. i ' rill Vil .-M' 1 ' aw ' r" ' r i r if Sk. 4V . MY 81? f ' vs! 1 si ils WPS KTI H'V ' J . Editor and Proprietor. B. F. SCHWEIEB, , THE COSSTli'VTIO THI CXION A5D THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. 7 vol. xxvn. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, EENNA-, NOVEMBER 26, 1S73. NO. 4S. n 7 II - : "J ' I-;. i Poetry. "TU Ef bt yo 4ow the aTene ' " " " ltlaeedarkt" atraaald, - h Aad kld tbe Uap, wltk h wb!ti h.ud n i.'-k ...... v.- v-.. IU I(tUtU. MT1UUI MS' . Aad oa bar lily CM. "Wltk oak eurprHlaf fT ' ' tt fell apoa a bit of also , , , Aad lattice, a'ar ker kui' . .. I'poa k mea-bad at k tbroal, . , . t OfdeepaadbrUliaatred. k4 aU arof waa aa Tkf aboaa tba laap'a aoft Rfbt ii A f lowla plctai la a fraaw, 1 ftjfaklkl44, J. -. ,., 1 tarsea to look a aoaArad ilaa- . t . . ' "kbaaatifolUblaaar I oallal. and aba laafbod back : "Tkf can ! B carafal bow wm !" 0 aUu I" I thoaat, 1. lUrk , Tba world Biay'cTer be oararar 4ar or eol ret atlU ' ' ' nwtnkebrlfataeaxthM!' ' ' " ' Aa4 tkk lima back (hn(b tki!aik,:. .. , To kUa ker oace agala ; . For ndd 7 yjumil mif keart, . ttexMtar krnkeaia.- " n T '. i Little Iho-ke. . Ib a aaw poem vf the aatbor or Balot Abe aaa Wive., lately pablishM ik 14b4od- HU beraa mttirt tbo follow lag rreUr llnlo pictare ' ' "Dlnplei, 4JlaV.', twoatr. Koay-facol aaa .Wid of hob. Wanned wlla uo'.bex-wU la rlea'7. Prndant, mmleot, aprj fat prim, Lily-kaadae, ttny-footed, Wltkahaakleieaaaadarat, ' ' 3Utl a-loved aad Iriaaly bootad.' Tooklaf atea aad aaeiliaf aweat ; B.U ooManoa, aabdmlkg beaatjr Ta a acker oiaa of daty. - , " '. Ckaale aa Dlaa, plaiap aa BW, t V Sachet gum. aa Ctiia Pfearba," - 4 tMiiseolln ii v. It i evident th Hpnrgooa hs lout much of the physical vigor wluah he once bad. lie leans ol truer ana more heavily on his desk, his manner is more hesitating his Tcrite More Uw"Bll.'n- veraationaJ. increasing weakness Has not, however,' tyuciitjd any GbiQ p jhia inuweci,aa4, ir, anq,r inae v severe taste ins Hiwer. tone and 'nope soienub tnanaer are sn . improvement on. Lis former style.'. Me bUU tiokis toe crowd as no man in xndon has held it in recent times, and as a natural eonse- anence' bo m -overworked. Qmte re- oently he had among his hearers the negub jiRile enorua rrpm America, wno sang some-of their hymns to him in his ante-room after the sermon. . A crowd of visitors, some from America, came to shake hands with him, and he greeted them cordially, remarking that he re gretted that he had so little time to talk to them, bat hoped they would have plenty of time in heaven. A rather odd, incident ; jant before the services, two distinguished Americans one a former official and intimate fnend ol the late Daniel Webster had been shown into a pew. . Presently the pew opener came and requested that they would take a seat just behind, as "a distinguished gentleman and lady Lad to be placed in the pew they occupied." The two Americans t onee . complied, aad be held the gentleman and lady escorted to the vacated seats botn clack. Mr. -Spurgflofc is oreLIed,''itlf' hi following, which, if not true.' is fc trovato. He is said to have been taken to task by some Sabbatarian since be hus found it necessary to employ a broneham to take him to church. But." he nreed, "I onlv sit still in the carriage I don't work." ; J . 'Ah. yes, sir,"- said the other 'Tanl year coachman think of him !" "Oh, be is a Jew, and keeps the sev enth day Sabbath !" , "But your horse V ' , 0h, said Spurgeon, getting a little imoauent. he is a Jew. too I . This reminds me of another little story going the rounds concerning one , of our broad churcn clergymen, wno, (taring recently on an excursion in Boot laird, wma fenementiy remucea try nif Indiana-for taking' a avaik OS 6afD4a afternoon. .The clergyman said that he ooum Hot see the harm, and said ; ' - "Ton know that we read that our Iiord himself walked with his disciples in the fields on the Sabbath day' Ay,"3aid the. old lady, I ken it, an' I neer thocht any the better o Him for it, neither f Pret. ' ' 1 Life in India. The nsual routine of European life in India lis to,, rise at "gun-fire" five o'clvck), go out f"r an airing in boat or palanquin for two full hours, bathe and dress at eight, take breakfast' at nine, lunch at one, and siesta from two to four, when, everybody retires, . and, whether one vifihes to. sleep or not, he is secure from interruption, and has the full benefit of being "en dishabile" for the two most oppressive hoars of the day. - At four the second bath is taken ; at five all go out in full drabs in open carriages, and . after a rapid drive over some of .the public thorough-fares, the horses are walked slowly up tod down the esplanade, where all the fashionable world assemble at this hour to see and be seen, and exchange passing courte sies or comments. At half past six "the coarse" -is deserted, and brilliantly lighted dining-rooms are thronged with guests earer to test the quality of the rich and varied delicacies of which an Oriental dinner consints. This is the principal meal of the day, and,- oceapy ing often two or three hours ; it is made not merely an epicurean feast, bnt also an intellectual . and social., banquet. Strong coffee, served In the tiniest of porcelain cups, follows the guests on their return to the drawing-rooms, and music,' conVersation, reading and com pany fill rrp tb hours till midnight, when the. - fyad bath is, taken .imme diately before retiring'. Lippineoti'i Hmgatine. - Haurdi-Cravs. The . A'ight Troeea lost. , 'Carnival culminates at night, after Rex an3 the "day -procession have re tired. Thousands of people assemble in dense lines along the streets included in the published route of march ; Canal atreet is brilliant with illumination, and swarms of humanity occupy every porch, balcony, house-top, pedestal, carriage and mule-car. - Then comes the train of Comas, who appears only at night ; and torch bearers, disguised in outre masks, light up the way. At the last Carnival, one hundred figures represented "The Missing Links in Darwin's Origin of the 8pecies.n After the round through the great city is completed the torch light on the sky dies away, and the Erewe betake themselves to the Varieties The atre, and present tableaux before the ball opens. Scribnrr'$ Monthly. OLD - In the summer of 18C7. after a pro longed coarse of Russian, steppes, Cri mean bill-sides, Moscow churches, St. Petersburg boulevards, Finnish lakes, and Swedish forests, I found mystvlf at Berlin, and daring the first week of my stay was busy from dawn to dunk in exhausting, with the wvstematie in dustry of the genuine British tourist. the "sights" of that methodical eity, which Mr." Murray's "Koran," in red binding, politely defines as "sn oasis of brick amid a Sahara of dust," and in studying all the minnti of that pipe - clayed civilization which appears to advance, like the national army, in time to the music of the "Pass de Charge." Just as my lionizing fever waa be - ginning to abate, a slight service, ren - uered in a pouring wet day in the park, oroagn me into closer relations will a rl. it-looking elderly German, who had f reauentlv crossed mv rambles, and more than once halted to exchange a few words with me in the frank, open-hearted fashion of the hospitable Teutonic race. Our acquaintance, however, was still in embryo, when, on the day of which I , KOWISCE OF- A N - nritEAr. 