B. F. SCHWEIERj THI CONSTITUTION TH1 U5IOJI A5D THB KSF0RCEME5T OT TH LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXIX. : MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., MAY 12, 1S75. XO. UK POETBT. ROLL " LI, AFTER THE BATTLE. Corporal Green !" the orderly cried, "Here '." ni the ansner, load and clear. From the lip of a soldier who stood near ; And 'here" ra the word the next replied. -Cyras Drew V then a silence fell ; This time do answer followed the call, Ol1; a rear-man has seen him fall. Killed or wounded he eoold not telL There they stood in the falling light. These men of battle, with graTe dark looks. As plain to be read as open hooka. While slowly gathered the shades of night. Ihe fern on the hillsides was splashed with biood And down in the corn, where the poppies grew Were redder status tbsn the poppies knew. And iTimbOD-dyed was the river's flood. I or the foe had crossed from the other side. That day in the face of a mnrderous fire. That swept them down in its terrible ire. And their life's blood went to color the title. Herbert Cline!" At the call there came Two stalwart soIJiers into the line. Bearing between them Herbert CI ice. Wounded and bleeding to answer bis name. "Ezra Kerr!" and a voire answered "Here!" "Hiram Kerr !' but no man replied, They were brothers these two, the sad wind sighed. Aud a shudder crept Uirongh the cornfield near. T.phraim Dean '." Then a soldier sjioke, "Dean carried our regiment's colors,' he said When our euoign was shot. I left him dead J list after the enemy wavered and broke. "Close on the roadside his body lies, I iused a moment, and gave him a driuk ; He murmured his mother's name, I think. And death came with it and closed his eyes." 'Twas a victory, yes ; but it cost us dear. For the company's roll when called at night. Of a hundred men who went into the fight Numbered but twenty who answered "Here." imi:ixt. The a-rller Carrier. "Ye ma'am, we carriers read a great ileal of history in our rounds ; and since these postals ha' come np, you see, it's somewhat plainer to ns than it used to be. Sometimes we have to wait so long at the doors that we have plenty of time to pass away, and so, as reading is an innocent way of passing one's time, we pass it in that way, ma'am. "What was the most curious story we ever read in onr letters ? Well, about the saddest thing that ever came under my notice was this : I had been on the G. street ronte some two yesrs. In that time I carried a great deal of mail to No. 216. Every week there was one neat little letter, postmarked 'Bethleham,' directed in a school-girl's hand, and generally the day those let ters came, the lady of the house was at the window, anxions and eager like to get them. About holiday time one tore on the outside, in large letters, Jast seventeen ! One week more, and hurrah !' The lady took it from me at the door, smiled when she saw the girl lbh postscript, and then said to me, " 'My daughter is glad to leave school, you see. She don't know school has jnst begun. "Not very long afterward A rosy cheeked bright eyed girl used to watch at the window for letters ; and then, the letters watched for were directed in a bolder hand, and post marked 'New Haven.' (College there, yon know.) I used to find letters heavy ones, too in a school girl hand, in the amall box at the corner about that time. I knew what it meant, and I nsed to like to tease her a little, and pretended there was none for her sometimes, jnst to see her eyes light np, and the rose blush come in her cheeks, w hen I handed it to her at last. "One day there was no letter. I felt sorry myself when I remembered it was the first time he had missed, and I knew there would be no smile or blnsh for me that morning. Bnt I do not know what I was to see instead. As I passed the window she saw my grave face, and, looking out, laughed, and gave a little toss of the head, while be side her sat as handsome a young fellow as ever I saw who bnt the writer of her letters, to be sure. "The next spring I carried away from that house a great bundle of white wedding looking invitations, to post. 'Ha, ha 1' thought I, 'school is begun, aud I know who the school mas ter wiil be.' "But I didn't ; for one morning, not many days after, as I came np the street I saw boy with a book and s yellow envelope standing at No 216 ; and as I passed the door, I heard a shrill scream and saw my sweet, pretty little school girl lying on her mothers bosom with a telegraphic dispatch in her hand. - "The papers next dav were full of a terrible accident, by rail, on the New Haven road, and among the list of killed, I read the name I had so often read on the letters I posted from the mail-box on the corner. School had liegun with a grim master for the pretty little girl at No. 210. "Postals, ma'am, are funny things, I delivered a postal the other day, written in a woman's hand. It said at the close, 'Don't tell a soul,' and 1 knew all aliont when it was to come oft We come across some sharp ones ooea si onally ; for instance, 'Pay me my bill or I'll expose yon ! I hope he paid his bill to save exposure. "It's curious to watch the receipt of rejected MSS. I always feel sort o sorry when 1 have a Daisy parcel io deliver, with 'Harper Bros, or 'People's Monthly,' on it. I know it means 'Un available. 'Sorry to be obliged,' 4 a. ; for, yon see, I've had some of them come directed to nee and I know it is myself. "I once took such a package to a house in a little street down town, and I shan't ever forget the expression that came into the girl's eyea who took it from my hand it was such a disap pointed, despairing, hopeless look. I couldn't help it I jnst said to her then, 'Never mind, little one ; try some where else ; don't get discouraged.' She looked np into my face and an swered with a brighter look, 'Thank yon, sir ; I will." "It was not many weeks after, that I carried a business looking letter to the same party. 