' TOWNS OP PW3LICAT lON. The linaDtOßD URPOSTRS le publiehed may Thursday morning by GOODRICH k GITCHCDCY. , , at:One Dollar per annum, fa advance. .Advertising . in all cues ex/ ttihalve of Sate; strition to the paper. EClALNOTtantoaertariViiN MINT/ per . line for first insertion; and inns caste utilise for each subsequent Insertion, but no notice Inserted for less than fifty cents. YEARLY AD VERTISEHHNTS, will be insert ' - ed at reasonable rates. , Administrator's and Exeeutor's 'Strikes, Pi Auditor's Notices4l.6o ; ligsineascards, Avenues ; (per year) SS, additional lines #l, each. Yearly advertisers are entitled tO terly changes. Transient advertisements mut quar , be paid for In advance. Ail resolutions of associations; communications of limited or Individual Interest, and notices of marriages or deaths, exceeding Aye lines are charg ed viva us :ire per line, but 'pimple notices of mar riages and de .the will be published without charge. The Reranma baring &larger !l a the elreutlou b at any other paper in the county, makes best advertising medium in Norther% Pennsylvania. JOU PRINTING of every kind, in plain and fancy colors, 4one with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Bill heads, Statements, kc., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest_ notice. The SIPORTXR ofece is well supplied With power presses, a good assort ment of new type, and everything In the printing line can tie executed In the moat artistic manner and at the lowest rate& TERMS INVARIABLY CAI!. §arbs. ' JOHN W. CODDING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA. PA °Mee over Mason's old Bank rIONIAS E. MYER ATTORNEVAT•LAW, ITOWASIDA, PA Office with Patrick' and Foyle PECK & OVERTON AT MS'S ILTS-AT-L TOWANDA, PA. D'A. OVERTON, ROONEY A, MErCUR, , ATTORNinr ir-LAW, TOWANDA, PA., Solicitor of Patents. Pateuffir attention paid to business ih the Orphans urtiind to the settle went of estates. Office In llontanyes Block May I, 19. OVERTON & SANDERSON, ATTORSET-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, rA. E. OVERTON, lit. JOUN P. SANDERSON TXT H. 4ESSITP, V V •-. ATTOIINEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT - LAW, MONTROSE. VA.. Judge Jessup having resumed the practice of the law in Northern Pennsylvania, will attend to any legal business intrusted to him in Bradford county. Persons wishing to consult him, can call on H. Streeter, Esq., Towanda, Pa., when all ap{mUttment can be ma to. TEEN RY STREETER, ATTOUNEX D COL'NSELLOII-AT-LAW, 'POWANDA, PA. Feb 27, '79 TI L. TOWER, M. P., HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN MiD SURGEON 09— Residence and Office Just North of Dr. Cor bin's, on Main Street, Athens, l'a. F. L. lILLLIS, 1 -1 • .ATTORNES-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, Pi!. F. GOFF, A TTORNST-AT-LAW, •WYALUBICG, PA • Agency for the Sal and purchase of all kinds of Securities and for making loans on Real Estate. All bindness will receive. careful and prompt attention. Pune i. 1579. ATTORNEY 11i tt .4 to all bustuess entrusted to his care In Bradford, tiulllcau. and Wyoming Comities. Office with Esq. Porter. [n0v1:444. 11. ANGLE, D. D. S._ Or Eli AftlVi AN AN IC AL 'DENTIST. ()Mee, oa State S t reet,.second - ttoor of Dr. Pratt's Oa we. ' apr 3 79. REE SON, E LS ATTOIINETS-AT-LAM, TOWANDA, I'A. N. C. ELsiiims ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. ()Mee—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A Reading Room. McPHERSU\, RI ATTOR YET-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. Brad. Co Diet Att TickFlN W. MIX, .• y -; ATTODNICT-AT-LAW AND U. S. COMMISSIONZA TONCA.NI).I., PA: Omce—Nonh Side Public Square. Jan. 1,1875 QAM W. BUCK, ATTORNEY-A -1,4 W, TO W.iNDA, Otliceocitti side Poplar scivete opposite Ward House. , , '[Nov. El. 10.19. - D AVIES tV CARNOCIIAN, 1 ATTC , IIi.NISYS , AI,-L AW, SMUT II SIPE OF WAED HOT - SE Dec •L 3-79, TOWANPA. PA, I ANDREW -WILT, • ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Opce Aver Turner St Coriton'ii Drug Stare Ttiwanda t Pa. May be consulted In German. 1/2 [April 12, ,75.) W• A.TTC4IICNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. 4 flire—seennd door south of the First Nat!onal Bank Main St., up stairs. WILLIAMS Sr. ANGLE, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. fr E.—Formerly occupied by %Vm. Watkins. H. N. WILLIAMS. (Set.l7, WM. MAXWELL: ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. TOWANDA, PA. nice river Dayton's Store April 12. 1876. MADILL & CALIFF, ATTORNIS R-AT-L AW, TOWANDA, PA In .otl's Block. first door souLS of the First N oank, up-stairs. H. 1. kl/11.1.. (Jana -7:11y) J. N. CALIFF. 1)1.t. ',l , L+ WOODBURN, Physi , r eiao and Surgeon. Office over 0. A. Black's rk-T v T.,.‘0. , a, May 1, Ismr. I;er. B. KELLY, DrsTisT.--,oifice T • over M. E. Rosenfield's. Towanda. Pa. 'Pa :hln,erti•d ~,, Gold. Silver. Rohner. and Al umni,( base. Teeth extracted without pain. wt. 34-72. 1 4 -1 D. PA M. D., VIriSICIAti ANS) SuttGEOlV. Otlhe over NtontanTe,' stortt. (Mee hours from 10 to 12 A. W.. 504 fry'an 2 to 4 I'. a. Speehahttentrou given to DISEASES ). DISE ASES or I and of T HIE EYE I VIE EAR COUNTY Sui•ERINTrtsDF. ‘V. RYAN Ottlet day last Saturday of earth ninhtn, over Turner & Gordon's Drug store, Towanda, Va. T.,wanda, June O. IsTs. AIRS. 11. PEET, TiACIIER Or PIANO lICSIC, - T ER:MS.—V(I per term. (Residence Third street, Ist Ward:) T , .wanda, San. - C s. RUSSELL'S • GENENAL INSURANCE AGENCY TOWANDA. PA. m„.2s.Tott FII sT NATIONAL BANK, TOW AND A, PA C APITAL SURPLUS FUND Thia Bank offera unusual facilities for the tram action of a general bareting business. J OS. POWELL, Piesident - EDWARD WILLIAMS, PRACTICALXLUMBER d GAS FITTER ra, fif bushiest; in. ?if ercur Block, next door to J , ,u rant °Bice, oppoalte Public Square.. Piacnbf ng. Gas Fitting, Repairing Pumps or - all 4.1,. and all kinds of Gearing promptly, attended t ,, . . wanting work in his line should giro him Dec. 4. 1077. =I GOODRICH SC HITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME XL WILL HE GIVE "HIS BELOVED • t When the feet are worn and weary, When the tyre grew dim with tears, When the days are long and dreary When Oa monotone of year., And the fainting footsteps falter, In the marshes dant and deep, With the gilds no time can alter, Will He give •Hta kwed ones sleep? When our pleasures all have ssAlskeds And the heakt is wont aisd old, Feeding on thi , husks is tarnished With a hungering untold, ' And the day is:dark and lonely Up the ruggid mountains steep. Faith asks the assurance only Will Ile give )11s loved ones Sleep? 