TEAKS OF rIIIIILIOATION. The BILADIPORDOwns Is published every Thereto, morning by HOODKICK Ai HITCHCOCK, One Dollar per annum, In advance. liPAdrerttslng In afl casecexelpslee of sub scription to the paper. S NOTlCESlneerted at Tett dawn per lane:tor drat Insertion, and errs Curie perllne for r‘eiVanbsequaut Insertion. but no lice inserted for less than fifty cents. . „t - YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS 111 be Insert el at reasonable rates. • .k.l.mlnistrator's and Executor's ;None , " IP: Andltim's Notices,l2.so BUSIIIC36Cards, draftee, (per•year) al, additional lines 1l each. . . Yearly a Ivertlsers are entitled to quarterly .th'inges. Transient advertisements must be paid for fa advance. Alltresalutions of associations; communications of 'Waited or individual interest, and notices of marriages or death s. exceeding live lines are charg e t istrg cr.MTS per line, but slinplenotices of mar riages and .lesths will be published without charge. 'he RIGPORT.git having a larger circulation than nr.3: °deer paper In the colintyl. makes it the best advertising medium In Norttinra Pennsylvania. JOS PRINTING of every thlnd, in plain and fancy extors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills. Blanks, Cards, Pamphlet's, Blllheads, Statenseets. Sic., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The •itsrOuvrat tare is well supplied nlth power presses, a good assort ment of new type, and everything to the printing nap cap be executed in the most artistic ; manner and at the !great rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH- "Arsiness garbs. 11ADILL KINNEY, • AtionSEVS .- AT - I , AW. Office—Roenue formerly occupied by Y. ll ~ C. A Reading Hoorn 11. J. 31ADILL. 3.14,0 MES. E. J. PEREIGO, TEkrIIER OF PIANO AND OItGAN Le' , sotts given In Thorough 'Bass and Ilarmouy ultiration of the votee a rpertalty. L.•eat-d at A ,M3.lis St, Itelereitet` : liolakett k PaaLhage owanda, l'a., March 4, PPM JOHN AV. CODDING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA °Mee o'er Klrhve Drug Store THOMAS E. MYER ATTOIMEY-AT-LANPL TOWANL)A, PA Office with Patrick and Fil;le. 9rp.25779 DECK t & OVERTON TOWANDA, PA. I)'A.. OVERTON, RODNEY A. MECUII, A TTOISNLYST-LAW, TOW AND A. Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention paid to nosiness In the Orphans Court and to the settle in-lit of estates. ollice in Moutauyeo Block OVERTON & SANDERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-i. APT, TOWN DA. PA. OrtirtTON,..l 11.. r. JESSUP, ATTOUNEX ANT) COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW, MONTVOSE. 1'.... ludge%Tessup having M 4nnned the pract Ire of the law in Noi . th,rn Penu.y ivania. will attend to any Intru . ,trd tr. .11.11 In I/Califon! county. Person 4 wl4hing to cons , : ,hlin, eau' call on U Stro..ter, Es q., Towanda, Pa., when au appointment cult lo• 1113 ti ITENRY STREfIyER, ArTuRNXY AND CotiNSCLLoft-AT-LAW. TOWANDA. PA - - lI.L. TOWNER, 11 , „ D., 11. 11031EOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND STTRGEON R(nliderle, and (lttire just North Of Dr. t'or ltio y, ou Main Street, Athens, Pa, 1101'2444u. r 4 L.IIILLIS, • A TTOII N ET-AT-L Air, TOW AN DA. PA. F. GOFF, A TTO N KY-AT-LA*, WYALUSIIit;; PA Agfinry for the sale and purchase of all kind, of B•vatitMa and for making loans. on R e el Est a te. All hominess will receive careful and prompt ,attention. , rJune 4. 1579._ H. THOMPSON, ATTORNEY • vr LAW, WY ALI'6INO. VA. Will altelkd t , Ali business entrusted to his cam In Bradford, Sultivaa and Wyoming Counties. Oftlee with Esq. Porter. [n0r1944. j li. ANGLE, D. D. S. _Ja OPERATIVE AND MECHANICAL. DENTIST Mike ou,State Street, second floor of Pr. Prutrs ()Mee. nipr a ro. T'LSBREE ez SON, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, ' TOW AN I.IA, l'A. N. C. Er.stinEr. RI McPHERSON, ATToItN ES-AT-LAW, TO AN DA, PA. Lee Atry TOIIN W. 111 X; A - TTORNET-AT-LAW V. S. COMMIRSIONAR TOWANIPA. PA. UlUce—Nonb SPle Pulalle liquare l iiTh . i A rrorLy E r,t7*-1, A B. TOWANDA, PENN'A office—South side Poplar street. opposite Ward House. [Nov. 13. 11,79. s DAVIES & CARNOCHAN, ATTMCN ENS-AT-LAW,. SOT7TII Si PE oF WAT,I) ItorSE Dec 13-75 10 ANDREW WILT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. i‘tnee—Menns* 11Wk. Maln-st., over J. L. Kent's sZorr, Towanda. ,May be consulted in German. {April 12,'76.1 J. _YOUNG, ArronsEr-AT.T.AIe, TOWANDA. PA. vner—sorond door south of the First NatOonal Tim k Alain St., up stairs. MTM. MAXWELL, A TToteNEir.AT-I.Avr TOW A NDA, PA. Ottce over Dayton's Store April 12. 18741. CALIFF, ATToUNEYI , AT•LAW, ToWAXDA, PA 1:111ee 1n W vat's Mork, first door sout:l of the First Nath 11: bank, np-stairs. t! at DILL. t.inna4:lly) J. N. CALIF?. DR. S. WOODBIJR).;, Physi• clan and Surxeon. Odice at residence. on Pine street, East of Main. Toaat., a, May 1. 1a72 W B. KELLY, bENTisT.--,-ofliee y • over M. E. Ito'venileld's, Towanda. Pa. Teeth inserted on Gold. Silver, Ruhher, and Al. utrinium lase. Teeth extracted without rain. 0, 2..1442. 4 D. PAY NE, M. Plll - 1:1CIAN AND SCIMECPC. e over Montative.' (Otlea hoar% front 10 to 12 A.M„ and ft , n) 2 to l P. N. Spec4l attention Oren to I.I. , VASESftIS:F.AS.V.S nr and y or TIII: EVE I THE EAR G. W. .It, YA Y, ‘._A • COrNTY SUPPRINTENDY dice day ha=t Saturday of each month, over Turner ..tt Gordon's Drug Store, Towanda, l'a. Towanda, June 20, Il7m, Ci S. RUSSELL'S U. • GRNERAL _ INSURANCE AGENCY TOWANDA. PA. 4 Hay. -70tf FIRST NATIONAL BANK, TOWANDA. PA CAPITAL. PAID IN SURPLUS FUND.. Tuts Bank offers unusual facilities for the trans - action of a general banking busineas. N. N. BETTS, Cashier, Jo% ,P 0 WELL. Preside'nt. MRS. H. PEES', TEACIIZR fOF PIA ,t 0 TERMS.-110 per terra. (Realdetiee Thhd atteet, Ist wand.) Tewauda. Jan. 13.19,1.9. ET YOUR ‘,3 • JOB, PRINTING •' the BEN - MS . IM OFFICE, opposite the ,Cow Toetulda. Colored work a specialty. VOLUME XL E. H. _ DORMAIIL, 32 East Water St., Elmira, N.Y. Ist Floor ' r►RY , iIOODS 24 Floor MILL.INTICY 24 Floor CARPETS' 4th Floor ` CLOAKS & 81lAWL8 Upper floors accessible by elevator. Sii-A.1.1t of thypectich la respectfully solicited 1!1!M!1!132 EDWARD WILLIAMSi PRACTICAL PLUMBIE & 0418 FITTER i'lare of business, a few doors north of Post.olllee Plumb!Pi. Gas Pitting. Itepalrlng Pumps of all , kinds, and all kinds of Gearing promptly attended to. All wanting work In his Una should give hint a tali. Gee. S. !CS. SIMQVENNA COLLEOTATE IN ITA wirryTe.