f I : v , 7'"'( Hi) HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL. DESPEIIANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. III. UIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, 1A., THU11SDAY, NOVEMBER1" 20, 1873. NO. 38. November Dawn. Oil, charming eiplit ! Oh, lovely light I Orange to amber graded, On gray cloud-foldings slded. Air pure, Bereue, Aye, frosty, keen, November dawn ! Oh. bannered stars! Oh, floating bars Of white, with star-dust gleaming! O'er Luna, paloly beaming. Thy gauzy lands By spirit hands Are lightly drawn. The beeches Bob, They feol the throb Of Nature's pulse Tibrating. Its lessening beat translating Prepared they staud, Majestic, grand, Upon the lawn. The aspens quiver, The larcheB shiver, The birds fly low, In flocks thoy gather. Winter is coming ! the shrinking land Awaits the grasp of its death-cold hand Its cold, gray dawn. AX UNHAPPY WIFE. Isabel walked tho riarler of her suite, It was far past midnight, and the great hotel was nearly silent. Up and down, with a supple, leonine motien peculiar to her, and a footfall of velvet, turning her black eyes lestlessly, and whirling about if the air stirred in the passage ; thus she had moved for hours. Was she a heroine in distress ? Was she a woman of gifts, evolving some creauon irom ner sleepless brain y am sorry to bring her down to earth she was a fit subject for romance. But it must bo confessed Isabel was only waiting for her husband, who was out late. Had she been a sensible, prac tical woman, she had wrapped the drapery of her couch round her and laid down to sweet dreams long ago. But she had only been a wife a year. Her liusbaud was her single tie ; she lived her life in him. Isabel was beautiful. Her flesh was like marble lighted by fire ; her hands. her eyes, her lips, the poise of her head, her undulating motion, had an elegance of their own. But when God lent her the gift of loveliness, He added thereto the gift of supersensitiveness. through which so many are graded to melancholy ana madness. She had been the ward of a bachelor uncle, who felt he did his whole duty if he visited her twice a year at her convent, and answered her sorrowful black eyes with uods and winks of approval. When Hhe was ready to enter the world, the oharge of a young lady niece so taxed his freedom, aud, by consequence, his spirits, that he laid him down and died. lie hadn't meddled inmatrimonv. Whv should his autumnal youth be spoiled oy a loster daughter y Then Burnhain appeared to Isabel. Jtiis lamiiy and hers had been on friend !y terms whole generations. He had just returned from a long tour, and nau me air 01 ocner continents around him, which fascinated her senson Afterwards his best grew upon her ; his generous nature, his pure intention, his mellow thought, the whole flue structure of his manhood. She knew little of the world ; she made him her standard. So that when Burnkain crime wooing and made her sure that all his happiness was in her, she staked her self, and was blessed in proportion to her intense sensibility. When Isabel became a wife, she did not degrade her hero. Her very esti mate kept him up to her. Proud and tender of her, he walked tc rectitude, and softly before her, many moons and never meant to deviate. But But Burnham was a society man ; he had such jovial friends, who formed such a jovial and select club. The " Pickwick Club " ran over with money and leisure and graceful gayetv. To be a "Pickwickian," was to be "recog nized as a tip-top globule of the eity cream. Youngsters of family looked forward to rising into this club much ns the young Boman anticipated the toga -of manhood. It wielded an ab surdly strong influence. The " Pick wickians" met in elegant apartments, drank imported wine, attended by per fect and silent service, and railed nt the hard-worked, sad-visaged world. Young husbands were considered great conquests among them, and they im portuned Burnham so much to join them that lie good-naturedly took to " running in." From taking a friendly cigar and glass, he went on to extend ing his 6tays till the fascination of the club ran through all his veins. Isabel knew nothing of clubs. She supposed they might be assemblages of gentlemen with something of a literary character, such as Addison pictures. She saw in her mind's eye sober citi zens grouped about tables, reading, perhaps smoking, and disoussing wis dom. She waited for her husband be cause she was restless when he was away, not because she had any right eous tongue in pickle for him. Feet shuffled in the hall. She bent her neck ; her whole body crouched to listen. They drew nearer, zig-zagging; they paused at her door; and the being outside, evidently an animal without hands, began to rub and fumble and growl for entrance. Isabel threw the door open, when a person in a very bad hat, with his whole apparel somewhat on one side, fell at her feet. It was a stage scene, but ter ribly real with one actor. Isabel start ed back, raising and wringing her hands, and staring at