leiillm B. F. SCHWEIER, . THE C9NSTITUTI05 THE CKION AlfD THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. YQL. XXIX. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., JANUARY 13, 1S75. NO. 3. POETBT. A LEU1L ATTACH EXT. Believe me. Bern, when I declare A title deed my heart. And 70a the party of the first. And I the second part That I have an attachment true In useless quite to mention; In vain I seek to serve 70a and Arrest yonr sweet attention. Von know von owned some love fur me When I the question mooted. But now it seems to me you act As if yoa were non-suited. My case is one in equity; I've pleaded wtth precision: Von know the points; why will yon then So long reserve decision ? I make no dilatory plea; I'm driven to distraction ! L'uless I soon obtain relief, I'm sore I sliall take action. At first a civil snit I'll bring At Cnptd'e Berial session; And there, a plaintive lover, ask For judgment by confession. Now don't demur when this yon read. But own yon feel compunction. For I my suit will prosecute In spite of yonr injunction. And if, my judgment ia despite. Yon will not hear me still. I'll Ret an order from the court I" adiniuistor your will. I trust you'll file an answer brief To this, my declaration. Or else I shall proceed to make A cruHS-examiuation. IS4 :l.l.4i. Haiti j Squandered. How we launch the bolts of reproof against tbe foolish youth who wantonly squanders bia inheritance ! How we sermonize njon the subject of improvi dence, when gold has leen lavished by a foolish hand ! With that pitying eyes we look npon the individual whom the world terms a spendthrift I What wise aaws and Rage sayings are uttered npon the sin of moneyed extravagance ! Dis mal, indeed, are the wailings over the man who dissipates his birthright, and scatters broadcast the wealth which good fortune has placed within Lis coffers. And with what admiration do we not re gard the thrifty and the prndent gatherer of riches 1 See how carefully he converts units into hnndreds, hundreds into thousands, and thousands into millions I Every coin be husbands with praiseworthyeconomy.and watches its increase with the joy of a mother as she beholds her progeny waxing Btrong in health and numbers. Nut a penny leaves his fingers unlets to be well re turned in a necessary equivalent. As there is no term at all to the keeping of the spendthrift's riches, so there is no limit to the increase of the prudent and and careful money-merchant. He not only has more than enough to meet all his wants, and to enable him to perform few charitable duties, but he acquires the means of making rich his relatives and dear friends' when he quits this world for a higher sphere. Yes, where mere dross is concerned onr censnre or our admiration can be easily and per manently evoked. But did it ever oc cur to the reader that there are other spendthrifts and other prudent and thrifty people besides those who waste and save money ? Are you sure that you are not spendthrift ? a much , -ti ill a n more reprenensi Die spenuinnii uiu iuo sqandererof filthy lucre? Don't you, by overwork, by neglect of sunshine and air, by an obstinate and indefensible clinging to old prejudices in medical matters, by your late hours, your foolish habits in general, your constant over drafts upon your nervous revenue, your unequal taxation of the brain, stomach and organs of circulation, your wretched waste of vitality in a thousand different, needless and ruinous ways, spend in the wildest and most senseless extravagance that which constitutes your existence ? Are yqu not daily nay, hourly, squandering the principal constituents, ingredients the very essences of life ? Not only life, but of long life ? And knowing that you have done, or are doing so, do you, like the prudent business man with reference to his lessened capital, seek to renovate, build np and restore what you have lost ? This is a momentous question. "What hall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul ?" is a start ling interrogation. And, without be littling the spiritual importance of that interrogation, let me ask what is the Erofit of a fortune if the life-capital is ankmpted ? He that is wise he that accomplishes the just and true end for which he was created will avoid being a spendthrift with the vital forces. If he baa unwittingly overdrained his stock of vitality if he is now doing to, per haps unavoidably, let him fly to Nature (who will not fail him) for a new stock, and restoratives which are life itself. Recalarilr or IIbil a Xerexlly. Very ft'"" persons understand how greatly health and happiness in this world depend UMin the regularity of their dailv habits the constant recur rent of those events which we are apt to refer to as tiresome ami monotonous. During the early and later periods of life this "even tenor"' is essential toour well-being ; and though we may feel like kicking the traces when at the zenith of power nnd activity, and some times My on" at tangents, or p rid ( our superfluous energies in odd and eccentric wars, yet we usually come back, or at least try to come back to onr mooring, and gladly accept the treadmill path of daily duty, which, if it brings no ecstatic pleasure, leaves 110 remorse. , , , . ,. Everyone can nnderstand how dis agreeable it would be not to le able to make sure of one's dinner; to le de prived of bed and sleep; to loose the eniovment of abundance of good water, a dailv bath and a daily paper; but npon the recurrence of many more and much smaller niinnti:v do we depend for our dailv comfort T We like certain kinds of bread at every meal; we want meat alwavs cooked in certain favorite ways, and expect to lind it so as natur ally as we exect the sun to shine. H e get to seeing certain things in certain places, and we would not miss them upon any account, a tree, a bush, a picture, or a chair, which occupies the same place for yeais, acquires a value to our consciousness which only the habit of seeing it can give it. The world seems very large in growth, and full of many and varied interests, but it contracts as we grow older, and the objects of value to us narrow them selves down to those which we know to be real, ajid which form our lives. Xaturallv, as these grow fewer in number they grow dearer. and the more we dislike to niisa them from our sight and sense. No lives are so bappv as those which are so well ordered that there is little to resign, and to which, therefore, very