m a f it' tfl 11 i k n w m ii B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CeSSTITCTION IHB C5I0N AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THB LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. YOL. XXIX. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., FEBRUARY 3, 1S75. NO. 5. POETET. LOVE 1D REST. BT If ART B. DODGE. Love is sweeter than rest. "II ex ry Timeod. "Rent will noon be Granted, dear. Think of all the Libia When you reach that brighter sphere. Lifted free of this ! llocue aud rest, and palms, and peace ! Verily, euch gain. O'er the looses of release, ISalanoee the pain !' "Yea; bat human lore to me Is so near divine. That my heart clings yearningly Even to life like mine. Love is sweeter far than rent That aloue I know And the soul that love mc beat Will not let me go." "Home, and rest, and heaven, dear Love in in them all ! Teuderest love in giveu, dear. In the Saviour's call; He would lift your face to hia. Fold you to hia breast. Teach you wiiat a crowning 'tm When he off era rest !" "Rest is Bwoet how well I know Itewt that follows care When the tired sun droppeth low, Aud beside my chair Listens one while I rejieat, I'.y her love caressed; 'Ah, my darling, love is sweet, Sweeter even than rest ! 1 " "Yet, beloved, more tlian we I'udemtand, he gives l"u to him who trustfully In his promise lives; Measure all the bliss we can. Still must be believed Never has the heart of mau Perfect joy conceived !" "True, ah, true, and well I mark All your words would teach And my soul beyond the dark Stretches forth to reach Faith yet fuller, more complete. . While my lips attest It is love makes heaven sweet - Love is more tliau rest !" IM ELLA XT. IMKplajr. A love of display is treated by most persona as a harmless kind of weakness, and those who do think, speak of it in a charitable, commiserating manner, as something to be expected from those persons who have no real jewels in their heads. This view is certainly a most mischievous ODe, and if all would fully realize the terrible train of evils arising from an inordinate love of display, the failing wonld tie treated with as mnch severity as a crime. The basis of this vanity is a disposition to pander to the superficial senses and to pass for more than mere worth, which is essentially vulgar and dishonest. To well bal anced, rightly-instructed mind one quiet virtue in our friend or neighbor is worth all the diamonds that glitter, and in contemplation will bring us more real happiness. In summing np the evils of the dis position, we find legions in its wake. In private life it will cause as to over look and undervalue real merit in our servants, and neighbors. It will create an inordinate desire for wealth, making us hard, selfiish, grinding and cruel. It will cause us to ignore the claims of humanity, neglect our children, who should receive onr most valued time while being fitted for the business of lifd, and, in fact to fritter away time which should be used for higher, more imperative and substantial duties. If shown in the language of onr conver sation, it is ridiculously disgusting, and reveals a streak of littleness which we would be too happy to conceal if we could see ourselves as others see us. In public matters it shows itself accord ing to the vulgarity and unsubstantial character of the people, and leads to the building of grand structures, be fore the wealth of the country will jus tify such an outlay, while really deserv ing institutions perish for lack of means and the unfortunate poor starve for want of bread. Then the necessity for economy is felt ; it will strike at the roots of our most serviceable institu tions in public as well as private life, compelling those who have compara tively little to get along with mnch less. In religion it manifests itself in fine churches and nseless decoration, while the widow and orphan are turned into the street to prey upon the society at large. This trait is never the ac companiment of true greatness. We have all seen persons who had spent their whole lives in impressing the world with the magnitude of their pres ence upon this earth, the effort requir ing eternal vigilance and a vast expen diture in goods, and these very persons will literally shrivel up with contempt for their own insignificance when in the vicinity of true worth, wisdom and culture, it the time expanded in the gratification of this frivolous vanity was conscientiously used in making ourselves wiser, better and more use ful, as individuals, we should be much more prosperous and honest, and as a people vastly happier. Don't ! the Step. It is, perhaps, well for us that we do not count up in early life the number of steps, many of them weary ones, we shall have to take in treading the long road that reaches from the cradle to the'grave. It is well for the; young housewife that she does not estimate the number of million of dishes she will have to wash during a period of house-keeping forty years long, in each of which years the table must be cleared and the dishes washed a thousand times. It is well that the poor seam stress does not count the number of miles of seam and gusset and band, band and gusset and seam her tired fingers must form till the lamp of life, like the table lamp, gives out. It is wise and well that sue, who sits from one year to another in the same little room, does not realize that her hand movas, in forming siitches, more miles than a steamship travels in crossing the Atlantic. PhonpboroiiM Sleet. Among the results of extended ex periments, conducted by Euverte, to ascertain how much phosphorus may be added to steel, the following seem important: Bybringingsuitablequanti ties of substances containing phos phorus in contact with iron of different kinds spiegeleisen, for example treated in a Siemens-Martain furnace, he found the resulting metal to be malleable, and generally of good quality, and he also determined that cast-steel may contain a certain amount of phosphorus without losing its quality aa respects its tenacity, and that steel containing 0"003 of phosphorus and 01)015 of carbon affords most excellent nils. LOV1XG THE HOVEY. HOT THE Max "Uncle Coleman, I'm going to marry Lucia Frothingham 1" "Eh ? What 1" Uucle Coleman put down his news paper, pushed his spectacles up on his loreneaa, ana glared at his nephew. "Goinir to marrv Lucia Fmthinnr. ham !" he cried, after gasping awhile in sheer dismav. "You idiot 1" "Thanks," was the cool reply. "I know you do not like the lady, but where there is a strong mutual love "Strong mutual fiddlesticks !" inter rupted Lucie Coleman, contemptuously. "You may love her : she is nrettv ami fascinating, but what she loves is your oaua account, my Doy. i Knew it would be so when Aunt Jennie left vou a cool hundred thousand. But boys, will be Doys. umy lor goodness sake, wait a year or two before you saddle yourself T,(i, . -f "I am twenty-one sir," (with an im mense air of dignity.) "I am sixty-four I Now, Frank, do hear reason. Lucia Frothingham is a fascinating woman, touching the thirties, if not already over the line a finished flirt, and as mercenary as she is pretty. 