Wo IjOTO tho Absent Best. /Hi, h* almoin aro the iloarost To a mother'* loving heart; And tho depth of onr affection la not known until wo part. Wo may view onr sleeping darling* With a watchful pride ami care; Awl may breathe an oarnoat blowing O'er each ilitaky head and fair. Rut if there remain* a pillow Too tinemmplisl, ami too white; And the ehair a-nnar the liedsido Mold no garmentx for the night If we mi*) the *h**m ami stocking*. A torn jacket, or a dri** If we mi** a " Oo)*l-night, mother!' And a dear one'* warm can** Ilion our tieart* yearn with affection for the rover from onr met, Ami we feel of all onr darling* That we love th" alwent l* *t. Ah, the aIDM iit aro Vim dearest Metho* hi'art* will anewror ye*' The dear lip* by far the weet>*t An> the lip* we cannot ki*' THE ECCENTRIC BACHELOR. I' wa> a living *peeimeii of tho typical oleot, crusty ami cynical of tcmjior. Ho was, moreover, an avowe)l ndility; otn- of the privileged claim who, by vir tue of this reputation, can do what oth ers daro not without exciting surprise or giving offense; whoso eccentricities are met with a shrug of the shoulder ami the remark, " What else could you ex pect of an oddity like him ?" He was an un|K>puhtr man, receiving scant sympathy; vet ca)>able, neverthe less, of kimland generous acts, jsrformed on the condition that they were to In ke|d strictly secret and that he was never to he thanked for them. Woe lictidc the recipient of a favor to whom it was brought home that he had mentioned the same to any one, or extolled the kindness of his benefactor! The un lucky wight once detected in thus giving • vent to his gratitude had taken the stir est method of cutting himself off from further help. He never got another chance. Our old bachelor enjoying, as we have *ai>l, the privileges of eccentricity, it excited no surprise when on one occa sion, after an absence from home, he wrote to inform his servants- an old couple who hud lived with him for years that on his return he would be ac companied by a widow lady who was likeJy to make a long stay in his house, i ami for whom ivjxirt ments were to lie got ready. " And a pretty npset she'll make!" ex claimed the dismayed old housekeeper. " A fussy, middle-aged |rty, no doubt; ordering and interfering ami wanting to have everything her own way; which she won't get, John, as long s von and I can prevent her. She'll l>e a clever madam if she gets her foot in side mv storeroom while there's lock* ' and liolt* to keep her nut, I can tell her!" " Don t you make too sure," said John. The old man could not resist now ami then teasing hiH helpmate, oh a little set-off against sundry naggings on the part of that good old lady. " May- j le it's a mistri** of the house ami of yourself that's coming to it. Them ' widders are great at wheedling. It'* time, if the muster is ever to marrv, that " " Ah, stop your croaking now !" cried Mrs. John This dire suggestion was too overpowering for her feelings The apjsjinted day arrived; and w hen the cab drove to the door, the two o|l domestics, with very sour faces ami their Iwcks very much up, went to receive their master and his unwelcome guest. Their first glimpse of the latter showed thern they might have -paid their fears ' ami hostile intentions. Out from the cab, lie fore their astonished eyes, sprang * girlish figure, whose bright, happy faeecontrast<•! > irbinsly with her mourn ing garment). "Miml the step, uncle!" ("Oh, his niece, she is!") she criisl,tripping up to the hall dour "Don't trouble, please," I with a to the old housekeeper; " that bag is too heavv for you; I'll <*rry it." And when the stranger came down to breakfast next morning with a morsel of a cap perched on the top of her golden braids of hair (not my idea of a widow's sap." said the dame to her hnslsuid ; " anil would yon believe it, John, sing ing aw'av like a bird while she was dress ing ! ") she looked mora ah*nrdly yonng ; more like a girl in her teens than an ex periencod, "settled matron." The advent of his pretty nice made some change in the habits of