'Wait,' said she, when she showed me a nice little check from one of the generous paying publishing . Co's. in this city. I felt as glad as she did, and told her so. Little encourag ing words don't cost much, and they go a great ways sometimes. It is the little things that count np in a long life ; And so ma'am, I thank yon for tout kind interest in my story, and I hope I may bring yon lots of letters and good news Always as long as I am on this ronte. Good-morning ma'am." 1 X ROYAL LOVE-gTOKV. On the 3Cth of August, 1819, a boy was born at the Rosenau, the summer resi dence of Ernest, Duke of Saxe Cobnrg Saalfeld, who was destined to play An important part in the world. He was furnished at christening with a Ion list of names, after the fashion of royalty Francis Charles Augustus Albert Emanuel but in the household was known simply as Albert, and in later years as Prince Albert, the consort of the Queen of England. The birth of a prince or princess At one of the in numerable petty courts that once di vided Germany between them, before the nation had liecome consolidated iii to an empire, was, as a rule, a matter of very little importance to the great world outside ; and but for the influ ences that made him the husband of Queen ictoria. Prince Albert would in all probability have been reckoned with the vast multitude of German royal Dersonaeea who lived nndistinirnisliMt but blameless lives, and whose record is found only in the pages ot the AlmanaiU tie (Jutha. A ditl'ereut and happier fate awaited the amiable and larjfe-hearted boy, whose story is so well told in Theodore Martin's "Life of the Prince Consort," the tirst volume of which has been just published by Smith, Llder Co., London. The work was undertaken bv Mr. Martin in comnli auce with the express desire of thai widowed Queen, who placed very much interesting material in his hands, liis imii traiture of the Prince is most attrac tive, and will enable the rrnmblinjr Itritish pnblic to understand Ix-tter the prolonged sorrow or the Queen, which it lias viewed almost with resentment. His was a rare and excellent nature, royal not only by the accident of birth, but by every moral and intellectual quality which men deem admirable. Americans have every reason to honor his memory. It was his wise counsel, almost the closing act of his life, that averted war between this country and England when the Trent affair roused national passion to fever heat, aud when the Queen's ministry were not unwilling to precipitate hostilities. Albert was the second son of his Iiaixuts. His only brother, Ernest, now uke of Saxe-t'oburjr-Gotlia. was lrn a little more than a year before, IJoth the young princes were distinguished by their precocity. The lieauty, jfcn tleuess and vivacity of Allsrt seem, however, to have made him the favorite. As a child his beauty was remarkable. In IrcU the I owatfer Duchess of Coburg writes of him to the Duchess of Kent, the mother of Victoria: "Little Al ltcriucben, with his large blue eyes and dimpled checks, is bewitching, forward aud quick as a weasel. He can already say everything. Ernest is not nearly as niettr. only his intelligent brown eyes are very line : but he is tall, active, and very clever for his ape." And agaiu, a few weeks later: "The little fellow is the pendant to the pretty cousin the Princess Victoria, very handsome, but' too slight for a boy : lively, very funny, all good nature, and full of mischief. The portrait, engraved by Dehl, is stitlicient proof that the praise of his beauty was not the exaggeration of a grandmother's fondness. Like his mother in person, and resembling her also iu quickness, vivacity aud playful ness, Alltert was her favorite child, and she made no secret of her preference. But this was not to last. The Duchess was not only beautiful, bat exercised a great charm through her intelligence and- kindness of heart. With a habit of viewing men and things in a droll and humorous way characteristics in which the Prince strongly resembled her she was a general favorite in so ciety. But her wedded life, which commenced under the fairest auspices, proved unhappy. In a separation, followed by a divorce in lsCG, was ar ranged between the Duke And herself, bnt not before she had established A hold upon the affections of her children which, although they never saw her again, remained with them to the last, he died at St, Wendel, in Switzerland, in IXil, at the age of thirty-two, after a long aud painful illness. "The Prince." writes the Queen, "never forgot her. and spoke with much tenderness and sorrow of his poor mother, and was deeply affected in reading, after his marriage, the accounts of her sad and painful illness." All that conld be done to compensate the loss of a mother's presence and care was done by the grandmother of the princes, who con tinued to watch over them with a two fold tenderness. Their education was of the broad, general character best suited to their position, and included history, geography, mathematics, phil osophy, religion, Latin, and the modern European languages, relieved by the study of music aud drawing, for both ot which the Prince early showed a marked inclination. His father was an ardent sport ui an, aud the two brothers as they grew up took an eager interest in the sports ot the held and forest, which in Germany are the prescriptive pastime of their class. Albert, though an excellent shot, enjoyed them, how ever, chiefly for the sake of exercise and for the pleasures of the scenery into which they carried him. The house of Cobnrg was intimately related by marriage with the royal family of Eugland. In 11 Prince lipoid, the youngest brother of Prince Alliert's father hail married the Princess Charlotte, then presumptive heiress to the English throne. After her untimely death the Duke of Kent married the youngest sister of the Duke of Cobnrg, aud on the 34th of May, lMia, she pre sented him with a daughter, who was di stilled to become Queen of England. But long In-fore it was known that she would ascend the throne, the idea of her marriage with one of her Cobnrg cousins had taken such root in the family that Prince Alliert's nurse was in the habit of prattling to her infant charge, when he was only three years old, of his destined bride iu England. In lxiKS there was no longer any doubt as to the succession of the Princess Victoria to the throne, and already several aspirants for her liAnd were in the field. King Leopold, her uncle and loved adviser in all matters greatly de sired her marriage to Prince Albeit; but he also greatly desired that the union should be one of affection, and I l 1111 1 I I I ..1... ' . - f - -- I I . I I' ...ul n- i , V , t u I lllitllMU I lie 1 1ICICIUIC lliau(m mm ' of Kent that she should invite the Duke of Cobnrg and his sons to visit her at Kensington Palace. The object of the visit was kept strictly secret from the Princess and the Prince, so as to leave them completely at their ease. The Prince's grandmother had, it is true, often spoken to him years before of her earnest desires on this subject; but he had no reason to think this was more than a family wish, and the Princess at least was left freely to the impulses of her own inclination. Her uncle. King Leopold, saw that the impression was favorable, and made her aware of his wishes in the matter. Her answer made it impossible to doubt how entirely those of the Princess were in Accordance with his own. In Juue. lSwi. soon after Prince