Rates of Advertising One Square (I Inch, ;one Insertion -One Square- " (me month - 3 M OneSquare " three months - 6 CO One Square " ono year - , 10 00 Two .Squares, one year - - - 15 On Quarter Col. 30 00 Half " " - . - 60 00 On " " - . - 100 00 Legal notices at established rates. j Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. en A 18 PL'liMSHEll KVKRY WKDNESOAY, BY , W 11. I J UNX. ojtkie in eobinson & burner's buildikq ELM BTREET, TI0NE3TA, PA. T1CKMS, $2.00 A YKAlt. . N. Subscriptions received for shorter period than throe monthji. '.i rp,n.liMif. solicited from H parU "," '"'"try. No notice will bo taken of anonymous eoniinunicationH. mxt&t w VOL. X. NO. 44. 110 NEST A, PA., FEH. 0, 1878. $2 PER ANNUM. LoHt Treasures. HY KI.IZAT1KTH AKKtlS. If somu Vind power, when our youth iH ended, And lifu's first fieHlincns lest in languid noon, Should stay awhile the doom by Fate intended, And graiit ns generously one proclous boon Haying, "With thwarting, bitterness and trial, Yonr toilsomo days thus far have been op pressed i Cbooee now some blessing, fearing ro denial, To light, andehnrm, and bohntify the rest"' Wbak should wo ask? the prize of young ambition ? Fame, powor, wealth, mid gifts of priceless COHt? Ah, no our souls would utter the petition : "Uivo us oh, only, give us baek our lost !" No vls'.onod bliss, no pleasure new and splen did, No lofty Joy by longing never crossed, No new delight undreamed of, heaven riescendud, Only our own the tresHures we have lost ! For, wearied out with strife, and glare and clamor, Orown wisor with our years, and clearer eyed, No more beguiled by dreams, nor charmed by glamor, VVo dread the now, and prize the known, the tried. Ah, what a ovowd of Joys would gather round 118, Could we but have our vanished back agaia ! The heart ui.spoiled, 1 the strength and hope which crowned us, The bounteous life, the ignorauoe f pain The innocence, the ready faith in others . The sveet spontaneous earnestness and truth, The trust of friends, the tender eye of mothers, And all the rich inheritance of youth The plans f r noble lives, that earth thereafter Might be uxire pure ; the touch of love's warm lip Ami sav ng hnnd ; the sound of ohildieh ' . laughter, " The peuoeof Lome, tl Joy of comrdiHhip-- We had them all ; and now that they have It ft We oouiit them carefully, and see their worth, A id feel that t me and fortune have bereft lis Of all the bint aud dearest things on earth. Ah, yes! wheu on our heats the years are pressing'; A id nIi our iljrtor-plals are touohed wiih frost, . Wd ask iio more some now untasted blessing liat only sigh, " Oh, give us back our lost ." Moro Than Her Match. LoAsha'tsof moonlight were ing down through what seemed an re shoot- nn almost i upH'iwtrable wo )i au 1 quivering on tuo green mosQt. A faint wind dallied with the foliage. Wild flivvers flecked the ground. Ilore, in this sylvan retreat cut Mis Barron, an I she was very mneh out of humor, for every now and theu she drove the pniut of her parasol into the uu offending mouses. She looked and was downright disgusted with everything and everybody. ' The belle of throe seasons, during which she had escaped heart-whole, alio was now " caught" and all becauso of a three weeks' sojourn at a country villa. Madge had never been off her guard before. Hitherto she had visited fashionable wateriug places; but this year she had come to a quieter place, and had met Lindhurst Carringtoifv She did not yet know, howeVi",'he was in thralldoni. S!ie only knew she was cross and lonesotre; and so she sat punching the little blossoms and pouting. She thought Harrington exceedingly companionable, and that tho other four gonlleinen stop ping at the villa were little better thau wooden meu. As for downright, earnest love, why her intentions for three years had been never to venture her heart at sea, but only to glide about the shore, flirting, safe to disembark any time. Yet she was now thinking of Lindhurst lUrriugtou in a way many would have terinsd love. But she would not admit this to herself. He was a delightful summer friend, that was all, she said. She likftd summer, and flowers, and birds, and hazy atmospheres, und a quiet flirtation; but when these went, the comiug season brought new enjoy ments and fresh flirtations, and Harring ton could go with tliem. Were there not others, pray, who could read Tennyson and sing tenor? But now, just this moment,' it was rather lonesome. If he only would come ! He had gone to town the morning previous, promising