illtlli SVrr i - B. F. SCHWE1ER, THE COXSTITl'TIOX THE CXION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF TflE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PEXNA., OCTOBER 29, 1S73. NO. 14. fVX fnAVFA AYrrtA : ' V ..'Artft Poelry. I'iant a Home. Yvttcg beginners in Ufee ttorsiu hoa'l forget Uae rainy day ; tuui'iie cannot lat forever, or the heart Lt'i.i iv. gar. :2ve the dime, and then the dollar. Lay up enmetMQK as you ruam CLC4Me Roue biuuuiog spot of WaB'f, bome fa'.r lot, aid "plant a boute " Tt. u. loo, who Lave Label around yon. Coming up to tale rear place ; .ivetbem something te remember Homestead memoriea let tbem trace. Wvii'.d rou feel tb pride of manhood. Let the .un your dwelling greet breathe the biened air of freed in, ova tLe soli beneath roar fret. Vol:, to, v bo perhaps have pqaauuVr-J Life', fair morn 'tic not too late! Start t once t woo bright Fo.-tnue, Kail ho more at so-railed "Fate," !rvw the go'dee seeds of eavibg !a the lien and quickeaing hu ; Sod Tour la-1 days not a-Ilk stranger. Eater Heaven's gaie from "booae"' Coquette. Isl thou think I captive lie To a grAciou--, glancing ere? lost thou think I am not free 7 Say, I am; thou freest me. Ail the world rou'd'not undo tains which bound me fat to r.u : Only at your touch they fly Freer th.n before am I. 1 care naught for eyes of bice ; 1 loved truth asd thought it yon ; If you charm but to deceive. Ail your cLarmfl 1 vet! can leave. Ah, my once veil loved one, llo no m.re a thon hat done ; she that tnakea true heart, to aeiie l.iiu( all berovn viU break TriiKf-Oiiniiv. XIV Mast ISP.. Work w:ies a man. Until work draws npou all the system. Provision is made for a regnlar wear, bat not for au irregular waste or complete exhaus tion. Men need lxxlilv and mental recreation. Food does much. No man need bo idle for mi hour. Idleness is not recreation. I!ut no man can pnt himself to u particular kind of work, aud keep constantly at it, 'without weakening not only Lis capabilities for other employment, but also for that special Tiork to which he has devoted himself. .Business men must learn that it is not so much the strong pu'.l as the long that loos tho whole life work. A man wight break his back or rupture Limself by I wareh.use, and he ; Mil nttim-t trt lift. n. would faiL liut he can bctrin at the i top and remove every piece of wood, everv brick, verv bolt, until no sign of ! the warehonse remains. But he must do this in detail, and take intervals of rest to accomplish the work. : Unjust so 1U business OI any kind. ! Xo great fortune i' to be made in a day. But there are d-ivs that require the coolest, healthiest brain, and the fnll strength of nianLood to carry the busi ness man safety over, or to pive such impulse to Lis business aa shall pnsh him far forward. If he be worn ont early, those days of crisis will be his ruin. Men must l?am the great value of wise rests, pauses, breathing places. The horse mut not be lashed tip a long ing that the address of the lady might hill from the bottom to the top. The ! be sent to Herald office. Oscar con wheels of the truck must be rUhcd gratulated himself on this idea, until the lieast of the burden takes1 The result was, the following day breath. Oive the goose oats, and grass ' ti,pre came an envelope with the card, aud rest, and take the day's egg daily. ; iiiss EHa ttainsborough, No. 37 l am not tauuujr morals, l am taUiug business sense. As an investment in a ; luoaey point of vie-, whether a man , 1 ! . a - ii. . T . t . 1.1, a.l. ueueves or mil iu lue Jewisu riaooaiu anii tuen proceeded to No. 37. t.r the Christian Sunday, nature has "Was Miss Gainsborough at Lome?" written the law of rest as the law of ; gie wa at home, and she received activity in every man. Rest i as neees- jir cheeseman, and from his hand her saryto activity as activity is to rest. , own iittie pocket-book. She thanked When there is a given and limited ijjm ith the sweetest grace, and re supplyof water to run a mill, it is sheer : g,.ettej so verT much the trouble he folly to be pouring it over a wheel which na,j naj, is stopped by obstructions. Cit feci-; jt was no trouble, Oscar declared in nig that you are working wht-u you are aj BinCerity ; but how it came on his only spilling your life. ' office table, he said, was bevond his Let our business men live mncu by poWer ef imagining. And here Oscar living long. To live long they must Bmiled and showed his white teeth, but live wisely. Wisdom is knowing the blushed nevertheless, imagining, per capability of the machine you work. , haps, appearances were against him. Yot will lose yo:ir steam, or bnrst yonr jje expressed his pleasure at having boiier, if yon attempt to drive by a five fonnd it, and then having no excuse to power engine machinery which requires prolong his call, rose to leave, ten horse-power to move it. "Well, that is all," he said, as he Recreate ! Have your evenings for went down the street ; "no adventure other work, reviving brain work, puri- jor me" fying heart work. Take your time for jje whistied and hummed, and poked tiie country. Iu the old myth, when- over nj8 iaw papers the rest of the dav. ever Antar us wounded and fell, the touch ; "Ella pshaw," what was the use of of his mother Earth renewed him. Go thinking of it any more, in the summer and roll in the grass. But the next day there came a note, You will not come back to yonr work n-itten on blush-colored paper, and any greener. Have yonr Sundays, not suggesting the perfume of violets. It for lrnmminr up customers nor in waa from 1, How delightful, except writing up liooks, bnt for the rest of that it was so dreadful body, and mind, and sonL Have you jtsj jir. Cheeseman picked np a little benevolent pet schemes, some gman jvory picture ; one had dropped poor family to help, some little sweet from that unfortunate pocket-book." (lower of goodness in a hidden nook to n was a picture of herself, "and of cnltivate, almost anything that is not con, 0f ao value, except as it belonged yonr regular, every day, routine busi- to mamma," uess. "Horrible !" he Lad not fonnd any snch treasure, bnt of course Le must TSi Age of I a I.arl!i. f.jj nD)jer the imputation of having ab- lr. Herman J. Klein had just pub-, stnwfted it Would