Albert's departure from England she wrote the King: "I have only now to beg you, my dearest uncle, to take care of the health of one now so dear to me, and to Uke him under your special protection. I hope and trnst that aII will go on prosperously and well on A subject now of ao much im portance to me." The Prince, however, was still kept in the dark; but his education was ditected with a view to the possibility of his marriage with the English Prin cess. He And his brother were sent to Brussels, where, under the care of Baron W eichmann, a retired officer of the English German Legion, they re mained for a period of twelve months, closely occupied with the study of his tory, the modern languages, the higher mathematics, etc. From Brussels they went to Bonn, where they remained eighteen months. While' they were still at that university the death of William IV., June 30, threw upon the Princess Victoria, then only lrt years old, the grave responsibilities of Queen of England. Her accession to the throne revived the rumors, which had been for some time current, of a con templated marriage with her cousin, and it was thought expedient by their citcle, with the view of withdrawing public Attention for the time from the young princess, that they should spend the Autumn of 1:J7 in 'making a tour through Switzerland and the north of Italy. September and October were accordingly spent in a thorough ex ploration of Sw itzerland and the Italian takes on foot a mode of traveling of which Prince Albert was very fond. But the time had arrived when the question of the English marriage had to lie settled. King Leopold desired that some decisive arrangement should be made for the year 159; but to this the Queen demurred, for reasons which her uncle considered conclusive. She was herself, she urged, too young, so also was the Prince, and, moreover, his mastery of the English language was still very imperfect. The Prince, on being made aware of what was jiro Hsed, and of the necessity of delay very sensibly declared himself willing to submit, if he had only some certain assurance to go upon : "But," he said to King Leopold, if after waiting per haps three years I should find that the Queen no longer desired the marriage, It would place me in a ridiculous posi tion, and wo ilL to A certain extent, ruin all my piospects for the future." This serious question was, however, soon settled in a way entirely satisfac tory to the Prince's mind, and in the winter of 1NW he set out on a protracted and interesting tour through Italy, re turning to Coburg iu the following May. Meanwhile political events in England which it is needless to go into, made it desirable that the question of the Queen's marriage should again lie pressed. Those who had her welfare most at heart were anxious to secure for her without longer delay a husband's guidance and support. To effect this was however, no simple matter. All that the Queen had heard of the Priuce was most favorable. Her inclination toward him remained nnchauged and. to use her own words, "she never had an idea, if she married at all, of any one else." Still she dettired delay ; and the Prince, went to England with bis brother in Uctolier, lxflt, under the im pression that she wished the Affair to be considered as broken o2, and that for four years she could think ot no marriage. Her reasons for delay were, however.destiued to give way before the irresistible feeling w Inch inspired the Priuce when they again met. I he three years which bud passed since tlje prin ces were last in England had greatly improved their personal appearauce. Tall and manly as they both were. In nee Allien was eminently nauusome. But there was also iu his countenance a gentleness of expression and peculiar sweetness iu his smile, with a look of deep thought and high intelligence iu ins clear oiue eyes anil expansive lore head, that added a charm to the ini- Eression he produced in all who saw i ill, far beyoud that derived from mere tieauty or regularity ot tcatnres. The Queen was most favorably im pressed. On the second day after their arrival she wrote to her nncle: "Al bert's beauty is most striking, and he is most amiable and uneffected in short, very fascinating." The question was soon settled. The Prince arrived at Windsor Castle on the pith of Octolier : on the 14th the Queen informed Lord Mellmuriie of her decision. To Baron Stockmar. her uncle's life-long friend and confidential counsellor, to whom she had recently and strongly expressed her resolution not to marry for some time, she wrote with a naive embar rassment : "Windsor Casti f. Oct. 13, 119. "I do feel so guilty, I know not how to begin; but 1 think the news it con tains will be sufficient to insure your forgiveness. Albert has completely won my heart, and all was settled be tween us this morning. ...I feel certain he will make me very happy. 1 wish I could say I felt as certain of making him happy, but I shall do my best. I'ncle Leopold must tell you all almut the details, which I have not time to do Albert is very much attached to you." The next day Pi ince Albeit wrote to give Baron istockiuar what he knew would lie "the most welcome news possible." He added : "Victoria is so good and kind to me that I am often puzzled to believe that I should lie the object of so mncb affec tion. I kjow the interest yon take in my happiness, and therefore pour out ray heart to you More or seriously J can not write ; I am at this moment too bewildered to do so." ' 'Dm Aug sieht dt-n Hitumel offn, r-a artmeijtlil laa llerz iu ?euskit." ; Ht-avn nppfui on the ravi-bd eye, Tbe besrt w all rntraoced in blmn.J While offering to the Priuce his hearty congratulations on the happy event, Stockmar coupled them with earnest counsels as to the course which must be pursued in laying the founda tions of his future happiness, and in fulhlling worthily the duties of Lis high position. To this the Prince replied in a strain of lofty aspiration, and with a deep sense of the great part he was to play in his new career, which evinced true nobility of character, and promised well for the future. Neither the hap piness of love a happiness in his case made more intense by the singnlar purity and usefulness of his own na ture, on which the devotion shown him sccma to have come with a bewildering strangeness cor the brilliancy of the position into which this love had raised him, blinded him for a moment to its sterner features. "Tren nnd fest" (True and firm) was the motto of his house, and he was prepared to grapple with difficulties and face opposition with a manly heart. "With the excep tion of my relations to the Queen," he wrote to his step-mother, "my futnre position will have its dark side, and the sky will not Always be blue And un clouded. Bnt life lias its thorns in every position, and the consciousness of having nsed one's powers and en deavors for an object so great as that of promoting the welfare of so many will surely be sufficient to support me.