TIN LANCASTER INTELLIGENCEIL PIIBLISHXD EVERY WEEDIO:SDAY BY H. G. NlffiTn .1t 00. A. J. STEINMAN H. G. 13151 TH In aII TERI'dB Tar—o Dollars per annum payable oases In advance. • THE LAIICIAST3B. DAILY INTELLIGENCER IS published every evening, Sunday excepted, at 15 per annum in advance. OFFloE—poorawror Coarma or Cram= MIMES, 113 nett 1. GOOD NIGHT. Beyond the press of loss and gain, How sweet at eve to creep And fold about my weary brain The lotus leaves of steep, And all the throbs of daily pale In opiate (uncles sleep. No lotus leaf—no Indian wine— Like evening's inviiiic claims, Descending under dusk divine, And dropping tender balms I ido this lowly heart of mine That asketh God for alms. 0! blessed With chrisßlee m op f holyanointin nightg me, Ana blinding me that I may nee Beyond all earthly eig ht, And inding me that I may be Rele b ased for viewless flight. Upborne from dust of dully things, And freed from curb of clay To mount upon ethereal wino— Through boundless worlds to el my And drink at Life's eternal sprltign, I3eYond the founts of day. Oh! loving Sleep! that hringeth dreams To woo, with waving hands, And call us back by pleasant streams A nd over silvery strands, Where Memory, (lice moonlight, gleam. Across the shining sands. O! tide of Sleep! thus softly Bows Through pleasure's gard. 0 blooms. Anil ebbs, In sorrowful repose, Beneath oar tiorrow's glooms, Where Memory, like moonlight, shows The nn sits on all our tomb,. 0! gentle Sleep! 0! .10tnn Death! Twin angels, darkly bright, That kh4 our eyes. 11.11 d seal our !wont h And sally veil the light I know not which It be that salt The tenderest "(loud Night." flaisccilancous Tile Nopement " Your aunt Churl ton and cousin Jen nie will be here on the next train, Itus. sell " said Mr. Wilder to his nephew.— " You had better get the pony chaise, and bring them from the—" "Can't. Am going away myself, sir." The—the d—l you lire !" responded the old gentleman, pushing his specta cles up over his forehead, and regard ing his nephew with an air of surprise and consternation. "Yes, sir. Charley 1 hint invited 1111' out to his place for a few weeks, and I thought I might us well go now as any time." " I should say tliat it was a very strange time to be leaving !mine. Your aunt and cousin will consider it AS a personal atfrt int, sir." " It is not intended as such, sir.— 'Thhough to lie frank, considering the object of Jennie's visit, I prefer not to see her. And I must say that I think she would have shown more sense and delicacy if she would have stayed away." " Your cousin is a very lovely little girl, Mr. Impudence, and won't be likely to go a - begging." " I don't doubt it in the leueL. But for all that, she won't suit me for a wife, uncle," "How do you know that, you con ceited young donkey, when you never saw her?" inquired the irate old man, bringing his cane down upon the floor with startlihg emphasis. " Common sense teaches we that no marriage can be a happy one that does not, spring from mutual love. And one thing I am resolved, that I will never marry from mercenary motives." " Nobody wants you to marry the girl unless you like her!" roared Mr. Wilder, his face growing purple with rage and vexation lit his nephew's per versity. All I ask is that you will stay and see her. And this is a point I in sist upon—yes, sir, l insist upon it I" " I am sorry to disobey you, uncle, lint if I should stay, iL will only give rise to conclusions that I am 11115i011S to avoid, but I will, tell you what I will ' do. I will relinquish all claim to the property that you lire so anxious should not be divided. As that seems to lie the main object, I think that it ought to lie satisfactory to all parties." A few minutes later Russell passed by the window, valise In hand, Ho nodded good humoreilly to his uncle as he glanced in, who glared alter hint in speechless rage. " Ile shan't have a penny—not a penny!" he growled, as sinking back in his (Muir, lie wiped the perspiration from his forehead. " What's the matter now ?" said the gentle voice of his I,‘,•ife, Polly, who had just entered the room. " Matter enough, I should say. Rus sell has gone—actually cleared out, so as not to see his cousin. What do you think of that " 1 think you'll Intro another altar of the gout, If you get yourself so ex. cited," said the good lady, as she placii' ly resumed her knitting. " Wind's to he dune now ?" " Nothing, that I can see. and J pinto hail seen each other before they hadfany 'lotion that you wanted them to marry, ten to one but that they would have !Olen head nod ears ill love with each other; but as matters are now, I don't believe it would be Of the least use. From what Ellett Writes me, I should think Jennie to be as much op posed to, it us Russell. She says she can't bear to hear his name mentioned, and that it was as much as she could do to get her consent to conie at all, when she heard that Russell was at home." "They are lt couple of simpletons," said the old gentleman, testily. "I've got half a nilud to make another will, and leave my property to some charita ble institution !" In going to Dighton, whither lie was 11011 nil, Russell Wilder had to travel part of the way by stage. There was only .110 passenger besides himself, for which he was not sorry, the day being very hot and sultry. This passenger was a lady—there was an air of unmistakable latlyhood about her which told him that. He noticed liar. titularly the daintily gloved hands and well-hitting boots. Her graceful form indicated Lhat she was both young and pretty, but he could not seedier face on account of the envious veil that hid it. ;tut as soon as she got comfortably set tled in tile corner, to which Mussel as sisted her, site threw it back, disclosing a lair, sweet cave, lighted by a pair .of wondrously bright. black eyes, which shot a swift, bewildered plane- into his, that were so intently regarding her. Tim sudden starting of the coach, which soon sent. the lady's parcels from the seat to the floor, gave Russell an op portunity or speaking . , as he returned them, of which lie was not slow to take advantage. From this they fell easily into conver sation ; and it was I,lll'lOllS 110 W a,ciable they became. They talked of the beautiful scenery through which they were passing; of the newest books and latest magazines, some of which Russell had with him. The lady inwardly thought her cola panion to be the most entertaining and agreeable man she ever met with. And us for Russell, lie often lost the thread of his discourse in admiring the red dimpled lips, and the pearly teeth they disclosed whenever she spoke or smiled. Certain it is, his four hours' ride from 1 1 to Dighton, were the shortest four hours he had ever known in his life. '• Where do you,want to be left, sir?" inquired the coachman as lie entered the village. "At Mr. Charles Hunt's, Locust Hill. Do you know where that Is?' said Rus sell, putting tile head out of the window, " Certainly, sir; take you there in a ' jiffy." " Why there's where I'm goine!" said the lady, opening her eyes widely. Nelly—Mi. Hunt's wife is my most particular friend; we used to go to school together?" And Charley Hunt Is one of the finest fellows In the world." " How very oud !" "How very fortunate!" exclaimed ' Russell, with a meaning glance at his fair companion, which made the rosy cheeks still more rosy. " Might I take the liberty of inquir ing-1" But just at this moment the stage stop ped In front of the house, on the portico of which stood Mr. and Mm. Hunt, en joying the evening breeze. In a moment Russell was shaking • hands with the former, while Tale com panion rushe pagerly into the arms of the surprised affd delighted wife. " Why, what a happy surprise, Jen nie!" she said, after spiriting her visi tor off to her own room ; " I Lad given up all idea of seeing you this summer." And I had no idea of being able to come, until just before I started. You see, mamma—my step - mamma,you know—was going to Uncle Wider's, and she insisted on my going with her; to see the hateful, disagreeable cousin of mine, that they are determined to • • e. out al)f-Ittetlx- /end • • . . , . marry me to. So when mamma was busy packing, I just put on my things and slipped off; leaving a note to tell where I was going. Wasn't that a good joke on them all !" "I should think it was said Nellie, with a burst of the occasion warranted. "Whe re merriment,far mo than n I saw who your companion was, I thought you were out on your wedding tour?" "No, indeed, never saw the man until he got Into the stage at YBut, really,he Is the finest looking man I ever saw, and so agreeable. Who is he?" "Oh,l'll introduce you when you come down stairs. There's Sarah wanting to see me about supper. You'll have only to dress. Mind and look your prettiest!" And with a roguish shake of her fin ger at her friend, Nellie ran away to see about supper. If Jennie did not 'look her prettiest,' she certainly looked very lovely as she entered the supper room, her linen suit exchanged for a fresh, soft muslin, whose simplicity and purity were re lieved only by the violet-colored rib bons in the hair and throat. Russell had also taken great pains with