1 am speaking, the old man, having taken ! midst of that finest domestic group of shelter under - a thinly foliaged tree, j the great German art int. The hearty was In a fair way to be thoroughly ' old landlord of the Golden Lion, and drenched, I Came to the rescue with my j his "klnge verstandige Hausfrau" were umbrella. Observing that he had got ; before' me to the life ; the blue-eyed wet thrbngV before gaining -;his: m.fMadielu;rv who loaded my piste with promptn refuge, I insisted upon taking ' tes-vakes, might, with. Um addition of him to my lodgings (which were close 1 a little dignity, have made a very pas at hand), and drying him thoroughly ' sable Dorothea while i "brother Wil before I let him go ; his own residence, helm," had1 he beeu there, would have as I found on inquiry, being at ft coa-' represented my ideal Hermann quite siderable distance. The Old man's grati-! fairly. Nor was the "friendly cbst" tude knew no bounds, and next morninft ' wanting to oomplote t!ie pictnre. The he reappeared with a hospitable smile noon his broad face, announcing that j a new lirteher, launched into countless U nxst came over : but he waj inot very he has told "his folk" of mv kindness .siories of his soldier son. who, young!" rich himself, and nobody could blame to him, that hir "Hausfrau" and hia ; as he was, had already smelt powder on nim for o helping us when he had his "kleine Grttcben" wished to thauk me i more thaa ono hard fought Add, during : own family to think of. ..However, 1 to themselves ; that, in short, I must come the firrt short fever of the seven weeks n0 d?n He came.to ?r .la perfect and eat tea-cakes with them that very j war. Fran LisSeth, who was an actual S?d meaning- to give the best evening, an J smokea Gennsu pipe after- mine of those qtaint old Wnds which P" .ne",wm,a Ior h h bonSht wardd, which Herr Holzmann, in com-! ate nowhere more perfect than in Gar- ;-'". ln Je cttme 8nJ nrst thing mon with the majority of his country-! many, poured forth a series of tales that caught his eye was the old bureau, man ..flu. ,m. lf. hnn.iiUl.M, u-ruiUk.n m tli fnrtlinn of , Which BtOOd in a COmer-Ol the IDOm. foliritv " - Tn rr1r wnM tti'mvlf against any evasion, be added, with a resolute air, that, as I might possibly lose my wav, he would, come and fetch me himsel Punctual as death or a collector of water-rates, 'Herr Jleinrich Holzmann presented himself at the time appointed, and marched me off in trfumph to a nea,foWook nn thm nrnitliw-m nlft a M tha tnrnW' with dmrtt Jr' TKo fro.-l den was of the inwb!e German type ; j battered Kertch and ruined Sevastopol the same trim little flbwer-beds.accnrate Olessa.terea.fnnitiiig boule asregunenU on parade; the same broad d. nd sacked Kiev, with her dim- gravel walk, hud out with mathematical regularity ; thesame trellis-work t-' iZ merrhouse feewoooed with creewra at . aw. tQ"nieniU oeauijoi queenij Wa. iiiu tha inrtli.r ct.,1 in,l tha soma sm.ll table in the centre of it. are mounted i i i i . t . i j i vj u curputeufc u?&pui vi iruij uummic proportions, presjfled- over in this case by two female figures, "who, on our approach, oome forward, to greet us, and are Introduced to me by tny -host as bis wile and dauguter. Fran Hnlimann for m her hiitlinn.! calls heiLliiiwheniiaabuiora motherlv acUve-looking woman, apparently about fiftvvearanf am. with tfaMt anno-rirMuUiOItcn Ol Jfran titSOttn 8 lnexnsusllble I expression (suggestive of hot tea-cakes tea-cakes ; I had presented Fran lei n and well-aired sheets) characteristio of Margarethe, on the morning of her mgh the well-to-do German matron : but a i teenth birthday,- with a pair of Russian close fAseWermay detect on that broad , smoeth' forehead, tn- these ronndr rtsy of foTmer trials and nSewnd. ohftii thA faint hut im a ih a imnrMa tnrongn uie nngoi ner voice, iuu and ; T '"JTZi ;7.VT?-.i 1 cheery though it rs, runs an undertone : the ltless divinity of the scythe and : of melancholy that would seem to tell 'P VJlZ t lZS '! of a time in the far distant past when " man, at length, pat a period to my such sadness -wai'qnly oo: habitual ty nBerhn ; and one evening, a few ThedaugbteMargaetherGretchen1davsW.my ?iTrtaw'..I reminded , as her parenta call ber who may be abont eiarhtAAii. in nnfl of thos?- nluran. and treadeolored hair, who never - appear without a miniature of Schiller j on their neck, and a oaner of prunes in their pocket, and who, after flowing on j . . .r. for a whoe evening in a slow, steady, ! canal-like current of sentiment, will sap npon sucking pig and apricot jam with j an appetite of which IMndo, the oyster eater, might have been justly proud. . - ... J 1 Both: welooraetue with .true German . it came -td. worse; uutil I thought some cordiality, and overwhelm me with ! thing shouli .really be done to put thanks for my courtesy to the head of j matters to rights. -Now just about this the family, reproaching him at the same time all manner of stories were begin time for bringing me in before they have j ning to go afbont of. the high wages paid completed their preparations, and made j to foreign workmen in .Unssia, and the everything comfortable fox me ; to give heaps of money that sundry Germans m ! l 1 . I . i I Heinrioh marches me into a trim little ! dining-room opening noon the garden, j and thrusts-me into an easy chair and a 1 pair of easy slippers, while I take . .hasty Barvev of the chamber into wlucn 1 Have 1 h.n thns sn.LVnlv ushered. ! It is one of those snug, cosey little ! rooms, spotless in cleanliness and fault- i less in comfort, imm ertaliaed by Tash-1 ington Irving in his description of the Lhitch settlements in orth America. ; The floor is polislied like a niirror; the ! tasteful green and white paper (which looks delightfully fresh ' this sultry weather) seems as fresh as the day it was put on; wuile the broad, well- stuffed sofa, which takt-s np nearly one whole side of the room, seems just made for the brawny beam-ends of some portly Hdimtn imperii evr thA Mat1M mllv. pooly limbs of his half-dozen big babies, j . " a a.al Above the stands the Goethe and ;Schiller. hangn a starfng. i highly colored medley of fire, smoke, blue and white uniforms, rearing noraes and overturned cannon, which some crabbed Ten tenie letters becaatk it pro claim to be "Die Schlacht bei Koenig gartz, 3 Job, 1966;" while facing it from above the sofa is a rather neatly done water-color likeness of chubby, fair-haired lad, in an infantry uniform, whom I rightly guess to be my host's dlei spn Wiht4m (a fcpi'ol J. word in his father s mouth), now on garrison duty at Spaadao. -!T - .- -- .- . But the object which especially atf traces my attention is a tall, grim bureau of nark takjin the f dztberornet beyond the fire-place, decorated with those quaint - eld German carvings, which carry one back to the streets of Nurem berg and the bonse bf Albrecht Dnrer. There stand Adam and Eve, in all their untrammelled ' freedom, shonlder to shoulder, like officers in the centre of a hollow square, with all the beasts of the earth formed in close order around then, ana the tree til knowledge stand ing nplike a sign-post in the rear. There the huge, frame of Goliatht smitten by the fatal stone, reels over bke a falling tower, threatening to crush into powder the swarm oi aimuruuve x iuusiines, who hop about in the background. .There appear the cnosen twelve, wno jaces curiously individualized, in spite of all the roughness of the carving, and pass ing through every gradation, from the soft, womanly features of the beloved disciples to the bearded, low-bred ruf fianly visage of him "which also was the traitor." . And there the prosecutor Saul, not yet transformed into Panl the Apostle (sheathed in steel from top to toe, armed with a sabre thai might have stilted Bluebeard himself, and attended by a . squadron of troopers armed, cap-a-pie), rides at full gallop past the gate of naniaxms oa hid errand of destruc tion. ,:,,,. .. , ,. ,; ,.. --- "The bnrean mnst be a very old one," remarked I, tentatively. "- "It is, indeed ; bt ihaf not why we value it." answers the old man, with kindling eyes. "That bnrean is the most precions thing we have t and there I is a storv attached to it which will never j be forgo'tten in our family, 111 answer ! for it. . IT1 tell yon the slory one of ! these days, bnt not' to-night, for we ' mustn't spoil our pleasant evening by any sad recollections... And .here, in f good time, comes. , Lieschen to tell as that tea'a ready." , i -. .- : J ". I will not tantalize rev readers with a ! catalogue of the- good, cheer whioh , heaped the table ; suffice it to say, the meal w one that would have tempted the most "notorious evil liver" that ever returned incurable from Calcutta, and seasoned with a heartiness of welcome which' would have made far poorer fare acceptable. Fresh from reminiscences of "Hermann and Dorothea, ' I could almost have imagined myself in the ' old man. warminor with the presence of I .nV Tlirixt.maa Xnmlir" l'n Britain r I while the young lady, though rather J shy at Urst, bhook ciher baahf illness ! by degrees, and asked a thousand ques tions roBTeoung-- tne etraage regions which I had recently quitted ; the sandy wastes of the Volga, and the voiceless soUtadee of the Don relics of former o,'ll mum U, UV VkX . 1- . 4 Ul U. V. 1 j I PT hpa.limr flnuant, , A-ri .1 .flrimMH 1 caverns tenanted. Jiy Tartar peasants tiaouiuu nun uuciu ui 6uuai ' MSOCitnoim. vuuiiu. ik wq .ma iu mo o-ouiuk; i oeiore l neparted, wnicn a was not 1 ftllAarAtfl tnjln withont nmmiunv nnm allowed to do without promising onoe t , .- . rj . nd 2aln not long" of roturmng. j And 1 kept my word ; ' for the quiet , hnppiness of this little circle, so simple ' and so open-hearted,-was a real treat to a restless gad- sdotk nxe my sen. ueiore the month was at an end I had strolled I around the tewn with Herr hloltmaon "', " I ear-drops, accompanying my gift (as any one in my place might well have I uuiwi ur iuiuiuif kibs uu uvui j iieiT neiunca oi nin promise vo ru ma the history of the old bureau which had ; attracted mv attention. ' The old man. nothing loath, settled himself snugly in I tke ample corner of the sofa, fixed his j "pon the quaint old piece of furni- i i. i - . , n it anion lormeu uie memeoi uis uis- j wtuw, auiu wu aa iuuuwb; : , "Yon must know then, mein Herr, that in the vear '62 business began to i ; rather fall off with me (I was a cabinet-1 ! maker, you remember), and from bad t.. J . Konigsberg and elsewhere were making ! in St. Petersburg and Moscow. And so 1 pondered and pondered over all these ! tales, and the plight I was in, till at last j 1 betran to tnink of eoino- and trvmu rwt'.i ln,i as well as th Mr wi'fa .nA t i talked it over, and settled that it should be done ; and we were just getting ready ia nen n'Rht a message came teat my on unefe, Lndwig Holzmsnn "l iiminouiii-a-ci.T3c,(.uu uau ut&eu onenceat my marriage, and never looked near me since), was dying, and wanted j" iinmwiiateiy. ooaway x Tren ; m? wiio wanted to go, too, but I ""H" iiKutirr uui-.u.iwutai J nd sure enough in about half n lmaaa litn oraa anil a. 1 1 nil 'llin8 ?n his old withered faee, making it look just like one of the curvings on the old bureau, which stood at the foot of the bed and said in a hoarse whisper, "Heinricli, my lad, I've not forgotten thee, although, the black oat has been between as a bit lately. When I'm dead thoul't have that bureau yonder ; there's more in it than thou think'st ; and he sank back vrith a sort of choking laugh that twisted his face, horribly. .Those were his last words, for after that he ftattwiste S kiiMt tf ttrpdr nod dis4 h same night. ." VWben his property earns to be divi ded, every one was surprised, for they bad all thought him inacb.,iiclier. I got the bureau, ju&t as he said ; and, remembering hut words aboat.it, we ransacked all the drawers from end to end, but found nothing except two or three old letters snd a roll of tobacco ; so we made np onr minds that he must have either been wandering a little, or else that God; forgive him he bad wanted to play us one more trick before he died. . in a few weeks more all was ready for our going, and away we went' to St. Petersburg.