- The announcement of the lietrotbal caused great rejoicings in England and among the Prince's own people. But when the question of the annuity to be settled upon him on his marriage came before Parliament there wasa squabble, which mnst have been very disagree able to him and to the Queen. Her cabinet proposed 30.001) a year, the same that had been granted to Prince Leopold on his marriage with the Prin cess Charlotte ; bnt after An Acrimoni ous debate this sum was reduced to jCTO.mxi. The Prince took it in a manly manner, merely remarking to Baron Stockmar that his only regret was to find that his ability to help artists And men of science, to which be had been looking forward with delight, would be more restricted than be had hoped. A thousand times more vexations were the questions as to the rank And precedence be was to enjoy as the hus band of the Queen. There is no pro vision in the English constitution for the title And precedence of the husband of a queen regnant, while the wife ef a king has the highest rank And dignity, After her husband, Assigned her by law; and while it is no doubt always in the power of a queen regnant to give her consort precedence at home over All her subjects by placing him next her per son, her power stops there. The status ioi due to her personal favor Alone, And, if Acknowledged by other royal per sonages, it is so merely by courtesy. A bill was introduced in Parliament giving the Prince precedence for life next after tne yueen in rarnaraeoi; or einewnere as her Majesty might think proper; but, after much debate. Parliament re fused to give him any distinctive title. And left the question of precedence to the roval prerogative. It was not nntil li7 that the title and dignity of Prince Consort were conferred upon him by royal letters patent. This omission gave rise to endless vexations, especially when the Queen and her husband were abroad. Ihe position accorded to uiui at foreign courts the Uueen always bad to acknowledge as a grace And favor bestowed upon herself by the sover eigns whom she visited. everal sov ereigns rjositivelv refused to gratify her wishes in this respect, and the only one who was courteous enough to do so without An offensive show of doing a favor was the late Emperor of the trench. Even in England Annoyances constantly arose from the want of par liamentary action on this question. The Prince's right to occupy the seat next the throne wheu Parliament was oM-nul or prorogued was questioned by the Duke ot Sussex and others; but the Queen, supported by the Duke of Wellington, quietly ignored the inter ference. "lA-t the Queen put the Prince where she likes," he said. The great Duke had not much toleration for the traditions of conrt etiquette when they conflicted with the dictates of common sense. The late Lord Albemarle, when Master of the Horse, was very sensitive snout ins rigui iu iiimi capacity w sn iu the sovereign's carriage on state occa sions. "The Queen." said the Duke, when annealed to for his opinion, "can make Lord Albemarle sit at the top of the coach, under tiie coach, behind the coach, or wherever else her Majesty pleases. The marriage took place at the chapel of St. James's Palace on the loth of February, 1H4). It was very popular with the people, Itecause it was not one of political convenience, but of pure affection, and thousands lined the roads from Buckingham Palace to Windsor Castle to see the Queen and her hus band as they passed. The morning of the day had been wet, foggy and dis mal, but there was not wanting soon after the ceremony the happy omen of that sunshiue which came afterwards proverbially to lie known as "Queen's weather." Whatever annoyances came to the Queen and her consort from that day to the hour of the Prince's death came from the outside. Their home life was always happy. From the day of his betrothal to the Queen, Prince Albert held unwaveringly to the high course of life he had marked out for himself a course that gained him the confidence and affection of the people And the name ef "Albert the Good." Hi ad Words. Thete is an island in the Atlantic beautiful and crowned with All of the glories of a tropical climate. So mul titudinous and fragrant are its flowers and plants that the traveler's approach to this fair land is known, by the deli cious odor, which reaches him while miles away. How pleasing to the tired sailor mnst this indication be I How charming to know that although yet far away, anchorage ia at hand. To such An one the language of these flowers, acts as do encouraging words sometimes, to one almost devoid of hope. We can estimate the power of a kind word, a smile or pressure of the hand I It ia Bayard Taylor, I believe, who in one of bis interesting books, speaks of the kindly greeting which falls from the lips of the peasantry in Europe to travellers and strangers. When read ing of this class of people how our hearts warm towarda them, how we wish for the return of their "God bless yon." Daily, we read of and eulogize olden time martyrs, Macariaa, offerings upon the altars of sacrifice. Yet, daily, are greater sacrifice made, which bring no shouts of ap plause ; no sympathetic tears. Many an eve while reading the touching lines of "The Song of the Shirt," "or Beau tiful Snow," is blinded with tears, yet turns coldly aside if brought into actual proximity with the prototype of either piece. We know so little of the thousands who wander this broad earth, friend less and Alone. So little of the unend ing labor, which does not Always bring bread to the hungry. We realize ao little the temptations that beset the outcasts ; and, Alas still less their want of power to withstand these temptations. Yet how many of ns ait in judgment. How many grudge the world of sympathy, the friendly smile. What matter if we stand up right, towering far above the vast mul titude of "suffering sad humanity." Does not the oak, gray with moss and grand in the strength, give deep shade to the timid violet f Does not its trunk support the clinging vine ? Its strong branches afford safe resting places for woodland birds ? . Surely no man haa greater reason to look with compassion upon the weak and tempted, the nnsnooessfnl And dis heartened, than be who, far beyond hia fellows in the upward race of life, can bravely resist the storms whioh sweep around him, and from the height of his superiority treat as trifles the gales which make shipwreck of the