B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THB TJHION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. . . ' Editor and Proprietor. i , i.i YQL. XXIX. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., MARCH 10, 1S75. NO. 10. X rOETBT. BITTKatSEfcS. Is it true I have built insecurely ? Do do foundations remain ? Were th structures I planned no sorely Fonnded mod built in vain ? Have tli wave, no madly careering. No pity for wrecks laid bare ? Ah ! why are they ever appearing. To uiock me in my destoor ? Just aa if my hnpcs wore their vassals. They have felled them in their strife ; And the last wan the lordliest of castles, Ilejikt witl( the drcanm of mj life. I watched, from my rampart and towers. The strains sweep over the main ; And. scorned, in my daintiest of bowers, . The fury of wind and rain. I Haw the stars pale in tlieir splendor. And die out in darkness alove ; While mtirtic, entrancing and tender. (V as soulless beside my lore. I!nt my caetlcs wore crushed on the morrow- My hopes that were life to me ; I was mad in my first wild sorrow. And cnrsed the relentless sea. I paw with powerless emotion. The wrecks strewn far and wide ; A nd I watched the foam-crextcd ocean Hear tliem away on its tide. lleroemembranee and life are yet left me Memories of sorrow alone ; Of the rest hat the sea bereft mn, i'lainting my all as its own. isrt:i.!..txT. Slav Wbrrr You Are. One of the greatest drawbacks fo prseiity is the festive, roving, ami untitled spirit of the people. Each one imagines that tlicrcis an Kl Dorado somewhere, or that some Motion is more prosperous than his own, anil that In must get ti it licfore In- ran ac complish anvthing. The idea unsettles ' him, ami if in; iIihk not "pull up" ami migrate at once, lie is forever thinking nlxmt it, and neglects to improve Lis present liomi' ami farm. The delusion lias liecn wide-spread since the war, and inneli individual disaster lias been I lie result. The curse of Bcuhcn seems to rest uiHin the M-ople. The terrible "Texan fever," which so raged a few years ago, caused untold families mis fortune, and ruined many excellent farms and good fanners. It is a great mistake. Contentment is the great secret of life. Old Horace struck the right key when lie said: "Happiness depends not npoii place nor rlimate, but, umiu the state of one's in i ml." "Ilolling stones gather no moss," and the exicriiiient of wiling mt and moving, in the hope of licttcr ingthe comlit ion, often ends in bitter disappointment and irretrievable loss. Thousands in the South can testily, from exiK'rience, to the truth of this assertion. Setter stay -where yon are. If you are in a gMd community, and your lands have IhiUoiii, drive down your pegs and locate. Kemem'ier that "there's more in the man Than the land," as old Jones said on returning from Texas, after terrible sailures, to the old worn-out homestead he hail sold, and found it blooming like a garden. Bight-lip the old dwelling, renew the out-buildings, palings, fences, and barns; spend a few dollars in white paint, and give the premises . an air of cheerfulness. Cultivate less ground, and make it richer every year. .Make plenty to eat and some to sell, and let your cotton crop be clear profit. I'lant fruit trees, have your rye, oats, liarlcy, w heat and clover patches, tine horses, fat cows, and rich butter, Give your wives and daughters flower gar dens, and assist them in, collecting a good assortment of roots and cuttings. lo these simple things nnd,oiir word for it, your houses will take new hold (ton your affections, and, instead of the rickety, dilapidated establishments and solemn, hungry-looking counten ances so common in our country, we will find comfortable and inviting homes, w here all is love, contentment, and happiness. It w ill le like a t'ol chian enchantress infusing new juices into the veins for the prolongation of life and youth. Try it. Turn over a new leaf and liegin anew. Fear God, love your neighbor, your wives and children, and don't try to get rich in one year. Teach your little ones to love their homes. There is a world of - mclodv and sentiment in that immortal old lull lad, "Mnl I'U-vnro snd iialarv. wher-r-Vr we may nnm, Ike 11 cler mt Iiiuuum, tilt-re's 10 jiUre like litHiie.' Delirious Hit f I'renrli W it. Arse tie Ilnussaye's last Paris letter to the New York. Trilunf, contains some delicious bits of French wit. M. de Villetiiessiint, the editor of the Fiyro, passes for a lucky man in I'aris, and a man of wit His iersonaIity is very useful to his paer, and with his t0,ooo suliseriliers he knows how to manage the public. Lucky he h:w leen at every game of life except trrntc rt qwtr mitcand baccarat; witty lie always is. ltecently in the green-room of the Theatre Francais, Mile, Favart ran up to him. "M. de Villemcssant 1 how can you jHTinit such caltiniiiies? Your Fi'inro says I am forty years old." "Well," answered Villeinessant, gaily. ; "k iss me as many times as that esti- j mate slandered you." Mile. Favart threw herself on "the neck of M. de Villemessant and kissed him ten times, distributing the favors equally on his , two cheeks. "Very well," said M. de Villemessant, 'hereafter the Fiyirv will tell tlie truth, and instead of forty years will give you fifty." And all the actors in the green-room stood laughing about the burly journalist and the great coquette. The wits are still vieing with each other in describing the leanness of Mile Sarah Bernhardt She has gained a great triumph at the Theatre Fran cafe, and has spent so much passion in tragedy that there is little left of hrr but soul; so the paers have begun anew the pleasantries in regard to this imalabu body. One says she can walk in the rain without an umbrella, liecauseshe can pass between the drops. Another replies that this is an exag geration, but he adds that one evening, when some one tried to run away with her. she escaped by hiding behind her riding whip. Shew The flan. s'.mw na tfin man who is ever ready to pity and help the deformed ; show ns man who covers the faults of others with a mantle of charity ; show na a man who bows as politely and give the street as freely to the poor aewing girl as to the millionaire ; who values virtue, not clothes ; who shuns ti,a Mmnanw nf snch as irather at public vuv ivuijw. wj m places to gaie at the fair sex, or make unkind remarks of the passing girl ; show ns a man who abhors libertine ; who soorna the ridicule of bia mother's sex, and the exposure of womanly rep utation ; show ns a man who never for gets for an instant the delicacy due women, as