fulfill . II SC ill fL B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., JANUARY 2S, 1S74. NO. 4. Poetr-. Longfellow. Pvet of the nuj keye, Elch are all thy BtMltl '. Sot for serf alone nr king Is the message thoo. doei Lruig ; Not for Met and not f. clu, Bat for aalversal iumu. Worthy thoa to w;a the faaie 1 Lit h&j gathered ruund Ifey um. FVet of the nlDDf Uf., Kaught of discord, eavy, strife, Harshly breikinr ttiruota thy Uj, Star the moslc of tby gave. Like tho tream. Id tranquil pvaer, Iay by day and knur by hrnr. Flows thy gentle life along . Sweeter tuaa thy aweeteit a-itij. Poet of the silvery locke. Time the thoughtless graybearj wcks. Bat In reference bend hit head Where the great and noble tiead. Men, too, low and reverent, ii.se the years eo wisely pal, Each the life that thou it lire. 6neh the homage we would glee Poet of the kindly heart. Better thaa the classic art That the Mase has deigned to lead livery page thy band Las penned. Is the love which thoa hast taught. By each tender word and thungbt, Sprang front other hearts, to twin. Hoand that loving heart uf thine. P?t of the goldea tonae. Mill sing on as tboa hast snog. Through the future as the past. fcver sweeter to the last ! re the snow snail 111 iLy pat!'.. Bring hjsns many Aftermaths ; Rtill, as thoa hast been so l-in, be our Chryaostom of wong ' I I i eel J mii j". Australian Floods. Floods generally follow droughts. On the coast,- the more mountainous the eonntry the more rarely are these ex tremes felt ; bat no part of the country is free from their visits. It is iu the interior, however, that they have their home, and from that etroDghold the forces which call the floods forth rule supreme, their power declining as they approach that of tho ocean. Ilere, in the depression of the great plain, there is most probably only one long drought, or one long wet season ; no seasons of a year, but years of a season. Wet sea sons, like droughts, may last years ; for the seas of shallow wat;r, the innumer able lakes and marshes which some ex plorers in wet seasons have found north f Lake Eyre, may be years in evapor ating, as frequent condensation mast take place bv the cold Mmthern winds. And this milder inland climate will tend to mollify that of neighboring regions. Hut these two extremes are overpower ing ; they make that interior almost uninhabit'able, and they rule the char acter of the country, the produce, the people, and the history of the land. The desolation of a drought is not less complete than that of a flood, and it perhaps has more effect uKn the survivors. For years these droughts gather in force ; they multiply their action before they are broken by the floods, and their termination is in a melancholy, awful landscape. For days and months the earth has been hot, parched.and cracked ; for months the waters nave ceased to flow, the trees have lived, but not grown, and the sky has been cloudless. The never-green forest is browner, sadder, and still, in the oppressive air ; the plains are bare and dusty ; the waterMig-plaees filled with dead ; and the whole scene quivers before the eye by the great radiation of its heat. Daily "the euu rises in a hazy sky, sails in a white heat through a cloudless course, and sets, a round, red ball of fire, on the edge of a copper dome. A 6ulleu, dewless night follows the dreaded day. The leaves of the forest, and the surviving grass of the rield, glisten like blades of steel in the glare of the mighty sun ; there is no green thing, nor sound of life from bird or beast, or tree, in the great noonday heat. At length clonds mysteriously gather dcily they gather, and disap pear at night at last they form dense, low masses, thunder breaks, and violent storms of wind sweep the plain ; no rain. Again and again these storms break before the longed-for rains comes; and with it comes flood. Perhaps the Tain, filling the northern streams first, floods the southern water-channels be fore a cloud is in their sky. But with the floods destruction to lingering life, no less than hope to withering vegeta tion, is brought down. Many a settler has been ruined by droughts ; but many a flock which survived that ordeal has ben silently, hopelessly, swallowe3 by the flood. lianken "Dominion of Australia." A. I-Ofct .Vote. Aa extraordinary affair happened about the year 171 i. Oii? of the Direc tors, a very rich man, had occasion for 3G,0u0 of' the Bank of England, which he was to pay as the price of aa estate he had just bought. To facilitate the matter he carried the sum with him to the bank, and obtained for it bank note. Oa his return home he was sud denly called out upon particular busi ness"; he threw the note earelesly oa the chimney, but when he came back a few minutes afterward, to lock it np, it was not to bo found. No one had en tered the room ; he could not, therefore, suspect any per.con. At last, after much ineffectual search, he was persuaded that it had fallen from the chimney into the fire. The Director went to acquaint his colleagues with the misfortune that Lad happened to lam ; and as he was known to be a perfectly honorable man, lie was readily believed. It was ouly nbont twenty-four hours from the time that he had deposited the money ; they thought, therefore, that it would be bard to refuse this request for a second bill. He received it upon giving an obligation to restore the first bill, if it diould ever be found, or pay the money himself, if it should be presented by cny stranger. About thirty years after ward (the Director having long been dead, and his heirs in possession of his fortune), an unknown person presented the lost bill at the bank, and demanded payment. It was in Tain that they mentioned to this person the transac tion by which that bill was annulled ; be would not listen to it. He maintained that it came to him from abroad, and insisted npon immediate payment. The note was payable to bearer, and the 30,000 were paid him. Ttie heirs of th Director would not listen to any demands of restitution, and the bank was obliged to sustain the loss. It was discovered afterward that an architect having purchased the Director's house, taking it down, in order to build an other npon the same spot, had found the note in a crevice of the chimney, and made his discovery an engine for robbing the bank. Old and A'tw. Agassiz was twice married. Eis seo tnd wife was Miss Lizzie Cary. A STItAXGE STORJ', It is possible that some readers may be fond of ghost stories, and therefore I relate for their benefit the following legend about a certain London house. For obvious