviting, by making it remunera tive. Its profits must depend largely upon the measure of protection accorded by Con gress to our home industries, a question which may safely be committed to our Representatives i n the National Legisla ture. Capital is the water for the wheel, and should be abundant, and the rates of inter est should be easy for active and whole some enterprise, and whatever legislation will best serve this end should receive; en eral support. Money will always seek the highest rates, the security being the same, and for that reason it sow gravitates to neighboring States, where the legal rates are higher than our owu. If we cannot remove our restrictions and make money as free as any other commodity, at least, let us permit the same rate as allowed by other States and thereby retain it within our borders. It will be my pleasure, as it is my duty, to have a watchful care over the sehool system of our State. No part of our gov ernmental policy should command the em ployment of more wisdom than that which is to promote the instruction of our youth. It is a source of pride and satisfaction that our people contribute so freely to an ob- HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1873. ject so worthy as our schools, and the re port of the Superintendent of Common Schools must convince every reader of the happy results accruing from the judicious management of our educational system. But while the doors of our schools are opened wide to every one, it is sack° think 'that there are 75,000 children in the State, who do not, whether prevented by the necessities of their parents, or other wise, attend and receive the blessed privi leges of these schools. This is a matter of grave import, and exacts of us all, people and Legislature alike, earnest and thought ful consideration. In this connection, let me say a word in regard to.a subject that has often engaged my thoughts, and to which I invoke the at tention of our law makers. No part of our system of education has secured so univer sal commendation as that which is embra ced in the circle of instruction of those who were made orphans by the casualties of war. The helpless condition of these little ones touchingly appealed to the hearts of our people, and the response was the establish ment of the orphans' schools that are now the pride of our State. But iu rescuing , these children from destitution and pro viding for their education until they have attained the age of sixteen years, have we filled the measure of our duty to them ? Thrown out into the world to do battle with life's trials at au age particularly dangerous to youth, does not common humanity require that the State should maintain its guardianship of these children until their habits are somewhatsettled, and they have acquired the ability to earn their own livehood ? The establishment of in dustrial schools wherein useful trades may be taught, seems to promise the easiest and best solution of this problem. It is highly important that in times of insurrection and riot there should be at command a good and efficient force of mil itia to assist the civil power to protect property and maintain its authority. To create such a force it seems absolutely ne cessary that the State must extend its aid in a more substantial way to those who en list in her service. The fines for the non perfornianee of militia duty are obnoxious to many of our best citizens, and yield at best .but a slender revenue, and that, too, on a wrong basis, for property and not the individual be taxed. The military should be well distributed throughout the State, and the number of companies limit ed, and within the limit, to make them efficient, every company accepted, when found to be up to the proper standard of number, drill and discipline, should receive directly from the public treasury at least $5OO per annum. INSUIMNCE. The fire and life insurance companies are making an effort to secure uniform legislation iu all the States, and the States having a large home interest in insurance, have been the first to adopt that prinoiple. To impose heavy fees and taxes upon in surance companies incorporated in other States, and doing business in this, reads upon the home companies, by reason of the reciprocal laws of those States. If it is deemed desirable to protect and foster the home insurance interest, already too long neglected, let uniform laws be enacted. To me, it seems this interest is of sufficient importance to warrant the temporary loss of a portion of the revenue now received from foreign companies. The revenues from own companies will increase by rea son of their enlarged business, and we will thus be compensated for such temporary loss. CENTENNIAL The necessity for immediate action on the part of our people to insure the suc cess of the Centennial exhibition must be realized by every thinking man. Its fail ure will be to our lastine , ' shame—its suc cess must redound td the honorand perma nent benefit of the Commonwealth. Lo cated in our metropolis which is fast mo ving to the front of the manufacturing cities of the world, affording an opportu nity to display the products and resources of our State, and opening to foreicr ° uers new channels of information as to our character and enterprises, it certainly is the imperative duty of every citizen who loves his State to lend his countenance and support to this great exhibition. The dig nity and good name of the Commonwealth are