84.26,19 BENJ. M. Bscx Will Ile lead them by stilt waters, rn the postures tairand bright, Earths poor, heart-sick sons told daughters, From out darkness into light/ Ob ! I long to know the secrets • The eternal silence keeps: Will we lose our burdens some day/ Will He give His children isitep? Will there come a day of resting, When the pain slid-toll are done, Done the penance snd the fasting, -- And the Anal muds are run? Will the heart forget tie sorrows, - And the eyes forget to weep V There will be no weary morrows If He gives His loved one sleep.' MAUD MIRIDITIX Terrace Hall, November 17bb THE , HALF: BROTHERS.' ), The county of Down is a distriCt t that can ardly: be rivalled in the 'ivorld for aried picturesque ' cenery and gener, 1 interest ; a pleasanter spot for a ramble could not be found elsewhere. iiNo matter whether the traveler's taste prefers the rugged scenery of the uplands, that border Dundrum Bay, the grandeur of (novll-78 Strangford Lough, with its three hundred and sixty-five islets, its ru ined castles and dangerous currents, or the cultivated beauties of 'Ross trevor and Warren Point; no matter whether he may travel in pursuit of pleasure, health br information, for The picturesque pr the antique ; - whether he be a genial roving Bohe mian ; finding pleasure in every phrase of nature, or an antiquary seeking for the round towers, Druidic remains and other archtelogictil treas. urea so common in this country, he will at every step discover fresh ob jects a interest and beauty to reward his trouble and furnish him with pleasing recollections for future hours. Ireland, the birthplace of my Moth er's_race, has always seemed to me a second home,.-and in one of my nu merous visits to its shores I was L. ELSBRZE. Stopping with some friends at '.tho lovely little village of Rosstrevor, which ,lies at the foot of Sljeve Ban like a chilkin the aril's of its nurse. It is thoroughly protected on the north and past by adjacent hills; and, although open to the sea, is only ap proached by soft southern breezes. Villas, mansions and cottages ornee, tfcb.'7 embowered in trees, surround it on all sides; and, beinkn very Of health, it has become one of the most prosperous watering places in the north of Ireland. 'lt is scarcely gossible to believe in the existence of; a more beautiful spot than this little town, above whieh the wood covered hills rise upward' until the green slopes mingle in the dark gorges of the Mourne Mountains, over which Slieve Donard towers, "the, ,range, in pyramidal. majesty, flinging masses of, shade upon the waters of the bay. - The farm houses in this county are much superior to those in the more southern portions of the island ; they are neatly, built and comfortably fur nished, have excellent barns and byei . att4hed to them, and stand in the midst of cornfields and pasture rand, the natural richness of which has been greatly enhanced by indus try and well 4 applied . science ; each cottage shows tokens of prosperity: every son of the soil looks cheerful and happy, and the traveler will soon believe that if there be an earthly. paradise in the Emerald Isle it is to be found between Carlingford Bay and Belfast Lough, between Moira and the Irish Sea. One. morning started, accompa nied by Charlie Yernon, the friend with whom I was stopping;lo visit the seaport of Carlingford, which is full of castellated Ad. monastic re mains ; having gratified curiosity we crossed the Bay of Kilkeel, where, we lunched, and took a car to drive around the coast to' Newcastle, a small town on the shores of Dundrum Bay. There we intended to rest for the night, and to make the ascent of Slieve Donard, the monarch of Irish mountains, the next morning. In the evening we amused ourselves, with strolling about the beach, watch ing the fishing smacks that lay at, anchor in the •bay, with their white sails ,flapping lazily against their masts, while their owners got ready to. tempt thq, dangers of , the deep. When I was first in that part of Ire land, in 147, the Great Britain, now one of the luckiest vessels sailing to A ustmlia,.went ashore on the pun drum sand banks. The thought brought back happy dreams of ,my childhood. Ilow many of the friends who visited that shore-bound vessel in the hour of her trouble have pass ed away. While Ilwas pointing out to Char lie the spot on which iihe run aground he gave a startling exclamation and pointed to,a narrow ledge that jutted out from, the side of the mountain overhanging the sea. On the extreme verge of . the precipice two men were engaged in a deadly struggle, and as we sprang forward and shouted for assistance one' of them stumbled; for 'a moment he hung _suspended over the waters; and then the other stooped_ down and forced hie hands from the cliff; he fell, and the dark waters closed over him. Charlie aia I rushed off to procure a boat, but iyere stopped on the way by an old gentleman, the priest of the parish. " Ali, sirs," said he; "it is of no use; the struggle that you have wit nessed was not. between mortal men. Every year,. on this day, the same tragedy, is played." IMMO $125,000 06,000 N. N. BETTS, Cashier Arll 1, 157.9 • fork,. SLEEP ?" gel c cled k " We do not understand you." " Twenty-five years ago two broth ers .struggled_ on the brink of the abyss. Afterward the one who burled the other into the sea committed sui cide, and, since that time, on the anniversary of its death, the villagers have been terrified by the eight that you have just witnessed." By this time we were surrounded by a number of fishermet; who cor robonded their pastor in every re spect. The - old sentlemanaaked us to dine at his cottage, and offered to be our ' guide up the mountain the , next day, promising that he would , tell us the whole story of the appari tion during our walk. Of course, we accepted his offer, and, in the morn ing, when we came down to break fast, we found him (waiting for us. The ascent . of Slieve Donard Is a grudual one of--ribciut four miles,and it is nearly 3,000 feet above the evel of the sea. There is a mountain path about half way up, and the remain der of the way is through healthy slopes, and over rocks with scarcely any b og land intervening. The scenery is of the most varied and attractive character. We caught glimpses or hundreds _of beautiful striking views on land and sea. Climbing up high steeps, del - Mending deep valleys, - skirting around narrow paths - that overhung deep inlets of the sea, we could make out the Hill of Ilowth, and far out in the ocean the Isle of Man was dimly percepti ble. Below, to the north, lay Ard glass and Strangford' Lough, which our friend particularly pointed out to us, as the inland sea was connected with the story he had promised to relate. Sometimes, through an open ing in the hill, we could 'see the fer tile valley that leads forty miles in land to Lough Neagh, and obtain peeps at the long, solitary, deep hol lows that lie in the hearts of the