a tot 4 1ICI1. B. F. SCHWEIER, THE C0STITCTI05 THB TJ5ION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietors VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLIKTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENIVA., MARCH 25, 1S74. NO. 12. Poetry. Bear I us the Cross. TSAL4TCB Fioa Til HIIU. fhe bMTlar era, th. hiw kum, o erae wltboet, m Ooe with la ; Death, jadf meet, from th kail are erWea. Amlaet the werla'a falea flare ul 41m, O I happy he. wlik aU hia wee. Whom Gga hats Mt beaeeth the ctm The heavier eroee. tk better ChrUtlaa : TkU to the toachetoae Oat appllee; Bjw maay a tardea womle Ua waauar , Pawet by eeewere from weepta eyee 1 Th. (ola by Ira im poriaea Tka Cari.Ua. to by troabl. trie. The heavier croM, tha atroaf er faith : Tkt loaded palm atrikaa deeper root ; Tba viae J ale. .weetly Uua.th. l mi have preeeea tka e'esterlaf frmit ; Aad coaraf a f row. where daagera eume, Lika paarU baaeatk tha aalt aea foam. Tka heavier creae, tha heartier prayer: Tka bralaed berba moat fragrant ara ; If wind aad ky wara alwaya fair, Tba amilor woald aot vatck tba atar; Aad David'a pw'mt bad ae'er beea aaag If grief bia haart bad aayer wrnac. Tha heavier croaa. tba Bora aspiring : From valea w. climb to moaataia craat ; Tba pilgrim of tba dMTt rJrtaf , Loaf for tha Caaaaa of bia root Tba deve baa bar aa raat la algal, Aad to ark aba wiaga ker light. Tba heavier nw, the easier dylaf : Death to a frttadller fee. to ae ; To Ufe'a decay oae bide derylog From life'a diitreee oae tbea to free. The era, eubllmely 11 fu oar faith To Hum who trlampba over death. Christ eradfled 1 tke croaa I carry Tke looger may It dearer be; Aad leu I filnt wallet here I tarry, lapiaot tboa .aeb a heart la ma. That faith, hope, lore may aoarlth there. Till for my croe the crowa I wear. ZXiscellany. Disraeli's Trials and Triumphs. It was not until 1S52 that he was first called to office as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Twice afterwards he was compelled to take the same post, with a minority at his back. At length still greater responsibilities were pressed upon him. In the early part of 18GS Lord Derby, under whom Mr. Disraeli had so often served, found his health rapidly declining. He retired from office, and Mr. Disraeli received the commands rf the Queen to form a Cabinet. When he went down to the House of Commons, on the night of March 5, lUtiS, everybody expected a memorable speech. The House was I crowded, and the new Premier was vehe-1 mently cheered as he passed through Westminster HalL In the House itself he was received with equal warmth. The galleries were filled with people ! eager to hear the great speech. Bat I Air. .Disraeli does not care to surprise people at least not in the way they expect. He delivered a short and modest address, and instantly applied himself to the practical work of the House work which few Prime Minis ters have ever managed so welL The interest felt by the public in his acces sion to power was not unnatural. Since Mr. Disraeli had entered Parliament, mnrft than thirty tmk hefnri nnlv fi vi men had succeeded in climbing before j him to the chief place in the country, . . J ' Peel, Aberdeen. KusselL Palmerston. ' and Derby. He had beaten his rival. Gladstone, in the race. Many great men had come and gone during those thirty years, and had missed the chief mark. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Sir James Graham, Arthur Buller, the Duke of Newcastle, were men of great influence and abilities ; bnt the un known member, whose faith was that all things in this life will fall to those who wait and persevere, achieved the distinction which they failed to reach. He had fought out his struggle with a grand courage which would alone render him a man memorable in history. He set himself to accomplish his purpose. not in a feverish or impulsive spirit, bnt with an heroic patience, an indomitable endurance, and a splendid self-reliance which enabled him to face all anta gonists, to rise again and again from repeated reverses and blows, to mock at all difficulties, and finally to vanquish every obstacle which was thrust in his path. He had always led a solitary life. He had no intimate friends, outside a very small circle of men with whom he has been acting for years. He began as a solitary man in the wastes of Lon don, with the chances of success incal culably against him. He sought no help from outside. He paid court to no man, and, what must be the strangest thing of all to aspiring politicians, to no newspaper. Social prejudices stood in front of him like a wall of iron. Not the least of these prejudices was that which related to the race from which he sprung. His family traced its des ign t from the pure Sephardim stock; they were Hebrews of the Hebrews. For two generations at least they had been Christians, but still the favorite taunt levelled at Mr. Disraeli was founded on his Jewish origin. These reproaches, as usual, he met with defi ance. So far from repudiating his race, he has always gloried in it. He fought its battles in the Honse of Commons, and to him fell the honor of completing the removal of Jewish disabilities. He succeeded in gaining for Jews the right to sit in the House of Commons, and he has done more to break down the un just prejudice against them than any man of his generation. He has made people at last understand that they do not insult him by calling him a Jew, they only pay him a compliment. A tlantic 'Mon th ly. IX-ad Talemt. As by constant friction steel is kept bighlv'polished, so by constant exer cite is talent at its brightest. All our powers grow by use. If we neglect to cultivate the habit of observation, we might as well walk through the world blindfold. We lose our faculty what artists call our "touch" by neglect of practice on other things besides the piano. The man who seldom reads, reads 6lowly; the woman whose writing is confined to an infrequent letter to some absent child, spends more time over that than does a practiced writer over a dozen pages of manuscript. Ex ercise of possessed talent is absolutely necessarv, then, if we would retain our gifts. For example: if our occupation is 8edentarj't w ueed to plan for walks, rides and active games to keep our muscles lithe and serviceable, but if our employment gives us enough mus cular action, it is not one whit less im portant to our health of body that we should plan tor mental exercise for employment enough of our memory and our reasoning powers to keep theuifrom rusting. Aud, in either case, that life must be a dwarfed and unhealthy one that does not provide