SmI iheS iiiiii B. F. SCHWEIER, THS CGSSTITCTIOa THK CSION ASD THE ESFORCEIIEST OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor-. YOL. XXIX. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., FEBRUARY 17, 1S75. NO. 7. THE TWO TRAVELERS. BT WILIJAJI BEIiVT, I'm evening, and before my ere There lay a landscape gray and dim; Fi-i J faintly seen and tmiliybt ekiea And clouds tht bid the horizon's brim. I nw-or was it that I dreamed ? A waking dream ? I cannot nay; For every hbape as real seemed Ati those that meet my eye to-day. Through leafless eh rut the cold wind hissed; The air wan thick with falling snow; And onward, through the frozen mist. I saw a weary traveler go. Driven e'er that landscape bare and bleak, Jitfore the whirling gusts of air. The snow-flakes smote his withered cheek. And gathered on his silver hair. Tet on he fared through blinding snows. And muminring to himself he said : "The ui'ht is near, the darkness grows. And higher rise the drifts I tread. "Ieep deep each autumn flower they hide; F.ach tuft of green they whelm from sight. And they who journeyed by my side Are lost in the surrounding nihl I loved tVtn; oh. no words can tell The love that to my friends I bore; We parted with the sad farewell Of those who part to meet no more. "And L who face this bitter wind. And o'er these snowy hillocks creep iliut end my journey soon and find A fruity couch, a frozen sleep. As thus he spoke, a thrill of pain Shot to my heart, I closed my eyes. And when I opened them again I started with a glad aurpiisa. Twas evening still, and in the West A flush of glowing crimson lay. I saw the morrow there and blest That promise of a glorious day. The waters, in their glassy sleep. Shone with the hues that tinged the sky. And rugged cliff and barren steep Gleamed with a brightness from on high. And one was there whose jonmey lay Into the blowly gathering uighL With steady step he held his way O'er shadowy vale and gleaming height. I marked his firm thongh weary tread. The lifted eye and brow serene. And saw no shade of doubt or dread. Pass o'er that traveler's placid mien. And others came, their jonrney o'er. And bade good night with words of cheer; ' To-morrow we shall meet once more. Tis but the night that parts us here." "And I," he said, "shall sleep ere long These fading gleams will soon be gone Sliall sleep, to rise, refreshed and strong. In the bright day that yet will dawn." I heard; I watched bim as he went. A lessening form, until the light Of evening from the tirmoment Had passed, and he was lost to sight. Atlantis. SIMKIXAST. Tlie Telegraph in 1665. Old books are generally simple curi osities, but Mr. E. W. Buell hands ns a book, printed in K,6o, by E. C. for Henry Eversden, London, entitled, "The Authors Defense of the vanity of Dogmatizing." We 6nd the idea of the teWraph, as finally invented by Prof. Morse, suggested in the follow ing ; "lint (2) to advance another instance. That Men suonld cover at very distant removes by an extemporary intercourse is another reputed impossibility ; but yet there are tome hints in Natural operations, that give us probability that it is feasible.and may lie compassed without unwarrantable correspondence with the people of the Air. That a couple of Secdlr equally touched by the came magmt, being set in two Dyals exactly proportioned! to each other, and circumscribed by the Letters of the Aljha'l, may effect thia Mag nate, hath considerable authorities to avouch it. The manner of it is thus repiesented. Let the friends that would communicate, take each Dyal ; and having appointed a time for their Sympathrtick conference, let one move his impregnate Xcedte to any letter in the AlphaM, and its effectual fellow will precisely respect the same. So that would know what my friend would acquaint me with ; 'tis but observing the letters are pointed at by my Seedle and in their order transcribing them from their sympathizing Index, aa its motion directs : and I may be assured that my friend described the same with his : and that the words on ray paper, are of his indicting. Now though there will be some ill contrivance in a cir-j cumference of this invention, in that the thus impregnate Xecdlct will not move to, but avert from each other (as ingenious Dr. liroxene in bi Jeudo duria Epidemica hath observed :) yet this cannot prejudice the main design of this way of secret conveyance : Since tis but reading counter to the magnetick informer ; and noticing the letter which is most distant iu the Abecedarian circle from that which the Needle turns to, and the case is not altered. Now though this pretty contrivance possibly may not yet answer the expectation of the inquisitive cjrjcritncnt ; yet tis no despicable item, that by Borne other such way of magnetick efficiency, it may hereafter with success be attemp ted, when Magical History shall be en larged bv riper inspections : and tis not unlikely but that present discoveries might be improved to the performance. Depth ot Quiet I'eople. Some men draw upon you like the Alps. They impress you vaguely at first, just aa do the hundred faces you meet in your daily walks. They come across your horizon hke floating clouds and yet you have to watch a while be fore you see that they are mountains. Some men remind you of quiet lakes, places such as you have often hap pened upon, where the green turf and the field flower hang over you and are reflected out of the water all day long. Some day you carelessly drop a line into the clear depths, close by the side of the daisies and daffodils, and it goes down, down, down. You lean over and sound deeper, but your line doesnt bring up. What a deep spot that is I You think, and you try another. The reflected daisies aeem to Btnile at you out of the water, the turf looks as green aa ever. You never thought of it. bntyour quiet lake is unfathomable. You are none the less impressed from these facts that it is a quiet lake. William Quarterly. James Thorn, who died about twenty fire vnara aeo. first received his grea public notoriety upon the production of "Tarn O'Shanter." His Subsequent w jrk 'Old Mortality, es.aoii8nea mm among the first rank of the world, noted sculptors. TOE ROUS D WOOD GHOST. At last I had an habitation of my "lupvuiuj reu-onci structure, roomy enonirh to fnrniah ..