-- - -Sprlng Term will begin 111011 DAT. APRIL 5Tn, iaso. P.xtrenies for board, tultlou and turniahed room, from fin to 1180 pecycar.' Tor catalogue or further particulars address the Principal, EDWIN E. QUINLAN. A.M. Towamla,..tan. 15, MO. 7yl ALTER CHUB W (b . u,cmor to L. B. Pottet4 Scranion, Pa.) DEALER IN PIANOS, ORGANS, • AND ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. He continues the agency for the CMCEERING nod STEINWAY 11.1ANOs. and the MASON & - HARLIN GRGANS. which he Is prepared to sell at eI.oSE FIGURES. The trade supplied at manufacturers' prices. Agents wanted In all unoccupied territory. Scranton, Pa.. March n-nia. BENJ. M. BECK Slay S. 'l9 ! JOHN F. SANDEnSON TUE CENTRAL ROTEL, ULSTER, PA. The undersigned haring taken puteekalon of the above hotel. respectfully' eollelta the patron- Ago of his oh!, friends and the public generally. amity-tt. St; A. FORREST. VAGLE HOTEL, 1 ..i ; This wel:-known hbuite has been thoroughly rem omitted and repaired throtighoitt, and the proprle 'tor ds now prepared to otte tirst.elas aceotnmwda limns to the pubtle, on the , moat re:turnable term.. •• E. A. JENNINGS, towanda, Pa., May 2, 1878. MEM HENRY 1101 W., CORNER MAIN & WASHINGTON STREETS TowANDA. PA. Meals at all hours. Terms' to stilt the times'. Large stable attached. W3l. 11 Fti RY , PROPRIETOR Towanda, Ju l ly 3, `:9-tf. t noel 1 -75 QE.',LEY'S OYSTER BAY AND EUROPEAN TIOUSE.—A tew - iioors southot the Means tiotese. Board by the day or week An reasonable terms. Warm meals served at all hours Oysters at wholesale and retail. feht`t7. TAKER Dec.l l .l-th . JOHN N. WOLFE, Provn MEAT MARKET. E. D. RUNDELL, • Would respertfay announce that he In (Toth:Mel me Markfq buslt+ss at the old stand of Mulfor( & gondol', and win at. all time!' keep a full bupply of =3 ( frb.l7A Constantly on hand. Country dealers supplied at city rates. FRESH A: SALT MEATS, Jan. 1,075 114 - All Goods deltrered Free of Charge E. D. RLNDELL Towanda. Pa. Nov. 27 1879. TOWANDA, PA TARKET Announce to the people, of Towanda and vicinity that they are now'ilrepared to furnish . end Vegetables io . their season, it the most reason able rates . Everything purchased of us delivered promptly free of charge. Sir Our !oration. ONE DOOR NORTH OF SCOTT'S BAKERY. Is convenient . for all. We buy the hest vtreek: and take great paths to keep everything In the beskorder. Givens a call. IDISECRANTSR & BREWER Towanda. Dee. is, 11,715. I\IEAT MARKET! BEIDLE3tAN'S BLOCK, - BRIDGE STREET. FRESH AND SALT MEATS, • - DRIED BEEF, FISH, POULTRY, GARDEN VEGETABLES AND BERRIES IN Sir All goods delivered free of charge Towanda. Pa., May 28, 1879 THE OLD MARBLE . YARD r .j:51215.000 66,000 The undersigned hiving purchased the MAR BLE TARD ufthe late GEORGE MCCABE, de. sires to inform the public that littering employed experienced men, he is prepared to do alt kinds of work In the Ilse of MONUMENTS, Aril 1.187.9 OMNI Penult'. iteptrlng anything In the Marble line are hivlte4 in raLl and eiatuluo work, atm! save agents', toulativaion. GOODRICH & HITCHCOCK. Publishers. Vusittess garbs. otefo. ISOM! SIDE PCIDI,ID SQUARE.) (ON mit 7.I7ROPEAN PiAlia CANTOIC, PEAN'A Near the I)rpat, Xaracfs. R•E S H OYSTERS GARDEN VEGETABLES, FRUITS, &c ROSECRANSE & iitEWER, FRESH AND SALT MEATS, POULTRY, FISH , OYSTERS, MYER & DEVOE Located In Keep on hand, THEIR SEASON, &c MYER & DtVOE MarOfe Tarbo. STILL IN OPERATION. HEAD STONES, MANTLES and th the very beat mariner and at lowest rates. • JAM S 8 McCABS. Towanda, Ps., Nov. la, 11178. Sit,' 4 _ WHERE` THE BLACICHIRL , . Down theluiet country road, befote lin reach the 'lofty yldge, - Where the birch-tree, first awakened to the morning's low breath airings, . • I ofttimes eft in silence on the small moss-covered bridge, Sear the little shady nook where the blackbird sings. There the spreading trees meet o'er me, and I hear no harsh voice calling, ' Whilst hie sweetness to my fancy's dream a sa cred feeling brings, hs it mingles with the rippling of the brook o'er pebbles falling, In the little shady nook where -the blackbird • sings. There the ivy clintbithe highest of the lofty trees 'bi.sitie me, And the bluebell like a carpet in the early sum ' iner springs; In the Main I need but clamber, and the snowy bloom would hide me In fhe little shady nook where the blackbird sings. Where the trout his supper seeking, in The sunny beam is leaping. And tne pool is broug'it to life Again in many glistening rings, When the day seems growing fainter, and the shit , dews onward creeping, In the little silkily nook where the blackbird sings, When the swallows 'dart like spirits underneath the narrow arches, And the air a sweetened pirtanse like the al mond round me flings, And I dream of holy quiet as I watch- the leathery larches' In the tittle shady nook where the blackbird slugs. 0, If I could only tell you what uuhrokeri heartfelt pleasure Ever Waits me in the'spot, to which my thought so fondly clings, You would follow toe nor wonder my only pleasant Moire, By th,3 little shady nook where the blackbird. sings. elected (ale. RUTH MORRISON. Captain Sinclair stood at. Mrs. Mc- Grath's bright. cheerful fire, lifting . up first one foot and then another to the blaze. " You know what comfort means, Mrs. McGrath. I wonder," Said lie laughing, " you don't get sonic one to share it with you." "9, captain, for shame," rejoined the widow, smirking and looking. down. " Now, what do you say to Marks; for instance ?'' he continued, pith It quizzical sruile. Tut, nonsense, sir," she - replied half angrily. " captain speak ing of ikiarks I'm sorry Ichear of all the work they had above Yester day? 4 What work ?" returned the other' quickly. "Why sure enough, I forgot; I suppose you don't know; but there cap be no harm, tow in my speaking of what's in everybody's mouth. The first I heard Of the business was from Tom Reynolds, the policeman, him who was up at Oaklands to see into it; and Marks was just telling meal]; when we heard the car coming; but I don't know ; my mind missives me about that fellow. Tom Reynolds didn't think so. bad of her, some Captain Sinclair listened in aston ishment to thee unconnected and unintelligible fragments. " Why, in heaven's name, what is it all about?" he impatiently asked. " I know no mate than_ the man in the moon what you- are talking of. A policeman up at Oaklands—what the mischief was that about ?" "Bless us,, captain, but you take one quite aack ; you gut me inn fluster, you speak so short. Sure 'tis Miss MorriSon that stole a loV:of things, and Tom Reynolds wan up with a warrant; and they found them al in her trunk ; and