lives of other men. Gather around your gleam ing hearthstones all that is bright And beautiful ; but leave the windows un curtained, and, perhaps, the light which floods your home with bright ness, may chase away the darkness from the path of some wanderer. Chlaeae Leger deoaala la t'aakery. The reports of the last annual banquet of the Chinese residents of San Fran cisco make entertaining reading. The perfection to which the Chinese have carried their cooking was a matter of surprise to the American guests present. During the first course an orange was laid at the plate of each guest. The orange itself seemed like any other orange, but, on being cut open, was found to contain within the rind five kinds of different jellies. One was at first pnzzled to explain how the jellies got in, and, giving np that train of reflection, was in a worse quandary to know how the pulpy part of the orange got ont. Colored eggs were also served, in the inside of which were found nuts. jellies, meats And confectionery. When a celestial was asked to explain this legerdemain of cookery, he expanded his month in a hearty laugh, ana shook his head and cbucklingly said : "Meli can man heap smart ; why he not findee outT" Every luxury of the "MelicAn man's market" waa served turkey, chicken, quail goose, dock, pigeons, prairie chicken, deer. Antelope, And numberless other game were served, together with the usual Allowance of champagne. Kills, aad fBrea," Cwaeelt BT A!r5A H0LT0KK. Some years ago a young man, who had been studying medicine with an ex cellent physician whom we will call Dr. X., began to think of practising what he had learned on his own account. As he waa bidding farewell to hia old tutor, the old doctor said to him : "There is one thing my young friend that I have never told yon. It is an important secret whioh but few physi cians fully understand, " "What is it ?" asked the young doc tor, "I want to know everything in medicine worth knowing." "The secret is so valuable," replied Dr. X., "that I cannot Uke less than 30 for it," "Very well," replied the young man, "I agree to pay you that sum when yon shall make it known to me." "This then is the secret," said Dr. X., "Conceit kills. And conceit cures." Dr. O. was somewhat chagrined At what seemed to him something of an imposition ; bnt stifling his indigna tion, he paid the fee and quietly went his way. Several years passed and Dr. O. during a very successful practioe often found occasion to remember the saying. He worked hard, made money and went abroad for a vacation. After spending some years in France he re turned to his native land, where his reputation as "the skilled French doe- tor" found him plenty of patients and high fees. In one of his long rides through the country he chanced one day to pats the honse of his former instructor. Dr. X. The old gentleman was walking in his garden at a little distance from the honse, and did not see his former pupiL who seeing him reined his horse up to the gate, and said in a very decided though low tone to a bright-eyed grand daughter of eighteen who sat knitting on the door step, "Take that gentleman into the house immediately, and take care of him, if you have any regard for his life, uo yon not see bow ill he looks ? He has every symptom of a serious, And 1 fear dangerous illness, And 1 warn yon to obtain medical ad vice for turn without delay or I will not answer for the consequence." So say ing he galloped away And was soon out of sight. The family was soon alarmed, as the young girl communicated what had been said, to her mother, and others of the household. They did not like to tell the old doctor what had been said, but telling him he did not look well, they feared he was ill, etc., and per suading him to lie down, he soon began to think he was really ill, and the more he thonght of it the worse he felt, nntil it was at last determined to send at once for the celebrated French doctor of whose wonderful cares they had heard. The doctor arrived shook his bead in an ominous manner, examined the tongue and pulse, shook his head again, and pronounced it a bad case ; bnt said he would do all be could for him. JJr. O. was so changed in personal appear ance that Dr. X did not recognize his old pnpil who now gave hie name a French pronunciation and had alto gether a foreign aspect. Dr. O. ordered first a hot bath for his patient, and then leaving him two or three kinds of medicine to be taken every hour, left him, ordering perfect quiet and rest. Next day he called and pronounced his patient a little better but in a very critical state. Day after day he renewed his attentions and pre scriptions, and Dr. X. as well as his family had begun to think this his last illness when one day Dr. O. pronounced his patient decidedly better. He now gained ranidlv and was soon finite re stored to health. 'Now Dr. O. ." said Dr. X. one morn ing, "let me express to yon the grati tude I feel for your devoted attentions daring my illness. I feel that yon have saved my life." So saying he handed him a check for 50. Dr. O. took it And hAnding back 20 said, "Dr. X , I will Uke 30, which ia jnst the sum I paid you some years ago for an excellent piece of information whioh yon then gave me, viz. : "Con ceit kills, and conceit cores.' A Delia-htlal Lesread. There is a charming tradition con nected with the site on which the temple to Solomon wss erected. It is said to have been occupied in common by two brothers, one of whom had a family ; the other had none. On the spot was a field of wheat. On the evening succeeding the harvest, the wheat having been gathered in shocks, the elder brother said to his wife : "My younger brother is unable to bear the burden and heat ot the day. I will Arise, take of my shocks and place them with his, without his knowledge. The brother being Actuated by the same benevolent motives, said within himself: "My elder brother has a family. And I have none. I will eon tribute to their support ; I will arise, Uke of my shocks snd place them with his, without his knowledge." Judge of their mutual Astonishment when on the following morning they found their respective shocks undimin ished. This course of evenU transpired for several nights, when each resolved in his own mind to sUnd guard, and solve the mystery. They did so, when on the following night, they met each other halfway between their respective shocks with their arms full. Upon ground hallowed by such Asso ciation as this was the Temple of King Solomon erected so spacious, so mag nificent, the wonder and admiration of the world. Alas ! in these days how many wonld sooner steal their brother's whole shook than add to it a single sheaf I Gather-las; Samphire. This perilous