his toilet as could be seen by his spotless 110511 and carefully arranged h dr. The pause that followed Jennie's en trance was broken by Mr. hunt, who in response to a meaning glance from his wife, said: " Russell, allow me to introduce to you, your cousin Jennie ; Miss Charlton, your cousin, Russell Wilder." The embarrassment which followed the blank astonishmentdnto which this announcement threw the parties so un expectedly made known to each other, was quickly dispelled IbY the turn that ,was given it by their host and hostess. " I suppose you'll want to book your• self f u r the next stage?" said Mr. I fun' shyly to Russell, who had been talker into his friend's confidence. And said his wife, turning Jennie,' t don' [suppose anything could tempt you to remain, now that you have seen that hate' it, disagreeable -" " ! " interrupted Jennie, crim soning, its she remembered her words. "Well, I won't then. Ilut you must let me laugh ! Just to think of both running In the sante direction, and to the same place. • The ringing laugh that burst from Nellie's lips was to contagious too:be re• sisted, even by those at whose expense it was raised. This merriment was followed by a general feeling, and a pleasanter tea party never gathered around social board. We need hardly say that Russell did not take the stage the next morning, nor did Jennie seem at 'all disposed to cut short her visit on account of her cousin's unexpected appearance. When they did go, they Went., as Illcy came, together. Mr. Wilder's astonishment was only equaled by his delight, on looking out of the window to see the two walking up the path towards the house, arm iu arm, and apparently On the beet of erns. • As for Russell and Jennie. they seem al to regard the unexpected meeting as tu indication of their " manifest des- tiny," accepting it as such, much to the joy of their uncle, whose darling wish was accomplished is iho marriage of two, thus made happy in spite of them selves. Trick of a Gambler. A gambler in his confession says: 1 nice know a Southern gentleman, who, although not ostensibly a profes sional gambler, really made short cards a business. lie was a man of education and a line conversationalist, and a very elegant gentleman. He was tird of a little game of draw, just to kill time, you know ; but the result was that he id ways got the best:ofit,andoningllug with moneyed men his winnings were large. I got into a series of games with him, and as well as I understand cards myself, 1 invariably got the worst of it. I knew there was something wrong, and 1 re solved to discover it If possible. I care fully examined the backs of the cards, and, understanding how this sort 01 work is done, I very soon satislled my self that the backs were all right.. I watched his deal. He threw then& around with great rapidity. his shuf- g Was square. One day I procured a powerful lying glass and went carefully over a ,ack of cards that he had won with the night before. A long and careful search revealed in the aces and face cards a series of trilling concavities. The punches were so slight as to be invisible to the naked eye, but upon passing my lingers over them, I could feel them. A gamblers' lingers are,or ought to be, P oft, aS velvet. Subsequent investigation re vealed his work. He had on the inside of his linger ring a minute punch." "In the begin ning'of a game he would manage to turn the faces of the aces and face cards, one at a time, so as to bring them against his punch, and then one indention, or two, or three in a certain locality would designate the cards. So nice was his sense of. touch that, when dealing, he would naturally pass the face of each card over the end of his left middle lingers, and, no matter how readily he dealt them, he would know the position of all the face cards in the pack. Of course, this gave him a heavy percentage, and the result woo that lie invariably won." A Little Indian Shepherd There is a Digger boy employed on a sheep ranch in Monterey county, Cali fornia, who is a human curiosity. He. heeds about eight hundred sheep all by himself, and the overseer says he knows every one of them by sight, and when he brings them in at night, he Will get upon the corral fence and tell whether one of them is missing. He is about fourteen, and has a face as round as the moon, and the brightest black eyes, which fairly sparkle with mischief. He turns more somersaults and hangs head . _ down ward from more trees than an y man could count readily, and seems hardly to be aware of the existence of the sheep during the day, yet brings them all in at night. Like a true i odian his mo tions are perfectly catlike, and he never calls to his sheep, but always imitates the owl, the wild•cat or the coyote. When his employer culls him, he never answers a syllable, but starts an runs toward him with all his might. Mis chievous Leslie is when alone, he is as shy as a partridge, and was never known to come to his meals with the others unless lie was specilicallycalled by name. The overseer got tired of being obliged always to give him a special and particular invi tation to dinner, so he went out and took him by the ear one day, and lend him to the table ; but the boy straightway burst out crying and blubbering in grievous distress of mind, and it took him two days to recover his equanimity. A revolver was bought for him, that he might shoot at the coyotes when they conic to prey on his llocks,'but he regard ed it with aversion. At last they pre vailed on him to carry It two days in succession, and on the second day he saw a wi bi-cat,crept upon it with true Indian stealth, lay flat on his belly, held the pis tol to his face, and after ig . h6ng along \ the barrel and then rapiin lig at the cat alternately about a dozen ti sat last he tired. The pistol kicked hin in the burr of the ear, after that he could never be induced to take it again. The Diggers are a timorous and gentle race, and do not take to tire-arms like the hell-born Apaches. {That Is Thine Age? " Father," said a Persian monarch to the old titan who, according to Oriental usage, bowed before the sovereign's throne, " pray be seated ; I cannot re ceive homage from one bent with years, whose head is white with the frosts of age. . And now, father," said the monarch, when the old man had taken the proffered seat, " tell me thine age ; how many of the sun's revolutions hast thou counted? " Sire," answered the old man, " I am but four years." " What! " interrupted the king; " fear est thou not to answer me falsely, or dost thou jest on the very brink of the tomb ? " " 'speak not falsely, sire," re plied the aged man, " neither would I offer a foolish jest on a subject so solemn. Eighty long years have I wasted in fol ly and sinful pleasures, and in amassing wealth, twee of which I can take with me when I leave this world. .your only have I spent in doing good to my fellow men. And shall I count these years that have been utterly wasted? Are they not worse thak blank, and is not that portion only worthy to be reckoned as a part of my life which has answered life's hest end ? " James G. M'Quade, of Norristown has been appointed Master Warden o the Port of Philadelphia by Gov. Geary "liaising the Devil." It was a dark and tempestuous night, a night to fill the soul with fright ; the thunders pealed, the lightnings flashed, the wild beasts squealed and the ele ments clashed, while the rain from prabove in torrents dashed, when a poor eacher of the gospel wended his way through the dismal intricacies of a west ern forest many years ago. The poor man felt anything but com fortable for he was wet through to the skin, and almost tried to death. He had been tramping about since morning, be sides he had lost his way, so that the reader can guess the state of mind he was in, and also appreciate the sudden transition from despair to hope which he experienced on seeing the glimmer of a light ahead. He quickened his flag ging footsteps and soon came up to the light, which issued from the only win dow of a solitary log cabin in the forest. Remembering the scriptural injunc tion " knock and it shall be opened unto you, he did so ; but without meeting with any response. He rapped again, louder than before, and this time a gruff female voice asked : " Who's there t"' " I," was the indefinite reply of our rainsoalted parson. •• Well, who are you and what do you want:"' asked the voice, gruffer than before. "A peer, benighted preacher of the gospel who has lost his way, and who wishes to stay here to-night,' answered the parson, in a dolorous voice. " Well, stay there—l don't see what's to hinder you." "But I um almost starved, and I will pay you liberly for some supper." he re sponded chattering with cold and not iu the least appreciating the joke. The words "liberly pay" acted like open sesame, and after a few moments of delay, occasioned by the unfastening of the door, it writ opened and our pas tor entered. He found himself in a rough apart ment with a large tire-place at one end, on which a great log fire was blazing; a rough deal tattle and three chairs, be sides a box lilted with dry flax, com prised its furniture. liut all minor deficiencies