1 know her, and I tell you her affection is centered upon Aunt Jennie's legacy, and the half million in prospective at my banker's." "Uncle Coleman," cried his nephew, hotly, "I never thought of it, much less spoke of it." "I don't suppose you ever did. Having always hal an independent in come, I don't think you ever counted on a dead man's shoes. But Miss Frothingham was educated in the hard school of genteel poverty, and a rich husband is the prize for which she has studied and toUed. for well, say ten years. She was in society before you were done playing with tops and mar bles." "Uncle Coleman, yon are speaking of my betrothed wife, remember." "Hem !" "Years are of no consequence where there is true love." "Hem !" "And I love Lncia as she loves me." "Not a bit of it." "To-morrow she goes to Saratoga, and if you can spare mc I will go too." "And the business in Hartford f I should advise yon to attend to all matters belonging to yonr aunt's estate as soon as possible, Frank." "It may keep me in Hartford a month," said Frank, disconsolately. Coleman Burke looked with a pitying affection at his young relative, such a boy yet in many matters, though he had reached "man's estate." "A month that mny settle vour whole fortune," he said. Remember men do not fall heir to a hundred thousand dollars more than once in a life-time." "1 bupiiose I must go." "It will be best. Besides," added Uucle Coleman, dryly, "it will be a good test of your lady love's constancy 1" "I am not afraid of her forgetting me, said frank, loftily. "Yen are actually engaged ?" "Certainly ! I bought a diamond ring at 's yesterday, and put it on her taper finder last evening." "Hem! Well, the fool-killer hasn't been here lately, that's certain. There, be off and let me fiuish my paper iu peace. You will go to Hartford ?" "Yes." But after his nephew left him Cole mau Burke left his paper lie idle upon his lap, while he fell lutoa fit of musing, often interrupted by impatient ejacula tions. He was a man, as he had said, past sixty and had been a childness wido ver, for thirty years, while four little graves beside that of his wife, recorded the heart history of his life. When he had lived louely and a sin cere mourner for many long years, hia brother and wife died, leaving Frank, a curly-headed boy, to the cure of his uucle Coleman. AH the long-seated fountains of love in the desolated heart ojieued to pour out their affection upon the child. He was truely the very sun light of the old man's existence, aud though his manner had been cynical, his heart been sorely wrung by the an nouncement of his engagement, bnt not from any paltry jealously or any merce nary motive. Had Frauk loved a true, tender woman, were she a beggar, his uncle would have given her a father's love and welcome. But by the light of his own brief married happiness he read the misery in store for his nephew, if he married Lucia Frothingham a flirt, extravagant aud selfish. How to save him was costing the old man torturing thought. Active opposition would only strengthen what was now but a boyish infatuation, and yet saved he must be. Suddenly a light broke over Coleman Burke's face, aud he rose from his chair and went to a long mirror in the room. The reflection was not calculated to waken vanity, yet the old man smiled well pleased. "If I can only carry it out, it will be proof positive, he thought. Short, fat, nearly bald, with specta cles, and a cane, Coleman Burke was certainly a strong contrast to the tail, handsome young fellow, who had won Lucia for his promised bride, yet he said aloud : "I'll cut him out ?" A week later all the fashionables at the C Hotel, at Saratoga, knew that Coleman Burke intended to take a wife. What bird first bore the news upon the scented air no one could have told you, but there was no lack of in formation about the elderly bridegroom in prospective. Everybody (that was anybody) knew that Coleman Burke had retired from business years before, worth half a million of money, and had made fortunate investments since. That he was decked in fashion's latest styles, wore diamond studs and ring, carried a switch cane, drove fine team and oc cupied expensive rooms at the hotel, all could see for themselves. Very soon after he came, another fact was patent to all observers that he was very attentive to Miss Lucia Frothing ham, the belle of many seasons. Mrs. Frothingham hoped in her heart that Lucia would not be fool, and would remember how far Mr. Coleman Burke's pocket-book outweighed his nephew's ; also that an eld man's dar ling was far more apt to have every whim gratified than a young man's slave. Having delivered this material lecture, the widow dilated upon the expenses of the Saratoga trip, and was rather marked in her emphasis upon speedy subjugation of the elderly adorer. And Miss Lucia bragged her fair sloping shoulders, threw over them a cloud of black lace aud descended to the porch Mr. Bnrke waited to escort her for a drive. His manner of wooing was certainly more business like that sentimental. Where Frank had grown eloquent over the beauty of the liquid dark eyes, his uncle dilated upon the suitability of diamonds for brunette beauty. Where Frank tenderly quoted poetry descriptive of the slender grace of the willowy figure, his unole thought velvet was the most becoming wear for siigm ngures. as they drove, the fat old gentleman asked her oninion of his horses, also obtained her description of we mosi suitaDie carnage lor a la ly s exclusive use. Likewise he expressed contempt for an India shawl folded upon a seat near the lake, as one far below the quality he