year brings added in terest and added enjoyment in the regular discharge of individual and social duty. RIGOLOT'S ORDEALS. Ton were told some weeks sgo how my French friend, Blaise Rigolot. be came enamored of the dowry of Miss Ruth Cumleigb, and succeeded in in truding himself npon her attention. This week be and I have been staying at Cumleigb. Lodge, in Surrey, to honor the pheasant preserves ; but we have been doing something else besides shoot, thanks to the ingenious spirit of Aiiss r.utn. You recollect being informed that Mr. Cumleigh had fallen into bad odor among society, owing to Miss Ruth's eccentric proceedings. Having a ro mantic mania for testing the personal courage of her adorers, this young lady had played pranks npon certain weU connected gentlemen notaby a guards man or two and these pranks had redounded more to Miss Ruth's per spicacity than to the glorification of her victims. To revenge themselves the well connected gentlemen who had been made to show the white feather had spread the report that Mr. Cum leigh was disgracefully bad from a person of whose antecedents nothing was known, and must have made his fortune by modes of which no right thinking mind could approve. As for me, I only half believed this ; bnt having a great opinion of myself bke the rest of yon, I hesitated to accept Mr. Cumleigh's invitation, and it was only at the instant supplication of Rigolot that I at length condescended to accompany him. When we arrived. Miss Rnth thanked me with a demure little bow, for the honor I was doing her father's roof, and hoped that I should not find tbe hospitality of it too humble. This was nonsense for a less hnmble place could not le found for advertis ing. Cumleigh Lodge is rich, luxuri ous, and yet tasteful for those who, knowing little of the houses of city plutocrats, prate of the ostentatious, vulgarity of these abodes, forget that men like Mr. Cumleigh seldom consult their own tastes in the mutter of furni ture, bnt appeal to artistic upholster ers. Before I had spent a clock ronnd at the Lodge I could not help wishing that some of the aristocracy, among whom my acquaintances chiefly lie as I think I was good enough to explain to you before would take a leaf out of a city man's book. The only thing to complain of was that among the other guests invited were a trifle too many fellow city men strongly perfumed with gold. But after all, gold is a good perfume. The other morning, then, after a satisfying breakfast of game pies, we observed that the sky was weeping, and as sport was difficult under the circumstances, I strolled in the billirrd room and began knocking the balls about, waiting for Rigolot to join me. I had scarcely been so engaged a minute when Ruth Cumleigh glided in with a gravity of purpose on her pretty face. She was adorably fresh, dressed in a bnff costume, or ecru linen, with a velvet band and large medalion round her neck, velvet bracelets ronnd her wrists, and a scarlet rose stuck, as by the merest accident, in her girdle. Lay ing her finger on her lips she motioned to me to follow her into tbe conserva tory adjoining the billiard room, and there, when I had let fall the curtain, she said : "Mr. Trefoil." "Miss Cumleigh." "Your French friend is making vio lent love to me." 'l do not wonder at it," "It's a matter of of taste; but I should be careful before marrying a Frenchman." "An authentic Viscount, I believe." "O, foreign Viscounts And then I have no faith in the courage of these Frenchmen. They boast too much, and I wonld not give a pin for a man who boasted and had no courage. He would be sure to tyrannize and make one wretched and ashamed of him. What is your opinion of Monsieur Rigolot ?" "Try him." ' That is what I mean to do if you will help me. There is a ghost who is said to haunt a churchyard near here. Do you think Monsieur Rigolot is afraid of ghosts ?" "I have little taste for them myself but a Frenchman may be above such prejudice." "And do yon think that Monsieur Rigolot would like to be awakened at night by two armed burglars pointing revolvers in his face?" asked Miss Ruth, fixing her large eyes on me. "I can only answer for myself, and confess that a night so disturbed would be most diagreeably noted in my memory." "Well, I think lhat will do then," said the pleasant young lady gravely ; "and to-morrow if he gets through the two trials creditably, I will tell him that papa has received a telegram say ing that his fortune is in jeopardy. I shall see then whether your friend cares for me or ray money." I laughed, she laughed, and between us we agreed to submit Rigolot to as uncomfortable a series of ordeals as I have ever heard devised. So that evening at dinner, just as the soup was being removed, and before any of the guests had time to draw on artificial courage from wine, Ruth Cumleigh re marked quietly : "Papa, it's to-night tbe ghost pays a veaily visit to Grave- hill Churchyard. "My dear child, how can you say such foolish things ?" "Mademoisellee believes in ghosts zen ?" inquired Rigolot, displaying his white teeth on tbe other side of tbe table. 'In undoubted ghosts. Monsieur Rigolot, and this one has frightened several people to death. I'm sure it makes one's flesh creep to think of it. Do yon not believe in ghosts T" Rigolot 's handsome face at once be came serious. "Zere are more things in heaven and earth r.n we dream of, as your Shakespeare says. Mademoiselle; I cannot deny vat"l know nozing about ; but I care not for ghosts I mock my self of zem for what can zey do to me ?" "Tbe answei of a sensible and brave man. Mossbeer Rigolot," exclaimed Mr. Cumleigh with approval, and the other city men, their wives and mobile incumbrances, concurred. But Ruth ejaculated, smiling, as if skeptical. "Well, should yoa dare to go and stand in Gravehill Churchyard alone at midnight Monsieur Rigolot ?" My friend made one of his inimitable French bows ; and asked whether Miss Ruth would favor him with her com pany ; but she answered that the test of pooo curanteism in these cases con sists in being quite solitary. Accord ingly it was understood that the Frenchman set out for Gravehill un attended at half past eleven ; and I am bound to own that the prospect of this excursion did not interfere in the lesst with Rigolot's good humor or appetite. He ate, chatted and joked as usual, I took rather less wine than his wont. and at the appointed time, notwith standing tbe dissuasions