I IK B. F. SCHWEIER. TH C0N8TITUTI0H THB USIOJI AND THE EXFOECEME NT OF TIU LAWS Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., OCTOBER 7, 1S74. NO. 40. i n W M IV ! Poetry. PILVKISIS. Br M&Kt H kllenwood. Along the seashore, strewn with shells. And. "Lite with glittering saud. Two children walked with footsteps light. With ht'pv hearts went hand in hand. All the bella of morning, ringing Slowly, sweetly, glad, and strong, Holy messages were bringing, Joining in the sweet old song That the lajkting waves were hiiiiu All the sandy shore along. Children! children! little children ! Oh. be glad ! Will the bells be always ringing ? Will the waves be alwavs singing : Oh, be glad ! Along the roadway, edged with weeds. And brown with travel dust. Two children walk with footsteps slow. With weary hearts, yet full of trust; Though the bells have ceased their ringing, Slowly, sweetly, clear and strong. And the morning winds are bringing No sweet messages in song. To the time the waves are singing AU the sounding shore along. C hildren! children! little children ! Are ye sad ? That no more ye hear them singing. ISells and waves together singing. Are ye sad ? Along the pathway, steep and rough. Leading to the mountain brow. Hearts still brave, hand clasped in hand. Weary feet are climbing now. Faint and far the bells are riiging. In the valley down below; Thoughts of far off childhood bringing To the travelers who go Upward to the laud of siuging. From the valley green and low. Weary, aching hearts, take comfoit. Oh. be glad ! For the dear Lord hears yon cryiug Up in heaven hears you sighing; Oh, be glad '. Along the pathway, strewn with thorns. And hot with glaring sun. Walk the pilgrims sad, earth weary; But their journey's almost doue. Are the bells of morning ringing ? Gladly, sweetly, clear, and strong; liells and waves together singing. All the dear old beach along ? No: an echo from the land of siuging. Echo of the sweet, "new song." Bee ye nut the gates wide open ? Oh. be glad ! Ye who stand at heaven's portal. At the open golden portal. Oh. be glad ! Comic MaMir. We speak of comic music ; but tbere is no Buoh thing. Comic songs tbere are, and comic operas ; but uo comic music, although this art, like all others, is capable of the grotesque. Bat music can express neither wit nor humor, neither satire nor raillery, not even the ridiculous. It can express jollity, which is a mood of mind, and animal spirits, another mood, hardly of mind. But in this direction its limit is a phrase the spirit and form of which make it a not inappropriate vehicle of comedy. I re member but two musical jokes. Oue is in Cimarosa's "Matrimonio Segreto," an opera which I have never heard, aud which I believe has never been per formed in this country, never at least within my memory. In this, upon the father's announcement of "un matri monio nobife," there is brief silence, and then two horns are heard in the orchestra. It can hardly be that this musical hint of the probable conse quences of a noble marriage in a plebeian family is accidental But after all the joke is not really musical ; for it depends entirely npon the name of the instruments by which it is perpetrated, not at all upon the musical idea to which they give utterance. If the horn had happened to be called the trumpet, or horns (corni) had not been the ac cepted sign of a certain marital calamity the world over, this brazen joke would have been impossible. The other in stance was a monstrous portamento o glide in the performance of the air of "The King of the Cannibal Islands," in a potpourri by Jullien's orchestra. This air opens by passage from the dominant to the third of the scale, and whenever it recurred the stringed in struments, instead of taking the leap of five notes, slid np, with a prolonged and wailing crescendo, and then dashed off rapidly, The effect was very ridicu lous, and always provoked shouts of laughter. But" hero again the comic effect was produced, not by the masical idea, but by the caricature of the not uncommon exaggeration of a grave in vocalization. The Ualaxy for H:ptf tu ber. I'redalory C'biekens. One Max Adeler describes a novel method he adopted for ridding his garden of a neighbor's chickens, lie savs : "We had a good deal of trouble last summer with Pitman's chickens ; as fast as we planted anything iu our little garden, thosechiekensof I'itniau a would creep through the fence, scratch out the seed, till nn, and go home. When the radish led had been ravished in this manner for the fifth time, we complained to Pitman. He was not disposed to interfere. 'Adeler,' lie said, I tell vou it does Vm good ; and it does them beds good to be raked over by chickens. If I had radishes, give me chickens to scratch around them and eat up the worms. Radishes that haven't been scratched aiu t worth a cent.' Then we cliuibod over the fence with the determination to take the law in our own hands. e pro cured half a peck of corn and two dozen small tisli hooks. Fastening the luniks each to a grain of corn, we tied wire to each hook. Then we scattered the whole of the corn on the radish lied, and fixed the ends of the wires to the biggest sky rocket we could get. I he rocket stood iu a frame about 10 yards awav from the hooka. That very moriiing Pitman's chickens came over, and instantly began to devour the corn. We were read v ; aud as soon as it was evident that the hooks were all swal l... i . ....!, ...I o ni.-irch to the rocket. It is regarded as probable that ; no barnyard fowls that have existed i since the days of Xoah ever proceeded toward the azure vault of heaven with such rapidity as those uni. a uzz, a few ejaculat ry cackles, a puff of smoke, and Pitmau's roosters and chickens were swishing around the celestial con stellations without their feathers, and in some doubt respecting the stability of earthly things. Pitman never knew , . . J i r . 