would purchase to deck a laay s shoulders Sometimes.indeed, as Lucia informed her affectionate parent, "he was a little spoony, pressing her hand and rolling up his pale, blue eyes over the rims of his spectacles, like a fat old porpoise." Uut as a rule, he was simply devoted in a constant attention. A bouquet of rare nowers in the morning, followed by call ; a drive in the afternoon ; a walk in the evening, or an offer of escort duty at a ball, became the usual daily routine. But the elderly wooer was an energetic and persistent one, and even Lucia, vain of her conquest, was bewildered by the rapidity of the court ing. Only a fortnight ago, she had but a bowing acquaintance with Mr. Burke, and now he had positively offered a parure of expensive cameos for her ac ceptance. "A letter from Frank 1 Coming to day !" mused Mr. Coleman Burke, read an epistle handed in at his door." "Sur prised to find me away from home. Hopes I have seen his dear Lncia in a kinder light than the one 1 had previously had. Hem yes well" And so Mr. Burke mused and muttered as he donned his most ex quisite suit, his most dazzling necktie and fastened a boquet in his button hole. "Bless my soul. Uncle Coleman, what a swell you are !" And then Frank was in the room and the two exchanged cordial greetings. "And Lncia?" Frank questioned, "is she well?" "She was perfectly well last evening when I took her for a drive." "You?" "Certainly. You do not suppose I have failed in attention to my future niece, do yon ?" "You like her better than you did," continued Frank, pleadingly 1 ''See here, Frank," the old man said, suddenly wheeling reund from the glass to faee his nephew. "I have a bargain to make with yon. If, within an hour, I prove Lucia false, mercenary, and a traitor to her promise to you, will you give her up ? Stop I If she is true. loving and faithful I withdraw my harsh words, and will give her the love I al ways hoped to give your wife. "But how can you find out ?" said the young man astonished at his uncle's energetio proposal. ''It is yon who are to find out. I am already satisfied ! Yon are to go to the centre window of the small drawing room, on the east porch, and listen to a conversation I am to have, by appoint ment, with Miss Frothingham." "Eavesdropping. " "Never mind that grand air of con tempt. I am to have my way for jnst one hour, and you can take yours after ward for a life-time. Will you go ?" "If you say so." "Oo, then." Just a little later Miss Frothingham, all smiles and white mnslin, sailed into the east drawing-room to greet her elderly admirer. With an air of deepest devotion he raised her hand to his lips aud greeted her with a flowery compli ment, "I presume," he said, in a low, ten der tone, "you are at no loss to guess why I have ventured to summon you here. Yon must have understood the meaning of my attentions. Need I tell you how dear you have become to me ! Need I speak of the love you have in spired ?" "Yon are so kind" she murmured. "I am contemplating a speedy return to the city, and I wish to arrange for the wedding, if I can obtain any ex pression of yonr wishes. Do not ob ject to an early day ? "Any day will be supremely blest," she said, softly, "that makes me your wife." "My wife I Bless my soul, my nephew told me" "On ! Mr. Burke, you do not imag ine I have encouraged that boy !' with an accent of most magnificant scorn. "He is an amiable young fellow and I have been kiud to him. But love between myself and a boy of that age is simply preposterous." "I am aware the disparity of years " "My dear Mr. Burke, do not speak of that. To me there is a dignity and nobility about a man who has passed middle life that can never be attained without the experience of years. Be lieve me, your having a slight advan tage of me in age will bnt increase my affection." "You are only too kind. Then I may tell Frank that yon" "Why talk of Frank ? Surely yon may choose a wife without your nephew interference." "I choose wife 1 My dear young lady, what are you talking about I I have no intention of seeking wife." "No intention of seeking wife I Have you not just made me an offer of marriage !" "Not at all," was the cool reply. "I was nndcr the impression that yon were engaged to my nephew. As Frank is my nearest relative and my heir, I was anxious to win the affection of his promised wife. But since there is no engagement between you " "Oh, Mr. Burke yon must have mis understood me. My on!y fear was lest you should not sanction our love. Dear Frank has often spoken to me of yonr fatherly love for him. You will not repeat to Frank th 3 conversation we have had ? I my confusion yon will forget my wild words ?" "But 1 shall not ?" The blinds parted as Frank spoke, revealing his white face and anger lighted eyes. Miss Frothingham screamed and Uncle Coleman said quietly : "Are you convinced T "Fully! The boy. Miss Forthing ham, thanks yon for showing him the folly of trusting in the love of a co quette. Yon have given me a sharp lesson, Uucle Coleman ; but I thank you that my Ufe has not been blighted by a woman's treachery. The pale face vanished. Uncle Cole man, with a ceremonious bow, took bis departure while Lucia Fronthingham went into genuine hysterics on the sofa. Uncle Coleman joined Frank on the porch, and Unking his arm in his nephew's said kindly : "Forgive me the pain I cause yon, for the love I bear you," "I thank yon," waa the reply. "Yon have saved me a life of misery by show ing me a mercenary woman's treachery. I shall never feel any emotion bnt gratitude that yon proved your words." Josh Billings says : There is two things in this Lie wnich we are never prepared for, and that is twins. The Cultivation of Oyster. The usual method of studying oysters and the oyster trade is to swallow a dozen raw at a market stand, interview the wholesale dealer in regard to the number he handles and where he gets them, chat for half an hour, perhaps, with the master of an oyster sloop then clinch the whole with such information as may be gleaned from the nearest encyclopedia. This is the reporter's method. Much interesting knowledge is gained thereby ; but, as we have already seen, more is missed. The most important feature of the business, the cultivation of oysters, is invariably overlooked. Having seen that, so far from being unknown in this country, as commonly reported, oyster breeding is an industry