mountains. At last--we reached the summit, and, throwing ourselves on the grass, we gazed long and earnestly on the surrounding landscape. From the northern brow of the mountain fell a plOsant fountain of exceedingly pure water. The stream joins many oth-. era, which, in their rapid descent, form a river, running through a channel of white stone, broken by' a thousand windings, and making in the summer a prospect of waterfalls, cascades, jets d'eau and ponds, the most variegated and delightful ; but when the-winter floods came, the roar and impetuosity of this fall are ter rible in the extreme. From- the top down to the rocks overhanging the sea is one continued descent, and the lower parts, though craggy and rude enough, are covered with hazel, holly and rowanash--Ithose next the cliffs being old, bowed, stunted and lan guishing; while the - more remote, although in a higher situation, are flourishing and healthy ; and all this upon the face of the mountairi, ex posed to the wide open eastern sea. Near the summit are the - ruins of two rude buildings, said to be the cell and oratory of St. Donard, a dis ciple of St. Patrick, who once made his home on these mountains ; and here the peasantry assemble on the patron saint's day to do penance and pay their devotions. Here, lying at the foot of the \r uins, Father Michael began his tale :\ "You see, gentlemen, the Moun tain that stands on the southwest, divided from Slieve Donard by that. narrow vale and stream ? It is called Slieve "Snaven, or the Creeping Mountain, because a portion of it can only be ascended in a creeping posture. As you perceive, it pre sents to the view a huge rock; re sembling at a distance some old for tification, very high, overhanging and detached,'aa it were, from the eastern side of the mountain. After rain a stream rushes from the western side of the rock, shooting from the top, and falling in a large cascade to the beach; to the east of this fall-there is a vast natural cave, with an en trance nearly as wide as. the cave itself. This chamber is lined with ferns, grass and many beautiful mountain plants, and is inhabited 'by many hundred hawks, jackdaws and owls. At the further end there are some crevices through which -the light penetrates, and if you climb up a Marrow passage on, the left, to the top of itte rock, you will arrive at. one of the most beautiful and roman-. tic spots that can well be conceived. You will find that the rock is only the advance part of a large shelf, which projects at about the height of half the mountain, with a sweep, and leaves the space of about two acres on the top. Round the northwest, the west and south of this area, the mountain rises to a great height, and stands like a great wall; the area itself is almost round, and slopes. gently from all sides towards the middle, where is formed a beautiful circular lake, as clear as crystal. " One morning about twenty years ago, as the sun was sinking' to rest' in the waters, two lovers were seated, side by side, by the margin of that lake, under the shadow of the over- I shadowing precipices. " The ocean, which 'had that brill iant green , tinge peculiar to the wa ters of our coast, was turned at the extreme horizon into molten gold , by the rays of the setting orb of day. In 'the bay beneath, smoke was iisine from the little village of Newcastle ; while, further north, like dots in the distance, shown the walls of Dun drum. Far away at sea, the white sailed fishing boats, Whose owners bad been endeavoring to earn a scan ty living for their wives and children, were just visible, returning with the finny spoil. To these toilers of the sea the blackened walla of the gloomy ruin on Slieve Donard served as a landmark ; and the mountain side was a 'favorite trysting place for the lads and lasses of the neighborhood. "Everybody loved Nelly O'Hara, the prettiest girl in Down, a county noted, even in beautiful Ireland, for the beauty of its women. At a dance everybody was ready to fight for the honor of shaking a' foot with her ; indeed, the rival wooers did often finish by breaking each other's heads in revenge for Omit. own broken heart, till at last itcwas known that Nellie looked witlrifavorinireyes I= TOWANDA, BRADFORD ~ C OUNTY,_ PA., THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY, 12, 1880. on- Carrick -O'Farral f • the son or a small fanuer who lived near . Kilkeel; and as Carrick was a broth ofi . t bciy, who could hold own . and bandit) a tvrig 'with the best of them, csie by one they retired • !rote the contest, skid the. little _world on the '.Doi,rn coast looked upon him as the accept ed suitor. "But, as is usual, - the-course of true tore could only be made smooth 1 with a 'golden roller. :Nellie's 4:•11 . father, Dennis O'Hara, had met-mis fortune. During the ea;ly part of the , ptitato famine he had become se eurity for a poorer neighbor who had since failed,iand all the littlemoney that he had passed $ lifetime in sav ing ,disappeared. The. rent, . which up to this period had been punctually paid; fell into arrears; his landlord, a stern, harsh man, who presetvid everything but his ,tenantry,,threat -ened to turn him out of, Ns *olll,` and ruin seemed to dare hint hi the face.' Then,' for .the first time in his life, he thwarted the daughter who had shed a sweetness on his home in ber dearest wish, and refused his con sent to her marriage with the man of her choice.- "Poor, handsome Carrick was not the eldest son; his father bad been twice married, and had two children. Dermod, the eldest., a man of morose disposition, was. strongly suspected. by the villagers of being the cause of several wrecks that bad taken place. False lights had been used, and the vessels,= lured to certain destruction among the numerous rocks that stud the treae,herous shores of Strangford Harbor, and, although proof was ab sent, T rumor pointed to the dark, sombre man who answered to the name of Dermod Dhu. • • " Black Dermod was one oC the many suitors who had been neglected by Nelly, -but unlike the others he had not given up all hope. Believing that_ everything may be gained by those who wait, he advanced small sums of money, from time to time, to the old man, her father • and, when he found him th oroughly in volved, once more began to urge his suit. The father soon consented, but Nelly, who disliked and despised Dermod as much as she loved his brother, declared that nothing should tempt her to break her plighted troth. " But the constant dropping of water will in time wear a rock, and at last when Dermod swore: that it she did not marry him he would send her father to prison, she, knowing that the shame would kill him, beggid for a month's'delay, and putiniseo become, at the end of that time,'the wife of , the man who would pay