IIATES OF ADVEIITTSIIK rl 1 rl A tsi rrft.miii r xvf.hi w.twjtrAr, i f OfiVn In IioliinHKii & Bonner's Building, ELM BXIir.ET, - TI0NE3TA, FA, 'fJCliMH, Ot.r.O IC1J. YKAR. No BiilnrripMniiM received for a shorter period tfinii tlnro month'!. :,ivrHp'ti(l'weeo1icltyJ frnm til purtsof the roMiili v. N'onoticowiil bo taken of anonymous eoniiiniiiieafcoiiB. If a Heart for Tlico Is Breaking. If a heart for thee fa boating, , . Ubo it gently lost It break; Warm and tender bo thy greoting, 'Twill grow fondor for thy sako. Oh ! In alckncPB or in (onw, Lot thy caro its solace be, Then 'twill all its gladnpua borrow From ila aim of hope on thco. Oh I tho heart it ia a blessing, In its fr'nhnoq and itn youth, Bo it thine 'mid thy caressing, To presorvo it in Its truth. 'Tin no worldly gem, at pleasure To bo worn or cant asldo, But a firm and priceless treasure, And moro valued whon it's tried. Oh ! tho heart it ia a troasnro Tha', should not bo lightly won, To bo thrown asido at pleasure, When tho festive hour is done. 'TI a Jewel that to cheiitih Should bo still thy constant boast. Fur, when all bosido it perish, Will its worth bo known tho most. Sonq Echo. Story of a Diamond Necklace. When the Cormtoss Dubarry was in the height of her power, holding in chains a vicious king, Louis XV. or dered for her a necklace of diamonds. Bohmer . and Bossonge, the jewelers, hunted the world through for gems worthy to bo wrought into a necklace for the favorite of a king. Before the necklace was. ready for delivery the k;ng died, and tho jewelers found them Nlve8 burdened with a heavy debt in curred in purchasing the diamonds. They made an effort to sell the glit tring"and costly bauble to the youthful Mirie Antoinette, but the queen de clined to purchase. The finances of he country did not allow of 60 great mi expenditure on an article which, however beautiful, was by no means nec essary to the queen. It was offered to thevartou European courts, but they were not. willing to pay 8400,000 for a 'iamond necklace, however precious the tone miVht be. For ten years the jwiders persisted in offering the neck luoe to the queen, until she grew weary of the persecution. Thinking that they raw their opportunity when the dauphin was born, again they appeared at the palace with the necklace, and the king taking it, offered it to the queen, and was astonished at the warmth of her words when she rejected the gift. So the jewelers still had the unlucky neck lace on their unwilling hands. There was a plot brewing which, if nucoosful, would relieve the jewelers of the now obnoxious necklace, but which would not place it within the hands of royalty. It was a plot wonderfully con trived and wondet fully carried out, the chief conspirator, a woman, showing re markable fertility of resource, uncom mon audacity, and great recklessness of consequences. This woman, the Countess de la Motto, was descended in an irregular way from Henry II. of Yalois. The Saint Itemi family, however, had been reduoed through poverty to the lowest extreme of degradation; and, however their exalted lineage, they had lost all traces of their royal pedigroe. When we are first introduced to the wicked ounteRS she ic begging on the roadside with her little sister on her ttack, she herself a child of tender years. Deserted by her unnatural mother these little ones had to take caro of themselves, and perhaps the cunning for which tho wily countess Wus distinguished had been acquired during her vagrant career. It was a fortunate day for Ler whon, running beside the carriage of tho Mar chioness de Boulainvilliors, she cried: "Pray take pity on two orphans, de scended from Henry II. of Yalois, 'king of France." Such an appeal was likely to attract attention, as it was unusual to see the members of a royal family re duced to such a plight. The marchioness inquired into the girls 6tory, and find ing that her lineage could bo traced, even though remotely and irregularly, to a king of France, she sent for the children to her chateau and befriended them. Every educational advantage was given them, and by persistent ef forts she had their claim to royal do scent acknowledged, and a pension of $160 a year settled on each of tho three children for there was a boy also. Tho little beggar-Rirl was now known as Mademoiselle Yalois; and after she had , completed her education she went to Bar-bur-Aube, the place of her birth. Here Bhe encountered M. de la Motte. an officer in the gendarmes, and married him. Even at this early age her moral character was not above suspicion, and it is clear that she was utterly deficient m sen-respect and in proper principle, Full