her husband like a maniac. Mr. Burnham gathered him self up and took observations. Some drunken men are abusive; others maud lin; others jolly; but Burnham was pompous. He found a sofa, and mount ed it tremulously to harangue his wife on her duty as " gen'lmen to o'nduct 'self like genl'men -drivedullcare'way!" and made a consummate and disgust ing a fool of himself as it is possible fer a man's body to do when that fine spirit which governs is drowned. Isabel stood watching without mov ing a muscle. The stare drew his at tention, and he requested leave to ask if she wo flrntik, and it she meant to " suit him ? Then, overwrought, by his own eloquence, he relaxed and dropped along tho nofa. She saw a face swollen and seusual; a frame nerve less and heavy; a man turned to u beast. Her maid tapped at an inner door to ask if Mrs. Burnham wanted her now. " Go to inv oreaHinfl'-room " replied Isabel, towering between the damsel's eyes and that locomotive-laboring-up-a- stcep-grnde upon the sofa. " Wait for me there." She closed the door and went back. Not being addicted to harangues and handkerchiefs, she merely clasped her hands aud looked at him, thinking, I suppose, that no woe like hers had ever come upon the world since the deluge. Yet Mis. Smith, down by the wharves, could have shown her deeper depths; and thousands of wretches within few square miles, might have smiled at her butterfly misery. Yet, after all, every ne suffers according to his capaoity rather than according to his Btroke. Isabel considered wine as belonging to gentle breeding. That Mrs. Smith's "man" should come to the gutter through rum, was a thing to be expect ed; " that sort of people you know, etc.;" Jbnt that Mrs. Burnham's lord could bo touched with the same infirm ity, was a revelation of human nature for which she was not prepared. Like all natures of her cast, ske stood in fiercest judgment over what she loved best, Burnham slept till a late sun thrust bright daggers through his hair, and heated his eyelids. Dissipation treated him kindly. He came down to luneheon after bath and toilet and a little philosophy, as fresh and sii avo as your father confessor. Isabel did not trouble him for the time. She had taken her maid and gone out, he supposed, and he was glad of having more time to recover himself before he attempted to pass muster under those black eyes again. He came home to dinner, invigorated by business, with his winning, repentant guise on his arm, ready for use, as you may say. But Isabel had not yet returned. No one had seen her that day. He rushed to her room and plowed among her belongings. She had taken little ; and that little had evident ly been packed hastily. Pinned to a frame containing his portrait, Burham found her last testa ment ; he opened it with a face like the dead. She said to him : " Do not search for me. We can never be anything to each other again. You have killed me ; you taught me to lean on and adore the best of men ; and then you unmasked and showed me what you were. The world is black ; I have no faith in anything." Mr. Burnham. in rending this scrap, forgot the repose of good breeding. He fell upon his knees as if Hercules had planted a blow between his eves : he rung for the police ; aud whirled up the great hotel like a madman. But those much buttoned gentlemen, with clubs and ornamental caps, have a soothing euect on the most harrowed mind, Burnhftm dropped down iu his parlor, with his head between his hands, and explained himself in fragments to one of them, who stood reading him like a book. " Did she have money ?" asked the immovable. " She has a large bank account, her own property, which 1 never touch Perhaps she has cashed that." On investigation it was found that she had. "And with eighteen hours start," pursued the immovable, " she'll be well away from the city bv this time. De scription of ludy, am' lady's woman, sir y So they took notes, examined, put their hand to the wires, and flew about surely and silently. While Burnham measured his rooms or the streets, or set in polnje stations, looking like an old man. Once, when a juvenile, I seized stone, with an impulse of disgust, and hit a rat which crept from under the barn. It screamed and tottered, lifting siuicrmg eyes. The poor thing had been poisoned ; great ulcers were on its back ; it was crawling from death, and L hurt it ! x sat down on the grass, crying and wringfhg my hands, the veriest wretch alive ; I had struck a suffering, defenceless oreature 1 If could only have gathered the rat on my lap and soothed its dying moments ! But he dragged out of sight and left me everlasting remorse. Since cruelty is a two-edged sword that falls back painfully if you use it even against vermin, how it must cut if we have lift ed it against our best beloved ! The rhyme of Burnham, his wander ings, his remorse, his sack-cloth and fastings, are they not written in the book of his experience ? His police force traced Isabel out of the city, but they were long discover ing her. They