at once extensive and very important, let ns visit the oyster farmer at home, and study the methods of his business. their object, and the effect they have on the development of our mncn prized and most delicious product of Neptune's kingdom. First, to the breeding ground. To the casual visitor, sailing over an oyster plantation, it is the blankest of all cultivated areas. He sees but a waste of water, with here and there a protruding pole, and is bnt vaguely impressed when assured that as far as his eye can reach the ground is covered with crops in various stages of maturity. Strange farming, nnder twenty feet of brine I In the middle of a broad bay. perhaps a mile from shore, our tidy craft is put about, and our skipper says we are over a "patch" of twenty acres devoted to this year's spawn. For miles around the Sound is staked off for oyster beds, and hundreds, perhaps thousands of acres, belonging to other oyster farmers, are in use aa breeding grounds. As we drift across onr twenty acre field, a dredge is thrown over, and a moment after the quivering rope tells that the dredge is at work on the bottom. We drift a boat's length, and the catch is hauled in a bushel or so of empty shells, half a dozen crabs, any quantity of amber-colored "gingles," and per haps two or three oysters. "Nothing here !" you are tempted to say ; but look closer. Every one of those empty shells, every object that has not escaped through the meshes of the net, is covered with rough brown creatures the size of one s finger naiL They are oyster spat, that is, young oysters of this year's spawning, now three months old. They first become visible to the naked eye when about a week old. A gingle the size of a nickel coin carries half a dozen ; a nodule of coral as large as a walnut bears twenty ; on half an oyster shell yon count fifty or sixty, perhaps a hundred or more, if you have patience to distinguish the little ones. Who can number the thou sand on a square yard, the million on an acre, every inch of which is. sown with promises of futnre stews and fries ? As we pass to other grounds, the dredge is cast on the gravelly shell strewn bottom of a swift channel, in a quiet cove, in deep water aud in shal low ; each time the dredge is filled with rubbish interspersed with old oysters, clams, scallops, and other denizens of salt water. Here and there a bright shell, a pebble, or a bit of coal will show an oyster spat ; but a whole dredge full of stuff will carry fewer than a single oyster shell from the breeding ground. It is the old story of Nature versus cnltivation. At spawning time last summer, the waters over the several areas were equally filled with microscopic oysters, millions of which were sent adrift by each prolific parent. They swarm free and independent, like other young people, for awhile ; but the time soou came when they had to settle for life. At this critical stage of their existence, those on the breeding ground were plentifully provided with enticing rest ing places, in the shape of clean shells, gravel, and the like, and they settled in myriads. Those which had Nature for nurse had to take their chances, and on the uncultivated grounds the chances were relatively few, notwithstanding the season was an uncommonly favor able one for natural beds. The fur nishing of clean stools for the young spat is thus a matter of prime impor tance in oyster culture, and it is of equal importance that the stools are provided at the right time. The period of spawning varies with the position of the bed, the depth of the water, and other conditions, from J une to August. The precise time for each bed must be discovered "with the kniie," that is to say, by dissecting the oysters. By this, which is purely an American method of breeding, it matters little how deep the water may be ; shells and gravel will sink through a hundred feet as certainly as through ten. The shal low breeding places employed by the French would not answer at all in our climate, no more would their costly and clumsy contrivances for fixing the spawn. There the securing of a few hundred thousand spat is acconnted a great achievement. Here it is the least of the oyster breeder's labors to obtain boat loads of them. The trouble is to defend them during the five years of their development. Examine one of the spat-laden stools. It is obvious that such a crowd of oysters cannot come to any size in so small a space. If left to themselves, few could survive the struggle for exis tence, and they would be pinched and meager. The oyster farmer does not permit such a waste of seed. Yonder sloop, which has been beating back and forth across onr breeding ground, is nearly laden with a worthless-looking cargo, in reality a wealth of seed that would be a small fortune to a foreign breeder. The business of her crew is, primarily, to keep watch against inva sion by starfish and other foes of the young oysters. Their coarse-meshed dredges bring up quantities of spat covered shells which are kept for dis tribution on other grounds, quite as many spat as can thrive on the ground being attached to stools small enough to slip through the dredges. Next summer the year-old teed will be sim ilarly thinned, the clusters broken np, and the surplus transplanted. The same process will be repeated the year after ; the next year the entire crop will be lilted, it happening that the oysters thrive exceedingly well on this particu lar ground np to their third year, after which their growth is too slow for profit. Transplanted to more favorable ground they increase in size and thick ness very rapidly. By thus ohooaing grounds specially suited to the several stages of the oyster's development, the breeder is able to hasten the maturity of his crop, besides securing a higher average of size and quality in the product. On firm gravelly bottom, for example, where a free circulation of water is maintained nnder and around the oysters, a crop will accomplish as mnch in fonr years as in five on mud, and the quality will be much superior. Oar time is too short, however, to enter upon anything like a thorough study of oyster grounds and their effects npoxt the growing oysters. They vary as farm lands do on shore, the oystermen of any locality being able to recognize, at sight, the oysters of different beds within gunshot of each other, often those of different parts of the same