f.'l II Tit ill f ill true !..! 1 to n't ',:ft ?'-.rii r rfrki mi;s " 1 .,' V "'. "'" '" ..in" " f - ' " 1 ? ft it-i -;it..i' :.. It, ......... '. - - 'Ya -1 - -SEti r tej rifl 1111 WliU J-'"-" '" :1"-J Mi,llmBIII!HWMM j ;. : Cr ! ; . .-.I rl'! ; -a' : - it ',':-:"' .. -.,1; :. .. '. i. .; THE COXSTITCTION THE CXIOX-wLXD THE EXFORCEMENTOF THE LAWS.' i.n -. .1, . u ! .: !--m .., . , ...j-j Editor an4 Pfoprietor. . ,T . t. 1 i . . -t 4. , I I ,,' I .. J Ll. , , . , , 1.. ' ii J ..I m r .... - 1 i 141 t-ii -U- -1 1 . .1 L'i. VOL. XXVIIL ; MIFFLINTOAVxV, JUNIATA CQTOTYPEXAiJAXIAKt W, 1S7:;; ; M ! ; ! ; .VJiV'iV.".'.',' ?"1V:; , , TSO 2,T .Bt-KMI-WtlVlVlS "'I IB tl v-.ii-. i: ,:...- ,:i . Poetry- Of UUfboun7odilhtkiir '.', 1 U bright ar cVMdy wtker;.i'' Uf all lk flowtW tint coana4 ,' Tka hU tirahn aann tjgaU. . -- Thli Uttl. rmryie fwr? krlMr ' 1 ;' Tfengbta f the tiie.d J-t tb"!. Z had a UUle loTar (laca, , " ,. 'A Wb aaW to glM moaiaa;, V..,, JJla ayea ra bine aa iyaciBlka,' (, llh Upe wata r4.a ,M i ' Aad TCT7hail7 1t4 la pralr i Ba fntty Waka 4d uaaaa aray 1 . v . ii A il v. I iw' Vl" The t rla that acl ti ichool M hW Xaa im.aJtioMrpeUK ,Iki.1 ,- B urn ha bcaught b roajy :a b'.geat.plomft ADd peachea, Attl alaraja at tt iaof aroaM'Vaft , , ;.,, Ta tjarry home Hiy took as4 afata.4 Titj em!da l:aeeJ-wtth pout" aWiVi- . TheTghry raselna' da:Sa . V , . , T.i Abjnt u.at liftTe asoiVa U:ki, Tolauchaduiratiou;, ... ,.,..1 Airthweua,M girls , 'u. ument; but being a stolid fellow, he wiu alcar rye ao4 lender awia J, , ;v,n jclatcheJ the sand atod made no remarks. Art this l karw as ii a rbr, ' v.A V If it were the judgment, he "didn't feel ABdnaaeseattMaaaetemrif V'- . I ? prepared." But h.fcer.e?pected to wy Mrethwa Jl.rto or Xav "'"' V. ."feel prepared,?, like less anaktsd sin ishvaidbeioTedsadrarlr. -V v i-'i 'v Iners. Ila . was altogether vile. There' toTBaea i a-ked Wia,Trtisa,aa!r',v '' was no spot in hitn whereon character He only answered with a hist. .. V-jtil I tetaed hua I'Tall. B 1 ful to kaear t ia reaaoa CTa plaa vara ta aaaaaa) u . n Ba-aiatked and (tra a tat tana -With aweet and Uupka f tarity. i ; '. ,. 1 ' ,i'k . i Tft girtrc 1 la blrai " ks said. .i.t i ;tVlih Wlea p. la aad eieadeif J 'J y J 'i uo nma ana TariMfBiaxeo,., , 4JJ Aod fach;a' pnrple splendor; EuloTrud iV ielhatr t. J , ! ThU liitia havafia ta caicM afkV i . "im lycarlu kstiaiHaeaea, thaaTT tJ .-: 1 ashed with blahiug pleasure: He answered ra aad ra aaia y Ueanaeaeabd dearaat xzaaora; a a That tbe roa&d world aad all the tea laid nythi half ao awaet aa oie ) t 1 lletaned with a pfovl delight Too rare fur word tv captare, Xorerer dreamed what aaddea blight Woali come ta chill my rmptara. -, Could 1 &rea the tender LIoojb of paaW mud a iiule tjmbf Life holds aoiue item experience. As asoal of OS dii.coTr, Aad Tva hid other losses niece I lot bt little loser; But ktill this purple pasfij biiuga Taouhta of the saddeet, awealaat thl&ga. , t " , . - ' ' rvii.;c.llan' Till hy I.ncre. , . -n r cl, i,;r,c r,.. ;,. this conntryl" was the exclauiatiou of n Englishman a few years aro after a brief sojourn in New York. It hap - peued 111 this way: The Lnghshmau, in u i w u a.. uiumiria, .. sr esSar?.to,,obtal?,ttnlva!Pf on. .ome Jwith a lar-e commercTd rouccomldlte'LlL Z.rZ-lV Anncnrnm nta It onil MMtUTPa I lift C II I ;f r .Zr.Zr-,LZiZ: VtWrZt t to him the .u v...., .wamf tbp fiaaW'sanvB b!e at ninet rtvdavs'dVto. WamI x& he ina lirei "lake mis.' ne inn urea. use , to do with this? it tsi R- Ti J fn" fn-iifcin siannst vsll. - known Dangers; was uie repiy. -inev ; will cive vou the monev at the local rate." The Englishman did as directed. He met with no difficulty. The pper was acceptable, and although our hero ' did not touch the cash, he received a: check for the proper amount on a neigh- ' borirsr bank. Thither he repaired in j the full confidence of having something tangible. He was mistaken. The indi vidual at the bank to whom he presented the check for payment seized it nerv ously, and, in a rapid, incoherent man ner, scrawled some hieroglyphics on its face, and thrust it back into the hands of its astoiiubed owner, motioning him; at the same time to stand aside tor thtt comer. The check had been duly "cer tified." That was what the scrawl across its face meant Ia a state of suspense and anxiety the Englishman betook himself to the person to whom he was in debted, and timidly exhibited ' what he hail to offer. To his surprise his friend's countenance brightened. "Mjany thanks!" he: exclaimed. "By theway. this amount is too large; there will be someting over a hundred dollars coming to you . " and be proceeded to fill a check for it.. The Englishman groaned x in epirit It was only another "piece of paper. And then it waa he exclaimed. "There-is no sucn tning as is money in j-. this country V Galaxy. -t - - a a. a -SB waa ucaiin. : -. . : . An Irishman died, a few weeks ago, in London, w hose f areep apd i attain- ments entitle turn to a itiche ihlhe ah- nals of literature. The deceased was about fifty y eats of age, and waa aa odd a figure as oue could meet- in a day's ride. Ha was small, .but . firmly knit, generally wore a white hat and a dress r-nif nnrl SITWJITS tloal an' old ' TO hum 6 - uuder bis arm. He was a connnned : book-worm. Mezzofanti was hardly a j back 'fore dark, abed put me in the more accomplished linguist , Mortimer i house where the crazy folks is !" was a graduate of the ITniversity of j " Who said?" " '" Dublin, and deeply versed in classic "'Miss Smith, what keeps the poor lore, but he added a polish to his erudi-1 house.' ' She sent me on aa". errant. ' I tiou hy his intimacy, with at least a just run' 121 1, couldn't breave; audit dozen modem ' tongues.- He spoke i French. German. - Kutvuan. Polish,. Spanish, Italian, Modern, Gretk, Tur-, kish, Arabic, Irish, and Danish with' fluency.. , Iu LU youth be, - hadj been, cabiu-boy-in an American bark.aud aub-1 sequent ly became a medical student iu Paris, but had to leave it ou account cf tiw connection with the June jnsurxeo:i I inn vt MS ' He was a very strong man, and util- j ized his btrenght by taking an engage rge- ment as a Hercules iu a circus in Aus- trxlio. . Kff rnrnii lie a7iwT& !?CiIlTa99 OD ' Wiakspeare through Germany, waa a i Gretk professor at Hamburg, had aj troupe of Spanish ballet-dancers in Hoi-; land; il; and was a companion of Sir ffu-J liam Don, the baronet actor, in hia wild- ... ,. I I . .... K.a S.mA 11 a )iad been tutor to Charles Lever's chil dren at Florence. He came to the sur- ! face one day in the employment of Tom ihum; another m the company ol Mar- "She said it was lor sassiu Her. . ae , phy the Irish giant, who was a distant was tellin' a man .what my" athor, ,was, CAiusin. He had been in London sinc3 1 and I said he truttn't neither l . lAni ( tne