The Postillion of Nagold. ▲ stranger came to Nagold town One stormy wintor'e clay, ▲ queer old man with vieage brown And hair all etreated with gray— A man of moet forbidding waye; Hie glance wae shrewd and ooid. And all hia looks and actions days Of hard denial told. He came at noon—tho worthy dame Who kept the inn—"The Boar"— All vainly wondered whence he caine, Or what bad brought him there. He set apart and ato his bread And drank bis pint of wine. "I want a coach," at length ho said, "At three, for Adleretein." 'Tor Adlerstein ?" the dame replied, " Tie three good hours away; The monutain streams aro deep and wide, And waning la the day: By daylight there is naught to foar. Our hearth is warm and bright; You'll And good cheer and comfort hore; Stay then and rest to-night." "Ha ! What care I for rain and elect, And perils you forbode, With driver sure and horses fleet I do not fear the road." The worthy hostess sighed "Ah, me; I'll not entreat him more." Ami, as tho villago clook struck throe, The coach wae at tho door. The driver wae Postillion Dora, A lusty youth and true, Whose notes npon the bugle-horn Were known the Schwarzwald through; And village maidens used to cast Admiring glances down Whenever he, with cheery blast, Came dashing into town. Full half an bonr through mud and rain The team hail dashed along. And Dora had tried and tried again, By merry jest and ong, And frequent word of cheer, to break The silence so forlorn— Twas vain. "At least," thought he "I'll wake Tho echoes with the horn." Then first a martial air he played An air that he had learned In days when armies stood arrayed And blading camp-fires burn d An air that told of battle's call. Of carnage fierce and hot. Hie stranger sal unmoved through all, And seemed to hear it not. "Aha I" quoth Dora, "I'll try again." Then, 'midst tho rain and sleet, He warlded forth a tender strain, A love-song soft and sweet. Through wind-tossed pines the plaintivo lay Its murmuring echoes woke; Tot, when its mnsic died away, • No word the stranger spoke. Another hour in silence passo-l. Each spectral bush and tree Seemed mocking Dora's despair. At last •I'll try once more," said ho. Thou, mid the blust'ring wintry gale. In chorale grand and clear, Th "Lobe d n Herro, meins Becle" Broke on the stranger's esr. Its solemn notes the echoes woke Through dim-lit forest aisles In sweet and pleading tones that spoko Of Heaven and angels' smiles. D'er every lonely mountain track Its softened cadence stole, And distant hillsides murmsred back '"Oh ! love the Lord, my soul." Then to the stranger's raptured gaze At that sweet hymn's command Tame hark the scenes of boyhood's days Passe.l in that Suabian land— His mother * iove, hi* father's care; And all the peace benign That hovered round th<- hearthstone there Long since at Adlerstein. He saw tho tree beneath whoso shade He used to sit and sing— And where he'd plucked in sunny glade Freeh violets in spring— The cross-tipped spire, and, standing near The churchyard on the knoll. And over sounding in his ear, "Oh 1 lovo tho Lord, my tool." Tho tears burst forth —he meekly bowed Hia bead upon his hand. "God bless yon now," ho sobbed aloud, "This is my native land. I've wandered from it far abroad O'er mountain, seas and plain, My soul, indeed, doth love tho Lord Who brings me horns again." Postillion Dora has now grown old. Grandchildren round him play. And hs full oft, I wot, has tokl How well ho played that day. Lot's hope, in age, for memory's sake Borne brave Postillion Dora For us, in turn, such notes may wake Upon his bugle horn. Osnanc L. Carun. Un(Uil Stale* Consulate, Stutgart. IN BLACKBERRY TIME. "Oo down and piok a few quarts of blackberries, Halda, child, and don't sit doubled up over that book any longer," said Mrs. Holt, as ahe dumped down a basket of linen ahe had jnst brought in from the bleaching ptflh fresh, fair, fragrant linen, with the odor of new-mown hay permeating through every fold of it, Halda lifted np her golden brown bead and gazed at her annt with great, soft, appealing eyea. "Ohl aunty, it's the 'Two Or phana,' nd I do want to know whether they ever find each other again. Ton know Louise is blind, sod—" " There, that'll do. I bet they found each other all right in the end. Ton know if they did it right off there wouldn't be any story. Take your beaketand get enough berries for sup per. Ton know Joe Travers and Aleck Hunt are helping your ancle with the hay, aad hungry enough they will all be. Oo along." Bo the "Two Orphans" had to be laid aside, and Halda, somewhat re luctantly, took her way to the black berries. They grew at the foot of the