- : , "When we got there, we found it not at all such a land of promise as the stories made it out ; but still there were good wages for those who could work ; and for the first year or two we got on well enough. But after s time in came a lot of French fellows, with new-fangled tricks of carving that pleased the Baav siaa gentry more than onr plain German fashions ; and trade began to get slack and money to run short, - Ah I - mem Hen, may yon never feel what it is to find yourself sinking lower and tower, work as hard as yon lute, and one trouble coming oil yon after another,till it seems as if God had, forgotten you." . . . ; , -. .. ,. T. he old hero's voice quivered with emotion, and an'nnwontea tremor dis turbed the placid - countenance of bis wife, while even the sonny face of the little r raulein looked strangely sad. . "Well, neiii Heir, we straggled on u this way lor- two year longer, hoping always that our luck would turn, and patting the besl face- we could on it ; though, many a time when the children earne -to ask .ma why I , never brought them pretty things now, as I used to do at home, 1 could almost have sat down and cried. At last the time came when we ;ooold stand against it ,no longer. There was a money-lender close by us. from whom we had borrowed at higher interest thaa we could, afford, who was harder, upon us than any one (may it not be laid to his charge hereafter D, and be, when he saw that we were get ting behind in our pavmeaU,8eized our furniture, and announced a side of it by suction. I remember the night before the' ak as if it were yesterday, t My boy WUhelm was very ill just then, and no one knew whether he would live or die ; and when my wife and I sat by his bed that night, and looked at each other and thought of what was to come, I really thought my heart would have b rosea.- , Ah 1 nry Laabeth, we have indeed been in trouble together." , As he ottered the last words the old man clasped fervently the broad, brown hand of hie wife, who returned the pres sure with- interest, and. afttr a slight i pause, he resumed thus : "On the morning of the sale a good many people assembled, and among the I rest came the district inspector of police. He was a kind man in his way, and had M eerai lime- loos to ao wnen 1 It Seemed to take ,hi fancy, and he went across to have a nearer view of it. He began trying the grain of the wood r drawing- nis nail across one part, rap puis another with his knnckl till all onc? 1 8aw BloP B.norV Ben ?18 j he down' as . if betening. ;and give fnother rap against the back of the uis lace iignied np suaueniy. iiir- lu uiiu. Au 1UU tuuw Hiietiier nun bureau bas" a secret spring anywue'rel about? asked be, for the back seems to be hollow." I said I had never no ticed anvtlmur of .the sort son indeed. . " " " inspector, wno nad plenty oi practice in such work since he entered the police. discovered a little iron ' prong, almost like a rusty nail, sticking np from one of the. carved figures. He pressed it. i and instantly ' the whole top of the bureau flew np like the lid-', of a box, J : ' ; ,z v. i i ;K i. l.. . " i.... w .... j I .c ri uacicM ui uuia-uum iuu government shsre. abeut ,a dozen rou leaux of gold Fredericks; tightly roHed up in cotton, and' two or three jewel cases,' 'filled ""wrta. valuable Tings and. bracelets the whole amonnnag, as we afterwarda- calculated, tor more than 20,000 Prussian thalers. itn i .1 kind of miracle; and how we th m f M j fc w how truly he had spoken; The inBpeclor (Qod bleM him!) refused to f tfa e wind(l Mvin- t jJV .ufiicienUy rewarded bf , , L??l SSvSBSt M j we bad, and came back to oar own folk it a&- . ,B , . our own fatherland, never to leave Laagheal to Death. - i Ti .a, i . 11..1 m "7 V"n PP '""nj meet tra8, end": VT6 d.ner; "..eT "unxiui gui "ie lacuiiy oi "S people laugh. The man who nn,uUH it hi. In Mrlnprn tmnnuihi I. possesses it has to perform impossibili ties, He must sustain his reputation by keeping up the laughter, or go into some obscure corner and cry his life away. He never gets rich by his fanny efforts. It takes all the money be can earn to keep himself supplied with fuel and food for fun. There is a -constant f" ' lh? nurt,,al n8 9 not Pon? eTel7 fT- ottn f"" ?".?'" digging coal, and went to ' . . - - .ft- - DUl gradaauy dwindled again into com parative obscurity. He came down to singing comio songs in public houses, and made two or three shillings a week. It must have been very difficult after making a twenty-five years' laughter to be snflieieutly funny on three tahiUings a week. Tha thing can't be done. It is expecting too much of human nature. There is no fun in feeling the want of bread. Jonn Haeiam became too weak toeing, to say nothing of the comio expected of him. lie and said to a neigh- is something to eat no pain on me." He died two days after at Salford, England, and the verdict of the coroner's jury was "Death from natural causes, ac celerated by want of medical attendance and the proper necessaries of life." That is a stroke of English humor. Se riously, it means "starved to death." One of the jurymen was of the opinion that "some one was to blame." Very likely. There are many very fnrray people who know better than anybody else how serious life is, snd how diffi cult it is to langh themselves. The laughter of others becomes an intoxica tion, and the poor humorists is often laughed to death. Occupation. ' . What a glorious thing it is for the human heart f Those who work hard seldom yield to fancied or real sorrow. When grief sits down, folds its bands and mournfully feeds npon its tears, weaving the dim shadows that a little exertion might sweep a way into a f aneral pall, the strong spirit is shorn of its might and sorrow becomes onr master. When troubles flow npon you dark and heavy, . toil not with the waves and wrestle not with the torrent; rather seek by occupation to divert the dark waters that threaten to overwhelm yon, into a thousand channels which the duties of life always present, -Before yon dream of it, those waters will fer tilize the present, and give birth to fresh flowers that will become pure and holy in the sunshine which penetrates to the path bf duty in spite of every obstacle. Grief, after all, is but a sel fish feeling, snd most selfish is the man who yields himself to the indulgence of any passion which brings no joy to his fellow-men. ' : ' Prairie squirrels are said to be very plentiful this year in Wisconsin. . -. -EsMlgm Jaebnaaa'a Doc ; Ensign .Tackman was an old Vermont fanner.