all his debts, and prevent the old farmer being turned out of the home .of his forefathers: It,, was to Wll Carrick this that Nellie met him for the last time by the side of the upland lake. This spot had long been their trysting place; and now the gloomy old moun• ten seemed to frown upon their for. tunes and their low& " Sadly they paited, hoping against. hope. ' Nelly returned home to pray over her lover's success, while he went forth to battle with the world and win it. "True, he had one chance, to ex plain which it is necessary to look back at events that happened a few months, before the commencement of this story. " One evening a beautiful - cutter yacht, with the Stars anti Stripes fly ing at .her masthead, rounded t. John's point and dropped her anchor at Dundrum Bay. She was the pr erty of an American, gentleman, Mr. Winthrop, who was making a coast ing tour around the Emerald Isle, accompanied by his daughter and a party of friends. For ' several days the yacht remained in the hay, the tourista - arn using themselves by climb. ing the Mourne Mountains, and mak ing occasional trips to Strangford Lough to visit Gray Abbey, the ruins of the old Augustine Monastery of Moville, and the numerous castles that are scattered about in the vicin ity. One day, about a week after her arrival, the cutter rode at anchor on the crest of the big round billows, which swelled up, spread and tumbled over lazily, their glossy surfaces scarcely broken by a ripple ; after the' sun had junk in the waters a thin brassy belt of light was seen on the verge of the horizon ; the air be came thick and leadlike, no star broke through the haze, and although the sails flapped heavily against the masts, as the ~yacht swayed to and fro with the motion of the water, not a breath of .wind was stirring. The sailors were grouped about the deck, smoking and spinning yarns to,while away the tedium of the calm. , "On the little quarter deck a fair haired girl was sitting talking to an elderly gentleman. This was Kate Wiethrop and her father, the owner of the yacht.- The bright,gay-hearted girl, ever anxious to be on the move, was longing for a breeze, and Mr. Winthrop turned to question. the mate, an old salt;who had been many years in the whale trade. "'Lord. love - you, miss,' said he,, •is its breeze you want? We shall i have one before long that will blow `the anchor into the foretop and the hair off the captain's head. Look `at that belt iof light just above the hori zon ;. if that don't mean a hurricane I'm a Dutchman.' And he hurrieti forward to see everything close reefbd and,,made taut. " This bad scarcely been done when . the tempest came suddenly upon them with all the hOrrorieno common to a storm on the northeastnoset: The broad billows, mountain high, threatened. to overwhelm Ahem; the roar of the tempest as it struck. the yacht was terrible; the uprearing waves charged upon her like armed squadrons, anti all was confusion'aid terror; for an instant the cutter waa motionless, then she reeled over On her beam-ends, everything went to leeward, and all_ on board thought their last moment had tome ' •'but after the , first gusts of wind :14,4 rushed shrieking past, the yacht,. trembling in every Plankit slowly righted, and then - - drove awiftly•to wards the shore. . "As. the vessel Heemed,dooracd to certain destrictiOn, hooker ;1 - 7.•", • r :1 1 NM Bbisailudo tor ttainntramox PROW•AXir WAR ' TX R. IMIIN pasaed•nnder her stern, and a voice vas heard above the storm rope was ,thrown and a wan lumded on board. /Ele- sprang to the wheel and shouted, just as the raan at the lookout vried. 'Ereakeirs ahead!' , "tilantin your stub - races! Ease off to larbOard !' "The sailors rushed to obey, and the yacht, answering her helm, swung round and entered a narrow channel With breakers on both aides of It. For a fel minutes, whiO seemed in eternity; she ,held her Icourse, and then the' passage wldeoed, and, like ii:" an ocean bird rushing its native element, she' rounded t e point and stood out to sea. : l • ' "The worst of the; danger pan over, and after a short time, as the gale slackened, the cutter was tafely anchored in Strangford harbor— those on' ,board owing their lives' to Carrick °Tatra], the smartest sailor • on the eastern coast. " Old Mr. Winthrop was not un grateful ; he offered the brave young man a farm in the green lands across the Atlantic, telt Carrick preferred the old home, and, besides, if he had gone, he would hive to leave Nelly behind him, for she would not desert her old father in bis troubles. How ever, Mr. Winthrop' told him he would give him time to reflect upon his , offer,•and that be would write to him on his arrival in London. Welly, On the day that Carrick met Nell,y, at the trysting plaCe on the mountain, be had.,received a letter stating that the yacht was off Kings town, and asking him to,come and meet her passengers in Dublin. 4 Without any adventures by the way, Carrick reached the capital, where he saw his kind friend and ex plained his position. Mr. Winthrop at'once gave him sufflcient:money to pa 4 y off 03d Hara's liabilities, and to strrt him afresh. He then offered to take•the young man back to Dent drum on board the yacht; telling him the whole party wished to be present at his wedding, and that he hoped still to persuade him to cross the Atlantic. The cutter made a quick Passage, anchored in. the bay, and, on the evening of her arrival, Carrick was landed at the foot.of Slieve Donard. " Before he went to Nelly's cottage he determined to climb the hillside and look once more at the old tryst ing place where they had carted so sorrowfully a few days before. 4 He did so, and, on reaching the overhanging ledge, found himself face to face with his half-brother, Dermod Dhn. "So you have returned 1' said Dermod. "'Yes, and snecesaful replied-his brother; I have returned in time to' prevent the villany you have plotted. I have returned with the money to release Denis O'Hara.' " 'Liar V. " Carrick's reply was a light laugh , as he turned .to descend the cliff. ' Hoping to take him at a disadvan tage, Dermod sprang upon him, and seized him by the throat. The two brothers were equally matched as re gards height and strength, but the quiet, steady life of the younger gave him a - treatadvantage over his dis sipated opponent. " As they struggled they drew near er and nearer to the smooth and slip. pert' edge of the cliff that went down nearly a hundred feet sheer to the sea. Dermod's hold was growing weaker and giving way, and he was about to beg for mercy, when his brother's foot caught in the tangled fern and they fell, Carrick rolling over the precipice. "With' death before his eyes he . clutched desparingly at the tough, short bushes upon its brink; for a few awful seconds