reasons I suppress the names of persons and exact localities, and 1 further desire it to be understood that I do not hold myself responsible for the accurate truth of all the details of the story ; I need only add that the events are to be taken as having oc curred some years ago. Some yearn ago, then, a gentleman whom we will call Colonel Sjmerville, was desirous of buying a house in the west end of the town, and passing one day, through a well-known square, he observed a honse to be sold, which seemed to him, as far as outside ap pearances and situation were concerned, to be the very thing he wanted. The printed bill referred him to a firm of estate agents in the city, and to them he at once went, though he could not help entertaining a misgiving that the price would be exorbitantly high and beyond his means. No harm, however, could be done by simple inquiry. He was agreeably astonished to find that that the sum demanded was only four thousand pounds. Not being a com mercial man, he could not help express ing his astonishment at the small sum demanded, and naively inquired if the mansion was very much out of repair. The representative of the firm unhesi tatingly replied that the house was in very good repair, and would not require more than the usual outlay upon deco ration. The colonel pressed his in quiries, and, as he seemed to be a likely and desirable purchaser, he was soon informed of the circumstances ander which the house in question was to be sold. It had belonged to a qncer old gentleman who lived in Clerkenwell, and who had died intestate, and the sale was ordered by his next of kin, who had been found with some dillieultv. This old gentleman hal died, strangely enough, in the very act of drawing np his will. He had just penned the words "And I desire that my house in Square should be " when some kind of a fit seized him, aud he was discov ered the next morning by his house keefier dead iu his chair. Now the next of kin was found in Australia, or some remote colonv, and was anxious to realize tho property as quickly as pos-! si bio. The house in Square had ! been uninhabited for years. There was not a scrap of furniture in it ; but it had been scrupulously cared for and ! kept clean by an elderly deaf woman, I who did not live in it, but nsed to go to it every morning and spend almost all j day there, and preserved it in sueh a j condition that the owner might have furnished it at any time, and come to ; live there without experiencing any i sense of discomfort which would ordi-1 narily arise from residing in a house which had not been inhabited for a long : time It was well known, I may add, that the elderly care-taker never fclept ; there. The Colonel went to vieav the : house. He found that he had not been i deceived by external appearances, or by ; the description of the accommodation ; detailed by the agent ; it was, in short, i just such a house as he and his wife wanted for a town residence, aud in duo -course the purchase was completed. As ' he was in no particular hurry to enter, j and as Mrs. Somerville happened to be j Hnmnll At St. in w& I 1, 1 . I r 1 1 11 O ,1 i 1 nl ! UUWru .111-1 I'WILll 11111 . 1 111 t. , hi. i , able to come to London to superintend ; the furnishing, he contented himself, with preparing a bedroom for his own ; nse on the first floor, and another for ; his valet on the floor above. He retained , the services of the elderly deaf woman, i who appeared to be grateful for his consideration, as sli9 alleged that the ! - 1- : 1 t 1 . I. T . 1'a V Biiu rccrncu jur utrr uuuuio was almost all that sue had to live on. ine house became the property of the Colonel at Midsummer 1S5-. Towards the end of July the rooms mentioned j were furnished in a temporary manner for the accommodation of the Colonel, j who at that time was frequently called to town on busiuess, but it was not till ' the first week in August that Colonel j Somerville, accompanied by a valet who had been in his service for about two years, actually eutered as a resident. ! But in that house he only remained one night and he never slert there aguin. He arrived in town abont mid-day, on the Wednesday in the first week in j August. The day was oppressively j gloomy and dull in the conntry, and all i London seemed to be seething in a ; sullen heat. He went with his valet j straight to his new house in Square. The cabman took the fare offered to him without grumbling, observing (as j he glanced somewhat suspiciously at ' the house), "This is the first time as 1 '. ever drove a gentleman, nor a lady neither, to this here 'ouse,'' and he went , away as quickly as he could. j Colonel Somervi'le took no notice of j the remark at the time, though it came vividly to Lis recollection afterwards. Having deposited his luggage, and seen that his room looked tolerably comfoitpble, he told his servant that he intended to dine at his club and should be home about eleven. The elderly deaf woman, I should eay, wus in at tendance. Well, the Colonel transacted his busi ness, dined at his club with a friend, and returned to his house shortly after 11 o'clock. His servant, a smart, active young fellow, opened the door for him, showed him to his room, aHked for his orders for the morning, and, having re ceived them, retired to his room above. It was hot in the streets as Colonel Somerville drove home ; it was hotter still in his bedroom, yet he felt scarcely any inclination to sleep. Another cigar, he thought, would soothe hira into somnolency, so he accordingly lit one, and tried to amnse himself by consider ing how he should furnish his new house, having due regard to the exigen cies of London gas aud atmosphere. His cigar finished, he undressed lei surely and got into led ; the wind, such as there was, came from the south, and he heard the great clock of Westminster strike twelve. By-and-by he heard the quarter, and then the half hour, and then he fell off into dose from which he was awakened by repented knocks at his door. He called out "Who's there?" but the answer was unintelligible, thongh he heard voice in reply. He hastily lit the candla, and opened the door. In the passage he found his servant half dressed looking frightfully pale, and shivering violently from head to foot. "Why, Warren, what on earth is the matter 7" he exclaimed ; "are you ill ?" "I don't quite know what is the mat ter," was the reply. "Please sir, may I come ?" "Certainly," said the Colonel, who was one of the kindest of human beings; "come in Warren, yon rau3t be ilL" The man entered shaking as thongh an ague had seized him and the