-. He had rood dog, that . for some reason bore half ot his own name, being plain Jack ; and it would be no reflection en the old man'a sense if we should say that the creature knew half as much as he did. Jackman once owed his life to Jack ; and it all came about by his taking him with him to bis wood-lot, which was a good way distant from his house. Almost every' day daring the winter 'the farmer and the dog went oir together, always re turning safely with the great loads of wood, until one afternoon, as they were jogging homeward, the sled canted on a atone, and the . uppermost log on the load rolled off on the ensign's side, tak ing him unawares, knocked him down, and held aim there wedged in between the runner and a hnge bowlder which almost overhung the path: ' ' As be fell -he instinctively shouted "Whoa!" to the oxen ; and they stopped at once, then' and there. If they had started at aC, ' Ate'' sidling log wonld have been precipitated upon his bead; bnt, trained and most obedient of crea tures, like all good oxen, they minded what was said to tbem, and halted, with the toppling logs fesdy to roll off at the first movement. But, though Jhey might stand there all the afternoon, aa probably (key wonld, when night drew near, they would go home. Besides, there was no help in them, 'While this bad been happening, Jack had been off careering about the woods, hunting hares and starting np par tridges, and having most delightful time; bnt now when the ensign whistled for him,, he came bounding back to the sled, saw what had happened, and that he could not get at his master, nod started for home with the speed of a race-horse., Mother Jackinan saw him coming down the rond. and be seemed to her to be almost firing. His lameness did not hinder him "then. He cleared the ground like a deer running for his life. She and rushed to the door ; bnt, instead of stopping there, he shotpast and kept straight on, by several honies and shops to the eboemaker s. . Meanwhile shei 1 . , , . . , . l caught up a shawl and started for the woods, ...... . - . ' Jack nad evidently1' gone through with some reasoning wtucl to the conclusion that which a woman could not help, not even ' his own mistress. Arid so he sped by j everybody else; to the one man who had j befriended, him. . . i ., .. ,. He burst into the presence of the shoemaker, pftlled at- bis shirt-sleeves, and nan ta to -tha door whining. The. man put qh his coat and followed. At mtrici ecniit from all who InCitt wsn-! the groceiy store, next door, he stopped 1 ton cruelty. long enough to tell of the dog's con-! " Te "ni"bkr to give life, aad,' duot ; than borrowed a horse and sleigh i therefore, ought net. to take ,it from i which stood waiting while the owner tne- Meane.at ,1,n',et without aufflcient, was making purchases, and drove on'1.01" ' , . ' : after Jack. . i -I H we were as faithful to onx heavenly ; Men came oat along the road uutil ; Father as animals are to their masters, : there was quite a party on the wav, onr UTe ould be spent quite differ some in Sleighs and Some on. foot.; enJ'-T 1rom what they are now. : When the old lady waa overtaken, she ltiaaaidthiitjiero.oneoXthe bloodiest was picked np and conveyed along. i tjrants that ever lived, when young, Jk ld th wv. Th'pre atrmrl ths waS of a Trrv cmnl dlspsition; delight- patient oxen in thc'irtracU; they ld not lifted so mux-h as one of their feet inlthattime. And there lay ;ib. wgnqnite insensible now, just where ne nad uuien. . , . , . . .. . , Bloesoms oi" the Rattan 1'ree. . We had missed the professor but a j moment, when suddenly he reappeared, j holdinw at arm'slantrth what aetimed in I the dutance about a dozen brown, scaly , snakes a yard long, all strong together. Simultaneously the entire company sprang to their feet and started for a race as this, regiment of frightful rep tiles was thrust into their midst by the radiant "dominie." whose 'face -was fairly aglow , with mischief. ; "Where did they come from? What are you going to do witn tnem? exclaimed everybody at onoe, turning to look at the monsters as they lay passive .and motionless "where ' the professor bad thrown them; ' "Give 'them to- Saint Patrick, to keep company with those he drove ont of the Emerald Isle ; or we'll have them for dinner if you pre fer," was the laughing response. Re assured by the non-combatant air of the dreaded reptiles, we ventured a nearer approach, and onr astonishment may readily be imagined when we found not snakes, but simply a cluster of the pen dant blossoms of the rattan tree tArundo bambol), one of the strangest of all the floral products of, the tropics. .. They hang from the tree in cluster usually of ten or twelve, each a yard oi more in length, looking like a soldier's aigrettes snspended among the green leaves, or perhaps still more like a string of chestnut-colored scales threaded through the centre. : Waving to and fro in the ssm mer breeze, as 1 afterwasds saw them, intertwined with the graceful tendrils of the beautiful passion-flower with its rare feathery chalice of purple and gold and flanked on every side by ferns of exquisite symmetry, rejecting their dainty fringes in the dear . waters, the tout ensemble is one of radiant loveli ness, seemingly too fair to be hidden away among lonely jungles. Llppin eott't Maguainc Tbe Railroad over the Andes. The present age is mighty in stupen dous works ! Tears hence, with the his tory of civilization before them, onr posterity will believe that the coming ot the nineteenth century was the be ginning of the practical age. The steam boat, the railroad, the telegraph, the opening of the Suez Canal, the tunneling of Mount Cenis, are all followed with a work so gigantic, so astounding, that it is hardly to be believed, even by this inventive and determined age. The project to gird the Andes with the iron band of a railway tracK, is not a new subject for discussion. Its feasibility has been in contemplation for years, but the surprising and successful results that have followed the attempt, is a glorious and magniSoent if it is a silent eulogium on the indomitable persistence and ingenuity of the day. The contract of the building of the road between Callao and Oroya; was signed between the Government of Pern and Henry Meiggs, late of the United States, bnt now the great railroad king of South America, in the year 1369, and the first earth was turned in Lima on the first of January, 1870. The price - agreed on for the comple tion of the work was 27,600,000 sola (a sol being about 91 cents of an American gold dollar ;) payments were stipulated to be mad6 as the work proceeded, and the road was to be completed and equipped to the Government within six years from the date of contract. This Mr. Meiggs is confident will be com- pleted, and, his trust seems to be well lonnaeo, as oniy scout two nnndrea j the female character charms which sup more miles have to be finished.