of Mr. Cum leigh, who begged him not to consider the whims of a spoiled child, he donned his bat and overcoat and sallied forth It was especially noticed that he did not take a stick or umbrella. As soon as he was gone, Ruth hastened to her room, and in ten minutes reappeared, having changed her dress and put on a thick shawl and bonnet. I was in waiting to give her my arm, and together we walked out. going at a fast pace to reach the churchyard before midnight. It was about five minutes to twelve when we arrived, and, looking through a crevice in the low wall that sur rounded the churchyard, we perceived tbe Frenchman sitting unconcernedly upon a tombstone. There was no rain, the moon was beamsng, and tall, very funereal, shadows were cast into the depths of the buttresses, and on one side of the spire, which rose straight and high in the clear air, Rigolot's face stood fall in the mooulight, and we could see that indifference was perfect. Humming a tune, he drew a cigar case from his pocket, and struck a fusee on his tombstone. "Manly but profane," whispered Ruth, clinging to my arm. It was at that very moment when midnight clanged from the steeple ; and precisely to tbe hour, a towering white apparition glided from the gloom of tbe church porch, and walked straight toward Rigolot. Not to alarm anybody, it may be stated that this apparition was nothing but a gardener's boy who was a great ally of Ruth in these adventures and who played his part by the customary means of a sheet and a pole with phospbonzed mangelwurzel at the top. This gardener's boy then advanced ; but the instant he began to be seen stalking among tbe tombs, Rigolot raised a bright, joyous laugh without a quaver in it jumped from his grave and walked to meet him. The gbost was net unprepared for this move, and receded ; Rigolot followed. The ghost, thoroughly mystified, broke ground ; then, seeing tbe Frenchman continue to approach, turned tail and ran. Hereupon Rigolot's merry voice rang out in reiterated peals, and he called out, with wonderful intrepidity and archness. "Come, don't be afraid of me, my good ghost. I am only a man. Accept a cigaret !" Rath was abashed as we made our way home. There was no doubt R;g olot bad got the best of the first loiit, and I suggested the propriety of dis pensing him from the burglary ordeal. But tbe arrangements had already been made. The gardener's boy, a young city gentleman named Tuttle, who had been sworn into the conspiracy, and myself had all rehearsed for climbing into Rigolot's balcony with crape masks on our faces ; and both Rath and Tnttle anticipated too much good fun for this performance to be baulked of it. Well, it was good fun after all, especially for Tuttle. I pass over the congratulations which Rigolot received on his return from the ghost expedi tion, and come at once to the small hour of three in tbe morning, when tbe gardener. Tattle, and I found ourselves climbing a Udder under Rigolot's bal cony, each with a horse pistol in his hand. Tuttle led tlie way, and being provided with a glazier's instrument for cutting glass, coolly removed a pane, passed his hand through the aperture, opened the window. . and walked in. He had difficulty in sup pressing his grins, but he did not grin long. 1 have never heard for certain what actually ensued ; but it seems that Rigolot was awakened by the noise, faint as it was, and seeing a bnrglar there was a night-light on the chimney place leaped out of bed, fiew to a drawer, and extracted a revolver, thence let fly the whole six barrels at Tuttle without a word of warning. In saying six barrels, however, it is fair to men tion that Tnttle did not wait for any barrels after the first, for in ono bound he was on tbe balcony, and in a second he had dropped headlong on to the flower-bed twenty feet below, without so much as touching the ladder. Tbe gardener and I followed in a state of emotion which you may be left to imagine, for we heard the bullets crashing with fearful bangs through one pane after another ; bnt possibly Rigolot did not really aim at any of us, for it was noticed afterward that all the bullets went through the upper panes. Well, Rigolot triumphed in two trials, but the worst was 'sent him just before luncheon that day.' All tbe morning there had been panic-stricken talk among tbe city men about the presumed burglary of the night, and Rigolot had given his version of that startling episode to a couple of police men who were sent for from the vil lage. He was calm in bis account, and strictly modest ; in fact, his attitude was such as wonld have given any ordinary young lady the highest opinion of him. And yet toward one o'clock Ruth Cumleigh, her face sparkling with mischief, suddenly passed through the room where I was, and, beckoning to me with her finger, said : "Just stand behind the door, Mr. Trefoil, and you'll see." Rigolot was seated, reading. He rose and abruptly exclaimed : "What is the matter, Mademoiselles? You are crying." ,0, never mind me. Monsieur Rig olot ; it's enly for papa I care ; be has just received a letter announcing his ruin." "Good heavens ! mined I" "Yes, complete ruin. It "seems he will not be able to save a shilling. O, dear ! to think be should sutler like this!" "Ruined I" exclaimed Rigolot with an extraordinary ontbnrst of feeling. "Ah, Mademoiselle forgive me for say ing a hard zing, but I am half glad of this. Yes ; I had long loved yoa I bnt yoa were rich, and I feared my atten tions might be misjudged. But now zat I am richer zan yon, say, my beau tiful, darling Rath, yoa will be mine t" And hereon I, behind my door, heard something not unlike kisses ; protests ; then more kissing. An hour later, Rigolot came to me in tbe garden and said : "Mon cher, I marry myself to Meea Ruth." "I congratulate you, Rigolot." Then Rigolot winked such a wink. "I was in the billiard room yesterday morning, and overheard yoa both." Think over all possible ways of en larging yonr business and ask yonrself honestly which will soonest, most surely and most largely contribute to that result with the least expense. Is not the answer found in advertising, which while it talks for the merchant also leaves him free to attend to all who are moved to do business with him. Pulpit aad Pew. Oar age is specially distinguished as sn extravagantly ambitious and acqui- site one. In no age of the world was ever the love of wealth more absorbing, nor were men even more