at stake. Let us not forfeit these by a lack of public spirit, or by mistaken econ omy. Any proper plan the Legislature may see fit to adopt to aid the National un dertaking shall receive the hearty concur rence of the executive. CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM. The subject of constitutional reform is now occupying a large share of public at tention. Opinions are various as to its propriety or necessity as the views of men are conservative or progressive. There is now, however, in session in Philadelphia a convention of respectable and honorable gentlemen, fresh from the people and au thorised by them to revise the constitution. To these gentlemen we confidently refer these questions of constitutional reform in the belief that out of their combined in tegrity and wisdom will spring such mea sures as will best conduce to our safety, happiness and prosperity. SPECIAL LEGISLATION There is one paramount and growing evil, however, to which, by my oath as your Executive, and my sense of duty as a citizen, I am constrained to ask your se rious attention. I allude to special legis lation or the abuse of legislative power, to further particular local and private ends to the exclusion of public business. I can not condemn this evil in language too strong, and it seems but the part of com mon sense, that some positive restriction be put upon legislation that will confine it to the public objects and make its en actments uniform and general'. PARDONING POWER. There is another subject to which I may be permitted to advert, because it concerns one of my most important functions. I refer to the pardoning power. Tho exer cise of this power rests exclusively within the discretion and conscience of the Ex ecutive; and when we consider the impor tunities of the friends of a condemned man, and their natural inclination to use every influence to obtain a pardon, it must be conceded that this power is a trying and dangerous one with which to invest any individual. Any provision that would relieve the conscience and divide the re sponsibility of the exercise of this power, must surely commend itself to the good sense of our people. SINKING FUND. There is a popular demand, too, that the Sinking Fund, containing bonds that represent the proceeds of the sale of public works, and which are applicable alone to the payment of the public debt, shall be kept sacred to the purpose to which it was dedicated, and that the safeguards of this fund shall be made so strong as to protect it from every encroachment, however in geniously planned or powerfully supported. To this demand the Constitutional Conven tion will doubtless respond, and for myself, I may be permitted to say, that no legisla tion impairing the security of this fund, or changing its character, can ever receive my sanction. In view of the prospect that the Legis lature will, after this session, be divested of its power to legislate for special objects, a popular apprehension is prevailing that interested parties will push their schemes at this juncture and make extraordinary efforts to control legislation. I deem it my duty to impress upon the Legislature the necessity of examining with more than ordinary care every measure submitted for their consideration. BOARD OF PUBLIC CHARITIES, Too much praise cannot be recorded to the honorable and humane gentlemenNyho constitute the Board of Public Charities for their valuable services, gratuitously be stowed, in supervising the manifold and important public trusts the State has con fided to their care. I take great pleasure in inviting 'the attention of the Legislature to the suggestions and work of this excel lent board, and shall unite in any plan that will help these gentlemen to accomplish their beneficient designs. We have great cause for thankfulness, my fellow-citizens, when we contemplate the happy and prosperous condition of our country. Recuperating rapidly from the ravages and waste of our great civil r war, she is moving forward to a new era of progress and development. And in this march to a higher destiny in which all the States are united,Pennsylvania should have a place in the van, a position to which she is entitled by the intelligence and character of her citizens, the magnitude of her resources, the extent of her indus trial interests, and the grand record of her patriotism. To maintain this position for our proud old Commonwealth, will be the the constant endeavor of your Executive, and to strengthen his arm and enlarge his understanding, he asks the support and counsel of al! good citizens, and humbly implores the aid and guidance of Him who is the Supreme Ruler. Tit-Bits Taken on the Fly. Truth—Liar's purgatory. • Cold muffins—Ragamuffins. A water pitcher—A fire engine. A woman's fitness comes by fits. Keep the mind on a healthy trot. Time is a ship which never anchors. The fear of ill exceeds the ill we fear. Were man but content, he were perfect. Scorn at first makes after love the more. The world is still deceived by ornament. An imaginary quantity—A lady's age. Happiness is always a home-made article. A melodious attendant—A page of mu sic. Persons given to abstraction—Pickpock• Firm language—Conversation between partners. Something that doesn't mind pinching —Snuff. Prayer is a rope that rings a hell in heaven. Vested interest—Money ia the waistcoat pocket. That grief is most sineere which shuns observation. To talk without thinking is to shoot without