a woman, in any condition or class and yon show ns gentleman. THE MAID OF DAMASri'S. In the reign of the Greek Emperor tteraclins, when the beautiful city of Damascus was at the height of its pplentlor and magnificence, there dwelt therein a young noble, named Deme trius, whose decayed fortunes did not correspond with the general prosperity of the rimes. He was a youth of ardent disposition, and very handsome in per son ; pride kept him from bettering his estate by the profession of merchandise. yet more keenly did lie feel the ob scurity to which adverse fate had re duced him, that in his lot was involved the fate of one dearer than himself. It so happened that in that quarter of the city which faces the row of palm trees, within the gate Kesian, dwelt a very wealthy old merchant, who had a very beautiful daughter. Demetrius had bv chance Been her soncs time be fore, and he was so struck by her loveli ness that, after pining for some mouths in secret, he ventured upon a dis closure, and to his delighted surprise fonnd that Iahelle had long silently nursed a deep and almost hopeless passion for him also; so, being now aware that their love wr.s mntnnj, they were hs happy as the bird Unit, all day long, sings in the sunshine from the MiojmiU of the cypress trees. True is the adugn of the poet, that the course of true love nf ver did run smooth ; and in the father of the maiden they found that a stumbling block lay in the way of their happiness, for he wns of an avaricious disposition, and they knew that ho valued gold more thau nobility of blood. Their fears grew more and more, as Isabelle, in her private conversation, endeavored to sound her father on this point ; and al though the suspicions of affection are lwavs more apparent than real, in this they were not mistaken ; for without consulting his child and as if her soul had leen in hi hand he promised her in marriage to a rich old miser, twice as rich and nearly as old as himself. Isabelle knew not what to do ; for, on lieiug informed by her father of the fate he bad destined for her, her heart forsook her, and her fpirit was bowed U the dust. Nowhere could she rest, like the Thracian bird that knoweth not to fold its wings in slumber clond had fallen for her over the face of natnre and instead of retiring to her couch she wandered abont weeping, nnder the midnight stars, on the terrace. on the hbnsetop. wailing over her hap less fate, and calling on death to come and take her from her sorrows. At morning she went forth alone into the garden ; but neither could the golden glow of the orange tree nor the perfume of tr.e roses, nor the delicate frsgrancs of the clustering henna and jasmine, delight her, so she wearied for the hour ot noon, having privately sent to Demetrius, inviting him to meet Ler by the fountain of the pillars at that time. Toor Demetrius had for Bnrai time observed a Bcttlcd sorrow in the con duct snd countenance of his beautiful Isabelle : ho felt that some melancholy revelation was to be made to him ; and. all eagerness, he came at the appointed hour. He passed along tuo winding walks, unheediDgof the tulips streaked like the ruddy evening clouds of the flower betrothed to the nightingale of the geraninm bLizng in scarlet beauty till, on epproaching the place of promise, he caught a glimpse of the maid he loved and. lo ! she sat tbrre in the snnlight, alsorbed in thought, a book whs on her knee and at her feet lay the harp, whose chords bad been for his ear so often modulated to harmony. lie laid hia hand gently on her shoulder, as he seated himself beside her on the steps, and seeing her sorrow ful face, he comforted her, and bade her be of good cheer, saying that Heaven wonid soon smile on their for tunes, ami that their present trials would but endear them the more to each other iu the days of after years. At length, with tesrs snd sous she told him of what she had learned ; and, while they wept on each other's Ikwoius, they vowed over the J5ible which Isa lelle held in her hands, to be faithful to each other to their dying day. Meantime the miser was making pre parations for the marriage ceremony, and the father of Isabeile had portioned out his daughter's dowry ; when the lovers, finding themselves driven to ex tremity, took the resolution of escaping from the city. Now it so happened, in accordance with the proverb, which saith that evils never conic single that.at thiB very time. the city of Damascus was closely in vested by a mighty army, commanded by the Caliph Ahiibekcr Alwokidi, and iu leaving the walls, the lovers were in imminent hazard of falling into their cruel hands ; yet having no other re sonree left, they resolvl to put their perilous adventnre to the risk. Twns the Mussulman hour of prayer Mspgrib : the sun had just disappeared. and the purple haze of twilignt rested on the hil!s, darkening all the ctdar forests, when the porter ot the gate. Kcisan. having been bribed wittt a brile, its folding leaves slowly oiened, and forth issued a horseman closely wrapped nn in a mantle : and behind him, at the littie space, followed an other similarl v clad. Alas ! for the nn- Ineky fugitives, it bo chanced that Derar. the captain of the night guard, j was at that moment making his rounds, and observing what was going on, de tached a party to throw themselves between the strangers and the town. The former rider, however, discovered their intentions, and called back to his follower to return. Isabelle for it was she instantly regained the gate which had not closed, bnt Demetrius fell into the hands of the enemy. As wont in those bloody wars, the poor prisoner was immediately carried by an escort to the presence of the caliph, who put the alternative in his power, of either, on the instant, re nonucicg his religion or submitting to the axe of the beadsman. Demetrins told his tale with a noble simplicity ; and his youth, Lis open countenance and stately bearing so far gained on the heart of Abubeker, that on his re fusal to embrace Mahometanism he becaod of him seriously to consider of his situation, and ordered a delay of the sentence, which he mnst otherwise pronounce, until the morrow. Heart-broken and miserable, Deme trius was loaded with chains, and carried to a gloomy place of confine ment In the solitude ot me nignt ne cursed the hoar of his birth bewailed his miserable situation and feeling that all hia schemes of happiness were thwarted, almost rejoiced that he had only a few hours to live. The heavy honrs lagged on toward daybreak, and quite exhausted by the intense agony of his feelings, be