desirous to ob tain it. Perhaps one-half the evils of social life result from the excessive in dulgence of this overmastering pas sion. It blinds tbe eyes to moral good, it saps the principles of virtue and hon esty, it throws a veil of discontent over the simple and purer enjoyments of bfe or blots them altogether out of view, it induces a thousand vanaties, it fosters a world of sin, it is as unwise as it is unsatisfactory, for it makes men forget their truest interests their alle giance to God. their duty to their fel low-men, and the general well being of the society to which they belong. All the right enjoyment and best happiness of life are dislocated and perverted by it. It would hardly be inferred, from the lax or indifferent way in which the pulpit ordinarily regards it, that the uncurbed love and pursuit of wealth, for its own sake, was denounced in the strongest manner by the divine Author of Christianity. The enterprises of business and the pursuits of commerce offer a noble field for energy and action ; but why should they be followed to the exclu sion of every other ? The interests of a happy and healthy existence must be numerous and varied, yet how often are all others excluded by the all con suming usurpation of these 1 Suppose tbe pulpit were to institute a universal protest, a kind of united crusade, against this monstrous and growing evil : suppose it were to point oat stu diously and clearly at what a sacrifice such a condition of things is main tained ; suppose it were persistently to impress upon those who had obtained a competency in business, instead of going on adding gold to gold, bonse to boose, field to field, the desirability of giving themselves to other objects and pursuits, and of allowing the hundreds of others, comparatively indignant, the means of obtaining a subsistence. If tbe pnlpit were to do this vigorously and energetically, its advocacy might go far, ultimately, to infuse a new ele ment and motive in society ; to induce a new set of principles for its govern ment and guidance ; to reveal a fresh and wider horizon in the economy of life. Of coarse its influence at first would be relatively small. There would be a world of prejudice and pre dilection to be removed ; there would be numerous cases in which the man of business would be tied to his occupa tion by attachments more or less in severable. Bnt supposing the pulpit were only faithful to its mission, sup posing it was effective only on a moiety of the cases presenting no real obstacle to such a coarse, what an enormous measure of good might be brought about ! To many tbe very idea would be a new one a sort of revelation pre sented to them with the force of a desi rable possibility for the first time. Value of Fish-Food. Many elaborate comparisons have been made as to the comparative food- values of batcher-meat and fish, and occasional controversies have arisen on the subject, in which the ntmost diver sity of opinion has been expressed. Some economic writers maintain that fish has no food-value worth speaking of ; others say that fish-food must oc cupy a middle position between vegeta bles, and beef and mutton. Again, a learned authority says that fish, well cooked, with oil or fat of some kind, or served with butter when brought to table ; "is chemically the same as butcher-meat, so far as nutrition is con cerned." Another writer says that fish as food, is only fit for children and in valids, and is totally unfitted to sup port the health and vigor of men or wo men engaged in laborious occupations. As usual in such disputes, we may hold that tbe truth lies between the two ex tremes. Many people following labori ous occupations, especially in Scotland, live largely npon fish. In that country the fisherman themselves eat a consid erable portion, and as a class, fisher man are strong and healthy ; and the wives who undertake a part of the men's work, are still stronger and healthier. In Portugal fish fried in oil forms a very large proportion of tbe food of the population ; their fish-diet is supple mented by a little bread and fruit, and although tbe peasantry of the land never partake of fleshmeat, yet they are a hardy, vigorous, and brave peo ple. Let it be remembered that fish is a necessity of life in France and Spain, and as regards the latter coun try, a constant organization is at work in our own islands to supply it with many kinds of cured fish. A huge por tion of tbe pilchards taken on the coast of Cornwall, as well as many hundred hogsheads of cared and smoked her rings, are sent to the Spanish markets. Cfiambcr't Journal. Cared Her. An old man up in Connecticut had a poor cranky bit of a wife, who regu larly once a week got np in the night and invited the family to see her die. She gave away her things, spoke her last words, made her peace with heaven, and then abont eight o'clock she got np in the usual way, and disappointed everybody by going at ber household duties as if nothing had happened. The old man got sick of it finally, and went ont and got a coffin, a real nice cashmere shroud, a wreath of immor telles, and with "Farewell, Mary Ann" worked in a handful of silver-plated screws. Laying the scrcw-d river besides the collection, he invited her to holler die once more. "Do it," said he, 'and in you go, and this farewell business is over." Mary Ann is at this moment baking buckwheat cakes for a large and admiring family, while they dry apples in the coffin up in the garret. The KtillneM ! Sight aad Home. It is night now, and here is home. Gathered under the quiet roof, elders and children lie, alike at rest. In the midst of a great calm the stars look out from the heavens. The silence is peo pled with the past sorrowful remorse for sins and shortcomings, memories of passionate joys and griefs rise ont of their graves, both new alike calm and sad. Eyes, as I shut mine, look at me that have long since ceased to shine. Tbe town and the fair landscape sleep under the starlight, wreathed under the Autumn mist. Twinkl h r among the houses, a light keeps watch, here and there in what may be a sick chamber or two. The clock tolls sweetly in tbe silent air. Here is night and rest An awful sense of thanks makes the heart swell and the head bow, as I pass to my room through the sleeping house, and feel as though a hushed blessing were upon it. Thackeray. Can yon spell consent in only three letters ? Y-e-s. Some Wle Old Rats. I heard the narrative