to return in the evening. She had walked with him through this wood-path, on his way to the station. He had lingered a moment at the stile beyond, to tell her how beau tiful she looked how the fresh morning air had brightened the color on her cheeks. ' Come this evening as far as here to meet me," he had said, " won't you ? The path will be a horrid labyrinth with out you." "You will surely return?" she had asked. "If you don't, I shall find every tree a hobgoblin when I go back alone." "ltetnrn, indeed I I shall thiuk of nothing else. I shall da nothing all day but pull out my watch to see if it is time for the train." Then he caught her hand in a quick way, thought a moment, bounded over the stile, and hastened down tho path, turning often to look back at the pretty picture she made, listlessly leaning on ! tho stile, with a tinge of re gret m her face. At a turn where she would soon be hid from sight ho had dared to wave her a kiss. Madge was now waiting according to appointment, and she had taken care to oonooct a (host ravishing toilet. But all her little preparations were wasted. Lyndhurst Barrington did not come, Still she wfl:' l. It seemed so unreasonable, so ', to disappoint her. PerhapB he only trying to tease her, had got ut unseen, nud would surprise her directly by his ap pearance. A doleful Bough of wind, coming from the dark rocesses of the wood, a sudden shutting-dowu of night, made Miss Bar ron feel something like fear: and she started nervously to return. As it grew darker her dread became terror; she fancied strange noises were about; her feet scarcely touched the ground; she skimmed on, fluttering at heart like some low-flying bird belated from its nest, What wonder that she vowed that night, as she brushed out her hair, never to forgive Mr. Barrington ? What won der that a harmless little bunch of violets which he had gathered for her the day previous and which she had treasured in a vase on her dressing-case, she now found faded, disagreeable and odorless, and that she tossed them pettishly out into the darkness from her window ? "I detest him and his violets," she cried. "He may stop in town till dooms day, for aught I care." Miss Barron did not sleep well and rose in the morning with a little dull weight on her feelings, " Perhaps," she thought, "he will not come even to day." As she dressed for breakfast he was constantly in her mind. " Perhaps ho did it on purpose," she said. " Perhaps he didn't, but lost tho train. But he had no business to lope the train," she added crossly. " Per haps he was ill ; perhaps some women had asked him to remain. Well, if so, I don't care," she said. "He Bhall sec I am happy enough, and not even piqued, when he comes." Still, as the day wore on, Madge found the ladies of the company provoking and the gentlemen more uninteresting than ever. Mechanically, towards evening, she donned the same toilet as on tho night previous, and took a circuitous route 'through the garden, that none might be cognizant of her movements. Emerging out of sight, she struck straight for the wood-path ; and here we-find her again listening for the roar of the train, notwithstanding all her angry vows of the night before. Beautiful, cross, unreasonable girl ! " I will not go to the stile;" she wan saying to herself, " and that will be n disappointment to him." She was somewhat unsettled, however, for fear she might be in just the same predicament as on the previous evening, and have to return through the gl&nny wood alone. She had seven-eighths of "a mind to go straight back, even yet. Bnt she rcmainded after all. so perverse is woman. At last, with a sudden screech, the engine came steaming along. Miss Barron began to trace figures on the ground with her parasol, and put on u most nnexpectont air, her features sink ing into a repose and unconcern benign enough to befit a saint. She saw Lyudhnrst Barrington de scend from the train aud come striding on joyously till he came in sight of the stile; for, though hidden herself, she could observe all his movements. He came on eagerly, looking to the right and left for her, and almost stum? bled over Miss Barron. " Oh, Madge !" he cried, as he threw himself at her feet, "you did forgive me, and have come to meet me 1" "Forgive you, Mr. Barrington?' Nothing could be more icy cold. "Pray, what has been your fault ?" She looked, as she spoke, straight before her, bnt with an air of surprise which was ex ceedingly well counterfeited. He looked up eagerly into her face us he