the old gentleman. He hail friends at dinner more frequently than of yore ; and in j addition to the elderly fogies that formed his nsnal society, younger gnests were invited, snited to the years of his visitor. With great amusement, her uncle ob served the attraction her comeliness and winning ways were for these. " .Swarm ing round— like flics aliout a honey-|ot! Scenting,l dare say, a fat jointure. All widows arc snpiioscd to Ik> rich ; and just Imcause she is a widow, and for no ether reason, making up to her, the fools! " This to himself with a cynical chuckle. Aloud: "Nice little woman, that niece of mine. Plenty of good j looks ; but hasn't a sixpence not a six- I pence to bless herself with. It was wonderful how the old house | was brightened up liy the presence of I its blithe yonng inmate. Hut by none was its pleasant influence more felt thiiu by the domestics, who hail vowed such ' hostility before her arrival. The old woman especially was devoted to her; loving her for her own sake as well as for the kindly help and good offices she was always receiving from the deft and willing hands of the young girl. lii (lie storeroom thai sacred retreat which her foot was never to invade the latter was to lie found on " company-days," busy am! happy as a lice; with sleeves tucked half way up her plump arms, her heavy crape skirts stowed away under one of the old lady's capacious Holland aprons, and laph'ts pinned high over her head, while, laughing merrily at thi> queer figure she had mode of her self, she worked away at cakes ami sweets, taking a world of trouble off the housekeeper's hands. " Ami so thoughtful she is, ami gay , bless her!" his wife would tell old John. "Hhe'll come tripping up to me, aud 'Now, do as you're bid,' she'll say, playfully, forcing me down into my big ehair. ' Sit you down anil rest, tlicrc'ii an old dear, and take your tin. I'm not u going to let you do a turn more.' Ami then she'll work away, her tongue going all the time as fast as her fingers; running on about her mother ami her home, her flowers ami pets, dogs ami birds, ami what not, hut never a word about husband or married day*. And if I totieh npon them or ask a que* tion, she'll get quite silent ami strange like in a minute, ami turn off the sub i jei-t a* if it burned her. IVrluqi* for all she's so merry outside she's fretting in her In-art for him that's gone, and can't a-bear to talk of him." " Nothing of the sort !" ernsl old John. "Don't you go think sueh stuff. She'd take a husband to-morrow; mark !my words. Ami it's my opinion there's a young gentleman comes to this house that has a fairish chance. He's des|wr ate sweet u|>on her. I haven't eye* in : my head for nothing, ami I see plain she i doesn't dislike him, or hold herself up ' distant from him, as sin- does from \ others." , Old John was right. Matters were in due time so far satisfactorily settled Im tween the young couple that an appeal to the uncle was deemed expedient. : The old gentleman received the an j nouncement with a half-pleasant, half- I satirical grimmace. " Ha. I thought so," he muttered. ! " Hut are yon aware, my friend, that there is no money in the ease ? The lady hasn't sixpence, anil " F know it," indignantly interrupted the suitor. " You have made that re mark iM-fiire. I want no fortune with my wife, my ow-n Wing ample; and iny : love "Oh, sjsire your raptures, voting sir. Not so fast. Don't W too sure of the • prize; for when yon hear what I have to tell you there inay Is-, |ierhap*, a change .in your views. I have no time to go into the matter now ; hut come to-mor row, and W pre]*ircd to hear what will surprise yon;" and the old gentleman j went off. nodding liack malevolently, I the lover thought-—over his shoulder, leaving the tmor fellow in a state of ; most uneomfortable suH|H'ns4'ami uncer tainty-. What could this dark hint mean ? and why was lie not to make sure ? t'ould it be ]MMsihle there was any doubt, any mystery as to the demise of the loved one's husband ? He could not help calling to mind her con fused ami