Franco-Prussian war, which ruined i she " ul. vr.:. .a .T . j him in fortune. His learning waa of I; "What's your father's name?".;.. ! j iittle profit to him, for he died very j. "Joe Trestle." - poor in a ward of a hospital and is' Joe gulped a throat fall fair. buried in a nameless grave. - A ludicrous incident occurred at Hay- market Theatre, London, recently. Miss Ed.th Gray appeared as Juliet. She was about to pledge Romeo in poison, and was exclaiming, "I drink to thee!" when a soda-water bottle burst with a loud explosion in the gallery. Juliet had enough presence of mind not to heed the formidable interruption, but the public, went into conTulsiona. A BETTER COIXTRY.;' Joe Trestle was very druiik. Day Eassed OTer him, and night bejnn to owl around, while he Lit motionless ,4 s a mammy ou th low batik f lUmp iwn, uuuer a sycamore tr,e All lU leaves quivered with the storm's breath. -j The storm came roaring orer Jtilhv and tramping: tbrongh woods ; blotting out twilight and drenching the ground. It washed Joe Trestle as he had not been wanhed for yeais. liamp Ram rose to tha storm as a willing child sjlDgs to its mother. .,...: Water, we Vnnv ? rnnia f,-v In "'"'"terminaeon. Water pnrsn'ed '' rnm .iijuJ-kthrongh Joe Trestle's jhwsJ Lis boots ,;-tiuis RKuiL vj cootinuea . dasiies and ishoclcs it' bronght him back to the j world. ' He sat np in a broad glare, and , saw the world as it wtre on tire. But . .mpkuti uaiuiDwi vuxieu auui. jLLv uinarii f he long, whistled sound of falling trees. tO&t Ot HUT BBJ: : water, and alno, be. tbonglit, a child s cry. Joe. WISDecfedit infclit be the iiulo-. might be started, except a. fjillt desire, wbi-i- ''" " i achmg somcwhere,.to Imj butter ..rvV1"'' v-?than he was. Joe had stagsrered pat( , i-""'M. uir., it i ; .. .....1 ..... willing, to still his ancestor's toml stom s, ! his ova ears, or even hid wifu'a chi mau if he had had a. wifss for a sat infae- torv drink. . liovs ratrouized him on ; tu mtrBet j LiTed trika on him. hen he tucked himself up like a ,rhryali8 under stainray or fene. T-..Penple looked forward tjoe Trestle's givrBrjd unrer trains or frozen to the' gutter oTrr night, when he could at last j le utilize d by the comnnnity, and ntil- j ized thus'.- 'Sec-the, mr son, Joe I . Trestle went to school with me : he was , bright boy, end everyone expected Le i would make his mrk." That is all the i mark Joe Trestle has ever made. ,Vhat. 'is the cause of this? Kum'my soii ; ; drunkenness ' ''. ' ' - ' When churches revived their zeal, and CLristhais began to polish their armor, all deuomiuatipus seand uu Joe XreMtle. ; nud trii d to reform him. , They Toted . ut elections to license liquor tr&iiia ; and j ut ordinary times this victim of it was too mean for their notice ; bat when j they turned from basrnefs to religion, ' he was in demand. He felt it, and totik ; a s'y pride in being lassoed from all the 'pulpits, exhorted and prayed over. i They gave him money and old clothes, ' ' which he spent at saloon - backdoors. ; Thus they tried to inject a life through ," j ltia Teins which had never tonched him i inwardly. .. ... l OA Vtafej4 anarvii-ul o aj. I f . and beaten ; ihing could bear it no longer, ilie trtf t' , from his sight and died. The . know,-, i. - dge that he had a child, a daughter, V vc AJ.ava uj ,a a i uvi caw nivi . iiai a.aii.u I . . . . .1.1 . i. tu .;o . .'ing hands iheygmiwMl round the tree; . eoiuewhcre, Wuchsd lus briu ;. J'Ut as," .u, WWn ww a ., ! 7 !-,Je b-v the m.ore Pr aw m . a - si .f. ?UaWa u l. ?u OIV,lu.e Uluja., 08 re,B' fxatea at lootre. xsut even tnev. vonne T. . . 1 Knr. VAn thnv. vnnno . . i . UUa flcPe,,l Ls : iP' tT T?ld DOt "T." , ,fi n iwlirTinn tinr Tpmei--1 Im ... i. :; ,t- .V r oiury conta reacn mm. xxo rami pot ,iis own w drink hls iast drink die his own way. like a Drute, ana go wnere r ora have mercy on Joe TresGe s soul J. . It waa a child'a cry. . humaa and , reaching, ao that it cut across the winds. his courage f but he held on, and the Joe stood up ia the deluge. ; He i strong desire to save his child cleared didn't know just what to do. but bent! the mists of drink away. ' tin doing something fur aid. he put both i "Wake. up, girlie !" begged Joe un fists to his mouth and roared like a der his wing, " 'fetid this holler trunk gorilla;. i 1 t i going to be Swept off ! Did ye aay ye Aorain the child s cry "Oiu on r ' "Where air ye V hooted Joe. But h voice, lacking the sharp tenor of childhood, waa drowned. Wandering nearer him, came the pitiful wailing "Oh ! oh !" . "Maybe'flie Baasliee.'flia tM3 IriA tell t!imt,VTli(Ttift1ir Je,wcrr dl.PFds's' ;host, what killed himself down ip tha crick holler !.";, , The sky burst and split a broad, awful glare, in which Joe aaw- woods, and muddy expanse of waters, and shining earth, forming background for a little girl; who, as she thus enw 'him,' put luoreteflrSor and despair iu her fcrying, and flew blindly against bushes.-' "; ' "Comeyer!. bawled Joe, "I won't hurt ye I I'm nobody but Joe Trestle 1 Come yer and tell ca what's the mat ter!" ... . : I . .. - : . - ' ' Strancrelv. a9 soon as aha heard Itiii fr? i-;J jiame, the child dropped her fears. She 't ' :lrrroped and called: -Joe groped and called : till she got his hand and stood : ... .1.. UIIU Diivics iu m. Another fhtsh reveal J her a sad-faced hild, with hair like rag-weed, and dress of pauper home-spaa. Her eyes were I lifted to him.. , She .must. have seen he aAig bloated ; unreliable, . But her hand j clutched hia ; she staid her faith aad i safety oa hiscompany. ! "Was ye skefrtaTlyaisriiiloe. 1 "Yam. most to death. ' And I couldnt I. fit aorost. git aorost, and sue" said ii i diantgit turned black sind commenced to storm I I aouldn't .fiud the Xootbndge; every time I started out where it was, I'd git into water. Its washed off, and now tiqwHI em gif vet, audi ajie .agtpng to puwTneHu tBe cVozy house if T stayea till after dark !" Joe was so sober he began to think. i - I nM. . 1. i t if iJiAna . in .;. Tn tnn I laif its a. tol'able aized trunk, Crawl iui there, and it II kind O -ahiulU. ya lrom..noa ot refxrqrjiuon ami nra uccuiuu the wet Powerful iwerf ul watery spoil I That'a i require, the homely bat welcome sain- j hey?! '' .)! s x w tion-'ho w are yon, my old friend!" in rirra hut taint SO chSk-.a.'' . . .mm., LU'-' ' rTTi PbsbIbIa "Its wet in here, bnt taint ao chSly. "That'a better. Now you just take it easy, sissy ..Miss Smith or none o' them poor-house red-tapes is goto' to lay a finger on ye. She never, rut ji fjAtU, utuin;, viivav rjuc a "Voo ntl h V" shnddfrei child. 1 LUHUi - ... I "What iot and i-il it steer ye 7 " .. "And she ketched me by tue arm anu ; j put me right in their halL Oh, yo 'don't know .how awful 'tisl Theyi Un, yon behind iron winders ; -but they look into the hall and Tell and, make faces. and grab like they'd tear yer to pieces 1 I got down ia a corner with my dress OTer my head, and aaid over and over to myself what grandma Lane teached me." "What was that?" 