she forgive him for lished at Cologne a somewhat enrions so coveting Ler picture as delilierately mquirv concerning the age oftheearth to stea it? How did it get out. and in what Le scverelv criticises the at- how did the pocket-book get on Lis tempts of the geologists to compute the bl at all ? tLat was a problem for length of time required for certain for- Philadelphia lawyer to solve, luations. Thus Biddel calculates the Now, with all the desire in the world age of the Mississippi delta, from the which he felt an hour ago, to make an amonnt of the present yearly deposit to other call at No. 37, under the present be four hundred thousand years; Lyell, aspect of affairs a note would be more the receding of the Niagara Falls from , agreeable. Accordingly, this was dis Kingston t. their present site, to be patched, and Oscar ruminated over the thirty-live thousand years, and Bischof : mystery. for the formation of coal to be nine mil-1 A week passed, when suddenly the lions ot years. But all these and tin-; jovial face of Harry Lambert appeared merons other similar calculations have, I in Oscar's office. . He had just returned l)r. Klein thinks, this fault, that they I from BntTalo. nre all based upon present conditions ; "Well, Harry ! what adventures this aud experiments on a small scale, from time ? Canght a pair of acrobatic which conclusions are drawn to deter- horses and saved beauty from destruc uiine general development of the most ! tion ; or befriended some old woman, gigantic dimensions. and found that she had some enchanting . creature for a granddaughter ?" . 1 I , . .. anM. a.,1 Value or Spare Jlioulen. Madame Je Genlis composed several find a pocket-book on your table over of her charming volumes while waiting ! there?" in the school-room for the tardy prin- j "Good gracious, Harry ! did you put cess, to whom she gave dailv lessons. it there?" Dagnesseau, one of the Chancellors 1 "Well, you see I picked it up just as of France, wrote an able and bulky I was coming in here, yon were ont" work in the successive intervals of wait- and I was in an awful hurry to catch ing for dinner. the 5 o'clock train ; but I slipped it Elihu Burritt, while earning his living under a paper for safe keeping ; I knew as a blacksmith, learned eighteen lan- , you would find it But on my way to guages and twenty-two dialects, by the depot I stopped and put an adver simply improving his "odd momenta." ( tisement in the Herald, directing to call He finally acquired fifty-three. hero for it All right, is it?" A celebrated physician in London "All right ! no ; that is, a young lady traDlated Lucretius while riding in Lis lovely creature she was she is, I carriage upon his daily rounds. ; mean called, and I hadn't seen it, and Dr. Darwin composed nearly fall hie I felt somewhat uncomfortable ; but works in the same way, writing down the next day I did find it, and I called his thoughts in a memorandum book, 1 at her house." which he carried for the purpose. "She told you where she lived." Phrenological Journal. I "Well, I found ont in truth I had j WHAT CAME OF A FISO. ! The day was bright, and yet Oscar ( CheeReman felt very blue aa be sat in . his office poring over law papers. He pave a shiver, and glancing np observed the office boy Lad gone out ; the fire had gone ont also. He gave an impa tient push to his paper , and wished for Le hardly knew what And jnst at that moment Le heard a little, lady-like knock at the door quite unlike the thundering rap usually bestowed upon it, by his friends from the neighboring offices. Of course it was a lady a yonng, pretty lady. "I am sorry to titrable yon," she said, . "but I am directed to this office for a pocket-book which I lost yesterday. This I believe is number four," and she gla'ieed at the door. Oscar looked amazed, aud the lady, seeing Lim hesitate, went on. "The advertisement was in the .Vr ing Jlrrai'l. It said at Iloom Xo. 4, 30 King street, would be fonnd the pocket- 1 book which answered the description of mine." j "There must be some mistake," : Oscar replied ; "I have not fonnd a : pocket-book, neither has one been ; bronfht to me. I am aorry, but it ; in us t be a mistake in the paper. I re ; gret I cannot assist yon. Pissibly it : might be some other room in this build in?." The young lady remarked that she , might Lave made a mistake in reading the paper, and with that she gave Oscar as sweet a smile as he had seen for many a lay, and bade him "Good morning." That 'a very odd, though of course ; it's a mistake, somehow," said Oscar to 1 himself, as Le turned back into Lin ' dismal office, forgetting, however, to notice how dismal it had seemed a mo ment before. ! "Of course it can't lo here," he re ! pented, fumbling over the papers at the same time. "Sam may, perhaps the lioy is honest and he would never have thought of advertising it. Of course it's a mistake. l!y Jupiter, 6he was . pretty ; if now I had only been so lucky ' aa to find it ! Harry Lambert would ! have fonnd an adventure in snch a little affair as this, I suppose. Always meet ing with some adventure, and nothing ' of the sort ever comes to me. Some 1 fellow or other has fonnd that pocket ' book ; and he'll get a smile two, probably." Oscar gave another turn to the heap ' of papers on Lis table, and one more : yet ; and then, straight before his eyes, : lay a beautiful Kussia-leaiher pocket - book. "Well,' and Oscar looked at it as though he Lad seen the moon at Li3 feet "Well," Le repeated, "and : now Low did that come there, that's the 1 question ?" oam reiurneu oy jnis urn rtainly knew nothing about it. bam had returned by this time, and "Now what must she be thinking of nie?' said Oscar, mentally. "She probably knew it was no mistake ; and didn't even leave her address ; thought perhaps it was superfluous. So now, 1 advertise ; that will right luo uia"r, miu p-ruapa give mo an adventure, To write the advertisement won Id certainly appear a very easy thing, only it occurred to Oscar that Miss Ella the name F.lla was worked with silk in side would probably send for it, and that would cud the affair. To discover her address, and take it to her himself, was the thing. So, after one or two attenips, Le wrote describing the lost article, and request - gtreet." That morning Oscar's clients were left to their patience, while he hurried home with an eve to Lis toilet, . ' Aiireiiiarea atfc isvcry tutu, iu : Harry laughed ; "by the way. did you to advertise, because. I forgot to ask her ; but I called, by Jove, isn't she pretty, her name is KUa. Well, here the next day came a little note here it is now asking if I had aeen a picture "Oh. the picture ! that reminds me," said Harry, feeling in his vest pockets. "The deuce take you, Harry Lam bert ! did yon take that picture ont of the pooket-book 7" "Now just hold on a bit. I took it ont because I wanted to look at it a little more, and as I Raid, I was in a great hurry for the 5 o'clock train ; so I thought if no owner ever came for the pocket-book I would keep the picture ; and if there did, why then time enongh to return it no such awful hurry." "Well. I must say !" "Well, I aay you want a chance to go there again, and here now it is ; and you never would have thought of taking out the picture to serve as an excuse for a second visit ; and because I happened to do so, don't be no furious. Stop, though, I guess 111 take it myself." "o you don t. "111 throw myself at her feet tell her 1 was the fortunate finder of the pocket-book that the picture so en chanted me, I couldn't resist taking it. Now Oscar, be candid, and acknowledge that von are under obligations to me, "Well, we ll see about that." It was about a year after this when Harry received a note from Oscar. "By ! heaven !" he exclaimed aloud, "I had forgotten Oscar's little circumstance ; so his adventure has come to something real. Alas for him ! And I am invited In Ka 1.1a 1.a InmJ. . aritli- , , "TT""" - , bj out doubt it would be my miafortnne to ar ami n fiia nl.A. Vknt fttr f hut lh t lflb train. I a married man ! Well, to be sure it would be odd." Rural Ncirj Yorker. The Cnrs of the Hoar. j There is too much lying. On every hand we meet with exaggeration, eqnivo . cation, deception. We call it lying, aud every man or woman who varies one iota from the strictest fact or truth, is indeed a bar. The expressman agrees most solemnly frt flliTfr venna: tor Tnn At m certain Ihnnr Ha rllirpr. it a lv after the ! hour promised. The grocer promises i to send you the best tea in the market. He takes the first his hand falls upon without any care for the quality, and dispatches it to yon without a twinge. i The tailor agrees to deliver a suit of clothes without fail by six in the even-i ing. xou get them in the morning. The dentiat pledges his word that your! teeth, as filled by Lim. will be all rigbt I for a dozen years. The filling comes , ont in six months. A man over the way is in need of a temporary loan. 1 You lend Lim a small sum, which he , promises to return ui a given time. He Lep. it. month over time. An ! and is nothing more than a liar. The florist assures you that Lis flowers were lnikAi1 in IVib morninie when thev sre r o . . , . two days old. He lies, and will he ; about anything. The book-publisher advertises that his Look is selling by the : tens of thousands, when he has not sold j a thousand. He is a liar, and not one door from the murderer. Everywhere everywhere wehe.r lying ! knock you down if you caUed them Lars . lie every honr. Deception is the rule rather than the exception. Canvassers lie buuui iusuraturv cuuipwutva. muacn about stocks. Editors about politics. Exaggeration and misrepresentation rule the hour and are its curse. Gentlemen ladies why cannot the truth be told always and ever ? Why all this deception and lying? Why so much falsifying and cheating ? In the name of all that is good we beg yon to do as yon agree t Boldness and Canning of a Itstt. One often hears of the depredations committed by rats amongst joints and other provisions, but the following in- staace of desperate clever boldness and canning in. -ingle rat has seldom been exceeded. Late v in a house m London. thirtv-nnA nnutnM were nlaceil over . .. . . . . night in a large the pan was left bly high stool, pounds were bouio xrom lue f A.than anH In the morning the pan and stool re- mained intact, but the potatoes were all : gone. A rat, or rats, being at last sus pected, a rigorous search was made, and alter pulling down a large cupboard and part of the dresser, the potatoes were all found hidden underneath the latter. but no trace of a rat's hoi. et 'ture is by a master artist, when he , to climb the ladder of lame by doing ' keeper " -"8, a.a.B oummj. uwui.. 1 know, it was r.int.l bv a fourth-rate ' noble deeds and makinir the world bet-1 ..'v . v ' Un addresswl no one personally, and ' A sad sight KUCrioIieer leilS VOU tuat a CCliaiu mt- uieauilUK UI uuuiliu Kliai uras, iriHIlvlUK t iinff olol I ha .!nm.n . . .n hnnud. ! painter. He is not worthy of trust. A I ter for my living-had disappeared, and Baij t,faer ..Y1Z ' 't ',.? m ' . ?o one seemed to sympathize with Lim ' mer wind salesman lies abont Lis iroods. A boot- i in its place was wavinfc- train, ulenti- ' fil-!.. 1. ,1 ,"i..i .i UIS u"rota condition, lie sat in - sad sight ! 1 maker lies abont vour boots. The fullv bespriuk'.ed with rank weeds. The , sti,- -;n v., ?,lP"(e fo? V". then raisiug his violets, while ! jeweler lies abont your watch. The picturesque old mill had been pulled , u, g"ot the old man'a supper, but TOU ' "ead he exclaime.1- , eyea into the litt igossiper at the dinner table tells exag- j down and earned away. I almost re- can clear awsv the tea thiuirs easilv " ' "A man may aa well be deal as out 'py grew. 1 ... a a : 1. ai ti: i 1 1 . .1. 1 . r . J o' ..fl.,,.1. I i..t. ... i : e . aA nail si iriif I mniAii mi b r i .u u. WHifmiHii i : ivuiie.. hiiivi'ii i ritiiirii u. iiih in 111.. 1 1 1 1 1 v - 1 . , . . 1 . r . . 1 . 1 . i.. 