Cjjt crrfit llfpnbliffltt rrW;iJTRD EVHT WXBIOBJDAY. BT J. E. WENK. Vmct in Smaarbaugh ft Co.-'e Building, ELM STREET, - TIONESTA, PA. TIC11MW, ll.OO rTCIl YKAIl. No rubscriptlnn receiroil for a shorter period lht throo months. vJorrep(ni(liic solicited from 11 psrtaof till Vonnlry. No notice wiiLbeUkm uf kiiciiTinom ccimmnnlrntion. RATES OF ADVEItTTSXNCL One Fquare, one inoh, one lnnertfoa... fJ5I Or.e Square, one inoh, one month 1 9 One Square, one inch, three month. . . One Square, one inoh, one year , 2 ' Two Squares, bne year 119 yui rfer Column, one year Half Column, one year W On Column, one year I.Ojjti! ii.tira nt etablished rates. iVinmnp;- and ilrn'.h notice gratia. All bills f.r yearly ndvertiarntenta collected Vinrterly. 'l'om:irary advertisement inaat pnid'in advance. ,1d'j work, cash on delivery. VOL. IV1. MO. 10. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1883. $1.50 PER ANNUM. W HAT SEED SHALL WE SOW r A wonderful thing is n send, The ono thing dnalhlnss forovcrl Tlie ono tMag changeless ultotly true, Forever old and forever now, And floklo nnd faithless nevor. 1'iant Musing, l1Rings will bloom; I'lant linto, nnd hiito will gro.v; You enn how o-day, to-morrow will bring The blossom that proves wli it sort of thing la the bcu.I, (he seed thnt you bow. TEXRIIYN'S WARD. " I don't want to seem impertinent, old fellow, but I should really like to know how you happened to do it? I should, by Jovo!" Got married, you mean?" " Why, yes; you were old enough " "To know better, eh?" Interrupted Larry Penrybn, knocking the ashes oft his cigar. "Precisely," answered his friend; "and you sec, nobody .expected it of you, bocause you were always bo cer tain of remaining a bachelor, and gave everybody your word for it." "When I said I should die a bachelor, I did not think I would live to lp married," quoted l'enrhyn, yet with a rellectoi cast In his eye to Batisfy one tha.t something more rational was to be expected. It was a cool night, and there was confidence burning in the coals upon the hearth, and the two men sitting lesido It, with the tobacco between them, were old cronies. Time ami eir ruuistauccs had drifted in between theih, but for this ono night, at least, they were together agaiu, and sat talk ing as women arc said to talk to each other of the hidden lifo, but as only men can, because of common morals, common manners and common follies. " I really could not help it, Tom," said l'enrhyn, looking hard into the tire. "It really seemed the only thing to do at the time I" It was rather a strange reason to give for so grave an event, but looking into the calm, strong face of tho man taking into consideration tho mass ive, intellectual brow, the firm, yet tender mouth, one might know that it could be nothing less than worthy a true and honorable gentleman, how ever anomalous in form. " You want to know all about it 1" at last, he said, with a laugh, and blowing up a fog of blue smoke around him he settled deeper in his armchair ns if the story were not a short one. "Well, to begin with, my wife is the daughter of Halstca 1 Scot, whom you doubtless remember." Now, indeed, did blank surprise sit upon the countenance of l'enrhyn's menu, who did remember llalstead Scot, whoso stupendous rascality' and broach of trust had convulsed a city, and of whose miserable self-murder the world yet talked about. " I do not wonder that you are sur prised that I should have married the daughter of such a man, especially as that mah was not supposed to have a daughter up to the hour of his death , but hear the story, and reserve your judgment until you get tho case. . " About six months previous to Scot's suicide, when his irregular practice was only being hinted at, softly, among tho knowing ones, he came to my ollice one day and wanted inc to join him in the prosecution of some cotton claims against the government. " 1 thought it rather queer that a man in his position should approach me scarcely u full-Hedged barrister with propositions of such magnifi cence, but, more out of curiosity than any actual idea of taking hold of the matter, I asked for tinio t look into the case. " The papers were old, yellow, appa rently without a flaw, and involving millions of dollars, yet I concluded that, in justice to my own clients, I could not undertake to work in tho case. The next thing that came was Scot's suicide, ami the papers rang with ids attempted fraud, his l'org( ry and tho complaints of the people whose moneys he had held in trust acd speculate 1 away. At this point in t'o unhappy man's history, my real connection with him began. The morning following his death there came to me, through the mails, a letter reading something In this wise: Larky Pexkiiyn I believe you to be an honest man. 1 therefore give the inclosed papers into your keeping, feeling sure that tho secret they con tain will be safe with you. and that you will protect from all painful knowledge the being whoso life they so vitally concern. ' (Signed), 1Iai.stf.ao