sank down npon the ground in a profound sleep, from which a band, with cres cented turbans and crooked sword blades, awoke him. Still penisting to reject the prophet's faith, be was led forth to die : bnt in passing through the camp, ths Boubachis of the caliph stopped the band, as he bad been com manded, and Demetrins was ushered into the tent, where Abubeker, not yet arisen, lav stretched on his sofa. For awhile the captive remained re solute, preferring death the disgrace of turning a renegade ; bnt the wily caliph, who had taken a deep and sudden in terest in the fortunes of the youth. knew well the spring by the touch of which his heart was most likely to be affected. He pointed out to Demetrins prospects of preferment and grandeur while he assured him that, in a few days Damascus mnst to a certainty sur render in which case his mistress mnst fall into the power of the fierce soldiery, and be left to a fate full of dishonor. and worse than death itself, bnt, if he assumed the turban, he pledged his royal word, that especial rare should be taken that no harm should alight on her be loved. Demetrins pansed, and Abubeker saw that the heart of bis captive was tonehed. He drew pictures of power and aflluence and domestic love that dazzled the imagination of his hearer ; and while the prisoner thought of his Isabelle, instead of rejecting the im pious proposal, as at Cist he had done. with disdain and horror, his soul bent like iron to the breath of the furnace Uame, and be wavered 'and liecame ir resolute. The keen eye of the caliph saw the working of his spirit within him, and allowed bim yet another day to form his resolution. When the second was expired, Demetrius craved a third ; and on the fonrth morning, miserable man, he abjured the faith of bis fathers and became a Mussulman. Abubeker loved the youth, assigned him a post of dignity, and all the migbtv host honored him whom the caliph delighted to honor. He was clad in rich attire and magnificently at tended; and to all eyes Demetrius seemed a person worthy of envy ; yet in the calm of thonght, his conscience npbraided him, and lie was far less hsppy than he seemed to be. Fro yet the glow of novelty Lad en tirely ceased to bewilder the under standing of the renegade, preparations were mode for the assault ; and, after a fierce but ineffectual resistance, nnder their gallant leaders, Thomas and Herbis, the Dam scenes were obliged to submit to their imperious con queror, on condition of being allowed, witum three days, to leave the city un molested. When the gates were opened, Deme trins, with a heart overflowing with love and delight, was among the first to enter. He enquired of every one he met of Isabelle '. but all turned from him with disgust. At length he found her out, but what was the grief and surprise in a nunnery 1 Firm to the troth she had so solemnly plighted, she had rejected the proposition of her mercenary parent I and, having no idea but that her lover Lad shared the fate of all Christian captives, she had shut herself, fiom the world, and vowed to live the life of a vestal. The surprise, the anguish, the horror of Isabelle, when she beheld Demetrius in his Moslem habiliments, cannot be described. Her first impnlse, on find ing bim yet alive, was to have fallen into his arms ; bnt, instantly collecting herself, she shrank back from him with loathing, as a mean and paltry dastard. "Xo, no," she cried, "yon are no longer the man I loved ; our vows of fidelity were pledged over the Bible ; that book yon have renounced as a fable, and he who has proved himself false to heaven can never be true to me !" Demetrins was conscience strnck ; too late he felt his crime and forsaw its consequences. The very object for whom he had dared to make the tremendous sacrifice, bad deserted him, and his own soul told him with how much justice; so, without nttering a syllable, he turned away, heart broken, from the holy and beantifnl being whose affec tions he had forfeited for ever. When the patriots left Damascus Isa belle accompanied them, lletiring to Autioeh she lived with the sisterhood for many years and, as her time was passed between acts of charity and devotion, her bier was watered with many a tear, and the hands of the grate ful dnly strewed her grave with flowers. To Demetrins was destined a briefer career. All conscious of his miserable degradation, loathing himself and life, and mankind, he rushed back from the city into the Mahometan camp ; and entering, with a hurried step, the tent of the caliph, he tore the turban from his brow, and cried aloud. "Oh, Abuieker I behold a God-forsaken wretclu Think not it was the fear of death that led me to abjnre my religion the religion of my fathers the only true faith. No, it was the idol of "love that stood between my heart and heaven, darkening the latter with its shadow ; and had I remained as true to God, as I did to the maiden of my love, I had not needed this." So saying, and ere tho Land of Abnleker could arrest him, he drew a poniard from his embroidered vest, and the heart blood of the renegade sixintetl on the royal robes of the successor of Mahomet. An I'ulmppy Attachment. A painfnl scene occurred in a church in Ilncks Township, Ohio, a few Sun days ago. The ehnrch Lad .lately un dergone repair. Among other improve ments a new coat of paint was placed on the pews, followed by a coat of var nish. The result was most pleasing to the eye ; but, nnfortunately, the var nish had been applied so late in the week that it had not had time to be come hard before Sunday, when the congregation flocked to their seats. No apparent inconvenience was suffered until the clergyman was abont to de liver the benediction, when the congre gation were horrified to find that they were nnable to stand np ; they were, in fact, glued, or rather varnished to their seaU. Their spasmodic efforts to rise were most distressing to witness ; in vain did the clergyman exhort them from the pulpit to resignation. They were seized with a kind of panic, all the more frightful because they were for the moment powerless ; at last, by what seemed to be a simultaneous and her culean jerk, they managed to tear themselves from their sittings ; bnt at what a sacrifice 1 The pews were liter ally covered with fragments of Sunday apparel. Shreds of silk, lawns, calico, broadoloth, and eassimeres were left as souvenirs of the Tarnish used in beauti fying that church, and the hapless con gregation, rushing from the doors, harried homeward with an expression on their faces as though their hearts were even more severely