exercise for our spiritual faculties for worship, aud charity, and patience, and magnanim ity. Exercise of soul, mind and body, can alone bring us to the stature of tie perfect man. DREAMS AXU UltEAnl.XG. Early in the present century a Wilt shire farmer hud a dream sonn after midnight, thrice repeated, to the effect that there was something wrong going on in a certain field of his ; and after dreaming this the third time, so strong was his impression of its being a reality that he arose, and taking his gun set out for the spot. It was Summer time, and an hour or two before dawn. On reaching the field, he saw, in a remote part of it, a faint glimmering light, toward which he directed his steps. On approaching he found a man in the act of digging what appeared to be intended for a grave, the light being at the bot tom. "What are you doing here?" demanded the farmer. But without replying the fellow bounded off at the top of his speed, leaving behind him his jacket, in a pocket of which was found a murderous weapon in the shape of a knife. The farmer did not pursue, but retraced his steps ; and on ap proaching his house met one of his servant girls carrying a bundle. He inquired whither she was going at that unseasonable hour. But having formed her plan she seemed beut on carrying it out, and showed a disposition to avoid him. This, however, he would not per mit, and insisted npon an explanation. It appeared that the wretched man who had just been surprised in the act of preparing for his wicked design had promised to marry the girl ; and the ar rangement was that Bhe should clandes tinely leave her place and meet him at a specified hour aud spot in the field in question, bringing with her the money she had saved while in service. It need hardly be said that, after being apprised by her master of what he had just wit nessed, the poor girl was only too glad and thankful to return with him, thus doubtless escaping, through the inter position of a meiciful 1'rovideuce, an untimely and violent death. In June, 1732, Mr. Robert Aikenhead, farmer in Denstrath of Archall, in the Mearns, about live miles norta of Brechin and seven from Montrose, went to a market called Tarrenty Fair, where he had a large sum of money to receive. His eldest son, Robert, a boy between 7 and 8 ypars old, was sent to take care of the cattle, and happened to lie down I npon B grassy bank, and before sunset was fast asleep. Although the boy had never been far from home, he was immediately cirried in his imagination to Tarreuty market, where be dreamed that his father, after receiving the niouf-y, t ont on his re turn home, and was followed all the way by two ill-lookiug fellows, who, when he had got to the western dykes of Inglismnnlily (the peat of the then lj0r,t r HaUertuu, now i.arl of Kin- tore), and a lithe more tuau a mile from home, attacked aud attempted to rob him ; whereupon the boy thongbt he ran to his assistance, aud when lie cime "hin a gunshot of the pi ice called out 10 somo people who were jut going to bed. who put therobber to flicriit He immediately awoke in a fright, atd I without waiting to consider whether it i was a vision or a reality, ran as fast as he conld to the place he had dreamed of, and no socavr reached it than he saw his father in the very spot and situ ation he had seen in his dream, defend ing himself with a stick against the assassins. He therefore immediately realized his own part of the visionary scene, by roaring out "Mnrder !" at the P of his voice, which soon brought a it i t. . a r uul lue l-"!'1 uu, rumnug up io -ur. Aikenhead a assistance, found him vic tor over one of the villains whom he had previously knocked down with a stone after they had pulled him off his horse, but almost overpowered by the other, who repeatedly attempted to stab him with a sword, against which he had no other defense than Lis stick and his hands, which were considerably mangled by grasping the blade. Upon sight of the country people, the villain who had the sword ran off, but the other, not being able, was apprehended and lodged in jail. Meantime there was a hue and cry after yonna Kobert, whose mother missing him, and finding the cattle among the corn, was in the utmost anxiety.cotic'udiijg he had fallen into some water or peat moss. But her joy and surprise were equally great when her husband returned with the boy and told her how wonderfully both his money and his life had been saved by his sou's dream. In the 'Lif-j and Letters of the Rev. B. H. Barham," author of the "In goldsby Legends," the following narra tive occurs, as related to Mr. Barham by a friend who was told it by the dreamer himself : A Mr. Phillips, sec retary to Mr. Abbot, Speaker of the House of Commons, stated to my friend Mr. Wood, that about the year 1S03, he woke one night in some perturbation, having dreamed that he had been sen tenced to be hanged, when the agony of his situation roused him at the very moment they were in the act of pinion ing his arms in the press yard. Heartily pleased at finding it but a dream, he turned and fell asleep again, when precisely the same scene was re peated, with the addition that he now reached the foot of the gallows, and was preparing to mount before he awoke. The crowd, the fatal tree, the hangman, the cord, all were represented to him with a frightful distinctness, and the impression was so vivid that he got out of bed and walked about the room for some minutes before he conld re;oncde himself to the idea of seeking rest on his pillow again, ne was a long while before he could close his eyes, bnt to ward morning he fell into a perturbed slumber . in which precisely the same tragedy was acted over again ; he was led up to the scaffold, placed upon the top, the rope was fitted to his neck by the executioner, whose features he dis tinctly recognized as those of the man he had seen in Lis former vision ; the cap was drawn over his face, and he felt the trap giving way ueneain ms feet, when he once more awoke with a loud scream that was heard by a person sleeping in the next room Going to rest again was now out of the question, and Mr. Phillips describes himself as rising aud drest-ing, though it was then hardly daybreak, in a state of the greatest possible excitement. Indeed, so strong a hold had this dream so singularly repeated, taken npon his imagination, that he found it almost impossible to shake off tae unpleasant feeling to which it gave rise, and had nearly resolved to seud an excuse to a gentleman with whom he had engaged to breakfast, when the reflection that he must bv so doing defer the settlement