of pretense and of ambitious as pirations, sho thought that a daughter of the house of Valcis 6hould support a certain stylo. Neither her husband nor herself had tho means to keep up a dis play, or even a moderately genteel ap peurauce, and like many other weak' minded people under similar circum stances, they bep;an to borrcw, beg and steal. She now assumed the title of countess and her husband that of count, Fancying that she was kept out of her anoestral estate, she fairly besieged all who she thought could be of service in pushing her claims. Having been, unfortunately for him, introduced to the Cardinal de Rohan, grand almoner of Fiance, she prepared o 66; tire Liu in her toils, lit was not Vol. XIV. No.:39. hard to ensnare. She was not desti tute of attractions, was cajoling, flatter ing, insinuating and without any moral scruples; while he was vain, profligate, and easily duped by women. He was grand almoner of Franco, and a rich prize for her to grasp. Resolved to secure her ancestral do mains, she was detei mined to gain ac cess to the queen in order to enlist her sympathies in her cause. But she failed in reaching the presence of Marie Antoinette, notwithstanding her artfully contrived plans. So persistent was she in thrusting her petitions be fore those in authority that, to get rid of her, the controller general added about 8150 to her pension. This, how ever, was but a'drop in the mighty ocean of her wants. Living far beyond her mean, burdoned with debts, and har rasxed in jnind, she even contemplated suio'do. but concluded to remain on earth awhile longer and battle with grim poverty. , Then it waswhen she was having a hand-to-hand fight with penury, when every resource was exhausted, and tho wolf could no longer bo kept from the door, that her fertile imagination con ceived a deed which for cunning and daring has rarely been surpassed. This was a plan to transfer the diamond necklace from the hands of the jewel ers into those of her own.' Into this audacious plot the highest in the land were to be dragged the queen and the Cardinal de Rohan, high church digni tary and grand almoner of France. It was a desperate deed, but well planned and well executed. She first set tho report about that she was on terms of intimacy with tho queen, and, to give an appearance of reality to her story, she was constantly seen in the vicinity of the palace, as if she had bi en visiting the queen in her private apartments. She. persuaded Cardinal de Bohan that, through her intercessions, Marie Antoinette was ready to receive him again into favor. Owing to his conduct when on a foreign mission, he was in disrepute at the court; and, having rpoken disrespect fully of the queen's mother, Maria Theresa, her daughter, the queen of France, refused to countenance him. He felt keenly his position, and eagerly snatched at even the feeble thread this cunning woman held out to him. Bhe now forged letters which she pretended had been sent to her by the queen, in which the speaks of her for giveness of the cardinal, and says that the explanations of the Countess de la Motte nave placed matters in quite a different light. Delighted at this favor able turn in his affairs, and filled with gratitude to the successful mediator between himself and royalty, ho is ready to lavish money and good-will upon her. She now goes a step farther, and the cardinal receives letters from the queen herself, through tho medium of the countess. Through the same medium he sends money to her majesty, at her own request, which is eagerly appropriated by the Countess de la Motte. These letters are written on the same blue bordered paper on which Marie Antoinette usually wrote, and were inscribed by a young man employed for the purpose. Under the pretense that the queen wishes the cardinal to negotiate with the jewelers for the necklace, he is in vited by one of these blue bordered notes ip meet Mane Antoinette in the garden of the Tnilenes at midnight. To have believed it possible that the queen of k France would commit the in discretion of Inviting a man to meet her in such a place at such an hour proves that the vanity of the cardinal was so gigantic that it completely swal lowed up his common sense. A woman, who is not in the plot, but who is a dupe also, is cheated into meeting the cardinal. She is not aware that she is representing the queen, and does not know that it is the cardinal 6he is meeting. She says but a few words, when the countess, ,who is keeping watch, hurries her off, fearing that tho deception may be discovered by the cardinal. The end has been accom plished, however; the dupe thinks the queen has thus