- . full score of demure little morula like uiyseji. "You will loae yourself in thia great barn of a h on ba kiil.inn j . t bbiu anm Jerusha, who had accompanied me to Koundwood to be the ruling divinity of wic "eCtv "It would not be much of a loss to the world in general if I should." "Humph ! I have no predilections for mistletoe bono-lia ami nM n.V .l,ut. t want no such skeletons rising up to murder mv rest." "Trouble comes fast enough without borrowing it." "At any rate, I've spoken my mind, and not without reason. It is doubtful if you have heard all that 1 have con cerning your new possessions." Aunt Jerusha looked so solemn that I quickly asked : "What have you heard ?" "Roundwood has a ghost. You needn't laugh it may prove to be no laughing matter. I got the story from the servants. Not a soul of them but is convinced the house is haunted." "Tell me what they say." "It is really quite dreadful, Madelon. They declare that Madam Belgrave can't rest quietly in her grave, but comes back to her old room night after night.and walks the floor until morning." "Has anybody seen her ?" "No ; but all of them have heard her pacing up and down the apartment." "Humph. The ghost must belaid. I don't like the idea of being disturbed at all hours of the night by any such uncanny people." "Nor L" drvlv. "But who will do it?" "I will," was my answer, as I caught a sunbonnet from the wall, and darted out into the harden tl eain Aunt Jerusha's solemn visage while I rami- uaiea upon me ways ana means. However, the nrim nld fashioncl - - - - , - - ( , garden, with its quaint angular walks. ana iunny mue Deus, irom which the flowers lifted bright and smiling laces, as if in welcome, soon drove all thoughts of the ghost from my head. I wandered up and down the box- bordered natlm nwmintr i ti f r, ffMn. i , i i r, ri" arbors, and summer-houses, inhaling th. t.-iiin;. ..u- 4i : i nun uMmuiiv uuum ui iuo an, miu bugging to myself the delicious sense of noseasion nutil T irrew nnita inbilAnt Of all my pleasures, that of proprietor- snip was me Keenest just men. Ana why, indeed, shouldn't a nice brick house, with available grounds be a ' joy ever. I had reached the lower portion of the grounds, and was looking around upon my domain with quite the air of tine grande princesxe, when my gaze suddenly encountered a free aud.easy figure leaning over a wicket in the hedge-row. Starting at the vision, I rubbed my eyes, looked a second time, and exclaimed, involuutarily : "Law rence Belgrcve !" The figure lifted its hat and smiled a cheerful good morning. "I am no spirit. Miss Lane. Do, pray, try to look a trifle lees startled and dismayed." My emotion was quite pardonable and for his reason ; to this man I stood iu the light of a usurper I had cheated him out of his inheritance. He had been nearer related to Madame Belgrave in fact, a sort of protege of hers, whom she brought up with the under standing that he was to inherit her coupon bonds and bank stock some day. But, twelve months prior to this time, there had been a violent quarrel between the old lady and Lawrence, he had left Koundwood in high dudgeon, and, to retaliate, Madame Belgrave had made a will, leaving all htr property to me. The qnarrel was never made np, and madame died very suddenly in a fit, which found her incapable of expressing any last wishes she might have had, so the will in my favor was the one pro duced at the funeral, and I found my self suddenly transformed from a coun try schoolma'am with one decent silk and two merinos, to a very rich woman with the means to supply her wardrobe indefinitely. So you will comprehend that if I felt somewhat dismayed on seeiag that vis on at the gate, I had abundant cause for it. However.I mustered up courage, and went and shook hands with him quite cordially. "You did give me quite a start, Mr. Belgrave. and I might as well plead guilty to it" "1 am sorry, men lie stood looting at me curiously a moment. "1 snppose that I ought to congratulate you. Miss Lane, on your recent good fortune. Shall I ?" If you can do so sincerely not otherwise." He laughed. "Then I'll keep my breath for other purposes." "Shall you ever forgive me for having supplanted you ?" "1 don't know, my 'great expecta tions have turned out nearly as delu sive as those of poor Pip. I ought to hate you, Miss Lsue.but I don't quite." "Thanks for the margin that saves me from utter condemnation." "I can't help thinking," he went on, reflectively, "that Madame Belgrave meant to restore me to favor finally, and that only apportunity was lacking Proud and obstinate as she was, I'm sure she loved me." "And so, on the strength of that opinion which may or may net be correct you expect me to abdicate in your favor ?" "I did not say so." Again his eyes swept my face curiously. "Is it in your heart to be so generous ?" I shook my head. "Remember, I've tasted the cup of poverty and it is bitter to my palate. It seems delightful to be rid of the toil and anxiety attendant on earning one's own living ; I don't think I could take up the old burden again." "1 knew you wonld like lotos-eating." "Who doesn't, for that matter ? Be sides it has all the zeal of a new sensa tion just now. I may tire of it but that seems impossible." "Not to me." "Appropos of this inheritance of mine, I'll tell you what I am willing to do, Mr. Belgrave. I'll share it with you." He opened wide his eyes, as if sus picious his ears had played him false. "Are you serious ?" "I never was more so." Ah 1 conscience has begun to prick you already." "Not a bit of it" There was ebght pause, and then be said, with an amused smile : "And so you are anxious Koundwood should have a master as well as a mistress 7" "You know I do not mean that," I returned, blushing and speaking quite angrily. "This inheritance more than meets my luxurious notions you have a sort of claim upon it I am quite will ing to make over the half to you. In deed, an idea of that sort has been in my head all along " "Thia is Quixotic.'' "No, it is making two people happy and comfortable instead of one." "But I refuse to be made happy and eomfortableatyourexpense. If Madame Belgrave had wished me to share her property, she would have left some document expressing the desire." "Perhaps there is a will that has not come to light," said 1, laughingly. He gave a quick start, and changed co'or. "I can't help thinking so, but is a de lusive hope, I fear." . "You are entirely too anxious to eon sign me to obscurity and school keep ing again." "No, you