of important business, and all on ac nf a dream, struck him as so very pusillanimous a transaction that be de-1 termined to Keep ins appoiuimcuw might, however, as well have stayed away, for bis tuougnia wer o in structed from the matter they met to discuss, and his manner was altogether Mdtitrait, that his friend conld not fail to remark it, and speedily closed the business by an abiupt inquiry if he was not unwell. The hesitation and confusion exhib ited in his answer drew forth other questions, and the matter terminated in Mr. Phillips fairly confessing to his old acquaintance the unpleasant impression made npon his mind, and its origin. The latter, who possessed good na ture as well as good sense, did not attempt to use any unwarrantable rail lery, but endeavored to divert his atten tion to other subjects, and, their meal being ended, proposed a walk. To this Mr. Phillips willingly acceded, and having strolled through the park they at length reached the house of the lat ter, where they went in. Several letters had arrived by that morning's post, and were lying on the table, which were soon opened and read. The last which Mr. Phillips took np was addressed to him by an old friend. It commenced : "Dear Phillips Ton will laugh at me for my pains, but I cannot help feeling , oil cloths, an accurate colored sketch uneasy about you ; do pray let me write : of the design is first made on stout pa and know how you are going on. It is ! per. A blank sheet of paper is then exceedingly absurd, but I really cannot shake off the recollection of an unpleas ant dream I had last night, in which I thought I saw you hanged." The letter fell from the reader's hand: all his scarcely-recovered equanimity vanished ; nor was it till some weeks had elapsed that he had quite recovered his former serenity of mind. It is unfortunate for the lovers of the marvelous that five-and-twenty years have now elapsed, and Mr. Phillips has not yet come under the hands of "Jack Ketch." I suppose we must take it 'exceptio probat regulam." A physician writing in All the Year Round for 1859, relates a curious story, and suggests as curious a theory to ac count for it : One night, be says, I had a vivid impression in a dream that a man-servaut who has lived with me many years was presenting me with some strange object that looked like a screen, over the whole of which was a scalloped pattern. In my dream I was immensely puzzled to make out what it was that produced the pattern ; whether shells or marbles or any other variegated thing that would effect a tesselated appearance. The next morning I said, laughing, to my man ; "John, what could it be that I dreamed last night you were making me a present of ? It was a sort of screen, with a pattern on like this," and I rapidly sketched with a pencil on the back of a card, which I still preserve, the pattern I had seen in my dream. "Why," said John, looking blank, "then yon know all about it. Sir? My wife, I suppose, has been showing you the screen we are making for yon." "No, indeed, I assure you she has not, and I have never seen nor had any hint of such a thing." John's answer was to dart from the room and to bring back with him a curious piece of unfinished work. It was a canvas in the form of a square screen into which John's wife had sewed feathers of water-fowl which John had shot by a large mere near which we were living. 1 he screen. I he screen, which bad made considerable progress, was the Joint effort of the ingenious pair, and the feathers being assoited with many various colors and shades of colors, sewed into the canvas by the quills, with their tops overlapping each other, produced a fantastic and agreeable mosaic, which at least had the merit of complete originality. As I had never seen anything even remotely like it the inference was strong that John s brain was deeply preoccupied by his screen and its approaching presentation (he was actually cutting a feather at the time I rang my bell), and had impressed on my brain the dominant idea. Noth ing conld more exactly resemble the pattern I had drawn to show John what my dream had been than the real pat tern. The screen has since been mounted under glass on a fine gilded frame, and is at this time an ornament to my drawing-room. It is singular to observe how it puzzles everybody who sees it for the first time, just as it did me in my dream, as to what the mate rial is that produces its curious mosaic. Oil Cloth. The custom of covering floors, halls, and passages is very generaL Where warmth and comfort are desired, car pets are used. Where something more durable and less cost! is demanded, a covering of oil or floor cloth has been invented. This cloth or canvas is a very strong fabric, made of flax or hemp, painted on both sides, the under side being plain, the upper side ornamented with patterns or designs of two or more colors. The cloth used for this purpose should be without seam. So that when pieces of great width are required, two men am employed at the loom, one on each side, for throwing the shuttle back aud .forth. This kind of cloth being woven for this purpose alone, its manu facture forms a distinct branch of busi ness. Pieces are made from eighteen to twenty-four feet wide, and the length often exceeds one hundred yards. When the canvas is received at the manufactory, the bales containing one hundred or more yards, and weighing nearly six hundred pounds, are opened and cut in pieces of sixty or one hun dred feet, as may be required. These pieces are then taken to the "frame room," which consists of a number of strong wooden frames, standing upright, a few feet from each other. The space between the frames is occupied by a scaffold of four tiers, which may be reached by means of a ladder at one end of each frame. The edges and ends of the canvas are fastened to the frame, and by-means of screws the beams of the frame are moved so as to tighten and stretch it to its utmost tension. In this position every part of the cloth can be reached from several platforms. The first operation, preparatory to pain ting, is covering the back of the canvas with a weak solution of size, applied with a brush ; and while yet damp, the canvas is thoroughly rubbed with pumice-stone. By this means the irregu larities of the surface are removed, and the size penetrates the interstices of the cloth, so preventing the paint, which is afterwards applied, from penetrating too far. which would render me on cioiu hard and brittle. This priming and m I scouring are carried on lorm uie top downward. When the surface is dry, a coat of paint, made of linseed