- Aa phea the plaoe of transitory fresh excursion was made over the road, from noM -y . .. Lima to a point within sixty miles ot i io, Callao, the terminus ef the work then I Four counties in lows have elected wo accomplished. I men for county school superintendent The ' Mr. Oeorge - Smitfo 'writes : collection bruotmt home, -nv tha exre- dition confided to my charge inclndes over 400 separate inscriptions besides various objects of art, aomastie econ omy, implements, dVc. The inscriptions throw new light on th? history, politics, astronomy, mythology, geography, and language of ancient Assyria : but it would be tedious to your readers to inflict on them a 'critical and minute examination of all these texts. 1 1 will, thereto re. select a few as .characteristio specimens of the collection, and I shall commence with a text that has attracted most attention that, . namely, which belongs to the Delnge series. . When last year I published translation of the text in question, I was obbged to .note with regret that in the first column of the inscription there were about fif teen lines entirely lost The lacuna occurred at s point of high interest to students and the world in general for the Divine instructor of Sisit was about to give orders for ; the -embarkation in the ark. It is needless, therefore, to say with what satisfaction I lighted upon tbeweloome tablet' which fills np this very important gap. The fragment I found daring the expedition, belongs to the first column of the Deluge series of inscriptions ; It continues the speech of the God Hes, the commencement of whioh is on the portion of tablet already in the Museum. ' On the fragment of the old collection, Hea tells Siait to warn the world, because of the wicked ness of the people : on the portion Hea continues by predicting the flood, and then commands bisit as Xoliows .", 'Oi I shall ." 'On the coming of the flood which aeu'i, iuou siiaii, enter into ine ! snip, and the door of the ship turn ; thou stiait send into the midst ol it th corn, thy furniture and goods, thy gol ! BUU urer luJ n"UB "T' "7 omale slaves, the sons of the army, the i ""ts of the field, the animals of the i fie,d '' aU thott bareth thon shalt do. J-ney snau spread, and iney snaii gnara iud uuut vi iud Duiy. fc?iaie aucuueu and Ptne1 hl8 month, and spake, snd JMd to the Gad Hea his lord.' Five JiPM ol tLe iPech, oi foilo,r this, 1UI .rrTJ Iatioii anil than in tnd amaVAf Srair 1 latiou ; and then in the answer Sisit' refers to the dillionHies in the- wav of the work. I need net -dwell upon the,: 1 .-! .1? I Asavrlaa Dlsrovery. gone nrorign , inregt nf placiiig this account side by UwaTacalin ! Me t,'af the book ot fn ljq"" ' " ' - Gem Tor Iramb Animals. ' 5at mereifuf Creator wills that all his creatures shttufd be happy in the places' where his wisdom has placed them; ' nd he wUl most assuredly require a . g to tonueut S..kinals ; and when he. P?w nr.. he practiced it toward men. , i 10" s.80 "prM I - - - j it does not Iu'-Iy establish a lelatiou i ship. It is not possible to bring the nimal world under the rule, "Do nnto others as ye would have others do unto yon ; but, as that rule becomes the imnHnir r.rinr.l nf tlw hnman pnr-o I 0 0 z 1 -1 cruelty to animale will! J' J . .. . - . I Just as it requires k.ndness to make i me utrie one grow np wnn -love ior lis r . , ' . 7. ' " 1 parents, and become a blessing anda!hlB own meals and picking np stray help to them and the world, so does it I foTJ "n 8nPPrt. require kind treatment to make the . LaHo ! H he wm a dog he knew dumb animal a willing and loving helper ho to be kind to a fellow-dog in dis and companion to mankind. I "T"; " K:-tllt .-h'miI--! If you come suddenly upon a boy stoning birds by the roadside, be will not look yon in the face with an honest, straightforward look. Why? Because he has lost his self-respect. He knows he is doing wrong, if he has been taught ngntiy; and none oi us have much respect for ourselves when we are Juten-i tioually doing wrong. When we think .of the great good which results from the kind treatment of animals, with senses the same ' as ourselves, having bones that may be , broken, with mattcies and nerves mat may be braised, and, in consequence of this,- suffer pafn, how can we tail to be interested in them ? : . '.. A Bar's Idea F Head. Heads axe of different shapes and sizes. They are full of notions. Large heads So not always hold the -most. Some persons can tell just what a man is by the Bhapeof his head. High heads are the best kind. Very knowing peo ple are called long-headed. A fellow that won't stop for anything or anybody ia called hot-headed. If he is not quite so bright he is called soft-headed. If he won't be coaxed nor turned they call him pig-headed. Animals have very small heads. The heads oi fools slant back. When yonr head is cut off yon are beheaded. Our heads are covered with hair, except bald beads. There are barrel-heads; heads of sermons and some ministers used to have fifteen heads to one . sermon piu heads, heads of cattle, aa the farmer calls Lis cows and oxen, head winds, drum heads, cabbage heads, loggerheads, come to a head, heads of chapters, head him off, head of the family, and go ahead but first be sure you are right ; but the worst of all heads are deadhead, who hang around an editor for free tickets to snows. Womanly Modealj-.' Man loves the mysterious. A cloud less sky, the full-blown rose, leaves him unmoved ; but the violet which bides its blushing beautiee behind the bush and the moon, when ahe emergea from behind a elond, are to him sources of inspiration and pleasure. Modesty is to merit, what shade is to figure in painting ; ' it gives its boldness and prominence. - Nothing adds more to female beauty than modesty ; it sheds around the countenance a halo of light which is borrowed from virtue. Botanists have given the rosy hue which tinges I the cap of the rose the name of "maiden blush. This pore snd delicate hue is the. only paint that Christian virtue should use ; it is the richest ornament. A woman without modesty is like s faded flower, which diffuses an unwholesome i odor, and which the prudent gardener will throw away from him. Her dt stiny is melancholy, for it ends in shame and repentance. Beauty passes like the flower of the aloe, which blooms snd dies in a few hours, but modesty gives ! - i' - "Voiitlisi' Column, t . i ' Tan Bea is ran Br;3K.