so they sent her off this morning. "Mind," added the widow, correcting herself, " I don't tell you she stole the things; but them as knows best, I suppose, says . it ; and proof is proof, as Marks was just after stating; and there's how it is." " Miss Morrison stole !" repeated Captain Sinclair slowly, and opening his eyes wide in ,sheer amazement. " She as much stole as I did. And do you mean to tell me that they, sent her off from Oaklands, my poor • child ! Where did she go to Mrs. McGrath ?" he asked fiercely, stamp, ing his foot. " Lord, captain, how on earth can I tell ? They sent her to Newry this morning, that's all I khow ; buit, in de xi, Marks said," added Mrs. Mc- Grath, with that spirit of contradic tion so rife in woman, for at heart she thought Ruth innocent, " Marks said that there the things all were, in the very bottom of her box ; rings and jewelp, and I don't know what else, belonging to the mistress; and sure, that's 'plain anyhow—leastways, Marks says so." "Marks be—," returned Captain Sinclair, furiously. Now the captain was never gtven to swearing; but no question about it, he rattled out a tremendous oath then and there, that we can't by any means chronicle in these pages. "The confounded im pudence of them all!" he continued. " Policeman ransacking my house, and people sent off bag and baggage in my absence, and I knowing noth ing about it! 'Tis enough to drive one stark mad. Here give me these things;" and he seized the small box, and flinging his coat over his arm, strode out of the house, without even saying good-night to Mrs. McGrath. ' Well, if I ever !" exclaimed that dame, looking after the retreating form of the captain, as it vanished down the road. s' What a dazed woman I was to go and open my lips at all about any of their works. Had teas to them Marks, and that gov ernes's, and the whole lot. One would think 'twas I had the doing of it, so hot and, heavy did the man come down upon me !" And she slammed to the door of her establishment; with a bang, and went to wreak her wrath upon the kitchen-maid. It would have beet[ no easy task to keep pace with Captain Sinclair as SHELVES? got! v. —London Soctety [CONCLUSION.] CHAPTER IX. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., be dashed out from the Golden Sheaf. and plunged along regardless of the mud that went splashing all over him st every step: He. muttered each. moment dire anathemas against all his household, scarcely excepting.his wife.; he gnashed his teeth, with in dignation as he thought of Mrs. Ma- Bernd, concluding at once thdt she had influenced bet mistress to act thus. rashly and- hastily: "'Tomas some hellish plot," he muttered, "concocted the moment my 'back Was turned. I'll have that Fr i e . nch harridan of - before the morning light, as sure as my name's Sinclair. That poor,'gentle little thing! • God knows what may happen to her." He rush ed open the small gate leading in from the road to his own demesne. "Stop!" said he to- himself. "It Might be well if I went round and saw this policemart i Reynolds, first, and get from him all the bearings of the case. I remember Mrs. McGrath said he didn't suspect her, or so,ne thing of .the sort. True, though the 'fellow Marks told me the front gate might be locked." And -he stood for a second or 'two irresolute, with his hand on the half-open wicket. A cold sighing wind swept over the waters of the lake, and shook the naked branches-. of the trees, and came like the ominous Whisper of im pending danger to his ear. The cap tain shivered where he stood. " What a weird sound that wind has to-night! Yes, I will see ReynoldS. Sure, I can climb the gate "' ,And he swung to the little, wicket; and again strod e" on up the road ; for the police bar rack was.at the Other Bide of, and not tir from the front avenue. On how trivial a thing do the greatest events revolve! The captain ploughed his way through mud and gloom to the police barrack; • and the lurking assassin, as he changed his uncomfort able posture-behind the old oak, won dered what- could be keeping the master so long. We must briefly retrace our steps, and return.to where we left l the hero ine of our narrative, unconscious, on the floor o!: the room in the Down- Shire:Arms at Lisburn. The'sound of her fall, as well as the previous cry, quickly brought in some of the ser vants of the hotel to poor Ruth. She was lifted gently into an easy -Atari' the window' *as thrown open; re storatives such as• smelling-Salts, water, and witiewere all succesive ly brought and applied ; but when the death-like, pallor still continued, and no sympt4s of returning anima tion appeared; the landlord and his daughter, who had both come in at the first note of alarm, began to . get extremely uneasy, apprehensive that life itself was extinct. "Where did she come from ?" "Who is . she ?" were questions whispered from one to another. " No matter who she. is," , exclaim ed the man; "we mustn't let a fel tow-creature die this way on our hands without help ;" and he bustled 'out, announcing his intentionior. go- Jag off himself for the nearest'. c tor. At the door, he metlagtgitle man who had come to the house in the morning. "A stranger lady taken very bad, sir,". he said, " in. there." pointing to the r00m..; " Don't know what's amiss. hurrying for the doctor; for I own to you, I fear she's dead." The gentleman addressed passed quickly into the apartment, to see if he• could render any assistance. They were, at the instant, wheeling the arm-chair close to -the open window, to try and get- more air 'in upon the fainting form. and so the young man entering did not at once see who it was. He went round in the rear of the frightened group that were gather ed about the sufferer; and being tall er than most of them, soon caught a glimpse of the livid countenance. As lie did so, an expression of horror and astonishment broke from his I ps. "make way. there; for .God's sake," he cried, "and don't press so close round that chair—you'll smoth. -er her."