.... ,- . , - w,v,,. -:---... -. ..r ' ' . Z. n" riW- naffifr' ni Proprietor. F. SCHWEIER, THE C05STIT0TI0N TH1 C5I03 AKD IHB ZKFOBCE STENT OF TH1 LAWS. TOJL XIX. MIFFLDOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., APRIL 5. 1876. THE CROSS-ROADS. When the roads crossed we net, My lore and I ; In the near bey the ahipe Tossed heavily. Lamps were gone oat on earth. Cat those in heaven Trembled, for two more heart That God bath men. Bis accents broke the pause My tongne was tied ; He foond last words to say My sobs replied. Then he drew my white face Cp to the light, And said: "Farewell, poor lore Dear lore, good night !" At the cross-roads we kissed I stood alone. His was the seaward road. Mine led me home. He called, "I shall return V I knew, "not so Sot one ia ten returns Of those that go. Dreary the great world grew. And the son cold ; So young, an hour ago, I bad grown old. Oar Ood made me for him ; We loved each other ; Yet fate gave him one road. And me another. Tom Hay ward's Proserpine. "Lower the boat and let her drift!" This was the order given by the captain of the brig Levant, coasting one cloudy midsummer night along the western shore of X . The Incredulous sailor hesitated to obey. A second or der, brutally made explicit, left him no choice. Into the boat the enraged captain had flung rather thau lifted a woman and a child. "What do you say now?" he asked, as the hastily lowered boat rocked gid dily betwixt sea and deck. "Do you repent your rash oath?" "Never!" answered firmly and fear- lesslv a woman's calm voice. "I prefer this." "Cut her loose !" cried the master to the subaltern, who of all his crew was. morally as well as physically, his slave; while, livid with rage, his face glared upon the woman one parting look. The boat was cut loose. The. brig levant veered on its tack; the Doat, with its silent burden, fell hopelessly astern; the rolling waves, the darkness, fell between. The woman, hardly more than a child in years sixteen years she might have known at the most remained passively unobservant, instinctively hugging her child to her breast. One wild scene had revealed to her the terrors of Life and obliterated forever the terrors of Death. The boat bounded along not ongently, The sea was not running high, and the night air was not chilling. J lie clouds. lowering closely against the face of the waters, so as effectually to shut away all light from the sky, were surcharged, it seemed, with gentlest rain, ueatn was inevitable, but it was not harsh. To go down into the oblivion-bearing embrace of the sea, to sink deep into the bosom of the never-ceasing sleep what were the few pangs that might mark against the heart the edge or this engulfing? Was there anything to be feared after that? All terrible aspects of destruction had passed in the parting glare of one human race. "My baby, too!" contentedly sighed the girl. What was it, then, that made her , suddenly start and quake? Nothing but a sensation of cold against the palm of her left hand, that had lovingly laid dormant beside the babe's foot a sen sation of strange cold, startling her nerves, piercing her heart, from the little baby's loot. By one of those singular transitions that only the most subtle analysis of mental mechanism can unveu, a sudden change occurred In the outcast girl, arousing her from stupid apathy to eager life, "The land where Is the land?" her lips gasped, while her eyes, grown sud denly Intense, peered through the glooming space. Surely they were drifting shoreward. Surely she saw the looming of great rocks. Yes, and now the flashing of a light. They were borne in bravely on the upbearing. One great wave, and now another, friendly and gigantic, lifted the boat upon its shoulders and urged it oa. Only the rocks were opposing bars. On each bar the billows broke with a shock. On these bars the boat was stricken plank from plank; but the girl, with a voice rendered keen by the motherly pang at her breast, sent shriek and scream through the night, with her eyes fixed on the Fight, crying, "Help! help! help!" Tom Hay ward, one of the most matter-of-fact men among mortals, had what he did not believe in at all- Dresentiment that night. He was sit ting idly smoking a cigar in the sea ward verandah ol his hotel witn a tew lounging companions, who had been persuading him. forbidding as the weather was, to go to the theatre of an adjacent town to see a star actress in a provincial cast; and he had been lazily considering whether to accept the pro position, when a sudden impulse, strong enough to impel him from his noncha lant attitude resolutely to his feet, struck him with this clearly expressed intent: "Excuse me, for I must go down to my cave. I have left D 's manu script and R 's packet of African rough diamonds upon my escritoire shelf, and the postern gate unlocked. He declined the proposal for the even ing in town peremptorily, and went towards the cliffs. "Confound my cul- pible inertia!" he muttered to himseii ; 'it h hrpd these incoherent vagaries of the braiu. What made me think that some one is knocking at the sea gate to night, knocking and crying ,or neipr Not an ocular illusion, certainly; an auricular illusion I have never heard of. I suDiiose such a complaint may exist. A nervous irritation of the tym panum this undoubtedly is. The sounds were low, but so distinct. At any rate, I am on the track," Walkinir at a brisk pace. Tom Hay- ward turned from a paved causeway of a high road that stretched over tne bluffs a mile or more beyond the hotel, strode across a sunburned