Colonel hastily took his flask from his dressing bag and gave him some strong brandy and water. This seemed to do Warren good, and then his master asked him again what was the matter. "I don't rightly know, sir," he an swered. "I went to bed all right and went very sound asleep. But I had a bad dream. I thonght a pale-faced man came into my room, although I knew I had locked the door, and he stood be side my bed, looking for all the world, sir, as if he would like to eat me ; and then the air in the room became so op pressive that it seemed to weigh npon my face and head, and then this terrible shivering came over me as if I was lying out of doors in a bitter front, thongh I knew at the same time how hot it was." "Incipient fever," said the Colonel, "let me feel your pulse." "Strange," he muttered, after a min ute or two. "Have yon ever had malarial fever, intermittent or that sort of thing?" "No, sir ; never that I am aware of." "But vet you must be ilL Shall I go and fetcn a doctor?" "Oh no, thank yon sir. 1 feel so much better now." "Well, then, Warren, I think you had better go back to bed again." "The man became pale again in stantly, and another attack of shivering seized' him, and he exclaimed almost in agony. "Oh, no, sir. not to that room ! I feel certain that I should see that white faced man again, and feel that weight upon my face and head. Oh, sir, do ! inA lin nnnn the floor." The Colonel looked gravely at War- ren. He had, in India, seen a good deal of delirium tremens, and he entertained a very strong suspicion that this was the real causa of Warren's stransw be- havior : and vet the man had been in his service some time and he had never any reason to suppose that he was not thoroughly temperate and sober. Ho he said, "Well, you can take this blanket, and lie down npon the floor, or sit np in a chair as you please. I expect you will be heartily ashamed of yourself to-morrow morning. Warren. "I think not, sir; I shall only be most grateful to you." So Warren rolled himself in the bltnket, and Colonel Somerville put out the candle and got into bed again and tried to go to sleep. His efforts were in vain. He knew himself to be provokingly wide awake, and though he conn ted numberless sheep going through a gate, and resorted to all those devices which are popularly supposed to encourage sleep, he re mained as wide awake as ever he had been in his life. Everybody knows how preturnaturally acute the senses are when after mid night they positively refuse to be lulled to slumber ; and the Colonel felt as terribly on the alert as he had felt sometimes in the Indian mutiny. War ren had quite got over his bad dreams and indisposition, and snored in the most comfortable manner. Suddenly some noise within the house made the Colonel start np in his bed and listen attentively. Yes there could be no doubt about it ! there was the sound of a stealthy footfall npon the stairs. He hastily lit his candle again, and his gaze was turned toward the door, which he had locked after it was settled arren should remain, lie saw the handle move. In a flash of thought he asked himself what this could be. London thieves wonld never dream of running the risk of entering a house in which there was absolutely nothing to steal. To physi cal fear Colonel Somerville was a stranger, and so he at once snatched np the short, heavy poker from the fire place, and without waiting to arouse his servant, whom he saw was sleeping heavily, he went quietly to the door, unlocked and opened it suddenly, pre prepared to capture the intruder. But the passage outside was vacant and silent Being a man of more than ordinary strength, and thoroughly accustomed to danger he did not hesitate about continuing his search. There were only two other rooms npon this floor, these he entered, and, as they were destitute of furniture, a glance was sufficient to show him that there was no one there. He went up stairs, carefully examined Warren's room ; then he went down stairs, walked through the drawing room, dining-room and study, then into the offices, but he encountered nobody. Then he proceeded to examine the doors and windows of the basement, and satisfied himself that nobody could have entered there. His examination of the lower part of the house occupied him about a quarter of an honr, and then he arrived at the conclusion he had been the victim of his own imagina tion. Then he yawned and began to think he felt really sleepy, so he as cended from the offices, thinking that he should get a few hours rest at last. Just as he put his foot npon the first step of the stairs leading from the hall, something glittered from the floor. He stooped down to see what it was, and he picked up what appeared to be a needle of about four times the ordinary length with a tiny steel button at the end. He examined it curiously, for he did not remember to have seen such an implement before. The point he re marked, appearod to be slightly tar nished. With this, the sole result of his search he returned to his bed-room. He entered and locked the door after him, and was about to throw of his dressing gown, when to his intense astonishment he found that Warren, whom he had left sleeping soundly, was gone. He opened the door again and called loudly. No answer. He hurried up stairs to his servant's room no trace of hiin there ; indeed no trace of him any where, and Colonel Somerville never saw or heard of James Warren again. He had no reason to suppose that there was any motive for his mysterious dis appearance, for he had not robbed or defrauded his master in any way what ever. The next day the police examined the house thoroughly but nothing of importance transpired. Need I add that Colonel Somerville's new house was up again for sale immediately. Three facts remain to be recorded : First, the strange-looking needle which the Colonel found was subjected to as tb' gh his own had received a oi chemical inspection, and the tarnishes j plonia for righteousness (which every nnnn tliA noil it vera fonnd to be human i bodv else knows they haven't, and for blood. Secondly, when the house had been for sale about six weeks. Colonel Somerville received a letter from the agents, announcing that the house was sold for the same amount that he gave for it The Colonel being a man oi 1 has neither Doys or gins oi ner own, strict honor thought himself in duty j but her big warm heart takes in all bound to make the purchaser aware of those of her neighbors. She sympa all that had occurred and hurried np ! thizes with your perplexities and tron to town to the agents for