meadow by ■ running stream, and they were tempting, luscious and plentiful. Hnlda'a thonghta were with blind Loniae, while her lingers wero busy with the berriea, and she soaroely let her oyeo wander from her baaket. Bho waa fair to look npon, this orphan niece of the old New England (armor. Tall and Blender, with gold-tintod, bronze hair, brown eyea, and sun-kissed, soft, amooth cheeks, with a peaohen down on them. Her eyelashes were particularly long and earring, and ahe had away of looking oat from ander them that had a great effect npon the yonng men ahe met at " meetin'" and ainging achool. Not that ahe tried to fascinate them, bat ahe oonhl not help doing it, any more than a rose can help smelling sweet, llnlda waa not quite seventeen. Her father had been u teacher of music; heir mother a sitter of Silaß Hope. They both died yonng and poor, so Hulda came to the Ilope homestead when she waa a ahy girl of eleven, slender bat not angiacefal, look ing, with her wistfal brown eyes, like a yonng fawn. Her nncle welcomed her with open arms, and his wife, thongh childless herself, was a woman who had a heart big enongh to have n place for all the friendless little ones that came in her way. Halda waa happy—thoroughly happy and oontent. The fresh air, new milk and early hoars soon bailt ap her alight form. Thongh she remained slim, she filled oat with the roundness of beaaty. Her warm cheeka glowed with a sunset flash, and her lips were like ooral. Hnlda'a dress waa a simple dark bine print, and her head was covered by that well-nigh obsolete form of ugliness, u sunbonnet. Btill the waves of golden hair showed on the smooth young brow, and the blackberry gatherer formed a pretty picture. Not unobserved, cither, for acroaa the brook, under the shade of some droop ing willows, a tall man in a gray shoot ing dress lay watching her. " What a study for Evangoline 1" said he to himself. " What a Mar guerite?" The man kept very still, and in all probability nuida would never have been conscious of .his preaenoe if an other party had not appeared on the scene. The new comer waa a stout man about forty years of ago, with a long, black beard, large, soft hat and brown velvet coat. "Hullo, Morley I What luck?" he exolaimed. The sound of his voice startled tti girl, but a healthy existence had endowed her with strong nerves, and her surprise was not alarm. Bhe gazed at the strangers with calm interest, for they wore nnlike the men she saw in her daily life. " Poor lnek, Carltone. I fear tho tr>nt aro too sensible to tske mnch notice of my unsophisticated efforts to attract their attention." "Possibly so. Well, I have whipped tho stream also with more skill than success. Let ns adjourn." Halda had returned to her berries, but her cheeks wero flushed and her yonng heart throbbed, for she felt Mor ley's eyes fixed on her face. " What a protty girl I" said Carltone, in an undertone. " Yes ; an nnnanal style of beauty. I never saw anything more lovely than the mixture of tints on her face. No common pink and white blonde beauty but the ripe tones of the old Italian masters." The baaket was full now, and the girl was turning away, when Morley roee to his feet and addressed her gently and respectfully. " Can yon tell me where I can bay some milk or cider—snything 000 l to drink r " Yes. If yon go np to tbe middle of the meadows yon will find a bridge. I'll wait her# for yon, and that red honae is where my nncle lives. Annty will give yon some milk ; we haven't any cider.'* "Thank you." Hbe stood waiting for them, basket in hand, while Morley gathered np hia Ashing tackle and sought the bridge, followed by hia friend. Halda was shy, bat the replied to tbe questions addressed to her by Morley with self-possession. He was surprised to find how well-informed she was. Bhe had a passion for reading, and fortn nately had been able to gratify it, for tbe Library of the old clergyman who lived near the Hope homestead bad been plaoed at her disposal. When they reached the bonee aupper waa already on the table. Mr*. Hope expreeeed no anrpriae when the noml>er of gneata at her Üble wae increaeed by the arriral of the at ran (era. She made them welcome aed ahowed them their plaoee. Freeh, home-made bread, oold boiled ham, oorn oakea and Halda'a blackberriaa, waahed down with creamy milk, engroaeed their attention for a reaeonable time, then the men aongbt the dooratep with their pipea, and Hnlda, her annt and the hired girl went ont to milk. Hilae Hope waaaahrewd, middle-aged Yankee farmer, Ood-fearing and aober, amart and far*oeing, and Horley and Oerltone eoon beeame intereated in hia oonreraation. He