TEENS OF PUBLICATION. . . .The BRADTOUR ReronTan Is published every Thursday morning by •Go°Daley & at Oue Dollar and Fifty Cents per annum, In ad ranee. efirAdvertisleg in ail eases exclusive or sub-' scription to the paper. SPECIAL NOTICES Inserted Talc Ceara per, line for first insertion, and ytvacErma per line for each subsequent insertlod; but - no notice inserted for less than fifty cents. YE ARLY,'A DVERTI,SEMENTS till be Insett ed at reasonable rates. t Administrator's and Executor's Notices, Auditor's Notices,rl.s3 ;glumness Pards, Beelines, (per year) 0: additional lines 0 each. . Yearly advertisers are entitled to • quarterly changes. Tranlieut advertisements must be paid for fa advalics. All resolutions of associations; communications of limited or individual interest, and no , ices of marriages or deaths, exceeding five lines aro charg ed rtrk CENTS per line, but simple notices of mar riages and de .t hs will be published without charge. The REPORTER having a larger circulation than any other paper In the County. makes it the best advertising medium in Northern Pennsylvania. .10 ii PRINTING of every kind, In plain and fancy eblore, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, IHanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Blithest's, Statentenhs, he., of every variety add style, printed at the shortest notice. The ItEPOcrxn omen Is well supplied with power pressed, a good assort ment of new type. and everything in the printing Hue can be executed In the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERNS INVARIABLY C AS 11. • 'pis tacos §arbo. JAMES A TTOILNET-AT4. TOW AN I/A, I'A. MEM OVERTON & SANDERSON, A TTOIIN ET-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. E. OVERTON, JR \.l - 1. M. I'ECK, __ or o c i ArrooNEY-AT-LAW, 0, ee over Bynum] ti 11111'n tuoat maSkeL—' Towhala, .tan. 15, 1579. F,: J.J. ATTOR NET-AT-LAW, \ TOWANDA, PA. V F. GOFF, E. ATTOTINF.Y.AT-LAW, Main itrrot (4 (louri north of Warts noose). To wanda, Pa. (A3,r11 12, 1677. PATRICK S FOYLE, - ATTOiI . Nr7S-AT-LAVr, • TOW.% NDA, FA. '• 01Ere, In Movenra lltloci, We IL. kT 1. I% ° ' YA 1 1. 1 : 8O .1 NGNA AT TURN tu T , 1 0 11 t ri t c E n T d t•All inisniess entrusted to his can In Bradford, Su!lratt and Wyoming Counties. Office With Esq. porter. . \ quor 19-74, MASON AL HEAD, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Towanda, Pa. Officiover Bartlett & Tracy, Main-et. lIIIME 6. F.3IAsoN E LSBREE R. SON, ATT - 91! IIEW A N DA, r 4 N. C. ELsnRE.E. MEM ATTouir E V. AT-i. A mr. Ornce—Roorns forivrrly occupied by V. M. C. A T mcpuEnsoN, • ATTokf:FLY-AT.LAW, TOWAr)A, Pint Atry Brad. Co • • . • WIN W. MB A rol:NnY-AT-L AW Ain U. S. CO.II ISSION TAtWANDA, PA. cl e. Public iquare, D AVIES A CARNOCII- A N; Arroi:NET, , , , r-LAW, SOVVI SI ttF I I) 1101'SF... Dec 23-0. TOwANDA, rA, AND RE W WILT, tl U. rani Nky-AT-L ili Store, Iwo doora north of Stevelo..../ holm. I'a. May be cOnhulted ertnan. T• YOUNG, ;: ITto 1:N 1:Y•ATI. ANC, TOWN'S DA. dour s•,uth .uf the Flr,t. 11..uk Nlatti St., up btatr,. WILLIAMS' 4 ANGLE, A TV , 11 7<" T -L ANV F V I(' E.—F urine r:y (tempted lty Wnt. WatkluF, E.:ti. wILLIAMs, (net. (7, '77) I. J. ANGLt \\TM. MA X W.l. .XTTMIN EY-AT-LAW TOWA ?"; DA, PA. oftlee mu' Dayitors Store April 12, 11.1'S - 1' L. LAMB, ATTOEN EY-AT-LAW, WILKVS-1110:PE, c.`,••llections promptly attended to. IvEttToN & mERcuR,. ATTalt N F:1" • , -AT-T.A4, • TOW A ND A , (Ifficp nror Ninntanyes Store.- frnavnS j. iiVER'EPN. RoDNEY A.IIP:L'CUIc AD I ILL & CALIFF, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, ToWANDA, l'A. bri,fff In Wooet's Mock, first door sout:i of the First Nr,:hmalh,mkoip-siairs. H. J. MADILL. jaivi-731”. . J. N. CALIFF. lIIIAS.\I.hALL, , A TTORN EY-AT-L A W AND irSTICE OF PLACE Ti)WANDA. PA. t,ce. tN nl-LIABLE CoMPA7iIES =9 [AR. M. 'WOODBURN, Physi 1_ clan 311,1 Surgeon. 01 Tice over O. A. Black`r ('n. Xery T'Pwanda, May 1, li , 7111y•. \\T. E r N . T Tow I ST. r — m a, Pa. In•vrt,r ott WO,l, I,ll.ner, and, Al ur,,,tum Teeth extracted a Ith,ntit • p PA YNE, Ao I= I , ltstey Mott taT yett • Store. tMlee hours from 10 t.. 12. A. M.. and -from r. M. Special attention en to ithea.es of the F . V, and Far.-4)et.19.`76-tf. i • W. RY AN, • i• = f 7.1., day !AO Satnr dac ofir , 3ol month. ciTer Turner i; orth or , I'l tut Store, Towanda, Pa. ,r 4 ..:1111.ir1:311fi0 7..). 1,74 1 111 s . rEET, T CII /: It OF PIA ti 0 7/1 . SI C, TEL:MS.-1001.er ter:lig,- ' I 1:• , ..1 , 1,•ttce 1111 rd street, I:4 ward.) T -v. 31013, 14 •714-13% el - S. RUSSELL'S ENER AL INSURANCE AGENCY M r , 2,7(k1e. TOW4DA, PA. N RAN C E AGENCY. The following RELIABLE, AND FIRE TRIED Conipantes trpresented; TO. N : CSII llt NI X,IiOIIE.II ERUIt A NTS, Wit h 1G.'74 e U. le. BLACK.- pAINTINGS PORTRAITS AND LANDSCAPES-I r'atn!,l to order at any price from $5 to =SOO. • i Pa!ntings Kr-rnintetl, lie-Touched, or changes made as fles!red. A:1 c.,.,rk done to the I, Ight•st stile of the Art. JOII ANN F. BENDER Towanda,' Pa., April li, tn7B. UT • H. JESSUP, ATTORNEY ANT, COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW, MONTRIAE„ PA. :11.ge. aeasup•having resumed the practlcent tbo 13,, in Northern Pentllcatila. will attend to any bn.tne•tx Intrusted to him in Bradford county. I*-r , os uklang to consult. hlm..can call on H. ... Towanda, Pa., wQe•n an appointment be male lIENRY STREETER, ATTVIINEY AND CtiI'NfiELLOIL-AT-LAW, TOWA NI)A, I'A FII . IST NATIONAL BANK, TOW ASIA, PA r%I.ITAL rmi) IN SURPLUS FUND.. This Rank Wren unusual factlltlas teethe trans a,tlun of azeneral banking business. JOS. POWELL, President COODRICHA HITCHCOCK. Publishers, VOLIBE 3C-X.XTX.. Long years ago, Old Time, •tie said, . While Wilding his weary way, . Chanced on a stream Whichswiftly Pried, And to 'crust It did vain may. . . "Help!" cried he, "Consider my years! Will none of you aid me? Alas, Good friends, I entreat you with tears, Hither, and help Old Time to pass None heeded his cry, till wafted where Some damsels in Idleness rove, On further side.' To bring filth there, Spee . they a skiff,PmpOled by Lore. Others, more staid, were fain check, And warningly chanted this rhyme: "Ah, mani , a life has made shipwreck lloseektog thus to pass Ohl Time." JOHN F. Young Lore Made gaily for the shore, Whereon the old wanderer wept; „ Proudly turned to ferry him o'er, Puil strong though the dark current swept Plying his oars, the radiant boy Gaily sang and resang this rhyme: "See, see, ilear girls, behold with Joy, How Young Lore carries off Old Time r [n0r11.75 Vain-boast Soon spent, down droops his bead ('Twas ever his way, lam told); .t.):d Time takes tiWthe oars Instead ; Tired so soon, yet erewhilt; so bold? Poor child, how