1 ? jj "' '' - 11 il I T ''''j Milieu. B. F. SCHWEIER, TIIK rXSTITITKN THE V.MOX AXD THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVII. .. t 3IIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., OCTOBER '2-2, 1S73. NO. 13. ,i:Kp in Kliy me. THE LI05 AAl TUE MoL-SK. A Ik lay a-aleepiag, A liule awaa can erwplng aroaad tha foraet kin a : Sot reck log of hi daager The care.-a little ftraagcr CLaaced on Ma ear to prtu Tine Uoa quickly wakiox Aroae, aad fliely at.akii.tf HI lordly mane, looked roud ; The tivmblio little arranger, re friithlened at Lia tUcgr. Crept c.ee. to the gruand- The Ua aooa piid him Crouctiltt low beaide him, - Aad raiaed hi paw to kill "traat air! cried moaney, "pare e I prithee, do not barm ice 1 aaly bear good will. "To die I am not wlllluif, What would' thoa caia by kllilatf S aanall a tfciaf aa I V Well ; j o, tbea ! aaid Ui iUu, Bat let me ne'er aet eye on Your CArcaa-, or 70a die !' '&fh autama leave abidlaf. Oar BMiuey lay a-hlding ; 'Ttii afiar mnj dya ; He bard a frightful ruariug, -Aad creia$ forth exploring. Soon in la great auiaxe, 'Nath bnnter'a toll eataagled, S-r rata passed aad half traac led TUa lordly lion lie; Aad nous, la eoasternatioa Took U th aitaation With coaiprel.adiiij eyo. Tba airtight began to aibfc! Pid raaht but albbla, aibbl Till every card waa rut. Oaoe oor- tie It a atsadia , (.played hia front conau.Bd;&Tf Wiia pride and pteamra blent. i iscel I :i tty. Tbonsht-4 on a Nbirl. A woman, trembling with weariness, and nearly discouraged with ill-success, stands anil looks ruefully down on the shirt she is ironing, when a new train of thought arrives, and she mu.f heed its voice. "Why are bhirts made with ruffles and plaits and ttitehing and puffs ? and why are they starched aud ironed with such infinite trouble T Is a bian any more or less a man, because of the ornamental shirt front which fashion .lic-tate? Which is the uglier, a plug hat or a atarched shirt? aud would not either of them suit a Feejee Islander better than a civilized man? I shall endeavor to prove the shirt to be a great promoter of Inng disease and censump-lio-i. The ornamental part, which i" ihf part to show, is mode of linen, and just covers the vital organs in front. 'otVon is bad enough, but linen is cruel. Then the dress, which should be made to protect the breast, is left open one third of the front, to display ornamental needle-work and jewelry, and men go backing around with hereditary con sumption. Why not say an hereditary love for display ? AjJ a" general thing, men dress warmly and comfortably on cold stormy day, when they go out, iiul the moment they set foot iuside their homes, about s;x or eight thick nesses of woolen goods, and about one tind one-half or two inches of cotton wadding are laid aside, or turned back to display the shirt It is not at all necessary that a shirt should be seen, then how much labor would be saved lo woman. It has never yet been my fortune to know a woman who could ca her husbcud's shirt right. Among the s-ary earliest recollections of my childhood, arises a ghost of a shirt with its button off, or too for back, or too far front ; iu collar always too stiff, or too limp the one big bugbear of the tash tab, and the one thing that could cot be put off till another day, in case jf aickneas or trouble. Then," whoever uiad a shirt right? For my part, I have never seen one that proved to be right. And where is the m.ed of perfec tion in au undergarmeut, if it be clean .ad whole? Men suffer from exposing their persons to display a shirt, and women gaffer from anxiety and fatigue and unnecessary labor in preparing it. Would not the cause of humanity be promoted by wearing a plain garment, without ornament or starch, and devo ting the time usually spent on 6hirts, to a careful study of the laws of health ? Thus one or two ot coaauuiption's causes would be done away. Keeping Fnitta. Hir William S apier was one day taking a long country walk, when he met a little girl about five years old sobbing over broken bowL Hhe had dropped and broken it, iu bringing it back from the field to which she had taken her father's dinner, and said she would be beaten on her return home for having broken it As she said this, a sudden pleam of hope seemed to cheer her. She innocently looked np into Sir Wil liam's face and said : "But yon can mend it, can't you?" He explained that be could not mend the bowl, but the trouble be could overcome by the .rift of a sixpence to bny another. However, on opening bis purse it was empty of silver, and he promised to meet his littba friend on the same spot tit the saiao hoar next day, and to bring sixpeuee with him ; bidding ber mean while tell ber mother sho had seen a gentleman who would bring her the ftuiucy for a bowl next day. The child, entirely trusting him, went on her way comforted. On his return home he found au invitation awaiting him to dine in Batli the following evening to meet some one whom he especially wiabi! to see. He hesitated for some little time, trying to calculate the possi bility of giving the meeting to bis little friend of the broken bowl and still being in time for the dinner party in Bath, Put finding this could not be, be wrote to decline accepting the invitation, on the plea of "a previous engagement," Baying, "I cannot disappoint her ; she rusted me." il Home" in m Bulb. "LenkerbaJ," "is a favorite resort of invalids who come to seek health in tbe warm waters. I went into the bath bouse, saw both sexes dreaaoJ in long tiaunei gowns soaking in the sameshssm ingpooL Friends come to chat with them, and you may see a great' fellow kicking out like Giovanni's frog, while carrying on conversation with hia pos sible dul jinea. Those not so fortunate, in company play solitaire, read papers ot books, or divert themselves in the various ways that a floating table per mits. One woman I saw arranging dowers, which, in their natural beauty, lent a alight refining influence to the scene, but not enough to detain me long. I hastened back into an atmos phere which, in temperature and odors, wasn't-quite so suggestive of cutaneous disorders." KOLLIX WCSTN WILL. Well. I declare 1" Miss Chirrup was always "declaring!" might be said, iudeed. to be in the ! indicative moo J. Declare, we mnr ad J, iu iter idiotn, was a verb intransitive, 11 u less tbe note of adniiratiou with which she invariably followed it might 1 be taken to be iU object. "Well, I declare !" said Miss Chir rup, in