sent him oontinued messages of their progress ; he left his affairs to follow every elue. And dis mal hours he spent in her dressing-room poring over a glove or a ribbon, eniov ing the sweetness of freedom and widowhood, The "Piokwick Club" was no stay to his care. He hated the sight pi their iiacchanaliuu faces. It seemed that years instead of months had passed, when the chief man of buttons and clubs waited on him one day, with the joyful assurance that in a certain Northern village, in a certain house, he would find his wife. Was it joyful assurance after all ? At the end of his long, sickening journey, he stood at the gate of her house, about dusk, more depressed than he had ever felt before. She had commanded him not to search for her ; ke was minded to turn and go back, satisfying himself with the knowledge that all was well with with her. Such floods of change had rolled between them. He knew not how to approach her. But, like a call to him, a little cooing cry came from the house ; it stirred him like a sea. Then Isabel! came to the window, looking out and up. Her beautiful face was softened and sweet ened, for she had been in the hard land of maternity, under discipline, which brings out the angel-side of woman ; in her arms she held his little child. Her eyes falling ou her husband, thin most consistent woman readied toward him, bursting into a low, glad cry of, Oh, I knew you d cornel After supper, when the room was cospy, and the good maid s steps had ceased, and the blessed child had boon admired till both parents were in a state of imbecility, Isabel hung to a button of her husband's coat and falter ingly confessed her sins ; her days of darkness ; her ignorance oi patient love, till the baby came to teach her. Then Burnham took up the parody, and shrived himself and made promi ses in a way which would have afforded the " Pickwick Club " infinite amuse ment. And, in his turn, the remark able infant raised his voice. So that they were very cosey. And it was not fatal after all, like some other Club affairs. (Jen, Butler in Court, The long, pending suit of William A. Brittou against Benj. F. Butler was tried in the Unitod States Circuit Court at New York. The plaintiff is the sen ior member of the banking house of Britton k Kountz, Natchez, Miss. While Natchez was under the dominion of the Confederates, Mr. Britton's bank gave customer two draft3 upon their New Orleans correspondents for$15,000 gold. The holder of the drafts was captured while attempting to pass the Confeder ate lines and put himself under the pro tection of the Union flag, which was then floating in New Orleans; On the person of the refugee were found the two drafts, and they were taken from him and payment forced by Gen. But ler. - On the part of the defence it was urged that the defendant had the au tkority of the general Government for his seizure of the drafts and for com pelling the payment ; that thoy were contraband of war, and were turned over by the General in fact if not iu proper form. (ien. liutler, testifying in his own be half, swore that he seized the drafts as confiscated property, and had made proper return of the facts of the seizure to the (iovernment through his subor dinates. He C enied that he had used the money fer his own purposes, assert ing that he had expended the amount in feeding the poor of ew Orleans, strengthening the Mississippi levees, and defraying the expenses of his secret service force. Decision is reserved. Murdered In his Garden. Mr. Philip B. Howard, of Jamaica South, Long Island, was shot and in stantly killed by a person, as yet un known, while near his house, it being Mr. Howard's birthday, he had invited his father and mother to spend the day with him. About 11 o clock ne went to his cabbage bed, which is but a short distance from his house, to get a head for dinner. Noticing two men gunning on his land he turned and was seen tc speak to them. It is supposed that he erdered them from his grounds. From the house Jus wile was attracted by them, and she stepped te the kitchen door and watched the three. After they had talked a few minutes Mrs. Howard saw one of the men raise his gun, take deliberate aim at her husband, and fire twice in rapid succession. Then the mon turned and spoke to his compan ion, and tho two hastily jumped into a wagon that was near and drove away at lull speed. Mr. Howard fell. Mrs. Howard rau to him, but he was dead before Bhe reached hiin. Dr. Wood and Coroner Allen were sent for. They examined the body and found that Mr. Howard's left side and a portion of his breast had been shot away. Both charges had taken effect. Mr. Howard was a well-to-do farmer, aged 40 years. Ho was well known and respected, as is hi3 venerable father, aged 90, who so narrowly escaped being an eye-witness to the tragedy. An Opera Singer (Jone Mad. Theodore Formes, the German tenor, well-known to opera-goers, has gone mad in Germany, and lias has been sent to a lunatio asylum near Bonn. Formes, it is said, was attached to a young