seemed to be more than made up by the lady of the house, for she was fully six feet in height mid weighed nigh unto three hundred pounds. After having placed some food on the tattle she turned to the parson, who stood shivering before the tire, making futile attempts to dry himself by alter nately turning one side, then the other to the tire. Now I want you to eat thisgrub as quick as you know how, and then tramp, for it's perfectly impossible for me to keep you here over night!" " But my good woman," said the prO . '•- son, anxiously, " I shall perish in this inclement weather; I have been wan dering in this fearful storm since morn ing, and if you will have any compas sion or pity at all you will try and give niesome place where I can be sheltered front this storm fur the night," and he offered her a five dollar bill. " Well," said the woman, avaricious ly clutching the money " if you think you can stay in the garret, maybe you can stay ; but hurry up, for I expect my husband home every minute, and it's as much as your life is worth if lie should find you here, for lie's a very devil incarnate, and would think no more of murdering you than he would of shooting a grizzly !" The woman produced a short ladder as she spoke and bade the parson to get up hi the garret. There was a small drop" or trap door in the ceiling, winch raised of its own accord on the parson's head press ing it upward, and not without some difficulty he managed to squeeze him self through the aperture. After he was up, the woman told him to shut the trap and not to make any noise for his life, and then taking the ladder away, the parson was left to his own reflections. Wet and uncomfortable as he was, his fatigue was such that he had almost fuller asleep, when lie was disturbed by some one's knocking at the door. Being somewhat curious to know what sort of a nun his unknown host was, he arose and peered through a smith crack in the door into - the room beneath. Ire saw the woman open the door cau tiously, and after admittffig a short, thick-set man in a heavy cloak, lock It again. From the mysterious actions and whisperings that ensued, our parson rightly concluded that the person who had just entered was not the woman's husband but her paramour, who had taken advantage of the husband's ab sence to pay the woman a nocturnal visit. After whispering together for a while the woman went to a cupboard and pro duced a bottle of whiskey and a plate of ham and bread, which she set on the table, and the twain were soon engaged in a loving repast. While the parson was watching the guilty couple there came a thundering knock at the door, which caused them both to jump to their feet in the greatest consternation. Without a moment's loss or time, the woman ran to the box of flux and emptied its contents upon the floor; she then bade the man, who was almost scared to death, to get into the box,which he was only too glad to do, and when he was id she rapidly covered him up with the flax. The womaCthen ran to the door and unbolted it, all the while rub bing her eyes as if just awkened out of her sleep. " Why the devil don't you let a feller stand outside all night!" exclaimed the new-comer, a tall, powerful, villainous looking man, clad in a hunter's garb.as he dealt her a ringing box on the ear. "I was asleep and didn't hear you be- I fore!" whimpered the woman. "And don't for Clod's sake, curse so much, for there's a Methodist minister up in the g,arrett." " Who cares for the Methodist minis ter I'd like to know? But I'll soon have him out of this hole? Here, you old canting hypocrite, come out of this and show your.self, or I'll make you!" he exclaimed,. with many imprecations, as he set the ladder before the trap door. The poor parson, almost dead with fright, slowly descended the ladder, looking as white as a ghost, for, from the ruffian's manner, he expected that I he would be a ghost shortly. Don't hurt the poor man ! See how sickly he looks !" exclaimed the woman, 1 pitying the poor parsons distress. " You shut up, and mind your busi ness, or it'll be the worse for you," was the gracious reply of her lord; then turning to the trembling parson, he asked: '• Are you a Methodist minister, and do you believe in hell and the devil?" The parson replied in the affirmative. " Well, then, by the eternal, I don't! land if you believe in the devil you'll either make it appear, or I'll cut your lying throat and make you appear before him!" and he drew his bowie-knife iu a threatening manner. The poor preacher was in anything but an enviable situation, and thoughts of the other world began to till his mind with anxious forebodings; for it is a remarkable fact that however much cler gymen preach and talk of the joys and bliss of the future world, they prefer to have others go and enjoy it. This may be self abnegation or pure unselfishness—Heaven knows "Are you most ready ?" asked the ruffian, raising his knife as he saw how ' the other hesitated. I'll :give you just three minutes, and It the devil is not here you'll be with the devil!" "My friend," said the parson, into whose head a brilliant idea had popped, "that there is a hell is a well established fact,as I can prove by hundred of writers, and that the devil exists allows of no con tradiction ; and that I have the power to make him appear is also true; but dread ful for you will be the consequence if he does ! Better for you had you never been born than to see Satan face to face In the wicked state is which you are in !" " D—n you, stop your preaching and call the old boy! I'll stand the consequences; and be quick about it, for time's up." The parson went to the fire-place and took thence a burning brand, which he applied to the box of flax. It blazed up almost like gunpowder, and the earthly yell that issued from the poor devil in the box was truly appalling. With apkacrobatic power of the pos session-a which he was himself una-, ware, he leaped out of the box, covered from head to foot with burning flax.— With roars and howls of agony he made straight for the door, but he was not so quick as the owner of the premises, for with one look of terror at the burning figure he fled out of the house, closely followed by his "Satanic majesty." When they were both gone the par- son gave his hostess a short but effective lecture on connubial duties, after which he seated himself comfortably before the fire. When the woman's husband returned h e e pe e c a t t efully parson e w d it t h h a t t h h e e ha e d atest the power to raise the devil at will. Mark Trevanlon's Love. " Do you think he will marry that woman?" " There's no telling; He is in love, and men in love are very uncertain creatures." The first speaker pulled his blonde moustache, and stepped out to get a clearer view of the couple then passing, with a deep anxiety furrowing his fore head and moving the soft beauty of his blue eyes. "Marry that woman? He must be mad The man upon whom his eyes were fixed was a splendid-looking fellow, six feet tall at least, with a grandeur of physique seldom beheld. He had great soft eyes, like the eyes of a true, faith ful animal—clear and limpid as water, frank and fearless as an innocent child's, and tender-and beautiful as the eyes of a loving woman. The rest of the face was in keeping with the wondrous eyes. There was a broad forehead, with a. 'shading of straight black hair, a clearly defined nose, a mouth shaded by the graceful sweep of a silken moustache, and a firm, smooth-shaven chin. Beside him; leaning upon his arm, was a woman—a perfect Juno. In stat ure she stood nearly us high as Mark Trevanion, and her form was a model of roundness and grace. In all that assembly of beautiful, high-bred wo men, there was not another face like hers, with its skin like the waxen leaf of a white Calla lilly ; its long, almond shaped black eyes; its white-pearly teeth shining through the scarlet lips that curved downward with a strange, a hitter pride. There was some white, gleaming stuff falling from her polished shoulders and lying in great,rich folds upon the velvet pile, draping her magnificent form iu a manner as artistic and classical as some of the sculptors draped their Grecian statutes; and every woman who passed her gave a sigh of envy. She was talking just then, with her great, burning eyes fastened on his face; and he was listening, with a rapturous expression brightening his face, and an utter oblivion' of everything around him ; and the picture they formed was striking enough to call forth the ques tion : ' Do you think he will marry that woman '.'' If he did—he, with all his pride, deli cacy, passion, high sense of honor, and love of truth stamped upon his face ; and she, with her thorough-bred cun ning and cool calculation showing themselves plainly through the flimsy veil of laughing good-nature and mock refinement— what would become of them? Everybody knew him, knew his fam ily, and the promises of a glorious future stretched out before him. Nobody knew her, save by the common hearsay. She had come among them with old Mrs. Chasseford for a patroness, and as that lady stood in high repute, nobddy open ly questioned her ward, Aura Delamere. But