JLi. 1 ? ! i 1 1 B. F. SCHWEIER, THI COSSTITUTlOa THI UHIOS AHD TBI ESFOECSMEST OF THX LAWS. Editor and PropWsHoak i 4 . i i VOL. XXIX. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., APRIL 21, 1875. NO. 16. POITBT. ('rilvsroot PlaalN. BT JOKX nxt. What's this I bear. My Moll; dear. About the Dew carnivora? Can liUie plants Kat bugs and ants. Why bleat my eyes ! Who is the great diskiverrr ? Not Itarwiu, lore, ; For that would prove A sort of retroradiug ; Surely tbe fare Of flowere ia air, Dr sunshine sweet. Tlwy shouldn't eat Or do augbt so degrading! Alas twould be fiad news to me. To liear your own dear Fido, p-t. Had lout bin breath . In cruel death, because, one day In thonghUemi play. He went too near a violet! Or, horror ! what If, heeding not. Some cruel plant carnivorous We ventured near Yea wv, my dear And swallowed were, W ith no one there To suooor or deliver us. And yet to die liy blossoms, I Would call a doom chromatic. For one might wait A harder fate Thau have a rose End all his woes Iu paiu called aromatic. Ah. science knows Each flower that blows And all its wicked habits 'Tis uot for as To make a fuss ; For auht we know; The lillies row From dining on Welsh rabbits ! frTilmrr'a Monthly. IM'KI.LtY. The Bttm Urawtr. I saw my wife pull out the bottom drawer of the old family bureau this evening, and went softly oat and wandered up and down, until I knew that sue bad aunt it ap and gone to her aewing. We have some things laid away in that drawer which the gold of kings could not bny, and yet they are relics which grieve ns nntil both onr hearts are sore. I baven t dared look at them for a Tear, bnt I remember eaca article, There are two worn shoes, a little chip hat with part of the brim gone, some stockings, pants, a coat, two or three spools, bits of broken crockery, whip aud several toys. Wife poor thing go-js to that drawer every day of ner life an J prays over it, and lets her tears fall npon the precious artichs, bat I dare Dot go. Sometimes we speak of little Jack, bnt not often. It has been a loll? time, bnt somehow we can't get over grieving. lis was snch burnt of sunshine into onr lives, that his going awav was like covering our everyday existence with a pall. Sometimes, when we sit alone of an evening, I writing and Fhe sewing, a child' on the street will call ont as our boy used to, aud we wiil both start up with beating hearts and wild hope, only to find the darkness more of a burden than ever. It is still and quiet now. I looa up at the window where his blue eyes used to sparkle at mv coming, but he is not there. I lii-ten for his pattering feet, his merry ahout and ringing laugh, but there is no sound. There is no one to climb upon my knees, no one to search my pockets and tease for presents, and I never Hud the chairs turned over, tbe broom down, or ropes tied to the door knob. I want some one to tease me for my knife, to ride on my shoulder, to lone my ax, to follow me to tbe gate when I go, aud be there to meet me when I come, and to call "good night from the little bed. now empty. And wife, she misses him still more ; there are no little feet to wash, no prayers to say, no voice teasing for lumps of sugar or sobbing with tbe pain of a hurt toe ; and she weuld give her own life, almost, to awake at midnight and look across at the crib and see our boy there as he used to be. So we preserve onr relics, and when we are dead we hope that strangers will handle them tenderly, even if they shed no tears over them. How l Eitver Oil ia Made. A correspondent of the "New York Tribune who has examined distillery for the manufacture of this article, at St. John's Newfoundland, gives the following : During one of our rambles on shore, we inspected a cod liver oil distillery, and the mode of manufacture is so simple and interesting that I Ten tare to insert a description of it for the beuebt of consumers ol tbe beverage. The livers are first washed with fresh water, and great care is taken to cleanse them of all traces of gall, the gall not only discoloring the oil, but giving it a disagreeable, bitter taste. They are then placed in a vat and heated by steam, from a loiler underneath, to a temperature of Hi iahr., which raises tbe exuded oil to the surface, whence it is skimmed off carefully, it is then filtered three times; first, through three bags, one within the other, the inner one made of flannel, and the two outer ones of muslin ; then through three others similarly placed one inside the other, bat nuvbs of stun resembling Canton flannel ; from these last bags it drips into a large tin trough, and is drawn off into puncheons through a faucet, over the mouth of which is placed screen of the finest muslin, which excludes every trace of sediment and dirt. It is then ready for the market and iu color and general appearance, cloecW resembles Sauterne wine. Our polite bnt flshv host pressed me to drink a glasi of it, but I declined with all the polite less I could command. He evideutly looked upon my refusal to drink, as a slight upon his oil, and brought every argument in his power to bear, to induce me to alter my de cision. .At last he was successful, for after informing me that out of the ssme glass offered to ns, the Trinoe of Wales and the Duke of Newcastle had drunk of it, I could hardly refuse. I found its flavor not unpalatable, but it was al most tasteless, with barely a vestige of the rjansetting, rancid odor of the "Pure Cod Ldver UU sold in .lew j or drug stores. From being extracted at a low temperature it is said not to re tain its purity longer than fifteen months, after which -period it is mixed with inirredients to preserve its taste, or rather to prevent its rancid flavor from becoming too apparent. When a man can look upon the simple wild rose and feel no pleasure. Lis taste has been corrupted. SIRS. HADF.LIXE WEBB. BT EVA EDEff. WASnro. An elderly lade as a emmanlon for an invalid. Must be uitelafffnt, refluAl, a o xi r-d.