fl B. F. SCHWEIER, THI COaSTITUTIOa THI CHIOS AUD TBI ISrORCIMXST.OF THI LAWS Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXX. !i.r i'; MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., JANUARY 19. 1S7G. NO. 3. spii TWO CHRISTIANS. Two Cbrietiana traveled down a road, ' Who wired the world with difeieo area ; Tba one m pleased with aarth'a abode, .. The other longing for the akiea. Fur one. the heavens were ao Una, They fiil'd hie numfwitb fancies fool ; The other eyes kept piercing through Only for that which liee beyond. For km, enchanting wen the tree. The rtintance waa divinely dim. The birda that flattered on the breeze Nodded their prettj heada for him. The other actively aaw the So wen. And never knew the treea war grand ; Be did not count the lays and boon. Till ha might reach the promised land. And one a little kind career Would to a tender rapture move ; He only oped hia lipa to bleaa The God who gave him thinga to tore. The other Journeyed on hie way, Afraid to handle or to touch ; He only oped hia lipa to pray Ha might not lore a thing too much. Which waa the beat . Decide who can. Tet why aboold wa decide twixt them ? Wa may approve the mournful man. Nor jet the Joyful man condemn. He ia a Christian who haa found That earth, aa well as heaven, ia sweet, Nor leaa ia ha who. heaven-bound, Haa apnrn'd the earth beneath hia feet Good Word. Caught In His Own Trap. "Confound the boy! what doe he UK-am? Does he think I am going to be a father to uiin, and ilot be obeyed as a father? Does he think I'm going to give him my money to ciend in busi ness, and take only ingratitude in re turn! What can the young dog be thinking of? Plague the youngster! What business ha lie to go and fall in love with a poor piece of trash ? I'll fix him! I'll but here come the rascal, tiie spurner of my counsels !" And as Captain Jerry Pieman thus spoke, he sank into a great stuffed chair, and looked daggers; and twice lie stamiied his dumpy foot vehemently to keep up his stern purpose, lie was a round-bellied, red-cheeked bachelor, just five-ami -forty. Most of his life he had spent at sea, and had lately settled down ashore with an immense fortune, for the purpose of euioyiiig the rest ol his lavs "after his owu heart," as he expressed it. His pare was just large enough to carry his jolly face high up over his brow, but vet lie had a good quantity of dark etirfs clustering about his short, fat neck. The only near rela- tive he had in the lower world was Jack Kendall, an only child of his only sister. Jerry Pieman had loved his sister fondly, and when she died, she was a widow then she left a prayer upon record that her brother would care for her orphan boy. And Uncle Jerry had done it faithfully, For ten years he had provided for his nephew, keep ing him at one ot the best schools for a while, and then paying his way through college. But now' that he had settled down in a home, he had Jack come and live with Mm. "Ah, you are here, are you ?'' growled the uncle, looking up with a dagger-like expression. Jack Kendall w as twenty-three, some what taller than his uncle, but with the same family look. He was a handsome, good-natured, generous, affectionate fel low, and loved his uncle Jerry with his whole soul. "Yes, uncle, I am here," he replied, taking a seat, "and I know you are glad to see me." "Aye, I am glad, for I have something to say to you, the bachelor resumed, looking more daggers. "Have you seen that baggage again ?" "Baggage, uncle?" 'Baggage, sir. I said baggage. Have you seen her?" "Her, tincle? Baggage? Her? Why what do you mean ?" m'Va. L . u- - m-lit I niA.fi .u i.L, t h.neron-that-that baViraae-tliat that irirl ! rj - - - - tJ rr Oh. vou mean Lizzie Brown. The srirl that" Thinks to catch you, ami thus catch my money!" interrupted lncle Jerry, emphatically. "It is hanllv fair to sav that, uncle, seeing that I made all the advances my self. "Xonsense, don't you suppose I know ? I sav she set the trap lor ye: But won't have it. if lm to be a father to ye, you must obey me. Xow I've got vou "a good chance. ' I want you to marry Susan Garland." "But she's a widow, tincle." "So much the better. She'll know how to make a home ye." "And she's older than I by a dozen vears." "Just five years. She's only twenty- eight. It's all the betteror that. 'But I can't love her." Can't love her!" cried the uncle, looking an immense number of very sharp-pointed daggers. '"Can't love Susan Garland ! Can't love the woman who was the wife of the most faithful friend I ever had ! Let me tell you, sir, that when the Gazelle was cast upon the rocks of Barnegat. Bill Garland saved iny life aud lost his own. He died in these arms, sir, and the last words he ever said to me were, Be kind to my ioor Susan, and I will be kind to her," the captain added, wiping a big tear from his cheek. "I'll give her a hus land a graceless husband, jierhaps but who shall have money enough to keep us above w ant. You shall marry her, sir." "But suppose I should refuse?" "Refuse! refuse your uncle! You dare not do it, sir! I'll turn you out of doors in an instant ! 111 see you starve liefore I'll give you another penny. I'll take away all I ever did give you. "Ah, you couldn't do .tnat, uncle. The education I have gained underjyour noble, generous patronage, is a mine of wealth, of which you caiftiot rob me; and I would not to-day exchange it for all the wealth you ever possessed. 1 can live by my own wits." "Aha! you threaten me, do you ? You mean to rebel, do you ? You mean to disoliey me outright." 'You do not understand me, uncle. Yon surely would not force me to be- i lie my own heart. If you could but know Lizzie Brown " "Lizzie Fiddlestick ! I don't want to know her. I know Susan Garland, and that is enough. I've had this plan fixed ever since I came home. 1 promised Bill I'd take care of her, and I must do it; and hew can I do it if you don't let me have her for a niece?" "Why not have her for a wife?" asked Jack, quietly. "Wife me! Why, you young ras l! what do you mean? Me marry! Zounds! Lo you think I am crazy ? I am old enough to be her father." "Only seventeen years, iincie Just enough to Kive you character as a bus hand." "Silence, villain. Would you have "I make tooi f mvself, just as 1 am settling down for comfort aud quiet? Iint you dare mention such a thing aga;a. I shall go and see Susan to morrow, and shall tell her you will have lier. That's enough. I won't hear any wore. By the big fish, I'll keep my promise; Jack knew it would be useless to say any more at present, so he held his peace. i muni uarianu lias oeen ms uncle