Hates of Advertii. One Square (1 lneh,)ne inwertion - f: OneNquare " ono month - - :i i One Square " three month - K oo One Square " one year - - lo 00 Two Squares, one year - 1" o Quarter Col. ...... :io (to jalf ii ii . . - 50 CO One " ...... loo xo T,egal notice at established rate. j Marriage nnd death notices, gratis. All WIN for vearly ailvertiHeinent" col lected quarterly. Temporary m'a ci tK -ments tnut lie'viid for in ii'lveti'-e. Job work, Cii'h on 1i livei v. A A i ' ! Ml.iii i; i:uv vi;im;kia y, by W W. 1)1 NX. tfTICE IN ROBINSON & BONNER'S BUILDING ELM STREET, TIONESTA, PA. TICUMH, .on A YKAK. No Snl)- ripli..iiM received for h shorter ' tIchI thiol three months. 'irrewpon deuce solleilnd from hII parts ' country. Notinliee will betaken of anonymous communications. VOL. X. NO. 41. TIONESTA, PA., JAN. 10, 1878. $2 PER ANNUM. 3 JJAV (V I The Leap or HoiiNlinn Beg. IIV HENRY W. LOXOFKMlW. Mounted on Kyrat strong and fleet, Tils chestnut steed with four whit feot, llouahan Eeg, called Kurroglou, Hon of the roal and bandit chief, Boohing refuge and relief, Up the mountain pathway flew. Such waa Kyrat's matchless speed Never yet could any steed Itoaoh the daat-cloud In his course ; More than maiden, more than wife, More than gold and next to life, liouaban the Robber loved his horn. In the land that lies beyond trizoom and Trebizond (lardou-girt hia fortress atood j Plundered khan, or caravan Journeying north from Koordistaii lave him wealth and wine and food. Foven hundred and fourscore Men at-arms hia livery wore, lid hia bidding night and day ; Now through regloua all unknown He waa wandering, lout, alone, Booking without guide hia way. Suddenly the pathway euda, Show the preciploe doacenda, Loud the torront roars unseen ; Thirty feet from aide to aide Yawna the chasm ; on air mual ride He who croscos this ravine. Following close iu hia purauit, At the precipice's foot Reylian the Arab of Oifah Halted with hia hundred men, Shouting upwarj from the g'en, "Uil AUuh! Allah-la!" Clently Koushan lieg caressed Kyrat's forehead, neck, and breast : Kissed him upon both Lia fyos j Sang to him iu hia wild way Aa upon the topmost spray Sings a bird boforo it Hies. "Ooj Kyrat, O my steed, ltouud and alouder aa a reed, Carry me this danger through ! Batin housings shall be thine, Shoes of gold, O Kyrat mine 1 O tbou soul of Kurroglou 1 Soft thy akin as silken skein, Soft as woman's hair thy mane, Tender are thine eyes and true ; AH thy hoofs like ivory shine,' r.ilHiodbiigh'. O life of mine, Leap, and rescue Kurroglou !" Kyrat, then, the btrong and fleet, Drew together bia four white feet, Paused a moment on the verge, Measured with bis eye the apace, And iutotho air's embrace Leaped as leaps the ocean's surge. A a the surge o'er silt and Band Bears a swimmer safe to load, Kyrat safe hia rider bore ; Itattling down the doep abyss, Fragments of the precipice Itollod like pebbles ona shore. Itoushan's tassel led cap of red Trembled not upon bis head ; Careless sat We and upright ; Neither hand nor bridle shook, Nor his bead he turned to look, As he galloped out of sight. Flash of harness in the air, Seen a moment like the glare Of a sword drawn from its sheath '. Thus the phantom horseman passed ; And the shadow that he cast Leaped the cataract underneath. Iteyhau the Arab held bis breath, While tide vision of life and death Passed above him. " Allah-hu !" Cried he ; ''in all K cordis tan Breathes there norao brave a man As this robter Kurroglou !" Atlantic Monthly. THE FALL. " Are those the rnins ?" asked Maude J Chalmers, pointing with her riding whip. I can see the glimpse of gray walls now and then through the trees." " Yes," auswered Paul Trevor ; " and we shall have to dismount here and walk the rest of the distance, for the avenue Ip the house is now so overgrown with inderbrush as to be almost impassable." They alighted, and arm-in-arm forced their way with some difficulty toward the house. Jt was a gloomy-looking building of stone, erected upon a ledge of rocks, which rose about twenty feet above the sea. Long deserted, it had fallen into gradual decay ; the walls were greeu with moss ; long, dark weeds filled the paths, and the crumbling fountains and broken statues were covered with mould. Far from all human habitations, sur rouudod by a dense wood upon the one side, and upon the other by the sea, it stood in solitary desolation. Maud shuddered at the gloomy aspect before her as she and Paul halted before the crumbling Bteps. "Oh, what a dismal place! Don't