-r, jtiwi com wt-11 recoiunieiMled. Apply imms dialW at Mo. baa, Oraud avenue." This beaded the long column of "wants" in the morning paper, and though Ethel Yanghan read the entire list, her mind and eyes would wander back to the first, and wishes and plans would till her imagination for the place. She had been sick for many weeks, and now, upon her convalescence, found herself almost without money, aud a wanlrolie so iueatrre aa to lie alarming. She had lieen a uiusie teacher, but the strain u)mn her had been too great, and had resulted in a prostration fearfully low, bnt with the aid of a good, stroug constitution and the care of an excel lent physician, she had fought the struggle through, and was again ready for work. She was alone, there had never lieen any brothers or sisters, and so vt lieu her parents had died, she was thrown completely npon herself. As long as she was well she did not mind the work, but weak, and nervous, she knew full well it would only be death to try again the arduous hibois of a music teacher, and then her pupils were all gone. She had been sick a louir while aud iinimtient ot delay they had obtained other teachers. She could not be a seamstress or a clerk, she was not strong enough. What then could she do t Now if she were only elderly, there would le no trouble. She knew herself well enough to be certain that she was intelligent and refined enonirh for such a position, and she had always been commended for her reading. i)r. Scott would gladly recommend her, for he had knowu her for years, and his posi tion was such in the ciiy that the influence of his name would be poten tial in securing anything she might covet. Hut the age. She was not elderly. There was nost retching the imagination into lielieving her over twenty-five, though she was iu reality bnt twenty, aud lor once iu her life Ethel Yaughau wished herself as old and wrinkled as her nurse. There was another reason why she wished to be agaiu at work. Though she had saved money to pay all the exH-nses of her illness, yet she found herself indebted to Dr. Scott lor many delicacies and dainties that she had craved, and she knew that he was beginning to love her. aud the thought was intolerable that she should have to give Imu pain by retusiug his prof fered care aud atl'cction. She leaned back among the cushions, weary with projects. Her way seemed hedged about, and try as she would, there seemed no escae. When just as she was beginning to despair, a plan, venturesome and doubtful, dawned upon her. She would assume the attire ol an elderly widow aud make an appli cation for the place. She grew strong with the thoHght, aud when the doctor came for his evening visit he fouud her more animated than for a long time. To hint she confided her plan, never allowing him time to interpose an objectiou or a remark as to his own feelings. After they had talked the matter over, and arranged the disguise, or rather the garb of concealment, the doctor asked where the place was, and the moment his eye rested on the street and numlKT, he exclaimed, "Why, Kthcl, it is old Mrs. Whitney : I kuow her well. She has been a patient of mine for years. Jt will le just the place for you, for your duties will lie only nominal, and your salary ample and secure. The old lady has weak eyes, and she is oinx lied to keep them constantly shaded. This, added to her bad health, makes her indeed an invalid " "How large is her family, DctorP enquired Ethel. "Herself and one son, who is now and has been, for alxiut a year, away from home. He is traveling, aud 1 understand from his mother, is not to return for attout three years. They live elegantly, though very retired, have a host of servants, a tine mansion, aud almost nulimited wealth. You will see very little company that you will proltably like, as you need not fear detection. It would ut-ver do for you to go as you are, for the old lady imagines every girl. has designs upon her sou, and cannot tolerate one iu her presence." Ethel Vaughan or Mrs. Madeline Webb, looked every inch a widow lady of about thirty-five or forty, with her false black hair sprinkled with grav in lieu of her own goldcu curls. The widow'scap was lec'ming,and matched well the plain old-fashioned dress. She played her part to perfection, and had no difficulty; armed with a note from the Doctor, in winning Mrs. Whitney's favor, and In-fore the end of the week she was- installed reader and com panion. The invalid was gentle aud kind, and her duties light. She read for an hour or two, wastheamanuensis, talked entertainingly, and then after taking tea with the old lady, was at liberty to do what she chose, but generally she passed the evening with her sew ing or conversing, finding the grand old house dull enough with only the servants for company, outside the sick room. Thus for weeks and months the quiet stream of her life rippled on uneventful, unexcited, undisturbed, only broken by the letters from the absent son. These she read to the mother, gradually becoming so inter ested in them that she watched aud waited their coming with impatience. After a few messages Mrs. Whitney would intrust the answer entirely to her, and the young girl wrote out hei pent up feelings to this stranger, secure in the mother's name affixed, aud she read iu his letters the replies that only she understood and appreciated. At last one day a letter came that he was coming home, and that they might expect him immediately. Mrs. Whitney was overjoyed, and talked incessantly of her hoy. content that her coinpauiou silently listened. His room was ele gantly arranged, all the care devolving UHn .the v. iduw," whrr was careful that every detail should lie just what she imagined he would like. When he came, she met him in his mothers room, with an odd throbbing of her heart, but returned his how, as "My friend ami companion, Mrs. Webb, Edgar, my son,"1 introduced them, and though he scrutinized her closely, she was outwardly calm, and after a few remarks, left mother aud son together. Hut her duties brought her constantly into direct communication with Mr. Whitney, aud as he rarely left his mother, there were but few hours that the "widow and the heir" were apart. He joined in the reading, and the dull pages grew interesting and entertaining as he would read hour by hour, letting her rest, and then he would talk of his travels, and she would half forget her position, and in question or listening, prove herself to lie well informed, and he would watch for the glow of interest that would flush lier cheek. He became very attractive to her, and though she received his care and politeness half patrotiiingly as became Iht age, yet often she would surrender herself to the feelings of the moment, and neither rebuke or repulse. Hut one 1v came for which she was not in the slightest degree prepared. "Mrs. Webb, mav I have a little talk with you in the library V he asked, as they arose from their dinner, which they ate in the irreat dining-room alone. She silentlv assented, and they passed iuto that apartment, when, drawing an easy chair before the fire, he tenderly seated her, and taking her hand in his, said: "Mrs. Webb, I love yon. Ever