he looked up at • his brothel., and, with 9 cry of Cain!' uponlAis lips, the branches broke and he fell into the sea. As the waters closed over him his whole life came back before his eyes, the memory of his love, their last meeting and his promise to return. The frowning face of Black Dermod came between them, and then the dark waters sang in his ears and all, remembrances faded. With the voice of Nelly call ing to him he , became insensible. "The - end of the month arrived, and Dermod claimed his bride. Nellie had heard nothing of her lover, the officers were ready to, take her father to prison, audl she allowed herself to he led to the, little village church by the man she detested. " Was she to - blame? Wail she false to her love? " Ah 1 how many pure young girls have gone victims to the altar to save some lather or brother from disgrace! Surely the misery of such martyr dom-is a sufficient punishment fee the heartaches they have caused. Who will try to judge when a girl has to choose between her love and her kindred ? "the chapel_ — was decorated with all the mockery of gaiety=flowery garlands were twined round the pil lars, roses were scattered in the path —and the bridal party entered the holy place. Among the spectators Mr.' Winthrop and several gentlemen from the yacht quietly took their places without causing surprise, as one of the sailors had informed the villagers of their.wish to witness the ceremony. . " The bride appeared with her father, surrounded by her kindred; she was pile and trembling. , The weight of heavy sorrow seemed to have added years to her young life. Dermod advanced to her, and the priest was about to commence the service when; from the strangers, Carrick stepped between them, and, facing his brother, said : "I have come o claim my bride.' "With a blasphemous yell of hatred; Dermod rushed , from the church as Nell) , fell-fainting into her lover's arms. • - "Of course the wedding took place, but Carrick was the bridegroom. A boat from the yacht bad picked him np :wile was sinking for the last ' time; and the shock had brought on a fit of illnessthat con fi ned him to his bed Abr. sevend da3s. But now ell was joy,tlie lade and lassies danced Merrily that evening' In 'the old barn • I MEMOS DEM EMU 1 0 ES at 'l9.'Ram's farm ; and , before the yacht left Ireland, Nelly had consent ed to go with her husband to Ainerica. "In the new country, fortune fol lowed him, and he became one of the most popular. faimers in the Far West. Nelly,adored by her husband and surrounded by her numerous children, 'lived - as happy as the day is long, and almost ceased to think with regret of her home in the Em erald Isle. - "Two days after the wedding the body of Dermot' Dhu ed ashore at the foot of th mountain where his - brother f •an ever since, on - the anniversary of ii death, the restless spirit returns to'go through, the crime'tbat doomed 'him to de struction." • .- The old priest thus finished - his, tale, and, as the evening was drawing' near and the sun sinkingbehind the distant hills, we slowly descend the mountain. . Years have pkssed since I saw • this phantom struggle and heard the explanation given by the old man' but time will never make me forget the fiendish face of Der modDhu as 1 saw him gaze a ft er his . fallen brother that evening in the Mourne Mountains. A New Remedy - for Toothache. Dr. T. C. Osborn states that his cook .came to him with is swollen cheek, asking for something to re lieve the toothache with Which she had been suffering all night. , Re was on the- point of sending .her to a dentist. when it occurred to him than there was in the house a. vial of com pound tincture of berzoin. "After' Cleansing the decayed tooth," he If ays, " I saturated a pledget of cot ton lint with' the tincture, and pack _ed, it well into the elvity, hoping this would malice for the time, and told her to come back in two or three hours if she was not relieved. I was turning away, when she said it might not benecessarkperhaps, as the pain was already goii*. Supposing her, faith had a large share in the relief, I would not allow myself to think that the medicine had anything to do with the cure any more than so much hot water would have I had. But when I arrived at my office two other patients were Waiting with the same affliction, and I det4rmined by ,way, of experiment to use the same remedy. To my agreeable surprise, both patients declared themselves immediately relieved, and begged a vial of the tincture for future _Use. During , the winter a number of similar cases applied, and were in stantly relieved by the same treat ment, all expressing much Satisfac tion with the remedy. In December I told my druggist of the discovery, ' and' recommended him to sell it to any person applying for 'toothache drops.' This - , he reports, he has done, and every one seems delighted With the. medicine." ASKING TOO Mucn.—A shy young man of , Scotland for fourteen years bad wooed the lassie of his heart. One night Jamie—for that was the young man's' name—called to see Jennie, and there was a terrible look upon his eyes; just as there is some times when they have made qp their minds to pop the question. And Jamie came in and •sat down by the fire . just as he had done every Tuesday and k'riday night for fourteen years, and he talked of the. weather, and the cattle, and the crops; and the stock-market, I was going to say— but no, they didn't talk ;bout that; and finally Jamie said : , , "I've known. ou for a long time." " Yes, Jamie," said she. "And—l've thought I'd ,always like to know yOu, Jeanie." • " Y-e-s—Jamie." " And so I've bought—a—lot, Jennie." • "So—tbat--w he n—" " Yes—Jamie—Yes." "We're dead we can lay our bones together l ''" The fool had gone and bought a lot in a graveyard, but :Jennie was not discouraged. She knew her man well!—after fourteen years she.ought to—and so she said gently : "Jamie?" "Yes, Jennie." " Don't you think 'twould be 'bet ter to lay. our bones together while we're vet alive ?" A BOY oN WasniNaToN.—Boys' compositions are often fearfully and wonderfully. put together. Here's one about George Washington that puts the Father of His Country" on a stronger moral basis than any that has yet appeared. It serves the still further purpose of showing that where is real, irrepressible genius, great ideas somewhat precede: the mere' knack - of spelling: ...George Washington was a little boy that onet lived in Virginny what, had a nax give him by his old man. When george he got the nax he tutted a tree what had cheereys - up on it and eat the. cheereys he and.a nother boy. Wen george's old man foun out what geotge and the nother boy done, he called george to him an he see, george Washington who dated the - . bark ofen the cheerey tree, george sais i did And i cannot tell a li. Why cant you tell a li sais the old man. Coz sale george if i tell a li this here felleri blow on me an then ill be spanked twiet. teats rite sais the old . man ;- wenever yer git in to trouble the esyist way out is the best. No BLOOD ON THE PROORAMME.