moorland into a devious seaward path, and, leap ing down sharp-hewn steps in the rock, encountered a door formidably con structed of iron, the "postern gate" left this night accidentally unlocked that opened into a masonried passage connecting the beetling crags with the subterranean vault known as Hay ward's Cave. Under the seaward gate of this cavern in the cliff lay a horseshoe-shaped cur vature of beach. And on this beach Tom Hayward, answering a vague cry for help, inaudible save to an inward sense, whose existence bad forced itself into recognition for the first time In his life, found a girl in clothing drenched by brine, evidently a waif of the sea, and just awakening from a death-like swoon an exquisitely sweet-featnred girl, whose relaxing grasp bad unloosed a dead baby from her breast. Three days after the unheralded event of a woman found half drowned noon the beach, and a dead child buried In the sands by hands unfamiliar with such rites, the following letter by a young man spending his vacation at X was dropped in the Northern post: "Mi dear ArorsTA, I promised to give you detailed account of my im pressions of X . As we are off at 3 p. m. to-day on a boating excursion to the Isle or , I have all my pisca torial preparations jet to make, and most necessarily be brief. "Postponing, then, a full narration of minor incidents until we meet, I will describe to you merely the experience which, I am sure (considering the cap tivating personnel of our host irre sistible, I am told, to you girls), will Interest you and your sister most my evening at Tom Uayward's cave. "Two or three fellows of Hay ward's set have indulged iu the luxury of caves down here; and the fitting up of the sea facing caves has been a rage this season. But nothing so far compares to his. We were invited down to S)iend last evening an informal invitation to C and N and myself. The ap proach, directly seaward from the road, and wild in the extreme, has been some what assisted by art. A tiled excava tion leads by a fantastically lighted passage into a cavern some thirty feet, I should think, above high water-n ark. opening in a wide mouth directly upon the sea, and owing to a gully beneath it which forces the waves into curious columns more vociferous than 'howling wilderness,' dashed wildly by spray. and for several feet within the rugged entrance made slippery with sea-weeds. "Our visit was on a tranquil night; but a measured booming sound, made resonant by some acoustic properties of the caverned arch, announced the near ness of the 'mighty deep.' We soon became accustomed to tbe ceaseless roar, and settled ourselves comfortably to a game of whist. "But I forget. I must picture the cavern itself, and the simple black and white of paper and ink can hardy do this. The interior is au Apocalypse of color; the draperies of copper-colored satin Orientally embroidered in bril liant silks; the pictures; the musical instruments set with gems colored crystals, 1 presume; the lights arranged in tinted groups, like flower arrange ments in Parisian taste; the flowers, exotic blossoms upheld against Uie cav ern walls iu carved easels or racks ; the Indian rugs; the couches quilted with Cashmere shawls; the sombre book cases inlaid with colored hieroglyphics significant to the initiated, no doubt; the bronzes and marbles gleaming from mysterious niches in the rock ; au alcove for refreshments but that I will leave to describe at leisure. Last eveniug it ministered to masculine taste; but at times when ladies are invited, every thing is made to 'suffer a sea-change' ices shaped and tinted like shells, dishes and goblets conchological from helix to nautilus. "Opposite the refectory is a veiled niche, and the white lace dropped to the ground is so heavily embossed with embroidery of gold, that, although it looks transparent, it is an absolute screen. I emphasize this fact on ac count of au episode of the evening, which I may as well tell you at once. "We had played two or three games of whist, regaled ourselves with Uay ward's choice cordials and cigars, and the evening was drawing to its close, when, from behind the embroidered curtain arose the music, with harp ac companiment, of the sweetest, most plaintive voice that 1 have ever heard. The effect was magical; involuntarily every man of us 'might have been seen' with dropped cards, leaning our heads pensively upon our hands. 'Each thought of the woman who loved him best.' "Never have I heard, my dear Au gusta, such a penetrative, haunting voice. Well, all our imploring and in sisting demands upon Hayward failed to force him to uplift the veil and re veal the fair songstress. And for this reason, we all surmised; her form and face belied her voice, and Hayward would not for the worlds have destroyed the suggestive effect. Indeed, upon re flection, and assisted somewhat by N 's technical musical perception, I was convinced that the voice had the one rift in its divine lute of incipient age. A faded prima donna,' N said. A woman, I thought,' whose in tense power outlived her life. You know it is said that no actress can ade quately play the - part of Shakespeare's heroines until the bloom of youth is past, and consequently the thrilling accord of material and immaterial is lost. "At any rate, the song like the "one look of passion' that Lainartine says 'sweeps the keys' of that charming 'in strument,' the face of youth swept the keys of our somewhat inured but not yet age-worn hearts. "But Augusta, my dear friend since you will ouly allow me to call you by that