rent than their garments. ' A bronze statue of Robert Burns, costing twelve thousand dollars, is to be placed in Central Park. A Girl ! Stairs. The next clear evening, when the moon is on the other side of the sky. and onr side is full of stars, ask your papa or mamma, or your teacher, to go out of doors with yon and show yon some of the beantifnl star-pictures that the wise people call constellations. Very likely yon have often noticed the Great Bear, which looks so much more like a dipper than a bear, that ordinary folk call it the Great Dipper, and have learned to trace the line of the point ers np to the small glittering Morth Star in the end of the Little Bear's tail, or the Litter Dipper's handle, whichever yon please to call it If yon have never fonnd this star, be sure to ask your teacher to show it to yon, for yon need to Know where it is, as yon need to know where the North Pole is on the globe. The sky is to ns like a vast globe, only we seem to be in the center of it, and to look np into it, instead of down npon it. Around the North Star as a center, - each of the twinkling fixed stars seem to move in a circle ; bnt yon will not see this unless yon watch them a long while, for it is not really their motion, but that our own little earth that causes this appearance. The nied stars always keep tho same relative places with regard to each other. If one of them is eight degrees east on one night, yon will always find it in the same dnection and distance from its neighbor, in whatever part of the sky you see them. The heathen people who lived many hundred of years ago and who worship ped tho gods ami goddesses of (rreeco and Rome, used to see very strange things in the starry sky. To them, gods and goddesses, heroes and hero ines, and animals, great and small, shone where we see myriads of. mighty worlds. . It is one of the star-heroines that I wish to tell yon. Ask your teacher to point ont to you the constellation called Andromeda. Yon would never dream, to look at it, that it was meant for a girl, bound by crnel chains to a rock on the sea-coast ; bnt if yon look on an astronomical atlas, yon will see t very plainly. There is an almost straight line of four brilliant stars, beginning with a very beantifnl ne called Almaach, about fifty degrees from the North Star. (Be sure to find out abont de grees.) Almaach is in- Andromeda's foot. The next one, Miracb. with two others north-west of it, makes her girdle. The third bright one of the line marks her breast, and makes a lit tle triantle, with two dimmer ones south of it, and a straight line with one of these and another north of it. The last star of the four is a little farther north than it would be if the line were perfectly straight ; it is called Alphe ratz, and is at the same time the chief star of Andromeda's head, and the comer of a beautiful great sou are. which is clearly seen. The stars which I have mentioned are easily traced ; and, if you look very sharply, yon may see the triangle in her right'arm, the star of her right hand, the one in her left arm, and many others, for there are sixty-six stars, which bright and patient eyes may see iu tuts cuusieiiauon. Now, I suppose you wonid like to know why poor Andromeda was left chained to a rock. Well here is the story. She had a very vain mother. Cassi opeia (whose star-picture, according to astronomy, is also in the sky, north of herdanghter.) She was beautiful, and foolish to boast of it. That was what made the trouble. She began to say that she was more beautiful than Juno and the sea-nymphs. The nymphs had no idea of letting her talk in that way, and they went straight to Neptune, the god of the sea, and told him all abont the matter. The sea-god was very sngry, and determined to avenge the insulted nymphs. Terrible was the punishment that overtook poor Cassiopeia. A great flood began to pour its torrents over the fields and homes of Ethiopia, the kingdom over which her husband Cephens was king. What was the poor queen to do ? Her pretty face was dis torted with horror and drenched with tears. She sent to the oracle of Ju piter Ammon to ask counsel. When the ignorant heathen people of those old times and lands were in trouble, they nsed often to send to con sult certain oracles. There were ora cles at various places, where they thought that gods talked with men, and told thera of tilings that would come to pass. Very nnsatisfactory the answers often were, but then human creatures must pray. Those people heard the voice that the dear Heavenly Father has put into all His children's hearts, telling them to come to Him for what they want ; bnt they did not under stand to whom they were to go, and I how very near he is, so, as I told yon, I they sent to the oracles. It was a fearfni answer that was hronght back to the waiting queen. . Neptune was not to be satisfied unless 1 the Princess Andromeda should be given np to a horrid sea-monster that had come with the flood. It seemed 1 very hard that an innocent girl must snffer so cruel a death ; but as the choice was between the loss of her one life and that of the lives of many people she was taken ont to a rock by the sea, and left chained there, to be killed by the monster. Just as he was abont to seize her, gallant youth, named Perseus, came , along through the air, and, seeing the beautiful maiden, fell in love with her. ' He Lad just succeeded in very dan- gerons experiment, which was no less than that of killing a dreadful gorgon, who had snakes in her hair, and who had had a very disagreeable habit of turning every one that she looked at into stone. Perseus didn't dare to look at her when he killed Ler ; Le looked at her reflection in the bright shield that he carried. Yon may imagine that be felt very brave after this feat. He had the gor gon's head still in Lis band when he came to the place where Andromeda was. He bad on winged shoes, and this was the reason that he could go through the air as well as on the ground. As I said, he fell in love with the beautiful Andromeda ! bnt be was a business-like yonng man, and be was determined to have the bargain clearly made before he released the lady. He said he would save her if ber father wonid promise to give her to him for a wife. Of course the King said "yes." for be felt badly enough to have the prinoess in so piteous a plight. So Perseus gave the seamonster a good look at the gorgon's head, which, not having lost its petrifying power, turned him stone-dead. Andromeda was already engaged to ber uncle Phinens, who was in a great passion when he fonnd thst be was to