a shrill whisper. "Did you evrr replied Miss Chirk, iu another. It was Rollin West's will that the two were discussing. It was very brief and explicit. "I bequeath my entire estate, real and personal, to my niece, Knth Morgan," with date, signature, and attestation, waa all there was of it. The Missies Chirrup and Chirk were too distantly related to tbe testator to have entertained any considerable hope ; on their own account. A trifling re minder, iu deference to family etiquette, waa aa much as either bad a right to expect. But that ltoltiu West should have left bid whole fortune to one of bis nieces, to the exclusion of the other, whom everybody had supposed to be ! his favorite fciok more thn the Misses ;C..irrupaudChu-kbysurpnse. , I 1 m It 1 . . I l..i. . v A.. j u : i,l.,arr H, M.il.lr.. -li .lil in : infancy, and a cuple of onihaned uiecea I a crowd uegon to ciuiect. i ue ingu ; cousins to each other, and reared under ; f1 K-rl sobbed and glauced apjal bis ro,if. constituted bis Itonsehold. 'U.J frm oue coarse face to another ! That bis large fortune would be left to j ""o fueountennS a tangle look of 1 them equally, waa a' point people took ! P : ' for granted; but should ai.y discrimina-1 ,A J i"hiut the driver and the tiou made between them. nolody I c,lerk. 5uo clo to the' carriage ' -.ml,! i... hif.ti .. .. ; u i door, found themselves aimultaneously ! in favor of Millie rranger. ber uncle's pet. whose blithesome smiles ho had ! Iieeu wont to call the sunlight of his jlife. i Millie's loviiiiT h art was too fall of ! sorrow at her uncle's death, and of !uraiitudtj for bis kindness iu bveoue j years, to leave rouui for any feeling of reproach at hia lost uuaccouutuhlo act. which the Misses Chirrup and Chirk so earnestly protested asainst. An elderly maiden aunt came to live with the two young ladies, and the household remained unbroken. Except the changes caused by the vacancy in their home, the lives of Ruth and Millie ! ....: i .... i...f,.. wuuuucu a uriviri It was not till the cousins bad resumed their places in society that Millie began to notice the difference made by her altered prospects. It was Ruth now, and not herself, that was the centre of attraction, . . . To be rid of tbe common herb of fops, j and to be mi longer pestered by their silly flattery, .Millie felt waa g thing to be thankful for. Rat when Orville Ryors turned bis back npon her, and joined tbe ranks of ber consiu's admir ers, she must have been other than a woman not to feel it. Mr. Ryors was the pet lieau of Bil lingdald. Handsome in person, accom plished in manners, and of fosoinating address, he was not one whose atten tions were likely to prove distasteful in any quarter, and when they were directed toward Millie Granger in a manner suf ficiently marked to excite no small de gree of envy, we need not be surprised if, instead of repelling, she just a little encouraged them. It would have rf quired a closer analy sis than Millie had ever made of her feelings to show her how little she really cored for Mr. Royers, and how much she cared for Arthur Warren, whom she had known and liked since they had played and, sometimes, quarreled to gether in childhood. Rut Arthur's self examination had gone deeper. He de votedly loved Millie, and kntw it. If he had never said so outright, it was from motives of delicacy, prompted by tbe difference of their positions. She was a prospective heiress ; he was with out fortune, and void of expectations, save those whose realization depended on hiuaself. - - - Having never spoken out, it may be that Arthur Warren bad no right to feel aggrieved by the attentions paid by Mr. Ryors to Millie, ne should have re membered that young gentlemeu who j have nothing to say for themselves are ! not privileged to stand in the way of ' others who have. ! But Arthur was not reasonable. tt I . 1:1 1 r .11. ..1 'was 110. eveu cnuuiu. xjv inaii icuru . . . - , . I with Millie on the score of On?" Ryors, without a word of explanation ' as to what coucern it was of hi if she ! married that gentleman the next day. I Xow Millie was a girl of spirit. She i not only refused to decline Mr. Ryors attention at the nnwarrantabb) Uicta ' tion of Arthur, but received them with ! rather more encouragement than before. I People began to say it would be I match soon, and it might Lave beeu, j bad not Millie's nncle died. For Mr. j Ryors, as we have said, was a very at. j tractive person, and Millie bad not srifli- ciently scrutinized her heart to be aware j that her chief interest in him sprang i from the pleasure of having triumphed j where ao many others had failed, and a disposition to assert ner own wiiL When Arthur Warren left his native village without so much aa calling to bid her good-bye, Millie cried a little, without well knowing why, and that evening went to a ball with Orville Ryors, and was among tbe gayest of the gay. It is very likely she would then and there have accepted Mr. Ryors, bad he said tbe word, just to show how little she cared for Arthur Warren. The grief that Millie felt at her nnole's death for a season overshadowed all other thoughts. But when time at length had ao tempered her sorrow that her life began again to flow in its accus tomed chaunel, it was not with a little chagrin that she beheld tbe man whose attentions had beeu lately so devoted to her that people began to couple their names significantly, turn and follow her fortune instead of herself. Millie knew now how little she bad ever cared for Orville Ryors ; but would others understand it? The thought stung ber past endurance. And the meanness of him who thus humiliated ber scarce exceeded in her eyes that of her cousin Rutb, who permitted, in stead of spurning bis advances. In tbe bitterness of her heart, Millie resolved to quit ber oousin's abode, and make her way to the great city, trusting that where so many live there mnst be many ways of getting a living, some of which would be open to her. She had been liberallv supplied with money during ber uncle a lifetime, aud bad husbanded enough to meet the ex penses of her journey, and, for a time, her living. So one day, without a word to any one, she secretly packed her trunk, caused it to be cnuveyed to the railway station, and took the traiu for Xew York. The day and night her journey lasted was one of alternate hopes and misgiv ings. At times she would have fain turned back, but when she thought of tbe jeering tongues behind her, her eyes would