since I came home I have been attracted to you more and more every day, and I could not refrain from to-night telling you this. You have known me but a short time, but have not our letters been a means of acquaintance that compensates for the brevity of my stay with yon?' In yours I recognized a woman's lieart, loving and pare, and when I returned home and found yon here, I rejoiced, for I knew that yon were the woman of all the world 1 should mish to marry. Do you not love met I cannot wait longer for a reply." Mrs. Webb's voice quivered as she spike. "Mr. Whitney, have you thought of the disparity in our agesf Why, 1 am almost old enough for your mother, and am failing, while you are young and just starting in life. Yon are rich and I must labor tor my living. Have you thought what tbe world would say if you were to marry vour mother's companion, old and wrinkled Is not this a mere flitting fancy ; will it not fade away before the smiles of some of the beautiful yonng girls you may meetf The tears would come, but the spectacles hid the bright eyes, and the firm lips trembled only a little as she paused. "No, Madeline, if you will let me have the right to call you so, nothing will change me. Think you I have Eot had ample opportunity to try my love among the fair women I have met in my travels, and I tell you now, old as you call yourself, you are my choice. I care not what the world says ; I am independent enough to manage my own affairs, and I plead with you not to let that keep ns apart. Try me by what test you will, but give me a hope. You may be old enough to be my mother for that does not alllict me but you are yonng and beautiful to me, aud I claim you for my own by my great love for von." His pleading prevailed and they were betrothed, but she asked for silence, and so their engagement was known to none. She continued to till he accus tomed place iu the invalid's chamber, and listened to the mother's praise of her boy with deeper interest than ever befoie. After two or three months she asked Mrs. Whitney to allow her a few weeks to go away to arrange some affairs and to recuperate, as she was quite exhausted, and after a few days she was ready to depart, auI promising to write regularly to Edgar, who clung to her and regretted her absence, she left. The davs wore on lonesome enough in the Whitney mansion, after the "widow's" departure; and so Edgar commenced rescinding to the numerous invitations that poured in upon him from the best families in tbe city. At one of these parties lie met a beautiful girl, fair and accomplished, with exquisitely moulded features and form. She sang divinely, and her motions were the embodiment of grace; she was more bewitching to him than to any of the other gentlemen who crowded about her, reserving for him her brightest smiles and most winning ways. She strove to gain his praise, and would turn from the gay crowd about her to him, to walk with him, or sing or talk to him. She constantly reminded him of some one, and w hen she was reading or conversing, he would watch her with a puzzled air, that seeing she would remark, but he evaded her questions. When accidentally her lingers met his, as he turned her sheets of music, he thrilled with the delicate touch, and bent low to speak to her, nntil he inhaled the sweet breath of the white verU iias in the golden curls. Hut in a moment, as she raised her eyes to his, the sudden passion was passed, and he remembered the woman whom he had wou ; the pure noble lieart which he had so prized, aud he scorned himself for even the brief forgetfulness. It was strange that, that morning there should have come a letter from her "telling him if he ever repented the engagement she would absolve bim from a vow that must never fetter ; that if he ever found another that was nearer his own age tiiat he was free to woo her, only to lie honorable enough to first tell her of the change." He pondered the matter well. If he had nover met Madeline Webb, if he were absolutely free, would he marry this girl ; did he regret hisengagement; was the burden more than he could bear; hail the thought of marriage grown intolerable to him ? These were questions that he considered well, and his heart seemed to be divided. When memory recalled the gentle face and sweet voice of the little form clothed in black, the smooth hair, with the gray lying like threads of silver across its bands, tbe many happy moments in the sick room, his whole soul would thrill with love for the absent one. But when the syren voice of the fairy-' like woman at his side called his name and the long curls swept bis sleeve, and the white, fingers toyed with his flowers, the past, with its promises aud affections, were swept apart by the flood of the preseut moments. One day, as the rain dashed against the windows, as they stood side by side, she said to him, 'I am so lonely to-day. It seems to me sometimes that I would not care to live if the future be as, gloomy as the past. The present is all there is of my life that has aught of joy iu it, and for tlutt I have to thank yon. Do you know I am going away next week and 1 suppose then I shall never see you again. U ! how dreary and sad tbe world looks to-night,' and she shivered, and with eyes clouded with tears looked up into his face. He took her hand, cold and clammy, in his, and would have drawn her to him, while words, burning with love and passion trembled on his lips, bnt though the blood fled from cheek aud brow, with an effort he cruslied them back, and stood silent before her. "Do not sav yon do not care to live, my friend. There is much of beauty and love in this world, and there's many a true heart." It was impossible to say more, and raising the slender fingers to his bps, lie pressed a kiss npon them, and then abruptly left her. The next morning there came a note bidding her good-bye, saying it would be out of his power to call npon her ere she left the city. The same mail bore to Mrs. Webb a letter, pleading with her to return, and telling her all that had occurred in the past few weeks, bnt assuring her that his love had withstood the test, and that he could lie separated from her no longer. The answer caaie speedily, ."Meet me at I r. Scott's," who had lieen married, and at whose home Edgar Whitney had met the fair young girl at whose side he had whiied away so many pleasant hours. He could scarce await the arrival of his betrothed, but was at the rendezvous hours lie fore she came, and met hex with the tenderest greeting. "Ol my darling. Heaven bless you; I am so glad to have you with