lose her. He had fight with Per seus ; bnt what was the use of fighting with a man who had a gorgon's head at into Perseus and Andromeda was married and "lived happy ever after;" and when they died, they were turned into stars and put into the sky. Some people don't believe this story. but there are the stars 1 SY. Xichotan for March. Tw Ways ! Hysnpatblslns. Mr. Goldthwaite was much surprised npon enteriug his comfortable sitting room one bitter cold evenintr. to find bis wife wiping the corners of her eyes w nn the daintiest of cambric handker chief9 Had she !een reading a novel he could readily have accounted for this, but she was only intent upon the uaiiy paper, ami as mat uoes not usu ally appeal to the tender emotions his curiosity was excited, and he asked: "Lucretia,dearest, what is the matter! Don't you feel well this evening f With along-drawn sigh Mrs. Gold thwaite replied, I have just been read ing of a family starving to death out in Nebraska : its terrible ! The govern ment ought to do something for the relief of the sufferers." "Perhaps we could do sometliin? for them ourselves." said the gentleman, reflectively. "But then there's no knowing that it would ever reach them." "And even if it did. the little we could give would amount to nothing among so many. Oh! it a dreadful to think of so much destitution. It will drive me crazy if I don't have some thing to divert my mind. So saying, she took up the latest novel and soon forgot the real sorrows of the world in imaginary ones. That sameeveiiingJohii Smith, sittimr with his wife and children around the evening lamp, read aloud tho same heart-reiHling account of starvation and suffering in the west. Before he was half through Mrs. Smith exclaimed with her usual energy : "John, those jieople mnst not starve while wo have plenty of everything; something must lie done right away. We can give something ourselves :uid get others to help ns." John replied, more cautiously, "We are not rich. Mary ; 1 am afraid we can ilo very little " "No, we aren't rich, but we can share what we have. I will get nil alpaca dress instead of the silk one you prom ised me, and put my name down for ten dollars." "Spoken like my own brave little wife," said John, smiling. "I will make my old overcoat last anothei winter and put my name down for ten dollars more." Then twelve-vear-old Charlie canelit the infection and sjHike up. "John lilake offered to trade his new skates for my old ones ami a dollar to boot, but I'll keep the old ones and give you the dollar." And licfore he had finished Alice chimed in, "Mamma, mayn't I give the fifty cents I earned hemming Uncle Frank's handkerchiefs X" There was something more than ap proval in the mothers smile, as she glanced from the elder children to the little four-year-old in her lap and asked : "And what will Freddy give to the poor little boys and girls out west t" The little hoy looked first at his slip pered feet ami then at a pair of new Isiots on the floor which he had owned for a whole day, and choking back a sob hesaid manfully, "Mamma, wouldn't they like to have Freddy's new boctsfr' 'I here were tears in her smile as she kissed the eager, npturned face in re ply, for though hoots would lie a poor substitute for a breakfast, there was no mistaking the generous heart of the little giver. Bnt Mrs. Smith did not stop there; she talked the matter over with three or four neighliors, then a meeting was called and a committee appointed to canvass the township. They worked with a will, and at the end of two weeks a large box of good, thongh half-worn clothing (including Freddy's boots) and three hundred dollars in money were sent to the western sufferers. If every eastern ncighliorhood would but do as much no man woman or child in Kansas or Nebraska need die of cold or hunger. .uxorious Editorial Itoonis. The Figaro each day is an epitome of the most readable gossip. It seeks to be nothing more and it fulfills its mission admirably. It is a sensational paper in a country of sensations. The Fisaro is one of the best lodged, and perhaps one of the best organized newspapers in France. Its office in the Rue Dronont is a miniature palace, in which no appliance of comfort or convenience is wanting. It stands wedged in between the odd houses of the street, a veritable gem of rmai ance architecture. Yon enter' under its frescoed portals and find yourself in a vestibule that might for any diflerenee in its arrangement lie the entrance to some elegant private mansion. A mag nificent stairway, half covered with growing plants and statues, ascends to the second story, where are the editorial and the private offices of M. de Yille messant, the presiding genins of the paper. And such editorial rooms ! No barnlike makeshifts such as I have seen in America. Quiet little nooks for the editors, stnffed arm-chairs for the re porters, plate-glass, gildings, tapes tries, and paintings everywhere. And here, too, is the fencing-room, an ele gant apartment hnng with jute tapes tries ; it is an armory with as many swords as there are editors, and here each day from 3 to 5 o'clock a professor of fencing comes, and each editor has hia lesson. Boaton Adverl'mer. How I.ithography wast ni- covered. ' After the first triumphant performance of M oiart's opera "Don Juan," at Munich, the theatre was deserted by all except one man. Alois SennefelJer had still much to do. After seeing carefully around the stage, that no sparks had ignited about the thea tre, he retired to his little room to stamp the theatre tickets for the following day. As he entered the room he bad three things in his hand a polished whetstone for razors, which be fca'L purchased, a ticket stamp noistened with printer's ink, and a check on the theatre treasury for his weekly pay. He placed the check on a table, when a gast of wind took it, swept it high up in his room for a moment and then deposited it ia a basin filled with water. Sennefclder took the wet paper, dried it as well as he could, and then, to make sure ef it, weighted it down with the whetstone, on which he had before carelessly placed the printing stamp. Returning to bis room on the fol lowing morning, he was surprised to see the letters of the stamp printed with remarkable accuracy npon the damp paper. He gated long at the check; a sudden thonght flashed throaga hia brain ; he wondered if by some such means be could not save himself the weary trouble he continually had copying the songs of the ehorns. That very morn ing be west eat and purchased a larger stone, and commenced to make experiments and, as we