s first mate during his last two voyages, anu tue aptain not only liked linn much, but also thought much of Susan, having stopped at her home while her husband was living. When Captain Jerry came home with the care of the widow upon his shoulders, be had hit Uon the happy expedient of niakiug ner his niece or marriage, and thus having the right to care for ber without exciting scandal. Jack knew how his uncle had cherished this plan, and he feared it would be hard to thwart him. The old fellow was as stubborn as he was kind-hearted, and where he felt he had authority he would not yield Finally Jack retired to ponder upon the subject, and before dark he resolved to see the widow in advance of his uncle, and he went that very evening, Susan Garland was a very pretty woman, witn a plump lorui. and dimpled, cheerful face, over which the sweet, genial smiles were continually playing when she was happy, She bad been alone two years. Sue welcomed Jack kindly, and after some common place remarks the young man came to tne point, lie related the conversation which passed between himself and his uncle that afternoon, and expressed the nope that she would help him. 'Surely you would not wisu'to take me from the being I love," he said Of course not," the widow replied. with an earnest smile. "I should be decidedly opposed to anv such thing, know Lizzie well, and 1 know, too, that she win make you a good wife. i ou may depend upon my assistance, for I can tell your uncle that I won't, and that will be the end of it. ' They chatted a while longer, and then Jack took his leave. "He will be here to-morrow forenoon" the young man said, as he reached the aoor-stoue. "I shall be ready for him," was the reply, and a funny light twinkled in the widow a eyes as she said so, About 11 o'clock on the following dav Lncle Jerry called upon the widow. She had left off her weeds, and now appeared fresh and fair as a maid of six teen. She welcomed the captain with one of her sweetest smiles, and Anally took a seat close beside him. Br a dex terous turn she got him engaged in re lating wonderful stories or bis adven tures at sea, and thus an hour slipped away. Of course he must now stop to dinner. "Oh, no, I must go liome to dinner," said he. "But before I go, I have a little business matter to touch upon." "Then yon must wait, sir," pro nounced the widow decisively. "It is my dinner hour, and I must prepare it. Wait and eat with me, and then I'll listen." And with this Susan drew out the table, spread the snow-white table-cloth and soon had the dishes in their places. She finally went away to the kitchen, and soon the captain heard the pots and kettles rattling, the meat spluttering, and a brisk culinary racket going ou generally. Egad," the old fellow muttered to himself, "she's a splendid craft. What a clean build. If I had come across such a woman years ago, I believe I should have made a fool of myself." In due time the dinner made its appearance, and the captain was invited to partake of it. "Xow make yourself at home," the widow said, with a charming smile; "for I look upon you as one of the dearest friends I have." "Egad, if she ain't a beauty," Uncle Jerry said to himself, as he moved up to the table. The lamb chops were done as the cap tain had never seen them done before. So juicy, so rich, so delicately spiced and so splendidlv cooked. And then the little rt rrtera. and the pies, and the cake, and the rich golden coffee. But above all he was entranced hv the bright ?ral,e "nd Prkling wit of his fair hostess. "Zounds!" he muttered, while she was gone away with the dishes, "ain't she ('harming? T Finally the widow came and sat down by the side of the captain upon the sofa. Her dimpled cheeks were all aglow ; her bright eyes sparkling with a beaming lustre; and over her white shoulder flowed a wavy, curling tress, which trembled ever aud anon, as though there were some strange emotion in the bosom beneath it. "Xow, sir," she said, "I am ready to listen." "Well well," Uncle Jerry managed to sav, after a prodigious effort at clear ing his throat, "vou must pardon me if 1 come right to the point." "Of course." "Then here it is you know I promised Bill that is Bill Garland my old mate or I should say my young mate that I would look a'fter you care lor you; you know that." "Yes, sir," continued Susan, with a grateful look: "I know that. and I have blessed you many times for your kind ness to poor me. Alas: Idou tkuow what I should have done but for your generous bounty." "Tut, tut, don't talk so. How could I help being good to you ?" "Ah, but everybody don't have hearts like yours. The captain rather liked the compli ment; and then it came from an agree able source, too. So be did not dispute it. But he made another prodigious effort to clear his throat, and then said : "1 have tried to be good to vou. Susan and 1 hope 1 have been ; but 1 can't do all I want to do for you at present. I am coming right to the point now." (Another clearing of the throat.) x ou know vou are a widow." She did know it. "And vou know you are yet young and very beautiful.' "Ob, no! not Deautitui; ana surety not very young." "But you are not oiu, anu you are beautiful. Xow tills wou't do. Scandal will rem h vou. I ahem am not so old mvseif but that the shaft of scandal might reach me, too." "You old?" uttered Susan, looking up reprovinglv, and yet admiringly. "Whv, vou are right in the very prime of manhood. A man at your age, anu with your genial, happy disposition, has Just reached the dawn of life at five and forty." Uncle Jerry rather liked this, so he did not contradict it, as he had at first a will to do. "Then, of course," he returned, ap plying the compliment to bis own pur pose, "it is still more necessary that there should be a new and nearer rela tion between us. I love you too well to have a single breath of suspicion rest upon you. Would you object to such a relation ?" , ' The widow's long lashes drooped, and the dark tresses upon her bosom trembled perceptibly. . ... "If it is your isb, sir, I should have no opposition to make," she said. 1 - ... i r ...1.1. ..m ' 'Ana you II come ami n vr u .