singular manner at times; a certain ( want of frankness; an evident embar rassment at any allusion to the ]>a*t. The possibility of an obstacle made the I yonng man realize as he had not Wfnrc ' done how deeply his affections were en gaged. He s|ient a miserable night, 1 awaiting in vain conjecture and *lco|- less anxiety the tidings which the mor row might bring forth. In order to explain matters it ai|| be necessary to go back for some month* previous to Hie arrival of the young lady I at her uncle's house; a* well as to change the scene from it to a country cottage in 1 a remote jart of Kngland the home of ! the widowed sister of the eccentric bachelor. In it we find him |sming lup and down the small drawing room and listening to the querulous complaints that its oeciqiant, a confirmed invalid, is uttering from the sofa on which she lies. " I think but little of my bodily sufferings," she is saying; " they cannot now last long. Every day I feel more plainly that the end is not far, and my doctor tells me the same. The distress of mind that torments me is what is so hard to hear." "And what may that l*> alont, if I j might ask V " The future of my child when I am j gone. All I have, as you know, dies with me. 81ic will be jcnmle**, and the thought of what is to liecome of her, cast on the world without a home, liaunts me night and day. It is too dreadful I" " A girl -and young - and not Imd looking. Where's the fear ? Home Imdy'll marry her. Men are such i fools!" . IKL The sick woman could not forebear a I smile. " All, but there are no men, no ' fools hero! In this remote comer we j see no one, and the |sor child, taken up with tiursiug me and tied to a sick ; room, has made no acquaintances. It is killing ine to see her young life nocri- Heed and to think of the future." The mother's teurs began to flow. , Her hearer, never very amiably inclined toward the weaker sex, or, at least in its company, increased his quarter-deck pacings in milch discomfiture as those symptoms of " water works turned on" heenuie apparent. His hurried stejis soon subsided, however, to a steady march up and down the little drawing room. while with frowning hrow and occasional chuckles, lie seemed to be concocting some scheme. After a few minutes lie came to a sudden halt Ihi fore the invalid's sofa. "Gen the girl act ?" he asked, abruptly. " Act! How do you mean ? I " "Oh, you needn't look frightened; " I'm not going to propose sending her to the Gaiety or the Criterion." '• Well, except ill the little lliaki lie lieve plays ami dressings-tip that chil dren delight in all children are, I think, actors horn" |" Ay. ami men and women too," growled the cynic) "except that sort of thing slu- never has ms-u or had any opportunity of acting Why do you ask ? And in reply her brother unfolded the plan he had lieen concocting namely, that his niece, laying aside her " frip pery and her trinkets and other girl's nonsense," was to p'lt on the mourning garb and act tho pari of u widow, in which assumed character she was to come to stay with him in hi* Iswdon home. " But 1 don't understand " And you're not wanted to under stand," he snarled " It's my whim; arid it may Ik- for the girl's advantage. If she's willing, ami can hold her tongue, I'll eomi back for Iter when die's read v. And I'll |>ay for her outfit Crajs- and woepera. Ho, ho, ho!" When the tint surprise at her uncle's Htrangr- proposition w.is over, the voting girl jiimjs-d eagerly at the prospect of a change from the dull hotnc sin- never yet had left. She wa* young and spirited; at an age when love of va riety and a longing to s-o the world and plunge into its unknown delights are natural. The playing the widow she thought would Ik- excellent fun. Then was a spire of advent tin- in it, and it would Ik; like the private theatricals ami acting charade* she had ri-ad of ami imagined so pleasant. The old gentle man's reasons for wishing her to do so was a puzzle; but then who could won der at anything lie did ? absurd oddity that he was! Perhaps it wa* to avoid having to |no