feebly formed ttiou art Rest, then, now whilst I slug my rhyme— . An old refrain from broken he.irt— • Love is Carried away-4 Tline.l" 11y17.73 A sllv'ry sound of Mirth above • Ripples downward over the tide ;- One passing fair, In sylvan grove, Dotli3O;(1 Time and Young Love deride. " - Hold !" erh , !ditihe sage, with voice severe ; • "Who laugh thus at Love and my rhyme?" "True Frlendshill., who has naught to fear; I yield not to Love nor to Time :" • —From the triiich J Svur. AI[TIWIt linen This casket with the choice lilies spread, Contains a mortal doubly \ Ile tiled in the esteem of men. • And yesterday he died Pgaill. lightly bold thy gp.ll.Land gem! ' • SOT° one at fiAt will ears for them.: litttceep thy r i:11110 lii thine own trust, And vcith thy deeds perfume thy (Inst. • —l-I , cher Bates in Congregationalist tcsratlCE 0701as:eons. LEFT OUTqT THE COLD. [fell.ll9 . . It was a winter \ cvening and the snot ig fell dreamily ` , Rutside, Alown, down, over the earth \like a white . \ man* of charity. s, 04e of those soft, midwinter nighs, when to stand at thl. window and 400 k out is a luxury—alseemsso white and peaceful—when puts ~ out the hand and feel the cold snow flakes touch.-- it and melt thrills oae with a refreshing sense of life arril vigor, but to be obliged to go out, alone and on foot, is not so delightful a prospect. And inside, on this night, were warmth and light, the odor of 'now : ers, and the elegant appointments which betOken wealth and taste—if-, si , le this pleasant home-mansism on W. avenue,' Chicago. OMR A young girl stood at the window of her Boudoir, and . throwing back the shutters, leaned out a , little way into the night and down:falling snow. SLie raised her face, beyntiful as a day lily, and th 6 snowflakes kissed it lovingly—the:face, the brown, braid ed hair, and the richly bioidered sack. ,It was a beautiful piCiture she make from tlfe,, outside. 'darkness, standing standing there in the halfiopen win dow, light and beauty gleaming be hind her, and snowdrops like a feath ery veil falling between her andthe chilly night. So thought the little, dark-robed girl opposite, tripping along through the snow, on the side street, and looking up at the picture, framed in the dusk and shadow of the even- 3 to) 27, -7r The little, girl's name #ras Bernice Floyd, and her grandmamma, among the old New England hills, had been wont to call ,her Brownie, and she was certainly brown enough, with her daile, curling hair, great brown eyes, and rounded brown face, with a flush of red at the lips and cheeks, like autumn stains on forest leaves They had lived in Boston in those former days, and had been wealthy, herßrownie's mamma had .dressed . her always in soft raiment, warm col ors, that brought forth the beauty and brightness of the dark fee 4. then came other dayS„ when misfor 7 tune . stopped at the door, and they had come west to the : great city, and prospered well ;` but the darkest days of . all came with the fires o - f"-71, which swept pettily all they had away, and Mr. Floyd had contracted a cold. from which `he never fully recovered. EZEINIE :Ile had never been able to do much but hail obtained a small clerkship, and they had lived in a very unpre tentious way—alnast shabby—com pared to the old life.' Mr. Floyd hail one friend—James Busscll- 7 who lived in Boston, and who had come to them once_since their trouble, when Bernice was four teen years old, and had been pleased with her dark beauty and' biight, youthful vivacity. lie had Wished to help his friends, but Floyd ivas - proud and would not allow it, and indeed .they seemed to be getting on better then, but at lass he had prevailed upon him to - accept, as a gift to his -little daughter, the price of her musical instruction. for one mote year, and a beautifuliAano. Then he hail abroad, and they had scarcely heard from him since, not even when Mrs. Floyd wrote to him or the d6ath `of her husband. And so, in those long dull days Ber nice had her music to console her. It was her especial delight and she studied it with application and ardor. So wheil her, father died and left them with but little; to battle against a world of voverty, hunger and cold, she had taken, the burden upon her little, strong slionldS, -aud taught music to a small class of pupils, while her mother dill: braiding and embroidery .for Mada l me L.'s estab lishment. • Then . they gotman - quite comforta bly in their small way, and lived "in rooms," but they were bright and cozy, with the piano, a few flowers and a bird in the • south - window, which was white--draped by deft fingers. • Bernice often ran. errands for Madame L.; for even her lessons and practice did not 'occupy all her time, Feb t 7, 79 5125.000 50.000 N. BETTS, Cashier ,--' Feb. 14, 1878. foehy. Lon AND TIME. UNDER THE LILIES and she liked to do it, for it was a change for her, with a glimpse of the old _life, which seemed to her now like a dream - of the dead past never to be hers any moreond she accept ed her fate hopefully, and' spent:'no time ,of her busy life in -useless-re grets 'or bitter envyings of those girls whose days were gladder, or whose future seemed more rosy than hers. She was' naturally Sctive, - and her sort of life suited the enetgetic ulsings of the braVe little heart. i Madame L. was . an impulsive French woman, superficial like ,her race, brilliant and a trifle.graspmg, but there were color, bright ness and a certain majestic presence to the little Brownie, that reminded her of her own early youth, an.l ,it refreshed her and made her glad:to have the youtig lady about her. to she' w s an attractive feature to the establisnment, was swift and trusty, never any - mistakes in delivering the dainty parcels of nee dlework and 'always remembered what alterations were needed, if-any, for all of which Madame paid her well. It makes ,any girl happy., to know she is pretty and admired, and: Brownie never went into the street without meeting admiring glances from almost.every one she saw. Old ladies and' gentlemen smiled to see such a bit of sunshine pass them; passe beauties .envied her, Young men wondered who she was, and even grave business tueu, per plexed with the cares of the day,. turned to look again' at the sunny. face, with its tiny rings of. brown hair, clear, laughing eyes. and red cheeks.. And to crown all this, Brownie had a lover. ' llow could it have been other wise? And this is how 'it came about: In her music class was one Mollie Eaton, who grew passionately fond of Bernice, and always had her own way in the 'Ouse, so Whenshe invi ted die • music teacher to dinner, as she often did, no one objected, 4,d it became quite the usual thing for her to stay an hour or so. ailer . le i lsons, as this• was ° the last place . -o her round of instruction. • And when Mollie's' brother Charlie carte home, it had been as natural as could be for Bernice to play waltzes and pol kas for the two to•dance after..