1 . . l..,t vK-lion wnat became oi ins iois, " " , we read in the paper next day that, twenty-four underdone chickens, with i tuh-hnr.L-11 in their craws, had been rained down by a hurricane m Nw Jersev, we felt certain that that sky rocket had done its duty. Fine gold fears not fira, stone the water. nor solid THE LOVERS' QUARREL. How the snow fell, in myriads of tiny flakes hurrying, tumbling down with bewildering rapidity 1 That mythical personage, the oldest inhabitant, could not recollect ever having seen such a quantity of snow ; the roads were im passable in every direction ; trains were detained in snow drifts travelers found it impossible to proceed ; houses were almost buried ; indeed, at Lyster Farm, it reached above the windows ; yet still it fell steadily. It drifted the wind by turns moaned and hcwled around the comfortable farm-house, as though it longed for an entrance. Nellie Rss pouted and yonng Will Lyster frowned ; still the tempest did not abate. I have always noticed that close confinement to the house for many days iu succession did not improve the temper of man, woman, or child ; and it certainly had that effect upon the two individuals I have mentioned. Lyster Farm was in summer the beau ideal of a pleasant country-place ; even then in the depth of winter, when the outside world was as dreary as it was possible to be. inside the house it was i snug and cozy as light, warmth, and , spotless cleanliness could make it. The fare leaped and flickered ; the bright I cooking utensils glittered like polished j steeL Mrs. Lyster sat placidly knitting, ; handsome Will was reading, or pretend . ing to read, at the window, casting j furtive glances at his pretty cousin ; : who. also busv sat beside his mother. I Nfllie It ma and Will Lyster were ; cousins. Ever since they had attained i the height of the table, they had been regarded as lovers by the whole family ! connection. In truth, they did love , each other dearly ; but young girls will occasionally be willful, young men will I occasionally grow jealous, and love af- fairs generally have a decided and pre ! verse inclination for the crooked paths, instead of the straight ones. Nellie was as tair and dainty a little ' maiden as the heart of a man could desire ; but perfect as she was, she had t vo faults which Will Lyster had just decided are the two very worst faults any woman could possess. She was a coquette, and very high bmpered. Wid was also of a haughty, impetuous disposition, quick to resent any fancied slight. From this resulted many misunder standings between the youug people ; but their elders only smiled benignly at the lovers' quarrels, and the recon ciliations which were sure to follow, wisely deciding that old heads were not to be expected upon yonng shoulders, and where so much real affection ex isted, all was sure to come right in time. A few days before my story com mences, there had been a gathering of the vicinity at a neighboring farmer's, and Nellie, flattered by the universal admiration her pretty face and engaging manner had excited, had tested Will's patience to its utmost limit. lie had expressed his displeasure in lordly fashion, and the girl had resented it ; a violent dispute had been the conse quence. Just before the storm began, Nellie had come to pass a few days with her aunt ; and by way of relieving the monotony of country life, the quarrel hud been renewed. Will had assured the girl that he did not love her ; that she was a flirt uaworthy of any honest man's love. Harsh words, which Nellie, accustomed to the softest tenderness, could ill endure. Now she sat with hot, flushed cheeks, vainly trying to restrain her tears, for, after all, she was a soft- j hearted little thing. Presently she sprang up with a pettish ! exclamation : "I am going home, ana," she said ; "mother will be wautiug me. I have stayed too long already. "Nonsense, child," quietly replied Mrs. Lyster. "ion could not walk a hundred yards, much less two miles, such a day as this. Hit quiet, lassie." Nellie did not answer, but left the the room, and presently returned pre pared to start. Will never even looked at his cousin. "Areyoumvl, Nellie?" demanded Mrs. Lyster, sternly, "that you should wi.-ii to risk your life, by exposing your self in such a storm. It is tempting Provideuee. I should not allow a dog to leave niv bouse to-day, much less my own flesh and blood. Nellie stood at the door ; her aunt's words only excited her to opposition. "He does not care," the thought. "If he asks me to stay, I'll stay ; if not, I shall never come back to his house.'' Then she said aloud : "I can walk home quite easily ; it is not snowing much now ; besides, I am tired of being here, I must go home. Good-bye, aunt." Tell her she must not go. Will," implored Mrs. Lyster; "it is certain death to start to walk two miles to-day. Willful as you have been, Nellie, I did not expect this of you. Speak to her, WilL If any harm befalls you, Nellie, your blood be npon your own head !" "I am not wanted here. I don't care for the storm. I am not afraid," per sisted Nellie, defiantly, as she turned to open the door. O, how icy cold the air was, and the wind gave a great shriek, as though re joicing that she was to be delivered up to its power ; Nellie's heart failed her ; she looked back ; the fire blazed cheer fully ; never had the room appeared so home-like ; if he would only give in and ask her to stay. "Good-bye, Will,' she ventured timidly ; and the clear girlish voice trembled. Will never raised hishead, and vouch safed no answer. If his life had de pended upon it, he could not have asked her to remain. Poor Nellie felt she had made a con cession which had been very ill re ceived. Piqued by his seemin g indiffer ence, she was very deaf to her aunts' entreaties ; and, regardless of the friendly warning, she rushed out into the storm. It was drifting, and the cold snow flying in her face almost blinded her. She could not see her way ; there was no path, and at every step she sank almost to her waist ; and still, with the energy of auger, she went on. "He drove me out," she said to her self. "I shall never turn back.' If he finds me dead in the bnow it will serve him right." She iurned to look at the house, but could not see it Iudeed, she could not a vard before her. She tried to find the road, but failed. Nellie's courage commenced to fail. Her pride could not sustain her amidst such difficulties. How cruel he was, yet he bad said he loved her. She would retrace her steps; Bhe could not be far from the house. She wandered first in one direction, then in another, but at each step sank deeper and deeper into the snow. The short winter day was drawing to a close; it. was almost dusk now. A terrible dread took possession of the girl ; she trembled convulsively. Would she, in deed, perish in the snow, and be frozen stiff? She thonght of her. mother, happy at home, unconscious of her child's danger. She thought oi uysier Farm, ita warmth and comfort. Bhe could not die, she was so young and be loved. Life was so beautiful, death was so terrible. Surely she could not be doomed to snch a death. Then she cried aloud for help ; cried with all the