enter, Paul. I am not superstitious, but somehow a thrill of fear and dread creeps over me." " Oh, you are only depressed with the melancholy aspect of decay, and the solitary loneliness of the place. Shake off your nervousness and we will explore the interior. Nothing worse to be found than owls and bats. I'll warrant." And the better to reassure her Paul put his arm around her waist and im printed a kiss upon her lips. Gathering up her ridiDg habit Maud tcok the proffered arm of her lover, and they descended the broken steps. The great hall door swung open with a diurnal creak, and their footsteps echoed through the dismantled hall. They wandered through dusty corridors and deserted rooms. Here Biid there patches of de cayed drapery or a forgotten picture, ntaiiidl nnrt lilnckoned. ClUllg lo lue mouldy wnll, aud now nud then a broken J bust or statue showed ghastly in the uncertain light. Owls ami bats, dis- tnrbed in their nooks aud corners, flew abont uneasily ; rats aud mice, surprised in their foraging expeditions, scampered hastily to their holes ; and huge spiders, ! suddenly deprived of their cobweb- homes, crawled in all directions. ; Maud looked with nervous lear inio i the dim, dusty corners, and started and , shivered at every sudden noise. One flicrht more." said Paul, as they paused at the foot of the last staircase, " ami we shall nave a spieuaui view oi the sea to repay us for the ghostly sights and sounds w have had to endure. Why, darling, how pale yon look 1 If 1 '11 - x- 1 1 . u I, you really wish, we will go no No, Paul, I won't give w luniiei i way to my I foolishness : but the house seems to me like an immense tomb, and the moan of the sea like wailing lament. ' My poor, little impressible tlarling. I did not think you were so easily af fected. But come up to the room above, and you will get a view from the window that will brighten your eyes and bring the color back to yonr cheek. " They ascended the stairs, passed through a narrow passage, and entered a room? It contained but one window, which reached the floor, opening to a balcony which overhung the rocks below. Tho window was closed, and begrimed with long-accumulated dust, aud fes tooned with the webs of busy spiders. Determined to have an unobstructed view, Paul tugged at the closed sash. For a time it resisted, but at last it opened, with a loud crash. A strong wind was blowing from the sea. It swept in at the qpen window with a great gust, and the door of the room slammed to with a resonant clang. Maud gave a little scream of affright. " Oh, Paul, what if the door would not 'open agaiu !" "Why, how nervous you are, Maud!" laughed Paul. ' You'll see how quickly it will open." And, advancing to tho door, he clasped the knob, and gave it a vigorous tug. The lock was old and rusty, and the knob came off iu his hand, leaving the door, which was heavy and well pre served, still firm in its casing. ""Never mind, my dear," said he, as he saw Maud's face blanch. "If the door won't open we can find another egress. See, this balcony runs all the length of the house. We can walk uion t, and enter some open door or wiudow. Stay here for a moment." " Oh, Paul, don't leave me 1" He turned, and taking her iu hia arms, kissed her pale cheek. Why, Maud, darling, why this ex cessive fear V" I cannot tell, Paul ; but an unac countable oppression stole ver me at the sight of this gloomy old building, and every moment I have spent in it has increased ray agitation. It is a prescience of coming danger to one r both of us. " " Tshaw, dearest ; you are morbidly affected by this dismal place. I did wrong to bring you here. We will hurry away from its gloomy influences." He stepped out upon the balcony as he spoke, and with a cheery word turned to reconnoitre, when immediately there was a loud crash the balcony, rotten with age, had given way beneath his feet, and he was hurled to the rocks Welow. It was a strange sensation, the gradual awakening to consciousness, and Paul Trevor opened his eyes languidly, and dreamilv wondered at his eonditiou. He j was ryiiig in an humble cottage ; and , through the half-open door he could ' hor a murmur of vgices. At first the effort to remember bewildered him; but 1 gradually his mind became clear, aud 1 uh, yes! he recollected his fall, the i rocks, the sea. and with a feeling of acute paiu it flashed across a prisoner iu him that Maud was left that fatal house. He strove to rise, but the sharp pain caused by the sudden movement pressed a groan' of agonv from