-Then . , short days . of winter, it 'came dark almost before they knew it, and Char lie would walk with her to the street car, and once, one n'ala night, when the car was crowd, he had walked home with her, to those-bright little roonis, where the monthly rose and he mignininette blossomed .in the .Window, and he held her hand just for an instant at the door: Oi\e f ourse it was not • at all- the thing r him to, do, considering the difference' in their social standing, \ nit somehow he couldn't exactly help it. This had en the year before, but during the mi \ mer months she had not seeff him a' all; and' later they had again met, and in some way life looked rosier, perhPs-because Mol-• lie had once said : " CharlieAthinks the world of you,- Mis Floyd. lie's forever holding you up. s a model of ,behavior; says you hav(, a certain style about you that•would take .you anywhere." \ Perhaps it was I),2cause last night they had such a livelyevening iIII to gether, singing and (lancing, with a merry little dinner all to themselve . Perhaps it, was because of the com pliments he had paid her ; telling her she . had cheeks like roses and eyes like stars; and bad snatched the little, jewelless hand from oil' the pia no, in a moment when Mollie's hack was turned, and kissed it, laughing at, her blushes and petulant rebuke: But I rather think it was because he had taken her home, with his shining bays, arid driven up toward the armory building, to give her a longer sleigh ride, and bent his hand some head down toward the bright; uplifted face and said, " Brownie, I love you.". You know girls arc just foolish enough to allow such tlungto'add something trytheir lives. " Then Bernice had nut answered that she lovtd him ton, but' had smiled back to him itiThertlad, child ish way, for she was. so , small and swift and fairy of motion, that she seemed - . only a childi although she .was eighteen years old, which s.ein , ed very .ancient to the little girl who had so long borne the heavy burden of life. - And . this night of which we write she way carrying home from Madame L.'s to—the house on W. avenue. a beauf.iful dress for its fair yOung mistiOs, Alice Herrick, she who had stood at the window and watched•the snowflakes falling,, and whom Ber nice had looked up tt', and ad:aired as•a beautiful picture. Alice had stood but, a moment and then turned back into the soft-light ed luxurious - room, to wait- for the dress 7 she -was to wear that nig,ht, and which had been sent back for a slight altertition, making it a trifle late. Bernice bad been Clore before, but Miss Alice had not:happened to,see her. It was getting late, the hairdresser had been there and she was all ready to don the dress Wheu it should conic and was getting impatier.t when lit tle Vrownie: was admitted. Miss Ilerrit4i. gave one swift, star tled glance at the brown face, bright With ou'.-door 'air and the con stant kissing of the snowdrops. " Whom am I to thank for bringing my robe 2" she asked, after a mo ment's silence, in which she had. not looked at the dress, but straight into the face of the girl befo-e her, It was as Charles Eaton had said Bernice had a certain style about her which would take her;anywhere, and Miss Ilrrick, who was used to think of Madame's girls as at least very or dinary, could only speak to her as one. lady speaks to another, but her agitation had not originated entirely In surprise at the beauty of Bernice Floyd. It was this—she had seen her face before. Yes scarcely a.mo ment since she had this girl's-picture in her hand and had been studying it for a day or two. "My -name . is Bernice Floyd. I do errands sometimes for Madame L. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, FL, TIIIIRSPAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1379. when I have leisure. Will you look at the dress, please? I fear it is getting late." "Oh? pardon me, yes; only your face looks familiar—like that of—of some one I offre knew. I am sure the dress will suit now," as she glanced hastily over the havy silk; ".but won't you sit doirn? You must be tired." BerniCe smiled in her.cateless way and s a id .she • was not tired, and. bid ding the lady good' evening, turned to go. But Miss Herrick called. to her and laying her white hand :on the little little girl's i3hontler, looked down at. her, searchingly, and said," Do your friends sometimes call you Brownie ?" In surprise Bernice answered yes; Then the other added, hurriedly, "I have no' time to tam with you now, but, can ..you not come to me soon ? - I want to speak with you." Stupefied' by Wonder, Brownie' promised to come on Wednesday, and went away trying to conjecture what this lovely girl . could want of her. " HoW strange she acted," she so liloquized. Perhaps .1 remind her of some -pne who was dear to her, and is now .dead ; but . how did she know they cants.' me Brownie Y " Then, in thoughts of her lover, she forgot the fair Miss . Herrick and her words. Alice Herrick was engaged to a; man she deemed worthy :lifetime of affection. She had known him alon g time, and 'a few evenings before this he had been showing her some photographi, and accidentally left his little pekei. case at the house, and in the morn ing she found it in the parlor, and not dreaming there were any he would• care to conceal from her, she had looked at them again, and Among them discovered one he had not shown her, the face of this little beau ty from Madame L.'s, and on the •back, in her future husband's writing were the. word's "My Own Little Brownie." Her betrothed was Charles Eaton. Ile was a good enough fellow, in the Main, - but pre-eminently weak. He had been pleased with Alice Herrick. She belonged to his set, sang, played . and'daneed well, beside being an only child of . a father worth something more than two hundred thouglinedollars. Comparo with Bernice Floyd, she was like 'Pale dawn to noonday, in splendor, and the more he saw of this flash of sunshine, the less he admired his affianced. He' had not really meant to make love to the music teacher in the ster eotyped way, but her wit, beauty and lively good humor, won him quite away from himself, and alter that night, when - he told her that_ he loved her, he had serious intentions of ask ing a release from the other entangle ment-, and marrying her. Yes, for fully two days he carried about with him this decision, to give" up,Mfss .11c:thick's money and posi tion, and "Marry Brownie