answered, " Why, i was buttonholed j to death in town yesterday. It seemed j as if a conspiracy had been entered into, and that every fellow I knew had left his summer haunt to go up to town to detain me. I transacted bnt half of my business, and put off Jack Longley with only a nod on my way to the station. I suppose he'll never speak to me again. After all, I was one minute too late. I saw the train sweeping out of the sta tion just as I reached it I was in dirt pair, thinking you would ooine to meet me." " I did walk down last evening, but I can hardly say, sir, that I came to meet yon. I did not expect you. I thought. if business or illness kept you, you might be gone a week, x never thought of you as hobnobbing with your male friends and sauntering to the station. " . " Madge I" and a serious look came into his face. "Let us drop bickering, and begin where we left off yesterday." "Very well," she replied. "I be lieve the point at which you left off was whistling, and I was doing nothing in particular, bo if you will strike off a stave of anything, I will demurely, but admiringly, walk by your side." " Madge !" he exclaimed excitedly. " I did no such thing." Do men gaze at statuary or paintings and whistle? Faith, my last remembrance is of a pret tier picture than an art-room ever held. I saw a beautiful woman, looking regret at my leaving a woman I want for my wife." Here was a poser I Proposed to ! It came like a sweet surprise, nevertheless. But it was contrary to Miss Barron's tactics. Were weeks of delightful flirt ing fc be cut off in a moment in this fashion? How could he have believed her in earnest ? It was ridiculous. She had meant to play tho injured mistress for several days, and make him abject in his efforts to reinstate himself with her. She did not want a climax reached wit)) this man. Her heart had told her that it would leave a regret which she had never known before. To avoid this now, she would begin with raillery. " Really, Mr. Barrington,'' she Buid, "you must be hungry or over-tired, to mako such a statement. A well-spread table, steaming viands, comfort and a wife, must have shot through your brain. I can assure vou a delightful supper now awaits you ' "Miss Barron," he began, frowning, without apparent notice of her words, and rising to his feet, " three weeks ago I did not know you; but in that time all my life now seems to have become crowded. I never slopped to question your actions. It seemed as if there was no need of asking for vows, they would denote a commencement of love. I wanted it to be as if we had loved for ever." " Very well," Bhe said, " let it Vie so; no vows, no commencement. You see I agree with you perfectly." " No, I will not have it bo, he cried, trying to take her baud. " As you please," she laughed, shrug ging her shoulders. "I can pick my way through this bog without help." "I hope I am not wanting in gentle behavior, but before I or you stir a step further," he paid, stepping in front of her and barring the way, "I want a simple answer to a simple question plain 'yes' or 'no.' Do you love me, Madge?" " If I cannot say ' yes,' perhaps I can not say no. ' I "think friendship does not justify an abrupt no.' I " "I don't want equivocation," he broke in. " If you loved, eyes, lips, voice, acts, all would blend into 'yes.' It must be ' yes ' or no, ' I say. " Madge had never met any man so mas terful. But she answered, nevertheless. "Then, 'no,' since yon force me to be unladylike." "I do not ask yon to be unladylike. I do not say you are. I asked you for your love. It was a straightforward question, I wanted, a straightforward answer. My arm, Miss Barron." And thus walkiug, assisting her over every trifling inequality of grouud, they went on to the villa. Miss Barron was exceedingly gay that evening. Lyndnurst loved her I Of course, she was not going into any prosy engagement. She could not hedge her self in by marriage. But they could live the delightful life they had lived this last three weeks always. He had nothing in particular to do. Why could he not( when they should return to Lon don, visit her every day ? She could, she thought, flirt all the same, when he was not by ; and his attentions, therefore, would be just bo much gained. Her life TvaB not to be altered au iota. She did not profess to love the man. Ho must not, hewever, scatter his atten tions. He must concentrate all his ad miration on her. But toward the close of the evening, when Madge found he hud iiot sought her once, a shadow of a thought parsed