the purpose of j blea, and after having made both you procuring the name and address of this i and your boys fall in love with her, ends person. A" mat ine agents ootuu m- form him was that the purchaser waa a gentleman named Williams and ap- peared to be an American. He gave a cheque npon a well-known bank for the amount and it was duly honored. The only peculiarity about Mr. Williams was that he had a remarkable pale face. Thirdly, the honse has never been since pnt np for sale, bat it remains, to all appearances, untenanted, though I un derstand the deaf old woman is still the care-taker. To the lovew of mystery, I commend this story. London Society. The Pleasures of the Dull. Tormented by the pains of thinking, I have often envied the placid peace of those who cannot think at all. How delightful it mnst be, I have said to myself, to be able to hold the most utterly contradictory views on all things, divine and human, without the faintest suspicion as to their inconsist ency, or any loeical horror of inconsist ency itself I Women, with occasional exceptions, are not much troubled by such inconsistencies. Are they, there fore, less happy than men ? How sooth ing it must be to be hopelessly incapable of syllogisms 1 What pangs is not a mind spared that refuses to admit that if A is B, and C is A, therefore C is also B ! What admirable wives and mothers and daughters toere are, and what praiseworthy country parsons too, to whom all this bepnzzlement about A, B, and C, is as unintelligible as a con jurer s gibbensn j supposing it were suddenly proved that all our astrono mers are wrong, and that the sun really roes round the earth, what horrible agonies should we thinking people en- I fltira wlm hpliavA in mnilipmaHM on1 the multiplication-table, and what a i hideous skepticism would darken the rest of our lives ! Yet the unthinking multitude would be unmoved by a single painful thonght, and would dress, dine. digest, and sleep as unconcernedly as u soperuieus uuu .tewiou uau never existed. Then, again, there is that enviable capacity for enjoying many things which in my unfortunate state of culture. I do ! detest. I never walk through an old j house, filled with eighteenth-century furniture, without envying the simpli city and credulity of my ancestors. How easily must that generation have been pleased which saw beauty in those spindle-legged chairs and tables, and which could plaster up a Gothic roof or screen, and paint some venerable oak carving a pale-blue color, and find itself refreshed by the effect 1 There are limits, indeed, to one's envy of the non-! culture I will net call it the barbarism i of the past. By no possible effort of sympathy can I wish to feel as those felt who delighted to contemplate King George IV., in his tight coat and silk stockings, sitting npon his royal sofa, with arm outstretched, as depicted by Sir Thomas Lawrence. As to the amount of happiness con nected with the mutabilities of ladies' dress, on the other hand, my thoughts are much exercised. Does it, or does it i not, add to the enjoyment of ones whole life to be able to be equally de lighted with a mass of false hair of reddish hue at the back of one's head, and a mass of false hair, made white with powder, on the top of one's head, and a head without any false hair at all? Take the whole amount of rapture which one has ever experienced from the contemplation of the Venus of Milo, and consider whether it is equal, ic the long-run, to the daily self-complacency of the simple soul that is conscious of being always clothed as fashion de mands, whether fashion prescribes four-and-twenty inches or three yards as the diameter of her gown. I go, perhaps, to a gayly-dressed evening gathering, where every woman, whether old or young, is dtcolletce, in varying degrees of exposure. hat necks do 1 see ! ! What shoulders ! What complexions 1 1 Yoa are not those smiling creatures ; t .1 I uuyyjft nuuoe Dftina axe as ucwij aa possible the same color as their dresses ? Is the enjoyment of that amiable female marred by the thonght that she has clothed herself in a hue which brings out most forcibly the sad fact that time is beginning its ravages npon her fare and arms ? And are women generally to be pitied because they are for the most part unaware of the fact that good looking arms are cot common, and that arms which are not good-looking had ! better be encased in some pleasant- j looking sleeves than paraded before the public gaze ? These are difficult ques- j tions for him to settle who speculates on the advantages of the culture of to day. Cornhill. ; A Word Tor the Bojs. 1 was always used to boys and their rough ways, for all my cousins and other connexions invariably were boys. Consequently, when Grandma is at her wit's end ; when Grandpa glowers over his spectacles at " the little rascals ;" when Bridget fumes and frets at the muddy feet and endless doors lamming ; when even Papa rages over the lost shovel, Aa, 4c, take things very coolly. And, between you and I, if I didn t, I should have been dead long ago. And I have made np my mind to this : " Boys will be boys " as long as this world endures, and there is no use in forever fretting and talking and scolding. It does no good, but, on the contrary, does do harm. I do not like my carpets and furniture spoiled ; I do not like this running in and ont in winter time to warm hands and feet, thus leaving in the cold air. I don't like it ; but, at the same time, what can I do about it ? If you know anything of boys, yoa know that they cannot sit still two minutes in succession. And then to act rid of them awhile, we're glad to let them go out. Then they ; are not ont any time scarcely ere the spirit of contrariness tells them how nice and warm it is in the honse. and in they come again. So it is perpetual motion, perpetual noise, perpetual mis chief, till blessed night brings rest for the poor mother, as well as for the boys. Troublesome? I should think so ! And yet I pity the little fellows. How they are hustled around and snubbed. What black looks, what short answers they get. They are not wanted in the parlor, and Bridget von,i have them in the kitchen. It really seems as if there was no room for the boys anywhere. Solemn respectability frowns at the peccadillos of his neighbor s boys, ; one, don't expect either his or mine to get just yet) Old maids, and ladies withont " a family of boys," wonld as soon sit down by" a bear as a boy, but some day cornea in a married lady who ner viaiu im i a u;i . ; In thonght you follow her home. You . see her handsome