- "Yes." "And we'll be as happy as kings!" "Oil, I should lie very baopy," sh" liispered ; and as she did so, her head rested upon the captain's shoulder, and the bright tress fell npon his baud, with several tear-jewels glittering amid its curls. "What a time we'll have!" Uncle Jerry cried, winding his arm about her plump form, and drawing her more closely to him. "When vou are Jack's wife, we'll "Jack!" repeated Susan, .breaking from his embrace, and springing to her feet. " Jack's wife ! " she tittered, dashing the tears from her eyes. "Why, bless me, yes." "Ami you have meant for me to marry him?" "Lord bless me, who should I mean?" "And do you suppose I'd marry with a mere boy r Are there not girls enough for the youngster? Sir, you mistake me you mistake my heart, you mistake my love, if you think 1 could give my heart to your nephew." "But bless me ahem a-h-hem Jack is-" "I know, sir I know Mm well. He is a fine youth, a worthy youth, and may be a noble man if he lives long enough. But I can say no more. I am sorry to disappoint you. I am am deeply gratified for all your kindness to me, aud I will pray to God for his blessing upon you continually. But we bad better part now. You have spoken my doom. Farewell !" "But Susan. Here! Slop! Bless me!" Susan did not stop, and Uncle Jerry found himself alone. He said "Bless my soul!" forty-three times, and then left the house. All the way home he muttered to himself ; and when he met Jack at the supper-table he was moody and silent. When he went np to his chamber he commenced to mutteragain ; and be kept on muttering and pondering till he fell asleep. Finally he began to dream. He dreamed that Susan Garland became his wife, and be held her to bis bosom and wondered that he could ever have thought of such a foolish thing as allowing Jack to have her. But as he held her thus, who should appear In the nuptial chamber, but Bill Garland, pale and cold, with sea weed for hair, and dark green ocean moss for raiment! And the cadaverous presence said, '"Give me my wife!" The dreamer awoke with a sharp err of fear, and found the suulight streaming into his room. He arose and sat down by the window, and finallr lie said, in a deep, fervent tone "Thank xl; Bill Garland hasn't come back J", For three whole davs. Uncle Jerrv was like a newly converted sinner. He could not eat, he could not read, he could not sleep, and the burden of his re marks to Jack was : "Clear out, you rascal !" On the evening of the third day the captain made an extraordinary toilet, and then went up to see Susan Garland. She welcomed him with a warm greet ing, and finally, at his particular re quest, sat down br his side upon the sofa just as she sat before. "Susan," said he he spoke bluntlv. for his courage and determination had been duly brought up to the sticking point before he started ''you said the other day that you should be very happy to come and live with me. Did vou mean that you would be willing to be come my wife?" There were a dozen tresses upon that white shoulder now. and they shook like aspens. That s a curious question, sir, she replied. t, . . ,, , . . ... i that?" "If I mistook your meaning, sir, you have no right to question mine." "But, Lord bless me ! suppose I should ask yon to become my wife? Answer me that." You never did ask me, sir." "Then by the car of old Xeptnne, I ask you now. Susan Garland, will you be my wife?" "Jerry Pieman I will !" "What!" cried the captain, starting back, and gazing into her blushing, tear w et face, "do you mean that you can love an old man like me that you can love me always?" "You are not old, and as for loving yon, I have loved you for a long while; and if you take me for a wife, I'll love and bless you to my dying hour!" "Then come here ! Come here, Susan ! Come right here; and if I ever cease to love vou. to cherish you, and to lie true to you, may may that sea-weed ghost come back : About ten minutes after this Uncle Jerry made the following very sensible remark: "Why, bless my soul! we are acting like two Tools . The widow only smiled and said : "Two very happy ones, ain't we?" And Jerry said: "Bless my soul- -we are !" On the following day Jack happened to pass near the widow's house, and he dropped in. In a few moments he was the happiest fellow imaginable. "But," said Susan, earnestly, "don't misunderstand me. I have loved vour uncle loved him well and truly, and I believe he loved me, but dared not say so. Had it not been thus, I could not have done this. I would have helped you all the same,- by simply and flatly refusing you, but I could not have toyed or trifled with him. He is a good man, Jack a good man." "So be is," said Jack. And then Jack went home. The youth found his uncle in the library, readings book said book being bottom end up. He sat down and peejied wickedly out of his eyes, while an ill mannered smile kept playing around the corners of his mouth. "What are you winking and blinking, and squinting and grinning at, you young dog?" asked the old captain, with tremendous ferocity. "I was th inki ng of a story I once read,' replied Jack, quietly. 'A story, eh ? What is it, you scape grace?" "I'll tell yon, uncle," said the nephew with the smile and the twinkle more wicked than ever. It was a very funny thing it is the funniest thing I ever heard of. A man once went to set a trap in which to catch a very respect able and honorable young friend of bis. He had got the trap all nicely set as ne supitosed, when what do you think?" " v nen, wnat, you graceless rascal r "Why, uncle, when the tiling was all fixed, there was the fuunlest thing hap pened you ever heard of. Instead of catching his respectable, high-minded young trieod, tne old leiiow got canned himself. In fact he got caught iu his own trap. V asu't it "Get out of my house, you young scamp out with you, you reprobate!" But, uncle, wnen i come race, mayn't I bring Lizzie with roe, and see and participate in your new and deep felicity?" It von 11 oe decent, yon aanng young villain, you may bring the queen of slatterns herself; but beware how you offend me ! 