first from the lips of an old sea captain a man of nn questionable veracity and I have not tbe slightest doubt of its entire truth' fulness, although the reader is not obbged to believe it, I will give it as nearly as I can remember in the narra tor's own words : "I sailed from New York for Liver pool, with an assorted cargo," said the captain, "in a ship terribly infested with rats. I tried every plan I could think of to lessen their number, but all withont effect. Tbe more I caught the more there seemed to be, till I became almost dishearted and well-nigh re solved to let them alone altogether. "At length one of the sailors sug gested a new trap, which struck me as ingenious, and which I thought Likely to prove efficient. Acting under the advice of the old sea-dog alluded to, I took a barrel, which I half filled with water then I took the head belonging to the barrel and trimmed it on the edges, till it was small enongh to fit in side the barrel across this head I nailed a stick, the ends of which pro jected abont an inch on each side, which ends I had whittled round then I bored two holes, one each side of the barrel, near the top, and inserted tbe ends of the stick therein, so that the head while apparently covering the bar rel, swung free of it. Now I fastened a piece of pork on the exact center of the cover so that it would swing neither one way nor tbe other unless touched on the edges, and my trap was complete. Tbe reader will readily understand that when a rat leaped on the edge of the cover to get at tbe pork in the center, it would go down with bis weight and drop him into tbe water below after which it wonld swing to its former po sition and be ready for the next cus tomer. "The trap succeeded admirably. On the morning after I first set it I counted thirty dead rats in tbe barrel hne fat fellows, who had been plundering tbe ship's stores till they had swelled to aldermanic proportions. On the second night I caught twenty on the third night twelve on the fourth night two on the fifth night none at all and yet strange to say, tbe pork was gone. I baited it again and again, but each time the pork was gone and no raft were cany hi. This puzzled me not a little. How could the rodents secure the pork withont getting a free bath ? The subject worried me. I called a council of war consisting of tbe entire crew and officers of the ship, but no body could suggest a solution of the mystery, and in the meantime the rats were thicker than ever. Aiy curiosity and my combativeDess were both aroused. I resolved to solve the mys tery at any cost. I determined to watch. "Accordingly at about seven o'clock one evening, while it was yet light, I took a binnacle litlit and went down into the hold of thi ship where I had fixed my trap. I hung a lamp on a nail and ensconciDg myself behind a cask of beef in an easy a position as possible, I settled myself to await patiently a solu tion of the problem which had fo puz zled and vexed me. "An hour possed by and yet no sound save the plash of tbe waves as they parted from the ship's bow, and the straining of the cordage, fell upon my ears. My eyes had become accustomed to the darkness of tbe bold, and the 'dim religious light' thrown by the bin nacle lamp, made everything around me distinctly visible. "At length a slight scratching noise, followed by a squeak, startled me. and the next moment two grav -looking and obese old rats ran to tbe cleared space whereon the barrel stood, and snuffing the air as they looked around, began to reconnoiter. "Seemingly satisfied after a brief in vestigation that no enemy was at band, they scampered back, and in the course of some five minutes returned with an army numbering some thirty or forty of their companions at their back. "I watched with breathless eager ness to see what would follow next. "After apparently consulting together while the rats divided themselves into two squads, and one-half remained on one side of the barrel while tbe other half went ronnd on the other side. I hen tbe party on the side nearest me ascended tbe side of tbe barrel one after another, each placing his forward feet on the edge of tbe cover to hold it ilown. and then the party on tbe oppo site side ascended, surrounded tbe pork loosened it from the cover, dragged it to the ground, and then the whole party surrounded it and began greedily to de vour it. The mystery was explained, and I concluded that from that time forth it was useless to attempt to cir cumvent the rodent thieves. Grasping an old belaying pin, which somehow bad fonnd its way into the bold, 1 let it fly fall force at tbe crowd, and suc ceeded in knocking over some three or four of them, and I bothered myself no farther about them. The good-bye Hospital If jr. The half of hospitality lies in the speeding of parting guests. Lavish welcomes are easily enongh bestowed, bnt the hospitable thonght mnst be very genuine, indeed, which dares to leave the gnost as free and welcome to go as to come. We all suffer, now and then, from undue nrging to stay when we prefer to go, and nearly every one of us is himself a sinner in this regard, too. No sooner does the guest intimate a wish to terminate his visit than we fly in the face of his desire, and urge him to stay longer. We sometimes do this, too, as a mere matter of dnty. when in ont hearts we care very little whether the guest goes or stays. We feel onr selves bound to show onr appreciation of our friend's visit by asking that be prolong it Now, true hospitality ought to learn better than this. Our effort should be, from first to last, to make our friend's visit thoroughly pleasant and agreeable to him. We strive for this result in hastening to offer him the most comfortable chair and to set ont our best viands, if he break bread with us. It is that he may enjoy his stay that we take pains to talk only upon agreeable topics. In short, from the time he crosses our threshold until he rises to leave we make tbe moments slip by as pleasantly as possible. Bat the moment he asks for his hat our courtesy fails us. Hitherto we have studied to anticipate and gratify his every wish. Now that he wishes to go, however, we endeavor to thwart his pleasure. We selfishly try to tarn him from his pur pose to ours. We wish him to stay when be wishes to go. Courtesy would prompt us to give his wish precedence of our own, but as a rule, we ask him to sacrifice his own to onr pleasure. Selected St, Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh is to have new stained-glass windows in the style of the fifteenth century. They are to be manufactured in France at a cost of 10,01)0, it is said. Contents of a Girl's Side-Pocket. For several days an article of lady's wearing apparel known, the reporter believes, bnt isn't quite sure, as a "side-pocket," has been hanging in the Mayors office awaiting an owner. It was picked np on the street, and evi dently belongs to a school Miss. It contains a wonderful assortment of articles, to be equaled only by tbe con tents of the pocket of a boy who is just beginning to sport a pair of pantaloons. An examination of it resulted in the following discoveries : The first thing unearthed was a slip of paper on which was written the following : A millAtme and the hntnn heart Are driven everaruuiid. If the; h.ve nuthmit eliw- tn grin 1, 1 twy niuirt tUeuMvivea be grouuL Now that's pretty good, bat here is an effusion of a somewhat different literary style, bnt quite common nowa days : Tabevtcx : Yoa 'are no iinhine. Ton are a temiet, mo uu are, Auawer. Yn are a'great irl juu are, f-hHii Hubiii kii The next thing fished out was a piece of white paper, torn from the margin of a newspaper, and on which was written, "I have not got a demerit. I got them all taken off." This is school girl all over, and is also quite sugges tive. The note leaves the inference that the writer had received demerit marks, but "soft-soaped" her teacher and got them canceled. Well, there is nothing like knowing how to get along. Following this was another piece of paper containing the address of "Bertha Spates," Clarksburg, Harrison County, W. Vs., " and this was accompanied by a pass not yet used on the West Pecn Railroad from Allegheny City to Butler, bearing the name of Thomas Mdler. Delving deeper "Bnrnett's Floral Hand-Book," giving evidence of much use, was brought forth ; also a paper of pins, a hair-pin, a lot of twine string, and, alas, must it be said, a package ol "nieen fan." It may be something else perhaps a sample of White River flour, lily white, Spanish whiting, or plaster of Paris. At any rate it was white. The last article developed by th-j investigation occasioned much se rious consideration before a conclusion was reached as to what it could be. It was a muslin string, tied with a knot, and when laid on tbe desk naturally formed a circle, as though that was its normal condition, aud as if to indicate that its proper use had been to encircle something round. After considerable time niHjut iu cogitating the writer finally arrived at the unaided decision that it belonged to tbe same class as the article of womeu's wearing apparel once nnfortnnately dropped by the Duchess of Shrewsbury, probably be cause it ha lu't been tied titfht enongh, and which Sir Sidney Smith picked up and with the now historical expression Jloni Koit qui vial y wnxr, but as ren dered by a later writer "honey swot kee Molfv Ponse." We have been thus elaborate in the description of the con-1 tents of this "side-pocket Decanse the ! owner may wish to recover it, and this j aruciu xxiav hiu tier iu imj;uiiuK . If she will call at the Mayor s olhee it will lie returned to her, garter aud all. Pittrnmrg Gazette. llitunata More at Uarrick'M neral. Fn "The beil at St. Martin's and the Ab- bey gave a sound that smote npon my very soul. When we got to the clois ters we found multitudes striving for admittance. We gave up our ticket, but unluckily we ought to have kept it. We followed the man who unlocked a door of iron, and directly closed it upon ns as two or three othere, and we found ourselves in a tower, with a dark, winding staircase of a half hundred stone steps. When we got to the top there was no way out. We ran down again, called and beat the door till the whole place resounded with our cries. Here we stayed half an hoar in perfect agony ; we were sure it would be all over ; nay we might never be let ont ; we might starve ; we might perish ! At length our clamors brought an hon est man, a guardian angel 1 then thought him. We implored of bim to take care of us, and to get us into a part of the Abbey where we might see tbe grave. He asked for the Bishop's ticket ; we had given it away to the wrong person, and he was not obliged to believe we bad ever had one ; yet he saw so mnch truth in onr grief that althongh we were most shabby, and a hundred fine people were soliciting the same favor, he took us nnder each arm, carried us safely through the crod, and put us in a little gallery directly over the grave where we could see and hear everything as distinctly as if tbe Abbey had been a parlor. Little things sometimes af fect tbe mind strongly. We were no sooner recovered from the fresh burst of grief than I cast my eyes, tbe first thing, on Handel's monument, and read the scroll in bis hand. I know that my Redeemer liveth. Just at that moment the great doors burst open with a noise tbat shook the roof; the organ struck up, and the whole choir, in strains only less solemn than tbe 'archangel's trumpet,' beg in Handel's tine anthem. Tbe whole choir advanced to the grave, in hoods and surplices, singing all the way ; then Sheridan as chief mourner ; then the body alas ! whose body ? with ten noblemen anil gentlemen pall-bearers ; then the rest of the friends and mourners ; hardly a dry eye the very players, bred to the trade of counterfeiting, shed genuine tears. As soon as tbe body was let down, the Bishop began the service, which he read in a low bnt solemn and devont manner. Such an awful stillness reigned that every word vt audible. How I felt it ? Judge if my heart- did not assent to the hope that the soul of our dear brother was now departed in peace.' Dangeron wealth. The London Globe says : "It is said that among tbe possessions inherited by tbe present Duke of Richmond was found a bank-note for X.",x). This uniqne piece of paper money of whose existence we have no doubt, was pre served with great caution, and by means which mnst have been a source of peril to friends and foes. We are informed ..I t, t l.t 'tat the late Duke caused the note to, be 'deposited m a casket L and this , casket was so fastened that any one who casae waa so tasieueu iu a-j j one wuo , attempted to handle it at once received I . 1 u . rvt. 1 . . six pistol-shots. The ingenious casket, j .0 are o.u, oerame . ui.rueumrj session to the present Djke. His an- ceebur uw uui .1 aupuiikiru m j ujiu mtj 1 1 1 .. . 