for love," for that was the name by which 11 designated the sentiment with 'which he honored Miss Floyd. After ghat he became more vtion al, laughed at his folly,-cursed his fate and comforted himself/ remem bering he bad not really committed himself to Bernice. , On W , ednesday MisOlerrick and 1 Brownie were together a long time. T i lley parted . firm =Friends and have remained-so ever-,,ince. . What Passed / betwee4, them only tl einsOves eve z r' knew. haute Eaton received from Alice a no c releaSing him from the en gagen / cnt,/and :the diaffiond she had worn tO \ 'femind her of his true and lasting / love. Shezwould not even see him when he called four explanation. ,She was a woman of principle and her idol was fallefi. When Eaton \again saw Bernice, "she - was the same of old, only her blushes did not com "quite so quick •ly at his bidding, bu she laughed and . chatted - with him, was just as witty, bright and - berditiV - but when he _took her, night, for another 'sleigh the I3oulevard, and ben handsome head to the- face besitle him, and said . _ est; sweetest tones: • ". Be: . you. Will you be my wife ? " she' answered Mtn, "No." ,Aml the "sweet bells jangled" nn musically in the ears of a man who had been twice rejected in one. week, and once by a music teacher, too. If he has arty conceit left, I'm sure it isn't the fault of circumstance. One night. soon after, he saw. both these girls at the opera, and together, accompanied by a distinguished look ing, gentleman. For the first . tame he WOndered if he hadn't been "aw fully- given away," as he expressed it. . The gentleman was James Russell, who, had come from abroad, and be inir• t'or a couple of weeks in Chieago, had .bethought him' of the 'little girl for whose musical instruction he hail provided four years ago, and sought her out. lie was more pleased than ever With her fresh, bright beauty 'and freedom from affectatikm and. the usual "isms" of young ladies, and she was always grateful to him for his kindueSs to her father's daughter, and . 'in all those years she rarely touched the Piano, that' she had not breathed blessings on tlieziTer. . Before he went home he asked for the hand of little. Bernice, but she was strangely intuitional suppose the life offselt - -relianee had made her so), and she seemed to feel that for some reason he not lust what -611 C required in a husband, and lie had gone back alone. _ .What strange . fate led him, it . year later, to marry Alice tlertick But he did on New• Year's night, and she sometimes says to her best friend, Miss Floyd, "You st,le a lov er from me, and gave me alusband a thousand tines' more worthy," for she knows of au:sselPs former -pen chant for Brownie. Madame L. took Bernice to Paris last,sUmmer, and it is said she-is go ing to marry a prominent and wealthy physician of Baltimore soon, but she is in no hurry. • Meanwhile Charlie Eaton :.finds hims'elf left out in the cold: IL V REGARDLESS OF DENTINCIATION ‘ FRia ANY QUARTER. EACII OP ITS DAYS A SUMMIM, EACU Of ITS NIGHTS A WINTER-;-VOLCANIO ORANGES APPARENTLY OCCUR RING. Philadelphia Record. The benefits derived from-the s3li. tary attendant of the earth are three fold. First. As the principal cause of the tides so essential to the-purity of thelluid which covers two-thirds of the surface - of the planet around which it revolves. Second. By the light which it af fords and the influence of, that light ' on the growth of plXnts and the' ri pening of , fruits. Third. The aid which' it furnishes to the navigator in -determining his position on the trackless deep. By means of the tides the moon serves as a mighty broom, which dai ly sweeps the shores of rivers, bays and oceans, and removes impurities which would be the sources of di sease, pestilence and death. It also promotes evaporation by the constant agitation which it causes, especially of the bodies of water exposed to_ a tropical sun. Rain is consequently more frequent, and countries" are thereby made habitable which other wise would be only parched deserts. The cheering light of the moon has been the solace and the guide of the benighted traveler in every age, and the poets from Homer to the present have sung the praises of' the "Queen of the Night." Savage na tions, in particplar, welcome the new moon . with :Naive offerings and re joicing, whliceven civilized commu nities watch with iinterest and pleas urethe daily incrOase of its illumina ted surface. Thsise • engaged in hus bandry and gairdenifig well know that the rays of the moon hastentthe ripening of grain and .. fruits, and cause substances liable to putrefac tion to undergo decomposition more .readily. . .. By the aid which it, affords' the navigator in directing his course across the ocean the moon has been an efficient means of enlarging com merce and of extending civilization! Beincr b apparently the swiftest' m - lug body in the heavens, and pasmg like the hand •of a clock over the stars as fixed and gli tering z s points on the dial of the ,/ aky, this planet enables the mariner to esti mate hiS distance east or from a pre-arranged raCridian I:)f.' twelve o'nlock time. So much/of importance have commercial naprons attached to the determination pf the moon's dis tance from certaintbright stars which lie along its path, that large sums have been offered at different times by the Dutch, French and English G-overnments for tables Which:would indicate the exact position in - the heavensPf the satellite of the earth at any/desired moment. • The phases of the moon were un doubtedly the first measures of time, and the interval between the same /ppearance of the surface of that body was equivalent in early ages to the present reckoning by years. The American Indians still speak of events which happened many 'peons ago, and it is altogether likely hat the ong reigns of one hundred y.a rs and upward, recorded in Chinese nd Egyptian annals, were only so many 'periods from new moon to new moon 1 or from the time when it was full till .a return of the same appearance. But, independent of its benefits, the moon presents much that is both cur ious and interesting. As this planet is connected by indissoluble' hands with the earth, it is - not uncommon to regard it as agreeing in its physi cal aspect, in the intervals of day and night and in the changes in its land scape, withthose that are observed . on the earth.' Such, however, is far from being the case. The moon re volves on its axes in the same time that its makes a revolution around -the earth, and its day is therefore. equal to about fourteen days and nights on this planet, and the night is of• the same length. During half of each lunation, or the period from new moon to