vide a rha|K-ron for her ; 111' liatrd ladies so, ehlerlv one* es |iec off. A disappointment, no doubt," wound tip tie- ancle with one of hi* griin chuckles; "but 'twas only right to tell you in time. Young man, if yon can punlon the deceit, take her." AS ell," exclaimed the young man to his fiancee, when, all things cleared up ami satisfactorily arranged, the engaged l>air were talking over the queer cir cumstance that ha pre sented. The next day she was missing and the family supposed they hail lost her; lint on the fourth day a familiar " meow" was heard, and there was tabby at the head of a column of three dozen eats in light marching order, their back* up and their tails ranqmnt. The front door was opened and the detachment moved down the cellar stairs in good order. The next morning a flour Imrrel full of dead rat* was buried liehind the house and the cats returned to their home*. —AW } arte Tribute. When the Isthmus shall have its two canals and it* ship railway, it will lie alsmt as difficult to make up one's mind which route to take a* it was for the man to come to a decision who sat up all night deliberating whether to first take off his shirt or his ]>antaloons. The mistake* of women result almost always from her faith in the good and her confidence in the truth. MKHMKKIHM IK COURT. Rrmarktblii Mpwtarlr la Carta— Haw a I'rlwarr was Arallt<-4. The court of ap|H-nls in Fans has been I lio scene of a most curious and remarkable spoclarlc. A young man named Didior was lately arrested for an offense in the Champs Elyseos and sentenced to thrt>o months' imprison meiit. In prison ho was examined by l)rs. Mottet and Mcsnct, two well known H|M-eialistH in mental diseases, wbo reported that he Jived in a state of constant somnambulism, the attacks of which can bo provoked at will. The case was heard on appeal, and the judges were aliout to withdraw to con sider their verdict when the doctors offered to confirm the statements made in their riqsirt by practical experiments on the spot. The bench con sented, ami then occurred the follow ing painful scene, described by the Paris correspondent of the London Stunihtrd: l)r Mottet, followed by tin magistrates and the prisoner, retired into a side room. Here, tiy the usual mode of rapid passes of the hands be fore his eyes and a strong, fixed gaze, the unhappy " subject" was mesmerized. Diilicr was then left in charge of two of the municipal guards on service, the doctors and the judges returned to tin court, ami the door of the riHiin was shut Dr Mottet now called the pris oner by his name Tln> next second a fearful noise was heard. It came from tho sick young man. A few minutes before a touch of the finger would have almost knoi-kisl him over, mi feeble and emaciated was be. Now, under the in tlnence of magnetism, he was like a raging lion. Upsetting tin- guards who held him bv the wrists, he rushed at the door, broke it open, and, knocking down everylssly in his way. ran up to Dr. Mottet Here he smlili-nlv stop|M*l, arid fixing his eyes on his mesmcrizer trembled from head to foot in a manner terrible to see. (Shrieks of horror then ran through the court. The ibs-tor then set to work. "Undress yourself," said be to the prisoner In a hi -ootid 1 tidier stripjssl himself of nearly all his garment*. " Dress your self again." -aid the doctor, and again the prisoner obeyed with the aamo lightning rapidity The experiment ap|s-ared conclusive. Dr. Mottet then awoke his "subject" by blowing on his face. Didit-r fell to the ground as if shot. The ills-tor. however, soon brought him round again. " Why did you undress yourself ts-fore these gentlemen?" a*ked Dr. Mottet. "tliat wa* very improper." Duller, gazing w it h vacant astonishment,replied "11 hat' I iindn-ased myself? Impossible." And the young man elnng to the doctor for protection like a child. Tin- bench, however, was not convinced, and ap |K-ared to bsik on the whole affair a* a comedy. Dr. Mi-suet, in hia turn, now O|M-mted on the prisoner. Haxing rns nii-ri/s-il liim In- ordered him to write from memory a