1 can t bear everything and 1 won't! 1 wou't put up with it: I'll I'll kick you out of doors, you ungrateful traitor!" After this effervescence, Uncle Jerry's soul settled down to a clear, placid j ,lm and when lizzie Brown finallr I appeared before him, he actually kissed her, ami said she was just the girl for his rase illy nephew. And, in a few weeks thereafter. Uncle Jerry had a wedding party. He was married first, and theu sat down ami saw Jack married. "There," said the happy old fellow, after the thing was all over, as he ap proached his nephew and handed him a paper, "there is something to make op for the loss you have sustained in letting me rob vou of the best woman In the world." Jack opened the missive and read it with tears in his eyes, for it was a certi fied check for twenty-five thousand dol lars, with a little note attached, saying that if he behaved himself he might at some Ornire time have more. C-bIm aiMra. There are many carious ceremonies nd observance connected with child's early years, which it would be impossible to describe in detail. The following are among the more note worthy aud iin)Krtaut: When the baby is a month old its head is shaved for the first time, and on this occasion a thank offering ia made to a certain goddess ; at the end of the fourth a family feast takes place, and the maternal grand mother is expected to make handsome presents, including a species of chair for the child's use; at the end of a year there are more thank-offerings, more feasts, and more presents; still later on there is tne quaint ceremonv of passing through the door." These and similar fauiilv customs have con stantly to be observed until the child "goes ont of childhood," an event which takes place usually, though not necessarily at the age of sixteen ; at this period the child becomes an adnlt. aud is expected to put away childish things. But although sons be come men at this early age, they are by no means exempted from parental authority, for, unless they happen to be in the service of the state, when the Emperor takes the place of their pa- rruin, mey are oouuu io yieiu implicit obedience to their fathers as long as they live. The same rule, of co irte, will be understood to apply with even greater force in the case of daughters. This is the strict theory of Chinese customs, but the practice of every-day lite is necessarily not quite consistent with it. In cases of extremely nntilial behavior, it sometimes, though not of ten, happens that parents cite their children before the magistrates and get them punished. Cases of parricide and matricide are treated in a very strange manner among the Chiuese, for the murderers are not only beheaded, but cut up in to little pieces; their houses are pulled down aud the foun dations dug np ; punishment is even indicted npon their neighbors, and the very officials are degraded on account of such horrible crimes having happened within their jurisdiction. In reference to some of the matters of which we have just been speaking, it will not he with out interest to notice what is laid down in regard to the various stages of a man's life in the Book of Kites, a work which is held in the highest esteem by the Chinese. From birth till 10 yeais old, it is said, man is called a child, and then begins to learn ; till 20 he is called a youth, and is then capped; to 30,be is in bis manhood, and may marry ; at 40, he is of full strength, and may enter the magistracy ; at 50. he becomes gray, and may serve in the highest offices of state ; at 60, he becomes advanced in years, and may direct affairs; at 70, he becomes an old man, and may retire from the cares of public life ; at 80 and SO. he becomes infirm and forgetful. I Till a m , the child is an object of com pa s- and 80 are not liable to punishment when guilty of crimes. hen a mau reaches 100 years, then he must be fed. Sunday Magazine. ikaat Mewl Ski we a awe Hlwta. Frwetleal Seal skin is pretty stuff. I can't deny, and the man who had charge of the work told us a nice story about its prep aration. The skins are sent to the man ufacturer packed in salt, and are first of all washed, and then carefully freed from all the fat that remains on the flesh side. Then they are washed once more, and after the grease and water have been removed by a knife, they are tacked on frames to keep them smooth and carefully dried. After another washing the fur is dried by stove heat, the tielt being kept moist, and then the picker puts the warm skin on a beam, and removes the main coat of hair with a dull shoe knife, being careful to pull the hair without bieak iog it ; after doing this thoroughly, he goes over the skin again with another knife and removes all the fine hairs, not touching the for, dries the skin, then dampens it on the pelt side, and shaves it to an even surface. Then the skins are stretched and worked and dried, and are then softened in a fulling-mill or sometimes trodden ont. 1 be wotkman Dings them into a hogs bead from which one head has been removed, puts in a little tine saw-dust to absorb the grease, and dances on them to break them into leather. After this they are dyed, ten or twelve coats being the usual number, and thev are washed once more and the far is dried, the nelt being left moist. Still they are not ready to be made np, and so tbey are shaved again and dried and worked and softened in a hogshead. and then run in a revolving cylinder with tine saw-dust to clean them. lAve-Mtwrlew. For the average man and women a true love-story never loses its charm. Do we not like to live over again the pleasures and the romances of our own voutb. whether in the pages of printed nooks or in tboseever-fresh voluuies.the lives of our children I It ts a mistake to let go our hold on any of the eas'ly attained pleasures of life ; and of them all what so easy of attainment as books tit argues, indeed, a mind both selfish and narrow, no matter with how many historical facts it may be stored, to lose interest in tlieold.evernew love story with which the heart of the world beats for ever. It is a lovely story too the loveliest in the world.' The sky is bluer, the flowers are more fair, and the fields wear a softer green, when the light of this one supreme experience transfigures them. It was divine in its day, for each of us in his tnrn ; and the tales that recall the ancient rapture are not without their charm tot the eves that read them through the spectacles of old age. Iwrtjr Befwrw Perwow. The following anecdote we recom mend to the attention of our readers : John Randolph's prejudices were so bitter that wheu an enemy to whom he had not spoken for years, was nomina ted for some office, no one thought Kandoiph would vote tor him, though of the same party. In those days vot ing was rin race, and when Randolph name was called he cast his vote dis tinctly for the party candidate. This astonished everybody, and the candi date himself was so agreeably surprised that he hopped down from the stand and thanked him for his vote. "I never voted for you sir," replied the irascible Randolph. "Why," said the candidate "I certainly heard you pronounce mv name at the ballot Iwx." 4Oh, ye, said Randolph, "1 used your name, sir 1 used vour name; but I did not vote for you ; voted for my party ! Til Tlrtwee er ailewee. In instances, and many might be men tioned. silence is chiefly used as a pro tective power, and that is no doubt its most obvious, though by no means its only use. In former davs the Fellows of Trinity College, Dublin, were for bidden bv statute to marry; but the violation of