honored him, and he clasps with eager joy the rose-emblem of her favor and forgiveness which she has placed in his hands. Wonderful credulity 1 He is ready now to perform any act, however silly, at the bidding of the cunning and false daughter of Yalois, whose exalted descent did not prevent her being a swindler of the worst kind. She writes, as if from the queen, cm powering the cardinal to purchase the necklace. She sends one of her trusted emissaries to the jewelers to suggest to them that, as the Countess de la Motte is in high favor with the queen, she would be likely to persuade her into purchasing the necklace. She was ac cordingly viEited by one of the jewelers, and when the cardinal purchased the necklace they did not recognize him so much in the matter as the queen's so called friend, the all-persuasive 4 and all-powerful countess. So delighted were the jewelers to get rid of the ex pensive bauble, and so grateful were they to the countess for her powerful assistance, that they gave a banquet at which she was the honored guest. When the cardinal was requested, as he thought, by the queen to purchase the necklace, he was told to hand it to the person appointed by her friend, the Countess de U Motte, to receive it. This person was . the accomplice who wrote the letters purporting to come from the queen. Everybody ia satisfied. The cardinal that he is able to gratify the queen ; tho jewelers that they Lave got rid of AO TIONESTA, PA,, WEDNESDAY, DEO, 21, 1881, the necklace, and the countess that she has secured that which will place her far above the pangs of poverty. A thief, a forger of the queen's name, she stands on a Volcano which is liable at any time to destroy her. She does not seem to realise this fact, however, as she gloats over her stolen treasure. The queen, meanwhile, is unconscious of the plot of which she is one of the victims a plot that is destined to work her woe and even to cast a shadow over her name. Not the faintest suspicion entered the minds of the cardinal and the jewelers that they had been duped. But why did not the queen wear the necklace sho had purchased? There had been publio occasions when it would have been most appropriate; when its gorgeous luster would have decked her most becomingly. The necklace was to be paid for in in stallments ; and when the first was due the countess visited the cardinal and informed him that the queen was com pelled to defer payment. The cardinal saw the jewelers, who were not satisfied at the delay. Their creditors were pressing them, and their need of the money was great. Meeting lime. Campan, Bohmer, one of tho jewelers, told ner of the pur chase made by the queen. She electri fied him by asserting positively that the necklace was not in the queen's posses sion, and never had been. The necklaco contained C29 diamonds, all of rare beauty and many very large. The Da la Mottes, picking it to pieces, prepared to sell tho stones. Yilette, the young man who wrote the letters, was sent with some of tho diamonds to sell. While thus engaged he was arrested on suspicion of having stolen them, but, as nothing could bo proved against him, ho was released. The chief conspirator succeeded in disposing of many, and her husband had similar good luck in England. And now " the winter of her discon tent" vanquished, and the countess pre pared to live as a daughter of the house of Valois should. She furnished her house in regal style. The hangings to her bed were silver velvet trimmed with gold laco and fringe, and embroidered in gold thread and spangles, and her coverlid was worked in pearls. Her stables were filled with horses; she had fine carriages; silver bells were attaohed to her horses when sho rode out; she had outriders; her coffers glittered with rare jewels, and her attire was worthy of the queen herself. She was now liv ing at her old home, Bar-Sur-Aube living there like a piiucess where she hod once lived as a beggar child. But the storm was gathering that was to break upon her, for Mine. Campan had informed the queen of her pur chase, made in her name by the Cardi nal de Bohan. Ono day, as arrayed in bin pontifical robes he wasobout to cele brate a church festival in the chapel of YtrsailleB, he was summoned to attend the king in his private cabinet. On being questioned by the king as to who gave him the authority to purchase the necklaco for the queen, he replied: "A lady called the Countess de la Motte Yalois, who handed me a letter from the queen, and I thought I was perform ing my duty to her majesty when I un dertook this negotiation." ' How, sir," said the queen, " could you believe 1 should select you, to