'For we look for a better country !' Its in a big book she calls the Bible. It tells a heap of tilings, bat she says that over the most. Ha, says I 'we look for a better country we look for a bet ter country J' -and it made me think of another kind of a place." "What's your namef" neked Joe tremulously.- ".Sylrie Trestle."- . . . m "I'm your father, ain't I i" put in Joe hntnblT. '. ;..' "Yes, I knowed it." - ' " The storm was at full height. " It was antnmnal eqninox, and full of'fnry. The 'little girl Bhivered. ' Joe crouched nearer and felt for her shaggy head. He got it against his ' ahonhler, and coded softly to his' chi d. , "Do you hate me V ', 'W said Svlvie ,"I like ye !" cad tiling hex hands under his neck, thus reaching aud wringing Joe Trestles' heart . , - '.'Ami I've got -a little girl 1 And that womnn '.buses, her ! . Aad I might be pnttin' as good a house aa any of Vm OTer her this minute; instead of bein' Tike a pig. ! 'There's nothiu' : and no wheres for ns now I'"" he muttered to himself ; the child eangbt his last words ; to them she answered, turning np a jntckr favi- " "Yes, there'sthe bettor country !' ' 1 The better ' country - had seised strongly on her imagination. "OH I that atn'tlor UotJdJy wn reli gious folks, and they've got to die: on the square to git in ! That's nowhere1 forme V l - Grandma Line said," propounded ( SjlTie, rising to her subject and her i parent's. ear, "that the better country's lor the people of Gad. and them's who- I e'er come to Dim V . t "Yea; I know, church folks. They're : had me up and' tried to religious me. I must ! Wish there was a plaite where I could 'do better! I t'oiyk thoughts, but that didn't mend me. Ain't clean enough for this world, and what show is tuut lor gtciu into a better one ? i Joe Tr6t!e saw himself sneaking be fore UieLord of Worlds ! , .', ' Hylvie Uiilout her simple creed. ' It was a rope of only two strands : "We look for a better eon n try tnrongh llim who died for us. ' And though ' no un clean thing may enter there. He washes the unolean, making it fit to enter." It penetrated Joe Trestle'to the qniok. And the deluge penetrated to his bones. ' "Seem9 to me we're' gittin' swamped, Sylvie ! dou't yrm feel as if you was settiu' in Wiittir ?" , , . "Yos," and with qiiick ,'i-ereption, ''its Ihe Hun! its over the hanks!" . : "And we're hived here on the low side with an arm of t best ream 'twixt ua and the bluff t was so druqk I forgot ! Oh Lord, chil l, we're hemmed in -by water!": t-: H .. .: : StIwb began to cry fearfully ? - Joe fondled her and felt ootiraffeou. Hold- cn1ent W'T '"'f "m, ej i . not lttirb ' " gMmog 'rh$, 1$$, JiIS-tSliH ";,'''' 111 .rlVi ' s.ic-J-, nf tn jk ini. f0y .-.i y ' It3fcrwr he cot hT; mU grl aVtre the gathering wave, and h.contemprneN a few of them more 'before " hi,rfx ,1, 1 ".b-j saaau- w - T ' awi sycamore hmb. he-gripping her to him. ! nudwatched-the waves through flashes. I . .1 ...... u..u.u UWh i . - . - , , . , nice two renigees irom Aoaa a nooo. i tn f t v... a i . "What it it about your barter coun- try?" aaked Joe, ... ... . . .. .... I 11 c imis iw s ocira niuuur I .It arus, a long bight Hia 'childwas i very heavy on his arm. They were both llpflea Mn s and Joe wa8 no i ctmat,r si,.- .i ua wiser, no stronger. - thau Svlvie. He had weakened his flesh and softened did'nt- like . your good-for-nuthin father ?' "Liked i him 1" corrected clinging feebly. , . .. . Sylvie, . - ' 1 un, and look "Uri oita-a my Utile I.A -twlstva i-crack 1 . The Bun was flowing like amill dam J' ' " .. .These two weie alone far from help. People were housed and 1 happy in towns and farm-houses; sleeping under the wing of the good God who keeps all His. : , .; "What ist ag'in, girlie?" breathed Joe "We look for a better" , .' .Then the world came to an end to these two ; when breaking timber,- cold, fast water, bruising logs, confused their battling sonls, Joe kept tight hold of his little girl. He struck out for sup port, but could not see was whirled aiid blinded. It .was - not Sot long, though. .1.1 i a : For presently, still clasped to one another, they floated down stream, and into a better country ! Household Afaqa;ine,i ' - . ..Manners. . ... . . I make it a point of mortality never to find fault with another for his man ners. They .may be awkward or grace ful, blunt or polite, polished or rustic. I care not what they are, ii .the man means well and aats 'rom honest inten tions, without eccentricity or tffecta tatioo. -All men have not the advan tage of "good society,' as it is called, to school themselves in alt its fantastic rules and ceremonies, and if there is any standard of vermouies, and if there is any standard of manners, it is one founded in reason and. common aense, and npt upon these artificial regulations. V u',, ..'.,.,.. ' .-' MauuerSy'lika conversation, should le exlemporaueoos, Ami ,not studied, f always suspect a man who meets me with the, same perpetual smile ou hia face.-the .same oontreing ot the body, and the same premeditated shake of the iaaniL. "Give-me the hearty it may tie rough grip of the hand the careless The Goaja are Haagryii' Sever did war, among either savage e iu the ; or civilized peoples,, assume ao. t ' ' i'"i'r? aspect aa whan' it .was oarr ed ' the . under the guise of religion, to i so. sin is tor oarriedien i fnrnich I UUUCI SUO gMlBW V. AWUQava., ---------- ' i hem, human. .bannnMB vwhiohr some . ' . . T - . J A r r . . . . peoples have WfJugnt it necessanr to lay ueiore taeir goas. m . ai .were fcrttgYy',"' "was the1 cause tf rs among many ancient raoesbut notably ao among the Mexicans. ' Theobjectof wars among the Aztecs waa far less territorial or personal aggrandizement than the procuring of human victims to piace oeiuro iueu ucmes. : wis wsa Jtwo moasana oi auca vicuiub. upuu si moderate estimate, were annually sacri ficed in the - Mexican temples, aod , in some years more than a hundred thou sand human ibeinga are believed to have perished in; this manner. They also had a yearly sacrifice to one of their idols, in which the victim was a beauti ful youth, who waa worshiped aa a god for a whole year before he waa killed. Scribner'i Magazine. ' i Charaeter ir Sonfhej-. Southcy went -rarely into society scarcely knew by s,ght . any of the eonntry-people living near him ; neTer rode on horseback; took no outdoor exercise save that of walking, and this often from a mere sense of duty, and with a book in his band ; and, although living in one of(tbe loveliest spots iu all England, and ' not insensible to its charms, preferred tho shelve of his library to the finest prospect' in the worhL He found his relaxation where he