Scot.' "Now comes the most singular part of the story. Tho papers inclosed were a certificate or marriage between Hal stead Scot and Gabrielle Wyndham government bonds to tho amount of thirty thousand dollars, registered in tho name of (iabrielle Scot, and the necessary directions for finding that person. "Two days later there came tome anoil er letter, written m a cramped, ohl-fas.iioiied ami feminine style, from .which, as I opened it, there fell out a printed slip cut ironi some newspaper and giving an account of Scots un happy end. The U tter itself was scant of woidi find ceremony, and briefly statu! th;il S'i t i a ! informed the writer th;it in case of bis death I to act as Mis Gabriclle's guardian, and reriuestinjJ earnestly that 1 would set my ward at my earliest convenience, and this letter was signed Patience Wyndham. " Fortunately for my curiosity and the exigencies of tho case, I could get away from town just at that particular time, and a there really seemed no way of decently abandoning tho trust without betraying the dead man's confidence, I started oil at once. " It was a romantic little country place at which 1 found them, with moun tains all around the half-hundred of houses ; the church, the store, the tavern that formed tho village, and near a little waterfall, that was a waterfall, not because some fellow with an eye for picturesque effect had built a dam across its course, but lie cause there was an abrupt descent in tho rock at that point, I found Miss Patience Wyndham's house. " I had fetched her letter with me, and upon sending it in with my name, I was immediately admitted to the presence of a stately dame, whoso at tiro was copied from some Quaker ancestress, and who.e very counte nance and manner bespoke her name Patience. She asked me a great many questions about llalstead Scot, which I could but answer with the meager, unpleasant truths that formed my stock of knowledge respecting the man, and then it came her turn to talk. She told me that years ago, when she wa3 but eighteen, her mother died, leaving her at the head of her father's household. In one year after her father married again and fifteen months later both he and the new wife had gone the way of all flesh, leaving Patience, at twenty, alone in the world, with an infant sister three months old to care for, and an income that only, with the strictest economy, could be made adequate to their .needs. "Well, for twenty years this woman, putting her youth and everything that is natural to it under her feet, was mother, sister, everything to Gabrielle, who grew from babyhood into a lovely girl, doing only her duty' with uncon scious heroism, and giving me the record as if it were something scarcely worth the telling, only that it was necessary to explain. " As I said before, tho child grew up to be a lovely girl, fair and graceful, pure ami good, and the faithful sister found all recompense now for what at first must have been all sacrifice, in this only thing of kindred blood left her. " At length there came a young law yer one summer-time to fish and hunt in that quiet country place, and before Mis Patience quite came to realize the danger the heart of her sister-child was won from her, and the couple were married. "To make a long story short, this young lawyer was Ilalsteal Scot. Six months he spent hap pily with his young wife, then he went awav, and, although lie wrote her occasionally, ho forbade her always to join him, and so the fair, frail crea ture fuled day by day, until the hour when her baby came struggling into life, and then shut her weary eyes for ever on a world wherein she had grown so sadly tired wherein she ha 1 learned the bitterness of unfilled graves, and death that renders not unto dust and Patience WynUnam was once more left to fill the mother's ollice to a worse than orphaned child. "Fifteen years passed, and, stirred by a feeling of remorse, by a reaiem brance of his old romance or what not, Scot came once more to thelitt'e village under the mountains, lie refused to see his daughter, and told Miss Wynd ham enough ot his own career t satisfy her that it was wis st so, but the week following his visit, a pure white monument, in form of a broken column, was erected over his wife s grave, and every six months during the remainder of his life there came regularly a certain sum of money to Miss Wynd ham for the support of the young Gabrielle. " This was the whole of the story, as that sweet old saint told it to me and naturally I grew extremely anxious to see tho child ot romance, over whom I was so singularly appointed guardian. ' ' The child does not know her father's history,' said Miss Patience, 'and I could wish she might remain al wavs in happy ignorance of it,' and then the child came in. "She was fair-haired, slight, blue eyed, graceful, shy, with nothing of her father about her in appearance or characteristics, and alter a few days came home, not in love with my ward, as you suspect, but thinking her