- He pushed there all wildly back, and flung himself on his knees beside the insensible figure, seizing her hand ; while with eyes fixed in tremb ling apprehension, lie gazed into her face and his own became almost as white, with the unutterable . dread that this stony sti Iness was ,death itself. He laid his finger on the' pulse, and it felt like the feeble vibra tion of a slender thread. "Quick, bring .some brandy here," he called out hoarsely ; and with a spoon, he succeeded in getting a few drops within her lips. " Ruth, my own be loved," he whispered softly ; and like an electric touch, .the low sound of that loved voice sent the flush again to the cheek, and the eyelids were lifted, and she made a faint effort to speak, although the words' were in audible. When the doctor came, he sent every one but Ferdinand—for we need scarcely say 'twas he—and -the landlord's daughter from the room, and continued giving to bran dy in small potions, which, before long, restored the lost animation. Ferdinand .continued holding her hand, and watching tearfully the ravages that anxiety and sorrow had wrought in her face, and wondering, in miserable perplexity, what had caused it all. The. doctor tried to hinder her from speaking; but im mediately after consciousness had been fully _restored, she whispered - to him, foriiiiie could _speak no louder: " I must speak at once to this gentle man; it is a matter of last impor tance." The physician accordingly withdrew. When left alone with Ferdinand, Ruth explained to him rapidly and succinctly the terrible position in which Captain, Sinclair' v as placed. It seemed as if the fainting-fit had restored something of collected calm ness to her disordered.mind ; for she could not, with greater clearness, have imparted' to the astonished young man all that was needful to know. It was only when the doubt arose as to being there in time• to re trieve the error of not having taken some precautionary measures in Newry that her mind again became confused and restless. Ferdinand, however, more uneasy than he cared to let Ruth perceive. taking out his watch, assured her that ' he had lots of n time'—that he'd have a chaise 1)•\ •) ) f (IL‘ REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 15, 1880. and pair at oney; and easily overtake Captain Sinclair before be could by any possibilitylreaeb Common Cross —the place, as' Ruth indicated, at which be was to arrive by the' mail car, _and • from the moment of hiy leaving which the extreme peril be, gan. "I ought, ,1 see now." slid. mur mured, throwing down her feeble hands desparingly, to have hid my self somewhere about there, and m et him when be came;'but it never , once occurred to me—never once." Ferdinand, telling her again and again that all would be right, had a power that none else possessed. to impart to ber quiet. and strength. He repaired instantly to the landlord, desiring him to' have a Chaise,':and pair got, as rapidly as possible, to go first to Banbiblge, and thence: to pursue 'the Mail-car. He then calle , i his uncle, the elderly gentleman who was with him at the hotel; -and tell ing him, in few , words, exactly how matters were, brought him in, and introduced Lim to Ruth, when.the affectionate fatherly manner, and .teeder commiserating face with which the old gentleman bent over her, brought' balm to her spirit. " llncle will take care of you ' der-. ling, until I return,?' he whispered to her; "and kar nothing; trust iii One above, Who is the helper of the friendless;' and I'll be back -soon to you with good news." And so he tore himself away; for though he. scarcely dared ~ to admit it to himself, he grew sick at heart as he felt how little time was before , him, and calcu lated the distance' to lie traversed. Ruth was able to stand, leaning on old Mr. Munroe's atm, and to stniie a faint yet hope4'ul return to Ferdi nand's eager farewell, as he gazed at her from the window of the carriage. It was some time ;before quiet , Aas restored to•she Downahire Arms, so great bad been the commotion and excitement.. The Doctor returned on Ferninand's departure, and found his patient so much better that h.• contented himself with ordering her perfect rest, with some simple .nour ishruent, and desiring that she should retire very early for the night. Mr. Munroe followed litn- into the halt, and slipped the fee into his open palm. Be made s feint :of - declining, asking, in si dubious manner, who she was, and what were her circum stances. "My dear sir," responded the old gentleman, "I'm her uncle—l'm her uncle." "Oh, thank you, s;r," rejoined the doctor. "I shall call in the Morn ing." "It isn't a lie," observed Mr, Mun roe to.liimself,"as he returned to the sitting-room ; " for sure she will be my niece very shortly, please Clod; and a dear nice little thing she is too —only I hope she is-not delicate. I wouldn't like a sickly wife for Fer- It was a peaceful, pleasant even ing that Ruth passed with the kitid old man in that hotel at Lisburn'. He explained to her how he lived at. the other side. of Belfast; that his nephew had Joined him but the day before, on his return from France ; that some business of his own had brought the to Lisburn, not an hour previous to Ruth's arrival; and . Ferdinand was to have gone. on the next day to see her 4t. Captain Sin clair's. Then Ruth narrated to as she lay back in her chair, all she . had gone through at Oaklands, which so excited and irritated her listener that he had frequently to rise and walk at - a rapid pace up and down the room. " Bless my soul and body!" he gasped out; "I never heard such a thin g in all my life—l never heard such a thing. Poor creature! I won der that you are alive after it all. Let me see—l forget—if that dread ful house, Oaklands, I think yoU call it, is Down, or Armagh?"' . • "Down, I think," said-Ruth. " Oh, then they'll 13c. banged in Downpatrick. Yes; and walk, my dear young lady— Stop! I'll call you Ruth. Why shouldn't I?" " ado !":said Ruth earnestly. " Well, Ruth, I'll walk, God will ing, in my stocking-vamps, to Down patrick to see the execution ; I will, as sure as ever my name is Cecil Munroe. 