2 ljc mcs, Nctu Sloomftcli), A QUESTION. As Annie was currying tho baby one day, Tossing nloft tlio lump of inanity, Dear to its father and mother no doubt To the rest of tho world a incro lump of hu manity Sam came along, and was thinking then maybe, Kuil as much of Annie as she of tho baby. ".Just look at tho baby'" cried Ann In a flutter, (Mvlug its locks 'round her lingers a twirl; "If I was a man I know that I couldn't lie keeping my hands off a dear iittlo girl." And Sam gave a wink, as if to say "Maybe, Of tlic girls I'd rather hug you than the baby." "Now, kiss It." she cried, still hugging It closer, "Its mouth's like the roses the honey-beo sips!" Sam stooped to obey, as the heads came together, There chanced to arise a confusion of lips! And It occurred, it might have been, maybe, That each got a kiss, Sam, Ann, and tho baby. It's hard to tell what Just then was the matter. For the baby was the only one innocent there ; And Annie Hushed up like a full-blown peony, And Samuel turned red to the roots of his hair; So the question is this you can answer it, maybe Did Annie kiss Sam, or did both kiss the baby? AN INTENDED ROBBERY. OT to go over on i'uot!" cxclaim SX cd the contractor. N "Mot a chance of anything else," re plied the agent. " But, then, it's only five miles and you'll have better quarters than here, in this vilo shanty. The mon ey will be safer, too let ulone that the nieti won't go to work again, unless they are paid in the morning." " Is the road safe ? I don't like the idea of lugging so much money. I could defend myself, or run ; but fifteen thou sand dollars in small bills is a, big pack ago to run with." " Scud your valise over in advance." " By whom ?" " My man." " Is he trustworthy ?" " Honest as the day ; and he need not know there's anything in it but dirty linen, lie can start now; and you will wait till after supper, if you will." And so saying, the agent of the rail road company stepped to tho door of the shanty and shouted for Patrick; and shortly that individual came as bright, lively, honest-looking a son of the Green Isle as ever helped build a western rail road. "Patrick!" " Yis, yer honor." " Take this gentleman's valise over to tho village, and leave it with the super intendent. Tell him the owner will be after it some time this evening." " An' is that all, yer honor ?" ' " That's ull only bo quick about it, and you'll earn au extra dollar." " I'm jist the b'y for that, anyhow. Sure, it's a small bit of a yalise." And, so saying, Patrick picked up tho object of his contempt, and trudged off, with an utter absence of curiosity as to the nature of what ho was carrying. The temporary station at which tho "construction train" had lauded the con tractor a gentleman named Perkins was at tho end of the new air lino rail road to ; and as the laborers there on had not boen paid over promptly, they had now for somo days been on a strike, abandoning the works and congregating at a hamlet, a few miles distant, thereby compelling their delinquent employers to come to terms. Mr. Perkins had brought a good share of the " terms" with him, for immediate distribution ; and, after a plain and hearty supper with the agent, he was about to start on his tramp, when it was discovered that a good-sized west ern thunderstorm was just about to burst, and the walk was postponed until the sky ahould clear. In a few minutes more the rain was coming down in torrents and kept up for an hour or so, at the end of which time the contractor paddled away over the road, congratulating himself that the valise in Patrick's care was water-proof. " He's had aaroughcr time than I will, anyhow; and, now, if I ain't robbed and murdered before I get there, I shall do well enough, in spite of tho mud." And so muttering to himself, the worthy agout splashed forward. Our present business, however, is not with his employer, but with Patrick him self. The parting injunction to make haste had not seemed to make a very deep im- ression on the careless son of Erin, and e trudged easily along, with an occasion al shrewd glance at the somewhat threat ening sky, growling to himself: " Faith an' I'll be there before he will an' it don't rain, an' uiebbe I will it if it does. Oeh, but it's n wake one to bo giv en a dollar for carryin' tho loike of this." A Iittlo more than half way across tho open prairio that lay between the railroad terminus and the village was a tolerably dense grove, and it was after sunset when Patrick plunged under the shadows. Nor had ho gone far before the gloom rapidly deepened, the premonitory flash es of lightning, find the deep, smothered roars of the thunder gave token that the storm was upon him. "Now, an' I cud only git to the ould log house, it 'ud kape me dhry. Ilowly Moses, what a big flash that was !" Aud, so saying, Patrick broke into a very respectable trot, which quickly brought him out into a Iittlo weed-grown clearing. In the centre of this there was a small log house, the deserted homestead of some discontented squatter who had moved farther westward. It consisted of but two rooms, front and hack, and all vestiges of doors and window shutters had long since disappeared ; but it prom ised some sort of imperfect shelter from the rain. Patrick was just in time, for hardly had ho stumbled over the grassy thresh hold before the first big drops began to patter, and these were quickly