his lips. He sank back upon his pillow. The meutal shock, together with the physical, so prostrated him that he was powerless ; but his brain seemed on live. Terrible visions of Maud alone and helpless in that solitary chamber floated vividly before his meutal sight. He pictured to himself her terror as she beheld his mad plunge into the sea, her agony when the terrors of her situa tion flashed acrosB her, her frantic at tempts to open the door, her wild, ap nealinc craze out at the moaning sea, her ! despair as the daylight crept slowly but surely out of the shadowy room, me darkness gathering like a presence ; the deathly stillness unbroken save oy the dash of the sea or the ghostly sounds of the house. And a more terrible thought still crept in upon hia harrowed mind, chilling his very heart's blood. He rose from the bed and gazed frantic ally around. How long had he been lying senseless and inanimate here how long? and Maud, his beautiful be trothed, was starving lying in that awful house ! The thought brought back strength to his brnisod limbs his blood coursed like five through his veins. He would ifo to her ! Dead or alive he would bear I ' .1 . 1 1 A.? lbertrom that latui nouse oi iiuunuug - I shadows and fearful sounds. He rushed from the house and fled to the woods ; h sunlight crept through the trees and ell with broad bars of Jgolden light on he jrreenswsrd ; the rabbits nprang across his track, alarmed at his hasty tread; the birds twittered merrily in the leafy brauches. All was life and joy, and seemed to jeer sud n ook his woe. Heedless of the cramping paiu iu his limbs and upheld by the feverish strength born of intense excitement, he strode rapidly out; but when the dilapi- ' dated rnins loomed still and sonibre in Me gaze lie checked ur a moment ins mad speed. A cold chill crept tlirougn his veins and his trembling limbs re mseti to oney ins win. jsui juauu i Am His darling Maud ! " I'm coming ; Maud, I'm coming 1" he Bhouted, rushing frantically up the crumuung steps, The wiud so warm without, met him, chill and cold, as he pushed open the great door, and the yellow sunlight paled as it struggled in the semi-darkness. The dash of the sea as it broke against the cold gray rocks smote his ear with a mournful sound; his own footfall echoed like a knell. An incubus of dread and fear seemed to settle upon his heart; he felt stifled, aud unable to advance. But, ah ! anything rather than this terrible suspense, lie rushed hurriedly up the stairs to the door of the fatal room. It was still closed aud all was deathly silent within ; with a desperate effort he pushed it Jopeu, and gave a horrified, fearful gaze within. Yes ; there there, upon the floor, with staring eyes and pinched, pallid features, lay his beloved a corpse ! For a moment he gazed horrified ; then, with a groan sank un conscious to the floor. . "Paul Paul!" murmured a sweet voice, and a lingering kiss was imprinted upon his lips. " Do you know me at last, Paul?" Drowsily opening his eyes, he saw the dear face of Maud above his own, fair and fresh as he had last seen it before that fearful fall upon the rocks. " Where am I ? What does it mean ? Are yon indeed, my own sweet Maud, or only her glorified spirit?" Maud laughed a happy little laugh, although tears shone like pearls iu her bine eyes." " It is only the horrid phantom of de Ierium that still vexes you, Paul. I am no spirit, but a living, breathing reality." Aud then she told him how Borne fishermen, sailing by in their little boat, had heard her terrified Bcream when he was precipitated to the rocks ; how they had come to their aid and carried them both to a little cottage near by ; how he, braised and bleeding, yet not dead, hud passpd from unconsciousness to the maddening tortures of brain fever Though subjected to a long aud painful illness, Taul could not fail to recover his wonted health under Maud's minis trations. Yet he was permanently lame. However, if tho evidWit devotion of a bride can confer happiness on a bride groom, Paul, leaning upon a staff while returning with Maud from the hymenial altar, was the happiest of Benedicts. The Unman Face a Mask. So inscrutable may the human face become, that frequently it" is but a mask which conceals the real character. The men and women most famous for heartless cruelty huve often been celebrated for their handsome faces ; wrifeis otj fiction have not beeu ufi miudfnl of the fact, aud Faust is repre sented as being a handsome man ; while the German fishermen sing of the