alining. A good rale—Back your friends, and face your enemies. A liar is tolerated when he tells what we wish to believe. The want of leisure is often only the want of inclination. Nothing but may be better, and every better might be best. Bigotry murders religion to frighten fools with her ghost. Idleness is weariness, and the straight road leading to ennui. • In every art the most difficult thing to preserve is natural grace. A man who was never troubled with his mother-in-law—Adam. The soft dews of tears water and ripen the blossom of repentance. He who is not loved, is alone every where, and with every one. To-mcrrow is the day on which idle men work and fools reform. The light of duty, when fully clear, casts no shadow of hesitation. People seldom learn economy, till they have little left to exercise it on. Those who are honest, "as the best poli cy," are half-way to being rogues. Like a great many thieves, "Time steals on," and cannot be arrested. Hold the gifts of Fortune so as to be ever ready to yield them back to her. Girls don't give the mitten now, be cause—they don't know how to knit. Time advances like the slowest tide, but retreats like the swiftest current. Moss—the beard of time which ripens on the stern old rocks and aged trees. What is fame but one loud, spontaneous blast from a myriad penny trumpet ? A duelist vindicates his pretensions to live like a gentleman by dying like a dog. The grave, the solemn chamber of initi ation into the great secret of eternity. Some young ladies must be given to dreamy speculations, they build such cas tles in the (h)air. THE ruin of most men dates from some vacant hour. Occupation is the armor of the soul. There is a satirical poem in which the devil is represented as fishing for men, and fitting his bait to taste and business of his prey; but the idler, he said gave him no trouble, he bit the naked hook. Simkins, havinc , ' wedded and settled down, accumulated a slight scar over his eyebrow, the muse of which it is unneces sary to state, but an inquisitive acquaint ance asked him whether it was a mark of the chicken-pox. "Worse than that," re plied Simkins. "It's• a mai'k of the hen peck." "Be cheerful," says the man who is easy in his circumstances, missing no loved. face at the table, nor by the hearth. But does he ever consider how hard it may be to be cheerful when the heart aches, and the cupboard is empty, and there are little fresh graves in the church-yard, and friends are few and indifferent, and even God, for the time being, seems to have forgotten us, so desolate is our lot? How difficult for one man to understand another in such different circumstances ! How easy to say "Be Cheerful !" How hard he would find it to practice, were he stripped of all life's brightness ! Not to be Fooled, In Philadelphia there lives a doctor so lean and attenuated that the sobriquet of "Old Bones" is far front being a MISUO men This doctor has a student, and that stu dent is trying his best to become a doctor. He attends to the office while the doctor attends to the out-door patients. Among other fixtures of the office is a weird skele ton, so hullg and adjusted-that it will walk out of a cupboard where it is kept; and by manipulating it rightly, it can be made to go through several grotesque antics. One day while the student sat pouring over some medical work, the street door opened and a youthful peddler, with a basket of knicknacks, presented himself'. When told that nothing in his line was wanted, the little rascal began to "talk back" in a most impudent manner, and was finally ordered to leave the office. This he refused to do; thinking to scare him, the student pulled a string, and open flew the door where the skeleton was hidden, and that emblem of death sprang out at the boy, who, frightened half out of his wits, dropped his basket and scampered out of the office, taking up a position on the' opposite side of the street to await, further events. Just then the doctor, "Qld Bones," came into his study, and learning the cause of the uproar, he went to the door and motioned the boy to come and get his wares. "No you don't," he called out, "I know you, if you have got your clothes on." A Quaker Printer's Proverbs, Never send thou an article for publica tion without giving the editor thy name, for thy name oftentimes secures publication to worthless articles. Thou ehouldst not rap at the door of a printing office, for he that answereth the rap sneereth in his sleeves, and loseth time. . _ Neither do thou loaf about, ask ques tions, or knock down type, or the boys will love thee like they do shade trees=when thou leaveth. Thou shouldst never read the copy on the printer's case, or the sharp or hooked container thereof; er he may knock thee down. Never inquire thou of the editor for the news, for behold it is his business at the appointed time to give it to thee without asking. It is not right that thou shonldst ask him who is the author of an article, for it is his duty to keep such things unto him self. When thon dost enter his office, take heed unto thyself that thou dost not look at what may be laying open and concerneth thee not, for that is not meet in the sight of good breeding. Neither examine the proof-sheet, for it is not ready to meet thine eye, that thou mayest understand. Prefer thine own town paper to any other, and subscribe for it immediately. Pay for it in advance, and it shall be well with thee and thine. Labor Conquers