new moon, the surface - is continually exposed to the rays - of the sun, which- giverise to a tempera ture unknown in the hottest regions of the earth, while the equally long night must be ploductiVe of a degree of cold never experienced by man. The inhabitants of the moon, then, if there are any, must be . subjected to ektremes of temperature, a summer and\a winter, during their long days and nights, beyond the endurance of sentien beings upon the earth. It is tru that a lunarian., by travel ing at the ate of ten_ miles an hour, might keep n perpetual sunlight and owing to theliminished attraction of gravity, a and here weighing but two - and a alf ounces there, 'might walk that di tance without ex periencing more Mus.cular energy that would be required for a journey on foot,of three milesn the. earth. lint such a treadmill cone ' lion of ex istence cannot be supposes to have been assigned to the inbabi nts of the planet, nor is it possible to 'mag ine any - progress in eivilizatio in the arts or sciences, in regions wh re, such extremes of temperature pr vaih The surface of the moon, how ever, exhibits but a rugged, barren waste, and is entirely unfitted. fof the r i residence of - beings analogous to those on the earth. - In it there are no proofs of an-at- .mosphete, no appearance of- water, no clouds float in the sky, and no twilight blends light and • darkness. The rainboW's majestic jareh, the lightning's flash and the r9seat hues Of evening are never seen.' Immense craters, including an . area greater than is contained in many. European kingdoms, are relieved by mountains relatively higher than any ~ont t he earth. • 1 At the moon the earth . appears as a moon . thirteen- times as large :as that body does- to the inhabitants of this. globe -and undergoing similar changes, but always seen -in nearly the fame part of the heavens, and. unlike. the satelite of the earth;pre senting sometimes a bright and at others a clouded disc. But, as the same side of the moon is constantly, turned toward the earthi the lune rians in its opposite hemisPhere must travel hundreds- of miles to :beheld the . gorgeous luminary which diastr,- THE MOON. pates tbo darkness of the long night. There are" but twelve of its days in the lunar year, which is the same as a year.. on- the earth ; its seasons are therefore , each but three days long, if what areprciperlyialled seasons can occur on .a planet where there is neither vegitation, , wind, rain or snow. Astronomers have usually regarded the surface. of the moon as in a con dition of 'entire rest, and that the volcanic action which caused its rug ged appearance has long since ceased. This, however, may be a 'premature conclusion. The elder Herschel be lieved that he saw volcanoes in a state of eruption. The , late Profes sor Virinlock, of Cambridge Observa tory, Massachusetts, hi 1869 watched for two nights • whit seemed to be a volcanic action on the moon. Dr. 'Klein, of Cologne, in May, 187 Z, posi tively asserted that a crater two miles wide had appeared near the centre of the planet where none previously ex isted, and within the last few monthS an amateur astronomer in lowa has announced with great, confidence the observation of ehanges taking place on the lunar surface. While the occasional eruptions of Xtna, Vesuvius, Hecla and other volcanic mountains and the cart quakes which nearly destroyed J. s bon, Aleppo and sonie of the citicS of South America show that the p fit-up gases which -upheay.Cd the m untaifi chains of the. earth are sti capable of producing great than , analogy leads to the conclusion t t the forces which have covered tl moan with elevations and depres ions may have grown - weaker, bu ,have neither ceased to exist no 'become entirely inactive. • 1 • Ze.- Y CIDER A Norsv . h alarl put up twelve bot tles of eh er against the no license law thi • season, and when II:: went down cellar; to get a bottle for a frien , he found that five of them ha burst. Ile picked ,up a sound o se, and returned above stairs. Ile ield the bottle at, an angle of sixty two and one half, cldgr, ces north lati tude, between his knees,- and cut the wires that girt the cork. There was a flash. and a report, , and the cork struck the northern brink of his. wife's left ear, while the entire pint of cider, making nearly as good time .as the cork, struck the expectant friend full in .the month. Never hav ing accustomed himself to drinking cider in this *ay—that is, on the fly —he reminded the dejected possess or of ,the bottle that he had been able only to get a smell of the liquor, and advised him to open another bottle. The request was complied with, and the host . brought up-another bottle; and, in order to . avoid accidents, and also sac the cider, lie - turned the neck of the bottle into a pitcher be fore he cut the wires. Then he sev; erect the cords'in the presence of a highly appt i ciative au Hence. • - The Seco d manoeuvre, as far as getting tliefeider out of the bottle: and into the pitcher was ,concerned, was a complete success; but the idea that it might refuse to stay there does not appear to have struck him half so .forcibly as did the cider, when, with unimpaired agility :and strength, it slnit forth and raked him from the bottom button of his vest to the back part of Ilia, hair. About a thimbleful of the liguid remained in the bottom of the! pitcher, ,and this was drank in solemn silence by the guest, who pronounced - it to be exceedingly good, but nervously muttered something l about setting the children a bad 4 . ample of ex travagance and waste'when the open ing of a third bottle was suggested. —Norwich Bulletin. WEIGHT OP PEOPLE. What is the average- ''iweight of man ? At what age -doe& he attain his greatest weight? How much heavier arc men than women ? What would be the weight of fat people? and whkt would be the weight of very fat p2ople ? M. Quetelet of Brus sels some years ago deemed such questions quite within the scope of his extensive series of researches on Man. He got hold of everything lie could, every where, and weighed theni all. He weighed the babies; .he Weighed the boys and girls ; he weighed the youths and maidens; he weighed men and women; he weigh ed collegians, soldiers, .factory-peo ple, and pensioners; and, as be had no particular theory to disturb hiS facts, helionestly set down such re-• sults as. he met with. All the -infants in the Foundling Hospital in Brus sels for a considerable period were weighed, and the ,results were coin pared, with others obtained, at simi, lar establishments in Paris and Mos cow. The average returns show that a citizen of the world on the first day :of his appearance in public - weighs about six pounds and a half—a boy baby a little more, a girl-baby a lit tle less. Some very modest . babies hardly turn; the scale with two pounds and a halt, while other pretentious •oungsters boast of :ten. and eleven Iponnds. M. Quetelet grouped , his ;thousands of people _according to I , ' , Ts, and found that the young men lb twenty g t reraged one hundred and foy-three pounds each, while . the 'womb -of twenty have an' average of 'one ndred and twenty ,pounds. is men cached their heaviest bulk at thirty- ve, when their average weight was ne hundred and rdy two.pounds ; ut the , women . slowly grew on until fi -,then their average weight was one h mdred and twenty nine pounds. Men and women to gether, the weight\ait full growth averaged almost exact one hundred and fitly pounds. • A Locx of-President Washiu_ ton's hair has just been presentcd to Lodg No. ' , I, A. F. and A.M., of Itichmond—th: Lodge in which the Father of his Couutr was initiated, passed and raised. 