should never go back to that drudgery, if He stopped suddenly, hesitated a moment, then held out his hand. "Rally. I feel like an intruder hem. Miss Lane. I'd better eay good morning ana leave you, before 1 am betrayed intil ftflV fni4ha f ..1 1 w He turned abruptly away. "Did yon snow mere was a gnost 01 Koundwood 7 I caMed after him. "No," looking back. xuey say ALadame i5e!grave a sure indication that she is displeased with something probably the unjust dis position she made of her wealth." An expression I utter failed to com prehend floated over his expressive i ace. "You have no occasion to be troubled on that score," he answered, and went his way. I watched him until the windings of the road hid his tall, stalwart figure entirely from view, and then returned to the house in a reflective mood. "Aunt Jerusha," said L abruptly. am going to sleep in the hauiited room to night. She stared at me utterly aghast "You foolish child, you would never dare "Have the room thoroughly aired and made comfortable," I interrupted. in the brusque, decided tone of one who does not wish to enter into any argument. "1 shall occupy the apart ment to-night, so the least said about the matter the better. Occupy it I did at least for a season taking up the line of march about e'even o'clock. Aunt Jerusha followed me to the door and there said good-by, with a face as solemn and a tone as lugubrious as though I were about to be hung. "Scream if you are frightened. Madelon, and we will all hasten to yonr assistance. 1 hope you won t be a raving maniac in the morning. I've heard of such things." "I'd rather be crazy than a fool," was my impatient rejoinder. Madame tielgrave s room as we called it was a large chamber on the second floor. The furniture was qn tint and old fashioned, of some dark foreign wood, with immense carved feet that looked very odd and ridiculous to my new fashioned eyes. The'walls were of oak, thickly paneled, and over the carved chimney piece was a raised figure typical Heaven only knows of what with a diminutive shield extended in one hand. I had barely glance J round at my quarters when something flitted past my head with a whizzing sound, and lighted in the middle of the shield. A quick, half frightened glance at the ob ject in question brought a binile to my lips. It was a bat , Now I had always a great antipathy to these vampire like creatures ; so catching up the poker from the fender, I aimed a aeadly blow at the intruder. The bat escaped unhurt through the open window, being too quick for me ; but the poker descended with considera ble force on tie spot where he should have been. The same instant I heard a sharp, clicking noise, aud the shield slid away, revealing to my astonished gaze a small chamber constructed in the massive chimney. In this novel hiding place lay a pile of pspers. Trembling a good deal, I caught up the topmost one and hastily examined it by the aid of the flickering candle. Instantly I knew that my startled conjecture was a shrewd one, and that I now held in my hand Madame Belgrave's true and last will and test -ment, and Lawrence Belgrave, not I, hs the rightful owner of Koundwood I It was scarcely a pleasant discovery to make. Thoroughly bewildered, i dropped into one of the quaint easy chairs, trying hard to command my wandering senses sumeientiy to realize it in all its bearings. My candle sputtered and went out, presently, but I still sat there quite oblivious to the fact, thinking only of my loneliness and the treadmill of poverty to wnicn l must return. At last I was aroused by a rustling sound, and a muffled step on the balcony without With a sudden thrill of horror I beheld a dark figure rise np before the window, and slide noiselessly over the sill. The next in stant a dark lantern flashed its light over the room. I started to my feet with a shriek of uncontrollable terror ; in an attempt to rush to the door, my limbs failed utterly, and I crouched pale and panting against the wall. "Miss Lane 1 you here !" said a voice; and the man put down the lantern and came toward me. "I beg a thousand pardons for giving yoa such start It was Lawrence. I rose up again, thoroughly ashamed of myself for having manifested such extreme terror. "My emotion was excusaDie, saiu i with all the old sauciness, for I bad grown bold as a lion again, now there was no real horror to conironi. i uiu uot expect to see you at Koundwood to night hence my surprise," "The fact is, he replied, manifest ing considerable confusion. "I have come here every night for two weeks back, hunting for Madame Belgrave s wilL Lawyer Green has told me she destroyed it afterward as it has not come to light I hold to a different opinion. The will was in my favor as you must readily guess, ana i ueueve it is hidden in some place which Madame was prevented from disclosing by the awful suddenness of her death." "Then you were the ghost?" I gasped. "I suppose I must have been." "Well, it is laid forever. You have no further need to haunt this apartment Here is the missing document for which you have been searching ; to-morrow I will abdicate as graceiuuy as possioie, and Richard shall have his own again. And while he stood staring at me, as if quite dumbfounded, I pushed the will into his band, and made a second effort to gain the door. This time it was Lawrence who de tained me foreibly. "Don't go, Madelon," he whispered, his arm gathering me close to his side. "Now I can speak my mind freely. Ill not be master here unless you consent to be mistress, for I love you too dearly, What aav von ?" I will not repeat my answer. But if aunt Jerusha had harried to my rescue as she declaied she would do a few minutes after I first shrieked for assistance, she would have beheld a tableau that might have given quite a hock to her strict ideas of propriety. The End of the Wrld. If the body's death seems to teach the lesson that modesty is becoming to the scientific speculator, what shall we say as to the prospects of that material frame which is bevona ourselves the general orderly frame of the universe as we see it around us ? People would suppose, from the way in which you hear men talk now, that there was not the slightest chance of any great organic change ever coming across the outward world in which we live. No doubt God works by fixed laws. No doubt the world goes on morning and evening, and summer and winter ; but what rea son