Gossip—that prying busybody— called her an ex-actress, an intrigante, and an artful hussy ; and as people are ever readier to credit evil than good, she stood, in the minds of the many, the de serving possessor of all these disagreea ble titles. But Mark Trevanion loved Aura Dela mere. He had told her so out in the wil derness of roses,in Mrs. Carey's conserv atory, where the light fell through green, leafy trellises, and where snowy wax-flowers fell down across the waves of midnight hair and lay against her warms cheek. He had held her firm, white hands In his, and leaning over her—as she sat before him—like some knightly loverof old, laid his good name, his princely fortune, and his true heart, at her feet. When she gave him her answer, he thanked God in his soul, and poured from his lips endearing words, such as men like him alone can use. When again they passed through the saloon, Itay Darnley, pulled his fair moustache with a fiercer anger, and something like an oath slipped from be tween his closed teeth. " God knows he is lost! There is a devil in that woman's heart!" A fairer, clearer sunshine never glad dened the earth than that which shone on the Spring morning of Marl Tre vanion's wedding day. All the world was there—all the world of fashion and elegance, and the dark old church was one vast parterre of bright, animated flowers. The bridal party needs no deseription; hundreds as rich and showy have been - - - described before, so there is no need of my repeating an oft-told tale. But the splendid bridegroom and the peerless bride were as fair a sight to look upon as ever were beheld in that old church, where hundreds of marriages had taken place ; and when they turned back from the altar, man and wife, the low-whis pered exclamations of admiration from that great throw , ' sounded out like the buzz of insects, and filled the arches with its subdued, yet distinct murmur. They went to breakfast at Mrs. Chas seford's, and thence up to the home he had thought a fitting one for his bride, and at night the doors were opened and the world found entrance to Aura Tre vanion's saloons. In the full hush of victory, crowned with wealth, position, and wifehood, this queeenly woman received her guests and their homage, and felt that her triumph was complete. The evening was wearing away, and guests were availing themselves or the music, dancing, cards, or whatever best pleased them, when some one came to her and whispered : " There is a man below who swears, ma'am, that he won't go away until he has seen you, though we've tried to do everything th get him away." " A man? Go—no!—lead the way ; will bee him !" She went down the stairs, and :it the library door the servant paused, and pointed his hand. " lie is there :'' and she entered. Near the tire, and in the deep shadow of a heavy book-case, sat something that at her entrance, straightened itself into a man, and came a step toward her. A ragged, unwashed ,unshaven w retch Ile was, with an evil, loathsome face, but he raised his head, with a vulgar leer and said with familiarity : "So, you're here, my beauty! And you've done a big thing for yourself ! " " Well?" " Well! And I want a crumb of it. You've got to give it to me or make this great house too hot for you ?" • "Devil! I thought you dead ! " " You lie ! you thought nothing of the kind. You knew I was alive. But, come, I cannot stay all the night. Give me one hundred dollars, and swear that you'll never tell who I am. Swear !" She lifted her white hand heaven ward. " God knows I have no wish to reveal you." She bowed her head upon her hands. " Ralph ! my love:for you—my prom ise to you has bes4.l the curse of my life!" Like a crash of thunder in a cloudless Summer skyvame that terrible,oath and that cry of agony, and turning, those two wretches—the ragged, sin-marked man, and the dainty woman—faced Mark Trevanion. There was a fury in him. One could see it in his calmestmoments,beneath all his natural gentleness, and now It was aroused. Like a wounded, maddened animal he stood, and as she turned, he caught her arm iu his, and dragged her before her filthy companion. "Who is this woman? What Is she to you? Speak, or I will kill you where you stand ! What is she to you ?" "My wife !" "Your "Wife! That's the word, my boy. Yes, my wife !" "Aura, look at me! Tell me that he lies ! For God's sake, answer me, or I shall go mad !" "I was his --" She did not finish the sentence, for, with almost superhuman strength, he flung her from him to the floor, where 'she lay stunned and motionless; and then he went2up to hie guests. What ho told them she never knew, but after a while the great rooms were deserted, and he stood alone before the dying fire in his chamber, gazing into the gray ashes, and likening them to the chill and desolation in his own broken heart! Six years later ! Six years, with their varied changes, fraught with good and ill, and Mark Trevanlon stood on the great parlor of his home, looking down upon the girlish face of the woman be fore him! A slight, frail girl she was, with azure eyes and waving-golden hair thrown back from a brow as white as snow, and falling in bright rings down close to the beautiful throat and over the black dress; and he was thinking in his heart that a lonely man could hardly give a proper welcome to one so young and fair. ' I shall be a trouble to you, Mr. Tre vanion, but in some way I can in part repay you. You must pardon dear papa's selfish love for me," she was saying. " I am not thinking of myself, my child. For my own sake I can thank your father for sending you to me, for I am very lonely. lam thinking of you, Nathalie. You will be alone, and un protected, and—and—the world is hard and cruel with the best of us." I am not in the world," she said And I am not in the world." So she stayed. It had been a lonely house, in spite of its splendor; for the horror of its wed ding-night seemed to have settled down within its walls, and cast a foul shadow upon every object. He never saw the fair face of the woman he had wedded, since he spurned it from him that night, but he knew that she lived, and that knowledge was sufficient in itself to make him wretched. Nathalie brought her blessings with her, as he soon learned. There were nights on nights when he came up the quiet street, and felt the weight of care roll from his heart, as the fair face in its frame of golden hair greeted him from the window. There came a time when he found himself asking : " What would life be without her? How did I live before she came? " And following that came the time when the touch of her warm fingers upon his own thrilled him from head to foot, and drove him sick at heart away from her, with the bitterness of his life-curse galling him like a chain of iron upon a gaping, festering wound. He was again in love. And this time it was no madinfatuation, but the steady growth of a love and passion that steals upon men in their later years and holds them captive for a lifetime. He lived with her face before him, her hand performing a thousand offices that only a woman's hand csu perform; and yet he could not speak one word of love to her. " You are getting cross and cruel, guardian," said she one night, as he sat in his arm-chair, his face turned sullen ly (so she fancied) toward the window. You are getting angry and out of pa tience with me." She went up quietly, and laid her hand on his arm. " Don't be angry with me." He turned and put his arms around her and drew her down to his heart. " Nathalie, darling, you will kill me! Angry with you! Would to God I was, for then this misery would not eat and burn within my heart until I have no strength to bear it. Oh, child, I love you, I love you!" She did not raise her head or move, but lay there nestling against his heart, with her soft hands clasping his. "Nathalie, Nathalle ! ' He pushed her back from him and held her out at arm's length. "My God! what have I one? I, who would have given my ife to spare you pain. Nathalie, you Her head drooped and the long lash es swept her check. " I love you!" He dropped her hand and with a groan started to his feet. She did not speak or look toward him, and he walked from the room. Had she given one sign of emotion she would have conquered and kept him back ' • but his words had chill ed and stunned her, and when he pass ed out she had not power to bid him st s ay. ,She had not known him when his great sorrow came upon him ; and liv e ing here in his quiet home,where every tongue was dumb upon that subject, and never going into the tattling world, how was she to know why he put her so fiercely away, and left her with such an agonized face? From the hour iu which their mutual confession was spoken, they separated. The true heart of the woman harbored no thought of evil, but felt that some great wrong kept them apart, that was no fault of his; and his heart, scarred and withered, now tore open afresh and bled as he never thought it could after that first great trjal. He was going away. She knew it, although in words lie never !told her. She knew that he could not bear his cross with her face above it. and that he was going, a willing exile, from his home, until