all know, finally succeeded in discovering the art of printing from stone lithography. The stem of the American wild rice ia coming extensively into use aa a mate, rial for paper pulp. The shores of the Canadian lakes alone will furnish 100, 000 tons annually. his service ? Fbinens was turned stone, too, at sight of it Talzar People. Mr. James Parton, in his lecture be fore the Liberal Club New York, said Shakespeare was evidently a tory of the old school, as he likened the clown and the farmer to fools fitted only for the jest of kings and princes ; and even the common people, such aa the tailor, shoemaker and baker, were treated with marked contempt skilled work men though they might be. They were vulgar people in his esteem, aud he made frequent use of them in his plays. The late Horace Greeley used to think differently. He thought that manual labor was no disgrace. Lord Chester field considered loud laughing one of the worst features of vulgarity. Scott thought it was vulgar to belong to any chnrcn but the .bstabiisned Church. uigaianty was to be noticed in a thousand forms. Some women were rude in their manners and especially in their dress. At an evening party yon may see them often decked ont in what one would suppose were costly trinklets jewels everywhere ; the set complete and how much did the set complete, cost ? the large sum of $11. Well known German writers had con demned shell-fish simply because they Had understood the American people ate so many of them that they lost tlieir wits, and finished up their clam-bakes th wild speeches, dancing, shouting. and gouging ont each others' eyes. Vulgarity could be seen every after noon in Central Park. Dashing and vulgar eqnipages could be seen there after the style of Fisk and IlelmboM. Some people had been guilty of many acts ot vulgarity, it nothing worse, by municipal gifts ; one in particular William M. Tweed. He gave one winter $10,1100 to the people of his ward, after taking a ranch greater sum from them. Such charity was very vulgar. Then again there were some vulgar clergymen, who, likeTyndall or Tlniley or Carlisle, could teach yonng children what they did not believe themselves. For instance, be himself went into a country church one day. and there the clergymen was talking to a nura'ier of children aliont the dclnge, as if ho be lieved it This Illinois pastor knew he was lying, and yet what should those children think when they grow up ? A gentleman not to be vnlgar, mnst be pure, temperate and honorable. A short time ago New York was nearly swallowed np by foreign vulgarity snch a time was never known before. There were foreign politicians men who wore diamonds here, there, and everywhere, nntil diamonds were not worn by any one else who did not wish to be considered vulgar. New York was turned upside down. The great event was the Aaiericna Club ball. There could lie seen miles of carriages carrying vulgar people to that halL Indeed it might well be said New York was then at its lowest for the lowest were at the top. Parton evidently don't consider him self vulgar, wherein be differs with a great many. A Vood Pleader. "May it please Your Honor and gen tlemen of the jury, the case is as clear as ice and sharp to the point as "no' from your sweetheart. The Scripture saith, 'Thou shalt not kill ;' now. if you hang my client you transgress the com mand as slick as grease and as plump as a goose egg ou a loafer's face. Gen tlemen, murder is murder, w lift hcrconi mitted by twelve jurymen or by an humble individual like my client Gen tlemen, 1 do not deny the fact of my client having killed a man, but is that any reason w hy you sliixild do so No such thiug.geutlemen. You may bring the prisoner in guilty, the hangman may do his duty, hut will that exoner ate yon f No such thing. In that case yon will .111 lie murderers. Who among yon is prepared for the brand of Gain to lie stamped u)Mn his brow to-day f Who, freemen who in this land of lilierty and light I Gentlemen, I will pledge my word not one of you has a iMiwie knife or a pistol in li is pocket. No, gentlemen, your pockets are odori ferous with the Jicrfuniesofcig-ir stumps and tobacco. Von can smoke the to bacco of rectitndeiu the pipe of a peace ful conscience; but hang niv unfortun ate client, and the scaly alligators of remorse will gallop through the inter nal vvrtebra-, tiutil the spinal vertebne if yonr anatomical construction is tunied into a railroad for the grim and gory gobiins of despair. Gentlemen, beware of conimittingmiirder f lie ware I say, of meddling with the eternal liemgati ve ! lieware, I say. Kenienils r the fate of thl man w ho attempted to steady the ark, and tremble. Gentle men,! abjure you by th manumitted gliost of temporal sanctify to do no murder! I abjure yon by the name of woman, the mainspring of the ticking timepiece of Time s theoretical trans migration, to do no murder! I abjure yon, by the love you have for the escu lent and continental gusto of our native pumpkin, to do no murder! 1 abjure ywu, by the stars set m the Hying en sign of your emancipated country, to do no murder! I abjure you hy the American eagle that whipM-d the uni versal gamecock of creation, ami now sits roosting on the magnetic, telegraph of Time's illustrious transmigration, to do mi murder ! And, lastly, gentlemen, if you ever expect to wear long-tailed coats, if yon ever expect free dogs not to bark at yon, if you ever eicct to wear lioots made of the free hide of the Rocky Mountain buffalo, ami, to sum up all. if you ever expect to Ink anything but a set of sneaking, loaling, rascally, cut-throated, braided small ends of humanity, whittled down to indistiuc tibility, acquit my client aud save your country.'' The prisoner was acquitted. A Pout-Owe Romance. In 18P.5, in New York, a yonng woman nsed to call every week for a letter ad dressed "Miss Mary IL Kuasel, Post Office." The regularity of her visits, and her apparent unwillingness to give any account of herself, elicited mnch curiosity among the clerks, but their inquisitiveness was never gratified. Years passed, and gray hairs appeared on the woman's head, but she made her calls as regularly as ever, and the ex pected letter always awaited her. Nearly ten years have elapsed since her last visit, but the letters still come ad dressed to her, although the intervals between them are longer than in the old time. The letters have been opened, but they contain no cine to the identity of either the writer or the recipient Kach contains a five-dollar bill, with a few lines of writing, to say when the next