sirens who drag men's souls down to perdi tion with their fatal dower of beauty. Some faces are unreadable, and tell nothing of the owner's character. The merriest men now and then have solemn faces, and the most serious frequently have cheerful ones. Frequently the most heartless coquette has all the shy graces of a girl of sixteen, while the heart of some woman who looks you through with cold, steady eyes, may be filled with love and tenderness that yon are too blind to discover. So we all go on, wearing guises of different device, never quite concealing, never reveuliug, the life withiu. A UirlN Horrible Death. The Pittsburg (Penu.) Commccial says : An accident occurred on Saturday at'the Valley Paper Mill, at Verona, on the Allegheny Valley railroad. A young woman named Mary Ann Collins, who had been employed iu the mill thre or four years, had been assigned to a new position iu the second story, in which there iB a large trap-door im mediately over a vat on the ground floor. Miss Collins had been called from another part of the room to assist in dumping a box of rags. She started to answer the call, and walked into the hatchway, which was obscured by steam arising from the vat of boiling water and vitro). She was precipitated directly into the vat, aud must have died very speedily. Iu three minutes alter she fell her body was taken out scalded w hite, She was sixteen years of age. Stalking a Tiger. Au exceedingly clever stalk of a tiger was made some time back by a native hunter of India. The shikari saw the beast asleep under the shade of a large tree on the side of a tank, and found no prospect of getting a shot from the land side. So he had recourse to the follow ing expedient : He waded from the op posite bank, gun iu hand above the water, which was breast high, with a long cord fastened to his waist, the other end of which remained iu the hands of a confederate on the bank confronting the tiger. When he had got uoiselebsly within twenty paces ol the sleeping beast, he delivered his shot, aud wusim mediately jerked violently back under water bv his partner. It turned out that there was no need of this excessive caution, for one bullet had done the business. VALLEY FORGE. low llir Amrrlena Arinv Kiidnred ike Win irr or 1 777-8 A l ump or llnl nt Vallrv Vnritr HiHIerlnB I'nim l.ni-k nf Food unit ClolllillK. Hardly any name. is more familiar to the student, young or old, of American history than that of Valley Forge One still reads with pain of the sufferings undergone there by the sturdy Contin ental soldiers, and with pride of the Spartan firmness with which those dreary vicissitudes were encountered. Of all the anniversaries which have so numerously distinguished these centen nial yoursnone is more worthy of at least a quiet commemoration than that of the establishment of Washington's forlorn winter quarters in 1777. None of the early years of the young Republic, struggling for life against the greatest odds, were darker than this. The slight est glance at the situation will show that it was indeed deplorable. .The battle of Brandywiue had beeu fought gallautly, and it had beeu lost. Congress had fled from Philadelphia to Lancaster. A series of reverses had opened away to that city for Sir William Howe, aud Washington was too weak to risk a battle which might have saved it, nor, with more than 11 thousand of his men barefoot, could he undertake those rapid and masterly operations which had been so brilliantly executed at Trenton and at Princeton. Meanwhile all efforts of an impotent Congress and of rash generals to clamor and importune him into military imprudence were Yain. Washington, that he might restrict the enemy within the narrowest possible limits, established his winter quarters, on the 19th of December, at Valley Forge, fllinnt twentv miles from Philadelphia. on the south side of the Schuylkill. Here lie would be able to keep a vigilant eye on the city and also protect a large ex tent of country. He had 11,000 troops, but they were in a very wretched con dition. Provisions were scant, clothing worn out,- aud such was the want of shoes, that all the late marches had been tracked iu blood. There was a like want of blankets, so that many of the soldiers were forced to sit up all night by the camp fires. Washington offered a pre mium for the best pattern of shoes made of hides nutanued. Oue-qnarter of the troops were unfit for duty. The com missariat was miserably managed, for at this very time (says Gordon) "hogs heads of shoes, stockings aud