--t A. the boys from the Portsmouth halted for . a few moments on the avenue during the parade of Wed nesday, a till, finelooking old man thus addrestied one of the mites: "Well, sonky, 410 you, think -you could,hurt any !one if you tried ?" The smallest of our country's future defenders looked at him patronizing ly and condescendingly, and merely replied, in a tone ealenlated to allay all his questioner's fears, 4 ' We're not out. for that purpose:. to-day," and then stood unmoved and grave amid the shouts of laughter - caused by his . rerly,Washington (D. 0.) Itepulgic. - Ü2l , Lt. _. *.. L ' t -ti : -, -' 4,..., , I 1..,,:..- ~ . . . ,-7„ . -. ~..._--_ ._ 41. TM RARITY OF CHRISTIAN CHARITY." Self-righteous souls, your bitter scorn Of those who falter In more way W show yourselves snore nobly horn. More free from taint of hounth day, As from your homes of calm repos° ' In all-untempted righteousness YOu look•serenely forth on tboeo 'Who tall and lease them comfortless. '2 , Fo cheering ward, no helpful prerr, -Yo ray of hope their souls to win, What wonder It in sheer dospoir They sink from error Into sin? Your path perhaps hatb fairer snares, • . You note each step whereln.they fall ; Bit% If Viur souls were tried u theirs, " How would your boasted strength stall P Your lives flow on ;40 still and cold, - No force Is yours to stem ; ' Self-praise around your hearts you fold, £,4 ail you cannot feel condentrn But into God's greit scale at last, l Both deeds and motives shall be thrown; When Justice weighs each sentence past, " Oh then what secrets shalt be known And ye shall bud who censure most That yours was far the greater sin Who count these weak ones wholly lost, intim heav'n's own peace la thefts to win:, A Pretty Rhine Legend Once upon a time there lived 'be side the Rhine a beautiful lady. She had a lover who loved her, and whom she loved in return. But after he bad wooed her—not one year, but three—he asked her Co marry him ; and she, anxious to show her power, merely an - swered: a"Wait." . "I have waited three years," he said, " but at your bidding,. I will wait once more—just once more." Then he,wcnt away . and became a soldier; and praise of his bravett filled the land; but the lady ,wap , piqued by the thought that he +hao been able to leave her even a year, and when he returned she determiE!- ed -to punish : him, though all the while she loved him well. He knelt at her feet and took her hands in his; and said : " Lady,.l hare come hack to claim you for my, wife." But all she answered was: " Wait longer; a patient waiter is not a loser." " I will wait two years longer," he said, calmly. "Ifl do not lose all is well." Then he left her again. She' had hoped that he would plead for her, and Milt she would be forced- to change her mind; but .now he was gone—gone for two long years. How she lived through them she could not tell,.•but they passed, - and again her lover was before he. " "I have waited patiently," was all he said. The lady yearned to east herself into his aims, but pride was strong within her. " Wait longef," she said. "No," he answered: "This is the last time. It I wait now I will wait forever." At this she drew back haughtily. "Then Wait forever," she said coldly. Ile left her without a word. -And now her heart sank in her bosom. She wept bitter tears, and repented in dust and ashes. When a year had gone by, she could bear her woe . no longer, and sent, her little foot-page to her old lover, biddin,:r him bear this message, " Come back to me." But the message the little foot page brought was just this: Again she was left to her sorrow, and two years glided by ; then once more She bade her page ride over the mountains to her lover's castle. " Tell him I am _waiting," she said. , The page rode away and r'ode baCk. Ile stood before his 14dy and. doffed his cap, and repeated themes sage that had been given Min: '" The patient waiter is not a loser." . ".lle is punishing me," thought the lady, and for two long years She remained in her castle.- Her 'Nazi was breaking—her health failed— she knew death was not far distant. Again she sent, her cruel lover .a message. - " Tell him," she said, " that I am near my end, and that if I wait long er before,l see him I shall wait for ever." • - The page returned, and stood be side his lady's chair. His eyes were full of tears ;-,his head was bent Upon his breast; he sighed and hid his plumed cap. . The lady lifted hei• wan face. ' " Speak !" she said," the message.". " Alas !" sighed the page ; " would it were a more tender one." *,t- Whatever it may be, speak," gasped the lady. " The only message that I have," replied the page, is "'Wait forever." "I am well. paid in my own coin," said the lady. _.‘ At last I have re ceived all my own answers back.. In ilittle while she died, and they buried' her in the old - church-yard, with a i stone at her head and a stone at hetiefeet. • 'When spring came there was grass up - on the grave, and theie also was a new plant strange to those who look ed upon it, a plant with dark, glossy leaves, that crept slowly but surely along; clutching fist to every rough surface it met. There had never. been a plant, like that on earth before.. ..1s.;o1V we call it but this is what those who saw it for the. first time said of it : "It is the lady whom her lover bade to wait:forever. In this form she is creeping towards her castle', slowly but surely. So she will creep on until she reaches the heart she threw away." %- - Generations have passed from earth. The castle ayuin, covered with ivy, and peasants there will tell you thatit has crept there. from the lady's grave, point by point, over stone and rock, through' the grave yard and over gates and fences. You can trace it if you choose, they say, but you do not try. EDISON says be can fix electricity, soit will run a sewing machine at an expense of two cents a day. Good enougol what would be the probable expende of arranging it so as to run a sowing-ma= chine agent out of a town? TILAVELEB—" Here, waiter, take , thii steak away and give it to the poor. It's' as tough as Waiter (blandly)— " We've 'never 'ad, no complaints, sir." Traveler—" No; beeause, than wretched old cow bad 'em all." $l.OO per Annum in Advance. Our National Flag. There is 'a very interesting volume on oor National flag about -to appear in a second edition, the . first having been only 'printed for- a few public libraries and friends of the antlior, by Rear . Admiral George H. Preble, nephew and present