'lt is • sti mated that not mom than 1,506 locks Washington's Itairare now in existence, and the report, therefore, -that a New- York religious weekly proposes to sire a lock ot his hair to each new subscriber is not founded on fact.—Boston CononerVut Bulletin. "WHAT is the 'name of your cat, sir?" inquired a visitor:. "His name was Wil liam," said the host, " until ho had fits, and since then wo have called. him . Fitz- William."—lnter- Ocean. _ . •IV ULi • - \V + .- : Br%tit - shines the sun„ but brighter after rain ; The clouds that darken make the sky more clear So rest is sweeter when It follows We lt r And the sad parting makes our friends ?more I ' 'TM well It should be thus : oar Father knows The things that work together for our good ; We draw a sweetness from our bitter woes— We would not have all sunablne if we could. The daps with all their beauty and their light Come from the dark and Into the dark return : Day speaks of earth, but heaven shines through the night, Where in the blue a thousand star-fires burn. fio runs the law, the law of reeompense, That binds our life on earth and heaven In ono ; Faith can not live lk eight and sexist, But faith can live and sing when these are gone. We grieve and murmur, fur we can but see The single thread that tiles in silence by; . When If we only saw thetbings to be, . / Our Bps would bre Hait a song and not a eigh. - 1 , antt edge the darkening'clond• g t goldt 'at Hope can atways lendt / ou art with sorrow bowed, t •ruorruw and thy grief shall end ! And whe we reach the limit of our days, Beyo the react, of shadows and of night, Then p ail our every look and voice be praise • T/ Him who shines' our everlasting light. • —Sunday Magazine. . Watt;-then, my ism ,With the brig)/ And If today Walt till tr Detroit Free Press. Up to three evenings agq such a thing as a checker-board was never known in Mr. Grattan's house. He and his aged partner have managed to pass the_ ong evenings very pleas antly, and he supposed ; they were happy enough Until a friend from the East paid them a flying visit and asserted over and over again that the game of checkers was not only all the rage there, but that it served to quicken the perceptive faculties,-en large the mind and render-the brain More actrye. After giving the sub ject due thought, Mr. Grattan walked down town and purchased a checker-, hoard, and when evening came he• surprised his good wife by bringing. it in from the woodshed and saying: "Well, Maria, we'll have a game or two before,we go to the social: I, expect to beat you all to hinders, but you won't care." " Of course not, and if I beat you Why you won't care," she replied. °. They sat doWnoud he claimed the first move. She at once objected, but when he . begaa to grow red inthe face she yielded' . and he led. off. At the fourth move she took a man, chuckling as she raked him in. "I don't see anything to grin at,'r lie sneezed, as he'moved a man . back-, ward: " Here, you can't move that way," she called out. • "I can't, 'eh ? Perhaps I never played checkers, before • you . .were, bora! " She saw .a chance to jump two, more . men 'and gaVe in the point; but as she moved he cried out : • ~" Put them men right back there! I've concluded not to move back- - wards, even if Hoyle does permit it !" She gave in again, but when he jumped a man her nose grew. red and - she cried oiit: "I didn't mean to move there, I was thinking of the'sOcial ! " "Can't help the.social, Maria—we moat 'go, by Hoyle." In about two minutes she - jumped two men and went into the king-rot . ; shouting: " Crown him crown. him! I've got a king!" "One would think by your child ish actions that you never played i a game before! " he. growled out. "I know enough to beat you!' '• " You do, ;eh ? Some folk are awful smart." " And some folks ain't ! " she snap, ped, as her king captured another man. • " What in thunder are you jump ing that-way for? " "A king can jump-any way ! " " No he can't! " " Yes he can ! " . -" Don't talk . back to me,. Maria Grattan! I was playing checkers When your were in your cradle ! 4 I don't care 1 I can jump two men whichever way you move!" He looked down on the hoard, saw tliat such was. 'the case, and roared Out -" You've moved twice to my once !" "I haven't:" " take my oath you have ' I can't-play against ! any such 'black-leg 'practices l" " Who's a black:leg ? You not only cheated,.but you tried to lie out of it 1 " Board and checkers fell between them. Ile could gap . n.-his hat quick er than she could Ind her bonnet, and that was the only reason why he notout of the house. first. A Wood ward. avenue ;;corer foUnd him sit ting on a basket of cranberries at the door as he was closing up for the night, and asked him if he was Wait ing for his wife to come along., "Well, not exactly; stopped here to feel in my pocket for the key of the barb. 'I shall sleep on 'the hay to-night and see if it won-'t cure this cold in my head ! • . Not . long ago, in a neighborhing city, one of the belles of society ac 7 cepted the matrimonial proposition of a worthy .young gentleman, and. was asked by !him to namethe happy day. - She consulted her parents, who had previously. given their consent to the match, and a family council was : held. The decision reached was Cu rious, as well as characteristic of our country and age. The father and mother agreed that the social position of their daughter required a grand . 