found his daily , labor, .within the walls of his stndy, "I can't afford." he wrote, "to do one thing at a time ; no. nor two neither i and it is only by doing many things that I contrive to do so much; for I caunot work long at any tning witnont nailing mysfcil, ami I do erery thing by heats ; then, by the time I am tired of one, mv inclination for another is at hand. ' ' " ' : Southey was an afft'etiorate husband ana a fond father ; and whenever, in his correspondence, he alludes' to his home bsppitirais, it is with a tenderness and warmth of feeling that are eminently beautiful. Moreover, he was a constant, and, at all times, noble friend, ready even when in straits himself to help with money or with his pen those who were more straitened. No one ever ached better the part of the good Sama- Jritan, and while he never forgot a bene fit received, it would seem as 11 his own magnanimous chanty Had no place id his memory. : The story of his life abounds in instances of the moet gene rous self-denial, and of a stendtast good ness of heart which never shrunk from the demands made upon it. Heavily burdened as he was with work; he was continually - accept i ug ' fresh literary labor in order to beueut otiiers ; nor was this all, for he received, under his own roof, his ufes widowed sister. Mrs. ' Lovell ; and when Coleridge, in that strange waywardness of mood which his vice- of -opium-eating earn alone ex-1 plain, deserted his wife and children, i it was .with Southey that they found a home. There is a beautiful anecdote given by Xiockbart "of a pbor mnsic ruaster offering Scott all his savings in the hour 'of his adversity; a siinilaf story may be. told of' Southey,- who, when hia frieud Mny. an early benefac tor of the poet, fell uito iUCioulties, sent hitn more than six. linntlred TWiiiudq. which was all the money he possessed. If the poet ft had strong and generous affection be was also a good hater, bnt this feeling was shown to principles rather thau to persons, aud if, which was not seldom, poiitiau animosity led bun to wnte bitterly aga-ipt his anta- gonists.the're whs not one of them fori whom, after the moment of writintr. he retained arfakfnflvYcHng.! li rssaid . . - - - . that he seldom spoke harshly of ar.y man wit h whom he had once conversed f he had too laree a heart for uettv ant mosities, and he was wholly free 'from enw. At the time when a whole Tears c.Unf .winanwis oni. f . . ' uce the poet five pounds, Scort was I gaining his thousands.but not a word of bitterness rails from sonthev on this' -core ; and the praise he bestowed on - , . . requentiy more generons tUan just. Aiino igrj non. as we nave saw, a sociaDie man, he had the good fortune to know i luwuuuarij mU i luw uiuaiui us i autnors who Jifioe.tha early part of this century so-famous, and,-long Irefore intimately most of the illustrious I ordwortn cad received tne pupiic. the public recognmon wmcn was uis cue as "ie 1 s . a ke i Coleridge, expressed his admiration of his friend and neighbor iu no uigzard terms. , This noble triumvirate, by-tho-1 ti,int none tue iess-0f -woman for going way, reminds us .that probably not since i to the table with a gJoJ" apnetiU We ' Shakespeare s day have three men ofii,ave uo admiration for thw Blanvhei equal mark lived together on terms of j inUmacy and affecUon. Laudor called I them "three towers of one castle," aud, BO ISU 1US WUUU BUVWB. itUVJ UY? L1CCU absurdly classed together as forming a scnool of not trv. Southey had but little 'ear fur har mony, and it was therefore all the more uiifortnnate for his fume that he elected to write hia "Ihalaba" in a novel metre, which is without the dignity of heroic blank vrrse, or the eoothing, satisfying charm of rhyme. Landor saw his friend's mistake in this respect, aud observed, very justly: "Are we not a little too fond of novelty and experiment, and ii it not reasonable to prefer those kinds of versification which the best poets have adopted and the best judges have cherished for the, longest time?"., But Southey, on the contrary, was" .well pleased with hia experiment, thinking that, while it gave the poet a wider range of expression, it' satisfied the ear of the reader. So far is this from being the case, faarmi delicate ing of earlier and later poets, is likely to gain delight from the strange aad fitful, and sometimes jamng notes ol Southey. But there is strength in his verse, if not harmony, and '"I'halaba," while it haa its wildernesses and arid deserts, caa also .boast, as-indeed -all Southey epics may, many a fair Scene of richness and beauty. Splendor of diction and felicity of description occur frequently, but frequently also the ac tion halts, . tbje. verse raga,- and , the reader feels inclined tt -resign' himself to slumber. On the whole, perhaps, the erudition lavished on the poeaa is more striking, thau it .Rtteticlwealth, and it ia aomtatimes axalief to tarn aside from the text to the carious and highly entertaining notes which serve to illus trate it Southey himself judged Rod erick" to be the finest of all his poems, and Landor, in writing to him, said: "There ia no poem in existence that I shall read so often." Charles Lamb however, an. admirable judge, and Wordsworth also, preferred "The Corse of Kehama," and, without endeavoring to compare the. value of the two works, there can be no doubt that they are the poet's greatest and least wearisome efforts. It i fUBgcdar that ia, none of Southey 's epics are there . passages w hich lay hold ol the memory, and be come, as .it were,, a. part of one's life.- No doubt, the first consideration of the poet should be to have a worthy action, and the more he strives after this ob ject, the less will he concern himself f ith the beauty of particular passages, at the lack of what may be called "beauties" in Southey'a Poetry is due, we think, less to the seventy of his taste than to the diffusiveness of his style. which has, as it were, no points for the . . t-.ia-re r-:.l- -1 . il.:. memory to lay uoia oi. : n uu iu men deficiencies, however,, the student. of English poetry can never pass by with indifference these elaborate productions but he ia not likely to agree with Uaoau lay that Southey'a poems, taken in the mass, rank far higher than his prose works. tbmniii Magazine. ""Did you ever go to a military ball ?" asked a lisping maid of an old veteran. "No, my dear," growled the old soldier; "in those daya I once had a military ball come to me. And what do you think it did? It took my leg off 1" , tiat uo one lamuias witn.tna loveiv oty fcf ahellry'a. verse,. o with f i muBic of Coleridge, to say noth- The Teuib of m lAtej Lady Antia Brewster writes tluit the gem of monuments in the Lucca,, Cathedral is "byjacopo delle Querela (1383-141'?), the muter of Donatello. "It is of the wife of one of the rulers of