flash through her tears, and though her lips quivered, her heart would again become firm and resolute. Millie bad never seen the city before. IU din and bustle confused her. Sur- rounded by importunate haekmeu and hotel runners quick to perceive her in experience, she found herself at last, without her own volition, seated in a carriage whose driver undertook to convey ber to the Kickshaw, the best house in the city, be assured her, though it had not a very inviting look, Millie thought, as the carriage stopped in front of it. "Your fare. Miss, said the . driver, jam ping down "five dollars you know. " It was not the extortionate demand that brought a troubled look over the girl's face: j Tutting her hand into her pocket, she found ber ' money had dis appeared. Hhe searched everywhere, butiu vain, titie had doubtless been robbed in the crowd after leaving the train. A feeling of hopeless terror over came her at the thought of being there, a total stranger, without a cent in the world. Iu a trembling voice Millie explained her situation. "That, dodge won't do. said tbe driver. "So. it wou't do." added a frowsy- lookiug clerk, who made his appearance . . . ..... .... . . , J u n no moueou the irkbUa that hae no money, jou ku..; . ' . ' , T. Avoaa I a II XV nwiu-ia. au M U VUlt am ! lHceniau !" exclaimed the driver. ; fired and thrust a cousi.lerable dis- j tauce asunder by a right-and-left shove iivui 1'iAix ua viifuiuua aiuia. "Millie Or ineer I" txclaimed a voice to the ' maideu's blanched cheeks. ! "Arthur Warner 1" was all fcbe could answer. "Well, I declare 1" uttered shrill voice uoue other than Miss Chirrup's, who, without Millie's knowledge, had 00 rue to live iu tbe city, aud who chanced to bo passing at the time. ,:) Matters were rfdon explained, m3 Miss Chirrup, who had the kindest of hearts, invited her relative borne with her ; and Arthur, having paid the driver his just due. called another carriage, aud es- courted the ladiea to their ilMBtiuatuiu. He called round that evening and s.ioke his mind to .Millie. And .Millie found out she bad always loved him. Aud Arthur explained that it was only the difference iu their former prospects that had kept him silent. ' And Millie said she wouldn't care to be riah if it wasn't ' for his sake. And Arthur said he was glad she wasu't rich, and added that he was earuiug a salary that two could live on comfortably. And, in short, the two lovers were as happy as heart could desire. Ruth Morgan's anxiety at Millie's sudden disappearance had been relieved bv intelligence of her safety, and Uutli waa iu high spirits when Mr. Ryors called, determined, this time, to bring matters to a crisis. He had more thau once tried the plan of gradual ap- "but the mau who lost it was up before proaches. On this occasion he resolved you." to come directly to the point, aud bad "My son," said the other worthy actually gotten half way on bis knees j parent, "jbserve that it's the early bird when Ruth said, quietly : ' ' ! that catches tbe worm." "Don't be too hastv, Mr. Ryors ; you "I ''. O " lffx, !" replied the ex may regret it." " tcellentboy; "also that the worm was iTti -li 4i- t , I caught by getting up earlier thau the There is but oue thing I i regret ; j .. J b 0 your refusaL" . . , , . , ,. .Mti nnl,,'. n-;il " p.iii. lirrin Ithoslieen considered uot beneath . .. . ,. ... ..... "Iknow ; it left you all he had terrnpted the gentleman ; "but that , notmngtome. 4AnI nmte as little I assure vnn to to . 1 . . . 1i.y said lluth. 11 hen hm tvtil twiu rfftct till uncle had nothing to leat r." The kneeling process waa suspended midway, and Mr. Ryors remained iu a very uneasy and not altogether graceful posture, while l.uth continued : "My nncle had some time before made a deed, you see, conveying bis entire estate in trust for tho benefit of J,!!!.lr;it.tBHf arel.'uisliops. and it was mv cuuHia .uu ie. reserviuir uuit i uie ,ntfrt l.imJirM interest to himself. The hinges of Mr. Ryors1 . . knees sud- ; denlr uucrooked, "Good good-morning, Miss Mor- i can, he stammered. i W . MAMtini .1. said Ruth, hen the discomfited suitor's back was turned. , "It shall never stand 1 said Millie. when she and Ruth met. a few davsltomo" iiufs, with their halting phil- , later. "Your claims on your nncle were as good as mine, and tbe property shall be equally divided." "Don't trouble yourself, little one," said Ruth. "Before Uncle Rollin pro vided for yon, our aunt, by an under standing between them, settled her fortune on me. 'Won't it console Mr. Ryors to hear it ?" iid.i ..... : 1 1 . I v .. . 4JU4. 44114. W1I4 Ul UUL.C I "Was made to save yon from a f,ir tor- tune bunting husband,", replied Ruth. Kdneation of Worn u. Commenting npon the fact that not one woman was saved on the fated At lantic, although many bad the tame chance of life as the men, an exchange says : "Tbe strength of women at tbe crises of their life depends on their physical culture while children. Let parents be no more ashamed of their girls' brown faces aud fists than of their boys'. Let them train and clothe them so that they cau ran and climb aud care for and protect themselves. Let them take them with their brothers into the harvest field. A boy is not ashamed of work ; no more should be a girl. The refinement that shuts a girl out of God's sunshine, and allows her uo rougher work in-doors than to embroi der worsteds, or tap ivory keys, or dust a marble mantel, is refining her off of the face of the earth to give place to the daughters of tha servants of tho kitchen." A Forger lleaeeiu lliuist-ir. While Geneva is mourning over the remains of the Duke of Brunswick with a grief which finds consolation only in the legacy leq neat bed to ber by the departed 'prince, the City of Carlisle, Scotland, haa found a little Duke of Brunswick of her own, whose bequest in her favor, although not so magnifi cent as that of the Duke of Brunswick to Gneva, is sufficiently large to call forth ber utmost feelings of gratitude to her posthumous benefactor. It seems that a certain Mr. Edward Stuart Wil son, who in 1855 fell into trouble by committing forgery, and was sentenced to transportation for twenty years, bnt was subsequently released on a ticket-of-leave, has left to the corporation of Carlisle the sum of SoO.OiK) for building a new town hall, and 915,000 for erect ing a re rod on in Carlisle Cathedral, be sides other legacies, amonnting in all to about 750,000. While a compositor on the Montreal ir;,V4.