naked them no qnea. Uona that bordered on the inqoiaiilTf, bnt atill lsoaned that thojr were strangers in the neighborhood—Oerltone, an English lawyer, come ovor to look for a lost heir; Morley, also a lawyer, from New York. " I'vo almost given up hope of finding the mun lam in search of," said the Englishman. " I lose all traoe of him sinoe the war. Ho was a musio teaohor in Boston, and joined the army, was taken prisoner and escaped from Libhy prison." "An Englishman—musio teacher— served in the army. May I ask the name, sir F' "Certainly. His name was an un oommon one—Stanly Earl wood. He was the youngor son of a younger son, and when he left England hail no ex pectation of ever coming into the title n estate." Bilas Hope took his pipe from his mouth and rubbed his ohin thought fully, " Bupposin' the man's dea l, sir. Bupposin' ho married out hore and left children. What then 7" "If thoso children can prove their descent they will inherit tho title and estate." "If they aro boys, maybe; bat what would they got if thoy are girls?" "Iftheyaro will inherit largo fortunes, bat the title will peon into another braneh of the family. I wish I could tlnd any trace of Btanly Karl wood. I shall return to England next month, bat I have done nothing." 11 Yon can find a trace of Htanly Earl wood, sir." " Where 7" cried Carltono, startled oat of his careless attitude by the marked significance of his tone. "Yonder," repliod Silas, pointing across the meadows, wh-re in the oarly autumn moanlight the white tomb stones of the churchyard glistenod. " What, hero f " Yes, here, Htanly Earlwood mar ried my only sister Maggie after the war. He met her in Boston, and they wont to Portland. Ho was sickly and oouldn't get along, and thoy came home for six months. Then they went to Baltimore for a spell, bat he got worae and worae. Now and then they would como and stop with the old woman and me, bat poor Earlwood was mighty in dependent and didn't like to be a har den. Well, he died fire years ago, and he is buried in my plot, and his head stone is there—yon can soe it to-mor row—and all his papers is in my sittin'- room in his own desk, and his only daughter, Elaida, is oat there with Miss Hope milkin' oar brindle cow." Ho the objeot of the search was ac complished in an unexpected manner. The next day the gravo was visited, the papers examined—fortunately Earlwood had been a methodical man, and in his desk all the nooessary documents to prove his daughter's rights were found. Ilnlda was surprised to learn that she was a memlier of an old aristocratic family. Her annt said she always knew her brother-in-law belonged to good kinsfolks. Hilas took the matter very calmly, and enly seemed sorry at the prospect of losing his niece, whom he loved like a daughter. " I spose you will go to England and live among the lords and doolta T" he said, placing his arm around her and drawing her to his breast. " No, I will not, Uncle Hilas. I don't know the lords and dukes. Oan't I stay in tbo States if I like, Mr. Carl tone 7" "Certainly, Miss Earl wood. I think yonr wish is natural. Btill it might be better to go home, just to form the acquaintance of your father's family." "I don't want to know them. They never did my father any good. Unole Silas was the one who always helped us. I'd rather stay." Morley did not leave the Hope home stead till be won Silas' oonsent to re turn. He told him that he admired Hulda, and he sought him to give him permission that he might address her. "No I" replied Silas, sturdily. "The girl is too young. Go back to New York and oomo here in a year's time. Then we shall see." Morley obeyed, though he waa loth to do so. He took a long walk with nnlda, bnt, faithful to his promise, said no word of love. He was wealthy, bnt he worked hard daring his probation ary year to better his fortune. It was s glorious moonlight night, and Hulda stood beside mi— who smoked his pipe on the stoop. Hnlda waa simply dressed in a flowing'robe of thin texture—of a pale shade of silver gray. She was beautiful, and the past year had been well employed by her, for she had used her new-found wealth to improve her mind, with the assist ance of a good teacher—a lady of genius and cultnre. Bhe was sometimes thoughtful, her governess thought a little sad, but never expressed any rea son for being so. As she stood looking acroes the mead ows listening to the chirp of the oriok ete, sad watching the shadows of the clouds as they crossed the gold quean of heaven, a clink of the gate sensed her to torn in that direction. A tall form in a grey suit stood before bar—a faoe that looked unnaturally pale in (lie