whom T have not spoken these eight years, to negotiate anything for me, and espe cially through the mediation of such a woman a woman, too, whom I do not even know ?" The cardinal evidently thought that tho queen was only playing a part in tho presence of her husband, and he felt some contempt for her cowardice in trying to screen herself from blame in the transaction. However, he soon bo came convinced that he had been made a dupe of, and confessing the same, de clared his willingness to pay for tho necklace. This did not save him from Eunishment, however, and in spite of ia protests, he was arrested in his sacred robes and thrown into the Bas tile. When the guilty countess heard the news of the cardinal's arrest she was at a dinner party at Clairvaux, where the abbot was entertaining socio of his friends. She almost fainted, as well she might, and rushed from the table in evident dismay. She was arrested the next morning and carried to the Bastile, while her husband wisely fled to England. The woman, Mme. d'Oliva, who personated the queen in the garden scene, was arrested, as was also the young man Vilette, who wrote the letters purporting to come from the queen. The audacity of the countess did pot desert her on her trial. She put a bold face on tho matter and denied every thing, trying to make it appear that the cardinal was tho guilty party. She was ever ready with the most plausiblo an swers, and even denied the confession of Yilette, saying that he was as inno cent as she was herself. She was cool and courageous, never at a loss for an answer under the severest cross-examination, and bore herself proudly through the whole trial, as a daughter of the house of Valoia should do, of course. Her assertions ol innocence did not save her, however, and she was borne to the conciergerie, where a ter rible punishment awaited her. Tho cardinal was acquitted, amid the plaudits of the people; but the king demanded him to resign the office of grand almoner and the ordors that had been conferred upon him, and to retire to his abbey among the mountains of Auvergne. Upon the countess deservedly fell tho greatest punishment, She Lad r A yv , i I a planned the whole affair, the others being her dupes and instruments. When her sentence was read to her she west into convulsions. She was to be whipped and branded on both shoulders with the word "voleuse" thief. She was not the person to submit quietly to an infliction like this. She screamed and struggled violently when the hot iron was appliod to her tender flesh. Never did the shoulders of a Valoia suffer as did those of this degenerate "orphan, descended from Henry II. of Yalois, king of France." Amid her cries and imprecations the painful sentence was executed, and thus branded she was thrown into a coach and driven to the Salpetriere, a prison for the lowest women. Through tho connivance of outside parties she effected her" escape, and joined her husband in England. They still had some of the diamonds in their possession, andthese they continued to sell as their exigencies required. Her day for doing harm was not yet over, and she employed her pen in writing an account of the affair of the diamond necklace. Her narrative, which waa as false as herself, was scattered far and wide; and her terrible slanders against the queen, strange to say, found believ ers. The last glimpse we catch of this audacious creatare is when she jumps from a window in London to avoid the creditors who are pursuing her. So badly was she injured by her flight that she died in a few weeks, aged thirty four years. "The evil men do lives after them," says the bard a Baying verified in the case of tho countess. The slanders she had raised against the queen, and the dubious position in which she had placed her with regard to the cardinal, were shadows which always darkened the pathway of Mario Antoinette. There were those who persisted in believing her as guilty as they wished her, and her enemies wore only too glad to have a subject of reproach like this. Diamonds have often worked woe, but never did they work such woe as this diamond necklace accomplished. Where are they flashing now? Who can tell ? The king who ordered them died most miserably ; the woman for whom they were ordered, the base Du barry, was carried Bhrieking to.the guil lotine; the lovely queen whose name was used in the plot, bowed with heavy sorrows, shared the fate of Dubarry, and the creature who originated the whole matter died a tragic death, her white shoulders bearing the sign and seal of her infamy. Truly, these gems of history are also the gems of tragedy. Demor cut's Magazine. ,c J