representatiVe in our navy of the. illustrious:Commo dore. The origin of .our Stars and Stripes was,rlike that of alMost ' all other good .and appropriate thi g's; 1 , due to an accident, lind such a 1 •ci depts seem to uphold the 11(A:trim' of the'survival l of the fittest, since with-: out such a law they are likely, to I . ,ad to no resultsi:whatayer. The earliest suggestion-cif the stars. was in 1774, when the Massachusetts Spy, pub- Balling an article oii the Boston mas sacre, suggested that in the Aineriqati ensign • would -- heieafter sparkle. a Star ' : . - . Which shall shortly !Wee wile through the tpheres. Stripes' found their way into our National bunting, by appearing on a flag carried by a troop of Philadel phia tight-horse, conimitniled by a Danish gefitlethan, Capt. Alarkoe. This flag, is still in the possess;on,of his descendant; Col. Abraham Mar koe, who has also the.hill for, its cost in '1775. It CO£at. £ i l: Si: to design (aboat,,S7) ($-v;) to get it up in silk, gold-fringe, and embroidery. The troopi of light-hocse that w4tted it escorted Gen. Washilii?,lton to Ca-in bridge when he went to take com mand of the.Army' of the North, and its thirteen stripes most probably suggested to the General the idea adopted to the banner oldie Nation'. The original design in 1;77 bore thirteen stripes and thirteen stars. In 1;85 fifteen . stripes and fift t een stars were for a time adopted. In 1818'there was a very pretty l ehange in the flag, the stars being arranged to force the letter A ; bet this altera tion was .not permanent; it settled into the Pre - senrilag—thirteen stripes for the thirteen original States, and on each accession to the Union an additional star. The .present flag is certainly as pretty a ono as call be made of bunting, and' very sug gestive of our- perpetual increase. other nations make no changes hi theirflaoexcept under the_press nre of a - reyoltnion, x thisiand of pro gress adds do hers every three years or so ,another representative star. Adthiral Pri4ble's book is an historic al monograph; full Of anecdote, re search, and beautiful cob wed engrav ings. In connection with the history of our SturSand Stripes, it gives all - the American patriotic songs,-a de= seription of our State flags,' of the flags• of the Confedcpate . States, the tacit club flags, the seals and arms of the United States and its depart ments. • In short, --- it is a complete colleetion'.'of our National flaglitera 2 ture;--BalliMoie American. A New_Dodge Sauntering up to the counter he began to harpotin the e,atables at the free lunch table, and as he stowed away, the articles . unden, 'his vest he began', in a toue of melancholy sad- ness; " Gentlemen, my actions may seem ill:bred, but, with a half-starved man hunger must be, satiOled before good Manners, can: ix; attended to." The bar Lender reached for a club and told - the n pologaii; stranger that if he -would not leave at ,once. he'd go for him._ " dearsir," re sumed the gauntdook.::ng new arrival, with a deprecatory waive of the a childlike smile was spoiled by his having a mouthful 'of pickled cab bage to attend to, I CAI: understand Your astonishment at what, may seem impudence onthe part . td' ,an entire stranger, and :1 -ant not offended at the anger it causes yo - t - frlo display: But when I say that. lam a poor, homeless, Wandering refugee from the fever-stricken . 'city of ,lemphis—". Five schooners of . beer. were laid: clown upon -the counter with taneousness that .shoWed prompt de cision arid- panic-stricken men: permAulatfil toward the door with a unity of 'upon that was admirable. The man, 'lirhind the bar had vanish- ed into airy nothingness, and as the weary stranger polished off the free lunch and gathered in scdtoOner after schooner until, beer laden, he ambled toward the street, that saloon ivas.as bare as tire upper lip of a sixteen year-old youth; and the homeless, wandering refugee from the -fever strieken city o r Memphis, footsore and woe-begone, turned' into Beek man street. with a dozed, sad counte nance Of one whom life had left noth ing worth living. fur. As he passed into Theatre alley two shabbily-dress ed tramps approached him - and, in , quired in accents of-anxiety: "Well, Bill, hoWdoes the new racket work-?" The poor, homervss, wandering refu gPe from the stricken city of Mem-- Phis, who -had so suddenly descended to plain ." Bill." - IncOnivally replied, with a. -deflection Of the left optic, " Immensej"---Purk. Ho4N Washington Died The certificate of Drs. - Craik and. Dick, the physicians who attended George Washington at the time of his.death, has just been unearthed from ' a Georgetown newspaper of 1795. It does not appear in any of the' biographies of Washington. The certificate concludes thus:: . "lle was fully impressed at the beginning of his complaint, as well as through every succee,dirig stage of it, that its coneltisiori , woold he Mortal; submit. : ing to the several exertions made for hialecovery 'rather as In. duty than from any expectations of their ern: eacv.- lie considered the operations .of - death upon his system as coeval with the..diSease; Anil several hours before ids decease, after repeated efforts to; be . understood, succeeded in expressing a desire that he might be permitted to die - without interrup tion. Paring the short period , of his illness lie economized his time in the arrangement of such few concerns as required attention with the utmost serenity, and anticipatedhii approaching di:is:Motion with every denionstration of .:;hat equantimity for.which bis7whole - 'life had been so uniformly and .singularly conspicu oui,"' One time Henry- .Ward - Beecher went down to Boston tirlecture, In ' the afternoon he went into a barber shop of, great tone and-rennement to be• shaved. The barber was- a 'garru lous little fellow who entertained Mr. Beecher, while be lathered his face, with intellectual: conversation. He asked: ".Are you going to the lecture this evening ?" ",Oh," Mr. Beecher replied wearily, as a man who didn't - take much stock' in lectures, "I don't know ; who's going to lecture ?" "- Why," the amazed barber. ex claimed, "Rev. Henry Ward Beech er ; Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, of • Brooklyn. Going to lecture to-night in Music Hall." - _ ENE! NUMBER 37 Beecher Mr. c roused up a litt4e with an air, of indifferent interest. - ‘. Oh, well,"• he said, "if. he is going to leeture, 4 guess I'll ;have co to.' " Got your tickets?" the barber rattled on. "Got soar -tickets? Got ,your tickets ?" 5 , ".No," !Mr. Beecher; replied, " have no ticket." , - ' The barber laughed ha, ha," he shouted. t 4 . 