-i v. glS jf If 1 . 1 1 SCw tlL B- F- SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION TUB UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., MAY 13, 1874. NO. 19. I'oetry. WHAT THE WIXD-EI.TES HEAKD AID HAW. T EBEH E. Bsxroan. The West Wind : The saddest sound that I ever heard the vailing plaint of a mother-bird For the one woe nestling that cheered her nest. Dead, with a thorn in its pretty breast. The South Wind : I hare known a sight that was sadder still; There's a grave op yonder, upon the hill. And a mother weeps at her poor boy's name. For his rained soul, and his guilt and e'TV The West Wind . The sweetest sight that I ever knew Was the luaa of two lovers whose lore was true As they pledged themselves, come weal or woe. One path in life they would henoeforth know, TV South Wind : Once, when a weary old man died, I saw Heaven's gates swung open wide. And his wife, who an angel long had been. Stretched welcoming bands, and cried. "Dear, come in !" And the look on her face! I was dumb with awe A sight that was grander I never saw. Trie Wat Wind : Last night, when the stars were out in the blue, like a dead white-lily kissed by dew, I saw a baby of two short years Wet with its mDiiroinj mother's tears. The South Wind . I saw a mother go in one day Through the gates of Heaven, and heard her eay, "Is my baby here ?" And they put in her arms A wee child, sweet with a baby's charms; And aha cried as she kissed it her face aglow, "I have found my babe ! This it Heaven, know .'" Xisscellan,y. Famine Series la India. From the voluminous contributions to the Loudon Daily News by its 1 ir- hoot (India) correspondent we extract the following: " isiting the police station, we found collected around it a number of beggars in a very miserable condition. One lay extended on the ground to all appearance slowly dying Two native doctors were calmly look- in? on, as were lots of policemen and other petty officials, but do one took any notice of the poor miserable wretch. Macdonald's relief house is not vet finished: but he had arranged to use a house as a temporary hospital, and thither he ordered that all the dis eased beggars should at once be taken. ana nave 100a uismuuieu 10 meni. 'i i... . - l - -;,k ............... 1UC utUBUaic uif(;iii, miu anaiaui-it.c. slowly got on his legs, and as lie stood 1 never saw a leaner mortal with litem hi in. He could not walk; but with much moaning he shuttled along, no body tendering him a supporting arm. A short time after, we visited the place to which they had been taken, for we were full of misgivings that the relief had not lieen prompt. In a straw shed we found the unfortunate squatted on the ground, all save the mau of whom I have spoken, who had sunk down and seemed in extremis, while the native doctor calmly stood outside the door enjoying the evening air. 'Has anything been done to gel looa lor theni F 1 asked. Nothing. By order of my companion the police inspector handed a rupee to the native doctor and bade him at once send into the ba zaar for food. The native doctor calmly did so, and then, strolling np to the living skeleton, gave him a push and told him it would be all light by and bv. The food came at once, a species of parched pnlse which required to be cooked. This was distributed, and among the recipients was the living skeleton. That is to say as he lay moaning a couple of hand fulls were emptied out on the corner of his ragged cloth, and ge,neral satisfaction ap peared to reign at this achieviueut. Why, they might as well have put a reaping hook into his bauds and bade him go find his food in the held. He painfully raised himself on his elbow, looked with glassy eyes at the stuff, tried in vain to masticate a pinch of it, and then mink back with a groan of despair. Native functionaries looked calmly on. It seemed to me that it was not well possible that the man's life could lie saved, yet it was not pleasant to me that he should In allowed to die without even an effort to avert the fate. It was with some passion that I de manded cooked food should at once le sought, ottering to pay the price of it. The people around stared and then began to stir themselves. Presently a mau came running with some cooked rice, moistened with oil, on a plantain leaf. We raised np the 6Uifeier, and let him see aud smell the food. The skinny arm went out feeblv towards it. lie gathered up some in his lingers and put it in hisniouth. The first mouth ful came nigh choking him, and I thought he was iroing to die in onr hands with food in his mouth, but he made good the r-wallow, and went on eating. The food perceptibly revived him. He licked the leaf after he had eaten the rice off it, aud then picked up the single grains that had fallen as he ate. Having eaten, he tried to raise to his lips the water jar, but was too weak. I quite lost my temper when I saw the native doctor looking down on his efforts as if they were an experi ment of which he was an amateur spectator. He got his drink and then lay down, his chance of life, though still extremelv precarious, materially im o roved. Meanwhile, the other un fortunates had gone away to cook their food, and they will starve no more. ' Stray Thoaghta. We are all hunters in the field of life. Some o! us bring down onr game ; but most of as end in a wild goose chase. Were it not for the clouds that darken us, there would be no rainbow in oar uvea. When you read, read the best books ; it costs you no more ; and what you get will correct and help to build you np. A good book is like a voice from nature or from God. Do not confound this voice with the ntteranoe of falsehood. A child is often the hyphen connect ing the uncongenial husband ana wile, ao common about TOO. It is not in placing the words that the effect of the good writer consists ; it is in the thought bringing its own word, that leaps to it like the particle to the magnet. We are sinning when we think we are. Perhaps the greatest good next to doing good to your "neighbor," is to heneM vonr enemv. But some people hean coals of fire on their enemy head to ecorch him, thus making use of a Christian precept to do eviL Idleness is the great slough into which the vices of the world drift and settle, to rise again in miasma. It should not discourage ns if onr kindness is unacknowledged ; it has its influence still. We govern our passions ; but in general we let the passions first have a