all Things. It is a well-established truth that labor conquers all things Everything that we do has to have a certain amount of labor expended on it to bring it to a state of perfection. However difficult it may ap pear, however impossible it may seem to be, remember if you attack it with energy, and labor with all your might, your labors will be crowned with success. Inventive man, by the aid and application of labor, wins for himself a name that will always be hon ored, respected and remembered by his fellow-citizens. It has been truly said that no excellence is obtained without labor. Few persons conversant with the world have failed to discover that in the race of life, men of moderate means and attain ments frequently outstrip competitors en dowed equally with the smiles of fortune and the gifts of genius. Difference of tal ent will not solve it, for that difference is often found in favor of the disappointed candidate. How often do we see issuing from the walls of the same college, nay, sometimes from the bosom of the same family, two young men, one of whom shall be admitted to genius of a high order, the other scarcely above mediocrity; yet you may see the one sinking and perishing in poverty, obscurity and wretchedness, while, on the other hand, you shall observe the latter toiling up the hill of life, gain ing steadfast footing at every step, and mounting at last to distinction, an orna ment to society and a blessing to his coun try. No Time for Swearing. "Catch ice using a protline word in the ' presence of ladies," said a talkative strip ling with a shade of down on his upper lip. "There's a time for all things." No sir, there isn't a time for all things. No law, human or divine, ever set apart a time for swearing. A profane expression is a sin and an abomination, utter it where you will. As for ladies, yes, I'll grant you it is well to be and act our best in their presence. We cannot be too true, too pure, too honorable, if we want to stand upright before a good woman or a good girl—yes, while I'm about it, I'll add nor before a little mite of a girl baby, with her soul fresh from heaven. I know only of one other before whom we ought to be just as particular, if not more so. When he is not around, my boys, you can safely do just about as you please. But when you are in his presence—and to my thinking we aro all there, or thereabouts, pretty much all the time—have a care Don't offend the deepest rove, the whitest purity, the grandest honor of all.—Uncle Tinz. THEY tell a story about a man who put the saddle hind-part foremost upon his hiorse, while in a condition of dizziness su perinduced by firewater. Just as he was about to mount, a German friend came up and told him to hold on a minute, because the saddle was on wrong and wanted re fixing. The horseman gazed for a moment at the intruder, as if in deep thought, and then said: "You let that saddle alone. How in the thunder do you know which way I am going?" And the gentleman from Germany pass ed' on. BE patient with men who make mis takes. The best men step aside without meaning to. A kind, strong word then is the help and blessing that they need. As long as the deliberate choices are not turn ed downward toward the evil, and the mo tive is not colored with a bad purpose, the man is essentially on the good ground of hope, and is open to the dew and light of love. Help that man. egurational. Education, and the Science and Art of Teaching.--No. 4. The possession of any gift or talent, in volves obligation. Heavy, indeed, then, is the burden under which those rest to whom is entrusted the power for good or for evil which lies in a trained intellect. It is man's highest attainment. Its influences are circumscribed neither by time nor country. Its use can only be legitimate when made subservient to the honor of its divine Giver, and promotive of the good of mankind. More credit and distinction will flow from the manner in which so sa cred a trust is used, than from the mere possession of it. In nothing should we so study the example of oar blessed Lord, as in determining the purpose of our lives, and the grand objects to which we conse crate our powers. To do good is the only true end of our being, and to do good is the highest aim, the only proper use, of educated mind. The man of thorough culture, should not be a man of selfish impulses. The ig norant and uneducated may be pitied for the narrowness of their sympathies and the selfishness of their feelings, but the more favored sons of study and discipline, merit severest condemnation when personal en joyment limits their desires or efforts.— Gifts and opportunities are bestowed for use, for the good of others. We may not neglect them, nor bury them. Money is not the only thing over which men are miserly. To withhold the beauty and de light which fill the soul of the thoughtful and the gifted, is to be traitor to the trust confided to us. All nature is generous, reflecting the image of its Maker, refresh ing the spirit and rejoicing the soul of every beholder. Let every scholar imitate. We dare not denounce thedesire for re putation, for personal fame, without some qualification. It may become excessive and offensive, but may mingle very properly with other less selfish motives. When to acquire the good opinion of others, we strive to do them good, to impart the les sons we have received, we use aright our treasures of truth and knowledge. When simply to gain their