carpets, her polished j furniture and spotless cleanliness of room and hall. And men yon 100a at. ! your own surroundings. Above all, on , the ruddy faces of those "noisy, horn ble boys," and you aay in your heart, aa the noble Roman matron, Cornelia, once said, " These are my jewels." Presence of Hind. There is one grand quality signally neglected, almost never tanght, nowhere prized at its true value, seldom preached upon, yet certain to avert many a dis aster and deliver from many a periL Were parents and teachers accustomed to show their young ones how self-command in some unexpected emergency, as in an outbreak: oi nre at midnight, would not only save themselves, but rescue a whole nompany of friends or leilow pupils, were the various means of escape shown, and the necessity of instant decision enforced, many a valu able me (to say nothing of property) would be saved. So intelligent a com munity as ours ought not, in this ad vanced period of thought, to be so easily overwhelmed by calamity, when one woman's prompt and resolute aid would stop the stream at its fountain bead. If it is replied, as it will be, that some persons are born without this gift ; my answer is that Feter the Great was born without the capacity to endure the sea, Frederic Second wiih a perfect terror at battle, Paley with indisposition to rise early, Jndge Story with a disgust at law books, Washington with impetu ous passion yet all conquered their natural weakness, and so can we if we feel the necessity. From various quarters facts have come to me of every sort, illustrating in women and children even, the power of overcoming pani j and taming appar ent disaster into an occasion o really sublime virtue. Instances there are. as we all know. of mothers rushing in frantio fear from a burning dwelling, then remembering the dear baby they left asleep in its little crib, and flying back through the open passage, to perish vainly in a whirl of mad flames. At the first alarm it would have been easy enough to have seized the child and secured its safety with her own, because the air currents were then cutoff; after her own mad hand had given the fire free passage through the house, her own sacrifice i came too late to be of any service. I Another mother I knew in this State, awakened Irom profound sleep by the fierce light in her room, forbidding her husband from opening door or window till she had made a string of sheets, and let her child down to the ground ; ; then she followed herself, without any (called a fonda) these reeling tars see serious injury from the stifled flames, standing a donkey, whose Chinese water and not even a very severe fright, for I man has gone iuto a fonda with his jar she had tanght herself self-control, and ; oi fresh water, leaving the little donkey so she was always ready to nse the best j patiently waiting for him. In a moment means and ail the means God and Nature one of the sailors is across the street and hail put in her hands. has mounted astride the poor donkey, The custom used to be universal in Kita his face turned towards the animal's Ireland, of storing powder in the garret tal!4 nJ ,h.19 n8 almost or of every grand country house. The qi'te touching the ground. The other great-grandmother of the famous Maria I 8al J takes the p,r beast y "e.b"Jle Edgeworth, had sent a stupid servant ; f,n,i p blows and curses tries to induce girl to procure something in the garret, j th donkey to go on, but in vain, he when the maid came back and was ! f.,U,not moV8 or 81t,,r. only plants asked for her candle, which she had j n'.8, more sturdily and sets his head carried without any candle-stiek, she stiffly in the air. Out comes the Chinese answered "it was sticking in the cask wa'ertmnJ1 and commences to reason of black dirt np there. Not a moment with the drunken sailor to get off from was to be lost. Mrs. Edgeworth flew!hls ?onie? "?J let him load on the np-stairs. dashed the candle npon the;e1mPtir wxter. aia- But the sailor is floor, and fell herself, overcome bT ner-: dak eDnsV want itoJ,aTe' httJe excitement. She had saved the house and all within its walls. That capital old story-book, Sandford i 4 1 &e waterman now waxes mad, begins and Merton, tells a story founded on i ?, BCo!J. from .Spanish to shrill fact, of a party of girls pursued by a Chinese, and screaming higher and wild bull in an open field. The eldest j h?nJe, The sailors understand neither lassie turned full on the mad beast, and kptmish or Chinese, so that neither faced him. Mr. Bull paused a moment can understand the other. One sailor in surprise. Then he renewod his ad-: Pulls at tbo donkey s bndle-rem and vauce, and the noble girl made the e ?ne B,catei nPou ,th? animal jerks best retreat she could, facing him still, ! east s tail up and down and digs and cheering her little companion to !"8 knV.n' the 0CJ 8 8ldes 8Uont; huny away. Her calmness seems toilnSand kicking at him to go on. A have been respected by the great beast, i crowd assembles and some side with for he onlv drove her steadily out of his , 8iulor8 and wjth the Chinaman, domain, giving all her party and herself ; "Vte.r frosting all his arts to dislodge time to leap the fence without harm. ! "ie l"11? ,Ur., tLo Chinaman appeals to ...... r . , 1 the crowd and savs in Spanish : "Uentle- y. A ,? J1' I remember of an , men ;t me -j Le me , 8ee how j Eughsh family taking tea in the garden am ftnJ by this bock of their bungalow one sultry eve : Jrunkcn Americano. WiU not some in upper India. Suddenly a grand ; one be j e h to brf hi8 mother Bengal tiger made one of the company. that sh CQS him . - t ff anJ The gentlemen, even an army officer, j ,et m(j ia ,,. iJea of seemed paralyzed with fear. One brir:ging'uis motUer , woman alone was master of tho occasion. I , , , She sprung open a large sun-umbrella Tbe Iron f of 3IarllBiHBe. right in the face of the beast, who j resented so nnusnal a reception by leap-1 The bane of the beautiful Island of ing over the green hedge and making ! Martiniqne is a serpent called the "iron for the thicket, where he had been hid-1 lance." This reptile, with venomons ing. Would not this same genius at ! taste, chooses the coolest and most de improvising means have made this lady lightful places in the garden for his perfectly invaluable iu shipwreck, in j retreat, aud it is literally at the risk of midnight conflagration, in burglar's one's life that one lies down on the attack, in epidemic disease, in the field grass, or even takes a rest in an arbor, hospital of an army, in tho panic of a The wounds inflicted by these serpents