trial. Tie lire of man is the aggregate of his loves. THE SEARCH FOB JOHSI NSIiril. John Smith married my father's great ancle' eldest daughter, Melinda Byrne; consequently I was a relative to John. John's family had often visited at onr quiet country home, and at each visit had most cordially pressed ns to return the compliment. Last October, business called me suddenly to the city of B , where oar relative resided, and without having time to write or apprise them of my coming, I was intending to visit the family of Mr. John Smith. With my accustomed carelessness, I had left his precise address at home in my notebook, but I thought bat little of it. I could easily find him, I thought to myself, as the cars set me down amid the smoke and bustle of . I inquired for my relative of the first hackman I came across. He looked at me with an ill suppressed grin. What was the fellow laughing at ? To be sure my clothes were not of the latest cut, and it is not just the thing for any one ont of the army to wear bine with bright buttons ; bat my coat was whole, and my aunt Betsy had scoured the buttons with whiting and soft soap until they shone like gold. I repeated my question with dignity : "Can you direct me to the residence of Mr. John Smith ?" "Mr. S m i-t-h ?" he said slowly. "Yes, sir, Mr. John Smith. He mar ried my father's great ancle's eldest daughter, Melinda," "I don't think I know a John Smith with a wife Melinda." John Smith seemed to be a common name with him, from the peculiar tone he nsed in speaking of that individual. "Ah I" remarked I, "then there is more than one of that name in the city?" "I rather think there is." "Very well, then, direct me to the nearest." "The nearest is in West street, second left hand corner yon will aee the name on the door." I passed on, congratulating myself on the cordial welcome I should receive from John and Melinda. I soon reached the place a handsome house with the name on a silver door plate ; I rang the bell a servant ap peared. "Mr. Smith in ?" "No, sir ; Mr. Smith is in the army." "Mrs. Smith is she?" 'In the army ? oh, no she is at the beach." "This Mr. John Smith's house, isit" "ft is." "Was his wife's name Melinda, and was she a Byrne before she was mar ried, from Squash ville ?" The man reddened and responded angrily, "I'll not stand here to be in sulted I Make off with yourself, or I'll call the police. I thought from the first that jou were fcn entry thief, bat yoa don't play no game on me !" and he banged the door in my face. I, a thief ! If I had not been in such a harry to find the Smiths, I should have given that rascally fellow a sound chastising on the spot. Inquiry elicited the fact that a John Smith resided in Arch street. Thither I bent my steps. A maid servant an swered my ring. "Mr. Smith in T Before the lady could reply, a big. red faced man jumped out of the shad ows behind the door, and bud his heavy hand on my shoulder. "Yes, sir, he cried, in a voice of thunder. "Mr. Smith ia in. He staid at home all day on purpose to catch yoa ! and now by J apiter, I II nave my revenge I "Sir," said I, "there mast be some mistake. Allow me to inquire if yoa are Mr. Jchn Smith ?" T'1 1 iVfn.m klinnt Tr Trttiti Smith in a way that yoa won't relish, if yoa dou't settle damages forthwith. Five thousand dollars is the very lowest 1 A , ft I ugure ana you must leave me country i I cried. "What do yoa take me for? You'd better be careful or You'll get your head caved in ?" "1 11 cave your head in lor you, you voung villlain. von 1" cried he springing at me with his cane. 0h, John, dear John !" exclaimed a olirill femalA vnirv anil a tall fiffnrfl in a sea of flounces bounded down the stairway. "Lion t don t lor the love of heaven don't murder him." " Whom do you take me for?" cried I, my temper rising. "It looks well for yoa to ask that question I" sneered the man, "you have won my wife's heart, and are here now to plan to Aslope witn iter i i ve ionna - all tnt vtn nAAsln't hlnnh. and "I Yseg jour pardon for interrupting you, Btiu Xf Dul l nave neTer Been w.Aw viIa KafnM T nAnwivA h im Tint. Melinda, the eldest daughter of my Art xrnn Un, that won STA Wil- j..p . J - f Ham Jonea ? Do yon deny that you are in love with my wife ?" "I am not a Jonea I have not that honor sir. Mr name is Parkwell Henry Parkweil, of Sqnashville !" and kti t Vi . hna tnnk mvfwlf off. After that I called at the residence of three John Smiths none of them was my Mr. Smith, and nothing occurred worthy oi note. My next Mr. Smith resided in Port- t.,.,.1 .tmot Thithnr T bent tnv aterjft. It was very small evidently not the . . , , , v bouse oi weaitn ana cieaniiuess. wi v nn t the front door. through a wildernessof old rags, broken crockery, old tin ware, eve, k'i"(! a nock of hens ana rousing Buppuu little terrier from his nap on the steps. ft Mj.r.Mul mmin answered mv raD. but before I could make my customary inquiry she opened on me like a two edged butcher-knife. OToil l all that imnndent rascals tu.t r aoo vnn host the lot 1 I J want to know if yon had the cheek to . . - 1 1 i: i .A come back here again r xouu mo sell me another German silver pot, and another brass bosom pin to dear Ara minta wouldn't yon " "By no means, said I ; "I beg leave 4a infitrm Vtntl "Oh, yoa needn't beg I We don't , , ? T .'nnu von oeueve iu iwKmi r" thought I should not know you but I did 1 I should know that black back of yours in Californy t Clear out of my presence or I'll lay my broom-handle I T IhoM im .nvthinir T hat. over yu i j o , , ' it's a peddler especially a rascal like y"Allowme to inquire," said I, "If Mr John Smith's wife was Melinda Byrne, the eldest daughter of my father's" . , , The broomstick was lifted, I heard it cut the air like a minute ballet, and sprang down the step into the street, t my best pace. An angry man I do not fear, bat who can stand before an angry woman? I would rather face a roariug lion. I called on two more Mr. Smith s still unsuccessful in my search. It was getting near dark, and I was more than anxious to reach my destination. My next Mr. Smith was located ia Lenox street. It was twilight when I rang the bell at his door. A smiling fellow admitted me fairly forcing me into the hall, before I could utter a word. "Walk right in. sir." I was gently noshed toward the door of a shadowy apartment, and at the en trance I was announced : "Mr. Henry!" The gaa was not lighted, and the