the rule, which in fact thev seldom observed, was connived at so long as they maintained a discreet re ticence on their connubial arrangements. aud their wives bore their maiden names in public. One of these wedded celi bates was asked by a friend, who had been much perplexed ou discovering the state of the case, how he managed to hold bis fellowship. "My dear sir," was the reply, "a man can hold any thing who can hold his tongue." It follows, of course, that a man who wears his heart on his sleeve will let everything slip through his finger'. This gift o' silence is characteristic ot the "canny" Scot. A Scotchman will never "tell a lee," but he will make it next to impossible for you to discover what he wishes to conceal. The surgi cal operation which is said to be so requi site for getting a joke into him is equally required for getting anything out of biin when he prelers, as he very fre quently does prefer, to keep his own counsel. He is an adept at beating aliout the bush, v. Inch is another way of say ing that he knows how to bold his tongue. But silence is not merely a protective power. If it often serves to conceal what there might be an indis cretion in betraying, it may also prove positive means of influence The Greeks thought it so dilllcult to "sneak good-omened words that they used the phrase as equivalent to what the Romans more directly termed a "sacred silence." And, great as is the repute which their philosophers, oratots and poets have won by their writings, it is difficult to determine how much of the stiil grander reputation of Socrates is due to his hav ing written nothing. In one sense certainly he was the reverse of silent, but he did not commit his thoughts to paper, and he has been credited we do not say undeservedly with more than the highest wisdom of those who under took to report his utterances,, while their weaknesses are attributed to them selves. How much gain of influences and reputatiou in ordinary life is due to a judicious silence. We have all heard of Lord Thurlow's awful noil, but there are other professions than the law here a sententious silence has proved the se cret of success. How many medical reputations have been built on a capa city for looking wise and saying noth ing! A doctor who knows bow to insinuate by tone and face and gesture his perfect command of the situation, without committing himself to specific assertions, may make a little skill go a long way, aud may even make serious mistakes with impunity. It does not seem so eay for a preacher to trade upon his capacity of reserve, yet even in the clerical profession many have gained the reputation of profound divines and able guides in the spiritual life bv a judicious management of platitudes. Xor would it oe naru to snow, on tne other hand, bow lofty reputations and bril liant prospects have been blighted by too open-mouthed frankness. It matters little what opinions an aspirant for poli tical or clerical promotion may hold, so long as he understands wheu to hold his tongue about them; but a single slip may mar a whole caieer. atawtMage wad a Ckeae AatwnanJwa. So far as we know, no really auto matic player of games of skill has yet been constructed. Babbage devised a machine for playing the lively game called "noughts and crosses," 'which, however, can hardly be called a game of skill. But it is noteworthy that Babbage believed in the possibility of making a really automatic chess player. His reasoning was sound, so far as ab stract possibility is concerned ; though he certainly did not succeed iu showing how the feat was practicady to be ac complished. The argument for the the oretical possibility may be thus presen ted : A chess-board has sixty-four squares and there are thirty-two men. Hence, the actual number of arrange ments of the men Is limited, aud would be so even if each man might stand on any square, ami if there could lie any disproportion between the two forces in poiut of numlier. Bur in reality the number of possible positions is consid erably reduced by the peculiarities be longing to the nature of the game. Thus, a pawn never stands either on the first or eighth rank, while many positions in which the piece might be set up cannot possibly be brought about in actual play. For example, a jiosi tion in which a bishop is anywhere ex cept at bis own square, while the two pawns which prevent bis leaving that square are unmoved, is impossible in actual play, and there are many other positions which cannot result in a real game, tven, however, with all such deductions the number of possible po sitions must be counted by millions. Xow, suppose we take any position whatever, and that it is white's turn to play. There must be some move which is better for him than any other, or to be more exact which is not surpassed in strength by any other move. And It must be possible, by playing a sntli cient number of games from that posi tiou, to find out w hat that move is. We say possible, not meaning practicable. Thousands of games might be played from that position ; still, if thousands of players were set to work to go through these games teriutim, the consequences of every possible line of play from that position could be determined with cer tainty. Xot however, to make the task of the Inventor more arduous than it need be, let us simply suppose that any such selected position - is submitted to the analysis of twenty players of the first class. Then, doubtless, either the very best or, at least, a very effective move would be found for white. Sup pose this done in succession for all the possible positions. (TI.e task of finding a winning move would be in many cases exceedingly easy) This done, aud the results carefully recorded, the bisk of the mechanician begins. What he has to do is to provide that on the formation of any given position by the move of a black piece, mechanism should be star ted which would cause the automaton to make the proper move, already as signed, for white. This Babbage pro nounced to be mechanically. feasible. V'THkill. Peace la the Fa ally: The following excellent rules for pro viding peace in the family have been given : 1. Remember that our will Is likely to be crossed every day, so prepare for it. 3. Evervbody iu the house has an evil nature as well as ourselves, and therefore we are not to expect too much. 3. To learn the different temper and disposition of each Individual. 4. To look on each member or the family as one for whom we should have a care. 5. When anv good happens to anv one to rejoice at it. 6. n hen inclined to give an angr y tnw0r tA ftror.MitTi vil m I r K mml " I 7. If by sickness, pain or infirmity we feel irritable, to keep a very strict watch over ourselves. 