crowded assembl v, in railroad eollission, I are very apt to be fatal unless imniedi in thousands of lesser disasters always j ately cared for. The wholo island is aggravated by lack of self-control ? j infested with this dangerous reptile, When only thirteen, Sir Astlcy Cooper and it is said that on an average nearly showed this rare gift. A little playmate eight hundred persons are bitten every had been crushed by a cart-wheel. He year, of which number from sixty to was bleeding to death. There was not seventy cases prove fatal, while many half time enough to get a surgeon. I others result iu nervous diseases which Astlev brought out his silk handkerchief; are almost as bad as death. A few tied it about the wound stopped the i years ago, when Prince Arthur of Eng bleeding effectually, till the surgeon ; land visited this island, a grand fete could take the child in charge, whom I was given in his honor in the Jardin Astley had really saved. And this event : des I'lantes. Iu the evening the grounds was the principal one to determine that were beautifully illuminated, aud thou choice of his profession, which made sands of people sauntered through its him such a signal blessing to mankind, cool and shady avennes. A largo num- ThenameofEliBreemonehttohavelber.were hia h the ,iron 1ee" some permanent record. A railroad aBd """T fff" never recovered from bridge had just been destroyed by fire, the effects of the poison. The fondness An express train was approaching. Eli .f hl8 ,temVle TeVu)9 fof and was determined to hazard his life to I 8na,lv P,oee9 19 , a 8erl?n3 drawback on save others. He ran to meet the ad- the ptowwra of rambling through the : little charming groves of. Jartinique. A rest as widely as possible, and succeeded in I D-aininir the enirineer s attention-who stopped the train just in time to prevent another disaster like that at Norwalk. The best wine I have kept to the last. Manning, a West India merchant, was sitting on a log on the shore of J amaica, while his companions were bathing. Suddenly he saw a shark making full upon them. Had he cried "shark," one or both would have been overcome by fear. "Fellows, lonk here," he cried, "you swim miserably. Here is the best repeater in all Jamaica for the one that comes in first. Now do your best." So he kept cheering and stimnlating,now one, now the other. When he saw Farnnm relaxing his stroke, he reproached him for giving np so easily, when he was sure to win if he only pursued. At last he rushed into the waves himself, his red handkerchief streaming from the end of a stick, to divert the man eater. When Farnnm was safe npon the sand, and was told his peril, he fell flat as a log, proving how helpless he would have been out at sea. Be Occupies!. Young men sometimes think that it M.non(oi,i. tn nrk Tliow imagine that there ia some character of j pare amethyst, into which the rainbow disgrace or degration belonging to toil, refines itself at last, hinting at the far No greater mistake could be made, distance of ineffable things. Instead of being disgraceful to engage "." " , " , - , in work, it is especially honorable. It A The following piece of or.ental flat is the useless, not the useful man who ! tefJ 18 V10 b? r. : does nothing ; who eats the bread he I Amencan diplomatist. Mr. Wade, does not earn ; who relies upon others having lately died at Pekin, the Chinese to support his life. It is be who is not attnbuted his disease to the inexpressi respectable, because he doea nothing to ble emotion which he experienced at ornmand respect ! "eem8 the august face of the Emperor. Scene in Pern. I believe that in no other country in the world is there such a complete ab scenee of the fitness of things as among me innauiianis oi reru. They are con stantly doing and saying the most gro tesque and inappropriate things, with the same unchanging air cf dignity and sooer earnestness that makes it only the more ridiculous. To illustrate : Daily there passes my door an old Cholo waterman, carrying his water jaw, on the most diminutive and stunted of donkeys ; and daily is the same scene enacted. As Pern is a Catholic country, there is erected in the centre of four streets a large wooden or stone cross, and it is the universal custom for every man, woman and child, whenever they pass one of these wayside croses, to stop, and, making the sign of the cross, to bow before it. Some of the devont kneel and utter an ave maria, while every one doffs the bat and makes the sign of the cross. Either this little donkey of the aquador (water-carrier) has been brought np a priest, or else he possesses more devotion than tha rest of his species ; for he invariably stops square before the cross, sets his fore legs sturdily at right angles pnts up his long ears and straightens his stubby tail, and obstinately and per sistently refuses to move an inch. The waterman dismounts, pulls at him, kicks and shonts, tugs at his bridle and belabors him with a stout cudgel ; but all to no purpose. Standing as immova ble as a roc!:, the donkey brays and brays again, his nose fairly rubbing the cross, and, at every blow, only plants his feet more firmly and brays the louder. Little donkey boys say : "Let him alone ; he is at his devotions." Bystanders cry : "Look at the piety of the beast ;" and the waterman, looking ronnd in despair at the crowd, says ! "What shall I do? what can I do ?" in the most hopeless tones ; then, turning to the donkey, he says, savagely, to it : "Beast! stop your braying, you are nothinsr but an old fool, and vnnr mother, was a fool before von " This settles the donkey, for he moves on. amid the jeers of the lookers-on and my own laughter. I have been much amused at the drunken antics of a couple of sailors, ashore for a spree after a long voyage. In front of a Chinese eatine-house t.1" Chinaman to pull him off. on the grass under the shadow of some spreading tree is always haunted by the dread of some nnsecn dangers, and one cannot even cross a field wtthont exer cising extreme caution. Kymbolirml tienis. The following symbolization of the twelve stones mentioned in the Book of Revelations as forming the foundation of the wall of the New Jerusalem will furnish a hint to gift-seekers ; First, jasper, the crimson, the color of passion, suffering ; then the sapphire, truth and calm ; beyond, chalcedony for parity ; next the emerald, the hope of glory. The fifth stone, the sardonyx, is the 'singling and alternating of these the tenderness and the paiu and the puri fying. The sardius represents the tri umphant love, containing and over whelming all