trade is extensively practiced in the Isle of Wight; it is a small succulent plant, found in abun dance in the hollows of the cliffs, and is much nsed throngbout Lngland as a nickle. The chief inducement its coll ectors have to follow the risky calling is, we are told, the hopes of At the same time securing the eggs and feathers of the various sea birds which build their nests on the ledges and in the crevices of the cliffs, from the sale of which a good profit is derived. In order to get At either samphire or eggs, the men fas ten a rope to An iron bar.which they bare driven firmly into the ground, and then placing themselves on a a rude seat formed of two pieces of wood placed one Across the other, they lower them selves by meAns of a second rope down - the face of the cliff. The practice seems to oe extremely, aangerous, ana matiw narsAna hava inaf. t hi r 1 1 v while engaged in it. Myriads of eider ducks, gulls, cormorants, daws, razor bills, pnilins, guillemots, etc., haunt the cliffs. And when a gun or pistol is fired they rise suddenly from a thousand cavities until tbe very sir is darkened with them. "Coaeelt Ia Goadela. Susan Coolridge writes: "Would you know how gondolas are 'ordered in Venice V You step ont on the balcony and call 'Giscomo !' Instantly from be low comes the response. 'At your ser vice, Signora V And the gondola, your little private carnage, shoots to the door. W e are fond of our Giscomo, who was a stout, handsome fellow, with face and arms dyed by the sun to a beautiful umber brown. He affected bright colors, and his orange And red awning, his yellow shirt and scarlet sash. made, when taken in connection with his brown face, a vivid bit of moving color which was joy to see. This evening, my evening, we were without awning, And I was glad of my parasol as we shot into the Grand Canal, which was all a dazzle of gold And red from the sun, as yet a good way above the horizon. 'Where will you go, Signora V 'To the sunset, Giscomo. Go to the other side of the Giudecca, and 1 11 choose a place. Another secoud and we were gliding towaid the Gli- deccA, which is the wildest of All the enetian canals. I he motion of a gondola is nnlike any other motion in the world. Smooth, swift, effortless. without jar or quiver, without apparent motive power (.tor the oarsman is tie bind and out of view), it is a very bliss of movement ; like a bird's flight, like a darting fish, or better still, like pro gress by volition, turning, swerving to right, to left, by the power of thought. Giscomo has poetry in his nature. He rowed softly, and did not speak to break the spell of silence as we moved on. Leaning over the side of the gon dola I could see the swaying figure re flected in the blue canal, a distinct red And yellow shadow. On the other hand was the sun, a ball of fiery gold floating in an intense pink sky. The light was too void ; 1 could not look and closed my eves, but still the color pursued me and danced in almost painful brilliancy upon my brain." . Nerve-. The scene ooenred on a railroad car on the Union Pacific Road, in which two men were gambling, while the rest of the passengers looked on. One of the gam esters waa a type of the pro fessionals who "work" the road a de sperate trickster, sleek and ngly ; the other was a rough, grizzled miner, fresh irom tne mountains, and carrying abundance of money. The game draw poker was for large stakes, and played silently and watchfully. Finally a nuge pot accumulated, .bach man had evidently a good hand, and was re solved to stand by it, Each man raised tne other, nntil finally the miner "called." The gambler shewed his hand three aces and two queens at the same time covering the money with his hand. The miner uttered not a word ; he merely took two of his five cards snd laid them down. They were aces. This meant five aces in the pack. The gambler had dealt. Then the miner reached back like lightning, drawing a hnge navy revolver. He cocked it and placed the muzzle between the eyes of the gambler. Not a word was spoken, bnt each of the two men looked steadily into the eves of the other. Soon the gambler's hand upon the iiioney began to draw back, and the gambler's form as well. The revolver followed. The gambler steps into the aisle, and at this point passengers in the car seemed to lose their interest in the game, most of them trying to get under the seats. The gambler backed down the aisle toward the door, and as he passed out the muzzle of that huge revolver still stared him in the face. Then the miner pat up his pistoL pocketed the money, lit his pipe and was as other men. Not a word had been spoken from the time the "call" was made. It was merely one of the rare oc casions where a gambler on the Union Pacifio mistakes his man. HnwbaadA aad IIoaae-Maae Skirts. A day or two ago, while crossing the ice, we overheard two ladies talking about a new dress, and one of the ladies remarked that, "When I tried it on, I asked Rob if it was a good fit about the waist," and he replied, "When, I should say not. It fits about as well as a home made shirt." There was a volume in Rob's reply. As a rule, home-made shirts don't fit at all. They will draw in at the back and over the shonlder to that extent that A fellow don't know whether he is incased in a shoulder brace or a strait-jacket. The neck-band may not go twice around and tuck in behind, but it usually laps about three inches, or else it is cut so low in the neck that a twenty four inch collar is required to reach the collar-button. In leaning forward when sitting, the bosom crushes in at the sides and projects in the middle, look ing more like a badly demoralized dust pan than anything else. The sleeves are so short that the large, twenty-five oent pair of cuff-buttons, selected with great care,, either tickle a fellows elbows, or dangle around his finger nails, never arriving at the extreme. The skirts are generally of an ab breviated character, making the affair resemble an overgrown roundabout. Men do not like to find fault, knowing that their wives meant well enough, and worked bard in making the garments, bat, when away from the house, they do not hesitate to say that the desire of their hearts is that their wives should go ont of the business. Troy Time. The Swaree of Salt. The ses depends on the disintegra tion of rocks on land for salt. It does originate in oceans And seas. Kains wash it and hold it in solution as par ticles are liberated by violence, decom position, and gradual action of many natural forces. All. streamlets and rivers, therefore, are constantly trans porting salt to the sea. If there is more than can be held in solution then it accumulates in masses at very deep points. Thus the salt mines ot Port land and the vast horizontal beds of pure salt in Texas, as well as that moan- Uin of rock salt in St. Domingo, were collected at the bottom of Ancient sess whioh Are now dryland remote from water. There are places in Africa where the process of disintegration of salt from rock is regularly going on, bnt there is not water power enough to force it onward to sea. Hence the par ticles Are spread abroad And mixed with the aoiL The negroes of North ern Africa having discovered its distri bution where there is no water to dis solve in the ground, leach it. In that wsy they separate the salt. Salt per vades the earth. It exisU ia the grasses and most vegetable prod nets on which animals feed. In that way they derive enough in most countries to meet the demands of their natures. , They require as mnch as civilized humAnity. With them salU is neces- ; ur- ..