me again, vou shall never leave nie, so long as I live. I have been sorely tempted, Madeline, but I am all your own for ever and ever.' "Did you not regret, Edgar, our engagement j would you not, if yon had lieen free, chosen differently. It so, believe me, though it shonld wring my heart, 1 would say farewell, and leave vou to win a younger and fairer bride. His arm encircled her with love and tenderness, and his kind words reas sured her ; but after a brief while she seemed down-hearted, and kept asking him, "Are you sure yon love me, Edgar P but he never wearied of repeating his words of affection, and she grew gay and happy. "Let me lay one hand over your eyes, dear. Now keep them tight shut; don't yon look," and she placed her outstretched palm to shut out the light. A quick motion and the widow's cap, the spectacles, the false gray hair were at her feet, aud the waterproof thrown back revealed the young, fresh face and lithe form of Ethel Vaughan. "Now. Edgar V "Why. Miss Ethel, is it possible you are here, Mrs. Webb, Madeline," a look of blank amaze oieut, then a cry so happv, so rapturous, that it spoke a world of tender love, "All mine, what shall I call you, Madeline or Ethel, both are dear, but I won you by tbe first, and that you shall ever be. Hut were yon afraid to trust me, darling, unless you tried met No wuuderso often I caught glimpses of your old self in the pretty young girl. But why did you ever assume this!" touching tbe widow's garb. She explained all, which Dr. Scott enjoyed especially bis telling how often he had been on tbe point of revealing the secret, and Sirs. Webb insisted that she was still jealous of her rival, her "other self," Ethel Vaughan. They never told Mrs. Whitney, for Edgar knew it wonld only excite and confuse her, and when he introduced "my wife, Ethel, or mother, as I call her most, Madeline," the old lady only remarked, "how familiar your voice is," but many a hearty laugh have the young folks bad over the "false front and specs," though Edgaroften declares they were the most becoming things his wife ever wore. Coloaial .Haaalactare rSUk. From the very first, nnder the popu lar impression probably that the coun try was particularly adapted to the production of silk, special efforts were made in nearly all the colonies to direct and divert the attention of the people to this particular industry ; and it is recorded that tbe first Assembly that convened in Virginia nnder a written constitution, in 1621, especially occu pied itself with considering "how best to eneonrage the silk culture." In 1662 also tbe Virginia Assembly, with a view of encouraging manufacturers, offered prizes for tbe beet specimens of linen and woolen cloth, and a special prize of fifty pounds of tobacco, for each pound of wound silk produced in the colony ; and it was also enjoined that for every hundred acres of land held in fee, the proprietor should be required to plant and fence twelve mulberry-trees. Silk culture in Georgia also so largely occu pied the attention of the first colonists that a public seal was adopted bearing as a device silk-worms engaged in their labors ; while bounties for the encour agement of the same industry were re peatedly oiTered by the colonies of Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, North aud South Carolina. It is a most interesting and suggestive circumstance that this specialty of employment which from the first settlement of the country was particularly selected as worthy of attention, and as such did receive for nearly two hundred years from the various colonial and State authorities an amount of encourge ment, throngh special legislation, greater than was bestowed on any other interest, is the ot ' one of the great industries which has never been able to attain to a healthy couditionof existence on the North American continent, and to-day only exists in the United States in virtue of a degree of legislative en couragement far in excess of that de manded and received by anv other in dustrial interest. JIarper't Magazine. ('oniaitdorn Vaaderblll's Krrs Oisrernuieat. One day, before Cornelius Vander bilt obtained possession of the Hudson River Hail way, he was traveling, it is said from here to Albany, and, consid ering himself a privileged character, went into the baggage car to smoke. He had been enjoying his cigar but two or three minutes when the conductor came along, and informed him politely that he mast not smoke there. Van derbilt said that it did not make any difference that it was all right, Ac, but the conductor was of a different opinion, declaring that it was contrary to the rules of the road. "Yon don't know me," said the smoker. "My name is Vanderbilt. I am sometimes called Commodore. I generally do about as I please." ' "I don't know, nor do I care who you are Mr. Vanderbilt I intend to obey the rules. '. It yon were ten times a Commodore I could not permit yon to smoke here, and yon must go else where to finish yonr cigar." The loyalty to duty displayed by the conductor pleased the ancient Corne lius, and be went ont, though not be fore he had said to the conductor : "Yon are a right kind of a man for yonr place. Yon don't respect persons. I think of b tiring this road, and if I do, yon can stay on it aa long as yon like," Vanderbilt did bay the road and re tained tfce conductor. He frequently remarked that that man could be trus ted ; that he was never mistaken in judging of character ; and that he knew from the first that the conductor was sound. The conductor stayed on the road for five years, and in that time, as tbe story goes, stole himself into a pecu niary independence. 