the bitter tide bad passed. He spoke to her one night at supper, asking her to give hi,n that evening, fur he had much to say; and she, knowing that it was his last at home, readily as sented. - - • • ie They were in the drawing-room, s sitting before the glowing grate, he standing near her, his arm leaning upon the mantel, when the door abruptly opened, and a servant thrust in his head. ''Mr. Trevanion, I - opened_the hal" door to go out just now, and I found a woman lying on the steps I brought her into the hall, but I believe to my soul she's dead." She was lying, a limp, draggled and dirty heap, upon the bright-hued mat. Her heavy, uncombed hair swept in wet masses across her face. Trevaniou, in his pity, tenderly pushed it back and gazed into her countenance. A great cry burst from , him, and he staggered away. - Aura! Great heaven, Aura!" Fur a few moments, silence reigned broken only by Mark's labored breath. Then he spoke : "James, you know who it is. She is dead, and I can only thank God. But she must be as tenderly treated as we can treat her. Take her out, and for humanity's sake do your best." - Then he opened the parlor door and allowed Nathalie to pass in, and when they were alone he put his arms around her Nathalle, love, I am free! That wo man was my wife, my curse; and look with tender, forgiving eyes upon me, when I give from my heart a thankful prayer for my deliverance, and call you my wife, my darling:" Her answer was an uplifting of her trusting eyes, a silent outstretching of her hands. Hours later, they went in together, and looked upon that face whose living beauty had cursed him. There was a crumpled paper in the rigid hand, and the servants, well knowing for whom it was intended, had left it there unmo lested. It was her dying prayer fur mercy : " Mark, forgive me. lam dying, as only sinners die, with a terrible fear of the hereafter and a fear of your curse. I wronged you bitterly, but iu poverty, in sin, in remorse, and at last in death, are your wrongs avenged. Forgive me, for God's sake, who forgives even such as I.'' The ROMIIII Sentinel When Pompeii was destroyed, there were many buried in the ruins of it, who were afterward found in different situations. There were some found in deep vaults, as if they had gone there for security. There were some found who were in the streets, as if they had been attempting to make their escape. There were some found in lofty cham bers. But where did they find the Ro man sentinel? They found him stand ing at the city-gate, with his hand still grasping his war-weapon, where he had been placed by his captain ; and there where the heavens threatened him, there where the lava-stream rolled, he stood at his post, and there, after a thou sand years had passed away, he was found. So let Christians learn to stand to their duty, willing to stand at the post on which their Captain has placed them, arid they will find that grace will support and sustain them. A PERSON walking into the counting room of the late Mr. C., a wealthy and shrewd merchant, inquired of the clerk the rent of a store which his employer wished to let. The inquirer being satis fied with the terms, said he would hire the store •, but the clerk, knowing that he had failed for a large amount, declin ed closing the bargain until he saw Mr. C., who was then absent from the city, and desired the gentleman to call again. Upon Mr. C.'s return the clerk inform ed him of what had been related. "How much did he fail for" asked Mr. C.— " About £10,000," was the reply. " And how much did he pay ?" " Only 10 per cent, sir." "Let him have the store, Sam, let him have the store—he's got money_enough." Prince Bismarck A Visit to Ms Estate in POTllleratlia• His Character and Habits. The San Francisco Bulletin publishes a private letter from an English lady of rank, who accompanied Countess Bliicher on a visit to Varzin, the coun try-seat of Prince Bismarck, in conse quence of ;this unceremonious invita tion from the Chancellor: "I say, Coun tess, mind you bring Miss with you in July. I like girls who have the frankness to let me know that they think me an old humbug." The fol lowing is an extract from this letter: The rattling noise of the carriage in the court and the baying of a band of watch-dogs, brought the Princess von Bismarck, her daughter, and two maids in Pomeranian costumes to the door. In every respect the Princess is in keep ing with the mansion. She is a lady on, I should say, the wrong side of six ty, but fresh and comely withal. Placid women keep their good looks far into old age. Have you ever noticed what a peachy bloom there is in the cheek of silver-haired Quakeress? Princess von Bismarck has this becoming bloom.— She is quite an unpretending person, both in dress and manners; and does not give herself any trouble to remind pebple of her being a great man's wife. You must not fancy because of her plain, simple ways that she is vulgar or unintelligent. As the fash ion is in her native province, she re ceived scientific education in girlhood, and on leaving school, devoted her en ergies to domestic economy. I wish you could taste the game she pots, or the hams that are cured, the sausages that are manufactured, the cider that is bot tled, and the fish that is dried under her superintendence at Varzin. The best part of the provisions consumed in the Chancellor's town-house come from his Pomeranian estate. In the good old fashioned style, Madame Bismarck has a bunch of keys hung to her girdle.— They depend from a gold chatelaine her husband picked up somewhere In France. When sitting in the drawing-room, or superintending the farm-women at their work, her knitting-needles are always going.— Everywhere in the sitting-rooms, in the bed-rooms, one perceives in knitted quilts, and curtains, netted macassars, embroidered pillows, evidences of her manual skill and housewifely activity. Being an old friend of the Countess, she kissed me. When I was introduced she addressed to me a hearty welcome in German. Her words had a motherly ring as she kindly said to her daughter, "You'll take care to be a good sister to the fraulein while she is at Varzin."— Then laughing, she told us that the Countess (Mlle. Bismarck) was engaged, but as her "intended" was with her, she would not be too much occupied in thinking of him to attend to the visitors, of whom I learned at dinner there were no less than 30 in the house when we arrived. Coffee was laid in the drawing-room. But Otto said that would never do. So he ordered a regular lunch, at which tea, with thick fresh cream figured. This repast was a good deal in the na ture of a Scotch breakfast, for, in addi tion to cold roast mutton, there were thin, hard-baked oat-meal scones, honey, preserves, and a sort of whiskey distilled from a mixture of barley and potatoes. The furniture used to be very plain. But Bismarck has brought back from France carved oak sideboards, tables and bahuta, equal to what one sees in the royal chateau of Pau, and probably as ancient. Many a Signeu rial residence in France has contribut ed to till his roomy Pomeranian schloss with pleasant riches. Our tea for in stance, was served in a porcelain ser vice'taken from the Empress' apart ments at Compiegne. This service was manufactured for Marie Antoinette, at the factory she founded at Bourg-la- Reins, and it is' quite unique. The ground is of a canary-yellow, and the decorative part consists of landscapes, most exquisitely done in Indian ink. The Princess Bismarck, with truly German naivete, says: ' All! you are admiring those little mugs. They be longed to that poor Queen of Louis XVI. My husband bought the whole lot for a thaler from a soldier. He (Bismarck) sent me such lovely things from Versailles! I will show you the wonderful laces that I am going to have made up for Leuchen's trousseau. They were found by Otto In a most beautiful inlaid wardrobe (which I have placed in my bed-room at Berlin), in the castle of the Duchess de Mouchy, that foolish Emperor's cousin. Mein Gott .' what a foolish man that Emperor was. I heard tile Emperor Wilhelm say that the Em press was also very silly and frivolous, and that she hated Prussia. But she was not wicked notwithstanding her being the tool of Princess Metternich in provoking the war." Bismarck came in from fishing while we were at luncheon. He is a hearty, hilarious,rough-and-ready sort of a man, with little culture of any sort, but a mine of keen mother wit, which best comes out over a tankard of beer. Without ceremony he took me at the coffee-stage of the repast into the hall to show me a basket full of trout, fresh from a little noisy brook that runs into the lake on the garden side of the house. Bismarck is a patient fisher and a venturesome hunter. At Varzin, nobody unacquaint ed with his antecedents, could see in him the stuff for an astute politician. Yes- terday, when he was romping with the gleesome Leuchen, he caught my eye scanning his massive head and soldierly countenance. I wanted to see where his astute genius lay, to find out where his Machiavellian spirit lurks. "There," he cried, "is your English frautein,won dering that a cloven foot does not show