oil and some cheap coloring matter is applied. This paint is very thick, and is thrown on to the canvas in dabs with a short brush ; it is then spread with a long and very elastic steel trowel. The paint is thns thoroughly worked into the web of cloth, filling up all inequalities, and render ing the surface smooth and leveL This Knmljmlnr " aa it ia nailed, is allowed to dry ten davs or longer, according to , the weather, after which a second coat j is smoothly laid on which the trowel, : completes the work for under side of the canvas. After the first coat of paint is applied to the under side, the same process is commenced on the face side of the cloth ; the size is applied, then rubbed in with a pumice stone; the first trowel-color ia then put on, which, when dry, is also rubbed down with a pumice-stone : two more coats are ap plied with the trowel, with a pumice stone robbing after each. Finally, a fourth coating of paint is applied with a brush, which is the ground color for the designs which are to be painted on it. A lie floor cloth is thus completed, the various operations occupying from two or three months, when it is ready to be removed from the frames and transferred to the printing rooms. The printing of the cloth is done on a flat table, over which it is drawn as fast as the designs are impressed. This is done with wooden blocks, not unlike those used in the old method of calico printing. As the patterns generally con sist of several colors there are as many blocks and as many separate printings as there are colors in the designs. "In preparing a set of blocks for printing placed nnder the pattern, and all the figures of another 'color are pricked ont in a similar manner. Thus the pattern is dissected on as many sheets of paper as there are colors to be printed. One of the pricked sheets is then fixed on the surface of a block, aod a little pow dered charcoal is dusted over it from a muslin bag, so as to penetrate the hole. The dotted line thus made on the block serves to guide the pencil of the en graver when the paper is removed, and enables him to draw the portion of the pattern required for that block. The same plan is pursued with other blocks, which are then ready for the engraver, who cuts away the wood, and leaves the pattern in relief." The blocks used for printing are gen erally abont eighteen inches square, the engraved portion being made of some close-grained wood, such as the pear tree, and fastened to blocks of pine. These engraved blocks, in large estab lishments, constitute a very valuable portion of the stock. Before the de signs are impressed on the cloth, it is made slightly rough by means of a steel scraper aud a scrubbing brush, which prepare it to receive the colors more readily. Near the printing-table is placed a number of flat cushions, on which the coloring matler is first placed with a brush. The printer presses the block on the cushion, which is charged with the color, and then applies it to the cloth, holding it firmly, at the same time striking it several blows with the handle of a heavy hammer. A second painter charges his block with a differ ent color, and applies it in the same manner. He is followed by a third, and as many others as may be required to form the most varionly colored pattern. As fast as the cloth is printed it passes through an opening in the floor to the drying room, where it becomes hard and ready for use. An Original Bible-Lesson. The teacher called np the Bible-class, and Malcolm sat beside and listened. That morning they had to read one of the chapters in the history of Jacob. "Was Jacob a good man ?" he asked, at soon as the reading, each of the scholars in turn taking a verse, was over. An apparently universal expression of assent followed ; halting id its wake. however, came the voice of a boy near the bottom of toe class : "Wasna he some dooble. sir'" "Yon are right, Sbeltie," said the master ; "he wan double. I must, I find, pnt the question in another shape : Was Jacob a bad man ?" Again came such a burst of yesses that it might have been taken for a general hiss. But limping in the rear came again the half-dissentient voice of Jamie Joss, whom the master had just addressed as Sheltie : "Pairtly. sir." "Yon think, then, Sheltie, that a man may be both bad and good?" "I dinna ken, sir. I think he may be whiles ane an' while the itber, an' whiles maybe it wad be ill to say whilk. Oor collie's whiles in twa min's whether he'll dn what he's tolled or no." ''That's the battle of Armageddon, Sheltie, my man. It's aye ragin', ohn gun roared or bagonet clashed. Ye maun up an' do yer best in't, my man. Gien ye dee fechtin' like a man, ye'll flee up wi' a quaiet face an' wi' wide open een ; an' there's a great Ane 'at '11 say to ye, 'Weel dune, laddie 1 But giec ye gie in to tha enemy, he'll turn ye intill a creepin' thing 'at eats dirt ; an there '11 no be a hole in a' the crys tal wa' o' the New Jerusalem near eneuch to the gran' to lat ye creep throu'." As soon as ever Alexander Graham, the polished thinker and sweet-mannered gentleman, opened his mouth concerning the things he loved best, that moment the most poetio forms came pouring out in the most rugged speech. "I reckon, sir," said Sheltie, "Jacob hadna fonchten oot his battle," "That's jist it, my hoy. And because he wouldna get up and fecht manfully, God had to tak him in ban'. Ye've heard tell o' generals, whan their troops war nnnin awa , haen to cut this man doon, shute that ane, and lick anither, till he turned them a' richt face a boot, and drave them on to the foe like a spate ! And the trouble God took wi' Jacob was na lost upon him at last." "An what cam o' Esau, sir ?" asked a pale-faced maiden with blue eyes. "He wasna an ill kin' o' a chield was he, sir?" "No, Mappy," answered the master ; "he was a fine chield, as yon say ; but he nott (needed) mair time and gentler treatment to mak onything o' him. Ye see he had a guid hert, but was a duller kin' o cratur a'thegither, and cared for naething he conld na see or hanle. He never thoucht mnckle abont God at a. Jacob was anither sort a poet kin' o' a man, bnt a sneck-drawin' cratur for a' that. It was easier, hooever, to get the slyness oot o Jacob, than the dullness oot o' Esau. Punishment tellt upo' Jacob like upon a thin-skinned horse, whauras Esau was mair like the minis ter's powny, that can hardly be made to unnerstan' that ye want him to gang on. Jiat o the ltner nan , dullness is a thing that can be borne wi'; there's t- . l.A, il..A A WmS a 1 AAA t Fa na hurry a boot that : but the deceitfu' tricks o' Jaeob war na to be