1 1. : . 1 , secret by which it might be opened wUfety.and he was? thereforefnot .UncweTrenotXrd tTlearn that he finally determined to deliver the casket and its contents to the Bink of England, and to permit the officers of that establishment to investigate the ingenuity of tbe terrible contrivance. The duties of property would even be in excess of its rights if every inheri tance were tied up' in this way." TOITHV coin. Abraham's Faith. Once Alice asked what tbe word "faith" meant. "To believe in any one and trust him," answered cousin Helen. "Shall 1 tell you a story that will teach you to understand tbe word ? "Oh yes," said Alice. "I told you abont Abraham, and how God gave him a son. He loved this son, Isaac, very much, more than he loved anything else excepting God. Now one day God told him to take this boy and sacrifice hiaa. In those days they worshipped God by laying an ani mal npon a pile of stones called an altar, and killing it, and burning its body. Ihat was what Abraham was asked to do with Isaac." "O cousin Helen, would that be right to kill his own son ?" "It seemed a very strange thing to Abraham, but he trusted in God, had faith in Him, and he knew that what ever God told him to do would be right. So he took Isaac and went a great way from home ; until they came to a high hilL Isaac knew that they were going to sacrifice to God, and he was carrying the wood and fire. Bnt he did not know that he was to be the one sacrificed. After they had built an altar, Abraham took his son and tied him with a rope and laid him on the stones." "Did Isaac let him ?" "Yes, Johnny, because he had faith in bis father, just as his father had faith in Gm1. And now the time had come to kill the sacrifice. It was a bard thing to do. Abraham knew that ; when Isaac was dead he would be child- j less, and he did not see how God could j keep His promise to make Abraham's children a great people. Still he knew j that God was alwavs right. So he took ; np the knife and turned to the altar where bis son lay. And jnst then God called to bim saying : "Do not touch the boy. Yoa have shown how mash yon love and trust me, becanse you did not keep even your son from me." Abraham looked up, and there, in the bashes, a ram was caught by its horns He took that and sacrificed it, aud then he and Isaac went home. How happy be was to know that be had his boy with him, and best of all, that he had faith in (Sod 1" "God loved Abraham, didn't he ?" "Alice, God loves all of ns so much that He sent His own dear Son, Jesus, to die for us. Near the very hill that Abraham went to, Jesus was nailed to the cross, and died, so that we may be saved if we only have faith in Him." PoT.rrn CrctLDRES. "Thank yon, Charlie," said Mrs. Brown, as her little son handed her a paper be was requested to bring. "That you, Bridget," said the little fellow a few hours after, as he received a glas of water from his nurse. 'Well Mrs Kmrti vnn h.-. !. kpst mannnmi pin! Inm I avi,- tf " said a neighbor. "I should be thankful are to the servants. You never spend half so much time on your children's clothes as I do, and yet every one notices them, they are so w ill-behaved." "We always try to tr ar our children politely," was the quiet repty. This was the whole secret. When I ; bear parents grumbling abont the ill- manners of their children, I always wisn to ass, -nave you always treated them with politeness ?" Many parents who are polite and polished in their manners toward the world at large are perfect boors inside the home-circle. If a stranger offers the slightest service, he is gratefnlly thanked ; bnt whoever remembers to thus reward the little tireless feet that are traveling all day long np-stairs and down on countless errands for some body ? It wonld le policy for parents to treat their children politely for the sake of obtaining more cheerful obedi ence, if for no other reason. The cost less use of an "If you please," and "I thank you," now and then, will go far to lighten an otherwise bnrdensome task. Say to your son, "John, shut that door," and with a scowl, he will move slowly towards it, and sbnt it with a bang. Tbe next time say, "John will yoa shot the door, please?" and he will hasten with a pleasant smile to do your bidding. Tub Child's Pocket Enquirr. 1. Always say, yes, sir ; no, sir; yes. papa; no, thank yoa ; good-night, good morning. Never say "how" or "which" for what. Use no slang terms. Re member that good spelling, writing, and grammar are the base of all true education. 2. Clean faces, clean clothes, clean shoes and clean finger nails indicate good breeding. Never leave your clothes abont the room. Have a place for everything and everything in its place. 3. Rap before entering a room ; leave it with yonr face to the company. Never enter a private room or public place with yonr hat on. 4. Always offer yonr seat to a lady or old gentleman. Let your companions enter the carriage or room first. At the table eat with your fork ; sit np straight, never use your tooth pick, althongh some people do ; and, when leaving, asked to be excused. fi. Never put your feet on cushions, chairs, or tables. 7. Never overlook any one when reading or writirg, or talk or read aloud when others are reading. When con versing, listen attentively, and do not interrupt or reply till the other has finished. Ismdon S. S. Timrx. Tub Cpilkrf.x or tits Arabs. The mothers aud fathers in Arabia make a great difference between their sons ami j laughters. They think it a dreadful thing for a little girl to presume to come into the world, and often hurry her out of it without mnch ceremony. Some years ago it was common through out tbe country to offer np female children as a sacrifice ; bnt in later years it ia done as a matter of economy and the poor little creatures are some times buried alive and sometimes thrown into the sea. When a little girl is born the mother cries as if her heart would break, and all her neigh- V 1 .1. : 1 1. 1 : wis hr nj uiuakUJAC wiui tier nils- (oliaw Tu proverbs bont the J. The threshold -- j. - - n ZH"J??E. WL7 ' l?h to send women before to tbe other wor,d , When a bov i horn thr. am at rejoicings ; friends and neighbors call 1 . 