itself through my jack-boot. Bismarck and the devil are all one. Isn't it so, old mother ?" (this was to the princess.) "What have you got to say about the hoofs and horns"lf you could only hear what the Vienna papers are writing about my pact with Belial, you'd plead forthwith for a divorce. But, luckily, you never look at the papers, and there fore ere in happy ignorance of mycoquet ries with his Infernal Majesty." Bismarck's study is situated nil the ground floor. it has the prosaic, uncom fortable appearance of en attorney's of fice. Long-legged desks, break-back, bolt-upright, hair-cloth chairs and sofas imported from London. by way of Stet tin ; brass-handled, endless drawers, all docketed and numbered ; many maps ; unsightly, ponderous volumes bound in calf-skin ; files of letters on a square table, solid as if made for playing bil liards, have held their own against the charming French importations which embellish the other rooms of the schloss. We, the visitors, pass our time in riding, fishing, boating, botanizing, eating, drinking, singing, and dancing. Small as the village is, it has its Orpheonist Society, which sends a brass band to play every evening in the garden of the schloss while we are at supper, for we dine at half-past two and sup at seven. The farm laborers and their wives and daughters are allowed often to dance on a broad quadrille space. The Chancel lor enjoys the fun, and sometimes orders beer to be served to the rustic dancers. I rode this morning in the forest with Leuchen,Otto and:Count von Luxburg, a Bavarian nobleman of old family and large estates, the affianced lover of the former. We cantered through some lovely glades, startling as we went along hares and other kinds of game. The Count is, naturally, In the army. Every German nobleman is. But he is a dit letanti also, swears by Wagner, and sings sentimental songs exactly like a tenor of the Italian Opera House. He is as mild as a moonbeam, and of the same palecomplexion. Leuchen thinks him an Apollo disguised in the uniform of a hussar. For my part, his hair is too silvery, his eyes are too celestially blue, and his cheeks of too pure a red and white to please me. The fiancee will be the governing power In the household when she becomes the wife of Luxburg. She is singularly like the Chancellor, which is tantamount to say ing that she has a deep-set, merry eye, a coarse nose, and a harshly square jaw. Her fine skin and animated manners alone preserve her from extreme plain ness. Bismarck banishes politics so far as it is possible from Varzln. Bucher and Brass, his Secretaries, have orders to isolate him so far as in their power as much as they possibly can from the out er world. Leuchen tells me that the day on which the telegraphic wire, com municating between her father's study and Berlin, brought the news of Bene detti's rupture with the King of Prus sia at Ems, he had given orders not to be pestered with official busi ness. When Dr. Bucher handed the telegram to him he was lying on the bank of the little river `'Nipper, watching some rooks flying over a rook ery on the other side. A book which he had been reading was lying on the moss beside him. Of all other books in the world, it was Gessner's Death of Abel. There were no visitors at the sch/oss, and the Chancellor and his family were to dine with the village schoolmaster, the worthy and erudite Herr Fizervitz, for whom he entertains esteem and sym pathy. On glancing over the de spatch, he started to his feet, and,with out letting fall a word, rushed to .the house. Meeting his wife at the door, he kissed her affectionately, and in formed her that in half an hour he must be off to Berlin. " I may not return for another year. Do you see to the har vest and everything connected with the farms, for I must not bestow 'a thought upon them. War in a few days with France is certain, and I shall accom pany the King and Moltke through the campaign." Next day he met William and Fritz at Brandenburg on their way from Coblentz to Berlin, where they were going to push forward military preparations. Eugenie Sale of the Ex-Empress' Personal Effects [Perim Correspondence Londou : News. 111 passing by the new galleries of Louvre, facing the quay, I heard the tinkle of a bell, and the voice of a crier inviting the public to come and buy what remained to be sold of the Empress Eugenie's personal effects. The auc tioneer was a self-sufficient sort of com monplace bourgeois. He did his best to Jocular at the expense of fallen great ness. Each article, he seemed to think, was worth its weight in gold, If only as a relic. The dresses, laces, shawls, and mantles had bewr disposed of on a pre vious day, and Ft was now the turn of the underclothing and "intimate house linen" to be liquidated. Pillow-cases of fine cambric—so tine that one wonders how they supported elaborate embroid eries and deep real lace borders—were hotly contested for by a "petite dame," a shabby Jew of the Rue des Victoires, and a party of buyers belonging, I should say, to the guarder Breda. The toweling was endless. Bundle after bundleof fine Saxony damask nap kins, all with the E. the crows, the eagle, the busy Carlovingian bee, and a profu sion of laurel wreaths, were handed round the vaulted room to be examined by bidders and then disposed of. Sonic breakfast-trible napery, the present of a king,now Emperor William's first feud atory, was bought by one of the former ha/. Thu sof the Salle des Etats. IN got it cheap. One of the.old gentlemen,who happened to be deaf, was furious when he found that he might have had the lot at 130 f. Ido not know why 'the brok ers and students were so jocose when all inside garment was held up by two dainty little eleevee, and the pub lic asked to examine it, as a fair spe cimen of the large bale from which it was drawn at hazard. American mod esty cannot bring itself to name this garment any more than it can to speak of a shirt. If Paul de Cassagnac were as good as his oft-repeated oath, he would have run his sword-cane through the profane auctioneer's showman, who held the article in question up to be scoffed at by the males and admired by the women. There were peignoirs and dressing gowns,. clearly furnished by Chapon, the famous ladies' out-fitter in the Rue de la Paix, and all wonderfully elegant, but dusty and somewhat blue moulded. The stockings of thread, silk and Shetland wool were of gossa mer lightness. An infinity of bath and toilet sponges were knocked down at a hundred francs. They were all of the best quality. The little lady said she would have been the purchaser if the auctioneer had guaranteed that he was selling her something which had actually passed through the Empress' hands. As for the boots and slippers, they Justified the eulogiums passed by MM. Franc and Lockrey in their re port on Parisian shoemakers. Then there were, the ladles thought, deli cious things .in the warof petticoats, flannel bustles, robes de chambre, sor ties de bain, and woolen wraps. Some baby's robes, which, according to the salesman's legend,belonged to the Prince Imperial's layette, were bought by a Russian lady. A snuffy purchaser near tue shook her head Incredulously at those belongings of Imperial infancy. They were sumptuously gotten up, she admitted, but nothing would convince her that they did not belong to some distressed bourgeoise's layette and were not palmed off by the auctioneer to en hance their price, as having been worn by the prince at whose birth, seventeen years ago, official France went into the most excessive demonstrations of de light that ever hailed the advent of a royal child on our planet. Webster and Fessenden Some thirty-five years ago—perhaps more—Daniel Webster contemplated a Burney to our Western States and ter ritories, which he had never visited. The great statesman felt inclined to have some talented young man to ac company him, and in looking over New England for such a companion, his at tention was attracted to young Fessen den, and extended to him an invitation to travel with him, which was eagerly accepted. Many a time, says the edi tor of the Portland Argus, Mr. Fessen den has spoken to ns of the advantages and impression of that trip. Mr. Web ster treated him with great kindness, and gave him much good advice, which lie treasured up in his memory. Web ster told him how hard he bad studied, and how careful he was in making out papers when he commenced the prac tice of law. He said he never let a writ or other legal document pass from his hand until he had read it over three times at least. And he further remark ed that while many young men were idling away their time lie was trimming the midnight lamp. "Now," said Webster, "I have ac quired some fame both as a lawyer and an orator, and have made speeches in which have occurred ,some figures and illustrations often quoted, and which have already passed into mottoes. And now do you suppose these terse sayings were made from the spurof the moment? By no means; they were the result of pre vious study—and close study, too. Some of my best illustrations of thought have been studied and trimmed down when the fishing rod was in my hands. The words