strength of one in deadly peril. The wind mockingly repeated her cries. Her strength failed her. Nellie now knew that no succor could come. Ttnderly cherished darling as she was, she must now die like a home less, friendless outcast, in the storm. Panic stricken, suffering bitterly from the cold, exhausted, stumbling deeper at every step, at length she fell against a tree ; to it she clung as though it had been a friend. She had a dim idea that relief had come in the hour of dire dis tress. She threw her arms around it, kissed it, as she would a living being ; she did not feel the cold so painfully now, only a little sleepy and weary. She tried to repeat her prayers like a frightened child, but couid not remember the words. Then, with the pure cold snow for a pillow, Nellie Ross sank gently into the sleep of death. Will Lyster's rest was strangely troubled that night ; he fancied several times that he heard Nellie's voice call ing for aid ; and his mother's distress increased his uneasiness. At break of day he was ready to go over to Mrs. Ross'; his pride was quite vanquished by intense anxiety. He could only think of his pretty, willful cousin, lovingly. After all, it was natural she should like admiration. She was very young ; she would grow steadier in time. He acknowledged to himself that he had been harsh to her, but he would make it all right now. Then he thought of Nellie's surprise at seeing him so early. - The dimple faoe, half-pouting, half-ehyly smiling, that would greet him ; on the whole, now that his bed temper was exhausted. Will Lyster felt considerably relieved. The revulsion of feeling was terrible when the frightened mother had in formed him that Nellie was not at home. She had supposed that her daughter would remain at .Lyster 1 arm nntu the storm has passed over. Will insisted some neighbor had found her and taken her home. She could not be lost in the snow within sight of home ; still he was in an agony of terror. As he turned through the fields his attention was attracted by a few work ing men standing beneath a tree. Their gestures denoted that they were much exsited. With pitying, awe-stricken faces, all drew back as he approached, aud Will Lysters beheld a sight which haunted him till the hour of his death. Resting placidly, with face upturned to the sky, and hands meekly folded upon her breast, no expression of pain upon the marble features, and only per fect peace, lay the girl he had hoped would become his wife. No more angry flushes would crimson the pale brow ; no more coquettish smiles would dimple the tender mouth ; far from the reach of both love and sorrow, Nellie Ross slept soundly. "Heaven help me, I killed her 1" he cried hoarsely. Then, raising her in his arms he turned toward home. The rough farm laborers were weeping for the blithe little maiden, who had always a smile and a cheery word ; but the man who loved her best of all the very light of whose eyes she had bem was stunned by the sudden blow, and could shed no tears. He carried his unconscious burden into the house, walking like one in a dream, without a word, and laid her upon the bed. The bereaved mother's wail of anguish rang out clear upon the frosty air. Nellie's girlish friends lamented loudly their companion, cnt off in the bloom of youth ; the poor, whom she had helped and comforted, mourned deeply; bnt Will Lyster never spoke. But once did he show any trace of emotion ; then the night before she was left in her last resting place, when the household had retired, his mother, alone, remained to watch beside the body. He came to look npon the child-like face, calm in the silent majesty of death. i "O Nellie.Nellie," he cried, "I loved you so dearly, and I killed you !" Then, resting hishead on his mother's breast, the strong man sobbed like a child. He never recovered from the shock, but lived on, a prematurely old man ; very grave, very tender to his mother, bnt rarely speaking, never smiling. He has remained a bachelor even until now, for the sake of sweet Nellie Ross, slumbering in her grass grown grave in the country churchyard upon the hill Good Sight. How tenderly and sweetly falls the gentle "good-night" into loving hearts, as members of a family separate and re tire for the eight. What myriads of hasty words and thoughtless acts, en gendered in the hurry and business of the day, are forever blotted out by its benign influence. Small token indeed; but it is the little courtesies that make up the sum of a happy home. It is on ly the little courtesies that can so beau tifully round off the square corners in the homes of laboring men and women. The simple "I thank you," for a favor received, will fill with happiness the heart of the giver. Trne wealth is not counted by dollars and cents, bnt by the gratitude and affection of the heart. If a home be happy, whether the owner possess a patch of ground of one or a thousand acres, they are in the end wealthy beyond mathematical calcula tions. Then how much more lovingly are the sable folds of night gathered around the happy homes ; how mnch more con fidently do fts members repose their weary bodies in the care of Divine good ness, soothing their overtaxed minds to the realities of a beautiful dreamland ; awakened, refreshed and invigorated for the coming day s labor, by Having bid their loved ones an affectionate "irood nil-ht." And if. during this lif, we have faithfully attended to all these little courtesies, these little soul-needs, if we have guarded carefully all "God's hearts" placed in our keeping, at the close of its brief, yet eventful day, how - a. ir.j .11 j i mucn easier o uiu mix uu. umij w loved onea a final "good-night" Receipt for at Happy Home. Six thintrs. says Hamilton, are requi site to create happy home. Integrity must be the architect, ana tidiness toe nnholsterer. It mnst be warmed by affection, and lighted np with cheerful ness ; and industry must be the ventila tor, renewing the atmosphere and bringing in fresh salubrity every day ; while over all, a protecting canopy of glory, and nothing will suffice except the blessing of God. Actions SDeak more forcibly than words ; they are the test of character. Like fruit npon a tree, they show the nature of man, while motives, like sap, are hidden from our view. The mother's Remorse. The child was so sensitive, so like the little shrinking plant, that curls at the breath and shuts ita heart from the light The only beauty she possessed was an exceedingly transparent skin, and the most mournful blue eyes. I had been trained by a stern, strict, con