Feasting in FIJI. The taro is of a bluish-gray color, and both in appearance and consistency re sembles mottled soap. As its name sug gests ' (Arum esculerUtim) its leaves are like those of our own arum greatly magnified, while those of the yam are like a very rich convolvulus, as is, also, its habit of growth. A great many vari eties are cultivated, including one the root of which is throughout of a vivid mauve. Tho sweet potato is also in common use, and bread-fruit and ba nanas are abundant. The favorite method of preparing the latter is to wrap them up iu a large leaf and bury them till they ferment. The stench when the leaf is dug up is 6imply in tolerable to the uneducated nose of the foreigner, but the Fijian inhales it with delight, therein Fcenting the mandrni (bread) and puddings in which his ncr;l delights. These puddings are sometimes made on a gigantic scale on the occasion of any great gathering cf tho tribes. We were told of une that measured twenty feet in cir cumference, and on tho same occasion thero was a dish of green leaves pre pared ten feet long by five wide, whereon were piled turtles and pigs, roasted whole; also a wall of cooked fish five feet high and twenty feet long. Cer tainly the masses of food accumulated on these great days beat everything w e have heard of ancient Scottish funeral foasts. Mr. Calvert describes one festi val at which ho was present where there were fifteen tons of sweet pudding, seventy turtles, fifty tons of cooked yams and taro (besides two hundred tons which weie judiciously reservod), and as much yangona-root as would have filled five carts. The mode of laying the tablo on these occasions ia peculiar. All food is arranged in heaps; a layer of cocoanut aa foun dation, then baked yams and taro; next the gigantio puddings on green banana leaves, the whole surrounded by pigs and turtles. These are roasted whole in huge ovens, or rather pits in the ground, perhaps ten feetdeep and twenty in diameter, which are first lined with firewood, on which is laid a layer of 6tones. When these are heated the animals to be roasted are laid on them, with several hot stones inside to secure cooking throughout; then comes a covering of leaves and earth, and the baking process completes itself. When all is ready certain men are told off, who carefully apportion this mass of food among the representatives of the various tribes present, these sub-dividing among themselves, and great is the need for punctilious observance of all ceremonies and points of etiquette, as the smallest breach thereof would in evitably be noted, and involve certain revenge or rather would have done so before the people became Christiana. (Jood Words' Never try to raise a rumily w ithout a good newspaper, provided it contains thadvrtiao meut of Dr. Bull's Cough Byrup ; for this valu able medicine ia necessary to keep your chil dren hi gov4 Lvtilth, j w vA . a $1.50 Per Annum. SUSDAY REAVING, Krllilona News and Notes. In the last ten years the number of churches in Chicago has increased from 156 to 218. There is a congregation of colored Catholics in Marion county, Ky., with 179 communicants. The members of the Presbyterian congregation of the Tvev. A. B. Mackay, Montreal, have given, the past year, $140,000 for theological education. It ia said that boys and girls who have walked a distance of eighty or ninety miles to attend the Telugu Bap tist schools in India have been regret fully turned away for lack of accommo dation. The Lutherans are very Btrong in Missouri. They have C30 ministers, 818 congregations and 225 " preaching ing stations." Last year 18,735 chil dren wero baptized, and 8,380were con firmed. The Free Baptists of New Bruns wick have added 341 communicants and received $25,000 for church purposes during the past year. The increase in communicants during the last ten years has been 3,500. The Methodist Episcopal church South has eleven mission stations along the Rio Grande and the Mexican bor der, with sixty-one preaching-plaoes, 447 church members and 373 Sunday school schools. The report of the American board shows an increase of seventeen mission aries, 10:) proaohing-ploces, 2,500 com mon school and 300 high school scholars, and more than 2,000 additions to tho mission churches. Tho California Methodists have be gan to raise a " Haven memorial fund ' of $10,000 in memory of the late Bishop Haven, who died in Oregon, for perfect ing the library, cabinets, etc., of tho University of the Tacific. The fiftieth annual Episcopal Dio cesan convention of Alabama reported twenty-seven clergy and 3,615 commun icants. The confirmations of the past year number 216 and