1 ! ' "' ' So much for Vanderbilt's knowledge of character. Evidently the conductor knew Vanderbilt better than Vander bilt knew the conductor. Dictiaarlea. The earliest dictionary of which any record remains is one in the Chinese language, compiled by Pa-out-sbe, about B. C. 1100. Marcns TerentiAs Varro who flourished B. C. 11628, was one of the first classic authors who turned his attention to lexicography ; but the most celebrated dictionary of antiquity is the Onomasticon of Julius Pollux, which wss completed early in the third century. The earliest Latin dictionary of modern times was pub lished by John Hal hi, of Genoa, in 1460, bat that of Calepio, published in 1502, is much superior. Sebastian Monster's Chalde Dictionary appeared in 1527; Pagninus' Lexicon of the Hebrew lsngnage in 1529; Robert Stephens' Thesaurus in 1585 ; Krpenins' Arabic Dictionary in ibM ; Sbmdlers Lexicon Pantagiottum in 1612 ; Ed mund Castell's Lexicon Heptaglotton in 16C9 : and Phillips' New World of Words m 1658. Moren published bis Biographical, Historical, and Geogra phical Dictionary in 1673, Elisha Cole's English Dictionary appeared in lbw. and Bayle's Historical and Critical Dic tionary, and the Dictionary of the French A-ademy in 1694. Dr. Johnson's English inctionary was completed in May, 1755, Walker's Dictionary ap peared in 1791, and Francis Grose's Dictionary ol the Vulgar Tongue in 17S5. Old time rocks rocking the cradle. Cariosities r Hh1i(. . In olden times it was the fashion for a suitor to go down on his knees to a lady, when he asked her to become his wife which, with very stout gentlemen, was an nnoomfortable proceeding. The way in which Daniel Webster proposed to Miss Fletcher was more modern, being at the same time neat and poetic. Like many other lovers, he was caught holding a skein of thread or wool, which the lady had been unraveling. "Grace 1" said he, "we have been un tying knots. Let ns see if we cannot tie one which will not untie in a life time 1" With a piece of tape he fash ioned half a true lover's knot ; Miss Fletcher perfected it ; and a kiss put the seal to the symbolical bargain. Most men, when they "pop" b7 writing, are more straightforward and matter-of-fact. Richard Steele wrote to the lady of his heart : "Dear Mrs. Scurlock I (there was no misses in those days) "I am tired of calling you by that name ; therefore, say a day when yon will take that of 'madam." Your devoted humble servant, Richard Steele." She fixed the day accordingly, and Steeled her name, instead of her heart, to the suitor. The celebrated preacher, Whitefield, proposed marriage to a young lady in a very cool manner as though Whitefield meant a field of ice. He addressed a letter to her parents, without consulting the maiden, in which he said they need not be at a afraid of offending him by a refusal, as he thanked God he was quite free from the passion called "love I" . Of course the lady did not conclude that this field, however white, was the field for ner. The well-known brothers, Jacob and William Grimm, were exceedingly attached to each other, and had no de sire to be married. But it was thought proper by their friends that one of them should become a husband ; and, Jacob being tbe elder, it was agreed that he shonld be the one to enter the bonds of matrimony. A suitable lady was found ; bnt Jacob declined to do the conrting requesting William to act aa his agent, - William consented bnt soon found that he was in love. and wauted the lady for himself. He could not think, however, of depriving his brother of snch a treasure, and knew not bow to act. An aunt kindly relieved him in his difficulty by telling Jacob, who willingly resigned the dam sel to his brother, and went out of the way nntil she had been made Mrs. William Grimm. A Scotch beadle was the one who popped the question in the grimmest manner. He took his sweetheart into the graveyard, and, showing her - a dark corner, said : "Mary ! my folks be there. Would yon bke to lie there, Mary?" Mary was a sensible lassie, and expressed ber willingness to obtain the right to be buried near the beadle's relations by uniting herself to him in wedlock. A similar nnromantic view of the subject was taken by another Hootch maiden. Upon her lover remarking, "I think 111 marry thee Jean," she replied : "Man Jock I 1 wonld be muckle obleeged to ye if ye would. Ninnggllng Before the Kevo- lution. It is most important and instructive to diverge for a moment at this point from tracing tbe development of Ameri can manufactures, and briefly notice tbe effect of tbe long-continued restric tive legislation of Great Britain on political and commercial morality. The mnltitude of arbitrary laws enacted to force the industry and commerce of the colonies and the British people into artificial and unnatural channels created a mnltitude of new crimes ; and trans actions which appeared necessary for the general warfare, and were no way repugnant to the moral sense of good men, were forbidden by law nnder heavy penalties. The colonists became thenceforth a nation of law-breakers. Nine-tenths of the colonial merchants were smugglers. One-qoarter of the whole number of the signers of tbe Declaration of Independence were bred to commerce, to the command of ships, and the contraband trade. John Han cock was the prince of contraband traders, and, with John Adams as bis counsel, was on trial before the Ad miralty Court in Boston at the exact honr of the shedding of blood at Lex ington, to answer for half a milUon dollars' penslties alleged to bave been by him incurred as a smuggler. And if good old Governor Jonathan Trum bull, of Connecticut (Brother Jonathan) did not walk in the same ways aa his brother patriot in Massachusetts, then tradition, if not reoord, has done him very great injustice. There is also on reoord a letter of Alexander Hamilton, written in 1771, at tha time be was in mercantile business, giving instructions to the master of a vessel in his employ how to avoid the customs regulations on entering porta in the West Indies. Bat men like Hancock and Trumbull bad been made to feel that government was their enemy ; that it deprived them of their natural rights ; that in enacting laws to restrain them from laboring freely, and freely exchanging the fruits of their labors, it at the same time enacted the principle of slavery, and that therefore every evasion of snch laws was a gain to liberty. JIarper't Uaffazine. now I hey Caleb. Maslaaga. The editor of the Pleasanton Stock Journal gives the modns operandi of capturing wild horses in Texas, which will no doubt prove instructive to many. It will be perceived that all the popular notions in which the lasso and fleet-footed charger play an im portant part, bave little foundation in reality. As soon as a herd of horses is discov ered, the party af hunters divide, one portion striking camp while the others set off in pursuit of the herd. The frightened animals go bounding across the prairie throngh the prickly pear and dense chapparel, leaving a trail which the hunters steadily pursue at an easy gait nntil they come in sight of the herd which scampers off as before. These tactics are kept up by pursuers and pursued for days, the mustangs returning to their first starting point which they are sure to do when the camping party takes the place of the tired pursuers, and thus follow the herd until the poor, wearied, and half starved creatures, with swollen and bloodshot eyes, give np the straggle and submit to be