scientious mother. I was a hardy plant, rebounding at every shock ; misfortune could not daunt though discipline tamea me. i iancied, alas, that 1 must go through the same routine with this delicate creature ; so one day when she had displeased me exceedingly by re peating an offence, I was determined to punish her severely. I was very serious all day. and on sending her to her little coucn i saia : "Now, my daughter, to punish you, and show you how very, very naughty you have been, I shall not kiss you to. night" She stood looking at me, astonish ment personified, with her great mourn ful eyes wide open. I suppose she had forgotten her misconduct till then : and I left her with her big tears dropping novo ner cneeas, ana ner lip quivering. Presently I was sent for "O mamma, yon will kiss me ; I can't go to sleep if you don't," she sobbed, every tone of her voice trembling, as she held out her hand. Now came the struggle between love and what I falsely termed duty. My heart said, give her the kiss of peace ; my stern nature urged me to persist in my correction, that I might impress the fault upon her mind. That is the way I had been trained until I was a sub missive child, and I remember how often I had thanked my m it her since ior ner straightforward course. I knelt by her bed and whispered. "Mother can't kiss you, Ellen," though the words seemed to choke me. Her hand touched mine, it was very hot, but I attributed it to her excitement I blamed myself as the fragile form shook with sup- Eressed sobs, and saying, "Mother opes Ellen will mind her better after this," left the room for the night It might have been about midnight when 1 was awakened by the nurse. Apprehensive, I ran to the child's chamber. I had a fearful dream. Ellen did not know me. She was sitting up, crimsoned from the forehead to the throat, her eyes so bright that I almost drew back aghast From that night a raging fever drank np her life and what do yon think was the incessant complaint poured into my anguishing heart? "Oh! kiss me, mother, do kiss me. I can't go to sleep. I won't be naughty if you'll kiss me. Oh 1 kiss me, dear mamma. I can't go to sleep." Holy little child ; she did go to sleep one gray morning, and never woke again no, never. Her hands were locked in mine, and all my veins icy with the gradual chilL Faintly the light faded ont in the beautiful eyes whiter and whiter grew the tremulous lips. She never knew me; but with her last breath she whispered, "I will be good, mother, if you will only forgive me." Kiss her 1 God knows how passionate and unavailing were my kisses on her cheek after that fatal night God knows how wild were my prayers, that she might know, if only once, that I would have yielded np my life could I have asked forgiveness of that sweet child. Well, grief is unavailing now. She lies in her little tomb ; there is a marble urn at her head and a rose-bush at her feet there grow sweet summer flowers, there waves the gentle grass, there birds sing their matins and vespers, tbere the blue sky shone down to-day, there lies the freshness of my heart Parents, you should have heard the pathos in the voice of that sad mother as she said : "There are plants that spring into great vigor if the heavy pressure of a footstep crush them ; but oh I there are others thateven the pearls of the light dew bend to the earth." Mothers and fathers, be kind to the little ones. Do not wait till the daisies grow over their bosoms before you learn to chide them in love. Kiss them before you strike them. By and by you must leave them ; bnt leave no thorns in their memory. Hall Jour nal of llcalth. How a nakeress Stopped rowing. Hor- An exchange says the subject of bor rowing and lending came np in the course of a conversation with one of its subscribers the other day, when he sud denly recollected a funny occurrence of that character that had happened in his neighborhood. He said he had a neighbor whose family were great bor rowers, but seldom, if ever, returning the exact amount borrowed. An old Quaker lady, another neighbor, who had endured these invasions for a long time patiently, hit upon a very philoso phical mode of eventually putting a stop, to the nuisance. Keeping her own eounsel.thenext time her good man went to town he had a separate and ex press order to purchase a pound of the best tea, and also a new canister to put it in. As he knew she already had plenty of tea, and also a canister, he was pnzzled to determine what the old lady wanted of more tea and a new can ister ; bnt his questionings and reason ings elicted nothing more than a repe tition of the order. "Jim, did I not tell thee to get me a pound of the best tea and a new canis ter I Now go along, and do as I bid thee." And go along he did, and when he came home at night the tea and new canister were his companions. The old lady took them from him with an expression on her usually placid feat ures, and, depositing the tea in the can ister, set it on the shelf for special use. It had not long to wait, for the harrow ing neighbor had frequent use for the aromatic herb. The good old lady loaned generously, emptying back in the canister any remittance of bor rowed teas which the neighbor's con science inclined her to make. Time went on, and after something less than the one hundreth time of borrowing, the neighbor again appeared for "just another drawing of tea," when the oft visited tea canister was brought out and found to be empty, and the good old lady and obliging neighbor was just one pound of tea poorer than when she bought the new canister, which now only remained to tell the story. Then she made a little characteristic speech, perhaps the first in her life. She said : " Thou seest that empty canister I filled it for thee with a pound of my best tea, and I have lent it all to thee in driblets, and put into it ail thou hast sent me in return, and none but thyself hath taken therefrom or added, into it, and now thon seest it empty ; therefore I will say to thee, thou hast borrowed thyself out and I can lend thee no more." It's rather remarkable that while sev eral thousand feet are required to make one rood, single foot, properly ap plied, is sufficient to make one well-behaved. Readers and Writer. Reading without pnrpose is saunter ing, not exercise. More is got from one book on which the thought settles for a definite end in knowledge, than from libraries skimmed over by a wandering eye. A cottage flower gives honey to the bee, a king's garden none to the butterfly. Youths who are des tined