clothing were lying at different places on the roada aud iu the woods, perishing for want of teams or of money to pay the teamsters." Washington had deter mined to hut the troops, and he took particular pains to make the dwellings as comfortable as possible. Among other expedients, he offered a reward of 12 to the party in 'aeh which finished its hut iu the most workmaulike and quickest manner. The little town, with its regu lar streets aud avenues, was soon built. Each hut was fourteen feet by sixteen, with walls of logs Oiled in with clay, ami a chimney of clay or wood rising a foot or two above the roof, which vas a single sharp slope, constructed to shed easily the coming snow. To each lint was assigued twelve nou - commissioned officers aud men. Each general officer lu.d a hut to himself, with two windows. The huts of the soldiery fronted on the streets. Troops from the same State were lodge.d in the same street or quar ter. Iu shape, the whole was like a tri angle, with Valley creek forming its base, aud the Schuylkill for its left side. It had abbatis, redoubts, aud pickets at differeut points. Washington's quarters were in the house of a uuaker, Isaac Potts, which is still standing. But with all the sufteriugs of alley Forge, there was some social comfort there. Liafayette wrote home that the general officers were sending for their wives: "and I envy them," he said, naively not their wives, but the hap piness of being where they can see them." Mrs. Washington was with her husband to cheer aud encourage him. There was no dancing, lor the quarters were too narrow ; cards were prohibited because they led to gambliug; but there ! were tea parties and conee parties, con- ; versatiou and music. There were gallant gentlemen, too Morris and Heed, mi.l Charles Carroll, when the Congress dele- gntiou came down and Hami'tou and Laurens. The ensuing May found Washington Still iu his cantmmeuts, with an effective force of about twelve thousand men. It was impossible by auy reinforcements to carry this number beyond twenty thou sand. But rumors came of the evacuation of Philadelphia, since the Delaware would be in danger of being blocked up by a French fleet. Washington busied himself in the formation of a new system for the army, and had asked Congress to send a committee of arrangements, five iu number, to the camp. They remained with him three months, and the recom mendations resolved upon were generally adopted. On the 18th of June, the pre parations for the evacuation of Philadel phia having been completed, the British army took up its line of march through the Jerseys. As soon as he had informa tion of this, Washington broke camp with his whole army, marching in pur suit. And so ended the memorable sea son at Valley Forge. There was still to be a short period of defeat and disap pointment, but brighter days were close at hand. Xto York Trtbune. It cannot be too often repeated that luxuries, not necessities, bring ruin. We are ruined, not by what we really want, but what we think we want ; there fore, never go abreast in search of your wants if they be real ones', they will come home iu search of you ; for he who does not want, will soon want what he cannot buy. TALL ASI SHORT HEX. Rl and l.llilr Mm Hn4 Waiurn-A Jniinn rue Pirn rf-The Avrraar llrlht ol lnn. At one of the public halls in this city, says the New Yik Times, are now on exhibition a couple of the tallest human j being iu the civilized world. At another j public hall, not far from the Inst men- tioned one, am two remarkably little j human beiugs, who are believed to be the smallest couple ever exhibited in any country. Martin Van Buren Bates, who was born in Kentucky, in thirty-two j years of age, weighs nearly 500 pounds, and is eight feet ono inch in height. His wife was born in Nova Scotia, is twenty eight years of age, weighs 413 pounds, and is eight feet two inches in height. When but six years old, she was as tall as her mother, who was five feet high, ner father was only five feet four inches in height. This loving couple may be said to represent "liuked sweetness, lona- drawn out." Gen. Mite is turned thirteen mti.la iu heigh those of any known living baby. Miss Minnie Obom, who stands beside him on the platform, is iu her thirtieth year, and is but twenty-three inches in height. Either of these inuBitesimal members of the human race is supposed by most persons who have seen them to be the smallest human being living. This, however, is not true, if we may believe the Tokio (Japan) Times, which