through her mind that perhaps he was not a poodle-dog, after all, to be led about in this way by a string. ' She had Bung, thinking to bring hinv to her side, but he had lounged away a thing he had never done befoie when she was at ' the piano. She' had , taken a garden stroll with a rival, Mr. Oakley, aud Lyndhurst had careless ly druwn up his outstretched legs, as he sat lazily ou the veranda steps, to let them pass down, without other notice of their presence. He had, she decided, fairly ill treated her. u lady.aud she would not tolerate rudeness. She would teach him what was due to her. But days passed. A week wore on. She found no possible chunce to visit her anger ou him. Ho never joined her. He was always civil aud well bred, but that was all. She whs down- , right perplexed. She scarcely ever met Lim, even at table, much less of an evening. He went flshiug by sunrise, rode on horse buck half the day, and at night asked the gentlemen up to his chamber ; the ladies, sitting lonely in the parlor, heard through the open windows, laughter ring out and gay songs being sung. It was getting maddening. One evening Madge curled herself up on a sofa and looked at the matter seriously. She must outgeneral him. But how? She had tried hauteur, and it had signally failed. Now she would try a dash of " giving in," even though it hurt her bo to do. She would plant herself ou the old footing. Just then Lyndhurst stepped into the room, cautiously at first, as if fearing her presence. She immediately rose to meet him. He did not start, but looked her over from head to foot without a word. She gayly said : " Don't yon think your highness is overdoing things a trifle?" Then she lost control of herself, and showed her vexation. "Sing to me," she cried, " walk with me, talk to me, do anything to obliterate this doeful week." " Well, Miss Barron," he auswered coolly, " suppose we talk and walk. I'll say, under the stars, what I said under the oaks ; and you shall give me a true answer." Sho looked at him a moment, then fairly blazed. I never saw such per sistence. Thank Heaven I I go home to-morrow, where gentlemen know whut is due to a lady, and take no' for no ' without getting sullen. Good night, Mr. Barrington: and good-by. If you ever consent to be less boorish, persistant, I shall be pleased to see you in town." He watched her out of the room and then Fat down to the piano. Miss Barron's first impulse was to seek out the party on the lawn ; but, some how, every face on earth, but one, seem ed tame. Then she resolved to go into the library and read; but books were so wearying. " I would play," she said pettishly, "if that pig-headed masculine was not monopolizing the piano. Just at this point she burst into tears. Crying, usually, to Miss Barren, con sisted of a couple of tears mopped up by a bit of laco. She had never before thrown herself down, in such limp shape and got into such a thorough tempest of weeping, as now. She was an hour at it. Gradually she got calmer ; she sat up, and began to consider what was next best to do. She tried to think of going home ait a pleasure soon at hand. Home I What had she there ? Only an old aunt, who dozed in a lace cap, with a cup of choco late at her elbow half the time. The memory of the pleasant days spent here would drive her wild, in that gloomy house. Then she acknowledged that it would be terrible anywhere without without She jumped to her feet. " Ho will drive me wild," she said, "banging in that way on the piano." " She passed into the hall and looked into the drawiug-room.where he sat plac idly playing. "Poor fellow!" she thought, "how can I call it obstinacy ; it looks like misery written all over his features. And isn't he superb-looking? Why, no one else has ever approached him; and he will be mine if I say it." Suddenlv can vou conmreheud it? she walked straight into the parlor and stole up bemud him, put her arms about his neck and pressed her cheeks against his. Not a word was said for some mo ments; but his fingers fell from the keys, his arms dropped listlessly at his sides, his head sunk lower and lower on his breast, and Madge felt a mist gath ering in her eyes, a mist of happy tears. "Come out under the stars," she whispered. " I want to say 'yes' to you." "lam answered, Madge," he said, drawing one of her hands over his shoulder and talking with it against his lips. " Let us not mar this moment of surprise and joy by a single word." " Lyndhurst, you are provoking as ever. "When I would not, I must; now