endured, and sae the tawse (leather-ttrap) came doon upo' him." "An what for didna God make Esau as clever as Jacob?" asked a wizen faced boy near the top of the class. "Ah, my Peery I" said Mr. Graham, "I canna tell ye that. A' that I can tell is, that God hadna dune makin' at him, an' some kin' o' fowk tak langer to make or-: than ithers. An' ye canna tell wh: : they're to be till they're made oot Bat whether what I tell ye be richt or no, God maun hae the Terra best o' rizzons for 't, ower guid maybe for us to unnerstan the best o' rizzons for Esau himsel, I mean, for the Creator luiks efter his cratur first av' (qf all). And now," concluded Mr. Graham, resuming his Eoglish, "go to your les sons ; and be diligent, that God may think it worth while to get on faster with the making of you," LippincotC $ magazine Oa Stage Coach. There are few pleasures in life eqnal to that of riding on the box-seat of a stage-coach, through a country unknown to you, and hearing the driver talk about his horses. We made the inti mate acquaintance of twelve horses on that day ride, and learned the peculiar disposition and traits of each one of them, their ambition of display, their sensitiveness to praise or blame, their faithfulness, their playfulness, the readi ness with which they yielded to kind treatment, their daintiness about food and lodging. May I never forget the spirited little jade, the off-leader in the third stage, the petted belle of the route, the nerv ous, coquettish, mincing mare of Marshy Hope. A spoiled beauty she was ; you could see that as she took the road with dancing step, tossing her pretty head about, and conscious of her shining black coat and her tail done up 'in any sim ple knot" like the back hair of Shel ley's Beatrice Cenci. How she ambled and sidled and plumed herself, and now and then let fiy her little heels high in air in mere excess larkish feeling. "So ! girl ; so I Kitty," murmurs the driver in the softest tones of admira tion ; "she don't mean anything by it, she's just like a kitten." But the heels keep flying above the traces, and by and by the driver is obliged to "speak hash', to the beauty. The reproof of the displeased tone is evidently felt, for she settles at once to her work, showing perhaps a litle im patience, jarking her head np and down, and protesting by her nimble move ments against the more deliberate trot of her companion. I believe that a blow from the cruel lash would have broken her heart ; or else it would have made a little fiend of the spirited creature. The lash is hardly ever good for the sex. I conclude that the most delicate and important occupation in life is staee- driving. It would be easier to "run," the treasury department of the United States than a four-in-hand. I have a sense of the unimportance of everything else in comparison with this business in band. And I think the driver shares that feeling. He is the autocrat of the situation. He is lord of all the humble passengers, and they feel their inferior ity. They may have knowledge and skill in some things, but they are of no j use here At all the stables the driver is king ; all the people on the route are deferential to him ; they are happy if he will crack a joke with them, and take it as a favor if he gives them better than they send. And it is his joke that al ways raises the laugh, regardless of its quality. We carry the royal mail, and a we go along drop little sealed canvas bags at way offices. The bags wonld not hold more than three pints of meal, and I can see that there is nothing in them. Yet somebody along here must be ex pecting a letter, or they wonld not keep up the mail facilities. At French River we change horses. There is a mill there, and there are half a dozen bouses, and a cranky bridge, which the driver thinks will not tumble down this trip. The settlement may have seen better davs. and will probably see worse. Atlantic Monthly. Attacked by Vampires. What an awful item this is for the worshippers of mere Xature. It is meant to excite the self-protective in dustry of Man "Jle who looks up ward" to the destruction of the horrible creatures? or to incite him to the dis gust of mere Materialism, the thing called "common sense?" "A gentleman states that, while in Surinam, he awoke abont four o'clock one morning, and was considerably alarmed by hading himself weltering in congealed blood, and was unable to account for this, as he felt no pain whatever. 'This mystery,' says he, 'was that 1 had bitten by a vampire, or spectre of Guana, which is also called the flying dog of New Spain. This is no other than a bat of monstrous size, that sucks the blood from men and cat tle while they are fast asleep, even, sometimes, till they die ; and as the manner in which they proceed is truly wonderful, I will endeavor to give a clear account of it. Knowing, by in stinct that the person that they intend to attack is in a sound slumber, they generally alight near the feet, where, while the creature continues fanning with his enormous wings, which keeps one cool, he bites a piece out of the great toe, so very small indeed that the head of a pin could scarcely be received into the wound, which is consequently not painful ; yet through this orifice he continues to suck the blood until he is obliged to disgorge. He then begins again, and thns continues sacking and disgorging until he is scarcely able to fly, and the sufferer has often been known to pass from time to eternity. Cattle they generally bite in the ear, but always in places where the blood flows spontaneously. Having applied tobacco ashes, as the best remedy, and washed the gore from myself and ham mock, I observed several heaps of con- fealed blood all around the place where had lain, upon the ground, on exam ing which the surgeon judged that I had lost about fourteen ounces of blood.'" Snow In St. Petersburg. A correspondent of the Hartford Post gives this account of the singular way in which snow falls at St. Petersburg : "The cold steadily increased for per haps ten days, when a little snow began to fall, and almost every day since a little has fallen, till now there is per haps six inches. There has been little or no wind, though one day it blew some and about two inches of snow fell, which is called here quite a storm. I learn there are never any snow storms in this part of Russia during which more than six inches of snow falls. Bnt the acquisition of snow is constant. It does not appear to come from the clouds, but the water held in solution in the atmosphere, which is very damp, it being so near the sea, and country per fectly flat, congeals