have you to suppose that it will so go on to infinity? Have no great catastrophes befallen the world before now ? Does not physical science itself speak of these catastrophes ? What is there to prevent other catastrophes, produced by the operation of laws of which at present we are very ignorant, coming athwart the globe on which we live, and a complete change taking place in the relations in which things even in the on t ward world stand at present, so that in the scriptural sense of the word there may be an end to the world, as there is certainly to be an end of our earthly life ? To be sure, things have gone on for a long time in the same way, but is that any proof that they are to go on in the same way for ever ? You arise morning after morn ing in good health and strength, and seem to say to yourself for a time that this will last for ever ; but one morn ing something happens, you cannot ex plain what ; the best physician in the world cannot tell you what ; but some thing has happened that lays you on a bed of sickness, and in two days Bends you off to your grave a corpse. Will the experience of the reality of the way in which everything has gone on since you were young, till you have attained maturity, save you from that great mischance ? Again, men for centuries had ranged over the mountains in Campagna : they thought that all would go on there, herds and flocks feeding and vineyards growing as they had done for centuries ; and suddenly there was a strange sound heard, and a volcano burst forth, and the greatest philosopher of the age came to look at it, and lost his life whe was looking. But neither he nor any of the men who had speculated with him ever expected that these great cities were to be swept to destruction, and their beautiful pas tures to become fox a time an arid wil derness. I do not say such instances explain or tell us distinctly that aucU catastrophes will befall the whole globe; but at all events, I think they ought to make ns modest, seeing that the wisest know so very small a portion of the laws that regulate Ood's creation. Surely we may not dogmatically as sume that such catastrophes are beyond the range of possible or probable events. It is true, I say, things have gone on for a long time, and men say : "Where is the promise of His coming, for all things continue as they were from the beginning of the world ?" But still with Him, with whom one day is as as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day, there may be changes maturing which no philosopher of the present or of any previous age has ever dreamed of, which will bring this great catastrophe to the globe, which will answer, on the whole outward creation. to something as great as is our passage from life to death, and what is beyond it. I do not think there is anything fanciful in such an expectation. I be lieve that a man, of that modest mind which is the characteristic of true sci ence, will hesitate before he pronounces with any assuranco that such a change may not come over the world as has been distinctly predicted in the Scrip tures. Dr. Tail. Archbishop of Can' tcrbury. Weeping After Klsing. Mr. ranch has derived great amusement lately reading the commentaries of sages of the English press on the following pas sage; 'And Jacob kitted Rachel, and lifted up hit head and Kept. Gen. xzix, 11. The following are the dinerent explana tion : "If Rachel was a good looking girl, and kept her face clean, we cannot see what Jacob cried for." Daily Telyrapk. 'How do you know but Kacbel slapped his face for kissing her, and he cried in con sequence." Ladict' Treatuty. 'n eeping is frequently caused by excess of pleasure, joy and over-happiness ; per haps it was to in the case of Jacob." Hard Kick' l Science Oottip. "The reason wby Jacob wept was Kachel s refusing to let him kiss her the second time." Xonconformitt. "We are of the opinion that Jacob wept because he had not kissed Rachel before, and he wept because the time was lost." Lily iT-ctt. The young man wept becane the damsel kissed him." Pall Mall Gazette. Jacob wept because Rachel encouraged him to kiss her twice move, and he was afraid to do it" Methodist Recorder. "Jacob wept because Rachel threatened to tell her ma." Sunday Gazette. "He wept because there was but one Rachel for him to kiss." Clarkenirell Aetrs. "He wept for joy; it was delicious." Jcieuh ChronicU. "We believe that Jacob wept because Rachel had been eating onions. Brttuh Standard. 'We believe that Jacob wept because he found that kissing was not half so fcood as it was said to be." Xcw Zealand Examiner. "A mistake it was not his eyes but bis mouth that watered." Ladief ChronicU. "He was a fool, and wept because he did not know what was good for him." Englith n oman t Advuer. "He wept because it was not time to kiss her again." Ezprett. "Peace, all of you I Is there anything be neath the starry firmament or the golden orb of day, in nature or in art, equal to the first kiss in sweetness and entrancing falicity T Our word for it there is not ; and as Jacob had never kissed a pretty girl be fore, his first enjoyment of the most delight ful pleasure of life fairly overcame him, and he wept for joy and blissful happiness. Honey Hornet. The Advantage wf Winter. Winter makes nations mainly by driving men into social unities, and obliging them to live with each other and devise ways for their amusement and instruction. In a mild climate, where there is no necessity for men to dwell under a roof, they wander abroad, and in great measure dis perse with each other's society, so that, although they may have a certain amount of cursory enjoyment, tney are comparatively nninstructed. But, in a severe climate like this, wheal the cold season shuts men out from the field and they retreat from their ordinary avocations, and the days are snort ana the evenings are long, the dwelling be comes a school-house, and there must be conversation and reading. Under such circumstances the family is a centre of knowledge ; and, if there be anv leaven in it centre of Christiani- 1 zation. "Plaiai" rplc. Robespierre, the "Incorruptible," with his green red-spotted eyes, and Marat, the hideous Friend of the Peo ple were fully qualified by queernees of aspect for admission into tne ranks of the Lgly Club, supposing that ill- favored fraternity ever existed out of the pages of the Spectator; but if it had come to a contest Robespierre would have been run hard by the cadaverous complexioned singer of the "Pleasures of Memory," who, when he sported a yellow coat, was dubbed the "dead dandy ;" and to whom Lord Alvanly once said, "Rogers, you are rich enough ; why don't yoa keep yonr hearse ?" Another likely candidate for a seat under .loop's portrait was Mr. Dunning, afterward Lord Ashburton. Lord Tbnrlow, looking in at Nando s one evening, when Dunning was play ing whist there, asked the waiter to take a note up to his friend. The waiter said he did not know Mr. Dun ning. "Take the note up stairs," said Thurlow, "and deliver it to the ugliest man at tiie card-table to him who most resembles the knave of spades." The waiter had no difficulty in execu ting his mission. Heidegger, King George II. 