--Three chil dren were climbing on their grandpa's, lap. ' They formed an extensive lapful," bat grandpa' was very 1 patient, for he : loved 'tthe babies", as he called them. A little girl witb rosy cheeks, another with golden enrls, and a sober-faced boy, each asked grandpa to tell them a true story. , . , "Many years ago," began granJpa, "my brother and myself were very happy, for a consul came t ;vuut us. We had lively times. I tell you : and Brother Sam and Consin Will, being about five years older than L, thought they must hare a . little fun at my ex-, pense. S:tm told me that if I would go over to Mr. Thorpe's,- after dark, and return borne without getting frightened he wonld give me a book. ... A book ! The promise was mnsic to my ears, and I did not hesitate to take the required journey. Sain and Will knew that I was no coward, and to pre pare my mind for a fright they spent the afternoon in telling ghost-stories. Evening- came. "You'd better let him start now, Sam, it's getting dark," said Cousin Will. ' "Well, go ahead. Bub,'' said my' brother ;- and I noadej .no second com- ma ad. thong)1 the wav led 'through shadowy hemlock wood. ' There was no moon and the sky was clondy, and when I was returning home the wood were very dark so dark thtt I lo t the path and fontid rryaelf in a big brash heap. - Well uo I remember how under my bitle feet the dry bmsn crackled in k m;i!. ..,.i,, T-fci. j I found the path again, and in the path a aun ui ii DLiiiurj.1 ua LUTJ mm nm X Jill BVll ; ris something white. I picked it up and found it to be a sheet tied to a V i hmnm. Afv rrtrir anil eAnain mmt u i to anarA wia with this bnt brcominir 1 ingntened themselves by the noise in , the brush, thev'dropped it and fled, j When I arrival home; dragging the broom and long, white sheet behind me. ; sam and ill were just telling a g.-eat bear story. "' I listened intently. What! , If I had met this horrid bear! . "And then we ran with all our might,' went on Sam. "ForwA beard the old1 bearcrwWfno in the brueh, pot in, ill, excitedly, A lio-ht l.r'K- in nnnn mw r,r.'n o .i.t ... ..... :,-,t nnn 1 de brunt '" I , uZ'ty ka boys looked r . xSTS d much ashamed. itoIenp to Sara. "Where. iv twV Ram ? t didn't get scared," "., t ; -, . . hotel, though- kept on the European Sam said not a word, but' went ont P1. constituted a man a guest within soon returning with the precious little the meaning of the statute, and made book, rwkh its bright covers- and pic-1 tne proprietors of the house responsible tares of dog ; ami I went to bed the tx property lost by.such a guest. '1 happiest child in the State of New York. -We learn that there is on the farm of But the boys uever finished their bear , Mr. Geo. W. King at, Painesville, Ohio, story. - ' , i ...i t i. i- - . . j a sassafras tree which, one foot from The children were maoh pleased with the ground, measnres 10 feet 4 inehr tbe story. '" They are grown now, but ; in cirenmierenee, and four(feet froei grandpa is living yt, and he now plays the ground, 8 feet 10 inches. It is 120 with his great-grandchildren. He is as feet high, presenting a clean trunk of fond of books as he was when he was a , 50 feet to the lower bianchea. . little boy, and reads for hours at a The first daily paper printed in the time, without glasses. O how we love English Ungua-e wa- published in Lon- himl with his young heart aad his rwaniiiui wane nan. iturai .ic Yorker, . Ch,ritab1 Doo - 4 charitaWe fxiXThl - dogahow chfnTy brother or sistrW? This dog's name was Carlo, At one time, instead of eating his dinner as usual, he was seen to carry it away. He did this for several days. His owner, feeling curious to know what be did with it, followed him, and found: that be carneu ii .some uisiance io a noie in wLjch lotdrtg with alitter of poppies had taken refuge.1 Carlo seemed to pity ... .. 1..,. I - ""'-1 in distress. I have seen s well-dressed boy langh at a ragged one. I have seen a boy with nice warm boots on trying to tread on the naked toes of a boy who was too poor to boy boots. I have seen a boy with a stomach so full of the good things he had eaten that he eonld scarcely wan turn a nongry oeggar child from the door with a harsh word. If I had these boys and Carlo together in my room, I should tell them the story of Carlo's charity. ' Better thn Golo We often Lesr little hoys telling-ef the Wonders they will do when they grow to Je men. They are looking and longing for the time when they shall be lartre enough to carry a cane and wear a tall hat ; alid not one of, them will say that Le expscta to be a poor man, bnt that everyone intends to be rich. Now money is very good in its place ; bnt let me tell yon, little boys, what is a great deal better than money,' and what you may be earn ing all the time yon are waiting to grow horge enough to earn a fortune. The Bible tells us that "a good naue is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favor rathe? than silver and gold." A good name does not mean a name for being the richest man in town, or for owning the largest house. A goud name is a name for doing good deeds ; a name for wearing a pleasant face and carrying a cheerful heart ; for always doing right, no matter what we may be. . , . Mr firtt I hope yon are ; . : My second I see yoa are i -My u hole I know von are. Well-come. We travel much, yet pris'ners are, And close confiiired to boot ; We with the swiftest horse keep poe, Tet always go on foot. A pair of Spur. WuBD S4CARR : - - ', A disagreeable aensatiwn. Having power. -. A scarlet oakl - " , Nearest ia place. Jmuer: P A I N ... ABLE I LEX- N.E-X ,T. . Pczzlk. I am a tangle ; behead and I am pronounced the same, but