and crystalizes and then falls slowly bnt constantly half an inch, or perhaps less, per day. No one carries an umbrella, as it does not snow fast enough to get wet in, and nobody minds it, but they walk, ride or skate all the time. Hundreds of men work constantly sweeping the sidewalks, cross walks and streets. It is not in sufficient quantity to shovel, but is swept into heaps and carried off, leaving only enough in the streets to insure good sleighing. In this manner, I learn, it will fall for a month or two longer, and, while there will be perhaps three or four feet in the country, there will never be enough in this city to impede travel, and I believe the horse-cars, of which there are many, run all winter." It is stated that the wife of Senator Sargent, of California, is a strong advo cate of woman suffrage. Pollto Piebpoebets. Among the English visitors to Paris during the gay season of the new year were several pickpockets, who were, however, in most cases, received by the police of the festive city, so that, as the American poet sings, "the subsequent Droceedinirs interested them no more." There were some of the elite of the Eng lish practitioners who are. however. rivalled, if not excelled, in dexterity and ubiquity by their t rench compeers. The Tollowing story is told of the latter by a t rench journal : A physician, offi cially connected with the prison of La i orce and much beloved by this light fingered patients, perceived on leaving the Varieties one evemngthat his pocket hsd been picked and that his opera- glass was gone. Next day, on meeting the denizens of JUa r orce, he expressed his displeasure at the occurrence. "It is all very well," said he, "for you to say I am popular among you, but I am treated just as others are. Some of your friends contrived to relieve me of my opera-glass last night, at the Varieties." "That was only because they did not know you, doctor," replied a prisoner. "Who was on duty at the Varieties last night ?" he required, turn ing to a comrade. The answer was given in a whisper. "You shall have your glass to- morrow," he added. Next day a person called on the physician s wife. "Here." said he, "are all the opera-glasses stolen two nights ago at the Varieties. Please to point out the doctor's." The lady having done so, the obliging pickpocket handed it to her, restored the others to their cases, and disappeared. Pall Mall Gazette. Dlckea's Domestic Life. The vounger sister of Mrs. Dickens Miss Hogarth, who was with Dickens when he died was a member of his household from the time of his marriage. She was a lady of greater energy of character than her sister, Mrs. Dickens, and had the faculty of keeping the house in order, and of doing wonders in the education of the children. She was housekeeper and governess in one. Mrs. Dickens, after many years, became acquainted with the fact that she was of inferior consequence in her husband's bouse, and was in deep distress because the children loved their aunt better than their mother. So the jealousy of the lady was aronsed, not on account of her husband's affections going astray, but because her sister had won the hearts of her children. As this occurred after many years of acquiescence in her inferiority as to usefulness, the demonstrations of Mrs. Dickens were regarded by her husband as exceedingly absurd. Mrs. Dickens could not bear to accept the situation, aud at last made the issue that if her sister did not leave the honse she would leave it. Dickens said that he thought the presence of the sister-in-law was more important to the children, whom she had cared for from their infancy, than that of the wife, who had been of no service to them after they were born and suckled. Therefore his wife might go ; and she did go, taking her eldest son, Charles Dickens, Jr., with her. After the separation the estrangement grew more serious, and the terms in which Dickens mentions his wife in his will are cold and almost disrespectful. The Art omnJaJiea Ware. The Moorish potters made a very beautiful ware, known to collectors as Hispuuo-Moresque, and easily recog nizable by the peculiar metallic lustre ou its surface. This ware w; e Lirgely expurtcd from Spain to Italy, ins miiii-h that the most and the finest pieces are to this day found in that country, and not iu puin; and in time the Italians began to set up potteries of their own, and to imitate the Moorish ware. They called their imitations Majolica or Maio lica the ancient Italian name of Ma jorca either because the Moorish pot tery was made there or thence brought, or because the Italians fancied that it was. At going oil the Italian potters could not compass either the lustre of the Moorish ware or the rich, enamel like glaze of these forciirn potters, and their first works were led glazed, and are known tocollectorsas half Majolica, "Mezza Majolica ;' but towards the end of the fifteenth century they liegan to imitate the lustred wares. At last they got hold of the great tin secret, and their pottery soon surpassed the 11 is-pauo-Moresque wares in beauty. In the Moors' own speciality of lustred wares they were excelled by the Ital ians, and at the town of Uubbioa mode of imparting a lustre of a red color of surpassing beauty was invented a se cret that was never disseminated, aud soon lost; and the rare ruby-lustred plates of Gubbio are now among the greatest treasures of the art collectors. A Trait of Tennjson. One peculiar trait in the character of the poet laureate is his unusual shrink ing from active life and public view. The world knows little of his life it knows him by his poems. It has evi dently been Mr. Tennyson's desire to escape observation, and he succeeds in doing so very thoroughly. Few stran gers gain access to him, and conse quently many ill-natured stories have been circulated at his expense. One anecdote, however, not particularly ill natured, will bear repeating. A well known prince of the house, of Bruns wick, familiar with Mr. Tennyson's shrinking habits, yet naturally anxious to pay his respects to the poet, in the neighborhood of whose home in the Isle of Wight he found himself, made a call unaccompanied and strictly incog nito. A page came to the door, "Who shall I say?" "The Prince of Wales," was the reply. Whereupon the page playfully observed, "Ha 1 yes ; prince of Wales. We know a trick worth two of that 1" and slammed the poet's door in his royal highness' face. The Dlfllenltlea of Prospective Matrimony. It is said that Sir Walter Campbell, who was lately in a mercantile firm in New York, wished to marry an American young lady, of good