- was setting up an advertise ment for a lost canary, the bird flew in at the office window, "which shows tbe value of advertising." Lying in Ited. If a convalescent may be monarch of all be surveys as be lies in bed, there re cases in which a man may be the (lave rather than tbe sovereign in that kingdom of Sleepy Hollow. Rossini furnishes a case iu point. Just sixty years ago, in 1X13, he lodged in a worst inn's worst ruom, iu Venice. He was then ono-an.l-twejty. unknown and am bitious, also poor, lie au opera, to be culled was composing II Figlio per Azzardo," in winter weather ; and, to save the cost of tire, Rossini lay in bed. Hchad justfiuishednotingaduet, when tbe leaves slid off the sheets, and, gently waviug to the floor, were wafted under the couch. . Rossiui looked after them, strr-i.-lieJ out his arm to reach them, and, finding them beyond his reach, he flung himself back, with an "Al diavolo vol duelof-. I will note it over again !" Tbe vein, however, was exhausted ; bis memory failed him, and again be looked beu?ath the bed at tbe paper beyond bis reach. "It would be unlucky to pick it np," - bo said, "since it has fallen. I will compose another. If I i vr pn w riiMi i win wniM m v inusm s oth ,Iul,u8ers ll in weatuer j . brief p. note,l another d net, and had just finished it - . . . . heu a friend euterd the room. "Ami co," cried Rossini, "cast your eye on this ; try it at the piauo, and tell me what you think of it !" The amitft did as be was told, and exprease.1 himself delighted. "Sow suid thecomixyser "put your arm under my lied. puU out the paper that hes therc-iiother duet is noted on it and try that also. A"B. " " !. m. .. 1 1 1. 1. ...i 1 - .... ... . -. . . JTrTt 1 f 1 m 1 '?,u,..re,0, te?.Hl ! . , 1 i..i .1: ' ... .u. w.i story ... now IT out of his reach 1 he two friends-mie in t Iia .t life, nfirn.! it lli. &lrn ttf tliA . --. . . . were of one opinion, that the duet from below the bed was the better of the two. After a little while, the friend inquired what Rossini meant to i!o with the other. "It is doue," reolied the youug com poser ; "I have, by help of a few altera tions, turned it into a t rz ((." Limn, by lieing too lazy to slip out ;uf U-d, he took the indnstrions pains to write two duets instead of one, and to euauce oue of the two into a fc7o. The philosophy which urges the ex- .vllftie., of early rising has been very excess iu rising with the lark and lying j to his visitors, of a call from West Point, down with the Iamb as iu the practice Some hours later, Washington, arriving referred to iu Moore's song, which re- with General Kuox and Geueml Lafo commeiids a lengthening of our days by ; vette, aud Uiidiu? Arnold gone, followed taking "a few hours from the night, my dear !" That phil.mopby was shaken iu tbe early days of the world by two sleepy cluldreu, wno came under tiie rebuke of vigilaut fathers. "My son.' remarked one sire. "I once found a j i early." leoe of fol.l by risms "Ay, rejoined the young hopeful. ; the dignitv of Field-Marshal the Duke 1 0f Wellington to hold rank among the pU.;,ogoph!e of tllB hwl . am,t no. Llv kn..w that l h-..l ver delivered ..... i nimseii 01 an avium or maxim lllUStra- , ung oed-uocinue. one nos oeen su.ien for him anil ins frace li:is lieeti mmle to . . . . . . 1 ." -. .f " r ; .r.ii-1 wear it as if it were bis own. " 'When e..r u were uis own. ueu .1uuu.gn.11u mu, , is ume tor "'m tied, it is time for him to turn out. as the Duke of Wellington ! used to say ! bo we are told, as if the field-marshal always saying 1L , Xow, tbe phrase was favorite oue 1 . . . i .. .1 . pruirauij u( uriginai even on cue ups VI 444D . I VJ44444Cn. HI 4IO 4lie4l4W1 IU i,. . ... tJ; . . ,...n.. .1 4 1 . a .... . 11. t .. 1 n of Chichester. .' 'IU I - um uccu 4..14344.1 J IIIC 4T4II T I .. 1: 4 1 . l ' . a 1 :.. ' i x i.e var.iesii iiiuirut.ou 01 .uu evils 1 . . .. . . of Ivinir lute iu bed. which some of onr 0,'1,-'' Ppl "spl to receive when they , cini. ren, came to tnem irom in. ; . ho has not Heard of-the osol"r ? ', Tia tba voice of tbe laggard : piata, Toa hava waked raw too aocn! I ma it alamber aaira ! As tbe door oa Ita hia are, ao he on bin bed, Ttxroa fata aldaa, aad hia aboaltlera, aad hia heavy had." The door that turns on ita hinges is '. doinir its diitv .a . .l.mr let Kiilomon i ! and Dr. Watts say what they will ; and ; : the wild-brier, the thorn, and the this- 1. ... . . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . ' . tie, which grew broader and higher in ; his garden, were at least acting busily j ... lulUlJ 411 C" 41144 II I XJ 1 111,111411 LtT.4 111 them. Aud, after all, the so-called j sluggard seems to have been more harmless in bed than his censurer, who left him, after an impertinent mission ary visit, with such au outburst of Pharisaical pride as this : I "Snid I the. ti my hrt, 'Hrrn'a a lan fur not ! That man. 'a but a p'ctarn of wtiat 1 mUht b; ant .nut, hi asy t;la their car la mj nre.J-In.-. Who bar. Un?ht me, ly t!me., to l.v lea-linn ' o.k Ug aaj i Perhaps, if the sluggard had had such j comfortable, house. In regions far re friends, and tbey had found him "work j moved from timber, aud where stone to do," he would have risen to do it. and lime and clay abound, even there There was some reason iu the young , the log house obtains universal prefer fellow who, on being asked why he did ! enee. During my trip np and down this not get np, replied that he had nothing long line of Xorwegiau coast, I have had to get up for I We are not even sure many opportunities to examine Uie old that Qniu is to be severely eensnred in j as well as the new constructions. Let tho part he took iu the morning dialogue me tell you first of the old. Tbe logs are with his valet : "John, what's o'clock ?" "Nine o'clock, sir." "It there any mullet in the market to-day, John ? "Xo, sir." "Then Call mo at nine to marrow, John." Moreover, it does uot follow that, be cause a mau is in bed. his mind is idle. or that he is careless of the welfare of j his fellow-creatures who are up anil 1 abroad - "'fleriMl-ltaa wrote DXwt la be4 Ana Klrbaraaiil, a learned phvuiriaa, tleclaiea tha chick-warn of la. "head (Joe beat la Uiat reclined poallk.. " . - Xo educated woman is fit to bear children who cannot give them all the instruction they require np to the age of ten years. No woman can have any , ony essenUal differences between the old ; warder, becoming enamored of ber, mm higher career or nobler exercise