1 - 4 , , ! r K . " "V ty i,?ii?4i0" hu""?: ! rXPre98in naPPlne8 . Dkwdbops at night are diamonds at morn ; so the tears we weep here may be pearls in heaven. "Chaos" is the name of tbe fashiona ble new color. - YtKIEriES. The soliloquy of Hamlet contains 79 Anjlo-Saxon wcrd-v. A noted architect when asked "what was the best system of ventilation ?" re plied : "Fireplaces in every room. The women of Ceylon were greatly shocked a short time back at seeing an English lady traveler wearing a tortoise shell back comb. In that quarter of the globe the article is worn only by men. The first three men in the-world were a gardener, a ploughman, and a grazier ; and if any man object that the second of these was a murderer, I desire he would consider that as soon as he was so, he quitted oar profeseion and turned builder. Cowley. Tennyson's temper isn't so smooth as his poetry. He ordered a new house built at Hazlemete some time ago. The house was put np by an architect of great accomplishments, but the poet laureate didn't like it. and went back in a huff to his old residence in the Isle of Wight, They say now that when young ladies describe a thing as "perfectly beautiful," they merely imitate William Pitt, who once used the expression in a dispatch. This attempt to deprive women to all claim to originality is abominable ; they will say next that Adam ate the first apple. Professor S -hievelmann has jnst fin ished the model of a group which is to t executed in bronze and placed in the "Lust Girten" in Berlin. It represents a nver god shielding a neried agaiust a pursuer, and the contrast between tbe rough muscular god, and the tender yonthfnl virgin is said to be exqui sitely developed. At Ostia is an old tower and fort that were built nnder the ptpacies of Sextn9 IV. and Julius II. Litoly thev have found aronnd the tower ninety-five can non balls, buried deep in the earth. In the middle ages, and for some years after. Ostia was the scene of many bloody combats. These projectiles be long probably to that epoch. Among tlio discoveries made in the Villa Palombara, near Rome, are a head of Venn, of artistic workmanship and in excellent presiTv.it ion; and a Mercury with cadiicens, and some bronze vases and sculptures in marble. At Ripetta, an ancient port of the Tiber, there have also been discovered a column of mot tled alabastar and a large sarcophagus of marble, with genii in relief and in scriptions ; and in the Villa Babn;no some remains of wails and mosaic pave ment. The oldest tailor in the world has just died in P.iris. He w.is lifJ yeara of age. He was called Father Fipps. He began his trade at nine ye irs of age, and continued at it until his linndredth year I He worked for ninety-one years! Three months ago he made a pair of pantaloons for his youngest great-great grandchild. It took him a fortnight. "And to think," he said, "that once npon a time I could make a pair in a half a day !" Corvin, of Dresden, manufactures an elegant imitation of marble for archi tectural purposes by impregnating sand stone with silicic acid and alnmina. In Nanndorf stones are prepared thus which are intensely white, transparent and capable of taking a fine polish. By the introduction of suitable pig ments in the impregnating mass any desired color is produced. It is said that the cost is much less than that of real marble, while the imitation resists heat better. The Duke of Edinburgh's baby has jnst received a present of a cradle in silver filigree, lined with pink silk, pink curtains, covered with white lace, held np by an elegantly chiselled po!, with a charming baby-face looking out from a knot of pink ribbons. Princess Iteat rice has worked a quilt of white satin for this beautiful cradle, and embroid ered the same with roses, so natural as almost to deceive the eye. And yet the little thing cries and needs just as much soothing syrup as other babies. A writer in the Pari Oanloi dwells at great length over the change in Stras bourg since the annexation. The Alsa tians keep entirely aloof from the Ger mans, and won't be seen with them in public. In proof of what he advances, he adds the following postscript : "I forgot to say that the German theatre is so little frequented that the manager is often obliged to put out the gas, and return the money taken at the doors. On the other hand, a French rJr. ron rr.rt is crammed nightly, ami I pro longed my stay twenty-four hours in order te go there." One of tbe services which the signal offices proposes to render the country is the study of seatempatare ia connec tion with the habits aud migration of fishes. This subject now engages earn est attention in England and Scotland, as well as in tbe United States. It has been suggested that the movement of fishes have a definite relation to sea temperatures and the weather, ami for two years the herring fisheries have been carefully studied by Mr. Cnchaa to determine this relation. If these ef forts are successful, the signal office may he able to add the direction of the fisheries to its other holds of useful ness. From careful experiment. Dr. Rich ardson concludes that since the red blood globules of the pig, or red deer, cat, horse, sheep and goat "are all so mnch smaller than are the ordinary minimum Bize of the human red disc, as compnted in my investigation we are now able, by aid of high powers of microscope and under favorable eircn ra ti ta rices, positively to distinguish stains produced by human blood from those caused by the blood of any one of the animals just enumerated ; and this even after a lapse of five years, at least, from the date of their primary production." This will be important in criminal trials. Ijindnn Knijint rr, The method fir making joints to unite tbe sides of boxes, tc, has been recently patented in England. The two pieces of wood to be fastened to gether are first mitred in the nsnal man ner, and a bole is then drilled vertically in each piece, from the bottom upwards, at a short distance from the nirad edge. A channel or groove is then cut, by a saw or otherwise, from the mitred edge to the drilled hole. This channel is of a less width than the diameter of the hole, and may be cut either paral lel to tbe sides of the piece of wood, or at right angles to the mitre edge, so that when the two pieces of wood are put together a eon tin nous channel shall be formed between the two holes. The two pieces are then held tightly to gether, and a key is formed by running metal such as lead or fusible metal into the channel, by this means the key is cast m the place which it is to oc cupy. The key may also be made sep arately, of solid metal, and driven home into the channel. 1