letter adilrcMM-d to him wlnb- in |>riMin. Dblier replied: "Can not, Imswiisi- I am in prison." The doctor insiMrd, whcrcn]Min the prisoner sat down to a table and wrote, word for Word, the letter ill question, without a single mistake. While he was writing it Dr. Mottet took a long needle out of hi* instrument-ra*<- and plunged it into the young man's neck, but he felt noth ing. By this time, however, the ls-neh had seen enough of these painful cx prrinirnt*, and some of the audience crying out " Ahm-z ! m.s-i !" the sitting came to an end. The court, consider ing the prisoner was not rcsjsuisihlc for his arts, quashis] the verdict of the lower court, and the unhappy man was discharged Training Circus Horse*. " How long," asked the re|sirter, " does it take to break a horse in?" " From eighteen months to two years for good and sun- (milridmg. Care has to Ik> taken that he does not sliy or break his gait, but goes round the eir cus-ring at an even jiace, so that the |kt fi inner can do whatever he wants, by time. If this is not secured the per former <-an never tell where he is going to jump. Much, however, diqs-nds lijsin what the horse is lieing trained for, all the liest horses Is-ing used for a Hjsi ial )erformanee. In most rose* the riders, if they an- ex perieneed, train their own animals, and thus, when they an- ridden, tliey uinli-rHtaiiil much ls-tter what is re quired of them. Ducrow, Mme. Dock rill, Melville, Hcliastian, Stick ney, Cooke, Heed and the like, all train their own horses, and own them. This system of private training ha* only Iw-en in practice a few years. Mana gers of a cirena, under tho old custom, were always exacted to furnish pad horses, anil Ihost) required for two and four-act )H-rfortnanees, so that a |cr former, going fnttn one company to another, would always Hud a horse reaily for him to mount, and in a short time horse and rider would lie able to understand each other. Nowadays, some of the crack stars have as mam as eight or ten horses of their own, most of them trained for a special )ierform ance. They an- vary valuable, most of them lieing full-blooded and inqmrtcd from England and France. Great care has to lie taken of them, as they are ex tremely liable to take oold after a ring performance." HIM language. In the course of h very able \m\n-r on lliih subject the Bishop of (ktrlisic says; A dog sometimes Ir>wer of articulation is totally absent. Parrots can Is- taught to n |K-at any words, but tbey never can make up for themselves any new phrase out of the materials iri tiii liajs of words 111ist they ma have or quins] Hie natural utterance of many birds, though conveying no meaning to themselves, is distinctly articulate, and sometimes is identical in sound with words that have a meaning to us. Hut it is the nightingnlc that j*is<-K*es the |siwer of articulation to the fullest ex tent among tin sjss'ie* ls-low tjs Tliere are races of men whose languages do not employ so many sounds as there are m the nightingale's song Vowels, con sonants of various kimls, sibilants in cluded. even double consonants, as X, 7., art ris-ogTiized in it by th- human •ar " Taicrn Sign*. Many tavern sign* exhibit touehr* of quaint satire. The Woman and the Hilent Woman, with pictures of a headless woman; the Honest with his head under his arm, the I>nul of M ischief and the Man leaden with Mischief, • ach depicting a man dunned to a woman, with the wonl "wedlock" on the imillock of the chain. The Green Mar ami Still ha* long I teen a puzzle; sometimes a man dre*Md in a sort of Itoluu il'ssl gris-n garb, but leaving the still unexplained. A French writer wish ing to enable other French men to under stand* this sign, translates! it into " L'hommc e*t vert it tranqtiille.