'i 1 1 1 iv. .iu liiu.it ul. iik.ii i l 1 1- - - . be found. The only hole visible was iej tno tLe broad' Btair. ont from the doorway never to return. """J Published, is worthy of repetition Oh t it was raro sport. The ram pat near the ceiling, by the side of a water mul-T ,e luo WJ "7 P uo , "r, , , j .. together with the embellishment natn- ( tenng on the roof, the wasps buzzing pipe, and into this a thick dishcloth 0486 anoopenea tne aoor to tue out r.arlj Vioiin-nauerM. rally accrning after the lapse of a year against the window panes, the hanging wilsat once temporarily rammed. In aquare-room which was in "apple pie) lwiwmMM. or n ; ,of the evening a rat-trap was baited and ! ,r.e. lnile5a ,was e?cn 'oom f "nt The man usually mentioned as tho , primeval days, when tho waters of the ' peculiar odor, the shadows hovering in laid in tLe kitchen : and now for the - 9 .. , , .. climax, in tne morning me uisnciotn was fonnd pushed ont of tne hole, and the trap was not to be seen. Ultimately the latter was found in a totally different part of the kitohen with the spring down, and inside the trap, the flesh, skin, hair, and some of the small bones of a rat's nose. He was evidently a desperate character, and after leaving this mo mentous memento of Lis last visit, has been seen no more. Influence of Sunlight. In Lis lecture on this subject, Dr. Griscome said : Sunlight, particularly i his pleasant intonations as I turned my in dwellings, has become absolutely , face towards the door, necessary to health and mfort The j It was here I sat and watched the hil lecturer illustrated how carbonic acid , very moon, riding high in the deep blue is deleterious to human life, by exLal- ' vault, and counted the most brilliant ing into a bottle the air from his lungs. ! stars, and pointed out familiar constel and then placing a light therein, which j lations to my younger sisters, who was immediately extinguished. The sometimes shared my room. This place life of a living insect, he said, would j had witnessed all my childish griefs have been extinguished there as rap- and girlish sorrows. These wails had idly. The oxygen necessary to human listened to the delicate messages the life is derived from plants through the operation of the sun's rays the yellow ray and the vegetables in return absorb the poisonous carbon exhaled from the human lungs. Both these operations take place only in the sun's rays, hence the impropriety of sleeping with plants in onr rooms. , With man, the sun's rays play a part very important Under their operation continual change is taking place in the human system ; a constant chemical process is in operation. The action of death was . mere chemical operation, produced by the incapacity of the sys tem to inhale ine necessary oxygen ana exhale the poisonous carbon of the , system. To preserve this condition in life, and a healthy system, as well as the development of the mental powers, alike in old and young, due proportion of sunlight is necessary. A regular boarder A saw milL The Old Home. For years I had longed to visit the home of my childhood ! to - press my feet once more upon my native turf ! How I envied those of my friends who were able to return to the old roof-tree for family reunions. I knew, full well, the dear, loved ones could not gather about the old hearth, as in former days for too well I remembered that terri ble burden, in the form of a mortgage, we all tried so hard to "lift," ana yet failed to meet the demands. It was a sad day when we bade adieu to its sa cred halls, liut the world was wide. and another roof kindly spread its broad wings over us and gave ns shelter. For two vears our family all dwelt within the walls of this adopted home, and then there was a quiet gathering of cherished friends, and 1 stood beside one who promised to love and protect me, and in the presence of the company he kissed and called me "my wife ;" and then I was whirled away to another home, in a land of strangers. For a time the months flew by as on j angels' wings, for I was not only happy but busy as the swift-winged birds in arranging and rearranging the bright new furniture about our oozy cottage : e in preparing favorite dishea to tempt "I my husband's appetite, that I might hear words of loving praise from his lips. But this daily routine came at j receive his joyous welcome, a more con last to be like an oft-told story ; and tented and I believe a wiser woman although I did not cease my vigilance j determined that the paintings of my in performing a single duty, yet the.) artistic nature should be at bright for performance of the daily round ceased, the western room of. my heart aa Lad to occupy my mind. nen months lengtnenea into years, I t Wan to cast loutrinir eves to the When months lengthened into vears. : . -r' . I . . -i of traveling alone, and my husband I thought it quite impossible to leave the farm finil thna civ rMirs naatuifl avrnw . . . . .. . At last my earnest yearnings overcame my cowardice, and I returned to the land of my nativity. After visiting my beloved and aged parents and the j members of the family who, like myself had "married and settled down," I, strtedfortheoidneigarx.rnooa.wnere; some of the happiest well me my life ' of the most sorrowful days of had been passed. It was a beautiful morning in the J early part of September, that 1 slipped ; quietly away from my friends for a walk ' ! np the hill, on the top of whose emi-, j nence stood the dear old cottage. On the way I conld but note, with a sail ' , heart, the chauges the present owner had made in the general landscape. The beautiful sheet f water known as the "old mill pond."-where "oft in the stilly night," and ou sunny raring days, , 1 hnd floated np and down in a fairy barque, watching the -Inning fish as ; they swept along in little flashes of, mofion. gtherig fragrant lilies, and , ' friend without further observation. 1 But no : I must go on ; so I pushed ' forwanl and at lust iraiiieil the ton of . 1 the hilk . The cottage was mossy and brown, from tue tiug f pattering rain aud scorching sun. In all these long years it uftj been unacquainted with fresh ' paint The pretty, climbing "jasmine," , "hat used toP8hade the porch, where'l beaul ,8 they approached the house, an torn awv. ailmittincr the broait arf. nr th hlazinir snn. Tlie old flower I beds were nowhere visible ; the fruit I. .1 . .1. ttwa that nerv anrino- in the vpnrs long past. I had compared to fair young brides as they were robed in pink and white, crowned with wreaths of greater beauty than ever graced a maimers and thorny by being browsed by herds 1 CVT"1IM1I VVtlAa Til ID a 1 v n 11 . I ' rJI. VI of cattle that had free range abont the grounds, the old garden fence was sadly dilapidated, and seemed to be pining for its former master. Thetately old oaks and maples, be-, neath whose widespread boughs many i a pleasant picnic party had gathered, to while away a passing day in pleasant! t-. i i t. i , - v.r.