apartment was in semi-darkness. I heard a soft, quick footstep on the car pet, and a pair of the sweetest lips in the world touched mine ; and, good gracious for a moment the world swam ; and I felt as if I had been stewed in boner, and distilled into Lubin'a best triple extract of rosea. "Oh, Henry my dearest and best I Why don't you kiss me, Henry?" cried a voice like music "Have yon ceased to care for me?" and again the kiss was repeated. Who could resist the temptation ? I am naturally a diffident man, bnt I have some human nature in me, and I paid her principal and interest. "Oh. Henrv. I had so feared that being in the army had made yon cold hearted good heavens '" She fell back against a chair as pale as death. The servant had lit the gas, and I stood re vealed. "I beg your pardon, mann." said I. "there is evidently some mistake. May I inquire if Mr. Smith's wife was Melinda Byrne, the eldest daughter of my father's great uncle " The red flush came to the young lady's cheek she was handsome as a picture and she replied with courtesy: "She wss not. Ion will, I nope, ex- case me for the blander I have com mitted? We are expecting my brother rlenry from the army, and your bine clothes deceived me." "For which I shall always wear bine," I replied gallantly. "Allow me to introduce myself I am Henry Park- well, of Sqnashville. and in making my best bow, I stumbled over an otto man, and fell smash into a china closet. demolishing at leant a dozen plates and as many glass tumblers. I sprang to my feet seized my bag. and without a word dashed out of the house. I knocked over a man who was pass ing at the moment, and landed myself on my head in the gutter. The man picked himself np, and was about to make a display of muscle, when the glare of the street lamp revealed to me the well known face of my John smith. "Eureka I" cried L "Allow me to inquire if your wife was Melinda, the eldest daughter of my father's great uncle .Byrne 7 "She was!" said he. grasping my hand, "and I am delighted to see yoa 1 But. confound it I yoa needn t come at a fellow so 1" Bat I mast eat my storr short. He took me borne with him and I had a good visit ; I saw Melinda to my heart s conteut. A ay, more 1 met, was properly introduced to Hattie Smith and well I am having a new suit of clothes made and in due course they will be married myself in them, to the young lady just alluded to. Cablnrt Timber. The indications are that within the next ten or fifteen years the curled and bird's eye maple timber of the West will be in active demand throughout the Eastern, Middle, and Southern States for cabinet ware and cabinet pur poses. Twenty years ago mahogany was nsed for cabinet purposes throughout the Eist. bnt either the demand so far ex ceeded the supply or the taste changed. and at present time walnut is Uie style. The supply of walnut, mainly obtained from Indiana, is decreasing. Indian apolis and Toledo are now the great business centres for walnut lumber, i Tl.. nn.l,An, k.lf nf Kaon JL uu uvibuiita linn vr a auuwubi isin n..M already stripped of its walnut timber, and the saw-mills have been removed to the southern portion of the State to consume what is left standing. Musical instrumentii. furniture sets. sewing machines, and nearly every article of fashionable construction now in nse, including fashionable coffins, all over the East and South, are made of walnut. Annually the price of this lumber rises, and as it grows dearer and scarcer it is beginning to be quoted in European markets, lisst vear ftiw England alone nsed 26,000.000 feet of walnut lumber in furniture, musical in struments, sewing machines, house trimmings, decorations, and coffins. The present rate of consumption of this timber will, within from ten to fifteen years, compel the adoption of some substitute, and curled and bird s-eye maple of which there are large quan tities in the forests of Michigan, Wis consin, Iowa, and in portions of Canada must be utilized. There will be no alternative. Europe, for the past, has been depending more and more largely upon American forests for timber and lumber, especially hard-wood varieties, as witness the shipments of large quan tities of oak wainscoting for the Liver pool market. For many purposes it is superior in quality to any varieties that grow there. The consumption of vari ous kinds of hard wood lumber in the United States annually for furniture alone, - is an immense business, and amounts to more than many people are aware of. In fact there is little if any timber of any kind now growing or standing anywhere in the United States that is not valuable and worth money. Maine, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Mi chigan are four States a principal source of whose health consists in the timber and lumber business, interests and in dustries. The Ace. A writer in the Overland Monthly discussing the "forces of culture,'' says: "If we should divide culture into a dozen eras instead of only into the stone, bronze and iron ages, we should have to designate nearly all of them from industrial events. The sailing vessel, the mould board, which turns over the farrow of the plough, the water wheel, the magnetic needle, gun powder, the paper mill, movable type, the spinning wheel, the telescope, the microscope, the quadrant, the chro nometer, the steam engine, the steam host, the steam railroad, tbe steam blast in smelting furnaces, the puddling furnace, the rolling mill, and lanor saving machinery of a thousand kinds thew are triumphs of industry, and the main causes of the superiority of modern over ancient civilization. It is tbe workingman, not the soldier, the priest the statesman, the philosopher, the scientist, the artist, nor the author, who has given us not only the founda tion, bat also most of the superstruc ture, of our culture." t:.... i in California J ltJJ , CI 1U. v . and Nevada have been made to neb an extent as to warrant the belief that from these sources the markets in the east of the American continent wui, at no distant time, be able to draw their chief supplies. Aa lej Tsmb, The Hamilton Spectator relates a very remarkable incident which oc curred on tbe shore of Lake Ontario, a short distance east of that city. It says ; "About the first of January last, it will be remembered, there was a great thaw here, which partly bared the fields of the surrounding country, and transformed the frozen creeks into swollen, rnshing