lady, the daughter of a wealthy banker from Indiana. He insisted upon Miss Rey nolds becoming his wife without delay, but her mother was opposed to the marriage, and she ordered Formes from her house. He made several attempts to meet his beloved, but always without success. He finally wrote Mrs. Rey nolds a letter, in which he threatened to kill herself and her daughter. Frightened, the ladies left Bonn. He vainly tried to discover their wherea bouts, and the fruitlessness of his long search threw him into a paroxysm of ex citement, which finally resulted in in sanity. For days he wandered about the mountainous environs of Boun, without taking any food, and sleeping in the woods. Some children saw him lately walking with unkempt hair, rag ged clothes, and wildly declaiming to himself. They told some peasants about the apparition, and the peasants arrested him. Thrust into a narrow cell there, Formes became a raving ma niac. Afterward he was sent in the strait-jacket to the asylum. 'ot So Rich as They Supposed. A few years ago a well-known pub lisher in Boston died and left a will be queathing, if we ieoollect rightly, about a quarter of a million dollars. The last we heard of the administration of his estate, it was thought that it would pay the creditors about 6 cents on a dollar ! The late good-natured Ueneral Hiram Walbridge, in his last will and testa ment, made bequests of very large sums, evincing a generous heart and disposi tion to give liberally ; but, unfortu nately, his assets were not sufficient to meet but a very small part of them. And now it is said that the estate of the Hon. Horace F. Clark, who died only a few weeks since, supposed to be worth seven millions of dollars, if not positively insolvent, will amount to very little. This is owing in a great measure to the extraordinary shrinkage in values which have taken place since Mr. Clark's death. Still the case fur nishes a striking illustration how differ ently estates may settle up from what is anticipated. jV. Y, Ledger, America Previous to IU Discovery by Christopher. Columbus. Hon. George S. Bontwell.'of Mass., in a lecture, began ny stating that America must have been known to the ancients, but that, on acoount of the difficulties which then existed of inter changing Ideas ail preserving them, a link had evidently been dropped in the greot chain of evidence which has been since taken up, without, however, ef fecting a satisfactory connection. From evidencps which have been collated and examined by scientific men, we can safely affirm that all parts of the world were populated as soon as they becamo inhabitable. After giving some theories about tho divisions of the human family based on the color of the complexion, the forma tion of the body and the growth of the hair, the speaker proceeded to prove that from the specimens of architecture and mining which have been discovered on this continent we can naturally infer that the civilization of the old countries was transplanted here at an early date. In the vicinity of Vera Cruz, in Mexico, there are to be found the ruins of cities and towns buried beneath the earth which give evidences of (in enlightened civilization and which silently wait for an interpreter to chronicle their history. In California there are extensive mines, at the bottom of which have been found specimens of human bones and altars for worship, whose formation plainly indicate that they were erected by Europeans. In the Lake Superior re gions, too, mines have been discovered which show unmistakably signs of European skill, equal if not superior to that which now exists. Mr. Boutwell gave three reasons for the belief that the population of America was not indigenous, and that this continent was visited by Eastern mariners at an early age of the world's history. The sphericity of the earth was known in the time of Herodotus, and was taught by his disciples ; it was handed down from generation to genera tion, so that Columbus made it the basis of his theory. The mariner's compass is not a new invention, but belongs also to the aucients. Herodo tus, in his history, alludes to an instru ment in the possession of the Indians, which always pointed due north, and it is a matter of history that in the fourth century of our era ie Chinese mariners used the maguetio needle. Then, again, the enterprise of tie ancient mariners was equal to a pas.nge over the Atlantic or Pacific Ocean . la the sixth century, the Phamicians bad so far progressed in the knowledge of navigation that they occupied the Black Sea, the Medi terranean, and evai as far as the Baltic Sea ; they had become familiar with the passages into the Indian Ocean, had ob tained possession cf ports along the coast, and were familiar with the tides and changes of the sea.'' Their ships were known to be away for three years at a time, and ns they had so far per fected navigatioi as to be able to sail 150 miles per div, the distance which they could trawl in a three-years' cruise must hay- been considerable. Their