remittance would be made. No address, no date, no signature. The handwriting is that apparently of a man feeble with age, and another letter, with the usual superscription, is at the present writing, lying unopened at the post-office. Mary H. Russell, an elderly woman ten years ago, ia probably dead, the letters with their contents are sent to Washington, bufnoone can guess who theaunoy mous writer is who so faithfully main tained bis correspondence, I said Happy New Year to the JuiTge "And did he give you anything V "Yta five years." Charivari. Torrnv mi.rxv. What Is the I'm ? Whmf Ui th. n-. of trimming a Tamp 11 ym ifciat mlail to bKbt it What m tlie nut- f enpi-ltiitf a wrong it jihi ntTTer mleut to ntbl it f WtaU Is th nse of rmorio Trmr hat. If Ton in't miml U tarry WriMi m th aMof wiMiin a nuM. if y o nevrr intend to marrj What is the use of birrim? a mat. ' , ll rt-u ! Q't intent) to war it W hat ki the nm -i a hum. for two. It you nwver tnteutl to .hare a r What ia the ns. of yitherinr eohl. It Ton do n4 intend to Iiti it W hit i. then of punting a nll. ll you never luUtutl to reap it t What Is the ne of bnvirur a boor. If yon ilon4 intriol to r-ml tl? W hat m tin net of a cradle to you. If you never etiet to use it Skfino Mother. A lady was riding one day in her carriage, among the mountains, when they came najini an old woman, with funny little hood on her head and a stall in her hand, walk ing all alone. She was neat and clean. and her skin was soft and delicate, bnt her hack was bent and she was barefoot. The ladv saw she was shoeless, and stopped the carriage. "Here is some money," said the lady in a tender tone. "What for ?" said the woman, look ing np pleasantly. "lo bny shoes for yonr feet Do yon not want a pair of shoes ?"' Ibo woman laughed a little low laugh which seemed to come from a heart tilled with simple, happy thonghts. "I s'pose I do." said the woman. "but I never didn't tbiuk of anybody's erivinf Ik.m a ma " "lake this bill, please, and buy yon pair," said the lady. "God bless and reward Ton I" an swered the woman, heartily. j. be carriage drove on. and the ladv sank bank on the scat with tears in her eyes. "Oh," said she, "I thonght 1 saw my own mother in that dear old lady. She had inst such a sweet face and pleasant voice. You don't know now 1 felt when 1 thonght of m v mother. old and feeble, walking with bare feet over this rongh, rocky road." If we all saw futheru and mothers, brothers and sisters, in the poor, the cold, and the hungry, what a world this wonid soon be. Tnn Dormouse. The sonirrel has a distant relation, a kind of a third cou sin once removed, well known nnder the title Dormouse, and often seen in cages, bnt not very frequently in a wild state. This little creature is also one of the hibernators, and has its warm nest in a thick bush, mnch as a squirrel has its domicile in a tree, where it sleeps its time away throughout the Winter. Like the squirrel, too, it has its store of food, not gathered into the earth, but tnoked away into sundry nooks and crannies in the neighborhood. The amount of food which the dormouse takes during the Winter, and the fre quency of its awakening, depends al most entirely on the severity or mild ness of the season. In a very sharp Winter the drowsy creature wakes bnt seldom, and very little of its store is consumed, and in deed, even if the season should be mild the inroads on the larder are bnt few. The provisions are not gathered so much for the Winter as for the first few weeks of Spring, when the animal has at last shaken off its long Wintry sleep, and returns to its own lively habits, natnre not yet having supplied it with a sufficiency of food whereon to live. Oru Boy's Own. Some time since, a little boy, while at play in an orchard, fonnd a scall owl which was disabled so that it could not fly. ne brought it carefully home, placed it in a large cage, gave it plenty of water, and fed it on various kinds of food, but princi pally meat, of which it was very fond. The owl was not much larger than a pigeon, and of a yellowish-white color, with rings of brown feathers round the eyes. The beck seemed hardly large enongh to admit a small cherry, yet when a dead mouse was given him, he swallowed it whole without apparent effort I had often heard the saying, "He looks as wise as an owl," but never realized its truth before, lie wonid fix his large, round eyes on me with a steady, searching glance, which seemed to read my inmost thoughts, and would wink now aud then, in a most knowing manner. He liked very much to have his Lead scratched with the back of a case-knife, and it was a comical sight to see him enjoying the luxnry. He wonid sit on the perch in his cage, with bis big, rouud head bent forward to get the full benefit of the scratching, and would slowly open and close his eyes, as a cat does when you gently stroke her Lead. I paid him several visits and became mnch interested iu him. Fiirmvo Ftsn. In the East Indies a species of fish is fonnd known as the "lighting fish," and nsed by the natives for sport much after the manner of game cocks. It is said that when two are placed in separate glass vessels and brought near together, they will at first watch each other closely from a dis tance, "then, changing color and be coming almost black, the gill covers are opened ont and form a sort of collarette round the Lead, giving the fish a most curious apiiearance. The tail and fins become phosphorescent in celor, as well as the eyes, and are tinted with the most beautiful hues." The fish then try to get at each other, hut are pre vented by the glass. When they be come sufficiently angry, they are put into one vessel, and tight fnrionsly, striking one another rapidly with their tails and fins until one or the other is conqnered, when be turns a sort of grayish while color and nses every effort to get ont of the way of his conqueror, often jumping ont of the water in his endeavors to escape. I worxp rather be the author of one original thonght than conqueror ot a hundred battles. Yet moral excellence is so mnch snperior to intellectual, that I ought to esteem one virtue more valu able than a hundred original thonghts. H'. .. CluU.w. Hardfthipa. A great many men, whatever may have been their experience in life, are accustomed to complain of the usage they have received in the world. They fill the ears of those who have the mi. -fortune to be their friends with iaww tations respecting their own troubles But there is no man who is born Into a world of trouble; and no man has ever attained to anything like the full stst nre of manhood who has not been gronnd, aa it were, to powder, by the hardships which he has encountered in Ufa Tuis is a world in which men were made, not by velvet, bnt by stone and iron handling ! Therefore do not grntnbft but conquer yonr troubles. Eiorrr pounds of oxyg gas and enc pound of hydrogen are combined in nine pounds of water. - TAKimKS. No churc'u is too weak to take up a collection. Broken China. A eivil war is impend ing in the celestial Empire. Every pound of cochineal contains 70,000 insects, boiled to death. Whalebone is reported scarce, and the dress reformers are correspondingly happy. The worth of a State, in the long run ia the worth of the individuals com posing it A man never gets hold of the real gist of life till he begins to appreciate his own company. An eminent foreign doctor asserts that the drinking of coffee invigorates and preserves the sight and so pre vents the use of spectacles.