moonlight. " Frank Morley I" cried Silas Hope, in tones of warm weloomn. " Yes. I've oome to ask the question that yon wonld not allow me to Rsk a year ago. Hnlda—yon know what it is. Do yon not ?" He took her hand, which trembled and turned oold in his. "Doyou, can you love me?" " Yes," she whispered. "I've loved you over sinoe the first time I saw you." The marriago took place at an early day. And sorry as Silas was to part with his niece, he knew sho had found a husband worthy of her. Bo ends tho story of how a wife was won by waiting till the blackberries were ripe. Advlee lo Would-be Journalists. Four hundred dollars per year is said to be tho average salary paid to the edi tors, reporters and printers of the Unitod Btates engaged on newspaper work. Young men, you who are longing to join tho band of publio opinion mold" era, just think of that. Four hundred dollars a year for the host slice out of your life I Hadn't you better stick to the farm, the counting-room or learn s good trade, that, when you become tolorably proficient in it, will pay yon remunerative wages? Hundreds havo learned that "molding public opin ion" is a mighty poor business. Mold ing stove lids pays much better, and don't cause half the wear and tear on tho molder's system. A good many people think newspaper work is just as easy as falling down on ioe, or finding a girl's lips in the dark. We used to think so ourself, but that was when wo ware a bigger fool than wo aro now. Wo know a young man onoo, ont Wast, who for two years longed for a place on a newspaper as a rejx,rtor, and at last ho got it. The irst day he was required to report a horse raoe, a temperance mooting and a fire seven miles out of town. After he had dono all thin the managing editor told him be might write a Washington letter, giving a summary of the political situation at the national capital, and then he conld go out and get aomo points on the pork market for tho next day's paper. Ho wanted to know of the managing editor how in the dread future he could write a Washington letter at a pointf 14 miles from the national capital, and when he had never boen there in hia life. The managing editor ooolly replied that "if he oould't write a letter from any point in the known world on fifteen minutes' notice, he'd better qnit the newspaper business before be disgraced it." Ho resigned that evening and went back to his old connting-honse stool, and his old time, independent ten-dollars-a-week air, and never asked to be s journalist again. Borne men seem to be born to do news japor work, and tbey will do it if they have to lire on oold hash and button their ooat up to their chin while their only shirt is in the wash. And they will be jnst as happy, too, as tho son-ir. law of a monopolist with a bad cough. They would never be contented in any other calling, even if it paid tliem ten thousand dollars a year and fire wood. All others should keep out of the jour nalistic field.— Middlttown Transcript. Zflonlte. One of the most remarkable uses to whiob paper hss been put of late years is the manufacture of xylonite, a sub stance which, at the will of the manu* lecturer, may be made in imitation of horn, rubber, ivory, tortoise shell, am ber and even glass. Tho ;naea to whioh xylonite are adaptable are almost in finite, but perhaps the most extraordi nary is the manufacture of oathedral windows. The disoovery was made by an Englishman named Bpills, about fifteen yean ago, but it was only about five years ago that a company waa formed in London for its manufac ture. Within the last two years a company has bean formed here. The base of xylonite is a plain white tissue paper, made from ootton or ootton and linen rags. The paper being treated first with a bath of sulphuric and other acids, undergoes a chemioal change. The acid is then carefully washed out, and the paper treated with anothor preparation of aloohol and camphor. After this it assumes an appearance ▼ery much like parchment It ia then oapable of being worked up into plates of any tthickness, tendered almost perfeotly transparent or given any of brilliant oolore that silk will take. It is mnoh more flexible than either horn or ivory, and much leas brittle. Combs or other articles made of it in imitation of tor toise shells are said to be so perfect in appearance as to deoeive the eye of the most practiced workmen in that sub stance. The difference in the ma terials can be detected only by tests. A plain white tissue paper also forma the basis of oeilsloid, and the treat ment in the early stages of preparation are somewhat similar. The ohiel difference, however, between celluloid and