for active careers, or ambitious of distinction in snch forms of literature as require freshness of invention or originality of thonght, should avoid the habit of intense study for many hours at a stretch. There is a point in all tension of the intellect beyond which effort is only waste of strength. Fresh ideas do not readily spring np within a weary brain ; and whatever exhausts the mind not only enfeebbs its power, but narrows its scope. We otten see men who have over-read at college, entering upon life languidly as if they were about to leave it They have not the vigor to cope with their own gene ration, for their own generation is young, and they have wasted the ner vous energy which supplies the sinews of war to joutb, in its contest for fame or fortune. S n.lv with regularity at settled hours. Those in the forenoon are the best if they can be secured. The man who has acquired the habit of study, though for only ore hour every day in the year and keeps to the one thing studied till mastered, will be startled to see what he has made at the end of the twelvemonth. He is seldom overworked who can contrive to be in advance of his work. If you have three weeks before you to learn something which a man of average quickness could learn in a week, learn it the first week, and not the thir l. Business dispatched is business well done, but business hurried is business ill done. In learn ing what others have thought, it is well to keep in practice the power to think for one's self. When an author has added to your kuowledge, pause and consider if yon can add nothing to his. Be not contented to have learned a problem by heart ; try aud deduce from it a corrollary not in the book. Spare no pains in collecting details before you generalize ; but it is only when details are generalized that a truth is grasped. The tendency to generalize is universal with all men who achieve great success, whether in art, literature, or action. The habit of generalizing, though at first gained with care and caution, se cures, by practice, a comprehensiveness of judgment and a promptitude of de cision, which seem to the crowd like intuitions of genius. And indeed noth ing more distinguishes the man of genius from the mere mm of talent than the facility of generalizing the various details, each of which demands the aptitude of a special talent ; but all which can be gathered into a whole by the grasp of a mind which may have no special aptitude for anv . DipHtherla. There have Is en many cases of diph theria lately, and although the disease has not been prevalent enough so far to warrant the fear that it will become epidemic, there have leen grounds for apprehension in regard to the disease in New York and Brooklyn for a long while. Dr. Peters writes to the "Tri bune" that, among the poor, bad air and food are the most active causes of mortality from this terrible malady. "But still," he adds, "it will oi.lv too otten single out and kill its victims among the children of the rich, cleanly and judicious.'' Dr. Peters recommends! band noticed that she was without cer tiorate of potash as the liest remedy j tain articles he had bought for her only for diphtheria. Here is what he saysot , a short time before, lie began to in it: "It should le given iu onu way only j quire and learned that her landlady dry upon the tongue, pure, not mixed borrowed her furs to wear to market, with sugar and not in solution. By that her sister had borrowed of her giving it in this way it dissolves slowly jewelry ua other articles to wear to a in the mouth and gia.lua ly and j rt f th&t jad friena had borrowed riTrSrvr.rf T. tifr l " r is ! er new bonnet to wear on the street, diseased parts or the throat, it is i . . . - ., . ... ; slightlv disagreeable atlirst; but the : and that scarcely one of the beautiful youngest child soon becomes accus- j "tides he had bought for his wife, tomedtoit. It takes awav the supposed i becanse he loved her and wished her to necessity for forced local applications have them, was in her possession, to the throat, and if the little patient Whoever should see her in company lie taught to open its mouth widely, even with her own articles on her per- without straining, and to draw iu its;80n, would think they were borrowed breath deeply at the same time, the j nf those to whom she had loaned them curtain of the palate will he drawn np, and the whole back part of the throat, down to the windpipe, will lie exposed to view, without the use of any harsher means to obtain a view of the parts in volved by thedisorder. This treatment must be persisted in, the chlorate of potash being given in doses ot two, three, five or more grains every hour at first, until some decided improvement commences, or for one, two, three, or even more days, without hesitation or falt'-ring. Often no apparent improve ment seems to take place for oue, two, or more days; sometimes not until Ci-arly np to 'the fourth day. But cour age and perseverance will almost cer tainly be rewarded with success: cer tainly four or ti ve times out of six." People cannot lie too careful in regard to diptheiia. It has ln-en wisely sug gested that a hospital should be founded exclusively for diphtheretic patients, like the smallpox hospitals. No dis ease is more ditlicult to guard against after it has once entered a household. But where people live comfortably and cleanlily, slight precautions are siitli cient to keep it away entirely. Very poor people, who live in unhealthy neighltorhoods, are in more danger. Diphtheria lias otten swept away whole families iu tenement houses. We do not wish to be accused of "croaking," but nearly everylmdy we meet ap'iears to have a cold in Ins head and a sore throat, and it is inst as well for people to know that diphtheria is prevalent. e do The Power or a tireat Example. There is nothing that will let the light into the soul like personal influence ; nothing that can lift one up out of the darkness, and lead one into the divine and quickening light, and baptize one in the spirit of faith, hope, love, and charity, Like the magic power of a great example ; nothing that can inspire, exalt and purify, like the magnetic rays of healing and helping that beam out of the eyes of noble men and women. If your life has been deep and broad in its experience, then you have seen lives that were better than yours ; lives whose pure light shone npon you from a serener height than you could reach, and touched you and warmed you through and through ; just as the droop ing flowers, some chilly morning, have