8. To observe when others are so suf- fering, to drop a word of kindness and sympathy to them. 9. To watch for little opportunities of pleading, and to pot little anuoyances out of the wav. 10. To take a cheerful view of the weather aud of everything, and to en courage hope. 11. lo sMak kindly to the servants; to praise them for little things when yon can. 12. In all little pleasures which may occur; to put self last. 13. To try for "the soft answer which turneth away wrath." 14. When we have been pained by an unkind word or deed, to ask ourselves: "Have I not often done the same and been forgiven?" 15. In conversation not to exalt our selves, but to bring others forward. IB. To be very gentle with the young ones, ami treat them with respect". 17. Xever to judge one another liarshlv, but to attribute a good motive when we can. Market la a Hawaii ftfanwlete Tow. The market was held in a tiny, open, oval space in front of the church, ami under the shade of two crumbling old houses, which had once, as the heaw cout-of-arms over their portals showed. lieen the riwi of some good SftanLsh fauiilv. The market consisted of two stalls; on one lay buuw-l:,, or oil-cakes, the operation of frying bein then and tnere carried on by the vendor, and a few round crakes of coarse bread; ou the other lay a few shapeless lumps of pork and a basket ot salted sardines this last, fried in oil, being almost the piere d rvxixtaiic of every meal of the Span ish poor. As in every Spauish market, the marked feature was the abundance of succulent, savory vegetables from the tew neighboring Irrigated gardens. The Spaniard, whether rich r iioor, is a vegetarian, vegetables and. fruit form the staple of his diet. The vegetables were piled on the ground iu he:i)s, the women squatting on a rug behind them, the scales lynirf close at baud. Ile.-i were bright carrots aud turnips; here smalt green onions, iull-grown onions, and garlic; here cow-cabbages of fabu lous size; here huge Vularn, or pumpkins, with a skin like the bark of a gnarled oak-tree, and sold in lumps of one pound each for two farthings, the rich deep orange of the flesh look ing quite luscious; here lay a heap of the enormous, but tender llmntmn, or radishes, of Spain; or a heap of fine Ktatoes, and the bright-colored i-i'miV?-!", or cai-ietinis. The scene was strik ing for its simplicity ; even the gentle men of the town were there, draped in their abundant c';wtrji, or cir, carry ing home their tiny bit of meat and their wealth of vegetables for the day's consumption. A lew words were ex changed here and there, but the yltiza was soon stripicd of its wealth, and as the last onion was carried off in tri umph, "clang, clang," went the bell from the old church tower above ns, aud we, with some half dozen ladies, in deep mourning, and five or six men, went in to join in the early witn, and ask for a blessing on "the day that lay before us. TeMj-le lMrr. Stew Www Kkwald Xwt Saawfce. 1 here are two men who should never smoke where they can be seen the little, lean man, aud the handsome. wen proportioned man. ine large tat man can smoke publicly with some propriety. His cigar Scemsasthe glow ing of the small iutelleet'ial fire within hi ui. which the waters of his dropsy or the tricklins of beer through his vast frame nilht speedily extinguish if there were no nrti tidal beat and light from the ouL-lde. I be handsome well pro iiortioned man alwavs apiiears ridicu lous in smoking, because the addition of the tobacco a flection makes him look ill-balanced and imitative of inferior men. The little, lean man should never, under any circumstances, allow him self to be visible while he is taking his smoke. A small thin man, with small, thin legs, smoking on the street in the early morning, is one of the most dis- tres.ing Mghis that the human eye can look iiMn. The iierson behind him is constantly apprehensive that the fragile body just ahead is about to evaiorate; that the small frame mav dissolve ami ascend in the eiirling ghostly tobacco smoke; that the little smoker may be some belated spirit, and that prcsenllv a faint shriek or a rushing sound will be heard and the disapjiearauce be ren dered complete. The tobacco habit Is a curious aud appalling thing at times, aud it has its mysterious terrors as w ell as its trivial annoyain-es. Linitrillt VuHner-Jimmnl. Tke Ktwcljr wf Ewallak C'waapMltiww. The I-ord Chief Justice, in distribu ting prizes at the Birkbeck In.-tiutioii the other day, made some seasonable remarks on the danger of neglecting our own tongue in our zeal for various kinds of cull nre. "May I be allowed to suggest," he said, "that in. the exam inations English composition has not quite so prominent a place as it ought to occupy? Xoone bow with a more profound ami reverent worship at the shrine of science than I do; no one values more highly than I do classical attainments. .Nevertheless, allow me to say tiiat 1 know of no study more valuable to an Englishman than the study of Englinh. Xothing is more val uable than the power of English com position, English oratory and English elocution ; and greatly as I value clas sical knowledge and the knowledge of foreign languages, I still say that the English language and English couiio sitiou are of the first importance to Englishmen." A warning voice such as this is needed. If the only effect of the present zeal for education is to ex tend bad precedents, it w ill bind the land in educational fetters from which there will be no after possibility of es cape. Our educationists should give more thought to the subjects taught. L"H-t"H Examiner. t'rllirls We should imagine that any person who has had much to do with the writ ing or the reading of criticism would be glad to go to heaven. If it is not one of the good points of that place of the de sire of hearts, that it is exempt from the mortal necessity of forming an instant opinion npon every subject in nature aud art, then it is not what It has been represented to be. The necessity of de cision as to the intrinsic and relative merits of all things nnder and aliove the it it is not a necessity felt only by those who are associated as critics or creators with matters of art ; the taint is in the atmosphere. People in or near the cities, at least, do not enjoy pictures or books any more; they form an opinion about them. The main thought in the mind of even a young person wheu you put a book into his band is not, Is it interest ing and enjoyable? but, What ought, could, would or