sylonite is that the former cannot be rendered transparent, and, there fore, oannot like the latter be made to imitate so many different substances. JHOKAL AND RKLiUIOUU. Vallb la (lad. Faith in God justifies self-respect and defense of one's individual rights. In the godless theory of the universe men are momentary products of nature's loom, woven and unraveled as they make up tho progressive woof of human history after the pattern of a slowly perfected humanity. The individual is nothing ; humanity is everything. One soul comes and another goes, each made by its place and for its place; and both endure for a moment and aro gone. Before the relentloss march of this advancing horde the single soul is trampled into annihilation and forget fnlnuss. From the crest of this foam ing sea, myriads of drops are for an instant whirled into life, wrought into forms of beauty, and then whelmed into the cruel waves. Human rights and joys, human affections and hopes, human responsibilities and fears—are but the flying foam on their restless waves that with accelerated speed hurry them toward the ooean.— Pruuicnt Porter, HrlliloaiStwa and SalH There has been a net gain of ninety nine in the twenty-seven Congregational ohnrches of Rhode Island, during the past year. Rev. Joseph Cook, of Boston, who has been lecturing in Japan, warned the people that "if their country did not l>ecome Christian it would not succeed in its new free development." Rev. J. C. I'rioe, of the African Meth odist Episoopal church, has returned from England with $ 10,000, oollected there for tho Zion Wesley institute, devoted to tho training of preachers for the colored race. Rev. Dr. Martyn, a missionary of the Presbyterian church, is president of the imperial college of Pekin, China, and Rev. Mr. McFarland, of the same church, is superintendent of public in struction in Biam. The British Wesleyan Missionary so ciety raised S2O, (XXI at its annual break fast meeting, and another $20,000 at its public anniversary, thus extinguishing the debt which had burdened it At the close of 1880 this debt amounted to $120,000. There is about to be formed in Great Britain a " Green Ribbon" army, com posed of all members of the Roman Oathoiio temperance organisations throughout the kingdom. A green ribbon will be worn at tho buttonhole by each member of the army. There is already in active work a " Uluo Ribbon" army. The Free M< thodist church was or ganised by former members of the Methodist Episcopal church in Western New York, in August 1880. Its latest annual report shows 13 annual confer ence*. 271 preachers, 368 local preach ers, 12 042 lay-members, and 332 Bun day-schools, with 2,188 officers and teachers and 11,401 scholars. Tho vicars of two of the most popular Episcopal parishes in Bristol, England, both of whom aro evangelical clergy man. have originate! a church mission army, designed to roach the masses somewhat on tho lines of tho Salvation army, bnt without their eccentricities. Regiments haTe already been formed in their respective parishes. The Methodist bishops who, s short time since, seemed to be on the threshold of desth, sppear to hsve gained a new leaso of life. Biahop Bowman has gained strength enough to make a journey Weat, and Biahop Foes has been able to ride out several times in a carriage. Both expect to resume active duties in the fall. Biahop Peck is also recovering alowly. When Whitfield preached before the seamen at New York he used the fol lowing apostrophe: "Well, my boys, we hsve a clear aky, and are making fine headway over a smooth sea, before a light breeze, and wa shall soon lose sight of laud. But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from the west ern horizon ? Hark I don't you hoar distant thunder? don't you aee those flashes of lightning ? A storm is gath ering I Every man to his duty I How tho waves rise and dash against the •hip I The air is dark I The tempest rages I Our masts are gone I The ship is on her beam-ends 1 What next T The unsuspecting tare suddenly rose and exclaimed: "Take to the long boats I" What Is a Census " Family T" I had occasion to inquire concerning the average sise of the family circle, and was dismayed at learning that the average is produoed by considering the inmates of OPS house whether it be hotel, tenement house, or private read deuce, to constitute the family. To illustrate : In a square containing two hotels with 620 g nests saoh, two tana msnt-hoaaas saoh containing four familiea of five parages, fifty private dwellings with ten persons to sash, and one household nrmats*if of an old maid and her oat, the average of the "family' | lb twenty.