for 1 "nl the new Norwegian styles of house : faVored her escape, and accompanied France has no poor law, and tbe whatever talent Ood has given her, and building are in the substitution of red j ber, but was stabbed to death by ber maintenance f the indigent depends if the unmarried women who are seek- tiles, ami occasionally of slate, for the i orders immediately after she had re- entirely npon the bureaus of charity, ing outlet for their unused energies od. roofs, and the casing of the timber, joined her ba'id. Since that period she which exist in most parts of the conn would qualify themselves for this high- ' !icMorm8 the body of the honse.with has become still more redoubtable, her try. These are voluntary organizations, est duty of maternity iiy would prove thin boards, for looks sake. audacity and activity having redoubled, supported by contributions, collections their own frequent assertion, that wo- 1 Within a year the town of. Xamsos, and she has made herself the terror of at churches, and similar means. They men are born for higher uses than to about one hundred miles north of the country. She burns forms, carries are said to work admirably, and accor be household drudges or to brinf forth Drontheim, was almost totally destroyed : off cattle, and levies forced contribn- ding to a published statement, during a children. Home training in infancy is by fire ; and it is now in course of re-; tions. The slightest disobedience to ' recent period of twelve months, afforded the only absolute universal rule of edu- ( building. Here, notably, the work of ber orders is punisiiable by mnrder and ' relief to 1,250,000 persons. England cation. After that the parent's coarse building is going on npon a considerable I fire. Her troop is numerous, and al- j has 777,725 paupers, or one to every should be modeled bv the child's char- ; scale, and the two modes appear side bv I wavs well informed bv the peasantry, twenty-seven of the population. Ire- 'acter and temperament. 1 Lafayette and Arnold) TrettMon. Robert Dale Owens, of the Atlantic J Monthly, writes: The event of a visit to i Paris was mv introduction, by Frances Wright, to- General Lafavette. Of all men living ha was the one I most enthu siastically admired, and the one I bad the most earnestly longed to see. These feelings had gained fresh fervor in the United States. Just two months before I A lauded at -e xork Ijaiayette bad returned home in the Urandywine, after I a year's sojourn in tbe land which be bad aided to liberate, and by which be ! had been welcomed as never nation, till then, had welcomed a man. I heard hia praise on every tongue. I found love and gratitude toward him in every heart. My admiration and sympathy were no doubt transparent, and these may have wou for me, from one of the most genial of men, a hearty reception. At all events, he devoted himnelf to satisfy my curiosity, with an overtlowiug good nature and a winning kindness and simplicity that I shall remember to my dying day. , A lew items of our conversation I still most distinctly recollect. One incident, puti tbJe Fatn of his C,mntrj i , raro asoect. ever recaUs to me . when I think of it. the tender eves and ' . the gracious, loving manner which made the grand old Frenchman the idol of all yoiiugpeoplu who werefortuuat enough to share bis friendship. ; It wft, jut More t- namMn(( ol tueBole t'raitorwho loome.1 up during our yotjo,, ono of mimt eventful days in all that eventful period, ., rtm ,,., 1 f,l: ' immortal DecUration' had baea read a. tkl-t l iiuui iiiu cn. statehonse ; it was the 25th of Sepfem- If O" te. afternoon of the .niui .us.up 01 me o.a x uiiauc.uuia preceiutiKuay, asuiugtou, aiier uiumg Ht Fishkill, had set out with his suite, iutelllli to reacu Anioia-s headquor- . . .. ters, eighteen miles distant, that even ing. What would have happened had he carried out bis intention, we can now only conjecture W bat men cull chance -a easiial meeting near Fishkill with induced him to remain there that night Next morning, after sending notice to Arnold that he might expect him to breakfast, he atraiu chaueed hia inten-! tiou, turning off to visit some redoubts on the Hudson, opposite West Point, -...1 4 J.. i. i -i .1 ... giz-. it was while these officers were UUlll UK IIUIIUCB-UCTIIIll ' U BlWIir- at break f. 1st with the faruilv that Arnold ' ,eceivel the desoatch which announce,! lim, as be snpinised, across the river. ' and,' learning that Arnold bad uot been to West Point, returned to dinner. As . A ashington approache.1 the bouse, his 1 aide. Colonel Hamilton, who had re- mained behind, name hurriedlv to meet him. and ulaced iu his hands a despatch ! which, as confidential staff oflicer, he bad already opened, and which disclosed Arnold' treachery, Washington com mnnicated its contents, doubtless before dinner, to (ieneral Knox, and to bini alone, with the brief and signitieaut words, "Whom cau we trust now ?" The usual version is flint ho thus communicated the portentous news to ; General Knox anil J.ajnurlti: jointly ; but that is au error. lhe statement made to me by the latter, during our journey t interested remaiueJ mnm.in- to La Grange, surprised and me at the time, and has indelibly impressed on my It was this : ' IV... W.nlnnnlAn .Unn in A aw u i tioiiLiik. uuu ont u' w u v 1 1111. a . no uunsnai emotion was visible on his j . ti. 1 . 1 couuieuance. lie was grave ami silent, tnt not more so than often happened , -heu recent tidinirs from the armv occii- i,A T:,i,n-, frm tl.A.rmvn.i. i piea his thonght. At tlle close of meai he beckoned to Lafavette to follow hirn 1aBSed to an inner apartment. ! turned to bis vouncr friend without ' nttering a svllabfe. placed the fatal dts-! . . . . - - patca in liis nanus, and then, giving . way to an ungovernable burst of feeling, fell on his neck aud sobbed aloud. The effect produced on the young French mfirnnid aiM.nulAn.iul li . ruM.ihl l.ia f..i - -j ... .... r,- . 1 . 1 . 1 . .4. . t erai tcoia inn u-.gnmeu in uis usual manner) as devoid of the common weak- ".""V' aJ " 1.UUK . "J"!" ... I remuug hii anecuote. iua. wii- waai ue, only "rouguon, iu long . ' ami aimntimtifl liriilfaa tat rrn rrt-yl. f ti u M BSUlUgbUU CICr KVD W i. V , r 14 UI moment, under a reverse of fortune ; and perhaps I am the only human being who ever witnessed in him an exhibi tion of feeling so foreign to bis tempera- ment. As it was, he recovered himself before I bad perused the communication that had given rise to bis excitement, 1 l 4 1 ... 