passion ; the central type crowning the human, nnderlying the heavenly. Then the tints grow clear and spiritual ; chrysolite, gold' n-green. ' touched with a glory manifest ; the blending of a rarer and serener blue. the wonderful sea-pure beryl ; then the sun-filled glory cf the topaz ; and chrys oprase, where flame and azure find each other the joy of the Lord and the peace rthich passe tn understanding. In the end. the lacintn. purple, and Youths Column. Hymn for a Utile Child. God malre my life a little light, ts itbin tbe world to glow : A little fSlme that burnetii bright. Wherever 1 may g. Ond make my life a little Sower. Thatfivetn).iytoatl. Contut to blikum in native bower. Although its place bo amalL O d make my life a tittle song. That conifortrth the sad : Th .1 help- th others to be strong. And makea the singer gUO. GV4 make mv life a little stall Vt hreoo the weak may rest. That eo what health and strength 1 hare May serve my neighbors best. God make my life a bttle hymn t H tenU?rue and Drain ; Of faith that never waietb dim. In all his woudronawava. Besxt's Ajuthmktic Lesson. Little Benny had just begun to go to school. borne boys as young and active as he is wonld rather play all day long than 10 spend part oi the time in the school room ; but he seems to like it Almost every day he comes running home, saying, "I've learned something more to-uny ; and, after iie has told us about it. we send him ont of doors with his little cousins, who live close by. We know that all work and no play woniu maxe isenny a dull boy. To-day he felt very proad, because he had been learning to add. He said that he eonld sav the first table. I told him to begin, and I would tell him if he was ncht So he began ; and thi9 is the way it wen on : Benny. One and one are two. Mamma. That is very true. Jirnnt.Tvo and one are three. Mamma. Nought could better be. l:nny. Four and one are five. Mamma. True as I'm alive. Jirnny. Five and one are six. Mamma. That's a pretty fix. Benny. Six and one are seven. Mamma. Thought you'd say eleven. Benny. Seven and one are eight Mamma. Bless your curly pate I Bt nny. Eight and one are nine. Ma nma. Why, how very fine ! B 'nny. Nine aud one are ten. . Mamma. Pretty goo 1 for Ben. We had a good hearty laugh when we got through ; for Benny's earnest way of reciting pleased me, and he enjoyed the emphatic manner in which I replied to his additions. How many little boys can say the table that Benny did? "Clear jths Coast I" "Clear the coast ! clear the coast I" cried Albert and Frank, aa they came down hill swiftly on Frank's new sled. "Look out for that woman 1" cried little Harry, who was standing at the top of the hilL A poor German woman was crossing the road. She had a large basket full of bundles, which she carried on her head. Iu her right hand she had an umbrella and a tin pail, and on her arm another basket Truly, seeing that the roads were slippery, she had more than her share of burdens. She tried to get out of the way ; but Frank's new sled was such a swift run ner, that it came near striking her, and caused her to nearly lose her balance, putting her at tbe same time into a great fright "Yon bad boys, you almost threw me down !" she exc!aimod, when she re covered from the start they had given her, and looked around to see if she had dropped any of her bundles. But down the hill they rushed on their sled, Frank losing his hat in their descent, but little caring for that in his delight The two boys, after reaching the foot of the hill, turned, and began to drag their sled np again. "That woman," said Frank, "called us bad boys. Let us tell her that we are not bad boys. We did not mean to run her down." "Here comes Harry, running. What has he got to say ?" asked Albert. "I toll you what, boys," said Harry, "you'll be taken up if vou run people down in that wav." W bv di Jn t she clear the coast when j I told her to ?" said Albert A Word to Children. If children allow themselves to be governed by evil passions, they become the cause of tor row instead of joy ; pain instead of plra.mre, casting around the once pure young heart an influence deadly as the poisonous oreatn oi the L pas tree ; as it destroys animal life, so does the in dulgence in evil companionship and sinful feelings take all that is good and beautiful from our lives while on earth, robbing ns of what is of far greater im portance our hopt of Jlr.accn ! I hope then that you will all strive to be good. It will bring its own reward. JesTis, our Heavenly Master, loved little children i In the book of books, which be caused to be written for our guidance and instruction. He often talks abont them. Twas Him who said, "Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the king dom of Heaven." How kind I What beautiful words !" When his disciples were disputing about who should be the yrtar, Jesus rebuked them in this wise. He took a child and placed him in the midst of them, and taking the little boy in his arms, ho said to his disciples : "Whoso ever reoeiveth one of such children in my name, receiveth me ; and whosoever shall receive me receiveth not me, but II' in thai m;t me." This same Jesus is just as ready to-day to enfold in the arms of His love all good children, as He was iu those olden times, when He lived, stipend and died here on earth, that tre might dif'jll trifft him in Heaven. Riddle. Two ladies, an aunt and her niece, were carried off by a band of Indians, and, though imprisonsd within the same encampment, were not per mitted to see or converse with each other. A young Indian girl the favorite daughter of the chief used to visit them both ; but they dtust not trust her to carry massages, so the niece persuaded the maiden to carry a certain animal to her aunt, and to bid her to study its name carefully. The young Indian complied. The aunt understood the message to be an entreaty to escape if possible, and returned answer, by a fruit, that escape was utterly impossible. What was the animal, and what the fruit ? Antwer: Ant-elope: Con't-elope. The Sza Mouse. The sea mouse is one of the prettiest creatures that lives under the waters. It sparkles like a diamond and is radiant with all the colors of the rainbow, although it lives in the mud at the bottom of the ocean. It should not have been called a mouse, for it is larger than a big rat It is covered with scales that move np and down as it bathes, and glitters like gold shining through a flocky down, from which fine silky bristles wave that constantly change from one brilliant tint into another, so that, as Cuvier, the great