position, in the Empire State. TJpon his applying to the young lady 'a father, the parent stated he always referred all those questions to his wife. The mother in her turn, stated that she must refer it to the Duke of Argyll. The Duke pleaded that, considering his connec tion with royalty, he must consult his eldest son. The Marquis could do nothing without the Queen's consent. Her majesty felt that the issue must be referred to the Dake of Saxe-Cobonrg-Gotha, as head of the family. The Duke rejoined that, since the recent changes in Germany, he looked upon the Emperor William as his sovereign, and must bow to his advice. The Em peror said he could do nothing without Prince Bismarck's opinion ; and Prince Bismarck declared he had no opinion at all, one way or the other ; and so the question to marry or not to marry was brought to a dead lock. Parliament's earliest fruit The Queen's peach. Youths Column. Osc eweetly-aolemn tlxmcht Come, to m off ad o'er. Tin near-r to my F.t'era uooaa Th.a ever 1 vita before. Nearer the bound of !ife, Wnrre we lay our burUena down. Nearer leeviuir my eroa, Nearer W(.ariu auy crown. A Rica Yocso Mas. We call him "Bobolink," and "Pappoose," and "Old Blessed," and all sorts of names you know how they call babies. Your great six-year-old Harry wonld not think him much of a fellow, I suppose, this small man of six months, but he thinks he is, and so does his mother, and his father, and all the family. He considers himself very rich, too, or, as grown np people say, "well-off." He has such white, round little pegs hied on to his bands for him to play with. He sticks them up and looks at them sidewise, and edgeway, and every way, and they never get lost like your playthings, they are always on hand. They aro so nice to eat, too. First one fist goes into his mouth, then the other, then both fists. The only trouble is he cannot swallow them, they are so big, or something. Too bad, isn't it ? Bnt he doesn't get discouraged. Why, it was only yesterday he was trying to swallow a large blanket shawl and all his petticoats ; then he plunged his head into a big feather pillow, and opened his month at that in a way which must have been very alarming to the pillow. Sometimes he gets hold of those little pink fellows down below. He thinks they are the cunningest. There is such a drove of them 1 He can't count them himself, bnt I believe there are as many as ten. One of them "goes to market," and one of them "stays at home," and there is a little mite of a one that don't get any bread and but ter. How he does squeal. Dear 1 dear t You would think this young man wonld cry to hear him ; but he don t ; the ripples of laughter come gurgling up Lia little fat throat, until, when at last the poor piggy gives his very hardest qneal, he almost explodes with glee. n so pleasant to bava jollv little fat pi of one's own to play with ! Ten live piuk piggies ! Just tliiuk of it ! But that is not all O no I He owns a most lovely piece of red flannel, which his graudnia gave him, that is very valuable. It is such a pretty thing and so bright ! He turns it over, and views it in every light, and tastes of it. If you should lay a ten-thonsand-dollar greenback down beside it, he would grasp in pre ference that gorgeous, magnificent rag. Yon conldn't buy that of him with ten or twenty thousand dollars. I Then he has a great many fine musical ' instruments that be plays on splendidly. Every newspaper he can get hold of he turns into a piano or organ. He scratches his nails on them, and digs holes through them, and you onght to bear bow beautifully they ilo rattle ; but the brown paper that came around the sugar is the be: t, that is so crackly and high toned. Nelly's Compast. Nelly's honse was on the door-step, and Bhe was going to have company. She went down to the other end of the walk, where Harry lived, and rapped on the fence. Harry did not seem to hear her at first. Perhaps that was becanse he was so bnsy making pies. He had some currants, aud some sand for sugar, and was stirring them briskly together in a broken lamp-chimney. Nelly waited a little while, and then rapped again ; and this time Harry shonted, "Come in !" ' Hiiw do you do. Mr. Rice ?" said Nelly. "It's a ieautiful day, isn't it?" "Yes," said Harry; "very fine. Won't yon take a seat ?" "I'm Mrs. Bradley," said Nelly, seat ing herself upon the block of wood that was Harry's sofa. "I'm going to have company, and I want you to come to tea." Harry dropped his currants, and took his hat down from the fence. "I don't want you to come now," said Nelly. "It is morning now. I don't wautyon come nutil afternoon. The! lowest step is my parlor ; and after din- j ner x snuii ue lutie, aud then you may come." Harry waited until he saw Nelly seated in her parlor, and then went to make his visit. Besides Harry, there were Nelly's little brother Willy, and Dinah the cat. They had a footstool for a table, and pretty little dishes with gilt bands and flowers. They had real bread, and cake too, and currants for preserves. Neily poured the water into the little cups, aud pretended to pnt in sugar and cream. Harry sat on the other side of the table, and passed the currants. Little Willy did not know how to play having company, and soon ran away to play with his ball. As for Kitty, she played with her tail, and acted so badly, that Nelly had to tell her that she must go away, and have her snpper by herself. After Nelly and Harry had eaten np the bread and cake, they wished the dishes, and put them away. Then Harry asked Nelly to come and see him some time, and said, "Good-by, Mrs. Bradley." The Sursenj. A Swarm op Bees. Take B from an instrument of sound, and leave a mea sure. Take B from a small vessel, and leave a grain. Take B from a basin, and leave a bird. Take B from a blossom, and leave a machine. Take B from a color, and leave want. Take B from a note, and leave sick ness. Take B from a shrub, and leave to wander. Take B from an aniraal, and leave a human feature. Annwer.