applause, we prostitute our powers to ignoble ends, to defend vice or decry virtue, we degrade ourselves and debaso our learning. Personal considera tions cannot be entirely excluded, but should not be paramount or controlling. The attainment of fortune is another, though oft necessary, yet an inferior, end of education. Very few, indeed, are born to hereditary case and affluence, so as to be exempt from all care or concern for a livelihood or for the maintenance of a fam ily. With such the work of life in the battle for bread, and whatever may be the department of labor entered, it must yield the supply for daily wants and for the ne cessities of old age. Whilst temporal ne cessity and personal comforts cannot be entirely ignored, they form but a seconda ry consideration in the aims and results of those prosecuting a course of liberal study. There are other purposes to which edu cated intellect has been directed, of a to tally unworthy and purely ignoble charac ter, which are so manifestly a perversion and a prostitution that, whilst we weep to remember that "Eien the light which led astray, Was light from Heaven," we feel no obligation to folllw it into the sties of profligacy, and kennelrof impurity, and haunts of dishonesty, and halls of in fidelity, and resorts of low wit and coarse profanity, to which it leads. Because the power and resources of the vile and of the dishonest, are multiplied and intensified by the advantages of culture, we admit not for a moment, that these tendencies to evil inhere, in any manner or to any degree, to education as such, but present as the true solution of the enigma, the very manifest fact that vice and iniquity will press into their service every controllable assistant, and the greater its power, the more eagerly will its aid be sought. If cultivated in tellect be feared, because it thus becomes capable of prodigies of evil, whence shall we look for a counteractive and correctiv e energy, but to the results of that same culture, lifted up by virtue and honor and faith to that loftier sphere, in which the true purposes of education are found. Ig norance, however upright in its intentions, is no competent match for educated vil lainy. In self-defence, we must meet Greek with Greek. From this rather negative aspect of the aims and results of intellectual training, we would indicate more positively our view of the highest and noblest uses and purpo ses to which it may be applied in future number'. ELOCUTION, In the list of great orators the brightest name is that of Demosthenes. Did he be come the golden - tongued orator because "it was born in him," and he "could not help it ?" On the contrary, is not every school-boy familiar with the story of his heroic efforts, and incessant toil, to qualify himself for a public speaker ; of his extra ordinary expedients. and unwearied en deavors in overcoming the many natural impediments with which he was afflicted ? A man who only possesses persistence in a high degree often gets dubbed a genius at last. If we inquire into the condition of elocutionary culture contemporary with the early education of Demosthenes, we shall find that the schools of Athens furnished three distinct classes of instructors for the voice: one to superintend practice in pitch; another to conduct exercises in force ; and a third to regulate vocal melody and inflection. A good, strong, clear voice, owing to our prevalent deficiency in education, is a thing so rare that we are apt to regard it as an original endowment of the constitu tion; a grace not lying within the scope of acquisition; a charm, the absence of which, like that of personal beauty, implies no fault. That this idea is not entirely cor rect, all who have had the advantage - of vocal drill and culture will testify. Mr. Murdock, the actor and elocutionist, tells us that by an appropriate vocal training, he gained, within the space of some months, to such an extent in power and depth of voice, as to add to its previous range a whole °eta*. Whitfield made a naturally weak voice wonderful for strength and volume, by persistent vocal drill. Pr. Franklin found by computation upon a certain occasion, that he (Whitfield) might be well heard by over thirty thousand auditors. Practice gave to the utterance of Garrick so extraordinary an energy, that even his under key was distinctly audible to ten thousand people. Strength of voice is of paramount importance to the speaker, and it is an element which is very susceptible of cultivation. I had a young man in my school last summer without the first natural qualifica- tion for a good reader or speaker, and as utterly devoid of any ambition to become NO. 5. either as he was destitute of ability. His position when reading was outlandish ; his lungs weak, and articulation bad; yet, by continual exercise, I have strengthened his voice and lungs, and rendered his tones clear; with patient teaching, by precept and example, and persistent drill, I have so far corrected his natural awkwardness and diffidence in declamation, that his po sition is now comparatively graceful and easy; I have taught him to make his ges tures much more timely and appropriate; by a systematic vocal training I have ren dered his enunciation clearer and more dis tinct; in short, by a thorough course of elocutionary instruction, persistently fol-. lowed up, you can so benefit and improve the boy, that whenever called upon in af ter life to speak in public, he will do