's master of the revels, whose furrowed face was likened to a map with a great many rivers on it, had the repntation of be ing the ugliest man of his time. Of course he afforded rare sport for the caricaturists, but he wisely took all in good part, and was ready enough to jest at himself, even to witgering that such another set ot features was not to be found in London. Jolly, the fash ionable tailor oi that day, once pressed a noble customer for a settlement of his little account "Begone 1" ex claimed his ducal debtor ; "I'll not pay you till yon bring me an nglier fellow than yourself." Jolly knew of but one man uglier than himself, and wrote to Heidegger to say his Grace wished to see him next morning upon part:cular business. Heidegger was there at the appointed time, and so was the tailor. The Duke acknowledged himself beaten, and paid np like a man. Jolly mut have felt as grateful to Heidegger as Soderiui the singer was to Fanar the ballet-master. The first time the latter appeared at rehearsal Soderiui, after contemplating the new comer for a few moments, accosted him with : "Let me thank you a thousand times for coming among us ; command me in any way, for I can nver sufficiently repay you for the happiness yoj have con ferred upon me." Astounded by such a welcome from a man he had never seen before, Fanur iaqnired to what he was indebted for it lo your uupar.u-1 leled ugliness, my dear sir," -said Soderiui ; "for, before your arrival, 1 1 was considered the ugliest fellow in ' Great Britain." A still better story is ) told of a Delaware Justice of the Peace who bad Song been regarded by com mon consent, his own included, to be ! the ugliest man in the country. While j out shooting one day, the Justice met a man beyond all qnestion, even worse looking than he was, and immediately ! leveled his gun at the astonished pe- destrian, who cried out to him not to . shoot. "Stranger," gravely said the' Justice, "I sw. re ten years ago, that if ever 1 met a man nglier than myself, I'd shoot him. and you're the first I've come across." Surveying his odd as-! sailaut from head to foot, the stranger I answered, "Well, Captain, if I do look 1 any worse than yon do; shoot ; I don't i want to live any longer 1" How they settled matters is not recorded, but' no! doubt the arrangement was amicable. I In 18:15 a yonng Frenchman was so! foolisli as to kill liimsclf iu disgust ot his own unhasdsomeness, leaving be hind him a letter, saying, "I leave my remaius to my father and mother, re gretting that they Bhould hsve allowed the growth and development of a crea ture of so disagreeable a conformation aa their son." liojal Mirabeau, as Carlyle calls him, who wrote, "Imagine a tigsr marked with the smallpox, and my portrait is complete," like our own Wilkes, fouud no difficulty in making headway with the fair st x. Every one knows how the fair Dauphiness kissed the ugly Alain as he slept In much the same spirit Sir Joshua's sister, although she considered Goldsmith to be the most ill-looking man of her ac quaintance, after hearing the "Trav eler" read aloud, declared she should never think the Doctor ugly again. She was more generous than Soame Jenyns, who wondered that anybody bo ugly as Uibbon could write a boos ; a strange thing for him to say, consider ing that he, too, was a writer of books, although he bore an immense wen nnder his head, and had eyes protrud ing like those of a lobster, yet allowing room for another wen between them and his nose. Chambers' Journal. The Power of So nil. Rudolph Yon Gardentield, chief phy sician in the Bavarian array during the Napoleon wars, tells the following : "Once I was gathering plant3 in a small forest near Moisen. Suddenly I came upon a man who was lying on the ground, and whom I at once sup pesed to be dead. On drawing near to him, however, I perceived he was still alive, but in a fainting state. Vigorously I shook him ; at last he opened his eyes, and asked me, iu a lamentable and scarcely audible voice, whether 1 had any onuff with me. When I gave in a negative answer he fell back into his former condition. I now went in search of snuff, and was fortunate to meet a peasant, who kindly came with, me to the fainting man, and gave him some pinches of snuff. The man soon recovered, and then he tolJ me that he had io go a certain distance as messenger, and on starting in the morning, had forgotton to take his snuff hex. As he went along so violent became his craving for snuff, that he was completely exhausted, and had fallen down in a swoon at the spot where I found him. Bnt for my op portune arrival, he Said that he must surely have died." A anions l'ainter at Work. A Paris correspondent of T7te Aca demy writes an entertaining letter con cerning Charles Dnrand and his man ner of painting. When sketching for his picture of "Dew," which represented a nude figure of a young girl standing in a meadow, he had a cage built en tirely of glass, about thirteen feet .nava in tlia narV nnder the trees, in which his model could mndress without fear of catchintr cold, while he could see the human flesh in full light and in its exact relations of color with the leaves of the trees, the verdure of the . . . . i. . . i grass-plots, and me nowers oi me borders. The correspondent describes Durand as "an agreeable man with a fine tenor voice. He stops short in the midst of his work as soon as he feels tired, takes a guitar, and hums Spanish airs, accompanying himself in a style that would bring to the balcony all the pretty girls in Granada or Seville. rnlse of the Basilisk. The return of the majesty's ship Basilisk to England, after