-.. ,nr h J ln,h of vision in good condition. Suy the supply, and blindness wonld ensue. To hold the truth and fight for it is one thing. To be sanctified through it is another, iocthv roirsv. C'a alia the Fiagert. Darr, d.-ar. vTir Stiffen hUJ ; l.it-u till njy Mitry. told. Thumb's a rogue, and wbiwper, 'Come; a. -! tb- AwetV his Thumh. M straight Flnrt Kinf-r KmhU to tnr ; She', rogu wtu-u Tbumb ia urar. " Hfcnnd Fingpr -. 'I'll go : iri Third Finger, t'ouut me.tuo.' " Little Finger Mauri akn. Hav., Tht .wti ire nn onr own.' Thumb Mti 'I.M no linger tmr . Whr the wffi bare goue to .lav. Klngrr Ftrrt tbew uwi out. 'So ! N a word frois mt ntiali go.' Hrcood I'mger aliaken hr uVad ; sh- would attnVr death inttil. 'lngir iltird ia lu'l ol ftr. It th nnrkft of giiilt a)ar. " Little r'inger enes. -yor banu-! . . I filiall tell where Ilea the nlaroe. " If we all are made to smart. With the reiw I'S hear my part. "Ami I think that thr-mgh aud tlirougb Little Finder's right doul yon Up, Dows, asd Ox. A A'ory for Sleepy Three-Year O'd. Once there waa a ship, a large beautiful ship, sail ing over the bine sea. The ship had tall tapering masts, and white and glistening sails. And the wind's blew against the sails, snd the sails bore against the masts, and the masts lore npon the ship, and the ship glided along through the waves, on and on and on and on. Down in the water, nuder the ship, there was a great fish swimming along. While he was wondering what . that black bottomed thing was, moving through the water above him, a sailor let down a line. On the end of the line was tied a sharp hook, and on the sharp hook was a piece of bait, and tha baited hook floated right before the fish's mouth. Then the fish gave a bite, bnt while he eaught the bait, the book canght him, and the sailor began to pull him np And he pulled and pulled and pulled and pulled ; up and np and np -and up ; higher and higher aud higher and higher Are you asleep yet ? No? Not yet? Well, up in the air above the ship there was Dying a bird, a great heavy bird, with monstrous flapping wings, and a long hooked beak. While he was a wondering what that white-! capped thing was, moving over the water below him, a sailor on the deck leveled his gnn and fired. Whiz went the bullet through the air and s'mck the bird and down ihe began to fall, . . i . , ua , , and fell ; down and down and down and dowu ; lower and lower and lower and lower Asleep yet ': No? Not qnite. XI' .1 1 : i i .... . i . i mi, uo Bsueu sue sum. on auii on : blown by the winds. rked by tL waves; first this wsy and then that way now np and now down over here and over there ; rolling and rocking ; pitching and plnng - in on and on an,! nr. ....I n Now are yon asleep ? lea. Hush h b, then. Congrrsjn things, bnt within the sonl ; we msy A Mercifll Friend. An elephant ' preserve it in the midst of the bitter belonging to an English garrison in ; e8t pain, if onr will remains firm and the Indies, was one day amusing him-! submissive. I'eace in this life springs sell with his chain in an open part of j from acquiescence even in disagreeable the town, when a man who had com- j things, not an exemption from snffer mitted a theft, and was pnrsned by a ' iDg. t'tttelun. great number of people, despairing of j ' ,,, , -ti -.ua all other means of safety, ran under I Spectacle frames, furnished with fine the elephsnt Apparently delighted ! TV ,D9teJ f P?' .'V6'5 with the poor man s confidence? the ! IU2 the "'I fastened to the creature instantly faced about and met b7 anm he been found the crowd, erected his trunk, and threw i by Kuhn to answer perfectly for the his chain in the air, as is the manner of j Protection of the eyes from dust, solid these animals when engaged with the rrt'el.. etc. in various occupations, enemy, and became so furious in de- j " rt8J1,U1' 0U",D(? Btonfi..f-' "' fence of the criminal that, notwith- the ihe V"" Permlt neces standing all the gentle arts made useof i arT acce.S9 of air -to tbe W amI P" by the surrounding multitude, neither j dnc no "" whatever to the they nor even his mahout, or driver, to I wearer- whom he was fondly attached, and who I The vast coal fields of China are at was sent for to manage him, conld pre- 'ast be utilized by the Uovernnient vail with him to give up the malefactor. t 'bat country. Although within The animal's wonderful kinduess met with reward. After three hours' con test, the governor heard of this strange rebellion to the laws of the land, and eame to the scene of struggle. He wss so much pleased with the generous perseverance of the honest quadruped, that he yielded to the elephant's inter position and pardoned the criminal. Tbe poor man, in an ecstasy of grati tude, testified his acknowledgement by kissing and embraced the proboscis of his kind benefactor, who was appar ently so sensible of what bad happened that, laying aside all his former vio lence, he became perfectly tame and gentle in an instant, aud Snffi red his keeper to conduct him away without the least resistance. Seeing ran Point. A boy returned from school one day, with a report that bis scholarship had fallen below the usual average. "Well." said the father, "you've fallen behind, this month, have yon ?" "Yes, sir." "How did that happen?" Dont know, sir." The father knew, if his son did not. He bad observed a number ot cheap nnwlf ReattArAil aHwt tha linnae Hiifc ha ha1 not thnno-l.t it wnrth wk.l. say anything nntil a fitting opportunity should offer itself. A basket of apples stood upon the floor, and he said : "Empty those apples, and take the basket and bring it to me half-full of china. And nnw' bamnli'nitml "nnt Ihnas artrdaa hodr inln tho h.alroi - those apples back into the basket. When half the apples were replaced, the son said : "Father, they roll off. I can't put in any more." "Put them in, I tell yon." "But, father, I can't put them in." "Put them in ! No ; of course yon can't pnt them in. Dj you expect to fill a basket half full of chips, aud then fill it with apples ? Ton said yoa didn't know why yoa fell behind at school, and I will tell you. Your mind ia like that basket ; it will not hold more than so much, and here you have been the past month filling it up with rubbish worthless cheap novels." The boy turned on his heel, whistled, and said, "Whew I I see the point." A BRiiirr little boy, jnst three years old. is. Uke most little chaps ot his age, fl- a t 7- la i ... 