bed. A novice can tell by its plumpness the cultivated from the natural oyster. Even when the latter has had the bast, of advantages, and has attained the rounded outline of the perfect oyster it invariably lacks the depth of body, the thickness of meat, which the culti vator strives to attain. It will be very apt to lack, also, firmness of flesh and delicacy of flavor. Encouragement. There are very few men, women or children who will not do better and be better for a little judicious encourage ment. Indeed, it is absolutely neces sary to their welfare. Every kind of worker, whether in the pulpit, class room, desk, or workshop (and that includes editors), will be more thriftv and skilful for a little lubrication by the way of sensible and timely expres sions of appreciation, when his work is worjny oi it. We do not mean that fawning and iiatierin? eulogies must ue iorever ex pressed, anil eople be treated like spoiled '-allies who will cry most lustily if the sugar-not is not in eon stant use. There is a wide difference In-t ween judicious praise and baby-talk. What we mean is: when a minister. teacher, or scholar is niakine prober riioiis 10 no inn umy, aim is making anything like due protrress, let liuii know iu a quiet and Bulsliied wav that yon notice it and appreciate it. 1 hous ands of persons, both young anil old, are languishing in their work for the want ot a little encouragement. A good many persons have the faculty of quickly discerning when a thing is done right or wrong. If it is done right, they have nothing to say. But if there is any flaw or shortcoming, they deem it an important duty to sneak of it iu deprecating tones and manner, and they leel that their consciences would deranged if thev failed to rebuke the fault. The consequence is. they are regai dedos scolds a sort of human currycomb; and the more sensitive the objifts lieing curried, the more wincing, laying back of ears, and occasionally kicking, results from it. The best way to curry, it is said, is to use a brush. I he currying process may tie neces sary, and therefore not to be dispensed with, it is the manner of doing it that makes it for liettcr or worse. Every observer of human nature knows that the fault finding, scolding style provokes a reliellious spirit in those who are the subjects of it, aud esjiecially when that style is the pre vailing style. 1 hey may even know that llicy deserve it, but, alter all, when their good work is passed by in silence, and their imiierfcctious loudly con- leiuned, it is not well received indeed. it will discourage und drive away such persons. 1-et imperfections lie bointed out aud duly corrected, by all means and level up the account by giving due credit where credit is due. Sensible people are never hurt by a little timely encour agement, and it is ulsmtas good a plan as any to make the other kind sensible. Lubricate! Don't scold! A Boy" Adventure. Just at the close of the war of 112. a United .States uian-of- war entered Bos ton Harbor. the Commodore was known as a bully of the first water. Entering a barber shon in Boston, aud ti tiding no one but the boy was present, he demanded in au insolent and over bearing way: here is your master! "Not down yet, sir." "Well, 1 want to lie shaved.1 "1 can shave you." -Youf" "Yes, sir." "Well you may try it, but look here, my youngster, laying his loaded pis tol down iiihiii the table "the first drop of blood you draw on my faee I'll shoot you." "All right" was the reply. The Ihiv shaved him and did it well. After the ojieiatiou was through, the bully turned to him and said, us lie took up the pistol : asu t you at raid I "No, sir," retorted the Isiy. "Didn't you believe 1 would shoot you T "l es, sir." "Then why wasn't yon afraid!" The Ihiv very eoolv renlied. "Because I had the advantage." "Advantage, lmwr demanded the irate bully. Why, said the boy, with thentiuost nonchalance, "if I should have drawn blood. I should have taken the razor and cut vour tin oat from ear to ear!" The bully turned pale, but never for got the lesson. Reverence Tor Old Hats. It is singular how a rich man will cling to an old hat. It is not born of his veneration lor anthjuity, for rich men revere what is, or may be, and not what was. A man with millions in his rollers will go for months without fur enough on his beaver to furnish Winterquarters for a mosquito. He scours it with his coat sleeve morning and night, and is mad enough to make his mother-in-law a present, f. anybody accidentally tumbles it on the floor. hen he enters Ins onicehe carefully hangs it up on the peg and casts a warning look at the boy witu the duster. When he takes it off at home in the evening, the children pass round it timidly, and his wile surveys it as scornfully as if it were a poor relation. .Nothing but the death ot the man or the decomposition of the hat can part these true friends. And even in death he has been known to go so far as to order this relic to be buried with him. It will probably be one of the most exciting spectacles of the Judgment Day when the rich approaches to beg for merry in a venerable tile that wouldn't bring 4 cents at auction. Beauties ofShadows. The thadows all day long play at silent games of beauty. Every thing is double if it stands in light, the tree sees an nnrevealed and muffled self lying darkly along the ground. The slender stems of flowers, golden rod. wayside asters, meadow daisies. and rare lilies (rare and yet abundant in every nice, level meadow) cast forth a dim and tremulous line of shadow, that lies long all the morning, shorten ing till noon, and creeping out again from the root all the afternoon, until the sun shoots it as far eastward in the evening as the sun snot it westward in the morning. A million shadowy ar rows such as these spring from Apollo's golden bow of light at every step. Jr ly ing in every direction, they cross, in terlacing each other in a soft net-work of dim lines. .Meanwhile, the clouds drop shadow-like anchors, that reach the ground, but will not hold ; every browsing creature, every flitting bird, every moving team, every unconscious traveler writes along the ground in dim shadow. Entertaining a Ranch Angel. A few evenings since there dropped into an np-town hotel a man about five feet eight, with heavy chin-whiskers, and with rather an intellectual cast of countenance, but slightly nnder the in fluence of