pure, innocent child, wonderfully born of such a father, and really not dis satisfied with my guardianship. " In fact, my charge whs no burden to me while Miss Patience lived, and the thirty thousand dollars made all clear for the future, I Imagined, with a man's wonderful understanding of a woman's needs; and so for three years, placidly the time went on; then there came a note lrom dabneiie herself, announcing the serious illness of her aunt, and 1 went hastily away into the country. "I found Miss Wyndhpm dying; her nohlo sands of life were almost told and there will be few whiter robes in heaven than that she wears. She had no fear for herself in that passing away; only a great thought, reaching out into tho future, for the young girl whom she must leave alone in a world where even her saintly eyes bad seen much neilh t good nor true. " I promised all that 1 could, and whil'i the dying woman seemed to trust me, she understood better than I how little equal to the protection of a young girl's life an unmarried man can be, and was but half satisfied when the final moment came. "Poor Gabrielle was distracted; she clung to me as to a brother. I pitied her, but I pitied myself more, because she took no thought, and I did, of the future which now loomed up before me like a terrible problem, to which the thirty thousand dollars offered not tho slightest clew of solution. " What to do with her now I did not know. I had no near female relative; I had not even the traditional old nurse to help mo out of the dilemma. My business was suffering from neglc ct, ind yet I could not leave this clinging grief-stricken girl alone and unsettled in this first space of her desolation. i finally determined to ask a widow lady, who was a distant relative of llalstead Scot, to take immediate charge of his daughter, but before writing to her I thought it would only be kind in me to consult my ward in tho matter, and learn if there were any other arrangement possible more co lgenial to her own inind. 'She came to the interview looking most fair and fragile in her black dress, and listened attentively to my proposition. Then the tears winch lay very near to her eyes in those sad days pushed their way from under the terse-drawn eyelids, and rolled heavily over the white young clieeKs, and she said, in a trembling, pitiful way: ' 'Then I cannot live with you, Mr. Penrhyn?' " I had rather pronounce the death sentence in a thousand cases ttian to b3 obliged again to meet the emer gency that stared out of those innocent eyes at me; but something had to be done then and there, and I had rather have tried modern strangulatlou In my own person than to have explained to this pure child the reasons why she might not live in my house as my sis ter, when there seemed no other homo no heart in all the world that held for her kindly feeling save mine. " So, and as I told you in the begin ning, it seemed to bo the only thing to do at the time, I asked her, a gently and delicately as I could, to marry ine. "It came very sudden to her, and especially so to me ; but she con sented, not that she was greatly in love with me any more than I with her. but because her quiet, straight forward life had taught her none of the hollow sentimentality of pride that would have led her to question my sincerity, or the prospect of form ing a connection that held no romance but only the continued society and friendship of one whom her aunt had. held in respect and trusted. "Immediately, and beside Miss Patience's new-made bed, blanketed with a drift of sweet syringa bells, we were marrieJ, I feeling at last content that tho sainted dead would rest now quietly from her labors, if her spirit might look down upon us two made one." " And I beg your pardon but did it turn out well?" asked the listening friend, his cigar burned down within a hairbreadth of the blonde mustache, and smothered recklessly with a long white ash. " Turn out well ! Why, Gabriel and I have grown to love e;ich other to a degree that makes the slightest separ ation unliappiness to both. There are two babies, and Lord love you, man, I guess it did turn out well !" and the smoking Tom tumbled the long, white ash into the gavlv-painted saucer at his elbow, and murmured, somewhat cynically : "After all, it was an experiment r Indians iu Massachusetts. A correspondent of the Boston Post writing about the remnants of Indian tribes surviving in Massachusetts, says: It is believed by those who have an opportunity to know, that no Indrin ot pure aboriginal blood is now a resident in the o union wealth, they having from timet) time inter married with the whites and those of African descent. Counting all those who have Indian blood in their veins in the State, in the vestiges of tribes remaining, there are to-day not far from l,0u0 persons, embra-ed in 225 families, and it must be borne in mind that the numbers contained in these tribes hayj been decreasing for over 200 years. It is a very significant fact that no tribe now