driven anywhere. The object of the hunters has been merely to keep close enough to the mustangs to prevent them from grat ing. Starvation soon brings them to terms, and the prairie monarch, with dropping crest and dejected look, leaves his native wilds henceforth to become the slave of man. This is what hunters call "walking mustangs down. When Agassis was pressed to deliver a lecture for pay, he repliad, "I can not afford to waste my time for money. Aaaerlcaa Callare. Few, persons, I suppose, will deny that during onr own century tbe .aro peans have surpassed ns in the fine arts. Even within onr own memory, what poems, dramas, and novels have they given ns ; what statues, symphonies, operas, and what men of science ! It ia a great list of names, theirs of this century : Goethe, Byron, Wordsworth Beethoven, Wagner, Mendelssohn, Tborwaldsen, Delarnehe, Turner, Bal zac, George Eliot, Humboldt, Darwin familiar names like these flow from the pen. Not that I wonld disparage oar great men ; I make tha trite com parison only to point ont a reason, which may not be trite, for the fact that each of the leading nations of Europe surpasses ns in the amount of its higher intelligence. I cannot hope that the explanation will be received with much favor, for it is not a pleasant one ; it is, namel. that we are lacking as a people, in sensitiveness to the things of the mind, and in consequence that we are not full heritors of tbe past culture of Europe. On the contrary, we are ont of sympathy with the past culture of Europe with its thoughts, creeds, method of working, ideals, and mental temper : nor will any mere growth in age give these to ns any more than it will give ns gothie cathe drals. What we may do in art is to be done in a different spirit from them if done at at. Our atsthetio temper was not formed under a benign star. Even onr most eminent publio men in some instances bated art, and said that they hated it. Here is an interesting case. In 1818 a French sculptor, M. Binon, wrote to John Adams, requesting per mission to take his portrait in marble. This waa the famous ex-President's answer : "The age of sculptor and painting has not yet arrived in this country, and 1 hope it will be lone be fore it does so. I wonld not give a six pence for a picture by Raphael, or a statue by l'hidias. It ia easy to think that a civilized person wrote these words t It they are reported rightly, they imply defect in humanity ; certainly no educated Euro pean would have uttered them. It was sayings like these that led Lamartine and other civilized foreigners to com plain of "la brutalite Americaine." If the ex-President of the United States "would not give a sixpence" for Raffa elle or Phidias, need we wonder that bis country shows something of tbe same feebng? Ihe (ataxy for April. The laflueace or Climate apoa 1.1 le. An interesting article appears in the Gazette dn Mfdiral L' Alger ie on the influence exerted by climates in regard to health and bfe of foreigners. In that article we are reminded that the ne groes of Senaar recruited by Mehemet Ali for his army, speedily succumbed after arriving in Egypt ; that negroes of Central Africa rapidly die if trans ported to Arabia, and that if sent to Europe they perish by phthisis. Of 1,8I0 negroes sent to garrison Gibralter in 1817, nearly all are said to have been destroyed by pulmonary consumption in fifteen months, and of tbe negro con victs sent from the French colonies to the hoiks at Brest, one-fifth die each year. In Mexico, tbe Egyptian contin gent Buffered by disease and death in larger proportion than did tbe regular troops from France ; whereas Algerians and Arabs in France enjoy relatively better health than in their native coun tries. During the Russian War the Zouaves and Tnrcos resisted the cli mate of the Crimea better then the men of the French heavy cavalry and it is said that on the same occasion the Algerian horses withstood the severe winter even better than those of the English cavalry. With regard to the power of resistance of Arabs, as illus trated in the war of 1870-71, it is ob served that if in battle they become ex cited to paroxysms of fury, once wounded, or taken prisoners, they find in their complete belief in fatalism a source of moral calm and resignation. The Arab moreover is leu sensitive to pain than the European : hence, in a great measure, the principal cause of the facility with which wounds received by the former heaL In the question asked then : Is man cosmopolitan ; Certainly not 1 Man does not perpetuate bis species in all climates. He may live, if transported after have attained adult age. but he often becomes sterile, or if he has children they do not attain manhood. Michael Lievy rightly observed that ,kTo change the climate is to be born to a new bfe." The t'awrllten aide ! Great Jlea. We always think of great men as in the act of performing deeds which give them renown, or else in stately repose, grand, silent and majestic. And yet, this is hardly fair, because the most gracious and magnificent of the human beings have to bother themselves with the little things of life which engsge the attention of ns smaller people. M o doubt Moses snarled and got angry hen he had a severe cold in his head, and if a fly bit his leg while he was in the desert, why shonld we not jump and use violent language and rub the sore place f And Csstar isn't it toler able certain he used to become furious when he went np stairs to get his slip pers in the dark and found that the Calphnrnia had shoved them nnder tbe bed so that he had to sweep around them wildly with a broom handle? And when Solomon cracked his crazy bone is it unreasonable to suppose that he ran around the room and felt aa if he wanted to cry? Imagine George Washington sitting on the edge of the bed and putting on a clean shirt, aud growling at Martha because the but tons were off ; or St Augustine with an apron round his neck, having his hair cut ; or Joan or Are holding her front hair in her month as women do, while she fixed np her back hair ; or Napo leon jumping ont of bed in a frenzy to chase a mosquito around the room with a pillow ; or Martin Luther in a night shirt, trying to put tbe baby to sleep at 2 o'clock in the morniug ; or Alexan der the Great, with hiccoughs ; or Thomas Jefferson getting sudJenly over a fence to avoid a dog ; or the Duke of Wellington with the mumps ; or Daniel Webster abusing his wife be cause she hadn't tucked the covers in at the foot of the bed ; or Benjamin Franklin paring his corns with a razor; or Jonathan Edwards at the dinner j table, wanting to sneeze just as he got j his month full of hot beef ; or Noah j standing at his window throwing ; bricks at a eat. ' j Tlje new green, bine, violet and prune silks are so dark as to be almost , black, and the new black failles are j coal black, instead of bine black. ! These, like tbe colored silks, are of fine make. They are no longer heavily corded or repped, and are decidedly more lnstrous than those worn for the past few years. Tonwr col. The Beaatlfal Mprlag. vr aaoaos oooram. "IwaasmSntasldtbeiaMMnlrnp: "look!" N4 before nit '" obuk id -ulvrr brmtk. "-Why, cnm ltiirTM.Ml'M S- asra Wk f "bo AAV 1, liear, Miched a i TlktM-t BUMS, -Well." ptprd a Mi-wMrd. mt Ira-ra 1 coat! i 1 we -ui-m was lay pwmi ac-out.