'nipleof regenerated hnmanity. nn enrb him And make him a good little ; .".., .....i. .i..... ..' A : I A . 1 A. boy his mother often threatened him " ? , "m". " with a peAch-tree "persuader." Tbe 1M C,PIWJ- little fellow has come to understand The deepest well iu the world is in sny allnsion to the peach tree, and : the village of Speremberg, twenty miles usually subsides when it is spoken of. j from Berlin, Prussia, It was bored by A day or two ago, since the flowering the German government for a supply of the fruit trees, a slight reference ; of rock salt. Operation! were eom was made to this same tree, when the menced five years ago by sinking a little fellow made peace for that day hg j shaft sixteen feet in diameter, and salt looking np and saying, "Why, mamma, j was reached at tbe dep'b of 287 feet, the switches are covered with roses." i In order to find bow thick the salt was - boring was commenced at a diameter A LiTTLS girl on being asked what is . of thirteen inches, to a depth of 9dt faith, replied : "It is doing what Ood ' feet farther, always boring into ro:k wants ns to do, and ask no questions ' salt. Knconraged by this, a steam en abont it." j gine was erected, and the boring eon- mm I tinned by its help nntil the present It often happens that those are the , time, when a total depth of ll'4 feet beet people whose characters have been j has been atUined, without having gone most injured by slanderers ; as we through the salt deposit, which is here usually find that to be the sweetest at least 3'.t07 fet thick, while it is not fruit which the birds have been peck- j known how muh thicker it may yet be ing at. I found to be. TiBirmx Trials are often the pivoU of oar b'ves. A man is successful when be makes life give him what he wants. Nature gives ns volumes of fruit, which she always prefaces with dowers. Life is a sum ; And it becomes ns to do it properly, as it can be alone bnt once. Few consider that enjoyment mnst have its uoaitmts of rest' as well as labor. Pleasure is certainly made up of something finite and something induite meeting together. Pfato. Teach your children to help them selves but not to what doesn't belong to them. Our passions are like convulsion-Eta, which, though they make ns stronger for the time, leave as the weaker ever after. A msn of large experience said his acquaintances would fill a cathedral, but a pulpit would hold all ot his friends. It is impossible that an ill-natured man can have a public spirit ; for bow shonld he love ten thousand men who never loved one The spores of ferns have been known to germinate After being shaken oat of fronds that have been preserved in her bariums for many years. It is said that a school for artists in Mosaio is abont to be erected at Sevres the object being to give French Archi tecture that powerful aid in decoration. What is life? A gulf of troubled waters, where the soul, like a vjxed bark, is tossed upon the waves of pain and pleasure by the wavering breath of passion. "Human felicity," said Benjamin Franklin, "is produced not so mnch by great pieces of good fortune that sMom. happen as by little advantageai that occur every day. A French patent has recently been i i,, n, i.n.nti.,. Lth. from tri, intestines And other animal membranes. The substance thus I 'wned " to be nsed for glove making. ,s0- , . ' "My husband was poetical." said ths widow, "and often expressed a wish to die in the eternal solitudes, soothed by I the rhythmic melodies of nature's unutterable harmonies, and yet he was : t,-,, it.i i- . . ! ly the explosion of a can of ker- E'Rhty years hence, when a yonth of fourteen sn miners asks his great grand - ' father if he ever saw such a cold winter ' and so mnch snow, "the oldest inhabi- i tant win piace nis nana on tne ooy s I head and reply : "My son, yon shonld ; have Uved in the winter of 1874-75 1" i Fence does not dwell in outward lurty miles ot l ekia there are extensive deposits of excellent steam coal, equal in quality to the bent Welsh coal, China does not contain a single coal mia which is worked on scientific principles or which is furnished with a steam en gine or a pnmp. The Viceroy of the Province of Chihli, within whose do main these deposits occur, has deter mined to commence mining operations in a locality rich in coal, iron and lime stone. In an Iudianoplis street car the other day a lady pulled the strap for the driver to stop at tbe first crossing of a street, but the bell did not strike. She did not notice this, bnt rushed to the door and began to ne her tongue lath on the driver qnite freely. She wanted to be set otT at the first cross ing, and he hail driven to the second. Without a word he promptly stopped his car, hitched bis horses to the rear end and pulled it back to the first crossing ranch to the amusement of the other panseners and the chagrin of the virago. Many years ago, in Paris, Miss Porter of Niagara Falls, was asked if she knew much abont the r alls. "ies, she re- nlicui - 'T sifwn aham . Thia waa anli. stantiaUy true, ax moat of the laud on i tu American side, along the rapid j n'' down to the cataract it.lf. was tu P'ope'ty of the p,ur.te fa"1"'; I Recently one i eighth of all the lands and I premises on doat Island waa sold by ' Jane Townsend to Eliztbeth lorter ! for .j1,.125. Sad One-sixt'nth part Of the same property was sold to George M. Perth for J.",V,..V(. At this rate Goat Island is worth a'out lial.UNI. llnryer ':rl'u. There is no surer soul-death, no more I inevitable paralyzing of worth and foree than self exaltation and self praise. The shadow ot self blights growth, maims power, cripples influ ence. There are men in some aspects almost great, in others pitifully small, because they will not stand ont of their own shadow. Tuere are men who have the ability and the will to per form the most valiant service for one and another great cause, who are wise brilliant, eloqnent ; who yet have been of little or no worth to their fellow beings, simply because they are willing ! bo eo,amn tn(j .1 - . 1 ..1 l fn ! i 3:1 - J i .14 ! i w I I 1 ! 9. if K I i h - p ,K 11 i '4 it J 3