liquor. He was attired in rather a seedy and patched suit, but clean. He wanted lodging for the night, and inquired of the landlord, if he could "bunk" with him. The landlord, not liking his condition and appearance, told him"he guessed not." The stranger took a seat and entered into conversa tion with some of the boarders. The landlord discovering during the evening that he was an educated man, re membered the saying of "entertaining angels unawares,'' told him he might stay if he paid in advance. The stranger at once took out about ten dollars in currency and tendered a five-dollar bill for payment, The landlord soon after took him to bed and left him in his room, but stationed himself where he could see the occupant of the room. The stranger after taking his boots off got down on his knees in front of the bed and delivered the Lord's prayer in a most impressive manner, after which he prayed for all the inmates of the house, for his friends and for his enemies, that they might te preserved from all danger and that they might be happy. He then arose and commenced undressing, in the meanwhile talking to himself and making expression aloud like the following : "What a fool I hsve been :" "Some thieves might have picked me np ;" "I wonder if I have got it?" The last remark being ex plained by his taking two large rolls of bank bills from different parts of his person, which he put nnder his pillow and soon got into bed. The landlord says he never heard the Lord's prayer repeated in a more impressive manner. The stranger is a heavy lumber-dealer from the upper Hudson. Troy l'ren. Happy H unhands. It is a man's own fault if he is un happy with his wife, in nine cases ont of ten. It is a very exceptional woman who will not be all she can be to an at tentive husband, and a more except ional one will not be very disagreeable if she finds herself willfully neglected. It would be very easy to hate a man who, having bound a woman to him, made no effort to make her happy ; hard not to love one who was constant and tender, and when a woman loves she al ways strives to please. The great men of this world have often been wretched in their domestic rela tions, while mean and common men have been exceedingly happy. The reason is very plain. Absorbed in them selves, those who desired the world's applause were careless of the little world at home ; while those who had none of this egotism strove to keep the hearts that were their own, aud were happy in their tenderness. No woman will love a man the bet ter for being renowned or prominent. Though he be first among men she will only be prouder, not fonder ; and if she loses him through this renown, as is often the case, she will not even be proud. But give her love, ap preciation, kindness, and there is no sacrifice she wonld not make for his content and comfort. The man who loves her well is her hero and her king. No less a hero to her though he is not one to any other ; no less a king though his only kingdom is her heart and home. A Poor Man' rhrislmas Villa. The story of the widow's mile was forci bly brought to the aitenlion of a bay ion household, says the Journal, on Christmas Jy. During the past year a poor, feeble old man bad culled dai y for food. He was kindly treated, and never left the kitchen without expressing his thanks to the ser vants. Meantime a queer little old colored woman in the family had given him the soubriquet of "Lanrus." Christmas after noon the mistress of tne household heird uproarious laughter in the kitchen. When "old Aunty" went up stairs to the family room, inquiry about the uproar el. cited the following: Aunty "Why, bress you, missus, ole 'Lsrarus' guv us all a Christmas gift !" Missus "Who is 'Laiarus,' Aunty?" Aunty "Why, bress you chile, he's the poor old man you'uns been feedin' so long, lie jess had his dinner, an' what you think, lie guv us all a Christmas gift '." Missus "Well, what did he give you, Aunty V Aunty "Why, bress you missus, he guv all he could, I spect. He guv The. twenty ole shirt buttons ; and Maggie, he guv two rows of pins, and me he guv one row of pins." (And here Aunty fairly exploded, hut between her paroxysms she added): "Hut Lor' bress you, missus, 'twas a 1 poor ole 'Laiarus' had I spect, an' it done us a heap o' good, and Maggie and me a got so many pins I guess we'll feel mighty aturk UP-" tmm The Danee. Dancing itself is a harmless and healthful amnsement when not carried to excess ; bnt the seeds of death are too often sown in the ball-room, not from dancing, but from the circum stances nnder which it is carried on. For instance, what can be more likely to produce apoplexy or some serious ill ness than the practice of eating ices when thoroughly heated by violent ex ercise. Again, the atmosphere of many a ball-room, crammed, as it often is, with three times as many people as it can comfortably contain, is enongh of it self to poison any one not acclimated to suffocation by previous training. Then there are the sudden changes of tempature to which young ladies, in sufficiently chid, are exposed on leaving the heated rooms as they retnrn home, overtired and in precisely the same con dition nnder which such changes ot temperature are likely to affect them if they have any tendency to lung disease. The late hours, also, which are neces sarily kept in the season, cannot be otherwise than prejudicial to the health of both old and young, and probably cause many illnesses that are nnjustly credited to other sources. Scolding. What good does scolding do ? It does no one the least service, but it creates infinite mischief. Scolded servants never do their work well. Their tempers are roused, as well as the mistress's, and they very often fail in their duties at awkward moments, simply to spite her and to "serve her out." Very wrong in them doubtless; but human nature is frail, and service is a trying insti tution. It does no good to husban 1 or child, for it simply empties the huuae of both as soon as possible. A farmer from the interior districts of Michigan brought barrel of flour to Detroit, some months ago, and shipped it with the address, "Queen Victoria, Windsor Castle, England." He waited long and patiently for an autograph letter of thanks, and was very much chagrined at learning, the other day, that his flour had been sold at auction, with a mass of unclaimed freight, some time before. lOCTHV