freshets. At about the time of this freshet, in Febuary, a farmer, whose land was situated on the shore of the lake, lost a bog from among a number that were allowed to range the barnyard and fields. Circum stances, which it is meedless to refer to, pointed suspicion of theft at a certain person, bat the farmer being unable to trace any satisfactory evidence the matter was allowed to drop. A couple of days ago a son of the farmer was along the lake duck hunting, and hap pened to be standing for a moment by a projecting point of the icy banks which were then thawed away to much smaller eminence, some of them, indeed, having already disappeared when he heard a noise. Though nobody ap peared to be near the noise after a pause was repeated. He listeneb intently, and again, after a silence, the sound was heard, this time apparently pro eeedimg from the ice beneath him. On bending his ear to the ice the singular sound broke forth with more distinct ness and seemed to be a voice. His cu riosity was now excited to its ntmost in tensity, and he began to examine into the state of the ioe that appeared to hold the secret of this nnnatual voice. Kicking away a lump of ice from the top he observed a hole in the mound. He peeped into this, but was forced to draw back from the fetid smell that is sued, like a poisonous gas, from the opening. But he did not desist. Be tween scraping and kicking he at last made the aperture of the cavity quite large, and once more looking into the steuchy bole, saw to his otter wonder and amazement a hog I Proceeding without a delay to the house, he pro cured an axe, and returning, chopped open daylight iuto the strange residence of tbe porcine in short order. He found the poor animal ia the same position as when he had left him, with bis hams upon the sand, but erect upon his fore legs. A great portion of his hair and bristles bad dropped out, and formed a thin bedding among the sands, and the animal himself was literally but skin and bone, and was too weak to move from bis position. He was pulled out, however, but was unable to stand npon his four feet. On inspecting tbe cave tbe aand underneath was found to have been loosened for a depth of two feet and a half, and burrow holes had been dug along the surface some three or four feet, in several places on each side. It appeared that pure air and the mo tion induced by being dragged ont of his six weeks, home had a fatal effect on him, for he died in less than nine hours after having been taken out- Ex elusive of the borrow holes, the cavity was bat seven feet in diameter, aud how he got sufficient air to sustain life, or how he obtained enough food to keep him in existeuce is mystery indeed. It ia possible that it survived on dead fish aud other staff which it could get by burrowing. This is the only explana tion of the wonderful mystery of how it kept alive. One rather singular and unaccountable act in connection with this strange matter was, that the sides of the upper portion of the cave were turned to a yellow color, and thia color was distinctly noticeable to the depth of nearly three inches in the ice. Tempers. Few men have sweet tempers, or hold such as they possess under steady, in variable control, though there are men who, without this sweetness of nature, however much tried, never seem to lose their self-command. No publio man can get on long who has not bis temper well in hand;but with tbe same amount of inflammable particles men differ very much on the occasions that set fire to them. Some people, who are all com posure when we might reasonably ex pect and justly excuse an explosion, will break down into peevishness, or passing frenzy on slight provocation. We have known men, quite remarkable for a well-bred serenity, be unreason ably and childishly testy at some tran sient annoyance of a sort they are not nsed to. Highly sensitive organiza tions and intellects kept on the stretch are always irritable. Do Quincey, who has no heroes, says that Wadaworth, with all hia philosophy, had fits of ill temper, though the unexampled sweet ness of his wife's temper made it im possible to quarrel with her. The two great hymn writers and good Christians, Newton and Toplady, met but once, and but for a few moments, yet something passed a triging jesl which npset Toplady ' equanimity, and made his parting words, we are told by the friendly by stand er, not very cour teous. There are times when men think they do well to be angry, and atribute their display of ill-temper to a holy im pulse, while the observer sees only a common pet exposing itself at the most unsuitable moment at the failure of their efforts to attaact and impress, perhaps to shine. The preacher is par ticularly subject to the temptation of an angry remonstrance uttered in this spirit- It must be hard to feel your best passages lost through tbe restless ness of school children or the infec tious inattention of the singing gallery; but it telJom answers to allow the chafed spirit its fling. The parson may be in a passion without kuowing it, but not without the congregation being quite alive to it, and the remem brance of a scene outliving every other effect of his discourse. Aa Answer t Prayer. An English Town Missionary a short time ago related a remarkable incident which may interest many of our readers. There was a lodging house in his dis trict, which he had long desired to en ter, but was deterred from so doing by his friend, who feared that his life would be thereby endangered. He became at last so uneasy that he deter mined to risk all consequences and try to gain admission. So one day he gave a somewhat timid knock at the door, in response to which a coarse voice roared ont, "Who's there ?" and at the same moment a vicious looking woman opened tbe door and ordered the man of God away. "Let him come in and see who be is and what be wante," growls out the same voice. Tbe missionary walked in, and bowing politely to the rough looking man whom he had just heard speak, said, "I have been visiting most of the houses in this neighborhood to read with and talk to the people about good things. I have passed yonr door aa long as I feel I ought, for I wish also to talk with you and your lodgers." "Are you what is called a town missionary ?" I am, air," was tbe reply. "Well then," said the fierce looking man, "sit down, and hear what I am going to say. I will ask you a question out of the