followed by such penetrating torrents as compelled him to select his standing-place under as good a shelter as he could possibly find. " Bless me sowl, but this is wet rain, anyhow ! I'd not like to be fouud drown ed with another man's portmanty about my clothes. Whist, now, Patrick, nie jewel what's that?" And, as he spoke, Patrick once more advanced towards the doorway. It was now all but pitch dark, and he could hear the half-muffled voice of a man whose profane utterances seemed to try and direct another toward the shelter. " Here it is. Bob; I wonder if there's anybody in it ?" ' Not to-night, there won't be. Go right in ; we're comiii'." Patrick was no fool, and he had heard something iu the tones rather than in the words though these were mingled with horrid profanity which conveyed to his mind the impression that tho new com ers were men with whom he did not care to scrape an acquaintance ; neither did he like to go out into tho storm and so he quietly glided back into the little " lean-to" that formed the other part of tho house, and curled himself up against the logs. In a moment more ho perceived that three men had taken possession of his late quarters, and ho lay as still as a mouse, while they continued a discussion which had evideutly been interrupted by the storm. " Ho won't try to get over to-night, 1 reckon." " Yes, he will, he's got to." "But the storm?" " He'll wait till that's over." ' " Maybe he's started." "If he has, he'll turn back. We are safe enough to bag him, au' it's a lit tle tho best lay we ever had such a chance at." " Pretty good pot, that's a fact. Do you know how he's got it?" "In a valiso, Jim says." " Well, we can take it as well in that as in anything else, as tho man said about the whisky." " But what'll we do with him 1" " Dead men will tell no tales." " That's tho safest, I guess ; and they will lay it to the strikers." " Most likely. Have you got the dark lantern ready ?" " Not much oil in it.' " Let's fill it then. I went to get some, aud got into the boss's private office, and I just found one Iittlo can hid away in the desk. Not another thing was worth bringing away. Here it is ; let's fill up, and take a look 'round here." Thus fur, Patrick had listened with breathless interest, while his mind teem ed with horrid visions of . robberry and murder. As we have said, he was by no means lacking in sharpness, and the ref erence to the valise had not been by any means re-assuring. " Howly mither 1 how did they iver know I was comin' over wid tho port manty t I'd like to know that. Begorra, I'd better have turned baok before I iver come ! An' what's a dollar to pay for being murdered !" Patrick's thoughts were troubling the very soul within him, when he heard what was said about the lantern, and it needed no one to tell him that his only safety from discovery was in retreat. There was some , little noise and loud talking in the other room, not to speak of the rain on the roof, and Patrick had no difficulty in escaping, unheard. Once clear of the house, he made a clear run of it for a couple of hundred yards, stumbling over logs, tearing through bri ars, but sticking faithfully "to tho valise. Meantime, tho three robbers had. prob ably been filling tho lamp of their dark lantern ; and as Patrick reached the edge of the wvods, in tho cover of whose darkness he knew he would be safe, ho turned and strained his eyes to the log house. As ho did so, a faint glimmer of light came out through the chinks. "Strikiu' a match," muttered Patrick; " bad luck to tho same for sindin' me out into the wet ! Ilowly mithcr ! What's that?" While Patrick had been speaking, the light had gained somewhat in strength, as if the match was blazing higher; but as he uttered his concluding exclamation, there came a Euddeu blinding flash, equal to many lightnings, and then a dull and sudden sound, as of some mighty explo sion, followed by the crushing sound of heavy falling bodies among the tree-tops near him, breaking their way through the branches. Patrick waited no more, but found the road as quickly as possible, and made double quick time for tho village, regard less of the rain. When, less than half an hour afterwards, the breathless Irish man, with his precious burden, dripping with water, opened the door of the su perintendent's office, in the village ho heard that gentleman remark : "What did you say, Jordan ?" " Why,'' replied the boss, in an anx ious tone, " some fool litis broken my desk open and stolon a can of nitro gly cerine, and I'm afraid harm will come of it." " Divil a fear," interrupted Patrick ; " sorra a mischief was done by that same. Only we'll have to search tho woods for days to foind enough o' thim for a decent wake, or I'm mistaken." The explanation which followed, left little room for doubt, and subsequent investigation left less; but as Patrick had surmised there was little for a " wake." The contractor got in all right, tho men were paid, the road was built, and three first class rascals were disposed of. t Position in Sleeping. IT is better to go to sleep on the right side, for then tho stomach is very much in tho position of a bottle turned upside down, and the contents of it aro aided in passing out by gravitation. If one goes to sleep ou tho left side, tho op eration of emptying the stomach of it contents is more like drawing water from a well. After going to