Lnooa in the early part of the fifta-enth century. Her husband was that Paolo Guinigi who gave premiums- to every peasant that plantod a chestnut tree in the Lucobese Province. The Guinigi was a powerful family that rnled Lncca' wisely from 1380 to 1450. This tomb is of the second wife of Lord Paolo, and the figure on it is said to have been a portrait. Her name wns Iloria del -Carre '.to. ' The figure, life-size, lies aa ii sleeping on a couch, dressed in the costume of the day. "Tne gown: a long robe which covers the pointed fchoos, is bound in at tne. waist by a belt ; it haa high raff, buttoned by a Ion? row of small buttons, which mn "front the ' Tirettt chin dowrf. following the slope of. the throat to the breast : the curls at the wrist are but toned in the same manner." The Ii6d' dress is Tery peculiar t it is a tnrbaa or tnick ullet. divided oil by narrow bonds of little flowers. I fancy this thick roll must have been covered with some sort of rioU stuff, relvet or satin, and that thesb bauds ot flowers were Kerns, a sort cf Chain or band of jewelled flowers wrapped around the roll.'! But the beauty of the face is euchantinff : the features are delicate and refined ; the mouth and chin delicious ; the eyelids soft and exquisitely shaped : the brow almost iniautiie. 'art,ot the hue nose has been injured, for this beautiful tomb was thrown info a cellar and for gotten for centuries. At the .feet ia a short-haired dog who looks as if placed there to watch his sleeping mistress. Hoc Iran haul d 'must have -prized her beauty as well as her memory: for. fter her death, he ordered Jacopo della Qaercia to make this' tomb, and when it was oompWted ho placed it in the centre of one of the great .halls, of the Guinigi pnlaoe. ' 'After the downfall of the Goitiigi, and .during other warring and civil distractions ia Lucca, this master-piece of della Quercia was, as 1 said above, tuuiMed' away, neglected, into a subterranean chamber.- The base of the tomb was separated, and part of it, by some chance,- weut. to. Florence,' where you may see it iu the Aflizi gal lery. It has on it a ban relief of wiiWed genii holding a lung rich garland of fea ! toons of Howe rs. lhet Acauenua della. ! Ije.he.Arti of Liicca wish to buy bock the-. remaining -sIhI! of this fine base and placo the tmjl in the centre of tlie h'ft transept of the JJiioino : now it ;a ...-.I." i . :'!: . wjeaiusi me au, uu uui one .' ue oas reiter ia. rroni. aub -"-r'stan gave me a photograph of the motnimeut. w! U10U 1 fell Oil UaVe irameu a"d rmntrsonlewhere nenr cry writifcg-! I. .11. l l 1 IV... l i ... r , tubUs 1 aha'd hte to look at the fucl ;riu of the lovely voung Haria, 4 Wi TTT a sirTi.Ta' ' an i-wlTn1 ami I aud form Ifwhdse ' name soumTs so loyf uI, and ; whose marble face and form are so gra- aiooruy oeauiuui ;, ana wuue a enwyi.tives of the l'ter size are now beinir IKT I't'litltV. I sll:ltl tlT to hnDt Ollt IU 1 1 Kvoks something of the history of ' thii lively lady of Luoea. i . The SitrHria!ify of nonicn. ' , rjy felt orffectea the'great-" .1, .4rf(i,...alihonrli: an!, , tic jouical, in.V-ilije.s in thes.Trmen. who aho perform police , duty-treoDnstanUy sim ployed. Geno- mnrks flf anybo.lv wants to tHer to th ; li-itiialitv of womanhood lt lum not : spmtualxty of womanhood let him not j vjflit between twelve and two, noon, any 1 n( the down-town restauranK Hisbe-fsi .. , . - . . , .lia - arill l.i alla alwkAn U'nman hawsr La 4 right to eat, no doubt X" .... .... l nitron tViom tf.i.nul,. in.l ! ans whoge dewnntlsare inst aselarpow I Otis as the sama apparatus iu man. V j Amorys. who wouldhave us believe that tl.ow .i,sist on ir Lnl h tt nrf .urjcb.es on the ely.'and trifle inVublic - j ., .- - - r------ with a plate of soup or a bit of pastry, conscious that the demands of nature were more than satisfied only a couple Of hour ago. ; Only, there is a point beyond which a good appetite ceases to. be a virtue, and this poiut is daily passed by the women who frequent pnbric res taurants, . You. will ak ua why . we do cot ut tick the men. Bless you ! the men are riot worth attacking.' We gave them wn. sua far am PftiinD- And drinkim? are concerned, long ago. ,For their gor- l maudism we expect no enre until the , women shall have 'set theur'a better'i example.! We defy Tennyson and Long- fellow to take a luuch .at Carrier's, for instance, and then write an ode in praise of womankinddodaot their tnapi ration from the scene from,, whence they have just come. The thing c.mnot be done. It is rmpos'sible to adore the woman who smack her- lips over a' juicy chop and orders a fresh relay , of steak after she lias had quite snfiicient Observe the happy medium, ladies as Charles II. Foster would say wtara hv writing the resent article. Dou't eat too mucks se yonr digestive organs as you ought to use your tonga; and find ont when to stop. .. A woman , never looks beauti ful to anybody but a restaurant-keeper when her face is flashed With a bottle 'of Scotch ale and roast beef 'ad libitum. Recollect what Cornaro. that model of temperance, said ' three hundred years ago, and keep in mind especially when yoa swallow a-repast before- a zoom-full of male observers, luat wuat we leave after having eaten heartily does us more good than what we bve eaten. So shall your daya belong in the land, and more money be accruing to you. if 1 . - 1 - -. Frntilaa Trophies In, France, ;. There are only four old Prussian eel-: on remaining iu France, with exception of two old flags on the' grave of Napo leon 1; 1 To thia number must be added the Prussian cavalry standards, vthich are in the groups of colors of the Sec ond Battalion of the Sixty-first' Regi ment of ; Infantry; which were lost at .Dijon during the last war. .All other Prussian troubles wnicn were lormeriy in the possession of the French were either retaken by the Prussians ia 1314, fr, as the French say, burned. together with aM the colors kept at the Hotel des 1 involutes, at rams, iy io Tneram ie-ln dent there; as they saw thaj the capture j. ot Paris was unavoidable. It is said ftiot th.w twllfve.1. the ashes of all the V trophies burned, threw them into a cask of wine, and drank the mixture to the health of the Emperor. The sword of Frederick the Great which 'the First Napoleon took from.. Potsdam in 1S0C, oould not be found iii'lSll and 1815, in spite of all searehsj'1 It had been con cealed in the cupola" of -the Hotel dea J . .7 , . rnvalides, but it is said tnat it is now in the possession of some private gentle man. Whether the upper part of the ninra nl trm Kpcnnd Battalion of the Sixteenth Regiment of Prussian Infan-! try, which, was' shot off at tionville and found on the field of battle by the French, has been sent to Paris or not haa not been ascertained. Two Prus sian guns lost at Gravelotte were re turned at the