Bays that a dwarf, said to be fifty-one years old and only one foot three inches high, named Sato lnkichi, is about to be ex hibited in that city. This is a depth of diminntiveuess truly wonderful. It would hardly le more surprising to read the announcement oi a giant oue aim u quarter years old and fifty-one feet high. The irregularity of proportion for which Mr. Ynkichi is conspicuous is not less remarkable than his condensed com pactness. His head is seven inches and a half long, while all the rest of his body measures only seven inches. Tne height of men, according to Villerme, varies from four feet nine and a nuarter inches to five feet ten inches, and thus gives an average of five feet three and three-eighth inches. Taking the extremes of individuals known, being seventeen inches for a dwarf spoken of by Burch and Bnffon, and nine feet three inches tor a Fin lander mentioned by Sapply, the medium would be five feet four iuches. But those cases may be rtgarded as quite abnormal. The Esquimaux were long considered the smallest race of meu on the face of the globe. Harn de Paw has asserted that the men do not exceed four feet three inches, and the women four feet two inches. Subsequent investiga tion bv Drs. Bellebou and Gnerault has, however, proved that those figures are too low, that the average of the lowest tribes is five feet two and a half iuches, and that some others attaiu to five feet six and three-quarter inches. The smallest family of known man is the Boschmaus of South Africa, whose medium height is given at lour feeti seven inches. Some ether tribes of that cont inent rival them, but not quite so short. Henry M. Stanley, tho explorer, mentions in one of his letters having come across a race of dwarfs of most minute stature, but the details have not reached us. As for the tallest races, they are the Norwegians iu Europe, the' Kaffirs iu South Africa, some of our North America Iudiaus.the Polynesians, and, finally, the l'atagoniaus, whose average height is given by numerous travelers worthy of credit nt five iet ten inches. Taking these last as the high est and the Boschnians as the lowest, we obtain an average of five feet two aud a half inches. But the savants who have studied this subject, considering the small proportion of very short races, have decided on fixing the medium height of the human race at five feet four and three-quarter inches. The average of the four jiernous now on ex hibition iu this city is prolmbly five le''t- Words of Wisdom. There is a department which suits the i figure aud talents of each person. It is j always lost when we quit it to assume j that of another. , He who ha not known adversity is . iint i1Hif Hcminintd with others or him- t Beif (joustaut snecess shows us but ' on 0t the world. We all dread a bodily paralysis and make use of every eoutrivauoe to avoid it, but none of us are troubled about a paralysis of the foul. There is a gift that is almost a blow, aud there is a kind word that is muni ficence ; so much is there in the way of doing things. A heart-memory is better that a mere i head-memory. It is better to carry ' awav a little of the life of God iu our souls than to be able to repeat every word of every sermon we have heard He that waits for repentance waits for that which cannot be had as long as it is waited for. It is absurd for a man to wait for that which he himself has to do. Preserve your conscience always soft aud sensitive. If but one Bin force itself into that tender part of the soul and dwell there, the road is paved for a thousand iniquities. Do not be discouraged under auy cirrumstauces. Go steadily forward ; rather consult your owu conscience than the opinions of men, though the last are not to be disregarded. Be industrious, be frugal, be honest ; deal in perfect kindness with all whoooree in your way. . . A 1 1 11' exercising a neighborly auu oongiug spirit in jour owu interoouic. Items of Interest. Puucakes should neither be, bloud nor brunette, but medium. Strictly religious people should be carefnlto select only upright pianos for their houses. A Hartford, Conn., newspaper pro poses a bachelor show, the prizes to ! awarded by ladies, The losses of the Scutch farmers this year through Hoods and bad weather are "estimated at $ W, 000, 000. This is the season when a man wh' ! wants to remember the poor can sit dowu aud think of himself the whole tiny long. Thirty Texas papers have died withiu the last twelve months, and sixty new ones sprang into existence during the same time. It