1(04.11 have to staff(' up; yO.Ol have to stand up! Seats 411 . gone two days ago ; yonll have to stand up.t' , - is well, now," said Mr. Beecher, with an air of grave •vexation; ".do. you know that is just my luck? I was in, Brooklyn last ,Sunday, Went over to Plymouth clinreli twice to hear:that fellow preach, - Morning and' evening, and both _times I had to stand up all through the sermon." - And as he went away thd still inn= ' enlightened barber laughed . at the man who would have to 4tand up?' at Mr: Beecher's lecture.--=Barling t ton Ifawkeye. • ! -• MOT flElt.'( noticing lier sotee weediness) —" George. -you should-always leave tho table feeling that you could eat. a little more." George—" I eo, mother." • " You'll Have to , Stand.' , Fun, Fact and F = cetiae. As through faArion'a, dEreree . dresses grew-small,. gentlernen's l pants were enlarged, and now that the hoops " are again affected, trousers' - legs begin to' . get ti, . t.i . CENg . : Recitation room in naturalhis tory. . Instructor—" Mr. X., have ytin ever put4otir head "down nil any one'S, breast and listened to the heart-beats ase Huxley describes them ?"':Mr. X.. (blush. - ing)—" Yes, sir." - n "A, - Louie, se, my heart is very deH ' spondeut. Evefsince I have gate ' into •the depths of .those lovely eyes, I "--! " Hush; John, put an air-brake o that gain of thought, - Pa ..bas introdue ql me' , to his new partner, and I am his fdr $2, 2 1 000,000: That settles it." Puck: Au Au uncom-promising infant :• Mrs. Levi—" You wualdn't - charge dot leedle pahy, full 'fare ?" : Condueor—• "IloW old is. he, mem2" 'Levi, Jr.i--" I vas sees years:" Mrs. Levi- 4 'f) Jokey; .lakey; you vial never make a sdlimart man like your fader." - -Drum. (aged four Years. and six months), having heen previously scolded fur a too lavish use'of her paint box, is in- . tently watbhing a 'glorious autumn sun. set. She suddenly exclaims, with a frown : - Naughty Dud, tq waste so many , I.4Liiii.S• ",.: . r' • 1 Tim End of all Things.—Mistress (to her late servabt): "Well; . Mary, how have you been since 1 you left' me, and where are yciu livin g novel?" Ye servant: "Il easi , ,ma'am, I don't live . abywliere, ma'am, I'm married, Inas:lin.' - 'A rniF.ND of ours who lieard - somebody read the faShionahleitem that John, Bright always carries a copy of Paiain , e Lost with him, said that was riotliirg, he did so himself. And be productl a pie. tore of his girl, who recently-muitticil azi, otherlellow. ' , - - - - , AN emaciated i humorist who had been sick for a long time, Was required by leis doctor to have- a large Mustard PlaNter put on his chest. "Look- here, doctor, isn't that a great deal of mustard, when the quantity of meat is taken into consid eration?' asked the-sufferer. A MAN coming out of a •-newspaper withrbis nose spread all over his face, replied to a policeman who interviewed him : "I didn't like an article that; ap peared in the paper last•week, and I went in ter-see the maii that writ it, and he war thar !" • , A BOSTON preacher- said "The li l ttle good ally of us can-do must be dune vial' our hearts thumping against- tlie hearts " of our fellow. men." And ,every wmnan in church looked at every :ether young woman and aruiled.alProvinaT• POLISHED steel vrilit "not Shine: in thti dark ; uo more can human reason, howev er refined and cultivated; shine effica ciously hut as it reflects -the light of vine high from heaven. -‘ TtmEs of the greatest calamity and con, fusion have ever been prOductive - of the greatest mines. The pure r or comes from iLe hottest furnace ; the brightest- flash from the. darkest (Amid. industrious bee. (hies not -,top to complain that :hero arc so many ppison ous flowers and thorny; branches in the road, but buzzes n ;selecting the honey Whertr she ,ean find it, and passing by the place where it is not. . IT is not work that kills men,: ii-js wor ry. Work is healthy; yfitieatt hardly put more upon a loan than he can bear. Wor ry is rust upon-the blade. It is not the, revolutb in that 'destroy:4' thp machinery, but the friction LET.us not listen to those who think: we to be angry with our enemies,. and who believe this to be great and man ly. Nothing is more praiseworthy ; and • nothing indreates . a great and - noble soul more than clemency and readiness to for . WHAT a difference have we 'often seen between our afflictions at our' first meet dug with and parting from them ! have • entertained them, with si!is, and" tears, but parted froth them with joy, .blessing God for them as the . happy in- .. struments of our-own good. FLATTERERS are the worst kind of trai tors, for they; will strengthen your imper fections, encourage you in - all evils; - cor rect you in nothing, but so shadow and paint your follies and vices-as yon never, by their will, diseover - gold from evil, or vice from virtue. • ImAorsAity evils soon become teal ones by indulging our reflections on them ; as lie Who, in a melancholy fancy 'seei some thing like a-face on• the wall or .4ains- Coat, can, by 'two or three touches with a lead pencil, - make it look visible, and '• agreeing with what'he fowled., SELF-activity fa - the indispensable con, dition of improvement ; and education is . only education—that is accomplishes its purposes only by affording 'objects supplying materials to: this. spontaneous exertion. --Strictly speaking, ; every man Must educate himself, - • •' . • • A MAN quit keeping a diary because he never could find anything.to' write in _it, and was the next day ran over by - a cart, beaten; out of three dollars Ou'a dog trade, blackguarded by a wishwife, and drawn, _nu a jury. lie will resume - the diary. "Now,, 1.711 , 1 e Pete, I am goimr" to' give you something. bully. This • brandy -is twenty-four years old." Twenty-four yEars:old; boss?" asked old Pete, eyei,ng the "one linger" doubtfully—!'this yar brandy twenty-four years old?' Mighty' small for its age, boss-L.-mighty ; small.'" WESTERN papers, while _admitting the, utility ofiEdifion s light, are strongly op posing the introduction of gas for heating and cooking puiposes. They admit that, it will be.cheaper for those why can .af ford to pay at all; but there are stitnring - poor ! how are they to furnish tbernsblves from the neighboring gas pile ?- . A COLLEGE professor owe tried to con- Vinte .11orace Greeley of the value of-- lau,guageS. ,The Professor said,: These ladguages are the conduits of the literary triasures of - antiquity.", Mr. Greeley replied : "I liko proton water very well, .but it doesift'follow that 1. should eat yard or two of lead-pipe." A VERI' tedious old actor, whose Him 'let occupied aui hours, was once playing the part in a country town, and with plenty of emphasis and no. discretion was "lading out"the celebrated. soliloquy; "7'o—be—or—not—to-4e,"- when an ir reverent gallery boy called out to him, "OW toss up for It, mister ; - : and don't preach.r • , . II