— Washington Republic, CLII'PIJfiH FOB THE CUBIOUfc The wall* of ancient Nine rah were 100 (net high, and thick enough to dltee three chariot* abreaet. A pound of oharooal will melt ninety* five pound* of iee, and a pound of ooei will melt ninety pound* of ioe. The art of working peddle* and oalg by oxen in a circular wheel wa* known to the ancient* and need in the middle age*. Tarring and feathering ia a European invention. It waa one of Ricluyd Cteur de Lion'* ordinance* for seaman in pun ishment for theft. It is estimated that there are 537 lan guage* and general dialect* in Europe, 937 in Asia, 226 in Africa and 1,264 in America ; in all nearly 3,000. In the fourteenth oentury, to main tain a lion in the tower of London coat sixpence a day, while human prisoner* were supported for one penny. In the United Kingdom there are lOt women to every 100 men. In the Uni ted Htates there are two and one-half per oent. more males than female*. In Chin* the first class are the lit erati ; the second, the husbandmen ; the third, the artisan* ; and the fourth, tbe interohangers. Tbe priests bold no cflioo. in oia times a Jew never asked in terest of a brother Jew, bnt took it out of the next Christian that came to him. In this way money accumulated in Jew ish hands, for they never preyed upon onejmQther. . . . - unto papers are telling with some show of astonishment of a lady who has lived for forty years within a few miles of Cambridge, that Htate, and who last week saw straw tarries for the first time and did not know what they were until she was told. The longest three-quarter-inch rod ever made was rolled at the Albany iron works recently. It is 263 fee% long, free of flaw, and plump from end to end. It is said to be forty feet longer than any rod ever before produced in this or any other country. One of tbe most arbitrary aots of William the Conqueror was forcibly turning out from their lands and tene ments all the people who dwelt in a space of thirty miles around Win chester, for the purpose of planting a forest there as a hunting ground. The operation required the demolition of twenty-two churches. Tbe tensile strength of glass has teen shown to ta between 2,000 and 0.000 pounds per square inch, and the^crush ing strength between 6,000 to 10,000 pounds per square inch. By trials q short time ago, M. Tranlionie found that flooring glass, one inoh square, and one foot between the end supports breaks under a load of 170 pounds. In some Eastern countries the larger shells of the mother-of-pearl family ere used in the construction of houses. Mounted on a framing of wood, they make at once strong and elegant blinds for windows, eto. The oatbcdral and other sacred edi floes at Panama are lined with shells, and tbe soft light they diffuse is said to have a most pleas ing effect. SUbblng Hit Coal Collar. Some Tear* ago a story came from Paris that a criminal oondemned to death had been ex era ted in a novel wet and withont blood-letting. Tha culprit was blindfolded and laid npon a marble slab after being in form od that he wm| to be bled to death. A needle was u*f\j with whioh to priok his am. and as U)| point toached him drops of warm w•* ter were sprinkled so that they ran down his side, and to the condemned fy appeared that be was bleeding to death. In a little while the experiment proved successful, and the man expired, snoh * was the foroe of imagination. A oasf somewhat resembling this was brcaghi to the notice ef Polioe Offloer Jonas thA other dsy. As he passed the building he saw a man lying on hil back in the entranoe. The hands were crowed npon his breast, and his legs were does together. As Jonuf afterward said, " He looked every inofc a corpse." The face was bloodless. ThA eyes ware closed as though in deaUb The handle of a jackkuifs protruded from a point between the oollar and tha jngular vein. The blade was hidden Jones jumped to the conclusion of sui cide. He took hold of the knife and drew it out of its rasting-plaoa. Tha blade was unsullied. Being aroused* the man said that be bad attempted suicide. Instead of wounding himself be merely stabbed the oollar of his ooei. Then he felt that he was dying. Visions of father, mother and borne passed through his mind, he said only for a moment, and then he became uncon scious. Hs was perhaps just entering the spirit land when Jones called him beck.—.St Lovi* GM* Dtmoer*, There is greet joy at the re-establish ment of the drum in the French arm. In the barracks and canteens soldisry are preparing to welooms It back with festivity. The army, it was found, was losing prestige in the eyes of the people for want of ths drum.