'leaven g rant that erdy will be in time, and they'll be caught;" ; and he flung open the shut ters to look out. "I'd hang that Mrs. Sinclair, too, as an accessory before the filet ; . I would, upon my honor; and 'twould be a great god send to that good old soul, the cap- tain, to get quite rid of her in that war." The night was fast falling ere Fer dinand Munroe reached B7inbridge, and it was scarcely necessary to ask after' the maiVear ; it had long ` gone, as he bad feared. Some short time was necessarily spent in instituting minute,inquiries about the cross roads through the country, for both driver and traveler were ignorant of the route. Having received as ex plicit 'directions poisible, and the horses being recruited with meal and water, they set out anew. The even ing was gloomy,'And they had not proceeded' many 'piles before the road became sorrough and bad that they had to advanceislowly toAd with care, and in a few minutes came to'a dead halt." • " What is the meaning of this?" shouted out Ferdinand." *.. " Why, sir, I fear we took a wrong turn below there; for hang me if I think we can make way here at all ;" and he bent over the. horses, heads in a fruitless effort to'sce sufficiently far to judge if there was any outlet. " Heavens and 'earth !". cried Fer dinand,' hounding . from the vehicle. " What do.you mean by going astray in this manner? I tell you, 'Cis a matter of life anddeath." "Be gorra, I can't help it," an swered the poetilion sulkily. " I didn't come (town here a•purpose, and how to getout of it how," he ex claimed. "sorry one of me knows." However, blid as things seemed, by !Morally aawell as metaphorical. ly putting the shoulder to the wheel, r Ferdinand and the man Between I them succeeded in extricating chaise i and horses from their awkward posi= tion, though with considerable loss of time. The remainder ofthe drive was passed by the young man 'in a state of mind little short, of distrac tion ; he could not stay an instant quiet, and half resolved, more than once, to-leap out and run ahead, as he thought that his tingling feet would far outstrip even the rapid rate at which the carriage now roll ed along. At, length the carriage drew up so audilenly that the horses were thrown upon their haunches. and the fidgety inmate sent with vio lence against the front Window. " ilolloa! what's this ?" he called out. "Is this it?" ' Without replying; the postilion shouted, in a voice Out instantly brought Mrs. McGrath to the door: " Any on inside there? Be this Common tre es?" . . " Yes," replied the woman, ." it is; and very good . board and lodging, though I say it, any • r ,oentlem.in can have here, at the Golden Sheaf." Ferdinand had already sprung .from the carriage. " , Woman," ask ed he with i excited eagerness, " has Captain Sinclair been here yet?" t• Captain - .Sinclair !" .repeated the other in surprise. "Yes, to be sure he's been here, and in there warming himself; and is gone—no, .not three minutes since—np home, to Oak lands " " Which way did he go? For God's sake, woman, tell ni quick !" t " Oh, : just down tit road there," re turned Mrs. MeGra h, 6usiclerably startled at the abrup and fiery earn estness of her interloeptor. _ " Down this road ? he inquired, pointing with his finger. "Straight on,, i l 4 it?" " Yes, sir, yes ;" and -she added, calling out atter him as he darted forwitrds. not ,waiting for smother word , : "You go in the little ?wicket, gate at the leftl.hand side of the road, not two hundred yards before you— if it is for Oaklands you're bonne." " Yes, yes, I remember ;" and he recalled What Rtith had said to him about that side-door entrance, and the wait on by the take, gasping out as he did so: '. If it's so near, I'll never citeh him in time." "Mercies be around me!" exclaim ed Mrs?. MeGiath, turning to the pes tilign, NFtid was busting himself on harbessing the horses; " tia well if I don't go, clean crazed this blessed night. f that ben't a fiery spark, 1 never saw one. What's it all about?" she asked. " Faix, - missis, that's more nor I know; but sich a fierce young _blade I never kim across. Lord! 'tis a blessing he didn't crack my Skull • upon the road ; and iopk here," he continued, taking the light from Mrs. McGrath, and holdingi . it up to the reeking sides of the panting steeds; alai a lather of c, sweat. 'Twill be small hours of the morning afore 1 have them dhry and done." "I'll send Jim out tp help. you," said. the hostess. -" Biit when have you to be for the mad. again ? Is he going back, and how far did you come—the whole way lion" Belfast, suppose ?" "No, wini only from Lisburn._ But my 'Word for it, it'll be a good stretch of the day afore I put these poor di villa under harness again, -I can tell you, to say nothing of myself; I niv er had such a hard dhrive in all my by born dayS. What's that ?" said the man, suddenly stopping in his talk, and in the undressing opera tions that - he had resumed. " Tis a shot," cried Mrs. McGrath, nervously, pausing a moment, after they had listened to the clear, sharp ringing sound that broke upon the dull stillness of the night, with its returning echo answering back from the distant hill. " Have you poachers hereabouts ?" asked the postilion. "I don't, know; it sounded as if 4t was somewhere about Oaklands. God grant that young young man you brought isn't after mischief." " ; Not he," replied the other. "'Well, I snppose it is some of these poaching. chaps; I heard the police over there talking of them. I'll send Jim out to you now," added Mrs, McGrath, as . she turned into the house; " and I'll have something hot and comfortable for you by the time I think you'll be ready." ." Thank you, missis; 'twas never more welcome, or more needed." When Ferdinand - Munroe hurried off so quickly from the 0-olden Sheaf, he had not gotta many yards before he found himself at fault. The road . was altogether strange.; the flare of the light Mrs. 31cGrath's door was still in his eyes, and the night itself was dark ; at Beast, the thick cloud that drifted through the sky effectu ally dimmed what little light the moon in its first quarter might have sh(d. Ile had therefore to slacken his pace a little : , but keeping close to the wall on hisleft, he, soon came upon the small gate. " This is it," he said, flinging it open. and in his impatient haste, not knowing the nature or length of the walk, and careless of everything but getting up to Captain Sinclair (who, he concluded, was on before him) ere he could reach the spot where the attempt on his life was to be made, he dailied forward at full speed.. was only as he came where thri path wound away among the trees, and when a Taint gleam from the heavens disclosed to him the still sheet of wa ter almost at hisAtle, that he stopped in some _uncertainty.: " Why, this must be the very place," he said ; .but the thought bad scarcely flashed upon him, ere he heard a - slight rus tle, in the'grass on his right; nor had he well turned in that direction, when a shot was tilred, and the ball whizzed so close that it grazed his ear. Fer dinand rushed in towards the trees, and in a second he and Marks, who plunged forward as he discharged the pistol, were grappling with one another in a tierce and deadly en; counter. Ferdinand was lithe strong.and active; yet Marks, though much older, was a powerfully-built, man, and now had the strength of despera tion added to his natural vigor: At first, be fliought l it was Captain