-vTV,-: .. : " ' ;.."-.. . . . : the amnie swine as swiitiv ns tne uncut . ' . . r' . . a, 1.:., 1 t ntter i m t u RnJ i . T P, P fa I invitation, telling her at once that this ; I had been for many years my home how 1 1 had longed with unutterable yearn- ings to press my feet upon native soil ' again, and how mnch I desired to visit , I my own old room once more. luo uu"so- Iu V VI me an I stemmed serosa the threshold i i 1 i, i 7 j i memories? I seated myself by the window looking eastward. This was the spot towards which my eyes ever turned when the first rays of the morning sun warned me that there was no longer bird or bee asleep. It ! was by this window my father's voice found me as it wound its musical note up the wide stairway and through the door, which was always left "ajar," that 1 1 might catch the hrst sound of his ! stirring feet : "Charlie, I'd like my ! breakfast soon." I conld almost hear love-god had sent, and witnessed the filling of manv daintv sheets of trilt- edged note paper, in answerjto Cupid's quills. This room had beheld the all absorbing grief I felt when he, whom I believed to be clothed with honor and perfections beyond comparison, proved himself to be formed of the grossest material, unworthy the name of friend much more that of lover, Well it was the latter, which, if al- for me that he had not reached the deep j of his predecessor. ' They too have be- j mountains known as the Aleutian isles. ! sent on a Sabbath evening, contained fountains of my heart, as I for a time come rare, and do not pass in general From the gradually decreasing numbers this passage: "Tell them that I have believed. There was another, away in for instruments of the first rank. Some ; of the latter on approach to the Asiatic unwavering faith in Christ and his sal the distance, all unknown, who held the ' other names are mentioned as belonging : coast, can we doubt the truth of a ' vation, and that I am waiting and hop key to the gates, which would open I to the Brescian school, which do not legendary tale that accounts so plansi-: ing for Lght, from the eternal world, deep and wide when his "sesame" was ' interest us, as they take no prominent , bly for the aint-nlar "melting away" or I want to sea that light and think I heard. The woman at my side talked of house , and farm, and of the neighborhood, in ' a social, gossippy way. and I listened and commented with her ; but my heart was living in the "long ago." When I arose to take my departure, . farewell dirge swept through the room, not dis- tinguishable to other ears than mine and a curtain was drawn across the easi window, that was invisible to other eyes. As I passed into the lane where once the green boughs waved their heavy plnmes in seeming acknowledgment of my presence, and the birds had caroled sweet anthems, I felt that the soft, balmy winds where whispering in my ear : "This ia never more thy Lome. Only the memory pictures, woven and painted so long ago, remain to be cher ished in the deep recesses of thy heart. From henceforth the western outlook will bring to thee brighter prospects ; experience has been thine. From the past thou wilt learn lessons of content ment. Only the Home, of which now and then a glimpse is canght, when the world acems receding, and thou almost Learest the rustle of angels' wings, will fulfill the ideal of thy childhood's home, where thou didst bak in the sunshine of purity and innocence." Not more than an hour had passed since I had toiled up the kill, yet it seemed that years had been added to my experience. Never before had I so appreciated the great blessing I pos- sessed in my noble, kingly husband. To Lis kindness and good taste, in a large degree, was I indebted for the pretty grounds and pleasant surround- ! ings about our dwelling' I returned to j oeen tuoso oi tne years agone, . . An ae Ken tne last peep : . ., !.... . i r l" . ... . - -i I mto 1 01,9 apartment, and I Lsten to "treeta wnose Joundauona are oi ly .8" JiLr. wnere the fra-ranceot flowers nsesUke I inpAnfiA mill here the sun will no more , "-" "r j- "r the ue neeueu to sniue ty aay, nor tne by night, for "the glory of (.otl cemtctn them, -aw , orr. Molher-sVi-.it. tL IS & "Tt nmat 1m that I am rrw;n U " 9 M Icanc, is ahe settled back comfortably in her rocking-chair for the , .,rLU ".- e cornea, and I don t even wish to knit Old, or lazy it must be. she added w,th i v i , i. i I ather looked np from his paper and regarded Ler thoughtfully for a minute, "Yon want a rest, Mary," Le said, "and np yonr trunk, to-morrow, and you- go 0 to motiier8 anJ make' , good, Ung Tisit. She thinks we don't visit her as often ve might ana mothrr j, in, ohL" "0h but Horace Low can I leave Lome" There m Tso maVhons in ?he wa You men fX don'I ' work, besides, without Aunt Polly's help," said Carrie. rt 1 1 1 i t i ' l i iv i .uuiti w more nit trust: aiuoiib jOU if there was some older head at the helm, so vou had better engage her. Now, reafly, Mary, what is there to hinder? The ride on the cars will do yon good, and the rest from care an.l work and the visit will pick yon np more than medicine. 7 i wear there in town. I am not ready to ; take snch a trin. "We'll heln von. niothnr : 7 f i rie. "My coat is nice and new and you A 1 . .1 . . . i , can tak that . what an a,lv.nt,im. ' it is to bo a little mother.