a commission of nearly" four years, deserves more then a passing notice, on account of the Maritime discoveries made by the ship discoveries whose extent can only be appreciated after a comparison of the latest existing charts of Torres Straits and Eastern New Guinea with the charts issued, by the Admiralty containing the results of the Basilisk's survey. To put the matter shortly, we may state that the officers and men of her Majestv's ship Basilisk have surveyed about 1,2 miles of coast line, added at least 12 first class harbours, several navigable rivers, and more than 100 islands, large and small to the chart ; and, lastly, have been able to annonuce the existence of a new and shorter route between Australia and China. It may be generally k flown that till these Basilisk discoveries were made a large Archipelago of islands some as large as the Isle of Wight, and densely popu lated), a rich.fertile country, intersected by navigable rivers, and inhabited by a semi-civilized Milay race, remained un known to us. After the news of this ship's discoveries reached England. L'eut Dawson, R N. (Admiralty Sur veyor), was sent out to join her, and she was ordered to complete and follow them up. This has beeu done with per fect success, and the whole of the previously known shores of Eastern New Guinea have bean carefully surveyed, and the route above referred to opened op. The principle of this work of dis covery and surveying has been per formed by the captain and flk-ers in small open boats, detached from the ship in some instances for many weeks, and among savages wno had never be fore Been a white face. The relations established with the natives we.-e al wavs most friendlv. . and sneh st will form m ffnrvl hasia fnr fnpma, intu.. ' course. The health of the ship's company was satisfactory indeed, surprisiugly good, when we consider the life of con stant exposure in a tropical climate and the anxions and arduous labonr re quired. The ship was in constant danger of loss on the treacherous coral reefs which surrounded her, aud officers and men alike may be congratulated on their safe return, as well as on the sac Cess which has attended their enter prise. We understand that two lofty moun tains, about ll.OiNl feet high, facing each other on the north-east coast of New Guinea, have beeu named "Mount Gladstone" and "Mount Disraeli." English Paper. A Case of Absenl-Miiideiliies. Gnstave Planche was poor, s liter ary geninses generally are. He sub mitted to his poverty half through a stocial disinterestedness and hall through a carelessness which came from his temperament, treating questions of interest with the disdain of a poet and the simplicity of a child. The editor of the "Revue des Deux Mondes" tried to clothe and feed him without alarming his pride, but with indifferent success. Ou several occasions be en tered into conspiracy with the hirer of Planche's lodgings to steal the critic's worn-out clothes and replace thera with new, made after the pattern and color of the old. Planche being absent minded, did not remark the substitu tion. This absent-niindeduess was one of his most striking traits. One day some one remarked a black stain on his trousers, and spoke to him of it, adding that it was the more cocspicnons being on pray. "What gray ?" asked Planche. "My breeches are brown." "What, do you call that brown ?" The critic looked down at the article in qnestion, and saw that it was indubitably gray. "Yet I wonld have sworn that it was brown," said the wearer. He evidently thought of a garment he had worn in time past In his wanderings he sometimes did not return to his lodgings for two or three days at a time, when the landlord took advantage of these absences to rent his room for a night or two. Two or three times Planche returned unex pectedly, when the landlord persuaded him tbat be ocenpird another room than his own. At first Planche, on these occasions, thought there wa. some mistake, but when the man of the honse repeated with an air of convic tion that the room into which he was ushered belonged to him, and pointed to his books and papers for which he had a quick memory, he allowed himself to be persuaded. Through love of isolation or the fear of being assisted, he kept his address secret For a long time even the editor of his magazine,M. Buloz, did not know it, and only discovered it by accideri. He saw him in a little hnt shop having his reddish brown hat, in txtrt lias, put under the iron, and drew near ana over heard the address. It is hardly necec sary to say that a new hat found its way to his lodgings, and that he did not note the difference between it an 1 the old one. The Galaxy for February. A Remarkable Pedestrian. A remarkable pedestrian feat has, according to the Einanza of Alexandria, been lately performed by an Italian named Giuseppe Bicci, who seriously seems to have taken rather a long con stitutional. Having come some months ago from Alexandria to Constantinople in search of employment, but being un successful in his object, K;cci resolved to reiurn to Alexandria. A slight diffi culty, howeve-, at the very commence ment of his journey, owing to the fact of his having no money a serious drawback to a bona fide traveler, for, notwithstanding the "wretched impo tence of gold," it is uncommonly diffi cult to travel comfortably without it. Kicci at first tried to work his passage back in a steamer or ship, but failing also in this endeavor, be set his face resolutely southward and determined to work or beg his way to Eypt He accordingly started off "with a light heart and a thin pair of breeches," aud after marching for one hund.od and fifty-eight days across the peninsula of Asia Minor, and along the coasts of Syria and Palestine, he arrived at Alex andria, where, by latest accounts, he was enjoying the repose he was justly entitled to after his fatiguing walk. Iloplua: .4gaiut Hope. Hoping for a servant who will be sat isfied with half the work being pnt out and all the wages doubled. Hoping for a friend to lend you fifcy pounds without interest or security. Hoping for another friend to pay the fifty pounds you lent him on the same con ditions. Hoping for the horse to win that you've backed with money en trusted to you for something else. Hoping the man you asked to dinner in a moment of enthusiastic want of re flection won't come. Hoping when he has come that hell go away again