'wedding.: The father, hoWever, an nounced-that misfortunes in l.usiness bad brought him to the verge of bank ruptcy ; that he was, in fact, prepar ing to make an assignment for the, benefit of his creditors. ,To this the, mother replied that, - the grand wed= ding being of primary importances it must of course take precedenCe of the assignment, fig pecuniary'ri;asoriS silt' understood ;. and it Was so \ or erect. The Marriage occurred mai a blaze oti glory, duly chronic led,ill i the newspapers-;.and a few a rward . Mr: Smith's paper Went - to rotest, and his creditors took posse -ion - of his limited assets: In another e - , considerably nearer THE GOLD OP HOPE. BY lIIINRY BURTON. THAT CHECKER-BOARD. FASHIONABLE HONESTY. $1.50 per Annum In Advance. home, a, fond husband informed his loving wife that his financial affairs were in that condition -which • indi cates a speedy and disastrous col lapse. The wife said little, but thought much. The result of her meditation was that the pest day she went' down-town and bought a seal Shesacque and a set of diamonds. told a female neighbor who knew of the impending calama, that the sacque and diamonds woid last her a lifetime; that if she: did not get them now she never would ; and so she got them. The colapse came iu due season; and it is hardly neces saay to remark that the furrier and jeweler are whistling for their money. CHINESE DENTISTRY. It is well-known that the Chinese attribute toothache •to the gnawing of worms, and that their dentists profess to take these worms from decayed teeth. But hoii they per. form this trick, and SO artfully con cealed in the hurry of daily business, .was a secret, only recently qolyed, by an. European inquirer. After some difficult and delicate negotiations an intelligent-looking native practition- . er was induced to hand over the im plement of his trade, togetherwith - a number of the worms , and to give' in structions in the method of proced ure: When a patient with toothache .applies':for relief, if the tooth is solid ly fixed hi the sockets„- the gum is separated from it with .sharp instru ments, and made to bleed. During ,this, operation the .cheek is held On one 'side by a bamboo *spatula, both ends of which are, alike, and on the end held in the ° band some minute worms are concealed Under ° thin paper pasted to the spa tula. When all. -is ready this is ad roitly turned . and inserted in .the mouth, and, • the paper becoming moistened, is very easily torn-with the sharp instrument used for cut-- ling the gum. The worms Mix with the saliva, and the dentist of course picks them out with a pair of for .ceps. The patient having • ocular demonstraton that- the cause of dis ease has been remoVed, -has good reason . to expe - .rt relief) which in many- cases would naturally Tollow_ the bleeding of the gnm. . When the pain returns, the same operation . is performed. over again, and a fresh Supply of worms, fully accounts - for the recurring trouble. These worms are manufactured in qnantities to I snit the trade; and they are very cleverly done. . Still, to carry on the delusion fully; the dentists are oblig ed to .keep on hand a few live worms to show their 'patients, explaining ' that most of these worms Oaken from 'the tooth are killed 'either,by a pow der which-is often appliecr, or by the process of removing them with the _forceps. The-practice just described it may be addedils restorted to when .the tooth is firmly set in the jaw. ONE OF WASHINGTON I S STRONG POINTS He is a great-man who can occupy the first. place in a nation and at the same time prei-cnt his Weakness from being known. The thing most neces sary is ,not how to - . be perfect—for that is impossible—but how to seem so. In this Washington succeeded. If he ever did anything wrong he was probably sorry for it, but his first step was to lay the blame on some person who could support it betted- than he. If- he complained' that the coffee was muddy, he did it niostly by substitute. If he threiv the morning butter in a .fit of impatience, against the wall, it was done to.test the stay ing qUalities of the colors of the wall paper. If he sometimes slipped up on the ice and was momentarily un dignified Ji . e held it • to - his little hatchet and . the - lookers-on forgot to smile. Once he put on another man's hat in a moment of 'absentminded ness,•and the hat descended to his shoulders. "This," lie said, with the utmost sobriety, 4 ' is the hat of .Mar tha's first husband. I. regret to per ceive that he was a swell-head," And ' thus was he not only relieved from .the embarrassment of the' moment, put he made a point. against the per son who was first in the heart of his amiable partner: • 4 TOUCHING INCIDENT.-A lady in the'-street met a: little•-girl betWeeii" two. and three years :old; evidently lost, and crying bitterly. -The lady took the baby's hand and asked where she was going.. • " Down lOwn, to find my papa,' was the sobbing reply. ••" What is your papa's name ?" ask edHie lady. • His name is papa." " But *hat is his other name ? What does your mamma Call him ?" " She calls himpapa," persisted the little creature; The lady then tried to" lead her along, sayiig: « You had better come with me. I guess you came from this way." "'Yes; but I don't want to go back. I want to find my papa," replied tile little girl, crying afresh as hen heart would break.- • / " What do you want of your'papa ?" asked the lady. / - . "I want to kiss him.2' / • Just at this . time ,51, sister of the child, who had ben,/searching for her, came along rut / took possession of .the little runaway. From inquiry it appeared that/the little one, ) % papa, whom she was / Fo earnestly seeking, had recently/died, and she, tired of waiting for/him to come home, liad gone out to And hins: - • A .:LtAirqr.e•clergyman iii -the State of Main was. accosted ..,in the follow ing Manner by an illiterate preacher .vhci despised education: "Sir, you have been to college I suppose ? " "Tea, .sir," was the reply.. " I sm ils\ thankful," rejoined the finer, "that the Lord opened my moue to preach without any learning." " 1 similar event," replied the clergyman, " took place in CalaanVs time ;' but such• things are of rare occurrence at the preseet day. : . IN a late severe gale a lady aksed a neighbor if he was not afraid his house would blow away. "Oh, no," was the answer; "the mortgage on it is so heavy as to make that impossible." . Tradition tells many stokes of showers which were not showers of rain. It is . stated by an old - writer that' in Lapland and in England, about - a century ago, mice of a par ticular kind were known to fall from the skies; and that such an event was sure to he followed by - a, good year for foxes. A shower Of frogs fell near Tonlottse in 1827. On one occasion; in Norway, the' peasants were - astonished , at - finding a shoWer' of rats pelting down on their heads. . Showers of fishes have been numer ous. At San stead; in Kent, in 1866, a pasture field was found