- fS." thin-ed snowbird, "thai Wkmf bs true ; But I'm tatu a all lbs tuamk wiater lanmcD." ! caaie bHirnn." sang tbe snotbwlDd, "I ! "After me, love I epake tae deep Mse sky. "Woo t u caiea?" cliMB44 the crirfcete nJF : -ow 70a are bars, lot us bopo yoa'U atay." Wbut doea it mattt r wboa ana or last acj, brouaa, aixi a-an, lad bird lea (hat AU brlp to atako up too iM-autiful apram.n How a House Hklpkd His Nkiokbob. Not long since, I visited a friend, who lives on a fine farm, in a pleasant town in Southern New Hampshire. While there, one evening, we rode to the village to attend a meeting, and on our way back my friend told me the following anecdote about the noble horse he waa driving. A few years ago this horse was kept, during autumn, in a field close by the farm house, and in an adjoining pasture a flock of sheep was also kept. One day while my friend was talking with a gentleman by the roadside, the nurse eame running toward him from the lower part of the field, next to the sheep pasture, and, pntting his bead over the wall near him, whinnied, aa if to attract attention. He took however, no special notice of this ; and presently the horse turned and ran back to the lower aide of the field. But very soon he was again seen rapidly approaching, and, on reaching his master, he again spoke to him, as horses usually speak. It was observed that the horse was acting in a very unusual manner ; bnt still no steps were taken yet to ascer tain the cause of the strange running back and forth. So the pony again wheeled and galloped away once more towards the sheep pasture. And now, very soon, for the third time, ia he seen swiftly returning. It seems that the intelligent creature, having failed in two attempts to secure the help he was seeking, determined to try elsewhere this time : and so, instead of going again to his master, he went to the farm-bouse, that stood near by, and putting his head through an open win dow in the kitchen, he again whinnied. My friend's wife, who, it seems, had noticed the strange restlessness of the animal, now felt quite sure there must be some trouble in the field or pasture, and that the horse was trying to tell them of this, that they might go to the rescue. So she went ont where the horse was. He seemed pleased that it had attracted attention at last, and, trotting on be fore the lady, he led her down to the pasture, and, putting his head over the fence, seemed to say : "Look, look I" The lady did look, and there she dis covered that a savage dog had caught a sheep, and was holding it by the throat, in spite of all the poor creature's efforts to escape. I hope my young readers will always try to help those whom they see in trouble, and that they will be as perse vering in their efforts to do good as was this noble animal. Too Much to Believe. One day. Farmer Kobson's old hen came scratch ing about in my meadow, and just then the pretty schooluia'am tripped by with two of her children. She was talking to them about the fish called the stur geon. 1 ta mv ilAara did mtam bbvitit I reaa it mis very morning in tne l om lar Science Monthly. Nine hundred and twenty-one thousand six hundred eggs have been found in a single stur geon." "My I what a lot." exclaimed one of the children, "and if every egg gets to be a sturgeon, and every one of tbe new sturgeons lays just aa many, just think what heaps and heaps of grandchildren a sturgeon must hava." The teacher laughed. They walked on ; and suddenly I heard a sort of gulp. it was the old hen. I never in mv life saw any living creature in snch a state. She was so mad she could hardly keep inside of her feathers. "Nine hundred thousand tatnV she exclaimed (yon would bave thought she was only trying to cluck her bead off, but Jack understood every word), "nine hundred thousand eg-gag-gng-gega ! Don't believe a word of it I - Never was such a thing since the world begaa ' sturgeon, indeed I Never even heard of such a bird. What '11 school teachers say next I wonder? Nine hundred thousand egg-gug gug-eggs indeed I" ' The last 1 saw of that hen. she was strutting off indignantly toward the tarn-yard to tell the other hena all about it St. Xichola. A Remark aBU Doo Stout. This story ia told by a gentleman who says its truth is vouched for by witnessea of undoubted veracity : Some years ago. anile -ur. Hamilton was Ashing near tbe lower rapids of tbe Mississippi, just above the Keokuk, he observed below him a man bailing out a canoe, prepara tory to taking himself, wife, and baby across the river. At the same time Mr. Hamilton saw that his Newfoundland dog waa watching the proceedings of tbe party. Seeming to com pre hen! their intention, the dog uttered a pecu liar bowl, and passing rapidly np the river for some distance, plunged into the water and swam diagonally down, landing on a large rock standing out of the water about midway of tha stream. After shaking the water from his shaggy coat, he again watched the party, who in tbe meantime had embarked in tbe canoe. Just as tbe little boat passed the rock, it was caught in the rapidly descending current, and instantly cap sized. The woman, in falling into the water, loosed her hold on the child, which floated down the stream. The man caught his wife and waded with her to tbe rock. The instant the child fell into the water, the dog leaped in, and in a short time was seen in the still water below swimming with the child in his mouth, which be carried in safety to the shore. Firziil; FrieniL. Lived it Dow. An honest black smith was once grossly insulted and his character infamously defamed. Friends advised him to seek redress by means of law, but to one and all he replied. "No, I will go to my forge and there in six months I will have worked out such a name as all the jndRes, law courts and lawyers in the world could not give me." He