Sin clair, but he was not -more than a moment *engaged in the conflict be fore be found his mistake. No mat ter—it was now, with Uhl/ equally , a Lk 41 iwiv* CHAPTER X struggle for, life. Mark's antagOnist had, at theontset, grasped the wrist of the hand that held the 044 for he rightly imagined - that there might be yet an undischarged barrel.; and he retained his vice-like hold t in spite of the desperate efforts of the other to ais O n g a g e it. Each tried GO thrOwl his opponent, but for a considerable time without success ; the younger and slighter man had literally twined himself around the grosser forin of his foe, and half-a-dozen times or more they had wheeled round and round on the grdss and upon - the walk, panting, struggling, until at length a slip .upob the trampled sward brought them down, when both rolled heavily to the groUnds Then upon the earth the wrestling combat was continued with unabated fury, each endeavoring to get aboVe_ the other. It • is hard to know how long the silent struggle (for not a word had been uttered) might have endured, had' not Marks, by, a dex terous feint of yielding, got a Momen tary advantage; rising above Ferdi nand prostrate forth, anti .pressing willh his knees and-hill weight upon' the young man's. chest, he caused the grasp upon his6'wrist, to palliablyl re lax, and breaking the silench With the ominous wrds, • Whoever you be,•if you knoW a prayer say it now, my tine fellow,"l he' bent round the hand that was still clutched but 'fee- . bly by the unfokunate youth, so as to bring the liaitrel of the pistol di-. reedy on a line with the head that lay pressed deeply into the grass, with all its. brown curls drooping up-. On the forelvail. One low cry broke from him, a cry of intense sutleri»g s as the violent pressure up.,n the ehest was augmented. and huth's name fluttered to the lips that were parted •in gasping anguish, as he felt that all was now over for him upon earth. The finger of the assassin.was touell ing. the trigger, and Ferdinand's doom hung upon - a second, when another figure that had been forcing its way, unheard and unnoticed by the •combatants, through • trees and' branches, emerged from the grove upon the walk ; and the loud, quick, familiar voice, with its " Halloa I what's all this ?" so disconcei•ted Marks that he bounded up from his, vanquished enemy, and retreating several paces, stood, pistol in hand, gazing - upon the unlooked-for appari; thin of his master. Ferdinand, when released from the 'incubus that fur the last few seconds had nearly crushed him, sprang to his feet, and, staggering from giddiness and still impeded respiration, cried oat, -in hardly articulate words, "Seize him, seize hies, the murderous scoundrel !" making a forward movement to where the butler stood at bay. Marks, With a wild Imprecation of ‘lballleil rage, 'tired off the second barrel of the pis tol at random, and turned to flee; it . was too dark, and he was too con= fused to notice that the Jake at that spot expanded 'with a slight curve into the land ; and some long tangled grass anti weeds catelfing his feet, he plunged headlong and- 0 heavily in. While ,one ..e.rrific• ety4eaving, _the very air, r 4e from him, as the wa ters closed Over hisliescemling form Ferdinand tottered and, fell to the ground. as it happened; at the • in stant:the pistol had been fired—and 'Captain Sinclair, in the utmost con sternation, hurried to him, certain that hi had , been hit, if not shot dead. He had' no idea who it was that he was bending over,nor the remotest notion iof what had led to the strange encounter in his own grounds. Marks,l he had in the dim light recognized,' and by his firing at himself. conjec tured that it Was•murder 116 eontern s plated ; that last appalling cry, with the splash into the Water; - he had,. too, a course heird'; but all his at tention was devoted to one who, he feared, had been shot down by the assassins hands, and who he saw was a gehtleman, though he did not yet discover him to be a friend. No very long ,time elapsed, however, before Ferdinand recovered, and the captain•i had the happiness of being assured,' from his own lips, that nOthing ma terial Was the matter. He was only " giddy and bothered," he. said, " from the weight of that rutlian, who had almost done for him ;" but no ball had touched him. ,and he- aeain rose tobis feet, assisted by Captain . Sinclair. I , • " I know your voice," said the lat ter, " but I. can't see your faceeiwell enough in . this light to • recognize you." '• ~' " Ferdinand Munroe. Don't 'you remember 2" • - . "To be sure I do," and he warmly grasped his hand. " But where did that fellow go to ?" inquired Ferdinand, eagerly. " He's gone, I fear, already to his great account ;"' and they both hur ried forward to •the water's edge. The lake was still and quiet now, and st4e not of the guilty wretch whose b lay motionless in . the slime be loWl,"save by the yet uneasy swell! -With which the disturbed .element rippled againgt the sedgy margin,-as though inquiring who it might •be that had sought repose in its cold, recesses. • . "Human aid cannot reach the,mis . erable mail," said Captain;Sinclair. ." Under any circumstances' it would be impossible to extricate him in this light, and without any appliances at hand ; but, to tell you the truth, I 'lover thought about him when I saw ybd full, 'as I sepposed, from that, last shot. But tell me something of all this, for I never - was so bewilder ed. What, broult you here?, What Was it that led to this attack upon ybu ? and, stop moment—tell me, Munroe, first of all, do you know anything of . Miss Morrison, or where . she is?" " I do,indeedi' s replied Ferdinand; and. then followed abrief recaPitula -Mon of nil that 11.. id occurred, as they - hastened on towards , the house, in terrupted only by the captain's ex , - clamations of astonishment, as One scene after another was, rapidly sketched by the narrator. { 1 . . "Thank God," cried CatAnin Sin olair,,With a sigh of relief,' "that I came•up at that, opportune .inoniteots I heard the pistol tired as I was 'in the avenue. I see now that I escaped 1 assassination myself by going round 19 - 1.00 per Annum In Advance. to the police barrack. I failed in seeing - the man • I wanted, .and 'was returning by the avenue. When I heard the shot I• felt somehow a strong instigation to lose not an - in-'• stant in ascertaining what had hap pened.. If I - had delayed ever so ~little, as it seems now, your fate was fixed." " Indeed," responded Ferdinand, With considerable emotion, "I . should have been in anotherWorldthis mo meat, instead of talking _ hereto you. But stay," •he added, as they now drew close to the house; " remember that-we have another criminal to dal .with indoors." "Leave her to me," rkurned Cap tain 'Sinclair, moodily. " Accursed wretch !