one -morn ing plentifully covered with fish, al though there is neither , sea nor river, • lake nor fish-pond near. In. several other places , these showers, of fish . have occurred, and can generally be explained by well-understood - causes. Stray wind blo - wn from sea or river, • a water-spout licking up the fish out _ of the water, a whirlwind sending them, hither and thither—all these are intelligible. The rat shower in Norway was an extraordinary' one. Thousands of rats were taking their annual excursion from a 'hilly region to the lowlands, when, a whirlwind took them up and deposited them in a field at some distance—doubtless . inuch_to the astonishment of such of the rats as-came down alive. Natur alists have proved that the showers of blood are connected with some phenomena of insect life. I= NUMB ER 44 1. UNNATURAL ROWELS. FUN, FACT AIM FACETLY. ENGLAND'S latest prize THE cat.o'-nine tails catches no mice. A FRENCH dancing-master is known by his brogan. MEN walking against time should carry a hurricane. ; •• _ EVEN a dry goods dealer occasionally. wets his whistle. To many a rash "woman kerosene is the i last earthly scene.; .IN most cases, the milk of human kinds - ness is Skilll-IHilk. A CAT playing with a mouse down in a cellar is a kind of low-comedy. TriE great cities grate the- angles and_ queer knobs off,of countrymen. EVEN the greediest grabber will heal tate before seizing on a. disease. THE Boston dip should, invariably bo danced by the light of other days._ WHEN rents Sall they never fall - far enough to'hurt themselves seriously; 31,viiv a young man's heart .is pierced through and through with the Lamers. • Tut boy who stole for the first time af terwards concluded to steal for himself. PEOPLE who do-- not know- one - card - 1 from another are fond of going t6-tho play. • SOME men are noted 'for their inn-abili ity, and yet they go right on keeping a hotel. • • BENEATH the rule of bar-keepers en tirely great, the chalk is mightier than the cheese. - A IVE:ITEICIs: woman has lost two hus bands by lightning. She ought to marry a conductor. .311ssoutit's new United States Senator, Vest, aid his level best to have the Union pulled; down. TIT% reason you always find a German . such an excellent cornetist is that ho was born a Teuton. • POOREST of all !hikers are the gorgeous blossoms of the- ice-plant. They aro. en tirely scentless. j MANY a boy who' handles a'billiard cue with consummate skillfcan't get the hang of a snow sluivel. To s,it down severely on' an way beggar, is an •etTective• way of sup pressing mendicancy. - • - " TAKEN prisoner .and hand-ctiffed,?' said the boy when he was apprehended and had his ears boxed: There is no.pse in grunibling about the temperature. ;You must pelt! up with- it, weather you like-it or not.:. . - _ Wiicx shivering bulls chew the frozen' cud, they may be ruminating' over their sufferings in the last fly-time. . ANtu.so the hosts of men who are loom ing Up for the Presidential nomination in 1S:,0 there is not a single weaver. IT. is a mistake to suppose that tho wearing of French heels gives the young ladles wearing them a Parisian accent. "DID he bringthose, chickens td your house in a secret way ?" queried defend... - ant's attorney. "_'No, he brung 'em in a bag.'? • " HANG that gate!" - yelled old - Hiekon ry, as he scraped his shins against it in the dark.Aud.after supper he went .out i and hung t. ' WHILE a war is brewing, the nations with an irreconcilable - difference on their hands try to makfLout what - it really is that ails-them. DRY goods men take more interest in the. inarket for-prints than do typograph ers.• And printers take more pains with • cuts•than do butchers.. "3lorrtrai-of-pearl ornaments are now so exquisite as to be dearer than g01d."... Then grandmother-of-pearl emameuti, must be worth more than diamonds. Wirax for the third time a sighing " swain tells his tale of love to the idol .of hiS affections while she is-strumming the , piano, it is-a clear case of piano recital. z i ‘.‘ A VAN in Illinois has found a-way to make Food limber. out of_ corapressedi straw." Provin g that every farmer hai • an undeveloped lumber-yard in hi barn. ItiuF-N the Marquis of Lome gazed_on-- Niagara Falls; be ejaculated: "Wolf Teo high-necked ! Won't do for myvice-regal ' court ! Good 4. enough for the / Plebeian' Yankeet-!" , 'UNQUESTIONABLY potatoes'have eyes but no - one has ever intimated having seen or heard of short-sighted potatoes, or of potatoes atllicted z witirstrabjsmus or ophthalmia. , „ • -- COTEMPORARY / gra /. vezy tens us that all true humorists poets. Which counts for the teaching poems of Josh Billings and the' stirring,epics of-Petrole um Nasby./ TILE Detroit' Press says statistics prove that blue e yed -women commit the Most murders. We.. thought it was _the green-eyed' monster that stood at the head of the class. - . ":iIIRELY you must be tired, aunty. I can't,think how it is you are able to work so long:" "Lawks bless you-, my dear, When I onst sets down tb it like, I'm just 'too lazy to leave off." " WORCESTEU, Mass., - has. a dog that. sa - ved a boy's life." And the enraged Coroner of Worcester poisoned the dog. Popular verdict : Served the deg right. He-bad no business - to interfere with the business of an honest and upright public Outt Indians are not cannibals. Yet they constantly go to war because the agents ontbe reservations refuse to give them a squawr meal. This is the worst fun yet manufactured, and it is said that its author is dead. IF clubs are a sign of high civilization, the aboriginees of America must be class ed with the civilized and enlightened peo ylei•of the earth, for every able-bodied Indian hai a club of his own; Oh ! let us swing the Indian clubs ! • TILE last American who had the Grand Cross of the Legion of- Honor conferred Upon him says he could not help -it. He did his best to dodge the durn'd thing •, but, being projected by experienced. hands, it hit him fair and square ou the left lappel oC his best`apilte-tail 'coat. So many people are shot where the doctors are unable to find the ball, that it is suggested that a thread be attached to the bullets, with a spool in the rear of •.1 cylinder of the revolver, so that the doctor can take hold of the and pull the bullet out.. Many valuable lives would be saved that way.—Milwankis Suet - FAMILIARITY breedi contempt. Rail road brakemen smile scornfully at the mention of breaking hearts, and say that Alfred Tennyson, the divine poet-laure ate, is a putty-headed old duffer, because no wrote Break ! break break at the foot of thy cold, gray rock; oh Seh !" As if the sea could work brakes-! ,and as if any mau_couhl down-brakoa on a rook 11