existing is increas ing numericidly in the common, wealth. Many Words iu Little Space, A man in Humboldt county has put ICt words into the spa'e occupied by a nickel, lie has also put l.loO words on the face of a postal card, which coata;ns 15" square inches. He has written tho Lord's Prayer on a space covered by one side of an old-fashioned three-cent piece, and says he can put thirty thousand letters' upo" one side of -i postal card with a steix pen without the aid of a glass Iowa Matt, llrgister. Bismarck is not a good orator. He coughs and stammers, and stops for the right word ; his sentences are involved, and often a foot long; but when he writes bis native tongue, it Is idiomatic and graceful. THE BAD BOY ALL BROKE UP. BADLY WRECKED BY FOOLIKO WITH AH OLD PACER. lie Driven n IWInMnr to a Fimernl The He nit ofSnylrn "Ve-np" to n former "Bon of the Kon.l." " Well, what's the matter with yon, now?" said the grocery man to the bail boy, as he came in to tho grocery on crutches, with one arm in a sling, one eye blackened, and a strip of court plaster across one side of his face. " Where was tho explosion, or have you been in a fight?" "Oh, there s not much the matte! with me," said the boy, in a voice that sounded all broke up, as he took a big apple off a basket, and began peeling it with his upper front teeth. " If you think I am a w re::k you ought to see the minister. They had to carry hiin home in installments, tne way they buy aewing machines. I am all right, but they have got to stop him up with oakum and tar before he will ever hold water again." " Good gracious, you have not had a fight witli the minister, have you? Well I have said all the time, and I Btick to it, that you would commit a crime yet, and go to State prison. What was the fuss about?" and the grocery man laid the hatchet out of the boy's reach for fear he would get excited and kill him. " Oh, it was no fuss. It was in the way of business. You see the livery man that 1 was working for promoted me. He let me drive a horse to haul sawdust for bedding, first, and when he found I was real careful he let me drive an express wagon to haul trunks. Pay before yesterday there was a funeral, and our stable fur nished the outfit. It was only a com mon eleven-dollar funeral, so they let me go to drive the horse for the min ister you know, the buggy that goes ahead of the hearse. They cave me an old horse that is thirty years old, that has not been off a walk since nine years ago, and they told me to give him a loose rein, anu he would go along all right. It's the same old horse that used to pace so fast on the avenue, years ago, but I didn't know it. Well, I wan't to blame. I just let him walk along as though he was hauling sawdust, and gave mm a loose rein. When we got off of the pavement the fellow that drives the hearse, he was in a hurry, 'cause his folks was going to have ducks for din ner, and he wanted to get back, so he kept driving alongside of my buggy, telling me to hurry up. I wouldn't do it, 'cause the livery man told me to walk the horse. Then the minister, he got nervous, and said he didn't know as there was any use of going 30 6low, because he wanted to get back in time to sret his lunch and go to a ministers' meeting in the afternoon, but I told him we would all get in the cemetery soon enough if wo took it cool, and as for me I wasn't in no sweat. Then one of the drivers that was driving the mourners, he came up and said he had to get back in time t j run a wedding down to tho 1 o'clock train, and for me to pull out a little. I have seen enough of disobeying orders, and I told him a funeral in the hand was worth two weddings in the bush, and as far as I was concerned, the funeral was going to be conducted in a decorus manner, if we didn't get back till tho next day. Well, the minister said in his regular Sunday-school way. ' My little man, let mo take hold of the lines, nnd like a blame fool I gave them to him. He slapped the old horse on the crup per with the lines and then jerked up, and the old horse stuck up his off ( ar, and then the hearse-driver told the minister to pull hard and saw on the bit a little and the old horse would wake up. The hearse-driver used to drive the old pacer on the track, and he knew what he wanted. The minister took off his black kid gloves and put his umbrella down between us and pulled his hat down over his head and began to pull and saw on the bit. The old cripple began to move along sort of sideways, like a hog going to war, and the minister pulled some more, ami the hearse driver, who was right behind, he said so you could hear him c lear to Waukesha, Yee-up,' and the old horse kept going faster, then the minister thought the proces sion was getting too quick, and he pulled harder, and yelled who-a,' and that made the old horse worse, and I looked through the little window in the buggy top be hind, and tho hearse was about two bl cks behind, and the driver was laughing, and the minister he got pale and said, ' My