the baptisms 259. The total of contributions was $47,546. A Lutheran Ecumenical council is now called for. The Lutheran Visitor believes that suoh a conference would be perhaps one of the greatest meetings ever held, and asserts that, instead of a few million of Calvanists or Armen ians, it would represent 50,000,000 Luth erins from all quarters of the globe. A Surgical Arm. A Philadelphia surgeon Ins invented a reniarkabloTnachine for the perform ance of surgical operations. The Phil adelphia Record thus describes it : It consisted of an upright arm standard about four feet high and a couple of inches in diameter, with a foot treadle and driving wheel at tho base. At the top was fastened what may be described as a flexible arm, being a long iron bar, with tho shoulder, elbow and wrist made flexible by means of an ingenious arrangement of wheels, enabling every section of it too be moved in any direc tion at will. Into the wrist patt a hand piece was pcrewed, and at the end of this a small circular paw. An endless cord, attached to tho driving wheel, ran up tho htandard and along the arm, and as tho wheel was revolved by the movement of the treadle the circular saw went into motion until it is flying around at the rate of 18,000 revolutions per minute. Instruments at the wrist can bo inserted or removed in a mo ment. Put in circular saws from half an inch to four inches in diameter and tho engine is ready for any of the major operations upon the bone. Here is a reciprocating saw which cuts both ways, moving only three-fourths of an inch and making fifteen cuts at each move ment, or 30,000 both ways. This will cut the bone instantaneously as smoothly as if done with a plane, and by it resec tions of every bono in the body can bo made. Fix a screw attachment to the han dle of the saw, which is fastened into the bone to bo cut, holding it firmly to the frame of the saw, and with this the thigh bone can be resected as high up as the upper third, and the end cut oil at any angle with the precision of mathematics. Substitute a drill, and with the rapidity of lightning the oper ating surgeon can have a hole of any size up to a quarter of an inch in any bono lying loose in the tissues, and where a stone in the bladder can be reached within four inches a diamond drill may be used to puncture the 6tone with numerous holes, which destroy its cohesive powers and enable it to be broken with impunity by the fingers or with weak forceps. Does it become necessary in an operation to shave down a bone, all that is necessary is to attach one 01 these burrs, and an operation which would take hours to perform with chisel and mallet is accomplished in a few moments. jiisrh-Priced Books. Brayton Ives, a Now Yorker, paid $15,000 for an illuminated missal the other day not too large to slip into an overcoat pocket, if, like those in Mr. George Bancroft's overcoat, the pocket is made big enough to take in an octavo volume. This ia probably the largest Erico ever paid hi this country for one 00k. In England $36,000, paid for a Gutenberg Bible on papor, is high water mark in book prices. Sitting Bull recently served as muta on board the steamer Key West at Fort Buford. The crew deserted the boat at that point and Sitting Bull volunteered to unload it. He wore tho nuito'H cap and directed the work. One Ripiaro, one inch, one inncrtion.... fin One 8iiiam, one inch, ono month 3 on One K'piare, one in 'li, three months.... 6 0) One H'iiar one inch, one year.... 10 nil Two Hiinrps, one year 15 (Hi Quarter Column, one year ilO 00 Half Column, one year... 50 CO One Column, one year 100 CO Iegal notices at established raUw. Marriages ami death notices gratia. All bills for yearly advertisements eolleefed cuarterly. Temporary advertisement must bo pi id for in advance. Job work, cash on delivery. Life in New York City. A writer who 'signs bimoelf " A Non Resident American," says in the Contem porary Review : New York is no longer tho city that it was fifty years ago. It has grown so rapidly in extent, in pop ulation and in wealth that all tho con ditions of life are changed. I visit tha palatial residences of former days, and I find myself in the midst of towering warehouses, or in the midst of a Ger man city, or surrounded by squalid tenement-houses, swarming with Irish. Another turn, and I am in a Chinese quarter. If I would find the fashion and wealth of the city, I must go far out among the old market gardens and the more distant pastures, which are cov ered now with costly dwelling-houses, Then 20,000 was a great fortune; now, New York boasts of a citizen who is worth 20,000,000. There are others who are