—the worse of the two, by far." All this time Mrs: Montserrat had; beep prowling about in a state of in describable restleastisss, listening at open - windows, slipping to the door, getting more,. uneasy.as thii - eipected time passed on, without any signal that success-,attended their' dark'de• sign. At length she heard the report of the pistol, the token that the at, tempt had been made. 'At once she was at the 'door, pacing the veranda, Clasping her hands that twitched and quivered ' - in the excess of leer nervous anxiety; ti - nd getting more and more disturbed as minute after minute elapsed,•wiLliout the appearance of Joshua with, the coveted booty. - she althost screamed ; "I should have been there:myself: MoP Dieu, if' he has blundered, what will become- of us?" Then, when - the soundof the second shot reached her, and still no sign of the returning mltr,lerer, • ,hiq• Feverish impatience • Anngedm 'to'the extreme of terror.; and uismal forebodings of the result' to ,herself„ In lease of the failure of the plot,:earne with a deadly sensf, don that made her , sitake from head to - foot..‘.‘ , Is it mine to . this.at last? Mon hien, - I was always successful ; yet: if he lives, and is caught, I know bell betray me. Fool, fool, fool 1 I managed better before." And then came the determination to strive to 'the „utmost for her own safety; no mater what was said, to 'brave it out. WhitJthe lingering thought remained thither mistress would stand by her. She r laccordingly crept .back. to the and, remained lurking in .the. daikkto see what might turn. W hen the ring at the hall door came: she bounded as tLiOngbit were the bell tolling for - her . own execution. "What shall I do?" she exclaimed. " It might be Joshua." Again it was repeated more loudly. "It must be him—it - must be him ;" and she has tened to the -hall. with fresh hope gathering 'in her heart: When she opened the door; both the gentlemen designedly stood aside. "Is it you, .Joshua?" asked a whispering voice. " No !": -was the dread reply from her master. . . . The peal of the last trumpeteould scarely have - thrilled with deeper hor •ror the listener to that single mono : , syilable. She knew by,tfie utterance that all was •known,that•all was over. • " Your wretched companion - in crime . has gone before / you to the Judgment Seat," .eiclaimed . Captain Sinclair, as he laid a strong hand up on the woman's shoulderi,and drove the unresisting form in I ,, iefore him. " Come ; we'll, find you temporary prison • here_;" and he opened' the door of a small pantry off the hall with a single high-barred window ".To-morrow, please God, you shall have better accommodations else where. It may be well for-' you to know that-the. body of that unfortu nate man •Marks, whom you at" any rite, helped to his destruction, lies this moment at the .bottom of the lake ; sent there, not by any of us, but by the hand of the Great Aveng er Himself ;• and all your plans and plots have. been discovered." So say ing. he locked tile door. • The unhappy woman fell with a IoW moan to the ground, and remain ed there. looking in her misery more like - a. • beapof clothes gathered up than a human fOrna. In the lonelv darkness, the sinful past rose up 1.4- fore her terrified mind, until she ro4e wildly up, and with appalling cries importuned fer a release, and to lie putlsOmewhere.with a light,and not alone." Her master took her out with-. tut a word, and locked her into her. Own bedroom, *efusing either light or companion. The next day she was taken to DoWnpatrick jail ; and.' the morning but one subsequent to her committal was found a ss corpse in her eell—killed by. a subtle poison that she: had secreted about her person. The remains'.-were quietly interred within the precincts of the prison, after a formal inquest. 'SimilarlY,l when with Irawn from the waters, Was the ' y of the drowned felon committed to - a dishonored grave'.l ;Words would' fail to convey an idea. of the effel,t upon Mrs. Sinclair of . thodisclos* of her favorite's Ws -11 my, and tiregrievous wrong.she had inflicted. up" . an innocent sufferer.' Her' linsham ; witnessing her extreme dismay. dealt . tenderly in the matter; onlY . byllegrees informing her . of all that had occurred,. and endeavoring tosoften the humiliating sense of.her own, share in the painful transactions. 11er &St. articulate words were.an .anxious inquiry atter Huth - (for well now, and with a bitter-Tang, did she recall: the 'look of dreary. desolate angursh that.stamped that fair young i face when last she , had looked upon it); she earnestly entreated Captain Sinclair' to go for her and bring her 1 back—a request ihat.needednot re- petition, as - early '• n the 'following , day he and..reitlinai d repaired again to Lisburn 'for Ruth. ' They found her at the hotel; as bad been\ settlo.-' by her betrothed; in care of hiS.,unele, 4 l the elder Mr. Munroe • but in stich.a ' shattered and 'enfeebled , state, both. ofiliind and -body. as to be unable to stir I frem a sofa-bed . that lid,heen '. prepared for her in the sitting-room.', Thelmeeting with Captain Sinclair anti Ferdinand . was so trying 'that for hours afterward she could not speak. They • had a long consultation with the physician ;. and it was then decided that she, might be remOved 1 to Oaklands-•by, easy stages, for the: lAiscomfort of a hotel for an invalid . I render the change sadesivable that they:determiued to venture, notwith standing her week condition; and when, after a tedious time upon the road, they reached Oaklands, she was borne unconscious to a. room that Mrs. Sinclair had had' prepared. The first glimpse-of. the old and-remem bered scenes induced a 'paroxysm of nervous excitability, so Were that - her.companions were in the' utmost - fear. Then ensued , a long and parently - hopeless illness; a lever that at, once preyed upon the body and _ unbalanced= the mind., -During the sad protracted period ! Ferdinand Munroe remained the welcome guest and inmate at Oaklands; _at one mo ment buoyed up with all but joyous certainty, and again sinking into the very depth's of despair. - During 'all Ituthi-Morrjson's hours or sickness I Slrs. Sinclair never left herside, i save Or the short respite that now and a . a id became inilispensablp ; all the medicine, every cooling *aught, was given by herown hand.'