little man, I guess you better diive,' and I said, 'Not much, Mary Ann; you wouldn't let me run this funeral the way I wanted o, and now you can boss it, if y..u will let me get out,' but there was a street car ahead and all of a .sudden there was an earthquake, and when I come to there were about six hundred people pour ing water down my neck, and the hearse was hitched to the fence, and the hearse driver was asking if my leg was broke, and a polw e nan was fan ning the minister with a plug hat that looked as though It had been struck by a pile-driver, and some people were hauling our buggy into the gutter, and some men were trying to take the old pacer out of tiie windows of the street car, and then I guns 1 faiute 1 away agin. Oh, it was worse than telescop ing u train loadt d with a!tl ." "Well, I swan," said the grocery man as he put some eggs in a lunnel shaped brown papt r for a servant girL "What did the minister say when ho come to?" "Say! What could be say? He just yelled 'whoa,' and kept sawing with his hands, as though he was driving. I heard that tho policeman was going to pull him for fast driving fill he found it was an a cident. They told me, when they carried me home in a hack, that it ayih a wonder every body was not killed, and when I got home pa was going to sass me, until the hearse driver told him it was the minister that was to blame. I want to find out if they got the minister's umbrella back. The last I see of it the umbrella was running up his trousers leg, and the point come out by the small of hi3 back. But I am all right, and shall go to work to-morrow, 'causo the livery man says I was the only one in the crowd that hail any sense. I understand the minister is going to take a vacation on account of his liver and nervous prostration. I would if I was him. I never saw a man that had nervous prostration any more than he did when we fished him out of the barbed wire fence, after we struck the street car. Put that settles the minister business with me. 1 don't drive with no more preachers. What I want Is a quiet party that wants to go on a walk," and the boy got up and hopped on one foot toward his crutches, filling his pistol pocket with figs as he hobbled along. " The next time I drive a minister to a funeral, he will walk," and the boy hobbled out and hung out a Hign in front of the grocery, " Smoked dog fish at halibut prices, good enough for company." Swiss Traits. The laborer and peasant of Switzer land have in many respects a rather hard time of it. Since the influx of foreign tourists lias assumed such large proportion during the past twenty years, the cost of living has greatly increased, while the wages of the-laborers remain stationary, and the few acres of ground of the peasants refuse to yield a larger harvest. Kents in cities and towns, the cost of wine, meats, flour and bread, which during the past twenty five years have all risen at least fifty per cent., present no attractive side for men who have to work for fifty or sixty cents a day. They generally live in crowded and poorly ventilated houses, perhaps warm enough, but al most bare of furniture and comfort If they can have meat once or twice a week, they consider themselves happy. They are badly off, for the reason that they have to work hard, live poorly, and are seldom able to save anything. Put notwithstanding all this, they are happy in their way; they love their coiintry.with its institutions ; read, are intelligent; and know that intelligence and industry, and not bayonets, pre serve tho peace in Switzerland. As to the peasants, or small farmers, they reldoin live on farms, but in clusters of houses, villages and towns. The reason thereof is that their land is seldom in one piece, but is cut up in small pieces of from one-quarter of an acre to a whole acre, and scattered for miles in different directions. The peasants are early risers, industrious, simple and economical in their habits. As in Germany and France, so in Switzerland, the women work in the fields beside tho men. In fact, the women are generally quicker and more industrious than the men, and the economical principle in tho former is more developed than in the latter, for these like to frequent the beer and wine salxrns, and spend some of their daily earnings.or of the procecdsof their fields. They generally possess a Yankee's desire for money, but lack his shrewdness as to the ways of mak ing and saving it. Their cares are few and, like" their income, rather light. They mow their hay, herd their lew cows and goats, prune their vines, and leave the outcome of their work to time and Providence. Their taxes are ccmparatively light, and yet the majority of these little farmers are never out of debt. Politically they are conservative democrats, loving home rule and disliking centralization. V nitid Mates Coiuiil Cramer. How It Was Made. An old lady in the country had a dandy from the t ity to dine with her o.i a certain occasion. For dessert there happened to lie an