4. 1 . lY . . 4 "uu "u remrur-i u u.n n..u m. 4 : 1 : .. 1 : . i . : 1 1 reuiatueu iu uu ueueuuor o..u of grief or despondency." The Los Hon of.N'ororay. "Yon may suppose," "that log houses were born on Plymouth Rock ; but they existed in Norway ' centuries, perhaps, ! before Plymouth Rock was known. A I yet more interesting fact is that the ; fashion has not changed. Improve i ments there have been in many ways. but the log house of X'orway is the most fashionable, perhaps because the most squared aud nicely dovetailed at the corners. Grooves are then cut, with tbe bioad axe. on both the under and the upper surface. When tbe log is finally laid to its place, this double groove is filled with moss, and moss is afterward ; canlked into the log seams. The par- titions are built with the house; and in 1 the same thorough manner as tbe out side walls. The bouses are never more than two stories high, and the roofs are ! steep and heavily timbered. A covering j of tdabs is fitted, rouud side down, to j the roof timbers ; and over these slabs comes one or more layers of birch bark, i then comes a heavy timber coning j along the eaves and up the roof at either end. On this is laid sods of rich earth : wel1 packed to a thickness of about six j inches, and these, in this moist climate, ! -Ornish an abundant grassy finish. The ; side. A few finished buildings there ' aie, which would bold high rank, among the best of our American country homes, iu architecture ; while in comfortable exclusion of cold, we have not a country house, of whatever material, that would bear a rigid comparison with the poor est of them. Double glazing of window sashes outside and in the packing of every window and door frame with moss, and a careful paperiDg of every room, j are some of tbe mean taken to prevent any circulation of the frosty air. For; winter comfort, combined with the nt- j most facility for every- conceivably or-! namentatiou, commend to me the Nor- i wegiaii log house. Scientific A uteri- enn. "It' Xoue of My ICiiMiuesiV "It a none of my bnsine.,,,-said Peter aiaran as lie pMsed rarmer Myde s orchard and saw one of his neighbor's sons stealing apples. ' "I, after his owu lioys." And he trudged on home, meetiug Til. tl-l . I .1 . .- -ur. jivuer ovine wav. ma nrsL lm- no let uis uiuer, iiio reproiii or punisu- meut that would have followed might have saved the boy from further crime. Rnt, escaping detection and punish ment, ho was encouraged to go on in evil. But it waa Martin's business, even iu 1L. 1 u.l. 1 1 wi narrow aim mus., sense m wuicu iueuau epres:,, uimseu. lie wouia 1 uav iuuuv ma uuHiuess n fumv oue introduced . fever-breeilino- nui sance- into tbe neighborhood, to the serious peril of his fuuiilv, On that verv evening Jim Ryder met Martin's son, Edward, a bid three years younger, and gave hiiu a couple of nice 1 ..Vbere did you get them?" asked EawarJ he tUBe gIicT trniL , ..You'll not tell?" : no imleeil. Hvj".-"o;eL,"r,d I w cZl llona ! a Jhe wples l.ed rtemS I Si nof L. 0, r,T . M' Iv. " 0t miss them." 'li... l.... i .li . t : - ...in.. ii,. I "Vjma.. li uin, auu lun viun ...... .1 1 . 1 . IL.I i L . uiir iirMumicii til. T.muxer-ii.ai; mere ' . i....; :.. 4,1,; i. -n.- D. . . ! JIT'T' "f . 7 ",J " l next afternoon. help themselves to as many asttiey could carry. Peter Martin was returning home on the next day, and jut as be got near Farmer Ilvile's orchard, he heard a reat l7 al"1 barkiiig of .logs. And ;u after he Paw Jim Ryder leap over road. ; . . An. Ah, joii young rascal !" be said to ; " "' "lieeti stealing apples again." He was moving 011, when be heard himself called. Looking round be saw Farmer Hyde and be saw something else that made his hesrt sink like lead in bis bosom. He saw bis li 1 1 lo boy Edward in the tight grip of the angry farmer's band. "Been stealing my apples !" said the At asiiiKlebonud Pet.-,- Martin was over the fence, and. standing with nale lips before the farmer and his frightened boy, ho cried : "Oh, Ned ! ' Xed !" iu sorrow acd shame. "To think that uou could have doue a mean and wicked '.;.. i.l 11.; .4.0 "I wouldn't have thought f it.father iiiviii . 4444. u 441V1444441. i4 iii.iatiiei. 1 the trembling. White faced child, "if it hadn't been for Jim Ryd.-r, . . . ne said he got some yesterday, and tl, it r.ant .... i,.,rn. Ti,.mfit rrwrna .A (T w i4'r.. . ir . : . ( U8nal ia 8acll ca . j Frmer j, d ! tl. .n.r i..0 m.t of hi. l.-rt .t nil,I of tbe father's naiu. "B.-.t there is mv Ivov " runkin irrvl l.nt Vir.,11 to"Ed ward '"in takinl. hat don't belong to von. It is stealing.' . . " .. o Peter Martin went home that day a wiser man : and with some' clearer no- tions of bis responsibility iu the life n ...... 1 I.;... niuuuu 444441, .Modern Niiazn. After all, m every age, under every civilization. people is always itself, whatever the dress.goat-skin blouse. gold.laoe joubiet black drss coat, the nve or six great instincts which it pos sessed in its forests follow in its palaces and ottiees. To this dar. warlike pas- ' sions, a (loomy humor, subsist under the regularity aud propriety of modern i manners. Their native energy and harshness pierce thronirh the perfection : of culture and the habits of comfort. ' t i ' : . . - i. .. -. . . iuctr uuit i.Ki "eiug a mill oue, iro- pulse was to tell the neighbor about his , ui 8tovB it Wi3 can .but he cheeked the impulse, saying derthat an un.lefinel fear came creep in hia mind: "Let him had it out for in iuto thip ,iule hearts b , WjniJT himself; its none of my business. 1 d uein! the older, put on a brave "out! get his lU will. instead of bis thanks, siJe.. for a wha g clieerf.illv mosniKely. to EJies question. "Ar'ut you afraid ?'-' It m luppenotl that this was J" : "N, what do you suppose can hurt me Ryder s hrst offence, and if Martin batl Lere r But vti)XlchM dowu i.icu young meu, ou icaviug wxioru, go sweet name, isn t it ?1 ; but be eats in to huut bears on the Rocky mountains. . sects, and the oollen of flowers, as well j the elephant in South Africa, live uuder , L-i.u.