Bible. If you answer me right, you may call at this home and read and pray with ns or our lodgers, as often as you like; if you do not answer me right, we will tear the clothes off your back and tum ble yoa neck and heels into tbe street. Now what do you say to that, for I am a man of my word ?" The missionary was perplexed bnt, at length quietly said, "I will take you." "Well, then," said the man, "here goes. Is the word girl in any part of the Bible ? if so, where is it to be found? and how often ? that is my question." "Well, sir, the word girl is in the Bible, but only once, and may be found in tbe words of the prophet Joel, chap ter iiL, verse 3. The words are, "And sold a girl for wine, that they might drink.'" "Well," replied the man, "I am dead beat, I durst have bet five pounds you could not have told." "And I could not have told yester day," said the visitor. "For several days I have been praying that the Lord would open me a way into this house, and this very morning, when reading tbe Scriptures in my family, I was sur prised to find the word girl, and got the Concordance to see if it occurred again, and found it did not And now, sir, I believe that God did know, and does know what will coma to pass, and surely His hand is iu this for my protection and your Good." The whole of the inmates were greatly surprised, and the incident has been overruled to the conversion of tbe man, bis wife, and two of the lodgers. Surely God is yet tbe answerer of prayer. lVwmea la Enslaad. Some information of great interest to woman, as well as some kind and fatherly observations respecting her, will Ive found in the General Report of the Census, 1871, lately issued. As girls and women of all ages, says the report, now constitute more than half of the population of England, their oc cupations are of vital importance ; 3, 948,527 are wives and a large proportion are mothers. This, adds the report, is a noble and esseutial occupation, as on the husband's labor and watchfulness depend the existence and character of the English race. But in all stages of human progress women have had, be side these, other employments ; and in Europe now they are seen burdened and toiling in tbe fields, as women were once found toiling underground in Eng lish mines. Engaged in spinning and weaving in heroic limes, in cookery and surgery in the age of chivalry, their em ployments are now becoming infinitely diversified ; a married woman of indus try and talent aids her hnsband in his special occupation, or she follows differ ent lines of her own ; even when she has children this is possible, for it is only in a few casea that the whole of a woman s life-time is mled np with nurs ing and honsekeepiug. Women unmar ried always exist in great numbers, aud will continue to exist at all ages, who devote themselves to works of utility or charity, and to the arts, tor wh ch they have a tatte, in which they often dis play extraordinary talent, aud for which they get as well remunerated as men. Iu literature and song women have al ways exce led. Tere are certain walks of athletic life from which woman are in flexib y excluded ; whether with advan tage without drawbacks it is difficult to say. They are also excluded, wholly or in great part, from the church, the law and medicine ; whether they should be rigidly excluded from these professions, or be allowed on the principle of free dom of trade to compete with men, is the report informs us, "one of tbe ques tions of the day." In the meantime, however, the facts of the census afford inquirers some help ; they show that without counting wives so returned at all, the number of women of the age of fifteen and upward engaged in specific occupations, and no doubt earning wages or profits of some kind, were 3. 453, 681. The number so returned at correfcpondiug ages in 1851, were 2.652, 660. The increase in twenty years was 801,021. and was at tbe rate of 30 per cent., or 1,33 per cent annually. Ihis exceeds the rate of increase among the residue, which was only 1.05 per cent, annually. Thus noiselessly there has been X rapid increase in the numbers and the proportion of women engaged specifically iu productive work. Add tbe wives, and the proportion so employed will be little less than the proportion of man. There is no evidence of the in crease of idle women, nor is any men tion made of the number of women en gaged in "worriting man." Remaaee or a Glove. A lord wns observed who wore, fas tened to his doublet a small glove.such as women wear. It was fa-steuea with irolden hooks, and the seams were adorned with such a quantity of dia monds rubies enierahls,and pearls.that the value of the glove was something extraordinary. "I nerceive. monsieur, that you are surprised I have so enriched this poor glove, but i win tell you tne reasou. i look ii non vou as a gallant man, ami I am sure you kuow what love is. You must kuowthat 1 naveail m.v nie loveu a lady whom 1 still love, and shall love even after 1 am dead. As my hear was bolder to make a pood choice than my tongue to declare it. I remained for seven years without even daring to show any signs of loving her, for fear, if she perceived them, 1 should lose the opportunity I had of being frequently with her a thought that terrified me more than death. But one day, lieing in a meadow aud gazing upon her, 1 was seized with such a palpitation of the heart that I lost all color and coun tenance. She having noticed this anil asked me what was the matter, I told her I was intolerably sick at heart. Thinking this sickness was one in which she had no share, she expressed her pity for it, and that made uie en treat her to put her baud on my heart and see how it beat, tihe did so more from charitv than affection, and as I held her gloved baud on my heart its motions liecame so violent that she perceived that I had spoken the truth. Then 1 nressed her hand on my bosom and said to hen 'Receive this heart. madame. which strureles toescapefrom my bosom and put itself in the hands of her from whom I hope for grace, life and pity. It is this heart, mndanie, which now constrains nie to declare the love I have Ion if cherished for vou in secret; for neither my heart nor I, madame, can longer withstand so po tent a god.' surprised at so unexpected a declaration, she would have with drawn her hand, but 1 held it so fast that her glove remained with me in stead of that cruel hand. As I never had