naturalist, says, the plumage of the humming bird is not more beau tiful. Sea mice are sometimes thrown npon the beach by storms. Hearth and Home, Varieties. Two-thirds of the Episcopal Bishops were consecrated since I860. Ostrich plumes at $250 a pound are in the highest feather with fashionable ladies. It is singular that there should be no way of putting a stop to the "girl of the period." Six and eight button kid gloves ex tending np the arm as far as the elbow, will continue the fashion for full dress. A favorite style of trimming dresses, is of two or three shades of the color of the material of which the costums is made. The ladies appear to have taken the front breadths ont of their overskirta and sewed them on the same garment behind. The Comte de Waldeck sent a bou quet to the ex-Empress Eugenie on her birthday, with a note saying that his age was 109 years old enough to know better. Oat West, where women are running for office, the newspapers whose candi dates have been elected, no longer place defiant roosters at the head of their columns. A modest hen broods over the glad tidings of election. In the Christian warfare, to maintain the conflict is to gain the victory. The promise is made to him that endures to the end. The object of our spiritual adversaries is to prevent this. Every day in which you are preserved from going back, they sustain a defeat Payson. There is no sort of wrong deed of which a man can bear the punishment alone ; yoa can't isolate yourself, and say that the evil which is in you shall not spread. Men's live's are as thor oughly blended with each other as the air they breathe : evil spreads as neces sarily as disease. "Little Tommy didn't dinnbev mam ma, ami ffntn ivimmine i i 1 t,a V "Vn , o p., - . mamma ; Jimmy Brown and the rest of the boys went in, but I remembered, and wonld nnr ti-tnruv vnn M "ln.1 Tommy never tells lies, does he ?" "No, mamma ; or 1 couldn t go to Heaven. "Then how dneaTnmmv hnnnon rrtriavA on Jimmy Brown's shirt ?" It will give some notion of the vast- ness of the spoil of war that has fallen into German hands, irrespective of the pecuniary indemnity, when it is stated that the share of gun metal from cap tured cannon allotted to Bavaria alone, as the due of her two army corps, amounts to no less than ItJO tons. Of this, King Louis has ordered fifty tons to be distributed to certain parishes to oe turned into the church bells they are in need of. The rest is handed ovr to the Bavarian Government arms foundry lor future conversion into Uerman guns. Two belles from some provincial town were taken through the St Louis Po lice Headquarters lately, and went into ecstasies over the picture of what they termed "a love of a man. "Who is he? chirped one of them, modestly. "That's professional bigamist, replied the clerk. "He's married fourteen or fif teen wives; the last one was the daugh ter of a banker in Detroit, Mich., aud there's jOO reward offered for him." The clerk stopped to get breath, while the maidens let out their sentiments in some well modulated shrieks and asked no more questions. There has baen a dispute as to which is the fastest train in England. Prece dence has been claimed for the 10 AM. express from King's Cross. It also as serted that the Great Western express between Paddington and Exeter is faster. Between Paddington and Swin don the distance is 77J miles, and both the np and down trains travel it in b7 minutes, including the starting and stopping, or at the rate of 53 '62 miles per hour. At full pace, the speed is as nearly as possible a mile a minute. The Great Western railway is built on a 7 leet gage, but many parts of the line have a third rail, allowing narrow (1 feet Si inches) gige trains to ran on it also. A recent number of the lead ing French Review has an article on the Uerman Imperial Parliament, which shows that unity is more easily declared than ac complished. The 33:2 members are di vided into eight parties, "Independent," Progress, ' Centre, National Libe rals," "Clerical," "Liberal Imperial," ImpenaL "Conservative. One great trouble is to get together a quorum of 102 to pass routine bills. 1 he 27 Ger man States still have a Congress or Legislature apiece, with 1700 members in all, and as many of the members of the National Congress are also members of their own State Legislature, and both bodies are often sitting at the same time, the national representatives, who get no pay, prefer Btaying at home. The presence of Bismarck and Moltke, and others holding high office in the Gov ernment, naturally affects the debates, but, while it brings the Administration and the Legislature into close relation, it does not prevent a very thorough dis cussion of the plans introduced by the various departments. The debates are short and the speeches to the purpose, so that business is promptly disposed of, and the nation seems thoroughly satisfied. A correspondent of the London Daily Telegraph writes to that journal as fol lows in praise of the life-saving arrange ments on board the Philadelphia line of trans-Atlantic steamers. He says : "It ought to be extensively known that there is one line of trans-Atlantic pack ets which provides in all its ships not only the usual boats, but also life rafU sufficient to carry all the crew and pas sengers. I refer to the American Steam ship Company of Philadelphia, rnnning regularly between Liverpool aud Phila delphia, and it ought to be stated that it is an exclusively American company. Now, what the Americans can do may also be effected by the English, French and German lines, and if tbe publio de sire to be ("pared a repetition of such appallingcatastrophes as that connected with the Ville da Havre, they will de mand that similar provision be made in all the ships. The rafts are placed on each side of the deck under the davits ; there is nothing to do in ca-.d of emer gency but to cut the ropes by which they are lashed to the deck, which can be effected in one minute either by a hatchet or Bailor's knife. Two or three men can tumble them over the bulwarks into the sea. It matters not which side comes uppermost, they ride above the waves even when covered with human beings, and there are ropes lashed all ronnd to which drowning men can cling . until lifted on the raf ta. While others have been theorising on the question, our practical trans-Atlantic cousins have solved the problem, and for eight or nine months have been running their vessels so provided with life-rafts. To make this plan widely known may be the best way to secure its general adoption." f '1,1 V .''il OaTCCQT?