-i, ju.t ucukjeo uu uuiscunca, j pose wis pirn set me losnion ol nam sail their yachts on dangerous coasts mocks ?" Little Corporal. delight in solitudo and peril. The an ' . . cient .Saxon, the old rover of the Scan- A WoRI Tt THe Hoy the dinayian seas, has not perished. Even evenings are growing cooler and" longer, at school the chihlren roughly treat one i arid the time 18 at hanii w,ien oa wiu another, withstand one another, hght ;iave more leisure than at any other like dogs, and their character is so I rw.,;! f tb v.r V,.n nt. nut., inla indomitable that they need the birch i and blows to reduce them to the disci- pline of law. J udge what they were in 1 the sixteenth century ; the English race passed then for the most warlike of ; urope, uie most reuonoiaoie in Dotiie, Tote at east two Lonrs o( eaih evemug the most impaUent of anything like ' to useful reading. You will be astou-?'a,velT- ."Englw" savages " is what : i8uw1 when upxt .pring come9t to find Ce lini ..all them ; and the "great shins j how ma.,h you h:,ve iearneii. Give an of beef with which they fill themselves honr a ,iaT to agricutural and horti keep np tbe loree and ferocity of their : cultural reading. Make yourselves instincts.- Tainn IIitor of Enih-h j famiii;.r with all tbst relates to yonr Literature , m. calling, and you will realize the advau- A Female Brigand. ; t'ge3 of such a course when jon grow The Italian Journals relate that the i environs of Catanzaro, Calabria, are in- fested by a band of brigands under the : command of a young woman. She is tweuty years of age, aud of great beauty, with remarkable black eyes. Her name j is Maria, the widow of Pietro Monieo, ; a bandit chief who was killed iu an en-! counter with the gendarmes. At his death she seized his carbine and swore to avenge him. Some time after a young man. the son of a wealthy farmer. feU j iOTe w;tu her and joined ber band j order to be able to prosecute his suit. ye wa, however, peremptorily ejected, I ,n,l in order to raven ..n himself, be betraved her to the authorities. She waB arrested, tried, and sentenced to : tliirtv years' imprisonment, while undergoing her punishment a through dread of vengeance. "oiit Iim" Column. Boy nod Hattrrlly Hoi: "ButtfrtT npon th wIuk, Pcvlty, fluttering llttic thing. . I l.a!llij(. huveriuit in tli Mr. Oa wiiAfc lu vuti uve uu there ? BcTTrarxT- H"n-j-Jwt uiliiii iwcit, li tli f.wd 1 Uiv.- tj et." The iiiiurt guy fltrjtr 1 nwk.v, Vanui? the t.y would Duf nr. Jy : A ol Krf be w-tit. on ffrntenuje whik. Floatiutt tuu ti N!i)"il t. . "Ofar cbu.i, it n brignt In lit. ft a'i xuiilitfht. 'trJi nit not. but irt Sv -1" tuorrww ivl aul ilts-1 I'll li.' A Chilu-Likb Faith. One afternoon j through the absence of their mother, ; two little children, Willie and Edie, hfone She wa necesarUy : .itaiuej from lipr 1m)hii niiiil &f;Ur .rl'T i rv!la. nJthe children vainlv watched .et Iyder look i:tr ner cou,;,, n!ltii tney- eoaj nu longer distinguish one object from an other in the fast-gatherini; darkness. mi. i i- i. r. in affright, declaring, lie t ween ber sobs, that she beard something, be uucou sciously realized the need of a higher power than his own. Taking hold of her hand he said, "Please don't cry, Edie i let us pray. God can take care of ns, even if there wav a lion right in ,.. J the roorn. ..wh w cmlJ He ?' ..0oJ can Uo ,nTtuing EJie anything, Edie. Don't you remember how mamma told us about Daniel how be was put right in among lots of lions, and God came aud shut their months so they couldn't bite at all?" "Couldn't they growl, either?" "Well, I don't know, for sure, about tba.t ; but I know God could make them stop growling, if He wanted to, for I tell you God can do anything." "Well, Willie if He can do anything, I wish He would mate mamma come nome. May be He will, if we ask Pber little bands together. Edie ! , L P. ' lig" " "Why. Edie. that isn't tbe ; way to pray : we must kneel down, aud : trr to tliinlr wl.Qt I1...1 11 ; .,,.1 - ; i ... I.. i.;nL. i.ni - it .i ir, :.. l -'j um ii uuu no i, nuu li tn-j .11 hulk w. ' ........ " ' we , i..,, ,. nave pteu good or uot. "Then let's 1 . Inoul ..,.1 ..... .." Tl.. ! 1 knelt down, and Willie repeated the Lord's Praver. aud then saidV "Please. trod, we know we have beeu .ery nanphty, lots of times, but we want you to help us to be g'KxI. Please take care of us. and make mamma come home quick, for we are all aloue." Edie then said ber little prayer, "Now I lay me dowu to sleep."- They arose from their knees with a peaue of mind they could not express, and, youug as they were, they realized a perfect trnst iu the wil- lingness and ability of God to take care for them nnder any circumstances. Nati-hal SoAP-Srns. An astonished looking little girl who has a lively im agination of ber own, and who finds not the slightest difficulty in believing "for very true" all the wonderful stories of the Arabian Nights, gravely accuses us of "making np," when wo tell ber that theI,e ure nttt,,.ral. "PrinfTS le ready U,.HJ. s"as """aup iromineearui. 1.1 : .1 . .1 1 ei it is irue. A spring ol tuis sort! is fonnd on the island of Samao in tho ! Malay Archipelago. t)ing to the j V . j . - .... presence of certain minerals in the earth, through which the water passes, ;, t,...,.. 1 ... 7 "Ti" "'L'ZIF:, """.TZ " i ' 1 . 7 ., - . J' strong lather, the natives of the oiuuu Ui.VU v artu OUilV IIUIUIO IU Iit .'"11'3 ,ue wai." pPrln: !.,! At. . a -aT il : . vuougu soapy enougn 10 Cleanse soiled clothes, are not euough so to be blown into soap-bubbles But if they are so aPJ lt tlie llttl Malayans are as fond of i u.'?w.,u8 soap-bubbles as some American : children we know, we can imagine that the ncighborhotal of the soap-spring is a favorite place of resort. i. itIf Vi,t. l,rul. j all the proper steps ; and upon tbe pre-TubLittlkHimmw-kBi-ilpek. The i feet sending to see that they were ef nest of this little bird is just the nicest i fectual, be found that the only prepara tbing iu the way of a comfortable, cozy : tion the mayor had mode consisted in cradle for baby birds that I know of. -i having a large number of graves dug iu " UUUJ5 like b uttiuuiocn., vi m Bleu- i der twig you know bow delightful a! hammock is, don't you ? directly over a stream, and is made of grass and wool, or cotton taken from plants. If anvthing cau be nicer, I'd like to see it. The cradle is quite deep ; so there s n. ,1 .nrer nf tl. Imbie. tnmblinir the edge. In fact, it is so deep that the pretty little brown and white mamma has to pack herself in very snuglv. This little 1. .mi.wu.L- and bis name is Uouev-Eater Ithat's a - J . . v . as honey. By the way, don't you sup- , t).in l.... v.e .11... Ives to pass an idle moment : improve eVery one of them. Read, write ; do gomethin-r that is useful to' yourselves or 0hera Make it a fixed rule to de- np to be men. EsioyiA. My first is iu