great sueces was in voyages after silver and gold, ind as the mines of Spain aud Englanl could not possibly yield the large simply which they con stantly exhibited Ye can easily infer that another and amore prolific land had been discovered whose existence they were unwilling to disclose, lest its treasures should bo utilized by their neighbors. It is wel known that they made their ordinary drinking-vessels, and even the anchors tf their ships from silver, and this furthik proves that they had more extensive lines than those which existed in Spaiiand Africa. He further proved fie possibility of these hardy mariners haviug readied the American coast, fm tho fact that various instances cf I sea-faring men having been carrief by the currents and deposited on islinds in the Pacific Ocean existed. Wqxre also led to be lieve that tho OldjTorld contributed the inhabitants of if le western hemi sphere, from tho fyt that there is a striking similarity ijitween the Asiatio and the American aborigines. The southern portion 0: Asia is thickly populated by an lidustrious people, while the north is Werrun by savage hordes, who live li a nomadic life, which would indiciti- that emigration prevailed in that sotfion ; aud, as the distance to the nortlern shores of the American continent's but short, it is clear that the exodus was in that direc tion. The inhabitant of the same de grees of latitude in both continents have the same custpas and manners, and are consequently of the same ex traction, i Egyptian Vorn, Among the many luvelties embraced' in me wiue range oil jgricuiiurai pro ducts of the State, of which bids fair to assume prominenoi is the "Egyptian com," which has alreidy been raised in considerable quantiti'S in the vicinity cf gutter, and is now being introduced extensively about Vdlejo. Its capa bilities are not yet filly understood, tut as far as its growers have got acquainted with it, it is found ut least to be an et cellent food for poultry and all kinds of stock even preferable for these uses to either wheat or barley. It yklds as much as seventy buthels to the aore, and, it is believed, can be relied upon for two crops per annum. The manner of planting it is similar to that employ ed with broom-corn, which the stock somewhat resembles, while tlie head in shape is more like that of the sorghum or Asiatio sugar-cane. InsUad of grow ing straight up, as that does, the Egyp tian corn always crooks at the head and turns di n when maturing. The grains in shape and size h;ar some re semblance to broom-cor seed, but on crushing a grain it is fonnd to be more of the nature of India corn than any thing else. The seedf from which this corn is grown wer taken Irom the wrappings of Egypt' an mummi ; and that thev grew aftor being thus laid away for two thfusand years shews that this variety of fereal possesses Wonder- lui power oi reprouucnon. ii is vena suggested that it might be fouifc to ad vantageously replace barley fotke use of maltsters and brewers. Diubtless tho experiment will soon be kade. Han jtanatao (jhromclt, A western paper speaks of a 1 Moiety for the "elevation" of horse tliii'ys. Early Day Journalists. The journalists in the reign of Louis XV, were queer souls, who lived in garrets, and dined chiefly off fried pota toes, served in a paper by the stove woman round the corner. Almost every big street had its journalist, and an own particular print, which indefatigable being published on candle paper once a week. The man was known down the thoroughfare. He chronicled the mar riages, births, or connubial woes of his neighbors ; he was welcome to a dinner now and then, and it was always re membered that ho ate much. It wae no great matter to him, if he were paid for the copies of his journal, which he per sonally hawked about, in cash or kind, and a pound of sausages for three copies, two rusk-dips for a single num ber, or a pair of breeches for a half year's subscription, were remunerations he could not afford to despise. People confided to hira their grievances, and besought him to libel their neighbors, which he did obligingly enough, if he had no special reason for refusing; and, as a natural consequence, he had always a few grudges stalking after him, though these desisted in time, for tho journal ist had a soothing tongue. Some morn ing the whole street would be thrown into a state of commotion, and the in habitants would troop outof their doors to see their domestic chronicler marched away solemnly between two tipstaffs, and in a somewhat hang-dog mood, to tho Bastile. Perhaps it was debt ; perhaps a too bold shot at some one in place clerk, beadle, recruiting sergeant, or what not. Then there would be much cackling in the street and cries of compassion, and the rancor for past libel, it any nurvived, would inealt away ; and the apple-womau, the stove-women, the tailor s wife, and the cobbler's neice would take turns at go ing to the prison aud passing tho poor journalist a few delicacies through the iron bars. But he was not au impor tant