surrender of Metz; and, in fact, only one Prussian gun lost du ring the late war at Beaune-la-Bolande remains in the hands of the French. InduMrial Tror in Ormavssy, Extensive as are'many of the indus trial establishments of oat' own country, we. have no such colossal enterprise as that known as the Caist Steel Works of r rederics Krupp.near Essen.in Prussia. As described in a late tssne of the A me ricaii Artisan these, works appear to be of wonderful extent. They occupy an area of a thousand acres, and of this area two hundred Bores are under roof. Seventeen thousand men are employed in the various departments of Krnpp's tstablishlnent.iin addition to 'some seyen liund red officers and regular em ployees. The workmen and officers, with their families, ooeupy more than 8,200 dwellings, and a large number of boarding . housea, are also required ior the use of the . unmarried laborers. There are 414 mines belonging to the' firm, scattered over an area of 50,000 acres. A printing office, a chemieal laboratory, a photographio and litho- 'graphicgallery, twoeiteuqivw hospitals. and a benevolent fund of nearly Si 00,000 are aiso a pan oi ijiis exiraonunarr establishment ri -"' ''- ' '- ' T - Among the items of detail connected with the working of this enterprise, the loiiowing will be found worthy of note: The quantity of cast-Rteel produced in the year 13?2 exceeded 123,000 tons. This product, consisted of axles, tires, wheels and crossinss for railways : rails. springs ' and shafts for steamers'': ma chinery of various kinds r boiler-plates.' Lrolls, spring-steel, tool-steel, guns, gun- carriages, snoi, etc. auere are in tne works sow in operation 250 Smelting furnaces, 300 annealing furnaces, 161 heating furnaces, 115 weldingand padd- ling lurnaces, 14 cupabo and reverberator- furnaces, 1 160 fornaoes of other kinds, 275 , coke ovens,. 2C1 smith's, forges, 210 steam boilers. ' besides 70 ! now fu process of construction. ' ' - ' lhem are,! besides -this,. 71 -steam hammers, 2SG steam engines, S52 turn, ing lathes, 82 shaping machines, 105 boring machines, 107 planing machines, 42 poaching and grooving machines, 32 pressing machines, 63 grinding ma chines, 31 glazing and polishing ma chines, and 443 machines of a miscella riATkna nliartuttjii. In 1372. these works consumed of coal, ! wju.uuo tons ; ' ot coke, 125,000 tons ; of water, 113,000.000 cubic feet ; of gavi ijj.ouj.oiNj cubic Teet, supplied by the gas works of the establishment.to 16,500 burnera. : . n r "; -.1. ;: To facihtata trafilc at the works, there (are 24 miles of railroad track, of the i ,nsu'U guage, with ISO sidings, and 39 V. " ' .. i turn taoiew, euwhicu run 13 tank loco- ,'moUves, with cylinders 1G inuhea in I j diameter, and 530 cars. Six more loco- j. mnlltM M una In nrnmn nf Mmfnu. tion.iTen miles of narrow gauge track . . ... n . (80 ia'phes). with 147 sidinga and 63 turn tables are also in use. On this track . n 1 - a T t 1 1 r ' t s run 3 loeomotives (cylinders 6 inches in aiameteri and a.u curls. ..tour loouroo. mm fWrtA ' 1' tf..eoAa k !o A nu.l t 'f t: 1 Horses' are also "used ou gnuge road.- In the eurting , there-are 1?1 Wjes aad the narrow a .i mi t i . OT-jA-iii'. ' ' ' u ' rt,i,.i;lr'V ! Vortahop. irxst ' i i . i, uT Vu Jr i I Eorkslinn niest'ihlisntvi ha- thrrtvlelevl A corps of luo watch-1 . : wen, and a permanent lire brigade of Jlrj J uml of toe t farm, stipp.y the voluntary purchasers i l. .!.:. i.. ...i. j -i.. . j. . , . . Sl'ona nl.tKinrv .1 rxr n,uj. Lwtj cti. at costprices. The present monthly rttmif M t Tvwa srnms smiliint in ahrtnf 1 $Vi.UbO fulJ. and are AontannullT in-' ereasing. This department comprbesi oue hotel,' three beer houses, one seltzer water. 'maaufaetory. one fiour miU and one bakry, with 4wo taam engines. ' The firm also possesses important concessions ot excellent iron ore beds in the. north of Spain, whence it is in tended to import annually np to 300,000 tons of ore, for the productions of cast steel; To facilitate the importation, a1 railway, in. Spain, nearly, eight mile long, as well as several steamers, aie now in course of construction. The five different smelting fnrnaces belonging to the firm produce, with eleven blast furnaces, nearly 10,000 tons of pig iron per month. ' They have 140 coke ovens iu operation,- and 120 in the course ot construction ; and ateam- engines employed iu them represent together nearly 10,000 horse-power, ' . a a. , Queen and their Charities... . , In very many cases, the former queens of England have been noted for their large charities. Indeed, some of them have robbed, themselves of absolute necessaries for the sake of their "poor". The unfortunate Catherine of ' Aragon, after her. separation from Henry, be guiled her weary days by devotional acts, needlework, and almsgiving. And her mure hapless sneoessor, poor Anne' Boleyn, who was in so many reepects thoughtless; and in many more blam able, shows a bright aide to her' char acter by her constant charities. She laid ' plans for bettering the condition of tire poor artisans; she gave away immense sums, in alma; out of her own pocket-money had alms distributed "to every village in England," for the poor. During her brief tune aa queen-consort of England she accomplished much in this way. Though a spoiled beauty and ' court favorite; with ber better instincts perverted by her early associations, aa maij of-honor, she was domestic and industriouV and, -while she lived atj Hampton Court as qneen.i divided her time between working at elegant tap-, fcstry with her ladies, and Superintend ing -the making of garments for the1 poor. It was a ireqn.su t practice of the early queens to found small hospitals. -where a certain number of poor, infirm, or aged men or women should be cared for; or to make provision for a different class of the needy who should receive a 4 Aily alio wauoe for life.so much money, bread, meat, and beer the arrangement to be perpetnal a vacancy to be filled as soon as it oocurred. home oi the charitable institutions ef England owe their oricin to some such kindly motive u.e l eart of a king or queen. u--, : - , '. ' ' . " 1 - 'Ian a m i.cai. : ,Mau is no better than a leaf driven by the wind until he has completely mastered his great, lonely duties. If he has so habit of retiring from all that is worldly.and of conversing facato face with his inner man, if he does not draw down upon his soul "the powers of the world to come, then he is no man yet ; he has not fouad .the life of. man, nor the strenirth of man : he is a poor, un hannv man. soortintr onlv with shadows. and affrighted before the Teal and the eternal. Ho owns a great house, a wont derf ol house, but it is shut up, and he lives outside with hia fellow-cattle; the inside is wholly unknown to him, and he has lived outside so long that he ia afraid of the