rOLl IM. The Busd Giiu. and her Bible. A ttle girl who lov ed the Bible dearly became blind, and when she could no longer see to read it she only loved it more. A kind friend gave her a New Testament, printed for the nse of the blind, in raised letters, which she could feel with her fingers, and so niak out. Never was a child more delighted than she. It was a touching thing to see her, every movement she could spare, passing her fingers slowly over the page, as her lips silently uttered the precious words. Bnt her touch was not quick enongh for her ; her finger-ende, poor child ! were rough, and sometimes she had to stop a long time over a word. So one day she took a penknife and lightly pared away the skin from just the tips of her fingers, hoping that so her feeling would be more tender, anil i she could get on faster. What was her i distress iu finding, after a few days, that her skin had grown again, but so ' hard that she could not feel the shape 1 of a single letter ! She tried and tried. ! bnt all in vain ; then bursting into an agony of tears, she pressed the much loved pages to her lips, to bid them, as she thought, a last farewell. But as she did so, she suddenly found out that her lips had the feeling which her fingers had lost. The letters, the words, were quite plain ! I cannot tell yon her joy that she still could read. And hundreds of times since the blessed book has been held to her lips, not in sorrow for a farewell kiss, but in thank fulness and joy, that even she can read the words of everlasting life. I t thl hlwagii volume rver lie I'l" to ni) lus.r -!! Urtr my eve ; To Ijff'a Unt tiiir my tbUk'!td ruX'K AuU Ur tuv I'UtMro lw ntt" Poweb of Kindness. A driver be longing to the (treat Northern lUilway goods station, had occasion to pass np the Quadrant Itoad highway. New York, to deliver a package. Ou 'approaching one of the houses, he was seen by a lady in the window, who immediately said to same friends staying with her : "Here comes the kind driver ; do come and see what power he has over his horses." The friends aecordinclv ivimA tn tlm window, when the driver in question. was ssKeu oy tne lady to "shake hands with his horses. With great good humor he at once complied. Standing in front of the pair of horses, he palled out : "Tom, shake hands." Instantly the near horse lifted up his right foot. After a shake tlm drier said : "Now, Tom, the other foot." L0 Went tllA f,Mt irwfurittv T1..i drfver then went in front f tl,u nl,u horse, when a similar scene occurred. .remaps, however, tue most pleasing incident remains to be told. Retreat ing backward several vur.la fti,m rh horses, he cried out : Now, lorn, turn around and come on." Instailtlv tliA liomd nnll.i.1 owav .1 - j - - r- " tllttir load, tnrneil th van rriun.l n.-i'!,- ont the slightest need of so much as the crack of a whip, and followed the clever as me uog wouiu tne BUepuerd. oucu an mNiauce shows clearly bow especially with the horse, simply by the power of kindness. iKtru'it Advr.r tistr. Orioin of Great Mem. St, Andrew, apostle, was tue son of a fisherman ; St. John was also the son of a fisher man ; Pope Sextus V. was the son of a swine-herder he was also one ; Aris totle, of a doctor ; Boccaeio, of a mer chant ; Columbus, of a woolcomber ; John Bu.it h, of a fisherman ; Diderot, of a cutler ; Cook, of a servant ; Hanip den, of a carpenter ; Talma, of a den tist ; Gesner, of a'bookseller ; Salvator lioea, of a surveyor ; Euripides, of a fruit-woman ; Virgil of a baker ; Hor ace, of a deuizen ; Voltaire, of a tax collector; Lamothe, of a hatter; Fletcher, of a chandler ; Masillon, of a turner ; Tamerlane, of a shepherd ; Qainault, of a baker ; Kollin, of a cut ler; Mohere, of an upholsterer; Kos seau, of a watchmaker ; Sir Samuel Bowditch, of a silversmith ; Ben Jon son, of a masou ; Shakespeare of a butcher; Sir Lawreuce, of a custom house officer ; Collins, of a hatter ; Gray, of a notary ; IScattie, of a la borer ; Sir Edward Sugden, of a bar ber ; Thomas Moore, of a swordmaker ; Rembrandt, of a miller ; Benjamin Franklin, of a chandUr; Cardinal Wolsey, of a butcher ; Napoleon, of a farmer. A Wonderfvl Clock. An old trav eler's tale has it that a certain Hindoo prince once owned a strange clock. In front of the clock's disk was a gong swung upon poles, and near it was a pile of artificial human limbs. The pile was made up of the full number of parts necessary to constitute twelve perfect bodies ; but all lay heaped to gether in apparent confusion. When the hands of the clock indicated the hour of one, out from the pile crawled just the number of parts needed to form the frame of one man, part com ing to part with quite a click; and when completed, the figure sprang np, seized a mallet, and, walking up to the gong, struck one blow. This done, he returned to the pile and fell to pieces again. W hen 2 o'clock came, two men arose and did likewise ; and at the hours of noon and midnight, the entire heap sprang np, and marching to the gong, struck, one after the other, his blow, making twelve in all ; then, re turning, fell to pieces as before. Bad Habits. As the biiow gathers together, so are our habits formed. No single flake that is added to the pile produces a sensible change ; no single action creates, however it may exhibit a man's character ; but as the tempest hurls the avalanche down mountains, and overwhelms the inhabitant and his habitation, so passion, acting upon the elements of mischief, which pernicious habits have brought together by im perceptible accumulation, may over throw the edifice of truth and virtue. The Alphabets. The Sandwich Island alphabet has 12 letters ; the Burmese, 19 ; the Italian, 20 ; the Ben- ; galeae, 21 ; the Hebrew, Syriac, Chal-: dee, and Samaritan, 22 each ; the French, 23 ; the Greek, 21 ; the Latin, 2 ; the German, Dutch, and English, 26 each ; the Spanish and Sealvonic, 27 each ; the Arabic, 2S ; the Persian and Coptic, 32 ; the Georgian, 3j ; the Ar menian, 3$; the Russian, 41; the Muscovite, 43 : the Sanscrit and Ja panese, 50 ; the Ethiopia and Tartarian 202 each ; the Chinese less than 50.UU0. ' An important fact has been estab lished in the tea trade since the panic, namely, that Japans are rapidly taking the place of Oolongs. During the past two seasons, it appears that the ship ment of blacks have increased only from 5,000,OX pounds, while those of i Japans