which so fitly represent Eng land's power so often quoted and so much praised, were strung together while I stood on the American side of the St. Lawrence river near Niagara Falls, and heard the British drums beaten on the Canada side." Many other statements he made to young Feesenden, which proved pretty conclusively that there is no royal road to learning. Hard work, steady, faith ful, persevering application, is the only sure road to either tame or fortune. The best " natural ability" or qualification that a young man can possibly possess is to know how to work well. Truth the Best Polley. It is related of a Persian mother, on giving her son forty pieces of silver as his portion, that she made him swear never to tell a lie, and said "Go my son ; I consign thee to God ! and we shall not meet here again till the day of judgment." The youth went away, and the party he traveled with were assaulted by rob bers. One fellow asked the boy what he had and he answered : "Forty dinars are sewed up In my garments. The robber laughed, thinking that the boy jested. Another asked the same question, and received the same answer. At last the chief called him, and asked him what he had. The boy replied : • I have told two of your people al ready that I had forty dinars sewed up In my clothes." The chief ordered his clothes to be ripped open, and the money was found. And how came you to tell this ?" " Because," replied the boy," I would not be false to my mother, to whom I promised never to tell a lie." " said the robber, art thou so mindful of thy duty to thy mother, and I am insensible at my age of the duty I owe to God? Give me thy hand, that I may swear reyentance on it." He did so and his followers were struck with the scene. " You have been our leader in guilt." they said to the chief, " be the same in the path of virtue ;" and, taking the 'boy's hand, they took the oath of re pentance on it. - Secretary Delano has gone to Hart ford, Conn., to addresa,the American Missions ry Association oh the subject of the Indian policy of the Administra tion. Old Ylrglnla Da}•s Lomax Smith, a barber In the Ex change, Richmond, is a relic of the palmy days of Virginia. A writer on the:Pittsburgh Progress recently sat In the old gentlentah's chair, to whom old Smith gossipped about old times ; " A nice collection of gentlemen, sir," said Lomax, "this convention at Assembly Hall ; many very genteeLand able per sons there, sir. It does - The good .to see again in Virginia the best people coming forward to take part iu poli tics. And, yes sir, there are some great men here, too, scattered about among the hundreds . I don't know; but—ex cuse me, sir, turn your face a little to the left—you can't remember the conven tion of '29, can you': Too young ! Yes, yest ! Well, there was Mr. Jeems Mad ison, and that other gentleman, very smart but mighty flighty, Mr. Ran dolph, of Roanoke, and more than I can I tell how. You have got big men here to-day, but bless my soul, sir, they was all giants then ; there wasn't an hum ble individual here. Giants, sir, giants, every one." And Lomax resirapped his razor, turned our head gently, and began again; And how did they come here, sir! Omnibusses—hacks. Not they! Private carriages, private servants ; and every one had a square mahogany box, with silver mountings; Iu this were four square bottles, trimmed with vines and leaves in gold; one held old pine apple rum, ono brandy and honey— peach and honey, sir—one sherry and one Madeira. No whiskey, and no drinking at bars. The case was in every delegate's l'ootn, with the key put away, but—and here .Lomax thoughtfully and suggestively drew his razor through the palm of an holiest hand—their constituents knew where the key was, sir. Yes, sir! And shav ing then was fifty cents. No change ! Those were days. Why nothing now is as good as it was, and I can tell the reason. " Ever since 1550, sir, when they got up this universal suffrage, things have been going down, down, down. I never used to shave anybody then that was nobody ; and now I hardly ever shave anybody that is anybody. Yes, sir, that 1:-;.50 suffrage commenced the whole thing, and now nothing is like it used to be. Why sausage, sir, sausage ! The old Virginia luxury' Wliat is it now" It dsed to he made out of the choicest ! pal tof the hog; and now you're lucky if it is hog at all, and when in It there's I nothing but gristle and lean." Lomax drew a long sigh ; we gently rose, and " declining the change," left the prem. ices with a convictionWun Lomax was ! more than half-right. A Spider's Engineering In 1830, at Newcastle-on -Tyne, !Eng land, a gentleman boasted to a friend that he could introduce to him an en gineer of more wonderful skill than Robert Stevenson, who bad just made himself famous by perfecting the rail way locomotive. In fulfillment of the boast, he brought a glass tumbler con taining a little scarlet colored spider whose beauty, with its bright yellow nest on a sprig of laurustinus, had In duced a young lady to pluck it from a bush where it was growing. When brought into the house it was placed on the mantle-piece, and secured by plac ing a glass over it. In a very short time this wonderful little engineer contrived to accomplish the herculean task of raising the sprig of laurustinus, a weight several hundred times greater than Itself, to the upper part of the glass, and attaching it there so firmly that after forty years it is still suspended where it was hung by the spider. In the Bible we rend : "The spider, layeth hold with her hands, and in kings' palaces ;" but in this glass prison there was nothing to lay hold of—no peg, or nail, or beam, on which to fasten its threads. But in a short time the little insect had accomplished its task. It is believed that this kind of spider always deposits its nests upon trees, and never upon the ground ; and this may account for its wonderful effort to raise the branch to the upper part of the glass. It may still be seen, dead and dry, hanging by one of its threads from the top of Its prison house, with its little nest upon a leaf of the laurustinus.— L Journal of Chemistry. Couldn't Find the Pole The colored voters in Maryland be haved with notable propriety and order in exercising their newly acqu ired rights, but here and there some droll incidents occurred, showing that some of them have not quite got the hang of the new school-house. One of them, Clem Hill by name, a hard-working, money-saving fellow, was seen In Bladensburg on Tues day last wandering about with a look of evident discomfiture on his face. When asked what was the matter, lie replied, " I'se looking for the pole, rsegwine to give my frencheyes for Mr. Gary." He was directed to join the long line of vot ers who were waiting for their turn, and finally, when his tunic, lie denounced the whole •' proceedens a Democratic humbug." " Dey is no pole here," said he; "it's nuflin at all but a windo; you can't fool die citizen with windos. W ha's de pole?'' Afterdue Instruction he was persuaded to use the window, and doubtless deposited through it the vote which gave Gary his one majority in Prince George's county.— Washington Star. That One Thing Uncle Peter, who flourishes in the mountainsof Vermont as a horse-dealer, was called upon the other day by an amateur of " equine" who was in search of something fast The result is told as follows : "There," said Uncle Peter, pointing to animal in the meadow below the house ; "there, sir, is a mare who would trot her mile in two minutes and seven teen seconds were it not for one thing." " Indeed !" cried his companion. " Yes," continued Uncle Peter, " she is four years old this Spring; is in good condition ; looks well ; is a first-rate mare ; and she could go a mile in two seventeen were it not for one thing." " Well, what is that?" "That mare," resumed the jockey, " is in every way a good piece of prop erty. She has u heavy inane, a switch tail, trots fair, and yet there is one thing only why she can't go a mile In two seventeen." " What in the Old Harry is it then?'' cried the amateur, impatiently. "The distance is too great for the time'" was the old wag's reply. Seeking Advice A Georgia correspondent furnishes the folloviiug: A country farmer's wife came to me for advice, saying, " I don't want to do nothin' wrong, but do you think now it would be mighty wrong fur me to take a few ears of 'corn, or some Bich thing, now and then, and sell It, unbe knownst to Ben, to get things for my gals? He (said Ben) wont't 'low noth in' for the gals. but gives all the chances for larnin' to the boys, and I do want to send my little gal to school." I ex plained to the poor woman that " what was his'n was been," and according to law, and inasmuch as she worked hard er than Ben did, I believed she had a right. The result was the little girl went to school, and the big one had fresh .ribbons on tier hat, and a new pink dress. I smiled sweetly when I tried to count the ears of corn it took to pay the bill, but I said nothing. Daring lluatcr Louis Kelley is, pLihaps, the most daring and successful Indian hunter in the great West. He travels alone, fights alone, and wears a turban around his head when out on the prairie. He is said to be a graduate of a college, and halls from Virginia or. South Carolina. He is about twenty-two years of age, handsome, well•formed and muscular. The Indians dread him as much as they ever did Kit Carson or Daniel Boone. He never misses his mark. An Indian is as good as dead th 3 moment he draws sight on him. He will travel weeks at a time through hostile Indians and never express a thought of danger. Kelley is now on a trip to the headwaters of the Yellowstone, a:country never yet;visit ed by any white man. He is alone.