*" Other attempt* to explain it have not met with much success. One of the World's End tavern Is-ar* a pictorial represents tion of a horseman in the equestrian cost nine of Ocorgc II brought t<> a dead Mop by a precipice, all lieyond Is-ing a chaos of sky and cloud. Many tavern signs are lirlicvcd to Ik- traceable to the conception of names which originally had widely diflcn-iit meaning*, snch a* Boulogne Mouth into Hull ami Mouth. Ibmlogiie Gate into Bull and Gate. CVeur I fori- ("Golden Heart") into Qiii-er l>oor, Basshanals into Bag of Xaibi, Peg and Wassail (connected with an old wassail-bow I diatom) into Pig and Whistle, George Canning into George Cannon, and jK-rhajw the most extraordinary of all. God Kneom)>assed Us into Goat and CVinq -asses. Gaming houses in the last two eenturies occasionally exhibit signs denoting the kind of play mostly earrii-d on there. In one ease the owner (a Frenchman) adapted the French natne* for some of the suits at cards; his successor jn the same house, an Englishman, not understanding the names employed, transformed tbein into Pig anil Carrot* and Pig and Checquors. The Swan with Two Necks, having its origin in two necks or marks cut on the Is-ak or mandibil of swans, as a means of identifying the birds tielonging to different owners, Ix-canu- the symbol or sign of the Vintner's Company, and is now adopted an an inn or tavern sign.— AU the Year Round. He Concluded to o. It was getting well along Into the night. Bbo yawned, and then asked him if be ever saw a snapping turtle. "One," he replied, "in a show.'' Said she; •'lt'avery funny; but do von know, you sort of remind me of that bird." " Whf r he asked. "Oh, you hang on so." He looked out of the window into the darkness said it looked like rain, and he hail better lie going. A household with a lwby is founded upon a rock.- AW I htm Regular. Blackbird. Hinging |y at the foot of the class, whose father had lii-n burned out once or twice. Hnrhmrton In review of the |o-t lesson at a Sun day-school the question was askisl: "What did (iwl do on the seventh day?" Answer: "He rested." "What else did do?" Promptly a little eight-year-old Iwy, " He reail Hi* news l|s-r." " Why, I'm so glad you've come. Did you know that I've Iss-n worrying alsitit you, John, all the evening?" ' That's just what I jmarrii-il you for. It is pleasant to think that there is some ons home worrying al*>ut you." Somehow this vu-w of the matter didn't exactly coincide with her idea* of marital amenities. ,\<**r //me one hail hit an old stump with a maul, and he shot out in the darkness, while a voice as deep a* a l.a*s horn said: " Birdie has gone, Amanda, and you can turn the gas out in the fiarlor and go to ls-d." * WMJNR STORY. \ major lv*l 4 rnsi-I.LI HI. Hi* warlike tii-sn was *<>o a* /<■• lie oft would Inn 1 to hi r aril -.-<- " Tlreu art of life tnjr only Hr. " Ah ! if but kinder thou would'st I*. An " Thou art tny life, my guiding *tar, I love the* tnwr, I lev.- U. f„ My passion I r snoot mntrol, Tbi srt the iilol of my /kit." The maiden said : Oh, fie ! ask pa How can you RO on tliue ? Oh, /HI .'" The " major " mac from t*-nihsl knee. And went her fktber for to A The father thought no tnsteh wae finer. This " major " omv bad been a " mi tun " TTtcy niamrsl wsm, and after that I'welt in ton mom* all on "one flat." Ho happy ends the little tale, K.r they lived on the gramh-st " scale," Then and A'ow. Fifty-three years ago a I'hilailclphui |aj>or recorded a wonderful change in the amount of coal bmttght to that city from the mines, as follows: " About 00,- 000 tons of ooal have leeii brought to l'ltiladelphia this season from tin Schuyl kill mines, of which nearly otic-half was ship|M>tl to Boston, Providence and New York. The above amount i an increase tf one quarter over last year. Light years ago only .150 tons wen- brought to market. It is now passing into general use." The pn-acnt annual product of the Pennsylvania mines exceed* JO,OOO, - 000 huts. More than fifty years ago d Morris and William W'nitr, who were euter))rising merchants, went t< the wililemeas of Lnsorne county, IV, and lwmglit a tract of coal land low price. They funned the Delaware and Hudson Ooal i-ompany, to which they sold their land for fl 10,000. This oom|tany now delivers 2,000,000 tons per annum for several millions of dnIMK according to the market price of coal . Ai? ....