-vonr black ! dress is nice, and so is your velvet bon- , net I know we can plan ont everything so that grandma will be suited with J . ' 1 a. "My mother isn't so hard to suit as you fancy. Mary. She will think far, more ot seeing you than of .your ' clothes." It was arranged at last, and mother's iUo .S-ll overruled. .n th .sit. taking with her the youngest of the flock, to the great delight of he aged grandmother, and to the leaning of her own aiiTiotv almnt tliA wnlfnm nf I all at home. Th? visit was all and more n. v, i,.i u ,.t . tu ,. """" ' i'f" " v-umt- i .. r 1 1 1 energy and cheerfulness. It had t0' haJ thrown on their own resources. They fonnd abundant means of exercising patience and forbearance, under the home management of Aunt Polly, and nad 'earned, as they never knew before, how to prize a mother. That last lesson was the most valuable of all. Too many first representative of the art of violin-' u: - , r 3:0.1--;? """"s " ""l""11 ui "c ui oaio, so named from his birthplace Salo, on Lake Garda (loGO-1610). This assump- tion seems somewhat doubtful when we consider that the creator of the Cremona I school, Andreas Amati, was a contem- porary of G. di Salo. Be that as it may ' O. di Salo is to be considered as the iounuer ei me srescian scnooi, at least wenst ages wens tteir course, tint savage-looking turtle, whose prison was as one of the first violin-makers. His , finally a change occurred and discord . the rain cask, and Lis name was "Mud violins, Lowever highly prized by con- j entered the mountain home. Whilst ' die ;" and a great ngly toad lived uader noisseurs and amateurs, have for the absent on a distant summit, the giant ' a big stone, and I called him "Beauty ;" present day rather an art-historical than ' felt the monntain quake beneath his ; and I owned, also, lots of chickens and a practical interest. For the unqnes-j feet, and, casting upon the wife the ducks, but none of the geese, for they tionably genuine and well preserved j fault of all the earthquake uproar, has-' run at me, and spread their wings in a examples of this master have become 1 toned down with a frown of vengeance frightful manner, and I considered extremely rare, and consequently are ; in all his mien. . The giantess, perceiv-; them very ride indeed, only fonnd as so-called cabinet pieces. ; ing this and fearing for herself, ran . Then again, as it regards their sonority leaping into the Behring sea, and to-1 Ikkmiraph. I am large and strong thev nn Inno-erannwpr to tllA hlcrh-Rtrnno- aruvft thA .liefnnt Aeiafii aliieA TTa . . . . r requirements of the present day. Their . e . -r, -o external appearance, especially in com-, parison with the productions of the Cremona school, is equally unsatisfac- tory; there is something uncommonly stiff, sharp-cornered, one might say pedantically constrained about it G. di Salo s immediate follower was the Brescian. Giovanni Paolo Maircinni (159O-1640K He isdesiOTatedMapilP.il . u. " .!. v. mu luiuici, una wiciD- mo xtu piouis i of it Such a relationship between the two artists has merely Win inferred from the manifold resemblance in their worts, tiitn Mazzuu s nddies tne cose is pretty much the same as with those position in the history of violin-making, Contemporaneously with the Brescian ' arose the highly celebrated school of Cremona, of which Andreas Amati, of one of the old and noble families of that ! city, is accounted as the founder. Here the art gradually reached its culminat ing point 1 A California Story. In the early mining days of California there stood at the foot of the hill, not many miles from Nevada, one of those rough-built gaming houses so common throughout the mining sections of the territory. A description of this struc ture and its surroundings will convev to the reader a better idea of the inci dent I am about to relate. The build ing contained but, one room, the en trance to which was situated at one end, i rL i - ii .. . ii ' wuu a large auooo nrepiace on the , other end, nearly opposite to the en trance. On the large stone hearth burned a wood fire, giving to the room j a cheerful appearance. On the front I at the right of the entrance, was a well-, filled bar, around which were congre- j gated representatives of different ua-, tions, soma speculating on the success others were discussing the general tnniMnfiUJ.e Aiinn ,1ia h.. ni.i. of the room extended a row of tables, wood-bly, as the sunshine danced in, around each of which was seated a ! one lTnmmfr "aT. among the white pine company of miners playing poker, and i tree "ranches. "Stay a while and rest staking large sums of gold with as much ! "P?11 thls onght carpet of moss, and coolness and apparent nnconeexn as if 7U me tor7- " ia ao qmet here to thev were partaking of their evening da7 m he forest, that I am almost meal A few mde scats occupied the j ftsIefP- J wish I conld get out into the apace around the lire-place, and in the ! w,orW an.e 8ome ot the fine B'gh's front portion of -tlio room beyond the I ".e.re- hot a gay time yon must have bar. The cabins of the settlers ex-1 danci?8 about wherever you please tended some distance to the front of Uo. mfnDB till night 1" the spot, while the unsettled portion of i . -a? ,!aia thf, sunbeam, "I cannot the country lay in the rear. i stoP to tel1 ?oa "f1 bave I bot, if Ti.inur t i ' you care to Lear it, I will tell you what The hill before nientinnpil njinte ah. i . - ruptly from this position was .. . v. . - . . . . thickly - - , " . t .7 KUlrV' "K" muce lor iue iniritive. as iiia pvpnin? .,, - tht ,.;,;.. Place lor tae mgitive. ' n7tn S.SHl It "'"""". ."""K -"' . 8!,UUU,J. ,, terrnpted by the entrance of t . ' . ,.rin ; . f'. Vj?. B... "ncW der L. nn(1 kii4 ., 1 " ( der tlasic and bnUet pouch. i . 'V;' i it-.Tl 'i'T .yer. liea Wlt" aell8. . ZJi. l J aeceptin- the ae-t courteously offered Lim by one of the company, he seated .uimseiiiiytue lire; resting one elbow, on his knee, and dropping his chin into ; h,s hand, he sat gloomily watching the : ' fire a,t 'om4 m,ShtJ Srief preying , upon him. He mumbled incoherently at times, and sat without changing Lis t . position. The attention of the company ' csTuid h Dm those art rpI,flTl T dear . taTe was direXl owar 1, the Vlac i it f?' mj, Pf.ing , where ho aat T.t ; ISSh bat? out rf h,1 fUnJ 'em' , 1 ,h" itjj9 iJZj.. f T" PaI? ! r . "eniauo-. as tnese . their rose-bnd lips, frowns clouded their , -, j ,t f M ,c a,m has fair white brows and their bttle hands ' faile,i' J, am Wi,Lout fnend? or ! aU 1 "haU 1 U 11 ia .'Jf. ' Then taking from his side the flask, he unscrewed the enp from the top, and nnnn.1 it i,.i . i . . . .u.v uu uauu buuio . -, , . . . . , . parently tine Hazard powder, then ponr-' fj? f W,M .f " &?m .haJ uidenly ing it carefully back, Le replaced the,r"iea 1 ,,V 0Ve,r . ..e8t cap, and screwing it firmly ou, yelled, r1" n", i OI u'e suj 8tol7 t,,e 8nubeam 'Yes, I will die myself, and all ir i i , around me Khali die also " ' ! uJ ' C"1'1''". that no ' IIe .,. fl,.c , ' m i 1 it Rnn,am .ev'e,r h?9 ,s, a tale in"coaIs The tumuU XS followed' ! JQ-Ar 'u.r, Magaz.n,. " T't simultleZs with t rasli net nf HiA Ktrnnn-or The windows " escape to those 1. II. A - f .T" " .V , 7 r"b" were nuable to press Iasuk i 1. 