is a wonder of the day -and yet a fact o'er true, That heavy banks are washed away by too much " falling due." Hume TimkA beinc? asked bv tieorge tell a king from a knave. " That's what I call a monkey wrotch," The witty showman said. When the big gorilla grabbed bis hair And twisted back bia head. The Philadelphia baby show broke up . in a haud-to-hand fight by the mothers over the prizes. The police cleared the hall of exhibits and spectators. Among the attractions at the Paris exhibition will be performances .by the Imperial Orchestra from Vienna, in the month of July. The Viennese artists will give several concerts during their fo rtnight's stay in Paris. A gentleman who is a sculptor in a . teeble way, waa calling on a lady the other evening. "How do you manage to get the right facial expression?" she asked, referring to his statuettes. " Very simple," he said. "I read a poem ex pressing the passion I desire to portray; then, as my face expresses rage or love, ( I plunge head foremost into a mass of putty 1 have at hand. This retains the impression, and there you are." The old gentleman went into the par lor the other night, at the witching hour of 11:45, aud found the room unlighted aud his daughter and a dear friend oc cupying a tete-a-tete in the corner by a window. "Evangeline," the old man said sternly, "this is scandalous." "Yes, papa," she auswered sweetly, "it is candleless because times are so hard and lights costs so much that Ferdinaud and I said we should try and get along with the starlight. " Aud papa turned about in speechless amazement, and tried to walk out of the room through a panel in the wall. Power of the Hand. It may be going too far to say that man may judge the character of his fellow man by the manner in which he " shakes hands." But there is certainly a signifi cance iu those buh.y members of the body which "he who runs may read." The creator of Uriah Heep has taught us not to trust the owners of limp, moist handf which close cordially on nothing save their own possessions. Says a coinmen tator on this subject: "It is the touch of a hand at a greeting which warms or chills my heart, and makes ine know to a certainty how much or how little I shall like the person before me. If the lingers close about my own with a short, quick, convulsive grasp, I know that ho will snap, snarl, and finally quarrel, and tbt the leant that 1 have, to do with te owner of thooe wily digits, the better oft I shall be. If a nervous, cold hand glides into my own, and seems disposed tilie there, without life, I know that my happiness would be nothing in that awful palm. But if the hand grasps yours and holds it firmly, in strong, warm fingers, you are sale in cultivating the friendship of the owner. These human hands ! From the begiuning of lite they play an impirtaut part." All t he greatness of earth has laid in the hollow of the hand. The Itooks, the miiHie, tho pictures, the wonders of architecture, the intricacies of mechan ism, the mysteries of science and the government of the countries, with all their godlike beauties of color, sound, symmetry, usefulness, progression aud wisdom, have lain within a human hand. The highest aspirations and realizations of the brain are brought to light through the hand, aud the tenderest love and charity of the heart make the hand their dispeusator. They can be tender minis ters of comfort and peace, yet as cruel aud full of venom as the bite of uu axp. Aud with all their power, with all their charities, their tender touches, their miscliief-they are folded at hist, aud those who speak of us tell of the closing of the eye aud the folding of hands as a part of our goiug away. North American. Briliaiu'x Amelia. Ttiifliniu Young's favorite wife. , Amelia, has been dethroned since the I prophet's deuth, and report says that she has gone back to reoria, ill., wuu ine intention of remaining. It appears that Amelia waa never a Mormon at all ; that her connection with Brighaui was based upon a contract which included a hand somely furnished home, carriages and horses, aud full liberty to provide such fnrtu an 'lic might desire. j This wife absolutely ruled Brighaui, and i waa the only wife whose unauthorized orders on storekeepers were luuy honored. She was very fond of expen sive attire, was entirely independent us to the wishes or desires of the eaintt and led a gay, worldly Vife. It is a' stated that when Bhe met Brighai was already affianced to a your"-' elmut of Peoria, but suirendeie i ! tho rich Moling-. .;' X '