I will, I shall not. I shall have to prac tice humility, I see, and study my lord'B moods. You've played the high hand long enough, and I insist on saying 'yes' in my own way. There, now, if you don't want to speak again in Rn hour I will rest my face here and dream. " "I don't think ' you will find me a tyrant," he said, kissing her. "But com fl out, Madge, and let's compare our mu tual miseries during the past week." He led her through the opeu win dow, holding back the swaying viues for her to pass. There, arm and arm, I under the stars, let us leave them. 1 Buffalo Dull Protecting a Calf. ! The buffalo cow seems to have little J maternal instinct, differing in this re-1 spect greatly Irora the domestic cow. When frightened, a buffalo cow will abandon her calf, and running away, leave it to bo protected by the bulls, who, to their honor, seldom forsake their charge. Au ttriuy surgeon once saw au admirable illustration of this maternal care. One evening, as he was returning from a- day's hunt, his attention was at tracted by the curious behavior of six or eight buffaloes. Approaching them he aattr tl.uf i 1 1 tl IT W1A fill linllo I1! . stood in a close circle with their head I downward. At some twelve or fifteen paces distant sat, in an ecceutrio circle, a dozen large gray wolves, licking their chops, as if impatiently waiting for supper. In a few minutes the circle of Lulln broke up, but keeping iu a compact body, walked off toward the main herd half a mile off. To his amazement, the doctor saw in the centre ol the guardian bulls a little feeble calf, ne wly-bom, aud hardly able to walk. After going a hun dred paces, the calf lay down, and the bulls again formed a protecting circle about it. The wolves, who had followed on each side, Bat down and licked their chops. The doctor did not wait to see the end, it being late and the fort distant; but he had no doubt the bulls brought the calf, abandoned by its mother, safely to the herd. An African Conveyance, The British consul at Loanda (Augo iu) gives un account, iu his report this year, of the maxilla carriers of that city, or "the cabmen." as he colls tliem, de siring, probably, to cherish any reool lection of home. They differ from the cabmen, however, in being at no expense for horses. The maxilla is a sort of cane-bottomed sofa without legs, is sus pended from a bamboo pole, has a gayly painted waterproof top, and is covered m with curtains of faucy print to keep out dust and ward off the buu'b rays. Two men carry the pole on their shoul ders, and this is ths only means of con veyance about the town. The tariff ought to be satisfactory to the hirer. If engaged by the hour each carrier has a sum not quite equal to three pence. Residents generally engage the carriers by the month at nine shillings, with three penoe a day ration money. The fare is established by law, and there are no squabbling. CRASHING THROUGH A nitlDtJK. A KallroMii. Trnln la t'nnnretlrm, llrrnkla Thrown n Hi itUr-.Wxny Killed ud Wounded. 'Hie recent railroad accident near Hartford, Conn., by which over thirteen persons were killed and fit'ty wouuded, is described as follows : The special which left Hartford at nine o'clock p. M., li,ad two heavy engines and eleven cars, containing about six hundred pass engers. It passed through Tarifl'ville at ten o'clock, and two minutes luter a terrific crash was heard in the direction of the Fariniugtou river. But one ex planation was probable the train had gone through the bridge. White-faced men, hurrying back into the iown a few minntes later, announced the catastro phe and aroused the citizens to hasten to the rescue. "Both engines and four cars tilled with passengers are in the river," they cried, "and strong and willing arms are wanted." The news was telegraphed to Hartford and Win sted, with calls for wrecking trainB aud surgical aid, and the people hastily dressed and hurried in the piercingly cold wind to the bridge. The entire western span was a wreck, together with fouv passenger cars, the other seven remaining safe upou the other span. The leading engine was up Bide down upon the river bank ; its companion upon its side, half buried in shattered beams and twisted iron work. The baggage car (which had been occu pied by passengers) was a dismantled wreck, and having broken through the ice hud nearly filled with water. Next to it was the first passenger car, also Bunk and shattered to pieces, while the second and third rested their forward ends against it with bodies tilted to a sharp