1! ?' f. Z ii n JtJtlr Ji ! i Ti..rvim m-i i.; ;t 1 PilUt OI , tue rapidity of lightning he 'sprang to 1 the tablc8 jnJ craped from them the ! then With iithtuLhlr,AAlZJ;i Mwf I in Lisat escaping thro uXone of tbe ' rear w;ndows. With desnerate stride 1 1' :"t ' V" ' nDon a faUen tree turned to anrvv thS SSi , breathlessly. watching the building, ex" ; pocting every moment that the contents ' ( theLeated nask mj blow it to i .1 t . ... . . . 1 a - " There can." i perch Le com- gam- biers, who returned to the saloon to find ihe tables all clear! of the last vestige ' rof their treasure. Icscnd of I he Aleutian Iie. The natives of certain secluded Aleu- tian isles retain a tradition concerning North Pacific surrounded not a single . .i . .1 isie among me vasi ranges oi me inie- rior continent, a mighty giant lived. j Dwelling in harmony with a giant bride, each morning he ascended the moun- tains from which the summits were pluekcd for their daily food. Lakelets formed their evening drink. At peace with all the ontaide world, they reigned -, collectinar mountains, followed the . frightened spouse, hurling them after Lead me and I am still well behead her with all Lis strength. ' For a time,me Bgain an1 x on', flt to not one of these did harm, ana midway ; drink ; behead me once more, and I am ,n the sea the "stock on-hand grew ftimost a general ; bnt if still again de- small ; so throwing one out, now and capitated only a vowel remains then, he hastened on. Approaching the , Anxrer .- Whale ; hale ; ale :" Le f. Kamtchatkan shores and summoning x ' all hia remain. no- ativntrth. hn ant th 1 last one whirling throntrh the air. and ,. . ' v.- hanRtd hv exertion, desr.air and moe. utfiieatu ll. isaua tuo iucaie&s wiie. - x.a the giant also no longer held himself against the waves, bnt sank into the . sea. above which, till this dav. appear the summit of all those sunken Alaskan comet-like extension of the Aleutian chain ? New Hampshire is said to reap $100,- 000 profit annually from the summer visitors at live. Ana yet Aew Hamp shire claims to moral State. be a temperate and "YoutliM Column. Xellie'M Question. "Shall f ever f nv old like traadmm ? Onr little Vlhe amid. "ahaU 1 fck turoutfb thuee fnunv nuu w a eap ou my n"Ml SU.il 1 be a vum aatd suftraui. Ami never rlay or mil ba-U I wear tooa. pokey dreaai a. And vill U be good lull r Shall I kaov bow deep in the ocean Aud what makes the world o round r VI bat bei-owe of the old moou, A ud whera the fairlea are found Aud if at the end of the rainbow i here la reallv a pot of n Id ? 1m tlMtre any winter Ul henveu, Aud will iod ev r grow old .' Ah ? Nellie haa gained a knovb-di1 Oreater than earthly ken : She is wieer now Ulan iTiulm. Wine aa the wi.et men For .he learn, at- the f eet uf ajiaela. Afar in the npier fold ; And we cannot Morrow, rememb'ring Our darling will niivsib grow old. I , v HAT ,IBJt Sunbeam Saw. "Stav, ! dear sunbeam, murmured a britrht 1 was ine nremest siirnt r - i :.i i.i k I "Do," said the wood-Lly, bending her I "I was kissing awavthe tears that the i -i -i . - . . . . uigm nau ien upon a cluster ot climbing window, heard the voices. I looked w.thin and saw two dear little I P1' ?J PT ?J scattered about the room, and each of the little ones had a doll clasped in her I thought them lovelier CT, l'??" the birds. By and by they put np their sweet bps and kissed each other; while K brows, ind I turning their brown enrh, to sh : gold." ining A pretty sight, indeed, that must Lave been," said the wood-lily. "And now," continued the sunbeam. "shall I tell you the saddest sight that I have seen to-dav '" The wootl-lilv bent ;!! ; lower. A 1 . ' P murmured the sum- throneh the pine boughs. breathed a cluster of tears fell from their blue ie stream lieside which echoed the stream. r,PPIeJ on wa-T- .... , , ? 916 . ! ,"allS the birds m the branches overhead. Talk with Boys and Girls. Will you allow one of your readers to lay aside the dignity of young ladyhood,"" mill won T-s-tii t d9 li ! fvlt-a 4 Y jva j u a i. iau avjava . a Ii t care for rufhes and laeea. I jnst Uon t Care lor mlhes and IaceS. I ,ike to Pnt. .n mT Piuk palico "J white l in in an.l ll il r. a romn in hA aPr.on aaJ orMmnlnrmtU.lIm ,.1,1 1,.,, I W.. Zk the little . eonn ones if I may come, for I was a country girl once, and lived on a B16"1 breezy farm, where there were ul.:' 7.7. . . Jf . . no,V,e'. w,u K-lTet, which w was a lec storeuouse ot t.-easnres lor a Efeh J&E$Mtoi "wis ud bSSliS iKeart ntIf0""timeT" iu mo );oou Old limes. e laugneu the plain, narrow skirts, or the fnll. sweeping trains, and the tiny satin slippers, with high heels that went through the atatelr "minuet" j very gracefully in 1775. Aud the bon- ; nets, oh ! what funny bonnets thev ! were f Our little heads trot finite lost in their ample depths. The. great, stiff sunshades, and the bic black. Rnancr led fans were all very beautiful to ns. and 1 we often ed played "train? to house- I keeping" with a spinning wheel, a pair of brass andirons, an old high clock, a chest of drawers, two or three straieht- j backed, ladder-like chairs, a silver can dlestick. and aa old trooper's war hat the dark corners. I never enjoyed a i . ... . . . cuy party nan so well bnt even a dav in that delightful garret was not to be j compared to the long, sunny afternoons on the hill-side the nm!1 down hv ' the brook, where mint grew higher than , our curly head-t And I owned a Utile cow. whose name. w "Sfjir-" an.l a ' Lttle pig named "Johnny; ahd a coin useiui ana flflnovmni ! min hir,.(i ..i i.:. i; i ' t . i x V .. "ue-Mil.a ol an orange, T).