soon. Hoping the landlord won't come for his rent just yet Hoping there's another bottle left in the cellar. Toms cruris. How Nelly Saw th Old Ykab Go Oct. Little Nelly Neal couldn't quite understand it She heard folks talk about the Old Year "going out" and the New Year "coming in," and she wondered to herse'f where the Old Year went to, and if any one ever saw him go and where the New Year eame from. and if anybody ever saw him come. It was a puzzle, sue determined, How ever, that she would watch thii season, and see for herself the Old Year "go out with her own eyes. Therefore, when she overheard mamma say to Aunt Josie one night, as she undressed the children, "When Nelly goes to sleep we'll go down to 'Trinity watch- meeting' and see the Old Year out," Nelly just made up her mind she wou'dn t "go right to sleep" as mamma bade her, but she would stay wide awake ever so long instead, and then, may 'be she would see the Old Year go too. But pfter mamma and auntie had kissed her good night, and she heard mamma say to papa, "You sit up for ns, the girls are tired, and look at the children once in a while, Nelly felt very sleepy. Her eyelids felt so heavy they wouldn't sty open at all, not even when he tried to hold them apart with her i w .. V..II- I r 1 beautiful couutr of childhood's dream-1 3') ?"ala1',14 millty. ,J land. She must have beeu there wme! , r""1 time, for she had been having some real i f England it is proposed that the good times with her dollies, who always I "Pper class shall for a while diseoa conTtrsed with her in real voices in that ' tluUe eating oyster, in the hope that happy land, when suddenly with a little j tbey m7 tlm be had some day for less start Nelly opened her eyes, and, sure t,ian $l dozen. enough, there stood the Old Year, At the Vistula, after vain attempts right by mamma's Lureaa. He was a , for many years to improve the natural dars, cross-looking, old man, to be sure, and he seemed to be roving around very cautiously. Nelly saw him open the top draw and take out mam ma's new watch that p.ipa had given her Christmas. She fnpposed, in a sleepy sort of way, tiiat must be Time he was taking along with him. She did not stir or make any noise, but just watched him J ut things in a bag he held in his hand, and waited to see where he'd "en" to.soassliA ronlil tell Dolliu Dean aud Susy Silver all about it next day. She lav very Mill until she saw hira j move over toward the crib, where Baby ci 'ii Id u t let hira take the baby too. Why, the New Year only brought him to them last wiuter : aud no, no the Oid Year should not "go out" with their baby ! Just thea a verv shrill, piercing scream startled paua. "No. no! " it i shrieked ; "von shan't have my baby have increased only from 5.0UO.OOJ to brother!" From the library to the 1 7,(HHJ,tH pounds, while those of Japans nursery was but a step, and papa rushed nave increased from 8.000,0l!0 to 17, wildly over to discover the cause of the j 00tV"O pounds, and those of greens outcry. Ou the stairs he met a figure j f"""Ui 5,0iH),(HXt to 10,000,000. which pushed past hiin swiftly and ; At Ostia in aa old tower and fort that rushed rapidly dowu the stairs and out j were built under the papacies of Sex of the door, dropping a package as he t us IV. and Julius IL Lately they ran. have found around the tower ninety- "Whst is it, Nelly? Speak, my j five cannon balls buried deep in the darling ! Are you hurt ?" cried papa, I earth. In the middle agns, and for with pale lips, as became towards the some years after, Ostia was the scene Uttle white-robed figure that stood be-I of many bloody combats. These pro side the crib. jectiles belong probably to that epoch. "No, papa, but he was going to take Russia spends her money as follows : Luun too, and I wouldn't let him and l everT io roubles of the revenue l bate mm. and 1 11 never watch to see another Oi l Year go out," and Nlly Durst into a passion of tears. Papa understood now. and. seeing his l.ttle ones were unharmed, he bade I instruction, 2 roubles ; department of V .11 . . I. f v - I 1 1... . -yriiy euro oi oaoy, wuo opeueu , his brown eyes and seemed to quite enjoy the excitement and dissipation of the hour, while Le should go down stairs to see if there were any traces left of the burglars. It was too lute, however, to catch the thief, but all his spoils were secured, for the bundle he had dropped in bis haste to escape contained all the valu able booty he had selected. Mamma hngged her darlings close to her bosom when she came home and heard the story, and declared she would never leave them again to go to "watch meeting." Nelly felt herself quite a heroine when papa to'd eceybody next day how brave she had been to give the alarm and frighten off the burglar. But Nelly still declares when she tells the story to her playmates that it was the Old Year she saw "go out I" Hearth and Jl'tme. Usk of Cat's Whiskers. Every one mn-,t have observed what are usually called the whisters on mm uj't' I lip. The use of these in a state of na ture is very important. Ihey are organs of touch. They are attached to a bed of close glands under the skin, and each of these long hairs is con nected with the nerves of the lip. The slightest contact of these whiskers with any surrounding object is thus felt more distinctly by the animal, although the hairs of themselves have no feeling. They stand out on each side of the lion as well as of the common cat, so that from point to point they are equal to the width of the animal's body. If we imagine, therefore, a lion stealing through a covert of wood in an imper fect light, we shall at once see the use of these long hairs. They indicate to tribes under bis charge observed a him through the nicest feeling any custom of making N;w Year's calls obstacle which may present itself to the the squaws calling on tho warriors, passage of bis body ; they prevent the j All the American savages formerly ob leaves which would give warning to its ; served the same custom. The Dutch prey, if he were to attempt to pass settlers of New York adopted the through too close a bush, and thus, in custom from them, with a slight modi conjunction with the solt cushion of 1 tication the gentlem iu calling oo the his feet, and the fur upon which he ; ladies. So the social cutora which re treads, they enable him to move towards ' quires gentleman to bnve the wintry his victim with a stillness even