angle and the rear ends resting against the center pier. The remaining cars, striking against these, had kept upon the track. The passengers in the Kecond and third cars had been tossed rudely together in the lower ends, and, bruised and jammed by their fellows, were struggling to gain the open air, fearing the firing of the cars from lamps and stoves. Another and a greater danger presented itself to the occupants of the first passenger and baggage cars, which, sinking to the bottom of the river gradually, let in a flood of icy water waist deep. Assistance arrived none too soon. The passengers were rescued, many uninjured, more badly braised or cut. From the torn front of the first passenger car, aud through the broken roof of the baggnge-car, one after another whs taken out, many of them wet through aud suffering intense ly in the wind, the thermometer being far below the freezing poiut These nufoi tunates were wrapped in overcoats stripped from the shoulders of their rescuers and carried to the uninjured cars. The wounded, numbering thirty or more, were taken to the same com fortable quarters, drawn upon rude sleighs devised for the occasion. Two hours of hard work sufficed for the saving of all who were living. Theu search was begun for the dead, report ed in the. excitement of the moment to be fifty or more, for it did not seem possible that many of the ocenpauta of tne baggage aud hist poi-seugor cars could have escaped. Yet these upre- j hensions, happily, were ill-founded, i The corpses found were placed in a car, ) and the train was thou pushed into the ' village, car by car, by the men at the ' work. Medical attendance was obtained, ' me people or TaritYjiile threw open their houses to the srnierers, and soon afterwards relief traius arrived from Hartford and Winsted with physicians aud men to help the villagers. After the badly wounded had received atten tion, the excursionists resumed their homeward journey via Hartford, Plain ville and tiie Cnuul road to its junction with the Connecticut Western line, beywnd the broken bridge. About Bells. The origin of bells is probably to be dated from the time when the sonorous property of metals was first noticed. "Bells of gold" are meutioned in the writings of Moses as being attached to Aarou's robe, in order that " his sound shall be heard when ho goeth in unto the holy place before the Lord." Bells are also mentioned iu Zech. xiv. '20 : " In that day shall there be upou the bells of the horses Holiness unto the Lord ;" and it has been suggested that even Tubul Cain, the sixth in descent from Adam, "and instructor of every artitlcer in brass aud iron," might have known somethiug of the art of making them. The Greek warriors are said to have had small bells concealed within the hollow of their shields, and when the captains went their rounds of the camp at night each soldier was required to ring his bell in order to show that he was awake and watchful at his post. The period when large bells were first introduced in churches is uncer tain, but by the seventh century they were in pretty general use, since the venerable Bede at that time mentions them as being' in English churches. Authorities differ as to who was the first to thus iutroduce them some claiming it to have been Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, in Campania, Italy, A. D. 400; others, Pope Sabinianus, A. D. 604. Bells were first known iu France about the year 550, and pretty generally introduced in churches in 103(1 The same authority claims that the first stt of bells (chime) was placed in Groyland Abbey, Lincolnshire, dur ing the refgn of Edmund the First, A. D. 945. It is not definitely known when bells were first manufactured in America ; but it is believed tbat a founder by the name of Hanks was the pioneer iu this branch of industry, his fouudiy being located in Conuecticnt. Items of Interest. "I'm gettiug fat," as fhe thief said when heyas stealing lard. The oonutry population of. California is only equal to tho population of San Francisco. The mayor of Jackson, Miss., gives tramps situations on the chain gang cleaning the streets. 