almost as rich. They are railway kings, or men who have grown rich by the sudden and enormoua rise in the value of real estate ; and socialism, imported from Europe, hav ing no kings nere to attack, has found a name for these men, and threatens them as "monopolists." The palaces of the Fifth avenue laugh at the fain echoes which reach them from the halls . near the Bowery, where social clubs discuss the rights of labor, and openly advocate the assassination of monopo lists ; but no one can seriously study life in New York without finding him self confronted, first of all, with this problem of the relations of wealth and poverty. New York has not nrrown rich so much through the Bkill and energy of her citizens as through the rapid growth of the conn- . try, with which she has had but little to do, except in the way of developing her natural advantages by building railways and canals. Most of her rich men owe their wealth to the rise in the value of real estate or to fortunate speculation in stocks. It has not been a slow growth. It has come suddenly. The poorest man in New York, who can read a penny paper, is familiar with tho slang of Wall street. He knows that he . is cutting stone or carrying mortar for a palace which is building for a man who has "captured a railroad," or "watered stock," or " made a corner." He does not need to go far to be told that thfc does not mean money earned, but money stolen from the laboring classes. He believes it. And even this does not touch him bo directly as tho fact that he pays an exorbitant rent to another monopolist for his filthy rooms in a tenement-house. If this were all of New York society, this article would never have been writ ten. There are rich men whom wealth has not corrupted, and poor men whom poverty has not embittered. This does not need to be said. It may be said of every city. But there are probably few cities in the woild where a choicer so ciety can be found than in New York, and thero are few, if any, whore there is more earnest, active Christian life. We find it among the rich and the poor. It is colored somewhat by the dominant spirit of the city, but it is genuine. It ia straggling manfully to redeem the city from crime, corruption, filth, ig---mce, irreligion and degradation of every kind; and if the city is saved " from outbreaks of the worst forms of communism, it will be by its means. But I am dwelling too long upon generalities. Let us come down to practical every -day life. The New Yorker is always in a Lurry. He is an early riser. ' and generally eats a hearty breakfast by ' 8 o'clock. If he is a religious man he . has had family prayers before breakfast, as this is the only time of which he could be sure before midnight. If he does not read the morning paper at breakfast, he reads it on the way to his ollice. He is almost certain to have callers on business before he can leave his house; and if he is known to bo a benevolent man, he has a score of beg ging letters by the morning delivery. He gets away as soon as possible, and is not seen gain until evening, when he comes in just in time to dress for dinner. His household affairs are managed -by his wife. He is liable to have busi ness calls before he has finished his dinner. If he goes to his club, ho talks business there. He has com mittee meetings to attend. At 9 or 10 o'clock he may go with his wife to a party; or he may get away a little earlier to the theater. If he ha3 an evening at home, it is because he has a dinner party for evening entertainment him self. He keeps late hour?. If an active religious man, Sunday is almost as busy a day as any other. If not, it is divided between business and amuse ment. In May his family goes into the country, or to some watering-place, to remain until October, but tho chance is that he gets but little rest. When rest becomes absolutely essential he escapes to Europe. What the ladies do, except to make themselves agreeable when they can be found, I cannot say from observation, but they seem to be aa overworked as the men. Some of them certainly specu late in stocks. They have their clubs and societies, literary and otherwise. Many of the charities and religious so cieties of the city are largely in their hands. Domestic and social affairs are generally left to their management. If most of the wealthy are devoted to fashion, many are devoted to better things to self-culture, religion and benevolence. Perhaps all this is enough to account for the fact that there seems to be so little of quiet and repose in Now York li' Tho Baptiat denomination iu Yer mont has about one hundred church, with a stated membership of 10, L' . :