looked np through the thick fogs and caught a glimpse of the bright sun, which scatters the mists and opens the glad blossoms to the warm, Life-giving light Whose life is not, sometimes, wrapped around with fogs ? Who has not looked np from his little life-world and seen no cheering sun above him nothing but a heavy, leaden sky hanging over? And then, perhaps, you have almost doubted the sun itself doubted goodness and doubted God until you have sen the clouds break away, the fogs lift, and doubt vanish before the beautiful radi ance of some shining example. I tell you that I believe, more and more, that what the world needs to reform and redeem it is, not so much a sound theo logy or a profound philosophy, but holier, purer, diviner lives Lives that shall be the light of men. Days of the Week The names of these are derived from saxon idolatry. The Saxons bad seven deities more particularly adorned than the rest, namely: the Sun, Moon, Tuisco, Woden, Thor, Friga, and Sea- ter. Sunday being dedicated to the sun, wss called by them Sunandaeg ; nis liiot represented the bust of a man. with the face darting bright rays, hold- mg a wheel before his breast, indica tive of the circuit of the trolden orb around our sphere. Monday was dedi cated to the moon, and was represented by a female on a pedestal, with a very singular dress, and two long ears. Tuesday was consecrated to Tuisco a German hero, sire of the Germans. Scy thians and Saxons. He was represen ted as a venerable old man, with a long, white beard, a sceptre in his hand, and the skin of a white bear thrown over his shoulders. Wednesday was conse crated to Woden, or Odin, a supreme god of the Northern nations, father of the gods, god of war, of Mars. He was represented as a warrior in a bold mar tin! attitude, clad in armor, holding in his right band a broad crooked sword. and a shield in his left Thursday was consecrated to Thor, eldest son of Wo den, who was the Roman Jupiter ; he was believed to govern the air preside over lighting and thunder, direct the wind, rain and seasons ; he was repre sented as sitting on a splendid throne, with a crown of gold adorned with twelve glittering stars, and a sceptre in his right hand, Friday, or Friga, Hertha, or Edith, was the mother of the gods and wife of Woden ; she was the goddess of love and pleasure, and was portrayed as a female with a naked sword in her right hand and bow in her left hand, implying that in extreme cases women should fight as well as men. Saturday, or Seator, is the same is the Rjman Saturnua ; he was repre sented on a pedestal, standing on the ! hack of a prickv fish called a perch, his head bare, with a thin, meagre face ; in his left hand he help a wheel, and in his right a pail of watex with fruits and flowers. The sharp tins of the fish im plied that the worshippers of Seater should pass safely through every diffi culty. The wheel was emblematio of their unity and freedom, and the pail of water implied that he would water the earth and make it fruitful. j What Real L.aiy Xever Does. The woman who is more or less green or snobbish borrows clothes, ribbons, jewelry and bonnets with which to dress. The genuine lady never is guiltv of such a degradation. The high-toned ; woman is above having articles of dress or jewelry in common with another; i she will never run to borrow new gloves, new ribbons, new cloaks, shawls and other articles of apparel with which to , cnt a dash. To dress a mud lark in j yellow feathers does not make a canary, nor will dressing a woman in borrowed ; plumage transform her into a lady. j Men seldom display snch weakness, j The real gentleman never will appear in j borrowed articles of dress or jewelry, i ' Nor will the woman who has real pride of character so cheapen herself as to appear in goods not her own. A gentleman friend of ours, who loves his wife dearly, was constantly buying for her costly and beautiful articles. He filled her lap with such little things as he saw from time to time, which he thought would please her. She lived in boarding-bouse. One day her hus- rather than lose their friendship. As the articles were returned to their owners, some of them torn, broken, soiled and damaged, like a sensible man he threw them into the fire and told his wife that if she did not love him enough to keep for her own nse such ornaments as he bonght for her alone, she might ! bnv for herself hereafter. There is no difference between a borrower and a beggar ; except the borrower is the most selfish of the two and the least entitled to respect The I'ower of Dit-keuV FathoM. Mrs. H?ury Siddons, a neighbor and intimate friend of the lateLjrd Jeffrey, who bad free license to enter his house at all hours unannounced, and come and go when she listed, opened his library door one day very gently to look if he was there, and saw enongh at a glance to convince ber that her visit was ill-timed, lhe hard critic of the Edinburgh was sitting in his chair, with his head on the table, in deep grief. As Mrs Siddons was delicately retiring, in the hope that her entrance had been r.nn,.fitf,Ail -T.ttTr-.tv Vai.LA.1 hia liAOii ami t;rt,ll KM,lrnA,1 1,.1 tiuu- Tr vi no. that his cheek was flushed and his eyes suffused with tears, sha apologized for her intrusion, and begged permission to withdraw. When he found that she was seriously intending to leave him, he rose from his chair, took both her hands, and led her to a seat Lord Jeffrey (loq.) "Don't go, my dear friend. I shall be right again in another minute." Mrs. Siddons "1 had no idea that yon had any bad news or cause for grief, or I wonld not have come. Is any one dead ?" Lord Jeffrey "Yes, indeed. I'm a great goose to have given way so ; but I could not help it. You'll be sorry to hear ;that Little Nelly Boz's Little Nelly is dead." The fact was, Jeffrey had just received the last number then out of "The Old Curiosity Shop," and had been thor oughly overcome by its pathos. A boa I Idleness. Manv young people think an idle life must 1-e a pleasant one, but there are none who enjoy it so little and are such burdens to themselves, as those who have nothing to do. Those who are obliged to work hard all day enjoy their short period of rest and recreation so much, that they are apt to think if their whole life were spent in rest aud recre ation it would be the most pleasant of all. But this is a sad mistake, as they would soon find ont if they made a trial of the life they think soagreeable. One who is never busy can never enjoy rest, for rest implies relief from previous