before, or have since, anv other approach to near iutiniacy with her, I placed this glove over my heart as the fittest plaster I could apply to it. I have enriched it with all the finest iewels in my possession; bnt what is dearer to me than all of them is the glove itself, which I would not give for the realm of England. For there is i nothing 1 prize iu tne woriu so inucn as to feel it ou my bosom." Such a love as this is declared by j connoisseurs to be a perfect and ideal love. Dickens's Low eTApplaaee and The moment that Dickens felt his invention failing in the least degree, be prospect of retaining the public by reading the older stories, and tasting by nearer and personal contact the pun gency of popular applause, was fasci nating and overpowering. His pleasure in it, as one of the English critics say, is a little hnmilating in a man of his great genius. It is the more so when he listened intently for the chink of the guinea as well as for the murmur of delight; Yet no man needed money more, nor might more rightfully earn it His family was very large, his estate was costly, and his manner of living profuse. Bnt the reader presently sees with sorrow that, as with his great pre decessor, Scott, the chief question gra dually came to be how much money he could maLo out of his genius. And as with Sjott, although in a smaller de gree, tbe sum was enormous. By his readings alone Dickens made nearly a quarter of a million of dollars, one hun dred thousand of them between the 1st of December and the 1st of May in the United States. The physical labor and exposure of traveling, and the nervous exhaustion of the readings, with the tremendous pace, as he would have called it in another, of the rest of his life, were enough to destroy any man. During all his travels, both in the ear lier and the later day, when he ran over to the Continent or coursed about Eng land to find inspiration or seclusion or excitement, he constantly wrote the most copious letters, full of fun and shrewdness and fine fancy, and walked miles and miles, and devised entertain ments, and acted plays, and presided at meetings and feasts, and made delight ful speeches, and seemed to have all the occupation of a very active and busy man before considering the real business in baud at the time, Sich animal spirits as in his earlier years were cer tainly never known. They bubbled about him and overflowed all who came in contact with him. They affected hu style of writing, and despite the saga cious Taine, they gave his descriptioni much of their singular vitality and power. A Hay aide Leeaoa. A good woman, searching ont the children of want, one cold day last win ter, tried to open a door in the third story of a wretched tenement house, when she beard a little voice say: "Pull the string np high I pull the stiiug up high 1" She looked up and saw a string, which, on being pulled, lifted a latch ; and she opened the door upon two children, all alone. Very cold aud pitiful they looked. D you take care of yourselves, little ones ?" asked the good woman. "God takes care of us," sj d the older. "And are you not very cold' No fire on a day like this I" "Oh ! when we are very cold we creep nnder tbe qiilt, and I put my arms round Tommy, and Tommy puts his arms round me, and we say, "Now I lay me," and then we get warm," said the little girL And what have you to eat, pray ?" "When granny comes home she fetches something. Granny says God has enough. Granny calls ns God's sparrows ; and we say, "Our father," and 'daily bread,' every day' God is onr father." Tears came iuto the good woman's eyes. She had a mistrusting spirit her self ; but these two little "sparrows" preached in that upper chamber, taught her a lesson of faith and trust she will never torset. April aa fcveatiol yf oath. The month of April is the anniver sary of many important events, among which the following are the most impor tant : Thomas Jefferson was born April 2, 17-H; Washington Irving on the 3d. in 1783; the battle of Shiloh was fought on the 6th, in 152; Wadsworth, the poet, was born on the 7th, li i0. Gen eral Lee surrendered to General Grant on the Hth, iu lKtVi; the bombardment of Fort Sumpter commenced on the 11th, in 1861; Henry Clay was born on the 12th, in 17; James Buchanan on the 13th, in 17il; Handel, the musical com jioser, died on the 13th, in 175V; Abra ham Lincoln was assassinated on the 14th, in 1S65; Jeff. Davis was captured on the 15th, same year; William Shaks- peare was born on the litli, in i.b4; Iord Byron died on the l'Jth, in 1824. at Missolonhhi; the battle of Lexington (the revolution) was fought on the same day, in 1775; Napoleon III. was born on the 24, in 1Si8; Oliver Cromwell was born on the 24th, in 15f0; the bat tle of Camden (the revolution) was fouglit on the 24th, in 177'J; General Johnston surrendered on the 26th, in 1865; lreiident Grant was born on the 27th, in 1832; James Monroe, was born on the 28tli, in 175'.); Joan cf Ate en tered Orleans on the 29th, in 1420; and leorge Washington was inaugurated first President of tie United States on the 30th, in 178!. Newspapers. Small is the sum that is required to patronize a newspaper, and most amply remunerative is tte patron. I care not how humble or unpretending the gazette which he takes, it is next to impossible to fill a sheet fifty times a year without putting into it something worth the subscription price. Every parent whose son is off away from him at school, should be supplied with a newspaper. I well remember what a difference there was between those of my schoolmates who had, and those who had not access to newspa pers. Others being equal, the first were always decidely superior to the last, in debate and composition, at least. Tbe reason is plain, they had command of more facts. Youth will peruse a news paper with delight when they will read nothing else. Judge LongtUreet. AflVcliv Faealties. Having much of one of the effective faculties, we do not like to be exposed to the acute exercise of the same fac ulty in others. A person with large veneration shrinks from being an ob ject of veueration to others. (To one with large self esteem the veneration of others is, on the contrary agreeable.) One with large acquisitiveness detests being subjected to the action of power ful acquisitiveness in his neighbors. It has often been observed that individu als who are much given to jesting at th evnense of their fellow-creatures cannot endure to be the subject of other people's jokes, and that great censurers and reprovers nate to ue in iue ieawi lebuked or found fault with. Vicious habits are so great a tain on I nman n iture. and so odious in them selves, that every person, actuated bv right reason, should avoi 1 them, though ha was sure they would be always eon eealed from both God and man, and bad no future puniahmect entailed npon them. Yontlis Column. Lnllaby. The rvd n Making And fatber at a I iun to b thinking Of osby aad ni. Tl ou'-wwt Is bHwIn-?. 