inside. Think, my good brothers and sisters, of the great, high, serene world, in which you might live and move and have your being. YoTttlis" Column. . The T fa-Party. ThadCa haj a tea parte: waMt it fan! . In nbboDN and larea thev came, oue be nn.. Wa sua eet tka UM an l niarnl cat tba B-, -Aud each, of ua held np a doll on our fcue. Too nerer aw rhrdrra behV hi'f so w-'l : shT,nopoUjka.laBjauiowall- ., , Aud (fan you believe it for ba.lurw, that da". " Ko doily waaacut from toe iaMa away. , fc , tj' Onadotly. howerer, tbproadeatona thara, .... Waa drfTviimlmont tothH eerire of denir. ' -Becauae she ht nec with a simple sautap, - s Aiul u;et the butter-pktte into uer Up. " ' ' Themind t'ie .an rather shneHly-wTiitr We helid all the doliiea. they looked a no lie. We hael iake and Ian fmra on n. , n ,rtrv ..jJtm Of course, we did nioat of the eating ourseifaa. - - . ... I . T Bat hmraewiTca dont know when their carea. mar e wi .u .w was op-n.ana puasy poppea io: . Be Jiunvedoncha-ile; aud what c 'jrotl thlulf IMwu ful all Um crockery tnare. In a Ink. We picked np tDa pieces, with many a sieh ; ' ' Our party bruka up.audwwall vaidKond-oy:,. j f, P-icouie t our next oue ; but fba Me'll Uivi a That verv bau poaef til keep outut Kifht. ' ' - ' ' ' 't I . .: :.ii , Letteh to Boys asd Girls. I , am going to ask you, young folks, if any of you ever nave Kept a diary, x M journal of passing events connected with your self or your family affairs ? You Wvu.U find it very useful.'" I have ;done so for seventeen years, -anti never missed a day which fact, shows -a methodiaal mind at least. And it i3 'a good thing to cultivate a methodical mind, let Tne tell you., . The practice of keeping a journal has been of great service to me, as it would be to you. Get a printed diary with blank leaves, and undr the days of the week write whatever hap pens to you during the day, what the west tier may -bo ; also, -any important pubUo -event ; and again, if you have room, put down your good and bad actions which will he apt to keep you in good behavior, for, if you are truth ful and omit nothing, you will fuel ashamed cf your wrung doings," and strive to do better, when you- see them every - day , in black and white.' And then, as to the weather and passing events, yon will find it Tory interesting to refer to. these entries in after days or years, and perhaps many ot them may be of great importance to yon, should you wish to recall the date;, of some event in your family. In another part of this blank book or diary you will find a cash account where you can enter all your expenditures that is, the money you spend every day, and also what you may receive from yonr parents or friends. At the end of every month yoa caaadd them up. and you will thus i know at the end of the year whether i you have been economical or extrava- J"' lie uit 'Now I want you to ask your parents or friends if thia would not be S very Kood plan for you to carrv out'! fi..a ; n.' " ' Suppose you ask' them to procure vou the blank books, and commence,' say, next, week; or. should you prefer, it, TS74.-irr A"cttr Yorbct. oeRiu on tue nr-ii uav oi me .ew tear, ' -' ? , ux .ua iradesman naa ouoe i YLJn bu3lne81fIt A1' dlsPsed hisgooils, and filled TflK..Xau, tr.desman.had ouc.-! mir. uisDoseu oi all ins fhis purstv with cold aadsriver. 'He' prepared afterwards to return, in order! to reacn home bT evening. So he ' , . ... ...it srranneii nis portmanteau, w Ct-aS.i-vrk.l KiA ' iAlitrArlnfna rt ' w-lV. tiki . ; i: i. u-.i j,' ro r . At ,1(vi:r.,i ... ',t : town,Tand as he was about to set ont much more." Tho Prfnc of Wales has " ;.' ...s.t. :u . u li.I.s at .- hof90 d to f'Sir, amail is'waut-iW. ; . .... ., ' ..V , - r tuK iu wid suue uu uoaib iuihi- Xtot it be- wanting,' .1-1 iit replied the Tradesman.; lamina hurry utheisectioT.ot . na,A . .... '. Will doubtless i hold the six hours I ua; Jr ?-!TTh Late in the afternoon he had to dis mount again, and feed his horse, and at thia place alio the boy came and told him that a nail was wanting in one will last out the) couple-of hours thai I nave now to travel; 1 am m haste. So saying he rode off ; but his horse soon began to limp, and from limping it came to stumbling, and presentlythe beast fell down acd broke its . leg. Thereupon the Tradesman bad to leave his hore lying on the road to unbuckle his portmanteau, and to walk-home with it upon his shoulder, where he arrived at last lata at night "And all this miafortuae," said he to himself, "is owing to the want of a. naiL More haste the less speed !'''" I' Whitre does ths salt on nnr jinnor- tablea come from?,. In the first place two Tery strange thiugs were joined . together tb make it : a silvery metal ' called sodium, aad a poisonous yellow ish gas called chlorine. .This .queer metal will swim on the surface of water, in little dancing globales, which ooo l.ta His am, I waiLlbli 111 tllna H am A . lint no sooner is it breathed upon by the poisonous gas', than both vanish, and leave in their plsce the little crystals of aalt without which life could cot be sustained. Salt is found in immense quantities in the mines, of Poland, Norway and Spain, where it is quarried like coal, aud is quite pure ; but a great deal ia found mixed .with o ay and wand, and has to be purified by dissolving, it and then evaporating the water. In Germany, and in our own country, are many valu able salt springs, which hold the salt in solution ; and lakes around which the salt constantly forms iu solid blocks. These solid crystals must be ground I fine before they are fit for table use. Treea and planta need salt aa well as human beings ; bnt there are great salt plains, where nothing can grow, like .the great region in South America, con- . r - ii a . .t a taming more man twenty tuousauu square miles ; and another in the heart of Persia, covered with glittering crys tals of salt, and which have been thought to be the beds of great ocean; whose waters have beea-iE-nined away by vol canoes, ,. . .- The Box axd the Nns. A ,ljy once found some nuts iu a Jar. Like' all boys, he was fond of nntsjaud waaglad to hear that ha) might put his hand once in- the jar, and have all the nuts- he couid then .take out. He thrust his hand down the neck ot the jar, and took hold of all the nuts he could. V.'hen hia hand was quite full, hdid hi best to draw it out of the jar. '".''' But the neck of the jar wa.