should I think about it? Let us hope that somewhere on the Western prairies, or dow n among the V irgiuia mountains, or among the Xew Jersey pines, there are people who can read books and look at pictures k at pictures like human beings. Srrihner'e Monthly. The citizens of Xatick propose erect a monument to Henry Wilson. lotrrnr colchx. A Seiitatio Among the FToxvrt. Dear Jack," writes a little maid, who signs herself "Kulerbood',' "may I tell what I an? almost sure happened last summer?' "Certainly you may, answers your iacK. But the little maid, without waiting to bear the gracious permission, goes on : The roses in the nrettv schoolmis tress's garden blushed deeply at their own lnsinincance ; the violets, sorrow ing. hung their heads: and the snow white lilies trembled with desnair on the day the gardener sowed the new seed witn the big names. "Oh. dear, dear !" said th rose, "the gentle schoolmistress will not care for us plain, old-fashioned flowers anv mere, after the agrostemmacoeli-roaea aud tne mnaiuiie jalapa bloom." "The gardener often writes their names with capitals, while he begins mniewiin a nine sain the lily. ue niignt at least r rencnify yours wmi au icy- repiiea tne wall-nower "but I suppose we must inst be nre pared to accept the unenviable nouirmn of neglected flowers : no doubt we shall henceforth .waste our sweetness on the desert air." But Summer came, and with it the blossoms of the fearfully and wonder fully named agrostemma eoeli-ru:i and the mirabilis jalapa grandinora. aiiu aura me ecuooimisiress walked in the garden, she said : These weeds are so troublesome; I w ill pull them up, so that my dear violets may have more room to rn." and she threw the agrostemma cocli rosea superbum over the fence ! Xext she saw the mirabilis laLini giandittora in full bloom. 'Dear me." she exclaimed. "I wonder what Hans planted more four o'clocks for! I bad plenfv in the back a? irden already. But they are sweet, old- fashioned flowers, ana I will let them grow here, if thev don't overrun mv jewels the roses, lilies, violets and the dear old wall-flowers." Then the rose smiled, and the wall flower sent forth its sweetest fragrance, the violet peeped ont shyly from its green leaves, anu the snow-white lily ur uivo aiivcr iu tue seiUDg sun. Of. .1 ICHOUIS. rater Ploff. know a little bov whose real name we will say is 1'eter Parsons; but the boys call him Peter Putoff. because he haa such a way of puriiug on ootn business and pleasure. He can learn his lessons well, but he is almost always at the bottom of his class, because he has put off learning ins uisk irom one nour to another nntu it is too late, He can walk or ran aa fast as any boy in town ; but if he is sent on an errand the errand never gea done in season, because he puts off start ing irom one minute to another; and for the same reason he is almost always late at Renvoi, because he can never lie made to see that it is drawinir near to o'clock. If tetters are given him to post they never get in in time for the mail : and if he is to go away by the boat or train. the wnoie family lias to exert itself to nurry 1'eter ont of the house, lest he should defer sarrting nntil the hour be past. He procras'inates in his play as in his woik. He puts off reading his li brary book until it is time to send it back ; he waits to join the game till it ia too late, and generally comes up a little behindhand for everv thing, from Monday morning till Saturday night, and then begins the new week by Ite ing too late for Church and Sunday School. Peter is quite conscious of his own fault, aud means to reform some time; but be puts off the date of refor mation so constantly that I fear man hood and old age. which do not know bow to put off their seasons, will over take this boy and find him still only too worthy of the name of Peter Pntoff. Chil,l W orld. A Humming-Bird Story. Summer betore last, a humming-bird new into the sittingroom of a lady who loves birds and flowers very much. She talked to it in a gentle, pleasant tone ; but, alter a short call, it Hew away. Son, ater, it rame again for another fashionable call. The third time it rame, it brought its mate; and they were so well pleased with their kind reception, that they continued their visits all through the snmmer. How do yon thiuk the lady fed themT With sweetened water fiom a petunia blossom, which she held in her hand. They would sip from it again and again, ami seemed to relish it greatly. Daring the winter, of course their visits ceased: but, in the spring, the bints again appeared at the window. The lady ranted it, and in they tie w; showing as much delight as it was pos sible for such little things to show. A few days since, there were no less than live humming-birds in the room at one lime. So, it seems, the birds that rame first told their frieuds where they would be welcomed, and enter tained with "refreshments at all hours." The Alpine ra. The Alpine horn is an instrument made of the bark of a cherry tree, and, like a speaking trum pet, is used to convey sounds to a great distance. When the last rays of the sun gild the summit of the Alps, the shep herd who iuhabil the highest peak of these mountains takes his horn, and cries with a loud voice, "Praised be the Lord. As soon as the neighboring shepherds hear him, they leave their huts, and repeat these words. The sounds are prolonged many minutes, while the echoes of the rocks repeat the name of God. Imagination cannot picture anything more solemn and su blime than such a scene. Dnring the silence that succeeds, the shepherds bend their knees, and pray in the open air, then repair to their huts to rest. The sunlight gilding the tops of these stupendous mountains, upon which the vault of heaven seems to rest, the mag nificent scenery around, and the voices of the shepherds sounding from rock to rock the praise of the Almighty, fill the mind of every traveller with en thusiasm and awe. ""Cause If Sunday." This same lady waa eu tei taming the Bishop of the State at her house as he was an old and val ued friend of the family and was al ways their guest on the occasion of bis visitations to the parish. On Sunday morning after bis arrival the lady's little son sidled no to him just after breakfast. "tsishop ' said be, won Id you like to look at my piggie book V "Why, yea,1 replied the church dig nitary, anxious to please the little fel low. "Well." whispered the child. "Ill show it to yon, but yon'll have to look at it on the sly.canse it's Sunday." The idea of the "very reverend father in God" aiding and abetting one of bis flock in a breach of