bird enough to be caged for any length of time, and it was never very long beforo the sun Bhone again upon him, as he was released from durance and cautioned not to come thero again. Then he would find a bouquet on his garret sill when he returned home; and the neighbors would treat him to roast veal, and broach a cheap bottle of vin d'Argenteuil in his honor. Sadness Had reigned while he was away, mirth and joy had attended the resumption of his duties as a censor of State polity and a purchaser of fried potatoes. Tiie journalist was u6ver rich, for money melted in his fingers, and he seldom married, because marriage was incom patible with the pursuit of literature and gallantry, which should go hand in hand. The customary end of tho jour nalist was the hospital and a deal coffin. The Pettifogger. The Hon. E. G. Ryan gave the fol lowing vivid portraiture of a pettifog ger, in an address delivered to the law class of the University of Wisconsin : Behold tli pettifogger, the black leg of the law. He is, os tho name im ports, a stirrer-up of trifling grievances and quarrels. He sometimes emerges from professional obscurity, and is charged with business which is disrepu table only through his own tortuous do vices, for the vermin caunot forego his instincts even among his betters. He is generally found, however, and he al ways begins in the lowest professional grade. Indeed, he is the troglodyte of the law. He has great cunning. He mistakes it for intelligence. lie is a fellow of infinite pretense. He pushes himself everywhere, and is self-important wherever he goes. You will often fiud him in tho legislative bodies, iu po litical assemblies, iu boards of supervis ors, in common councils. He is some times there for specific villainy ; some times on general principles of corrup tion, waiting on Providence for any fraudulent job. He is always there for evil. The temper of his mind, the hab its of his life; make him essentially mis chievous. In all places he is always dishonest. When he cannot cheat for gain, ho cheats for love. He haunts low places and herds with the ignorant. It is his kindly office to set them by the ears, and to feed his vanity and his pockets from tke quarrels he incites or foments. He is in everybody's way, and pries intoeverybody's'business. He meddles in all things, and is indefatig able in mischief. He is just lawyer enough to be mischievous. Ho is a liv ing example of Pope's truth, that a lit tle learning is a dangerous thing. Among his ignorant companions he is infallible. Sometimes he is reserved and sly, with knowing look which gains credit for wisdom and character, for thinking all he does not utter. Gener ally he is loquacious, demonstrative of his small eloquence. Then his tongue is too big for his mouth, and his mouth is too loose for truth. A Dog Story. It is related of Sir Edwin Landseer that when once visiting Scotland he stopped at a little village which was plentifully supplied with dogs. Land seer, as was his custom, amused him self by making rapid sketches of such ts pleased his fancy. The next day, as ie resumed his journey, he was dis ttysBed to see dogs ruspended iu all di rections from the trees, or drowning in tharivers with stones round their necks. HeWopped a weeping urchin who was hurling off with a pet pup in his arms, and learned, to his dismay, that he was supplsed to be an excise officer who was toeing notes of all the dogs he saw in ordir to prosecute the owners for un paid ttes, so the people had hastened to aispose or their pets to escape taxa tion. BostonGlctted with Labor. Mr. W. H. Faj, Superintendent of the Bos ton Young Men's Christian Association and Free Employment Bureau, sends the following note to the Associated Press: "I wish to check a wasteful expense of thne and money by the poor and laboring classes, by having the word go forth that Boston does not af ford remunerative employment for one out of fifty of its idle thousands. It is worse than useless for others to come here for work." Thou jhts for Saturday Night. Noble discontent is the path to heav ii. Where there is'much light the shadow is deep. That is true plenty, not to have, but not to want riches. Almost the best rule of life is to be worthy of one's self. If the staff be crooked, the shadow cannot be straight. A book is a letter to the unknown friends one has in the world. Defect in manners is usually tho de ficiency of fine perceptions. Partial culture mns to the ornate; ex treme culture to simplicity. Solitude shows us what we should be; society shows what we are. Do not speak of your happiness to a man less fortunate than yourself. Cities force growth and make men talkative and entertaining, but they make them artificial. If we judge from history, of what is the book of glory composed 1 Are not its leaves dead men's skin, its letters stamped in human blood, its golden clasps the pillage of nations ? It is illu minated with tears and broken hearts. In sculpture and architecture forms are rendered visible by exterior light. In