was right. It ia by honest labor, manly courage, and a conscience void of offence that we assert onr true dignity and prove onr honesty and respectability. Teach children to love everything that ia beautiful, and yon will teach them to be useful and good. TttiKTin. A matter of form Fitting a dress. The lady who took everybody's eye must a lot of them. Pickles in glazed pans, erosa dogs, and delays, are dangerous. A statistician estimates; that court ships average three tons of coal each. Thp coat of a horse ia the gift of nature. That of an ass is often the work of a tailor. Some heartless person has remarked that, however strenuously a teetotaller may resist the use of fermented drinks, he will certainly come to his bier at last. Too many people embrace religion from the same motives that they take a companion ia wedlock not from true love of the person bnt because of a large dowry. How easy it ia to please and be pleased if one will take the fragrance of the rose instead of the thorns, and hold the knife by the handle and not by the edge. The foundation of domestic happi ness is faith ia the virtue of woman ; the foundation of political happiness, temporal and eternal, ia reliance on the goodness of Providence. A Baltimore yonng woman skated benanlf thmno-h thai i Knk aa IK. water waa only four feet deep and abe Waa five) ftfMlt Lin 7 atia atswi.1 nn a.n.1 informed a young man of what had happened, and he courageously passed her a board. Out of 241,926 packages of stamps. etc, tranmitted throngh the Post Office in tbe United States daring the year i3i j- i. only lour packages valued at 7.45, were lost : and of the 2,000,(H ol regularly registered letters, only 313 were actually lost or stolen. "A human skull, covered and filled with oysters, was dredged np in New uaven naroor not long since. A man mnst be awfully fond of oysters when he "sets" bis skull to catch them. But perhaps, after all, the owner of that trap didn't know how it waa being used. A yard-stick is very nseful in a store: a stick on the stage ia of no use what ever ; a stick in a tumbler is sometimes in danger of making the sidewalk un even to pedestrians ; a stick of a hus band or wife is apt to be much longer than is desired, and a stickful of matter is the commonest thing read in news papers. The Sultan of Turkey employs in his palace 6.00U servants of both sexes. He pays and feeds 300 cooks, 300 gar deners, 500 coachmen, and 600 more to do odds and ends about the house. To feed these people and their hangffrs on 1.200 sheep and 2.000 fowls are killed every day, and 60.000 francs for Ughts are expended. No wonder they call him the sick man of Europe. Let onr love be firm, constant and inseparable ; not coming and returning like the tide, but descending bke a never failing river, ever running into the ocean of divine excellency, passing on in the channels of duty and a con stant obedience, as never ceasing to be what it is till it comes to be what it de sires to be ; still being a river nntil it be turned into sea and vastness, eveu the immensity of a blessed eternity. A neat confidence game, but very mean, was practiced on two young ladies in a Jersey City car the other day. A fashionably-dressed man en tered the ear in Jersey City, and two ladies got on at the same time. Oue of the ladies took a dollar bill from her purse to pay the fare with, when the gentleman pobtely offered to pass it to the driver, but instead of doing that he lifted his hat to the ladies and left the car. Every year a pastry cook in Dresden cooks np a lot of pan-cake, ia one of which a ducat ia placed, and advertises tbe same, whereupon all the good people of that city rush to invest five pienninga in one of the cakes, ia tbe hope of being the lucky winner of the prize. Bat the cook doesn't "scale down" the drawing in the Louisville fashion, so that the ducat ia changed to a groschen, while the pan-cake ia made of sawdust. This is the way an impecunious Pa risian dandy managed : He kept at his residence a costume of a groom. When offering an attention to the fair sex he used to say : - "Permit me to send yon a bouquet by my black servant. He then repaired to his garret, took his blacking bottle, pol iahed his face and hands, - pnt on his livery and knocked at the lady'a door. "Here," said he, "are some flowers from master to madame. He had spent his last frano in the purchase. Madame was so delighted with tbe present that she presented the bearer with a Ionia. This is a elevar pocket ing of three dollars, and a lady'a favor into the bargain. A Bangor fruit dealer has been pay ing a bet recently, with the making of which he had nothing to do. Two well known gentleman stepped in, and be ginning to eat oranges, informed the proprietor that they had made a bet of the oranges on a certain question, and after the bet waa decided tha loser would pay for those which they were eating. To this the dealer of tbe fruit was agreed, and the customers ate all they desired. The next time they were in the store he enquired which one was to piy for the oranges. "Don't know yet," waa the reply ; "I bet that when the Brewer bridge is carried away, tbe Brewer end will go first, and Smith bet that the Bangor end will go first" The oranges were immediately charged to profit and loss. The practice of clipping horses in winter is regarded in a great many dif ferent views ; bnt there ia no mistaking tbe sentiments of a contributor to tbe New York Evening Post, who gives ex pression to the following bit of sarcasm : "I admire tbe horse-shaving process, not so much for its conspicuous pro priety aud usefulness, as for its showing what a high order of intellect can ac complish when it seriously lays itself out for work. What ordinary man could, by any possible stretch of his inventive faculties, compass the notion ot basing the social position npon tbe brevity of his horses' trials, or the stripping the hair off the animals' oouies in winter t Any man mignt think of the latter operation in summer but who but men of genius could think of doing such a thing in our Arctic winter ? Such men wonld have been saints in Loyola's time ; and I am not altogether sure bnt what eanonizing would be the best thing for them- now. If comfort and ease are enhanced by contrast, I can easily imagine the ex quisite satisfaction felt by the occu pants of a vehicle drawn by clipped horses. In the terrible winter just passed away the amount of enjoyment so received mnst have been immense." But horses will still be clipped, never thelei a, be tha practice cruel or net. j P t -1 :