-An entire revulsiOn sealed to have cora& over this , woman'si mind • indolence and apathy were, flnng to tifeivinas, and the one, ceaseless :supplicationwi% her' was was for, Rtithls recovery. "If she ~dies," she said, " I can never know a moment's "peace again.' It was comforting indeed to ncr to see, that whether • the wanderings' of the disordered brain, or theliteid periods" that intervened, her presence seemed , to - soothe, her absence,.however brief; to increase the sufferer's distress. One evening—the crisis, it was said,: was at hand—there came a turning hour in the treacherous disease—the hour when the very shadow' of the. . grave seems like a presence' in the sick-m(lm, and the. physicianti kit thitir patient sleeping; telling those around her that Sleep woulc:Ohther melt'sway into the last long slumber _ of all, or that she would waken up to-life once more. Their breathless watch, continued through all that ' cold dreary night; and through_ with the light of a gray chill Morning, the last agony of suspense passed off . ;. the feeble but quiet • whisper .that came from the bed, scarcely, beard through the room, tcild_- better than the physieiawe verdict that'the worst was over. Recovery was slow ; but happiness without a flair was now fully enjoyed by the convalescent. Ferdinand left when it was pronoune; ed that all danger was at an end and i'ultimately the 'arrangement was entered into, more for her than with her, that'for another year she was to' remain as governess at Oaklands— ' no longer -a dependent, , but as f an elder daughter, a loved and. Cheris hed friend. NUMBER 46 These. were halcyon - days ,with Ruth. A reference to the past was never made; there seemed a tacit agreement, that names whose mention could only bring up . trying and ter rible recollections should be spoken no more; and even among the ser vants, an allusion to • the fonder guilty inmates 4 of the honse7appeared to be a:most*superstitiouslyavoided. All alike rcgarded• the,, governess with esteem and affection. .Then there, dawned dne bright spring day,, when Violets and urimroies smiled - along the grassy hedgerows, and soft sunbeams shed their mild illumine 'tion upon a small but festive train, !All nature seemed to breathe a bpi son upon the young bridal pail'. Two, : ehild bridemaidS flattered !'round the central, object of ; the 'grOup, their " Ruth," that was to be MiSs 31orri.; son- no. more: And . soi . tbe- , Tentle bride and manly bridegtomn,pledged their *troth each to the Other, that bright spring morning, in_ the' old parish church' near. Oaklands,' and thew went forth, halid fn . band, with 'united hearts, to wall: their road through life, content, ..virhile spared together,.s'ilike to brave the blasts or enjoy the sunshine..• , Thus; the dark episode in Ruth Morrigbp's humble history; that threw its disturbing force: into the current of; her earlier days, became to her but as " that weeping that endureth , for a night," and only enhances •" the joy. that cometh with the Morning." • - Fun; , , Fact and Facetim Moats rule—Tour wife's opinion. " ELIMINATE" is' the, new high-toned w.ord, for steal. . •--!'‘ IT isn't the thinness of - the milk I ob ject to,'' said John Shuttle, as he pulled out a small frog from the creamer, it's the thickness of the water-that it's mixed with." A scHoot. mistress aSked a child what' s-e-e• spelt. The child sliesitated. Said the teacher : " What do :I do when I look at Mr.. Smith?" •" Thquint," replied tho pupil. . - . • . • " oui must make calls,"- Said i !an de to bib. nept:ew, "whether you like it or not ; for there'll always pleasure deriv ed—if !aet when you enter, at least when you come out." WHEN one woman says of 'anotliwr "She is perfectly awful, and looks like fright." she'has no earthlyidea of what she say's; but she knows she wants to say something real mean. • • 3lus. PMITINGTON, 'in .illustration of; the proverb, "A - soft. answer .turneth away wrath,!' says, ;" That it is better to speak paragorieally of a peilson thin to he' all the time flingingiepitaphs at hiin." Lady—" I dinna ken what ails folk that-canna, like' folk as folk should like folk ; for an folk liked -folk as folk Should like folk, folk wouli like folli.',as Well as folk evei liked ,fulk.sin* folk war folk:" . •' ! . " It: we are to live: after death. :why don't we have some certain knowledge of it ?" Said a skeptic to a clergyman, "Why dAn't you haVo some knowledte of. this world before'you eo:ne into it?" was the caustic reply. • A Missoritt German paper advocates lion. Adolph Pantz for the Presidency. We suggest Scherz as Vice.- 'Ant z and Schurz would work well .together, espeo: , chilly in connecting government bureaus. Washington Capital. • Ex-G617..i0rt Hi:unarm -speaks not to his Nellie who went with a coachman to roam,-; "but;" says old Father Hubbard, "she may come to my cubbaid if Isbell leave her low- hubbie at horuc."-,-Phitz detphia Erening New'. .• ' - . Hntax nature is queerly cmstikuted. The average man doestet feel as - bad ,when be receives ten dollars WO -much change as he does when-he get ten cents too little.. He is more anxious to correct , the t little mistake than he is to rcctir_y the big one., • . , . • " a fanner, as ho exhibit ed a broken jar to the Manufacturer, - "I -packed this lull of butter and . the jar split from top - to bottom. Perhaps you tau explain the phenomenon." 01.3, , yes, I can," was the -ready . repli, "the liutter was stronger than the jar. . A cveNprr gentleman rt.Clentlr, at two o clock. n the morning; *as seen walking down the stairs of a New . York hotel. His gown was white and ho .held inshis right hand a large pitcher. As be ap proached the clerk's desk he said, - you be so kind as to: hew me to the well ?"--lferatd. • - A. ci.sssin- journalism "t is about to be - established in Cornell. University . . Where the students are to cornefrom is - a mystery, - as everybody not oontiectcd witb• a newspaper knows just -how it sliould ,t run. Perhaps the editors of-the country' are'espeetvi to take -lessons under- the m Cornell professors.Eouisva's . Cowrie r. - Journal. . ' • Pansnx Jo.lvits says; geuentlly hap. peas; when I-have prepared a particular ly good sinn4i), my congregittion will be very, small. and V.Wge.when have a poor one.'" I have been told that tho house is - alivays full when you preach," was the somewhat equivocal complimout pie-mindol 6mitlL—Boatort Teatacrfpt.