painting, on the contrary, matter, ob scure in itself, has within its natural element, its ideal light; it draws from itself both clearness and obscurity. Now unity, tho combination of light and dork, is color. The instincts of the ant are very un important, considered as the ant's ; but the moment a ray of relation is seen to extend from it to man, and the little drudge is seen to be a monitor, a little body with a mighty heart, then all its habits, even that said to be recently ob served, that it never bleeps, becomes sublime. Two persons who hove chosen each other out of all tho species, with the de sign to be each other's mutual comfort and entertainment, have, in that action, bound themselves to be good humored, affable, discreet, forgiving, patient and joyful, with respect to each other's frail ties and perfections, to the end of their lives. A Disagreeable Position. In a divorce case in Nashville the Judge said : "The position of a step mother was not to be envied. She went into a family to take the trying part of acting as the mother of the children of another, whose placo it was impossible to supply. The children considered her an intruder, and enter tained a hate for her which was alto gether unnatural. In the present case, a high-minded young woman had at tempted to fill that difficult position, and was tormented almost to death. The husband had grown cold to her, they had both, perhaps, been somewhat mis taken in their affections, and it was not difficult to seo that when a husband aud wife got as cold towards eaeh other as two frogs, they could no longer live happily together. The husband had put out an advertisement saying to the world that she had left him without cause and that she was not to be trust ed. This was itself sullicieut to prevent reconciliation with a high-toned woman. The man who could advertise his own wife as he would a stray horse, could neither have respect nor love for her. It was in the very nature of woman to love, and that love should always be cherished by the husband. No man had a right to treat the affection of a wife with coldness. It was to the indif ference ; to her finer sensibilities that might be traceable numberless separa tions, which might have easily been avoided. In the present case the hus band had Bent mediators, and she had said that if he desired to bring about a reconciliation, it was his duty to Bee her, and not to act through other parties. A Thankful Professor. Professor Sedgwick was geologizing in a quarry near high-road m .England, dressed iu a rough suit for the purpose, and striking vigorous blows with his hammer upon the rock, when a travel ing carriage coming up stopped at the place, and a gentleman within, beckoned to the professor to come up to the door, as ho wanted to know the way to the residence of a nobleman in that locality. Professor Sedgwick having answered this and various other questions put to him very readily, the gentleman, pleas ed with what he deemed the intelligence and civility of the quarryman, offered him a shilling, which was received with thanks. The carriage drove on, taking its occupant to the nobleman's house, where he was an invited guest. Soon after Professor Sedgwick followed him, fer he was staying there at that time himself. At dinner they happened to be seated near each other, and soon fell into conversation. After a while the gentleman, looking earnestly at Profes sor Sedgwick, observed, " I think I must have had the pleas ure of seeing you before, and that not very long ago ?" " un yes r was tne reply; you saw me this morning, and gave me a shilling for answering a whole string of ques tions, and I was much obliged to you for it." Children's Furs. Seal furs will be preferred for child ren this winter. The set consists of a sacque, muff, and boa; the sacques cost from 850 to $75, muffs from $8 to $12, and boas are about the price of muff's. A turban to be worn with these sets costs from $7 to $10. There are also warm, and durable sets of the curly gray krimmer and of gray Persiani at much lower prices. White cony sacques, muffs, and turbans are pretty for tiny little girls, and are very reasonable in price. The best and most durable cony fur sacques cost from $7 to $10, muffs are $1.50 only, and the turban the same price. Reduction of Wages. The builders association of New York have reduced the wages of their employees. Masons and bricklayers are to be paid at the rate of $3.50 instead of $4 for the day's work of eight hours, and laborers are to have $2 instead of $2.60 per day. There is but a small amount of building going on at present, Items of Interest. Des Moines has restored corporal punishment in its schools. California is successful in raising tobacco, as in everything else. President Grant is in favor of adding $44,000,000 legal-tender reserve to the permanent circulation. Many Southern and Western towns are crying out for sparrows to keep down the caterpillar crop. It is unkind to ridicule t hose items in the papers about centenarians. It is no