have increased from 8,000,000 to 17,000.000 pound, and those of greens from 5.0U0.000 to 17,000.000 pounds.1 V RUTHS. The weight of fish must be determined by the scales. A literary class Builders. Thev are ! always finishing stories. "The Worst of Wives," by the author ! of "lhe Best of Husbands." I "Oroweth Down as a Carrot," by the ! author of "Cometh up in a Flower." We would willingly have others per fect, and yet we amend not onr own faults. If a man has but one idea, what need has he of a Webster's dictionary con taining 20,tX) words. Bartholomew Christofori, of Padna, was the inveutor of the piano-forte, ac cording to the Italians. "Too thin has become obsolete. "Not sufficiently materialized" is the latest form in which this idea is clothed. A lady just been appointed by the English Registrar General to the office of Deputy Registrar, the first case of the kind iu the history of the department. A Californian puts in a good word for John Chinaman on the ground that he his never been known to become a book canvasser or a life insurance agent. A three cent stamp will now carry a letter from any part of the United States to a Canadian city, and a single Canadiau stamp will perforin the same service the other way. An attorney having died in poor cir cumstances, one of his friends observed that he hid left but few eflVs-ta. "That is not much to be wondered at," said another, "for he had but few causes." There is no royal road to snccess. Dream only of the crowuing pinnacle, i and it shall appear only in thy dreams. Attend to-day to the monument's foun dation ; the piunacle itself may appear to-morrow. From the Sweden comes the an nouncement of the discovery of a new exphwive agent called vigorite. Eight ounces accomplished by experiment what would have required double the quantity of dynamite. During the year 1ST t more than C6, 0ill steerage passentrers left this country for Eurotie. The New York Commis sioner of Emigration believes that about llillil, or two-thirds of the whole nnmber, intend to be permarueut ab sentees. There is a marked revival among the Mohammedans of Lucknow. Old de serted temples have been repaired, aud are crowded with worshippers. Street preaching has been resorted to, and schools have been oieued in which the doctrines of Islaniism are taught. The Aft'i Cnfifurnin says : "Raising cork trees seems to be au approaching industry of California. They are said to grow very rapidly amoug the foot hills. At Auburn there are a nnmber of these trees, three or four years old, that have bark thick enough for an or dinary cork." The Patent Olliee has granted a pat ent for a dummy, for dry goods mer chants, to enable them to make a large show on a small stock. It con sists of a block of woo, I, neatly done np in a cover of cloth, tabled and rib boned to represent, in exterior appear ance, a full package of real goods. The great staircase of the new Opera House in Paris, tliongh effective and ; striking, is said to be greatly over- doue. It is literally one mass of gold, i bronze, marble, aud onyx, combined with the richest drajieries, with statu 1 ary ami hnge mirrors, ami every-thing that the most lavish expenditure and elaborate ornameuts can bestow. A very remarkable character has died suddenly iu Paris Sophie, the cook to ! whom the lato Dr. Veruon was indebted for his reputation as the first dinner 1 giver in Paris for something like half a eeutnry. Sophie generally used to come iu after dinner and be compli- mented, and, in her humble way, be I came acquainted with almost every ! man and woman in Paris, from Mile. 1 Mars, and Mile. Rachel, Taglioui, and Klsslers, down to modern stars from ; Talma to Regiur. Hitherto Parisian bank-notes have i been burnt at the rate of about three I hundred thousand a month, mnch to the di'tgnst of people near the bank, I who complain bitterly of the air being I impregnated with the filmy remains of I the paper and of the disagreeable smell. It is now nnder consideration to adopt the plan of tearing the notes into mi nute fragments, and then reducing them into a pulp, from which fresh material can be prepared. This, it is said, will further have the desirable effect of sav ing a considerable sum of money. The making of Egyptian air-castles, cut circular by compass, and folded in eight creases to form a globe, furnishes employment for fashionable young ladies of au industrious turn of mind. . They are composed of paper of various ! bright colors, and when formed into : globe-shape, are strung upon a cord, ! five or six different colors together, and hnng in a portion of the room ! where a gentle current of air will set : them in motion. They get "excited" ' at length, aud go whirling around wiud i mill fashion, eventually all tangled np , in a pretty little snarl forming bnt one : glolie in appearance. j King Cakoban's war club has been ' sent as a present to Q leen Victoria, throngh Sir Hercules It ibiuson. It is 1 abont 3 feet 6 inches in length, and : made of dense, hard wood, stained black, and highly polished, resembling in shape a stout, well-rounded walking club. Round the handle are a group of cocoa palms wrought in silver ; fern i leaves gradually entwine upward toward the head, with doves carrying 1 olive leaves in their mouths, and the top or knob is surmounted by a crown all of solid silver. It was formerly used as a mace by the self-constituted Government from whose hands Fiji has now been wrested. Ninevah was fourteen miles long, eight miles wide ami forty-six miles around, with a wall 100 feet high and thick enough for three chariots abreast. Babylon was fifty miles within the walls, which were seventy five feet thick and 100 feet high with 100 brazen gates. The temple of Diana, at Ephe sus, was 420 feet to the support of the roof ; it was loo years iu building. The largest of the pyramids was HU feet in height and HJJ feet on the sides. The base covered eleven acres. The stones are about sixty feet in length, and the layers are are 20S. It employed 3M, 000 men in building. The labyrinth of Egypt contains 300 ch am bers and 12 halls. Thebes, in Eypt, presents ruins twenty-seven miles around, and contained 350,000 citizens and 480,000 slaves. The temple of Delpbos wax so rich in donations that it was plnndered of $., 000,000, and the Emperor Nero carried away 200 statues. The walls of Rome were thirteen miles around. it I,