labors; and if our whole time were spent in amusing ourselves, we should find it more wearisome than the hardest day's work. Recreation is only valuable as it unbends us; the idle can know nothing of it. Many people leave off business and settle down to a life of enjoyment ; but they generally find that they are not nearly so happy as they were before, and are often glad to re turn to their old occupations to escape the miseries of indolnce. "Voittli Column. HOW THB DoO HAD HlS LlKEXXSS Takkx. As the storv we are about to tell may seem incredible to some of onr readers, we will preface it by stating that its literal truth is vouched for by a well-known lady of Lowell, Mass., Mrs. C. A. Richardson, a sister-in-law of President Grant's Secretary of tha Treasury. Oesar was a fine Newfoundland dog of great intelligence, owned by Mrs. R. One morning she took the dog, with some of the children of her family, to a dagnerrotype-room, with the view of having a picture taken of the group. For nearly an honr Mrs. R. tried to place Cesar in a posture suitable for the purpose of getting a likness ; bnt, when she thonght he was all right, he would slowly get np, shake his huge body, and, of course, spoil the picture. Annoyed at his conduct, Mrs. R. opened the door, and, in a stern voice, said to Cesar, "Go home, sir 1 You have displeased me very mnch : yon uvj uisuieaseu m very miica : Ton shall not star with us anv loneer." Hereuoon ooor Cajjar slunk awav with rr rt , i I a crestfallen look : and Mrs. R. made 1 VID1 BIUII& a.nj wiia no further attempt to put him in the j I regard the progress of opinion picture. But the next day, mnch to i toward absolute, universal justice, as her surprise, Car came home with a j the one great end which hallows efforts box tied round his neck. What could , and recompenses sacrifice. Hurac it mean ? He seemed to be greatly ! Unthy. pleased and wagged his tail expres- j Genins . u fc h d to?SoI the0pen"lg0fr''r-lP'i8tanoe for lofty work.' Hia mistress was still more surprised i YXLtV0? t when she found that it contained a fine ! tJS hM " '"tlnl3r 8unor tu daguerrotype of C;ar himself. i K At her earliest convenience she called j A New York law journal argues that on Mr. S., the daguerrotypist, to in- j lawyers as a class, are very poorly paid, quire how he had succeeded in enticing ; and th it it is only by the force of an the dog into his room, aud keeping him indomitable will and extraordinary tal- qniet. Mr. a. said, that on the morning lollowing the iailure, ho heard a noise i in the entry as if some one was thump- ing on the door. On opening it he found Caetar stand ing there with wistful and eager face. Mr. S. tried to drive him away ; but the dog insisted on entering ; then walked to the old place directly in front of the instrument, - and sat quietly down, as much aa to say "Now, sir. I , ODe of th 8taWs of Argentine Con am reiav to make amends for inv nu- , . . i , , . , . , dignified behavior of yesterday. Seeing at once what the dog wanted, Mr. S. took the hint, placed his instru- j ment aright ; and the result was a very j tine picture. Ai soon as he saw that Mr. S. had i doue with him, Cie-iar rose and stretched j himself, with the satisfaction of one who had wiped ont a disgrace by making reparation. He then waited for the , daguerrotype, which Mr. S. tied around ' his neck, and trotted home with it to ; n'8 mistress. I Aiier mis specimen oi uis sagacity, ; CaMar was more a favorite than ever, j He died many years ag ; but the I daguerrotype Uteuesa which he ob- j tamed is still treasured i. his mistress s ; .ouiiij , -uu wC . B.u u uio w , i j i,i kins BLury ill uur iwxa a : tribute to his memorr. j BriLT of Sea Shells. I've heard of a very wonderfnl thing. The houses I and churches and palaces of the big and beautiful city of Paris are almost all made of sea shells. This is how it happened : Some hundreds of thou sands of years ago the water of the ocean rolled over the spot where Pans , nn fit u T. , I a I . n.lov tl.n nMtn n wavAa lived and died millions aud millions of . tiny sea shell animals. By and by, ' after a great, great many vears, the ; ocean waters no longer roiimi over mis , "''.""-"- , " , I'.'"-" ; s might say iudee 1, the mouutaics of dead shells were left for the sun to shine on, the winds to blow on aud the rains to fall on for many centuries more, till the shells had hardened into rocks. Then, after hundreds and bnadredsof years more, men came aud built houses. They dug in the earth and found the sea shell stone with which they built the beautiful houses and churches and palaces for which Paris is so fatuous. Aud yet the poor little sea s lells that livl and died so long ago never get the least bit of credit for all that they diil for the tine city ! Perhaps, though, thev don't care. At any rate, wo will remember tiiein, aud thi.t will be some- j thing. While wa are talking about this matter, it may be as well to remem ber that a great many of the rocks in different parts of the world were made of sea shell and fredi water shells in just about the same way that the stone of Paris came to be ready ior the builders. Do tor know why it is that the black j mni of the Nile spread over the laud by its yearly overflow brings snch wonder-1 f dl fertility ? It ii made np in a large . A strong mind always hopes, because measure, of tiny creatures, so small I it knows the mutability of human af tLat only the microscope can divide ! fairs, aud how slight a circumstance them into separate forms. Millions j may change the whole course of events, and millions of the living, and millions ! 