— He has been known to dare a dozen In dians on the open prairie to fight him in a body. No Indian will ever get within reach of his deadly rifle. The special game-law of Chester coun ty prohibits the shooting, killing, or otherwise destroying of, grey squirrels between the Ist of January and the 15th of September, and of rabbits between the Ist of January and the lst of No. vember. Partridges are not to be killed at all. Sunday Reading " * Kword fitly spoken, how good it Is."— Rel!glottis the e best armor in the ivorld but the worst cloak. Get all You can, save all you can', give all you can. The generous heart should scorn a pleasure which gives others pain. Sands form the mountains; moments make the year. Really to Inform the mind is to cor rect and enlarge the heart. No man can be elevated who does not love something higher and better than himself; Wisdom and power, like piety, are perfected through suffering. Lose not thy own for the want of ask ing for It; 'twill give thee no thanks. If good men are sad, it is not because they are good, hut because they are not better. ' A man behind the times is apt to speak ill of them, on the principle that nothing looks well from behind. The whole sum of human virtue may be reduced to speaking the truth al way s, and doing good to others. Merit readily recognizes merit. Cer tainly he cannot have it who doesn't know it when he sees it. Love may exist without jealousy, al though this is rare; but jealousy may exist without love, and thi, Is common. Do not condemn or think hardly of those who cannot see Just as you see, or judge it their duty to c mtradict you. Honest induStry is, after all, man's only sure dependence for the double blessing of a contented mind and com fortable livelihood. An hour's industry will do more to produce cheerfulness, suppress evil hor rors, and retrieve your affairs, than a month's moaning. A little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth of philoso• phy briugeth onus mind about to reli gion. One principal point of good-breeding Is to suit ourselves to three several de grees of men—our superior, our equals, and those below us. Men's hea^ts ought not to be net against one another, but set with one another, and all against the evil thing only. The happiness of the human race ill )yorlii does not conAlgt of our being void of passions, but In our learning' , oinniand them. Church Glennlmp.. Liberia lots the oldest :Methodist wis slon. lie Illinois \Vi sieyan uiverslty students. The Central Church, lit)StOii, COSI SIDO 000. It IS out of debt. , - A Baptist Church has bet•u dedicated Ureelcy, Colorado. The Presbyterian is the leading ebtireit Lincoln, Nebraska. Greenville, Tenn., has never had a a dist Church until this year. The Baroness do Rothschild support, a Jewi.li girls' school iu Jerusalem. Mr. .101111 Brown, of Philadelphia, has glven $300,00u to the Presbyterian lios- ut of eighty-nine parishes Tii l lliuoi.n, y-eight entlutol a change of pastor- The total contributions to the Ameri can Board of Foreign Missions last year were $429,100,60. Fifty priests In Hungary intend issu ing a proclamation est4,46l.iinkg a na tional church, indepetn . Mut, of Rorie. The Lutherans have been overtaken by the WolllllllllloVelllellt, and intend to have deaconesses and feminine preach ers. • • The American 'Board of Foreign Mis sions has 111 ordained missionaries and bio female assistants and unordained laborers. A priest in the south of Italy wrote to ask for some Protestant books and pro posed to say n stipulated number of masses in payment for them. The churches of the dillbrent denom inations In Canada propose to observe the 10th of Novemberasadayof thanks giving for the abundantacrops. At the third annual conference of the British Young Men's Christian Asso ciation, Mr. Gladstone presided and W. E. Dodge made a speech. aAn African Church South recently expelled a female member on the charge of being "double-headed," that is, wear ing a chignon. The first edition of the Bible ever printed was printed In Metz, In 1440. Mr. Lennox, of New York, has one of the eighteen copies. The Methodist Church at Springfield, Ohio, In order to clear otr a debt, open ed a boarding-house during the State Fair, and netted $7OO. Eleven Eplecopal Churches were com pleted in Dakota and Nebraska last year, and nine clergymen ordained, of whom two were Indians. A minister in Indiana Lecamo mixed up in laud speculations, and announced to his congregation that his text would lie found in " Ht. Paul's Epistle to the Corinthians, section four, range three, limed', for Our Lady Bender". Individuality In dross Is fond to bo the rarest and cheapest thing in the world. Very dark blue In cloth, silk and matins is to be very fashionable for street costumes. A new style of sleeve buttons are oval, and open at the side to hold a miniature or hair. • All the dresses for Winter wear aro trim med with fur, and are a very heavy, neatly material. White astrachan is very much used for ladies' dressing gowns, being very strong, warm and durable. Beef tea is to be given this Winter be tween the figures in the German, Instead of cream and cake as furmorly. - - A new style of necktie for ladies are of black milk, lined with red pink orilight blue, with fringe or lace on the edge. Feathers aro used for dresaing the hair instead of flowers, and blonde and {fold powder is also used, the effect by gas-ligli: being very dazzling. Largo fancy pins for the hair in the shape of flowers aro mado of perfumed wood, and are the latest thing In ornaments. The fashion in engagements now-a-days is for the gentleman to give the lady a dia mond ring and the lady to give the gentle man a plain gold one. Roman 81114110.9 and neckties have come in fashion again, and are specially adapted to black silk drosses, its they relieve their sombre and dark look. Brown, green anti gray felt.bonnets are very fashionable, and when trim neat with dark velvet and feathers make a very effective and stylish bonnoq The latest novelties in rotors are the Vendome column and the mhos of Paris. The former Is a bronze green, and the lat ter a handsome gray. People have grown BO extravagant that nothlng short of point-lace curtains at the windows and point lace tidies on the hack of their chairs will satisfy them. Crepe do-chino lichus, elaborately trim med with lace and ornamented with small fancy bows, aro very much worn for din ner and opera with a plain dark silk dross. A new style of trimming street dresses is with largo buckles of Jet or mother of pearl, which aro placed in the centre of largo bows up the front and back of theskirt and waist, and on the sleeves. A bride who was married last week wore a dress of white velvet,with throe point-lace flounces, a:point-lace veil fastened with a tiara of diamonds, and diamond-necklace and pendant ear-rings.: 'rho fashionable dress for a gentleman at a day wedding is the English suit of dark frock coat, lavender pants, black or white vest, blue necktie and lavender gloves, for evening weddings black dress coat and pantaloons, black or white yest and black neck tie. Ladles dress more this year for the opera and concerts than for many preceding years. A black silk skirt is the founda tion of most of the toilettes, and the hair elegantly dressed, handsome jewelry, and stylish opera cloak make up a very pretty and pleasing picture. A German woman, following the busi ness of picking from the offal of New York City such things as rage and bones, recently died. She had lived in a little shanty, and seemed to her neighbors to be a proper object of charity. After her death and burial, a bank-book was found In her house showing that she had deposits in the North River Sav ings-Bank amounting to $5,000' and she had also left a will by which this money goes to a little girl eight years old, who has been living with her for some time. This is an opposite extreme to the extravagance of the age. If we must say " poor woman !" over the German rag-picker, what shall we say over the bedizened butterflies that are so extravagant and wasteful in life? Bettor Still A person in high life once went to Sir Eardly Wilmot, at the time Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, under a feeling of great wrath and indignation, at a real injury which he had received from a person high in the political world, which he was de termined to resent in the most effectual manner. After relating the particulars, he asked Sir Eardly, if he did not think it would be manly to resent it? "Yes, ,, said that eminent man, "It will be manly to resist it; but it will be God like to forgive it."