enormous apple pie. La, ma'am !" said he, " how do you manage to handle such a pie?" " F.ay enough," was the reply ; " we make tho crust up in a wheelbarrow, wheel it under t he apple tree, and then shake the fruit down into it." An Kpitaph. The following is an epitaph on a tombstone in Chautauqua, countv X. Y. : " Neiiralam worked on, Mrs. Smith, 'Till noiilh the sod il laid her i She whs u worthy Methoilit, And served hh a crusader. " Fribiids came delighted at the call, lu pluiity of uood i-iirriitKOS ; Dwith in the c. minion lot of nil, And come more oft than oiumatfeg." Alabama females have a majority .f IV .2 17 in the Mate LOVE, DRINK AND DEBT. Bon of mine 1 tho world before yotl Spreads a thousand secret snares . Hound ths feet of every mortal Who through lif a's long highway fr Throe -Tocml, let me wnrn you, Are by every traveler mot ; Three to ry your heart of virtus They are love, and drink and debt. Love, my boy, there' noecaping 'Tis the common fate of men ; Father had it ; I have had it J But for love you had not been. Take your chnuces, but be caution ( Know a aqua! is not a dove ; Be the upright man of honor ; All deceit doth murder lovo. As for drink, avoid it wholly ; Like an adder it will stin ; Crush the earliest temptation ; - Handle not the dangerous thing. See the wracks of men around us Once ns fair and pure as yoo Mark the warning 1 Shun the pathway And the hell they're tottering through. . Yet though love be pure and gentle And from drink yon may be free, With a yearning heart I warn yoo 'Gainst the worst of all the three. Many a demon in his journey Banyan's Christian pilgrim met They were lambs, e'en old Apollyon, To the awful demon debt. With quaking heart and face abashed The wretched debtor goes j Hi starts at shadows lest they be The shades of men he owes. Down silent streets he slyly steals, The face of man to shun, He shivers at the postman's ring, ' ' And fears the awful don. Beware of debt 1 Once in you'll be A slave forevermore ; If credit tempt yon, thunder " No I" And show it to the door. . Cold water and a crast of bread May be the best you'll get ; Accept them like a man, and swear "I'll never run in debt 1" ' HUMOK OF THE DAT. The appropriate color for infanta this season will be yeller. Springfield (0.) News. When the man in the dock fumble In his pocket for the "one dollar and' costs," is it a case of fine feeling? Boston Bulletin. Hens may be a little backward on eggs, but they never fail to come to the scratch when flower beds are con cerned. Picayune. - Vbat was your observation, Mr. Brown?" "Oh, nothing, madame. I simply said the butter ranked well.'-' Boston Transcript. The American hog is forbidden to enter Germany. That shuts out the man who tries to occupy four scats in a railway car. Hawknye. " Say, Mr3. Bunson," said a little girl to a lady visitor, " do you behmg to a brass bund?' "Xo. my dear." "I thought you did." Why did you, my child r" " " Because, mamma said you was always blowing your own horn, and 1 thought you must belong to the band." Drummer. ' Some manufacturer of fishing tackle has invented a bait with a luminous arrangement, of phosphorus, or some thing of that kind, to light the fish toward the hook. When it gets so a follow has to hold a lantern so a fish can see to bite, half the fun of fishing will be gone. Perk. A "fashion" item says: "The lozenge shape is the most fashionable for pills, whieh should be coate l with silver, and look very inviting." This appears to bo a new departure in fashion intelli gence, and next it will lie in order to describe whether the new shape in porous plasters is -.ctagon or oblong, and if they are trimmed with gimp In aid or guipure lace, and we may be told that tho most fasluunahlo tints iu castor oil are terra-cotta and favn color, and that liver-pads are cut i' ..the form of a heart, with scalloped dges and lined with ciel-blue satin. Sorris town Herald. T o Late. Tie law or heredity, I y which living beings tend to repeat themselves in their descendants, is generally accepted by s dentists and physicians. Some assert that not only the physical but the spiritual trails of parents are re produced in their children. In the matter of health and disease there is no doubt that parents transmit their physical quali'-ies, strength and weak nesses. One of the bent-known physicians in Boston was called, not long since, t ) attend the bedside of a rich man who bad been suddenly taken ill. The doctor felt the patient's pulse and saw that the case was hopeless. Turning to one of the family, who stood anx iously waiting to hear his opinion, he said: ' You should have sent for a physician I ng ago." "But we sent at once; as soon as he was taken ill." "Ah ! yes," replie.l the physician, ad!y, "hut you should have sent KXi years ago." The phyy-'an recognized the fact that his put, it, who died that day, was iu real! tho victim f his an cestors' caret s or criminal violation of the laws A' licidth, years before he h'.-iself was born.