1 be brviker r hlgn ; May Ood guard his sutxtg. ii daaicer u sign ! Wh ibrt father ia kes- tns Hi watch In the atorm, Ard mother ta va V,ljg. Oiu baby aieeps atria. When winter to rer. And p ing decfta tbe Va. May wlads as t onr rover 1 j babj and me! How Linxx Naxnik Got Hxb Saoia One cold night last winter, all were seated quietly around the fireside, after prayers, when little-five-year-old Nannie was first to break the silence. Stepping up to her pa, and placing her hands upon iiis knees, she said, with a deep sigh: "Pa, what do you have prayers for?" Reflecting a moment, to frame an answer that might be simple enough for her to understand, he said : "We have prayers that the Lord may make ns good, and give us such things as we need." While she seemed to be thinking on the answer that had been given, her ma interfered by asking : "Don't von think Nannie might get a pair of sLoes if she would pray for them ?" "Certainly," said her pa ; "I have no reason to doubt it." "I know, 'Now I lay me down to sleep,' bnt I don't know how to pray for shoes," replied Nannie. Her pa then proceeded to give her the necessary instruction, and his words took deep hold on her little heart, and bursting into a cry, she fell across her ma's lap and wept. Recovering her feelings so as to be able to speak, she said : "I would pray three times s day for the sake of a pair of shoes." The next day she set about tbe work of praying for her shoes ; and no doubt she made her words good. For, after about the space of a fortnight, when her pa was absent from home, out on the circuit preaching, a man came step ing in at the door, having in his pocket pair of little cloth shoes, just suited to Nannie's feet. Learning these were for ber, yon may guess her joy was complete. Her prayer was answered. This fctory is bo fiction. It has been written by one who knows it to be real. "Whatsoever things ye desire, when ye pray believe that ye receive them, and ve shall have them," says our blessed Redeemer. But we should take ctre that our prayers be consistent with His will. Ths Jack -Rabbits. Dora is a little girl who lives on a farm in Nebraska. Oue day her father came home from a walk, carrying hia hat in his hand ; and in his hat he had four what do you think he had ? You little Eastern chil dren could never guess ; but perhaps some of the prairie children who read this true story will guess "Jack-rab-Dits ;" and they will guess right. "What are "Jack-rabbits?" asks the little Boston boy. Well, I will tell you. They are really hare, which live on the Western prairies, and are a good deal larger than common rabbits. They run very fast, so fast that few dogs can catch them, and little boys would have to look very sharp to keep them in sight. But Dora's father had found fonr young ones, so small that they scarcely filled his straw hat ; and be thought Dora and her two little brothers would like them for pets. Dora put the rabbits in a box which her brother Dies bad made on purpose for them, and fed them ou fresh grass and milk. For a few weeks Dora and tbe boys were very haopy with their pets. But, as the rabbits grew larger, theit box seemed to be rather crowded. So one warm night Dora left them out on the floor of the shed, where they could hop aud play as much as they pleased. Now, it happened that there was a large crack between the boards in one corner of the shed, which was so con cealed by rubbish, that Dora had not uoticed it. When she came to look at ber pets in the morning, not one of them was to be seen. They had all run away. Dora was very sad at first ; but Bhn brightened up at once when her mother reminded her that the rabbits were much happier frisking about in the open fields than they could possibly be as anybody's pets. Did you ever hear of the lost king of France, the unfortunate little son of Mine Antoinette, and .Louis At X? lie was taken from his parents, in prison, shortly before their execution, and was never really known to history after. His keepers testified to his death in prison. but there bsve been several persons ho have claimed to be the lost dauphin Louis XVII. One of them lived and died in our own country, and was a missionary to tbe Indians in northern Wisconsin. The latest story concernicg this un fortunate character is creating a good deal of excitement in France, which is just now without a king, you know. though a good many are claiming xne kingdom. Une of these claimants is Adelbert Wanndorff. who says he is the son of the dauphin, who was taken from prison after being put into a deep sleep bv oDium. A deal ana aumo cuna was left in his place, and he was carried into one of the high towers of the temple. Here be was Disced in a comn. but on bis way to the burial place, he was taken out. stones and earth were put into the coffin aud it was buried. The dauphin was taken out of the country, first to Rome, and was then shipped to Eng land, but the vessel was captured on its way there, and he was again tnrnsi into Drison. where he staid for seventeen years. His life was a series of escapes and captures, ana ne aiea, at last, in Holland, after having been recognized by hia old governess and many who were public officers in his father's reign. Be left one daughter and the son who has just lost his case in the courts. E51QMA. Tbo' small I am, and quite entire. If forced, I'd set a house on fire ; Let but a letter disappear, My space would hold a herd of deer ; Aiiother less nd you will find, I once did hold all human kind. Anttcer .