- 'small, and hia hand waa so- fall of nuts, that he could not draw it .put 11)- feit ao sad, that tears fell from bis eyes. His friend who stood near told hini to let go half the nnts. ' ne did so, and then drew ouf his hand with ease.) We shall find it so in life : men .lose all, if they try to get too maolu ... . iltt T. P.' Bash, of Mbure City, Ma. is in possession of a calf; the body of which preseuta a shape very similar to the letter S, its head being .twisted far to one side, curving in a curious manner, and its hind-quarters drawn around to the opposite aide in the same way. One eye ia on the top of the head, looking up ; the other is under the bot tom and turns immediately down. "VeiiirtiJ ,: ' A Leading jConplt celebrated theJr goldea weddirvfou Christmas day. :" To Bay what should be said, to say ' only what should-he sttH, and to say it on It as 'it ehdutd lecmtid is a rare gift. The virtu of tLealippery iron pUtee. in the sidewalks, iu assisting pedestri an" to" an irrrtrlurrrtfry ttfrtt are becoming"' conspicuous. " :.! The chief secrettjf eoetfort lies in not sufiaring triiW ta vex 'us,' and in culti vating aa unjorrrowth of araall plea- . snres, since Terr few great ones are to be had ou Ion Teases. " w A small ladV 'aged five, whose mhad 4' not bought her the unal new clothea for ChriHtawm; was 'fceanl to priTately remark that ha gaesstsd "pa was hold- v ing on for a rise la the rag market" An Instance 6f thrdwin? on'e'a elf ' about was witnessed a fet evenings ago " at a partT in the case of a vonnir lailv who, whan axkMl to sing, first tossed her htiad, aad then pitohed her roioew.v Truth lies . in character.. Chrut did . pot 'simply spak truth ; He was truth ; truss throogh and thmugh, for truth is ' a thing not of words but of life and u being. Xone but a spirit can be true. ' A lady in mpij pursuit of health "at Saralogo, huaMed to -her physician, ; tiu yon," was the quiet reply. N .,, . . "Punch" thus hits off the eoai frna- me : "Mrs. Brown presents her compli ments to Mr. and ilea. Jones, and hopes they will give her the pleasnre of their . company at a ftv ,arty on londav, March 3d ; fired lighted at 6.30." ,"!? Sara Coleridge was a- very precoei-ma girl, and her mind was almost the only key that nnlecked the recesses of her father's intricate thought and genius. " She married her cousin, and so was a Coleridge to the last in name as well as intellectual idiosyncrasies. , . . "How shall we settle the labor qnea- tion?" exclaimed a member - of the Georgia Legislature, in the midst of his ' gpeeoo. "By all going to work aad earning your living . honestly 1" than- ., dered a spectator in the gallery.' , That sentiment brought down the house. - The name''"Bhe Stocking," is de rived from a literary society formed in ! r,?h'?? I, ZZ?, rhn h Lionihm about the year 17S0, which in-. men and women. A iren- the name of Stillin?n'tet.whi was in the habit of wearing blue stock ii- . J" -CetUe alae-" ings, was a dntangnihed member of I' Cno.l.'n.r..! "Speakingof extrava rruuee in dreaa ." . .. writes Captain Crosstree, "the most ex- " ponsively dresseJ man I ever saw was an ' 1 African Ciiinf on ilia (UAA n;. la i.WiTes had anoiu'tpd him thoroughly with t (Huui ii, ana iuea powiierea him Irom 1. . .1 . . M i . " . L . , . .... - 22?." sawliryopr life. man cot ud so 'i terly regardless of expend ''P 1. 1-. V ... . t ' me-i ,a -Waeen lctona .receivr a f om the British nation arfincoFme of $1,925,000. nu SIW.OOO more from The Duchy of i . . . f TlAn4 L'bT aKoaairlBBl 4(AW a wa warawawf ..T.A (mm s . r. menta. which 'nmU. mt- and reoeives JO.000 more, from I n, T1...1,. ,.t r it is wanwv reoeives .111,11 ' foot, of 'he Duchy of Cornwall. ' , ., ! . .The discoloration of pi . ioi-"i"iwiu ui urans irom use j9 .coounted for ft this nlana.l If the" ...... r t r xamiotal it wiH has iloaml that is f jrmed of. la vera of ellS 'the centrflT being simitar to the' pith of wood, whaolH rf kept in -contact' with .the skia, absotbe the perspiration waicn, neing acted upon by the air. turns ' blivckfsh.' , - - - Ms.-.. ' but uiusr puada ru a - absorbed. o nicker than whola-ouost The 1 reason some keep their color kagar,thaa others ia on ac oount of the cells being more minute. A curious cose was. tried in Paterson. 55". J., , recently. , Sweo years, -ago .. , man's wife died, and. he iiai'eJ a lady to store a miiltrass and' two feather beds nutilhe could marry again. 'Recently he wanted, them.-' nud the holder. de manded storage, but- he would pay no money for their storjgn, claiming thav she had had the use of them for seven1 long year.' She, on the other hand, claimed that she did not rue them, and demanded the Bum of S72, or $1 per mouth for rent for six years. He then presented a bill of S91 for the use of mem or ,nd thn, fl , up a balance dira him of J1Z. Tue wo- I man's claim was allowed, aa being vir- (,uali COIlfeB9e1 bJ thf) defendant. . j mhl his offt wa9 not ,n9UinuJ uJ L verdict of 572, or her full claim, was j ... ... ' - - awarded her. A correspondent of a Georgia paper writes that in Athens, in that State, iu a beautiful residence, set in a snug grove, live Mr. Y. L. G. Harris and his ' wife. For five years a pair of red birds have built their nest in a tree very near their parlor window ; and each succes sive year the old birds bring back their young of the year before, to live upon the bounty of their benefactors. ' The most peculiar thing, though, is the pas Siou which the patriarch bird haa for music As soon as any one commences playing on the piano iu the parlor, thia remarkable bird flies to the window-sill. "! there, by grotesque motions, shows how completely his soul is aroused by the harmony. - When the window ia down he will dash himself against the pane of glass with the utmost fury, as if to get inside, bat when the window is raised never ventures farther than ' the sill. . The negro and mule are inseparable companions in the Southern cotton fields, and. like, the Hiawathan atring and bow, useless each without the other. The lazy indifference aod careless cru elty of the one, and wonderful powers of endurance of severe labor, bad treat ment, and neglect - of the other, com- -plete the compatibility of the two races necessary for the production of 4,000,000 of bales. A characteristic anecdote may be relished by those who have had ex perience of the two. The spectator had ' taken refuge from the van's perpendica- -lar rays under the shade of a spreading beech, tegmine fu&i, and lay re cumbent, enjoying the fitful breeaea and the sombre frothiness of the eoun- . try newspaper. Along the dusty road which paaaed by this retreat cams jog- giug a negro, mounted on a mule, both apparently fast asleep. As the somno lent pair approached the" spot, some, wicked sprite of the place gave the pa per a flirt, which was no sooner seen and heard than the mule, as mules only -know how, instantly 'swapped; enda, t and leaving the negro sprawling in the dirt, took his departure under full sail. -The negro- half raising himself, and wiping the dust from eyes and mouthy ' watched the retreating mule for some time in silence, but at length, uncon scious of an auditor, gave expression to this philosophical soliloquy: "Data what makes me 'spise a mule T