the Sabbath was so amusing to the good prelate that, of course he could not keep the joke to himself. jienj lark MaiL As Detroit man was disrsrinir in hU garden his wife appeared at the door. and shouted : "Come, you old fraud coae in to dinner?" Ashe did not come she opened the door nrettv anon and yelled: "H-lirt you eominsr to 1 dinner, you blasted" she saw a neigh to bor iu the garden along with her hu- band, and finished "old darling you ! IXWS IS BSHT. Scab root, X. II., has a log house built In 1038. . . The Baltimore and Savannah Steam ship Company is bankrupt. Shingle-makers take courage ! Vice President Ferry used to work at the same trade. Pronouncing bees" take the place of spelling schools in the West. They are pronounced a success. A seven hundred pound meteorite found in Gn enland, is on the way to Philadelphia for the centennial During the last week of last year, ' there were suspended in this country and Canada, eleven newspapers. Among the items of expenditure iu the United States is the slight one of $iO0,0OO,OOO annually for iutoxicating drink. A Xewburg (X. Y.) female teacher whipped 35 boys and girls in a row. the other day, for missing a lesson iu geographv. A Massachusetts clergvman re duced his own salary 1,0W). It is scarcely necessary to sav that his name is not given. - It is estimated tnat 80,000 qnart of fresh milk aud 4000 quarts of condensed . milk are consumed daily in Brooklyn, ; at an expense of about $9000. , A Duluth assessor savs it Is posi- ' tivelv amazin? how cheat) nronertv be- : comes as he passes up or down a street. ' It falls seven per cent, whenever he enters a house. Our railways are rapidly destrov- : ing onr forests, the wood for ties alone : requiring the leveling of 2.J,0J0 acres i of forest annually. ' Cleveland, O., gives tramps their '. choice between leaving the city bv the shortest road and cleaning the streets to pay or their meals. A couple of Bridgeport. Conn.. ' families have built a tweuty-foot hoard fence between them, so as lo keep from tearing each other's hair out. The Lynn shoemakers have revived ' the order of Kuighu of St. Crispiu.am! called a national convention to revive ; the order through the U. S. and Canada. Since the 1st. of Octolier twentv- ; five deer have been taken on the hills ' of Steuben county, between the Caiiis- teo and Cohocton rivers, ew ork state. - There have been twentv seven ' Speakers of the national House of Ret- . rescntatives, of w hich Massachusetts i has had three, Yaroum, Winthrop ami t ianas. , -r.--.-i Maj. Gen. Custer, the Indian fighter i has been visiting Major Barn urn iu Bridgeport ; and the showman has nre- sen ted the fighter with a uuiuher of - English fox hounds. ' It may not be generally known but " it is nevertheless true, that ex-Speaker Blaine's ancestors were natives ol" I .un do n County, Va.. where manv of his distant relatives reside. The sheriff at Rochester doesn't : ask a reiiomination. He refused atiotit 13.000 people permission to see Clark hung, and he knows that each one would vote against him. Judge Cole, of the Supreme Court of Iowa, has resigned his sent because the pay Is too small to provide for bis family and the labor too severe to per mit him to perform extra work. There w ill be at least 1,200 French exhibitors at the Centennial, two-thirds of whom are Parisian merchants. Thirty thousand articles of merchan dise will be forwarded to the Exhibi tion. The Inniau steamship comnanv. it is said, will soon order two yery large new steamers and will have them built in this country so as to be able to fly the stars and stripes in the Centennial year. The Catholic Total Abstinence Union, of Philadelphia, have resolved not to parade on the 17th of March, but instead, will make everv effort to render the parade on the 4th of July next worthy of the Centennial. The amount of capital I.ivested iu manufacturing enterprises in Louis ville, Ky., is about f-J),00,000; the number of workmen emnloved Iti.Ono: the total wages paid S,000,000, and the annual product 155,000,000. The Raleigh Sentinel savs there is a negro Iu that city 100 years old. His ; name Is John Hunter. He reiuemliers seeing Tarleron's dragoons passing the place during the great Xortli Carolina campaign of the Revolution. The American members of the 1 Byron memorial committee, at the head of whom is Mr. Wm. Cullen Brvant. will receive and acknowledge subscrlu- ! tions of one dollar and upward. About $500 have already been subscribed here, i The-rresident of the Boston and ' Providence Railroad has been disco v- ' ered in a freak of ecceutricitv which has been the occasion of much talk. Before reducing the wages of the work- ' men on the road he has authorized the reduction of his own pay. The H'Ma' Jimrmtl claims that . women printers were known half a ' century before the Revolution. A wo man, Margaret Draper, of Boston, con ducted the first newspaper in America. ue original Declaration of Indenen- : denee was printed by Mary Catharine fJoddaroV ' " - The Sacramento Vallev Beet Huarar Company have nearly completed their manufacture tor the year, having ob tained about 300,000 pounds from about i.iwu tons or beets, lhe ground planted this year yielded four and a half tons to the acre; the beets eleven and a half per cent of sugar. The vital statistics of the present freshman class at Amherst, as just taken by Dr. Hitchcock, present the follow ng averages; Aze.VJ.)J years; weight 134,944 pounds; height, 5,584 feet; best girth, 3a,oSl inches; arm girth, 1,270 inches; forearm. 10.779 Inches: lung capacity, l'J.317 cubic inches. Jacob Kyle, a miserably old apple and peanut peddler of Rochester who has scraped together about $100,000 had little nve-year obi boy arrested aud brought into court the other day for stealing a board worth one rent to play shinny with; but the Judge discharged the youthful criminal with a mild lec ture. A large New foundland dog belong, g to the keeper of the lighthouse at Bear Island, Me. is of great value to the captain of the steamer Lewiston in foggy weather, when the light cannot be seen. He barks from the time he rst hears the paddle-wheels until the engineer salutes him with the whistle. wnen ne waits on witn great satisfac tion. Col. John Hav. of Cleveland, for merly of the Xew York Tribune, has been appointed by the United State entennial Commission, at Philadel phia, to deliver, on the ill of Jul v next. an oration on the life and character of Richard Livingstone, a prominent signer of the Declaration, of American Independence. It will not only . be worth listening to, but worth remeiu- bering,