'ieh a spirit, too, rests npon itself ; it of the tiny shells of those that have 1 ' not couliued to particular objects, perished. In the h.irl or of Wisruar on ! and if, at last, all hould be lost; it has the Baltic sea there are deposited every : saved itself its own integrity and worth, year almost 31)0, OtK) cubic feet of this j Hope awakens courage, while despon mad. dency is the last of alt evils : it is the A large part of the sand of the great abandonment of good the giving np African desert is made np of the fossil I ot the battle of life with dead nothing shells of small animals. On the coast I ness. He who can impart courage in of Patagonia there is a bed of fossil the human soul's is its best physician shells that has been explored for five; The msnager of a French provincial hundred miles that reaches at Port theatre has set a wholessle example, Julian the thickness of eight hundred wmch the profession might do worse feet The largest or these shells are than loliow uing received so many sometimes a foot in diameter, bnt one j complaints from his patrons abont the tenth of the whole bulk are so small : enormous height of the ladies' hats, he as to be only shining specks to the j issaed a notiee iu iarge ietur9 on tue naked eye. a t I play bills reading thus : "The mana- . . ger begs that all good-looking ladies The Affection for a Mother. A j remove their hata for theaccom singular and affecting trait i, . recorded modation of the re8t of the audience, of the bison when young. Whenever a ; The , j thfl bald and the pUiB,Iook. cow bison falls by the hand of the; j not elpected to comply with hunter, and happens to have a calf the th fc8t r'rom that helpless creature instead of attempting , laJ .g hat or bonnf.t was to 8eea in to escape, stays by its fallen dam, with . the theatre, many expressions of strong affection, j The mother being seenred, the hunter! The I.wlon Art Jnrnilia retponsi- makes no attempt on the calf, because ! ble for the following story : A some- this is unnecessary, bnt proceeds to cut : what curious circumstance occurred uo the carcass ; and then, laying it on ! lately, which is strangely illustrative his horse, he returns home, followed by . of modern manners. A nobleman pas- the young one, which thus instinctively j sing through a West-End street saw a accompanies the remains of its parent ' fine but very dilapidated picture in a A hunter once rode into the town of j broker's shop. He purchased it. and Cincinnati, between the Miames, fol- iuqnired the painter's name, bnt was lowed in this manner by three calves, ! unable to discover more than the ini- all of which had just lost their dams, j tiais. Confident that the picture a , , ! seaside view with a rocky shore was . ,, . ., . ! modern, he was anxions to discover the Afteb all there are some things that , fa f yain b tried aU the ictnro puzzle the philosophers. In Cnina, v .... , ,T.i .i,- and in Scotland and s good many other f daces, they take thick muddy water, ike the peat water for instance, and throw in about seven grains of alum to the gallon, and instantly the mud col iec in loug iu: e, yiy , determineJ to find the painter, and at pitated to the bottom and the water is , , d ; , Ued to PoUaky th j left clear and pnre. The Chinese found j det.tiTe yVlMaky knew noth this out centuries ago, but though the ( . . rf- . bnt h der. . , .... . , , philosophers have squinted and smelled , and tasted and looked as wise ti i owls, j they can't for the life of them tell the alum clears the water. Love is all ita shapes implies sacrifi ces. Mach must be conceded, much endured, if we would love. Vi"ioti!j. A few vices viitues. rill often obscure many Nothi: besets than punctuality. confidence sooner Nice million horses in the United States ; value, $ii),OOO,(X0. People who are always wanting some thing new should try neuralgia. Country boys now waik around under apple trees, looking for the bail that they lost. Bored, yet happy a girl with her first pair of ear-riugs. Sue was at the camp-meeting. Talking of oarsmen, John Paul sat a it's a great thing nowadays to be "a gentlemaa and a sculler."" On September 2, the volcano Etna, in Sicily, was in violent eruption, which showed no signs of abatement The intellect of man sits visibly i- i ., , ,. , , , , . i t"r.on.e,i npon his forehead and his eyes. ?na n ae,ltt ol man 18 "" nPn i i . . ents mat one ol them occasionally rises to wealth and fame. A Columbia naturalist iu an excur sion among the Andes, fouud in au old miue a petrified vicuna, mnch larger than the species now living, and a pet rified condor whose sknll was larger than that of a man, and had painted on the frontal figures of the sun and moon. These discoveries were ma le in Iniuy, leuerauou. No girl should be indifferent to her personal appearance. G.xl meaut wo- man to be attractive, and it is one of her duties to carry out this design. But that dress is to be all is more than we can believe. Just because we love to see girls look well, as well as to live to some pnrpose, we would urge them on snch a coarse of reading and study a will confer qualities which no mod- iste can snpply. 1 .ti . pretty eS8aT on tue er o eJuoation to beilutT tUlit u al)Solutely chiseled tue features ; that he has seen manv a clllmay nose ani, pair of tLiek moalued by thought awakened and ac- tlTe geutnnent, as to be unrecognizable. Aud he put it on that ground that we i so often see people, homely and unat- tractive lnyoutu, moom in mi, idle lite into a softened Indian Summer of good looks and mellow tones. If a man is hurrying within an hour, more or less, after a regular meal, he is dyspeptic beyond question, and it shows that the stomach is not able to work np meU ont o it but 0 eat jn anJ ' . wnat he has eaten, so as to get nonnsh- thus impose more work, when it could do nothing for what it had already been eaten, is an absurdity ; and yet all dys peptics who eat wlieuever they are hun- Rry J(J t)ll8 Tery thi,1J? an(1 t,-M affgra vute and protract their protract their sufferings. The secret of the liberality of egg laying displayed by French hen lies, according to Consul Hothnm, in the quality of the soil. The French hen removed from her native land does not behave with that productive alacity which distinguishes her at home. Wherever silex abounds in the soil, as at Calais and Amiens, hens are re markably prolific. The French egg dealers do not feed their poultry, but allow them to run about and pick up for themselves in the fields. From the lips of woman, every infant hears the hrt agents of affection and receiTe the lesson of tenderness and love. For the aoprobation of woman. the grown np youth will uudertake the boldest enterprise aud brave every dif ficulty of study, danger, and even death itself. To the happiest of wo man, the man of mature years will de vote the best energies of his mind, and from the affectionate regard of woman, the man who has become venerable iu years derives his chief consolation iu life a decline. initials, bnt were unaco. nainted with the man. They were confidant that the painter was alive, but they knew noth ing of his home or his haunts. Tho nobleman piqued at being so balked. uuuicui finJ the mtn And find him be gome lronDie in the midst f thdire),t poverty in a little court in Soho. The discovery of the artist was the turning paint in his fortunes. The nobleman employed him, and at this moment there is a picture of his in the Adademy marked "sold.,, i AM ill W