-Spark, park, ark. "Half nf th evil of bfe." says a speaker in a new novel, 'The Sherlocks" "is caused not by tbe direct first-doers of evil, but by the well meaning people, who go on adding to it imitaimg uie very criminals who have offended tbem, stimulating tbe instinct and impulses that led to the offence, but doing all under floe, moral names and with a sort of furtive glance heavenward to see it heaven and ail iu angels do not ad mire them very much." "Varieties. To curb a fast young man Bridal him. Women in mischief are wiser than men. How to make a tall man short Ask him to lend you $3. A good way to keep out of a scrape Never go to the barber's. Never sigh over what might have been, bnt make the best of what is. A straight line is said to be the short est both in morals and geometry. Book-keeping may he tanght in a les son of three words Never lend them. Liberality, it is said, consists less in giving profusely than in giving judi ciously. Fret yourself as much as you please about trifles, but don't fret yonr friends about them. Counterfeit sovereigns made of plati num and electro-plated, are in circula tion in England. As by constant friction steel is kept highly polished, so by constant exercise is talent ever at its brightest. An Irishman, on observing a beauti ful cemetery, remarked that he consid ered it a healthy place to be buried in. A Cincinnati man is said to be train ing himself for his approaching mar riage by passing several hours a day in boiler shop. The corn in harvest sometimes ripens more in one day than in weeks before. Sj some Christians gain more grace in one day than for months before. People go to the mountains in the summer for their health, and, after being subjected to violent atmospheric changes, come home with colds whioh last all winter. A Vienna journal contains the follow ing advertisement: "Anna Agrikoi, sick nurse, watches dead bodies, repairs straw chairs, applies leeches, and makes pastry, desserts, and delicacies." No man is so happy aa a real Chris tian ; none so rational, so virtuous, so smiable. How little vanity does hs feel, though he believes himself united to God I How far is he from abjectness when he ranks himself with the worms of tbe earth ! Patcal. Jones thinks that he would make a good correspondent, because he says he always writes two capital letters every time he signs bis name. Well.it is some satisfaction to know that he has at last learned to sign his name with two capi tal letters, instecd of continuing to make his mark with an X. The most agreeable of all companions is a simple, frank man, without any h'gh pretensions to an oppressive greatness ; one who loves life and un derstands the use of it; obliging, alike at all boars; above all, of a golden tem per, and steadfast as an anchor. For such a one we gladly exchange the greatest genius, tbe most brilliant wit. the profoundest thinker. According to the French critics, the statue of Jeanne d'Arc, lately erected at Paris on the Place dea Pyramides, does as little honor to the memorv of the heroine as does the satire of Vol taire. Tbe attitude, say these authori ties, suggests 1 he idea of a gamin on horseback. The statue has no heroic qualities; and the face is equally de void of character, beauty, and expres sion. Salt is a simple remedy for many things. It will cure sick headache, make cream freeze, make the butter come, take ink stains out of cloth of any kind, kill wens, kill worms, make the ground cool, so that it is more conge nial to celery, cabbage, to. ; ease the itching pain caused by irritable skin disesse, like hives, itch, iix; produce vomiting or stop it, as you like it ; and many other things too numerous to mention. Many exquisites of both sexes claim admiration for their pedal extremities, but it is the boots and shoes which cover them which we are called on to admire. Their feet, if bared, would present a very great divergence from tbe classical ideal of beauty. The firmly planted foot, neither too large nor too small, bnt justly proportioned to the height and weight it sustains, the smooth surfaca and regularly curved lines, the distinctness of the divisions and tbe perfect formation of each toe, with its well-marked separatenesa and its gradation of size and regularity of detail to tbe very tip of the nail, are now to be seen only in art. Gail Hamilton tells us that "simple minded, sweet -sou led, high-hearted girls, it is not in English idyls only that they are to be. found, but in American homes, in cottages by the sea, io farm houses nnder tbe hill, in velvet and silken drawing-rooms, in shadow and in splendor, they are springing all around us, hue and fair and strong, nnseen perhaps of the girls they ought to shame, nnseen perhaps of tbe men they ought to charm, yet quite as likely to be the chagrin, the despair, perhaps the savior of both it is to these and to their kind we look, and look not in vain, for the noble and natural qualities which make the best women so like the best men, that all comparison ceases." In the Rue de Jour, a narrow, ob scure street in Paris, about to be widened, stands a house, built three hundred Tears ago, known in the time of Louis XIV. aa the Hotel Royamount. The Count de Boutteville then occupied it, who was in the habit of entertaining a strange class of guests. His hotel was the rendezvous of the duelists. All the aristocratic quarrels of the day were settled there, and the only title to the Comte's hospitality was an engagement on tbe part of one guest to meet an other in mortal combat. A table was laid every morning in one of the rooms, at which tbe duelists breakfasted before proceeding to business, and the Comte, with delicate thougbtfulness, prjvided foils for those who came without. "There is in Paris," says tbe London Echo, "an aged woman, who has for the last fifty years, supported herself by an industry of which, we believe, she en joys a complete monopoly. She sup plies the Garden of Acclimatization, in Paris, with food for the pheasants, which food consists entirely of ants' eggs. These she collects in the woods around Paris, and receives about twelve iranca (about $2.50) for the quantity she brings back from each of her for aging expeditions. These generally last three or four days, during which she sleeps on the field of action, in order to watch the insects at dawn, and to find ber way to their treasures. She is al most devoured by the ants, an inconve nience of which she takes little notice, but at the end of her harvest-time, which lasts from the month of J one to the end of 3-ptember, her wh le body ia in a truly pitiable- condition. Her services are, of course, highly valued, for. as there is at present no competi tion in this line of industry, it would be difficult to supply her place. 3 (