sleep, let the body take its own position. If you sleep on your back, especially soon after a hearty meal, tho weight of tho digestive orgaus and that of tho food resting on the great vein of the body, near the back bone, compresses it, and arrests tho flow of the blood more or less. If the arrest is partial, the sleep is dis turbed, and there are unpleasaut dreams. If the meal has been recent and hearty, tho arrest is more decided ; and the vari ous sensations, such as falling over a precipice, or the pursuit of u wild beast, or other impending dangers, and the des perate effort to get rid of it, arouses us, and sends on the stagnating blood; and we wake in a fright, or trembling, or in a perspiration, or feeling exhausted, ac cording to tho degree of stagnation, and the length and strength of the efforts made to escape the danger. But when we aro unable to escape the danger when we do fall over the preci pice, when the trembling building crush es us what theu f That is death ! That is the death of those of whom it is said, when found lifeless in' tho morning, " That they were as well us ever they were the day before ;" and often it is ad ded, "and ate heartier than common 1" This last, is a frequent cause of death to to those who have gone to bed to wake no more, we give merely us u private opinion. The possibility of its truth is enough to deter any rational man from a late and hearty meal. This we do know with certainty, that waking up in the night with painful diarrhea, or cholera, or billions cholic, ending in death in a very Bhort time, is probably traceable to a late large meal. The truly wiso will take the safe side. For persons to eat three times a day, it is amply sufficient to make tho lust mcnl of cold bread aud butter, and a cup of some warm drink. No ouo cau starve on it ; while a perseverance iu the habit soon begets a vigorous appetite for breakfast, so promising a day of comfort. HuU't Journal of Iltallh. t&" When is coffee real estate J When it's ground. Washington's First, Interview wiih his Wife. UY O. W. CUSTIS. ON' bright Sunday morning, in the year 1758, an officer, attired in the military undress, and attended by a body servant, tall and militairo as his chief, crossed the ferry called Williams', over the Pamonkcy, a branch of the York river. On the boat touching the southern or New Kent side, the soldier's progress was arrested by ono of those personages who give tho bau vhttl of the Virginia gentlemen of the old regime, the very soul of kindliness and hospitali ty. It was in vain that the soldier urged his business at Williamsburg, important communications to the governor, kc. Mr. Chambcrlayne, on whoso domain the mil itairo had just landed, would hear of no excuse. Colonel Washington was a name and character so dear to all the Virgini ans, that his passing by one of the old castles of Virginia without calling and partaking of the hospitalities of the host, was entirely out of the question. The colouel, however, did not surrender at discretion, but stoutly maintained his ground, till Chambcrlayne, bringing up his reserve in tho intimation that he would introduce bis friend to a young and charming widow then beneath his roof, the soldier capitulated on condition that he should dine and then, by press ing his charger and borrowing of the night he would reach Williamsburg be fore His Excellency could shako oft his morning slumbers. Orders were accord ingly issued to Bishop, tho colonel's body servant and faithful follower, who, to gether with a fine English charger, had been bequeathed by the dying Braddock to Major Washington, on the famed and fatal field of the Mouongahela. Bishop, bred in the school of European disipline, raised his hand to his cap, its much as to say, "Your honor's orders shall bo obey ed." The colonel now proceeded to the mansion, and was introduced to various guests, (for when was a Virginian domi cil of tho olden time without guests?) and above all, to the charming widow. Tradition relates that they were mutually pleased ou their first interview ; nor was it remarkable. They were of an age when impressions are strongest. Tho la dy was fair to behold, of fascinating man ners, and splendidly endowed with world ly benefits; the hero, fresh from his early fields, redolent of fame and with a form on which " every god did seem to set his seal to give the world assurance of a man." Tho morning passed pleasantly; evening came with Bishop true to his orders, aud firm to his post, holding his favorite charger with tho ono hand, while the other was waiting, to offer tho ready stir rup. The sun sank in the horizon, and yet the colonel appeared not ; and then the old soldier marvelled at his chief's delay. " 'Twas strange, 'twas passing strange ;" surely ho was not wont to be a single moment benind his appointments, for he was the most punctual of all punc tual men. Meantime, the host enjoyed the sceno of the veteran on duty at the gate, while the colonel was so agreeably employed in the parlor ; and proclaiming that uo guest ever left his house after sunset, his military visitor was without much difficulty persuaded to order Bishop to put up the horses for the night. Tho sun rode high in the heavens the next day, when the enamoured soldier pressed with his spur his charger's side and speeded on his way to the seat of government, where, having dispatched his publio business ho retraced his steps, and at the White House the engagement took place with preparations for the mar riage. And much had the biographer hoard of that marriage from gray-huired domes tics, who waited at tho board where love made the feast and Washington was the guest. And rare and high was tho rev elry at that balmy period of Virginia's festal age, for many were gathered to that marriage of tho good, the great, tho gifted and the gay, while Virginia with joyful acclamation, hailed in her youthful hero a prosperous and happy bridegroom. 