- Chocolate is considered injurious. It is said that a little coarsely -cut gentian-root, well masticated, the aaliva being swallowed, taken after each meal, will soon take away all desire for the chewing of tobacco. Some of the poor-house authorities in London have discovered a new method of utilizing paupers. The more picturesque are let out as models to artists at 2o ceuts per hour. In Belgium it is now no longer necessary, when taking an oath before a magistrate, "to invoke the saints and angels." This relic of the medinval ages has existed in that country nntil now. The great decline in railroad build ing during the last two years, amount ing to a difference of .I'.OiXr miles be tween 1S72 and 1S71, involved the throwing ont of employment 100,lK0 men. Tn London they think more of onr "Pub. Docs." than we do ourselves. The solemn publications of the Govern ment printing office bring very high prices there ; as for instance, the Ite ort of the Bureau of Statistics is sold at- .". i" ; the report of the Commis sioner of K.lm-ation $7.50 ; United States Digest Sri.SO. These hooks cost from "i cents to $l.2T in Washington. Speaking of law books, a recent lecturer on the subject said : "Another peculiarity of these books is. that none bnt a lawyer ever reads them. All other books have readers outside the class for whom they are specially writ ten ; and we have accordingly, amateur men ol science, amateur physicians. amateur artists, and even amateur the ologians, bnt no one ever heard of an amatenr lawyer." In 1775. the superficies of Paris was about thirty million metres ; it is now seventy-eight millions. A century ago there were in the city at the most a tbonsand streets, places, boulevards and lanes ; there are now over three thousand. The population in 1775 was .V),000 and the inhabitants occupied l'J.OOU nouses. To day it amounts to nearly two millions in round numbers, and there are 60,000 houses within the municipality. When spectacles were first introduced it was considered fashionable to wear them, even by people who were not in the least near-sighted. In Spain they formed part of the costume cf every well-bred person. This absurd nse of glasses was meant to increase the gravity of the apearance, and conse quently the veueration with which the wearer of them was regarded. The glasses of spectacles were proportioned in size to the rank of the wearer. Those worn by the Spanish nobles were as large as one's hand. The Marqnis of Antorga, viceroy of Naples, after having his bust sculptured in marble, particularly enjoined the artist not to forget his beautiful spectacles. The first Roman journal, over 2.IXK) years ago, appeared only once a year. This paper, intended especially to lie read by the public, was known by th title Aanalr. M'isimi. The editor of this paier was the Pontrifex Maximns. whose duty it was to chronicle all im portant events of the year. The news was written on white wooden tablets, and attached to the residences of citizens. But the thirst after knowl edge and the curiosity of the people grew rapidly, and in such a measure that the government the only issuer ot the journal, found itself obliged to issue a daily. It is very interesting to know that some of these journals, hav ing reached 2,011 years, are still in ex istence, A piano 'should be tuned at least four times in tho year by an experi enced tuner. If yon allow it to go too long without tutiinr, it nsnaliy be comes flat and troubles a tuner to get it to stay at concert pitch, especially in in the conntry. Never place the in strument agninst an outside wall, or in a cold damp room, particularly in a conntry house. There is no greater enemy to a pianoforte than damp. Close the instrument immediately after yonr practice, by leaving it ojien, dust fixes on the sound board, and corrodes the movements, and if in a damp room tho strinrs soon rnst Should the piano stand near or oppooite to a window, guard, if possible, against it lieing opened, especially on a damp or wet day ; and when the sun is on the window, draw the blind down. Avoid pnlting metallic or other articles on or in the piano ; such things frequently cause unpleasant vibrations, and some times injure; the instrument The more equal the tcmpatnre of the room the better the instrnmont will remain in tune. Amongst certain persons and the class is rather a numerous oms thst which is comfortable is unconsciously considered to lie wrong, and objectless self-mortification assumes the character of a virtue. Such persons never wear a topcoat, never hive a fire in their bed-room, always shave with cold water, break the ice in their tub of a morning in order to bathe. They are apt to boast of these feat , and to look down npon their weaker fellow-creatnrea) who do not imitate there. There is probably a remnant of old ecclesiasti cal terrorism in this, a trace of the "hair shirt and no shoes" of the pil grims, which is singularly ont of place at the present day. In the matter of the morning tub alone the absurdity is well shown. Our boasting friends loudly rejoice that they are not as other men are the seasons makes no differ ence to them as regards their morning tub. Now, granted that the cold water bath is a good thing, it must be re membered that whereas in Summer they immerse themselves in water abont 2il deg; or 30 deg. cooler than their blood, in Winter the difference of temperature may amount as it has dr ne. lately, to no less than SO deg. or CO deg. Fahr. To be consistent they sbnnUl raise the temperature of the bath in Winter to that which it has in Sum mer. As they are inconsistent they suffer very often from mnscnlar rheu matism. Lancet.