so with comparative success—with credit to himself and to his teacher. Jesox. (To be continued.) around the tirtoidt. Don't Let Mother Do It. Daughter, don't let mother do it! Do not let her slave and toil While you sit, a useless idler, Fearing your soft hands to soil. Don't you see the heavy burdens, Daily she is wont to bear, Bring the lines upon her forehead— Sprinkle silver in her hair? Daughter, dou' let mother do it ! Do not let her bake and broil Through the long, bright summer hours, Share with her the heavy toil. See, her eye has lost its brightness, Faded from the cheek the glow, And the step that ones was buoyant Now is feeble, weak and slow. Daughter, don't let mother do in She has cared for you so long, Is it right the weak and feeble Should ha toiling for the strong ? Waken from your listless langor, Seek her side to cheer and bless, And your grief will be less bitter When the sods above her press. Daughter, don't let mother do it : You will never, never know What were home without a mother Tiff that mother lieth low— Low beneath the budding daises, Free from earthly care or pain— To the home so sad withont her, Never to return again. A Beautiful Incident. In the Herald of Gospel Liberty Rev. James Maple tells the following beautiful incident in evidence that there will be re cognition after death. Southey, in his ode on the portrait of Bishop Heber, suggests that many of his admirers, gaze Upon it: reverentialre his effigy love, Till they shall grow familiar with its limo, And know him — when they see his face in heaven. There is, no doubt, truth in this beau tiful thought. A writer says : "A little girl in the family of my acquaintance, a lovely and precious child, lost her mother at an age too early to fix the lovedfeatures in her remembrance. She was beautiful ; and as the bud of her heart unfolded, it seemed as if won by that mother's prayers to turn instinctively heavenward. The sweet, conscientious and prayer-lovingehild was the idol of the bereaved family ; but she faded away early. She would lie upon the lap of a friend, who took a mother's kind care of her, and winding one wasted arm about her neck, would say, "Now tell me about mamma." And when the oft-told tale had been repeated, she would ask, softly, "Take me into the parlor ; I want to see my mamma!" The request was never refused ; and the affectionate sick child would lie for hours gazing on her mother's portrait. But "Pale and wan she grew, and weakly, Bearing all her pains so meekly, That to them she grew dearer As the trial hour drew nearer." That hour came at last, and the weeping neighbors assembled to see the little child die ' The dew of death was already on 1 1 the * flower as its life-sun was going down. The little chest heaved faintly—spasmodi cally. "Do you know me, darling ?" sob bed close in her ear the voice that was dearest; but it awoke no answer. All at once a brightness, as it from the upper world burst over the child's colorless coun tenance. The eyelids flashed open andthe lir parted ; the wan, curdling hands flew up in the little one's last impulsive effort, as she looked piercingly into the far above. "Mother !" she cried, with transport and surprise in her love, and passed with that breath to her mother's hossom. No doubt she saw her mother, who had come to conduct her up to heaven, and knew her through the means of the picture upon which she had so long and fondly looked. Thus, perhaps, we will meet and recognize persons in heaven. The idea that we shall meet and recog nise our children in heaven, scatters the gloom that hangs around the grave, robs death of its terrors, and enable us to give them up with the cheerfulness of hope. If we were to meet with them only as stran gers in heaven, it would rob that bright world of one of its brightest charms, and cast a dark shadow over our souls. This sannot be ; it is at war with our nature, and the spirit of our holy religion. Kind Words. "Buy a box, please, sir ?" The speaker was a little match girl, who, on a sum mer's afternoon, stood in the entrance of one of the large London railway stations. She was trying to find customers among the gentlemen who were hurrying along to catch the trains that would take them from busy, smoky London to their pleasant homes. Most of them never saw the little girl, or, if they did, took no notice of her. At length one gentleman, at the sound of the plaintive voice, •'Buy a box, please, sir ?" stopped a moment. "No, I don't want any," he said, and was passing on, when the hungry look of the child arrested him, and he remembered a bag of biscuits, which his little daughter had given him that morning for a luncheon, but which he had been too busy to eat. So he took them out of his pocket, and gave them to her, saying, "Here, darling, here are some bis cuits for you." She took them without a word of thanks, which rather surprised the gentleman as he turned to go ; but looking back, he saw her standing with the bis cuits still in her hand, her eyes full of tears, and he heard her say to herself, "He called me darling, he did :" Don't you think that my friend went home to his own darlings with a happier heart for the kind word he had spoken to that child ? Perhaps it was the only one she had heard for many a day. It is hardly praise to say that a man ha.- "an entire absence of self-consciousness:* If soma folks could see how they behave they might be as much shocked as their friends are by their action.