- 1 1 one-ionrtn oi a pair ; one fifth of a : VU T911110 01 P,ant4m v one- 81It.ul cnerry. ."Ahi what fruit ? A nmrcr : Apple. I Dr. Todd's last messao-e to hia chnrch shalL Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.' And so I stand at the gate Lke a litt.e child, waiting for it to . open to give me a glimpse of the glory." Gab'gnani says that Pere Hyacinthe has abandoned the clerical garb. A'nrietlos. Up in arms The baby. Night lights Glow-worms. A right angle Catching trout A mineral spring "Jumping" a min ing claim. , . Spanish veils, at Rrnoiu-ls tl.ra.l net have appeared. - John Stuart Mill'a wilt ha inai Uwn proved under 14,000. the Emperor of Brazil stands six feet four inches in his boots. Feather trimming, it is said, will be in fashion again this winter. The Mikailn nf Jinan a. not yet consider his country civilized. The first l!Wr Fn'.la." ..1 : said to have been owned by Robinson wrusoe. The senior rini tit Hia stAntiA .1. partment of Dartmouth College are sur veying a rauroau line irom tlanover to Lyme. ' Oreffon farmer. are rmiwine vl..K Their hay crop is donble what it was iasi year ; aua their gram nearly one half more. The pearl fisheries on the Gulf coast of Lower California, it is said, are likely to be soon destroyed by the avidity of the fishers. Ladies just returned from Europe wear the hair very plain and low on the neck, a style, we are assured, "all the rage" in Paris. It Las been estimated that the cotton supply annually increases four per cent faster than the cotton-consuming popu lation of the world. New Haven, in the loss of her State House, may console herself with the re flection that she will no longer be the snbject of capital jokes. The Union Pasific Railroad is build ing a snow plow to be driven by five locomotives. They expect it to go through drifts 20 feet deep. Instead of asking what people will think or say if you do thus or so let the inquiry be, what will be the thought or record -ivhich God will make ? A Massachusetts editor is inclined to approve an English teacher's plan in examining schools to pass a newspaper about among the children, and require each to read from it and to explain the allusion to events, institutions, aud persons. The captain of a San Francisco steam boat is exceedingly popular with the ladies, because he always puts back to his port if by the aid of a powerful field-glass, he can discern a female who has arrived half an hour after the start ing time. The new Trinity College building at Hartford will hs.ve a minstrel's gallery in its dining-hall, which will furnish accommodations for about 300 people. Each room in the college will have a fire-place in which wood or soft coal may be burned. The Belgian Government, it is re ported, has decreed that, in all the in sane asylums of Belgium, locked letter boxes shall be affixed to the walls, in accessible places, so that the inmates of the institutions may have the oppor tunity, without the surveillance of the asylnm authorities, of conveying any complaints, proofs of insanity, or simi lar matters, to those ontside the walls. This provision, which cannot possibly do harm, is certainly a humane one, and seems a really valuable means of detecting any of those acts of oppres sion which sensational stories, and oc casionally authentic testimon.es have connected with the mysteric;i- world inside "a mad-house.." " The aged mother of the Count de Segur is described as being a tiny little shrivelled old creature, with nut-cracker nose and chin, with eyes both dim and blear, and little wisps of snowy white hair sticking out from the oddest of bonnets, at the time when "bonnets" were still worn, dressed in the oldest snd shabbiest of nondescript garments. Attended by a "lady companion," much better dressed than herself, she never lost a "classical" concert, beating' time to the immortal quartets and quintets of Mozart, Beethoven, and Haydn, with her head encased in her large bonnet, covered with shabby ribands and faded flowers, her eyes shut and her whole frame swaying to and fro nnder the in spiration of her favorite composer. Liberian- colonization has enlarged the bounds of geographical knowledge by making known the fact that east of the territory of the Afro-American re public there are populous tribes, having the African features and hair, but light brown in complexion, and considerably advanced in civilization. They have mines, and are fairly proficient in agri culture and domestic manufactures. They are Mohammedans in faith ; read and write Arabic ; have public schools in which the koran is taught to the young, and many manuscript books. They are in all respects far in advance of the tribes of the Guinea coast Com mercial relations are likely to be formed very soon between them, the Liberians and the British colonists in Sierra Leone. A Kansas girl asks, 'Where is the work of farmers' daughters appreciated?' I am a farmer's daughter, and Uve on a large farm where dairy and farm work are carried on together. Few are the moments I call my own, for mother and I do our own work ; but I do not feel that my work is not appreciated, for the smiles and looks that accompany the words 'Weil done from father and mo ther are well worth a sacrifice on my part, and amply compensate me. I am inclined to think that many women want to shirk unpleasant work and do only that which is agreeable; but I think, whatever work is given us to do, we should work away at with a will, without murmur cr complaint, hoping for the best, and content with the allot ments of Providence." f A great many girls and women would find unpleasant work tolerable if appre ciative smiles and looks were a part of their reward. Kd. Adelina Patti, according to Vanity Fair, speaks English, French. Italian, and Spanish. Her favorite authors are Dickens and Feuillet She reads the Paris Figaro every day Punch and the Illustrated once a week. Rossini and Bellini are her best beloved composers ; primrose the color she most delights to wear. Nobody has ever seen her with an opal, for she has caught from the Russians the prejudice that this stone is unlucky ; bnt she loves pearls, Brus sels lace, sable fur, and black silk dresses with mantilla a FEgpagnole. As to other tastes, why deny that every night after she has sung she sups off a bowl of mutton broth, with rice enough in it to keep the spoon standing up right ; and the beverage that serves to preserve her voice as pure as crystal is not Clicquot, Grand Marque, nor La fitte 44, bnt bow thy head, Gambrinus, and ye, too, Messrs. Guinness 1 onr own Dublin stout More glory to her for the frankness of her choice.