t;q,e, but uot in braid, My second is iu shovel, an 1 also in spade. My third is in girl, but not iu boy. My fourth is in laugh, but not in ..v. My whole is a country in South America, A,lr .pera. W. Ill SorARC A planet. A pipe, A son of Adaii To trust. Anwer : S tar Tube Abel Rely land has 87,003, or one to every G3. A pretty hard case a cotlin. Tbe grain crops of Oregon ar said to be immense. New Orleans boasts of a swimming school for ladies. Patience is a tlower that giows not ia every one's garden. The defects of the nuderstandiu?. like thrmn of the fure. grow worse as wo grow old. h'fx hefoHf-anltt. "My deor boy, honesty is thc lieot policy." "Well, yon ought to know, father, for yon have tried 'em both." Why is a young lady like a bill of ex change ? liecanse she ought to be set tled when she arrive? at maturity. The two best rales for a system of rhetoric are. first, have something to say, and next say it. Eiiunonx. It is proposed to introduce Latin and German as optional studies into the ad vanced public schools of Wilmington, Delaware. Often do we think when we oiiht to act, and act when it behooves in to re flect ; hence, caution is frequently as fatal as rashness. Man has not love fr spiritual life and immortality, until sin breaks to pieces the earthly things on which his affec tions are fastened. Washington boarding housekeeper are said to be putting up their prices, to keep pace with the increased income of Congressmen. Three questions to be put to our selves before speaking evil of any man : First, is it true ? Second, is it kind ? Third, is it necessary ? A Sau Francisco man is proudly ex hibiting the prizes which he carried off at shooting festivals iu Switzerland, Austria and Germany. A boy employed in a Sou Francisco drug store is said to have recently fallen heir to a fortune of SJjU.tHM, left him by a relation in England. Somebody who professes to have H- . : inane me expenmenr, savs mat cnioro 1U1 K I : 1 1 . i . . 1 , . .1 - r .1 .i toriu w.u remove paiui iroiu garments better than anything else. It ia estimated that the farmers of Minnesota lose millions of dollars an- , Dually through carelessness or iuditl'er ' .... : .... .. .1 l...... ! .i i . cum iu n:iiriiig lueir ueai. 1 here is a member 01 th Xeliue race iu Chester, known aa the Ferguson cat, -uat .T" ns V"n poona ice I we,Kh m cat ordinary sire is nor r eight pounds. j Brighain Young has some wholesome ; opinions of the Indian agents. Hesayst j "With but few exceptions they are the most G.l-forsake u rascals that ever ' cursed the country. They promise ' everything, and .ultil nothing. They 1 swindle the Indian, from right to left, j ami the Indians knov it. If there had never been a? Indiar. agent the Indians ! would be better than .'hev are now." ', trii'l ali.itil.l I,.. ;,. lWV. ....1,4 ... : jtersonal appearance. God meant wo ' mnn to bo attra -tivr , and it is one of ' her duties to carry out this design. But j that dress is to bo all is more thau we ; can lndieve. Just becanse we love to see girls look well, as well as to live to some purpose, we would urge them such a course of reading aad stii.lv on will confer qnalities which no modiste can snnnlv. I 4 4 -rf - . ,-, . . . , ..... . .A Sf . re:l V1 1U tLe Testament. Ho came-I a hard other Iks were eoinsr to reap the irnus : a man must nave cnurasre to 1 rmiia man must have courage to ool at his own life so. and think what'll come of it after he s dead and gone. A good, solid bit o' work lasts ; il u's only laying a fl'or down, somebody's the better for it's being done well, "lieside-. the man as does it. . Eliot. A French prefect recently wrote to one of the mayors of his department, advising him, as the cholera had brokeu out in the district, to take all the neces- I sary precautions. After some time tha ' mayor wrote to say that he had taken me cuurch yard. . A ei-known antuor once wrote a ! pretty essay on me power or education j ? rieanty, that it absolutely chiseled tUe. attres ; that he has seen many i --'" pair 01 mica iips so mojinea py inongiiE awakened aud ac i.ic sentiment, as to ue unrect. lizaoie. And he put it on that ground that we so often see people, homely and unat tractive in youth, bloom in middle life I int ftencd Indian Summer of good i !....!. .....I . 1 . . 4 looks aud mellow tones. Among various species of new cotton indigenous to foreign soil, and intro duced in the cotton States, is the Peru vian. It is tall and well limbed, but yet destitute of the faintest sign of blooms. This cotton does not bloom until the second year after planting, and continues to bear fruit every year afterward to the seventh year. It seems well adapted to our soil and climate I durinir the summer, but it is Question I al,,e tether it will War the changes of I tne winter season. Tbe staple is said 1 to be coarser but as long as the Sea Island, and stronger. It commands about four cents more in the market than our ordinary cotton." In Chicago the street cars are about being used as adjuncts to the post office. For this purpose, the postal authorities propose to place iu all the cars passing near the post office, boxef for the reception of letters. These will tie so arranged that the letters can be deposited without entering or stopping the car ; and on arriving at the office, the carrier will remove the box and put an empty oue in its place. By this plan people along the lines can deposit their letters at any hour, knowing that in a short time they will be at tbe general I office for transmission ; while nnder ex- isting arrangements, the lamp post I boxes cau be emptied only at stated hours, and a considerable time may ! elapse Wfore the carrier arrives at his i destination. There are just thirty-two days in the iyeariii! which it is unsdvisable to ! Join bauds, namely : Seven in January, I three each iu February, March and De cember, t - each in April, Jane, Jnly, August. September ami Xovemlier, and ' one in lobcr, so tbat January is the j worst and October the best month for committing matrimony, the actual nn luckv davs being these : January 1, 2, 4, 6, "7, li). 15 ; February 6, 8, 18: March 1, 6, 8 ; April B, 11 ; May 5. 6, 7 ; June 7, 1 1 ; July 5, 10 ; August 13, 17 ; Sep tember 6, IS; Octobers; November 15, 16; and December 15, 16, 17. As to which is the best days of the week, why Monday for wealth ; Tuesday for health ; Wednesday the best day of all ; Thursday for crosses ; ; Friday for losses ; Saturday no luck at all.