- (B)ell; (B)oat ; (B)owl; (B)loom ; (B;lack ; (B,L1 ; (B;ramble ; ! (Biear. j A gestlexas, coming home at even-; irg, spoke hastily to his little three-1 year-old, who was playing very noisily. I The little lady dropped her playthings, ' and retreated indignantly to a corner, j "What is the matter ?" asked papa, i "Well," said the child, "I've beea a ! good girl all this day, and now yon . come home an! make trouble the first thing !" Word Square. A girl's name. An Eastern country. A small brook. Name of a college. Answer: M A R Y ASIA RILL YALE. Longfellow, on being at-ked by a country scboolmar'in recently to write his name in her album, "with a senti ment," replied, "I will write my name, bnt 1 haven't any sentiments." "Varieties. Gertrude thinks Lent a good time for proposals, for then it is so easy to aah(k) papa. Nothing can make a man truly great but being truly good, and partaking of God's holiness. Small frather fans are said to be tak ing the p'ooe of the gigantic wind sails of last summer. The beginning of things is in our own power, but the end thereof resteth, at God's disposing. The farmers in Scott county, HL, find it difficult to keep the wolf away from the door, positively, not figuratively. A young lady in Indiana was so dis gusted with her young man for running at the sight of a ghost, that she is mak ing preparations to marry the ghost. Busy not thyself in searching into other men's lives ; the errors of thine own are more than thou canst answer for. It more concerns thee to mend one fault in thyself, than to find ont a thou sand in others. Bishop Leighton. Mr. Beecher says, in a recent sermon: To fall from high position socially by reason of misfortune in business, or by loss of wealth, is to the lower sort of men degradation, but to the higher it is coronation. The Sultan Abdul Aziz, it is said. was most graceful in his bearing to wards the Empress Eugenie daring her stay at Constantinople, his habitual brusqneness giving place to an unwon ted amiability. After her departure he actually moped. A lady lecturer, who has the right to pnt M. D. after her name, argues that, because American women are enthusi astic, they are the handsomest women in the world. Foreign women, as a rule, become too stout, are too phleg matic, too expressionless " Joannin Miller is said to have cwed the inspiration of his verses entitled "The Indian Summer, contained in "San Land Songs," to a Cleveland lady. The fair inspirer is said to have been offended at what a great many girls would give their newest boots to gain. In a French industrial establishment, employing 630 men, chiefly vegetarians, the sick fond was constantly in debt. By the introduction of meat into the food of the men, the average loss of time per man, on account of illness or fatigue, was reduced from 15 to 3 days per annum. Said Lord John Russell to Hume at a social dinner, "What do yon consider the object of legislation ?" "The great est good to the greatest number?" "What do you consider the greatest nnnalier?" continued his Lordship. "Number one, my Lord," was the com moner's reply. The English Nobility are divided into dukes, marquises, earls, viscounts, barons. These all are specified in a big book called the Peerage and Baro netage of the British Empire, by Ed mund Lodge. In some large libraries, like Astor, it can probably be found, bnt as it is little needed in this demo cratic country, it is rarely seen here. Ill-health should be avot 3d. br state action as well as personal care, inas much as it diminishes mental and phy sical force ; bnt as we. are all under sen tence of capital punishment, is it worth while to make the enormous fuss every body is now doing abont every thing which makes, or possibly may make, death come a little quicker? Is there no force in Frederick's apothegm, as he caned the flying soldier, Yoa rascal, do you want to live forever T " A peculiar case of forgetfulness and increase of treasure came up in Lowell, Mass., recently, at the Lowell institute for earnings. Years ago, a yonng lady from Sand ford. Me., came to Lowell, and from her earnings deposited 31 "5 in this institution. She left the city twenty-one years ago and returned home, and in course of time forgot her deposit. Recently it occurred to her that she might have some money there, and she wrote to inquire if there was anything left for her. Mr. Canney, the treasurer, reported that there) was a bal ance there of $785.95, which will un doubtedly be gratifying intelligence. The Boston Public Library contained on the first of January 258.0UO volume, an iucrease during the year of 55,700. Sixteen thousand is estimated as the ordinary increase for the year, as of the total increase, over 20, 01)0 volumes were acquired by the " annexation " of Charleston and Brighton to Boston, and 12,000 were received as an exceptional gift. The Boston library is not as large nor as valuable as that of the British Museum, but is probably more useful to the general public Of the British library, a writer in the London Times says : "The nse of the library is practi cally restricted to the few who inhabit its purlieus," while that of Boston aims to realize the inscription over its por tals, "Public Library, Open to All." Ia England a more rigorous observ ance of etiquette obtains, in the graver relations of life, than with ourselves. People am invited to prayer-meetings in London the same as to an evening party cards being issued bearing the following, or similar, announcements : "Mr. and Mrs. propose (D. V.) to hold a Bible reading on evening, from seven to nine o'clock. Morning dress." Bibles are handed around on trays, and, altogether, piety is presen ted" in rather an amusing phase. "Mem oriam cards" are also en regie there. They are issued a week or ten days after the decease of a relative, and bear the words "In Memoriam," with the name, age, time of death, and place of interment ; also the names of the par ties who issue the cards; and those who receive them are at liberty to make a call of condolence on the bereaved family. Mr. BertalL a well-known French caricaturist, has been photographing modern society in sixty chapters, ana among his classifications are several in reference to the dress coat. The pro fessor, he says, the orator, the econo mist buttons bis coat hermetically as if in solemn attempt to compress the tu multuous outbursts of stupendous in tellect; the coat of the savant never fits ; the officer's coat fits too welL The artist's coat takes every form ; the ban ker's coat is just as he chooses it might be a sack and he would be equally well received. The clerk's coat has no characteristic, while that of the literary man fluctuates between the apogee of elegance and the depths of slovenliness. An odd paragraph in M. Bertall's album tells the story of the way in which the late eccentric fashions in feminine cos tume were adopted. He contributed a series of caricatures to the Vie ParisU enne ridiculing, as he thought, the ab surdity of the dresses worn in Sardou's comedy. Im Famille Benoiton. A fort night after, all the fashionable dress makers in Paris had literally and seri ously copied his satires. "Be a Juvenal after that !" says BertalL