am an adverb; reverse, and I am. a weight; behead again, and I am a preposition ; reverse and I am a negative. Atuwtr .'Knot ; not ; ton ; on ; no. . TourgueAefif, the famous Bosnian novelist, is said to be quite broken down by recent misfortune. Within a year his wife snd only daughter have died ; by the failure . of his Parisian banker, most of his earnings have been swept awsy ; and a nephew to whom he was greatly attached and who was greatly indebted to him has been sent to prison for outrageous felonies. The poor novelist writes very little now, as be says his stories, reflecting his own heart, are too sombre. "Varieties. The wetter the weather the direr the , A female misisteront West kisses the ' bridegroom when she marrys a conplo. - An ebUgaio on . the flute The- sum lent on that article by an obliging pawn broker.1' " i . The gentleman - who was unable to ' "express hie feelings" baa applied t- Adams Jfc Co. ... In Xevada they hang" men np to the limbs ef trees, that they may "enjoy the morning air." , .. -. . ,Tha Saratoga Riilway thinka it is pre-eminently entitled to call itself a "grand trunk-line." A lady recently presented- the city ol RirBzingbam, England, with a park ui CO acres, which cost $150,000. According to the latest estimate thora were 7742 newspapers in the world,' of ' which number 5071 are published in the United States. , , . Evidences" of Japanese progress are increasing. Late mails bring an ac count of a coal mine accident by which two lives were lost. .. - - After asking vonr name in the State of Arkansas, the natives are in the habit of further inquiring,' in a confidential tone: Well, now, what was your name afore yer moved to these parts ?" . A wealthy" bishop congratulated a poor priest on the good air which ha breathed in his parisa; to which the ! """'.'. JBIUIou- : "?y loru. u.w wor.ia oe good enougn. u l could uve i , onR." i 'A million dollars worth ef ostrich, idiuera in impuneu uiui uigiana ovary i year from the Cape of tiood Hope. i Every pound of these feathers is said to vm wonn miy guineas in tne xjonaon: marktt. . , , ... The bashful editor of a Missouri paper proposed to his beloved througlr tbe columns of his caper in this forms "There, is a certain girl in. this town who can carry onr smoke-house keys for life, if she'll only say the word." ; A Era in West bo rough, Mus , re cently uiseoversd in a car-toad ol corn 1 : 1 . 1 . i l k I ?'Ke '"o. " wno naa h'd themselves therein at Albany. i Whan niojiAVAKai f hnv IS ail hoAn sV-atreJU rtevv - !Jt . recently decided by a -New lork judge that taking a meal in a ; Jon. it 1702.' by a womss m'e' EVizv beta MUi)L - It was Cailed the DM Courant, and was not issued as a Wo man's Rights' paper, but "to spare the public at least half the impertinences which the oidinaty papers contain,", A distir.gnir.hcd cZaci was lately pre sident of a coort-martial. He had sworn a witness, a raw Irish recruit, and held out his hand fox the Bible. Judge of his astonishment at finding it the hand, not the book grasped and heartily shaken by. Pat wiko, in - the very broadest brogue, said; "It's me self who is proud and plased to bold the band -of ye,- sir ; and may Saint tauirrcaauuauuiB l'athnck and all the saints ol onid ln- Uud bless yer honor !' Captain Samuel George, the recently deceased chief of the Onondaga Indians ia Hew York, State, was employed by the government as a runner during the war of 1S12. In this capacity, while carrying dispatches for the command ing officer of Fort Niagara to Canan daigua, he is said to have performed the almost incredible feat of running a ditau of -one hundred and fifteen miles between the rise and set of the sun, and returned the same distance on the next . - . Moscheles writes: "After perform ance of 'The Maid of Artois,' in which Malibran performed marvellously, we went to see her in ber dressing-room. There she sat, anrroanded by wreaths and an enormous bouquet in her band. She .diced and laughed with ns, add ing i 'Si vona vonliez me debaxressez de cctto machine, e'eet cet abominable Duo tie Brunswick qui vient de me l'appor ter,' and, so saying, threw a eoknssl bouquet at me. whiuh 1 caught. What must 'the abominable Duke' have thought, when, a few moments later, he saw me mount tn.y carriage and carry off hit bouquet ? For so it happened at 'he entrance-door of Drnry Lane The atre." " ! The swans of the Thames have been increasing and multiplying this year with reckless fertility. It seems that a portion of the chicks belong to the queen, another portion to the corpora tion of London, and the remainder to a city company. Each callow cygnet has to be branded on the foot with the mark crest and motto, probably of its owner ; and it is made the duty of the Lord Mayor to see that. this is done. Meantime, the fishermen complain thai these unprofitable and essentially ngly fowls destroy the fish that might other wise become human food. The fisher men must content their souls with pa tient resignation ; the poets have con vinced the world, against the evidence of its sharp eyes and long ears, that swans are beautiful objects and sweet singers. Bo soon as their claim to all the cardinal virtues is established, we hope to see one of them elected Lord Mayor. " M. Bet ha a Edwards visited a Turk ish princess, whom she describes as fol lows : "She was .tall and slender and very handsome, with a pearly akin, delicately rit features, and black hair and eyes. Her dress waa simply per fect, ample, flowing, easy, of soft, noise less, lustrous silk, the precise hne of which it would be impossible to de scribe ; it waa something between an asphodel-blossom and the palest pink coral, and yet neither the one air the other approached it at all nearly. Around ber head was wound a hi tie turban of de'icately colored ganze, fas tened over the forehead with a jewel. Now, I am sorry to confess that this graceful and imposing creature was such an inveterate smoker that it seemed the sole business of two or three ot her slave-girls to supply her wants. During the two hotrs that we were honored with her presence one of these sntoma-ton-like figures wonld come in about every seven or eight minutes, nnsnm moned, snd band each of the ladies a cigarette. Anything more like machi nery eonld not be conceived. There was no salutation on the part of tba servant, no acknowledgement on tha part of the mistress. The cigarettes came and went, snd that waa all,' t 1 ti s? ft