'Twas ever thus from chi'dbood's hour We've seen our fondent hopes decoy The fire went out, the batter s aonr We can't have buckwheat cakes to-day. The figure of Liberty was first intro duced on dimes and half dimes in 1836, but the circle of stars did not appear till 18J18. . A man in Ohio is having a house hewn out of solid rock, the material being cut away so as to leave tho walls, roof and I fbinr all nt tliA nnn Captain James B. Eades is the most successful dentist in the business. He has received half a million dollars for clearing the mouth of the Mississippi, Last year a Chicago dealer failed, among his assets being 8600 worth of ice. The marshal kept watch over the estate till it melted away and then brought in a bill for $674 fordoing so. There is Borne foundation for the vam pire legends after all. Crooks, an Eng lish engineer, while surveying the Isth mus of Darien, had his blood Bucked during sleep by a vampire bat, and died from the consequent exhaustion. In a store at Mendota, HI. , a town of six thousand inhabitants, there met by accident the other day six men over six feet four inches high, the average height being within a hardly 'appreciable fraction of six feet five and the average weight pounds. it is noted that probably the oldest pettier in California is Peter Storm, who arrived in the Golden State in '33. He was the maker of the famous "bear flag" of Sonoma, when 1864, the citi zens of that place declared that Califor nia should bo an independent State. A man was recently convicted in southern Germany of murdering one of a family and attempting to poison four others. The judgo naturally thought that such a heinous crime should be punished with more than usual severity, and bo sentenced the murderer to death aud fifteen years' imprisonment. Mr. Marshall, the first discoverer o gold iu California, still lives in Coloma, iu that State. In this place he made his great discovery thirty years ago, and has remained there ever since. He made a fortune in niiniug, but has spent nearly all of it, and is now a comfortable culti vator of grapes. "I'll bet I make him break iu a week," said a Troy (N. Y.) youth when a com panion, urged by his betrothed, took the pledge at a public temperance meeting. The effort was successful, and when the young man came to his senpes ho was so much mortified that he went upon a spree which ended with his death iu a few days. HKIUTtlt. J-angbter I 'tis the po:r man's pUttr, -Covering up each sad disaster, I.augtiuig, lie f rge's lis troubles. WU ch, tmiugQ real, seem I ut bullies. I.Hiijl.ter ! tin a real of nature Stiuu ed npaa ihe human creatu'e. 1 .might or. wbe her loud or mute, Tel In the hnmsn kind from brute. I.aUKLttir 'tU Hoim a I ving voice Bidding us lo make our choice, and to oull fr.-iii tluiny bowers, Leaving th nis aud taking flowers. Captain L.ingiuere, of the Danish vessel Lnlterfeld, communicates to a' Copenhagen paper on interesting ac count of a novel experience which oc curred on December 10, 176, while on a voyage to Valparaiso. Tho vessel was ut this time iu the neighborhood of Terra del Fuego, about 140 miles from Magellan's straits, when early in the morning it narrowly eseuped collision with an island where no trace of land appeared on the charts. The vessel hove to until daylight, when the cap proceeded with a boat's crew to the new island, which had gradually diminished in size since the first observation. Around the couictd rocky mass the water was hissing, and although no smoke appeared, it was found to bo too highly beaked to permit of landing. The sinking continued slowly, until at eight o'clock fhe island was completely sub merged, and an hour later the vessel passed over the spot where it had disap peared. This volcauio island is proba bly due to the same causes which have produced the reoeut severe earthquakes on the west coast of Souyi America. Injuriousness of High-Heeled Shoe. Dr. Carbally says: "In descending stairs Or deep declivities while wearing high-heeled shoes, which' throws the weight of the body upon the front part of the foot, the extra effort made for the purpose of retaining the body within the centre of gravity produces a direct strain upon these tendons, causing rup ture or stretching of the annular liga ment sufficient to allow thera to be dis placed. It is no wonder, then, that fashionable women waddle iu a most un graceful manuer when they attempt to walk. They destroy their comfort to follow a ridiculous fashion, and acquire au ambling and undignified mov aient. People do things to follow fashion that their good sense would cause them to be ashamed of under any other oirmim stanceB. Ladies weariug Btich fihoes ar often obliged for safety, to go down stairs backward; und they can be s every day descending the, steps of fashionable rssideuces in this nvv making pretorioe of talking t imaginary pep M.'n the front eiouse to xh' awV . merits."