14 And so you remember when Colonel Washington cume a-courting of your mis tress '" said the biographer to old Cully, in his hundredth year. "Ay, master, that I do," replied this ancient family servant, who had lived to see five generations; "great times, sir, great times; shall never see tho like again. " And Washington looked something like a man, a proper man hey, Cully. " Never seed the like, sir; never the likes of him, though I have seen many in my day: so tall so straight and then he sat a horse and rode with such an air I Ah, sir, ho was like no one else. Many of the grandest gentlemen in their gold laee were at tho wedding, but none looked like the man himself." Strong indeed must have been tho impressions which the person and man ner of Washington made upon the rude " untutored mind" of this poor negro, since the lapse of three quarters of a cen tury had not sufficed to efface them. The precise date of the marriage the biographer has been unable to discover having in vain searched among the rec ords of the vestry of St. Peter's church New Kent, of which the reverend Mr. Mossem. a Cambridge scholar, was tho rector, and performed tho ceremony, it is believed, about 17f0. A short time af ter their marriage, Colonel and Lady Washington removed to Mount Vernon on the Potomac, and permanently settled there. Grindstones. A LETTER to an exchange paper gives some interesting facts about the locality where grindstones are pro cured, and tho method of the manufac ture. The English grindstones are quar ried at Neweastle-on-Tyne, and near Shef field. These quarries aro worked by hand, and all the grindstones are made with the mallet and chisel. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick stones come from sandstone fi, filiations overlying the coal districts on the Bay of Fundy and cross ing the Province of the Gulf of St. Law rence. These immense deposits contain a, great variety of grits, known as the No va Scotia grindstones. These quairies arc generally worked by the. Frcnoh peo ple known as " Acadiaus," from the name they gave this country. " Acadia," and are tho descendants of tho ' Ilugunnots," who were driven out of France by relig ious persecution. They are a very in dustrious and simple-minded people, and the females retain to this day the style of dress brought over from France by their ancestors. The tides of the Bay of Fundy rise aud fall from GO to 70 feet every twelve hours, and these people avail themselves of this power to work the quarries, which extend from a high bluff on the main land down to low water mark in tho bay. At low water a huge mass of stone is loosened from its bed, and a heavy chain is passed under it aud over a larsjo boat, which is placed alougside. As the tide rises, tho stone attached to the bottom of the boat is floated into a sand cove at high water, and made into grindstones after tho tide recedes. This work is done with mallet aud chisel, tho rough parts being first chopped off with a heavy axe. Machinery has been recently in troduced, and the small grindstones are now turned in a lathe by steam-power. The sandstone deposits of this coun try which arc made into grindstones, are found along the shores of Lake Erie, and extending for a considerable distance east and west of Cleveland, and inland as far as Marietta, on the Ohio. They are also found on the shores of Lake Huron, above Detroit. These deposits are of a different char octer from the foreign stone, and do not seem to be the overlying strata of coal formations, but appear to be a later for motion, as the quaries look as though this part of Ohio has once been the bottom of tho lake, the sand of which had be come solid and been heaved up by some couvulsion of nature. Nearly all the Ohio grindstones arc made by machinery,, driven by steam power. The blocks of stone being loosened from the quarry bed, are roughly hewed out, with a squaro hole in the centre. This is placed on a squaro iron shaft furnished with a nine inch collar against which the stone is se curely fastened by means of onother col lar keyed against tho side of the stone. The shaft and stone being driven by steam-power, two men on opposite sides of the stone turn it off perfectly true by means of soft iron bars about 6 feet long and 2 by 1 inch thick, which is curved upward. This was formerly a very un healthy occupation, owing to the shaft dust being inhaled by the workmen, but this difficulty is now obviated by means of blowers which drive it away. ttijy Send a postage stamp to It. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo. N. V., and V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo. N. ., and get Dr. Sage's pamphlet on Catarrh, or send sixty cents and get Dr. Sago's Catarrh, ltemedy. $500 reward is offered by the proprietor for a case of Catarrh which he cannot cure. Sold by druggists.