easv thing to become a centenarian several have failed. Five hundred miuers at Leith, who struck againBt the employment of ono man, have gained their end by the sacri fice of 2,500 in wages. Tho Governor of Turkestan is a miserable tyrant, and makes people sell their children, to pay tho heavy and unnecessary fines he imposes, A Vermont man went over to an island to live as Robinson Crusoe did, but his wife followed with a club, and his soli tary life, lasted only three hours. A letter from St. John, N. F., says that merchants, fishermen, and all traders are jubilant over the splendid success of the fisheries this season. A Western editor has placed over his marriage heading a cut representing a largo trap sprung, with the motto, "The trap down; another ninny caught 1" A new style of collar, said to be in tended for gentlemen, is the nearest ap proach to the kind worn by "end men" in minstrel companies we have seen. The eight new sloops of war author ized at the last session of the U. S Congress, will probably be ready before the close of next year, and sent abroad. An emigrant on his way to Kansas with his wife and seven barefooted children was lately swindled out of S230 by a confidence operator at Indianapo lis. The farmers in some parts of the country are hoarding greenbacks to such an extent in their houses that it is thought the enterprise of bank burglars will be turned in that direction. A Vermont woman who recently fol lowed the remains of her rather irregu lar husband to the grave, afterwards re marked that she had one consolation sho knew now where he slept nights. In Keene, N. H., a toadstool was lately observed to have grown up be neath a concrete walk, breaking and pushing awny a crust that bore a heavi ly loaded team without perceptibly yielding. The Rangoon (India) Gazette fur nishes the following item of news: " Four troopers have been scnteuced at Cabul to be blown from guns for the murder of Mallik Abdul Kadir, a Lugh man chief." Workmen have been discharged from the iron-works in Baugor, Me., and other places, wages have been reduced at Alexandria, Va., and Louisville, Ky., and mills in many of the States are to work on half time. The vote by which a resolution au thorizing ft loan of 2,500,000 to the In dustrial Exhibition Company was re cently adopted by the Board of Alder men of New York, has been reconsider ed and the resolution tabled. Probably the oldest timber in tho world winch has been subjected to tho use of man is found in tho ancient tem ples of Egypt. It is found in connec tion with stone work which is known to bo at least four thousand years old. A correspondent of the Scientific American says a certain cure for nose bleeding is to extend the arm perpen dicularly against a wall or post, or any convenient object for a support. The arm on the side from which the blood proceeds is the one to elevate. An English veterinarian adduces facts to show that rabies or canine mad ness is very rare in extreme tempera tures, while it is of frequent occuvrenee in the temperate zone. The disease is less frequent in Spain and Southern Italy than in other European countries. First reveller (on being turned out of the "Caledonian Club): "Come and take a glass at my rooms." Second rev eller : " Na, nn, ah've had mair than eneueh!" First reveller: "Hoots! Tak' anither, mnn ! D'ye no see ye're lettin' yer judgment get the better o ye?" " What is it, Katy ?" said tho teaoh er. "I want to know how to spell tun kan," said the little girl. " Explain," said tho teacher. "Why, I want to write, I love my teacher more than tunkan (tongue can) tell," said the child. That child understood phonog raphy. "Oh, what is the panio?"the little boy said, as his mamma was tucking him snugly in bed. "The panic, my love," was the mother's reply, while a tear all unnoted distilled from her eye, and she Btifled a sob, at the risk of her stays, "Is a beast that has cost ma a new polonaise!" An exchange pertinently asks : How can any person with common sense (mother or servant girl) push the baby carriage towards the rays of the sun along the whole street ? It seems iu oredible; yet we see it every sunny day. When the baby will be twenty years old, it will have weak eyes and wonder why." A correspondent of the London News writes: I was struck by the genuine politeness of the audience at the Mos cow opera. The Czar entered in the middlo ot the first act. At his entering there was no demonstration. But after the act was over the whole audience rose and made a simultaneous bow, which the Emperor returned quite formally. A confidence operator literally cap tured the town of Gilman, 111., the other day. In one day he succeeded in buying up all the live stock in the town, and making large contracts ahead, and on the strength of these operations borrowed nearly all the money in the town. Before night he borrowed a horse and buggy and left. A short time after 'his departure there 'was a lively f armers'movement in Gilman, which re sulted in the capture ol the operator. 4