greater j buffeting of the el ' en -t and call upon than that of a snake, which creeps along , the ladies has as r-v-j e. lible parentage the glass, and is not perceived until it ; as the F. F. V. is coiled around its prey. These aui- j h.xperiments witTi petroleum as fnel mala are ail beasts of prey, and thus . for locomotives hv iateiy been made we see how even these seemingly use- jn Canada, the r suit being that, with less hairs become great helps to them, an average consumption of four gallons and how wisely God prepares every 1 creature for its work. There is a dog belonging to a Con cord fire company which always takes it upon herself to spread a fire-alarm, ami makes a great ado about it. When a fire broke out, a few days ago, she rushed to a sleeping fireman and, seiz- , ing him by the throat, waked him. She ! then went to the house of another fire man, and, having called him out by her loud barking, fastened upon his clothes and tried to hurry him up. Thr Bible promises blessings to the i i . v n iu vv v merciful, but we hardly think the bene- i; . t ii !,. kn -.tv. diction will fall on tbat man who, with , , . .i ; 1 nis near ana purse open w M r7M heed- i S .1 "Sfs all liis crea- U13 llUEUaU UCIUWI, .111 lessly by the mute agony animal : for are we not tares, and the work ot His hands. Whvtevbb bustlings and trouble, tumults and outrages, quarrels and strife, arise in the world, keep out of them all ; concern not yourselves with them. A peep behind the curtain "mother don t sret me mad now r tiarry is coming, and I shall be all of a flush." The keys of the new Paris Opera House number 9742. VARIETIES. It is murder to drown your sorrows or kill time ? Chairs should never be covered with silk, but sat-in. A cash system is one where a man pays for all he g"ts, and runs the chances of getting all he pays for. The Santa Cruz Sr ntinel compares that town to "the dimple on beauty's cheek." More cheek than dimple, probably. If you want t- ex'erminate a family, don't get up a vendetta to do it A re cipe for making miuoe pies will do the business for you. A"witches cave" has been discovered near Parma, Italy, containing skulls, caldrons, vases, etc, and a tripod ex quisitivtly carved. An Irish editor remarks, impres sively, "Anonymous communications rejected unless accompanied by the name of the author. Faria has a graveyard which is en tirely devoted to deceased inmate of the Jardin des Plantea. Over seven hundred defunct animals have been buried there. Paris has "91 periodicals, of which 113 are political, scientific, 73 reli- 1 gions, 58 devoted to fashiou. 42 legal. , niontu, the nver formed a new outlet, ' aud the old one, turned into a lateral caual, has long given the needed water way to the important port of Dantzio. The clumsy style of daucing now in vogue in which people merely shnlBe alwut the floor, pushing one foot after the other, seem to have come from Taris ; for thev have it there, and they call these ambitious young gentleman "tloor polishers." Oil snd salt fi-th, immoderately used. ? r?u" the poorer luhabi- tants ' the Island of Grete especially not being in favor with the rich, thd wealthy families are almost exempt from this loathsome disease. From a table of the exports of teas from China and J ipan to the United States during the past t iro seasons it appears mat tne shipment oi blacks there are paid, for interest on the trab- lic debt 17 roubles ; financial adminis tration, lt roubles ; department of war. 32 roubles ; navy, 4 roubles : public tue interior. roubles: roads. Aj.. 6 roubles ; aud from one to two roubles eaeh on a number of other minor de partments. The London Timos prints a list of the brokers of that city. Persons who have been inclined to think that Dick ens manufactured his names, may find the following gems worth examination : Clement Coney Butlin Morris : John Alexandria Petrocoshino ; Tom Edward Wilkins Thomas ; Temple Hillyard Hicks Soanes ; Edward Hudson Blower Smith ; Norman Percy Miles Troson and Soiridion Stamati Zula. The rabbit forms an important article of food in G'at Britian and Ireland. In addition to the very large number imported from the continent, it is esti mated there are annually bred for food 27,000 rabbits. The flesh is sold at an average rate cf twelve cents (gold) per ponnd, which is fully a third less than the price of beef, and considerably un- jer tuat 0f ch0jcpr proportions of thD sheep, llie value of the annual supply is estimated to be $7,97o,000. The end of December and the begin ning of January constitute what may well be called the great maariage season of the year in some parts of f-otlaud. Why this should lie so it is difficult to imagine, uuless it be that the brides and bridegrooms wish to make their new festivities one aud the same thing. Ou a recent Sunday rooming the bans for frty six weddings were proclaimed in the music hall in Aberdeen, and at the same time the bans for thirty wed dings were proclaimed iu Oidmacbar CathedaaL A former Indian agent states that the per miie. the engiue steamed quite freely, and made good time with a train of thirty cars being about a barrel for every ten miles. It is stated tbat the most simple contrivance for burn ing petroleum if either by means of a jet of steam or compressed air, passed at right angles ov t the orifice of a pipe : . . . manor that the oil will be sncked and thrown into the furnace in the form of a fiue spray, where, if properly adjusted, it will undergo per fect combustion. Tue cost of the ap paratus is but tridiug. Take the potato awav from Ireland, , . . T" .1 and starvation comes, x amiuereceuny " : , . . , , . -i had its hold on Bengal ou account of a : , . ,, ; 1 failure of a nee crop. Bread Iruit is j Wegt india both iofA anJ clothing. 1 West India fo01 nJ cIotn'D- 1 Hesven sends it and causes it to grow, I d inhabitants ask for nothing , . . , ..n.ij.itk. further. And yet all these yield to the despised bamboo. W e go hshing with these poles; the Chinese eat them. The uses to which it is put render it a national benefaction. Houses, Doais, ,n)i wattfr wheels are made of , gfier with fences, ropes.furniture jhits, umbrellas, aud all varieties of I weapons, lamp wicks, pencils, brushes, I pQg Maeducts, telescopes, and a . thnan.i other thines of daily use. We might almost say that were the bamboo to perish suddenly off the earth the whole Chinese Empire would collapse.