name I must conclude. Could yea see the rampant melee of vandals who have just flocked into my not sj cious room, you would know why. I will continue my cave story in my next for there is a finis. But if the fishing is good, we may remain at the island tillSaturday; so do not be anxious if you receive no word till Monday's mail. Meanwhile accept, with my reminis cence of the sweetest music I ever heard, the dearest idealization of friendship that so far has blessed the fond but frowned-ou heart of your faithful Cbari.es." Not one of Tom Hayward 's comrades conjectured the reason of his refusal made at tbe last moment to accompany the fishing excursion planned by him self. Twilight of that memorable day found him at the now carefully kept locked gateway of his cave, exploring the Libels of manifold packages desited upon the broad paving-stoue curbing of the postern gate. All sorts of the most effeminate delicacies these packages held. The jovial cave had become a tender hospice. Tom Hayward was entertaining a guest. As he summed up mentally the contents of these pack ages, his face a kind, frank, not par ticularlv intellectual, but essentially manly face, wore an iufinitely satisfied look' . . ,. , He found his guest in the dimly lighted interior reclining upon a couch ; but the moment that be uttered the sig nal which in the first emotion of plea sure he forgot, she sprang up to meet him. .. . . ' "No more of these wuu nignts ior " he said, presently. "My friends are all going away till the end of the week, xoa snaii u , r" peace. A laltniui waicnuiau stationed just outside your curtain at your feet. Yes, truly, I have come to sUv for good : are you glad ? 'k)h, so glad!" said the girt. "And last night I did not die of fright." "Why not.' "Because a mask is being drawn over the cruel face. And it Is your nana, my benefactor can I ever be grateful to you enough ? that has done this. I begin to see afar oil oh, but very far off 1 that life is or may be, might be, perhaps, sweet." "My dear child," said Hayward, "depend upon it, life is a treat. The past your past, 1 mean is simply a bad dream. Consider it so; and now awake. Come and show me where I shall put some of these things which I found dropped down for you at my gate." Ah, the strange, unworld-like, child like, devout happiness of that night! Hayward actually beguiled his guest into the extravaganza of smiles, the unknown rarity of her young lips. Had the whole aspect of her place of refuge been less strange, less unreal and like a dream ; had her rescuer been less ofi-hand, debonair, aud boyishly kind and good ; less inherently ehival ric, and so apart from any being she had known, the mental shock which had left her nothing in life of hope, and the physical exhaustion incident to the excitement of the rough mode of her advent to the cave, would norhave been so readily counteracted. This place of rest was to her a complete new world. She had been dead, and come to life. Her experience was a realization of "an owning paradise," until memory should be re-established, and life, that never loses itself in more than momentary dreams, should catch up its lost links. Reaction came. One day when Hay ward had been absent many hours, he returned with something like an ex pression of care, and "to have," he said, "a serious talk." He had thrown himself Into an arm chair with a weary air, and his guest drew a cushion near, and seated herself at his feet. It was the nearest attitude of affection she had assumed; it ex pressed gratitude, the trusting subser vience of her heart. "I will not ask yon," he said "you know I have not aked you for days to tell me anything of the history of your past. It is enough for me to know that this woman here is you. I trust you perfectly, as you trust me; but I can no longer shelter you here. I knew this could be but a brief haven for you from the first; and I have been studiously making arrangements for you such as seem lor the present best. I want you to-morrow morning to arrange your lit tle wardrobe awkwardly chosen, I fear it is, I am such a novice; and at noon that is the time when we are most de serted here I shall have a carriage waiting for you at the brow of the cliff." The girl while he was speaking hail turned deadly pale; she leaned her head, with a sigh of pain, against his knee. "I made a solemn vow," said Hayward "a resolution, I mean, to myself that while you remained my guest in this cave I would not speak to you of any thing Uiat has bearings upon outside life. But to-morrow 1 shall be released from this voluntary restraint. I shall visit you to-morrow eveuing in the house where I have arranged to have you brought, ami then you will find how a blunt downright fellow like myself is ready with good advice. And always" for she looked grief-stricken beyoiid power of words to express "always, forever you know thin for ever your friend." It was nine o'clock by his watch when Hayward left his cave. He returned at eleven. He was priding himself, as he descended the steps, that Impressible as be had been to the charms of his guest complete, incomparable, they seemed to him in form and voice and mind and clearly as he had seen that grati tude in her was the quick key of love, the key that his hand held he had never, in tenderness for her isolation, conveyed to her by word or look the passionate thought which assured him day and night that this waif of the wild sea was the woman among all women destined to he Dearest his heart. H prided himself upon the silence that was to wreak uKn him from that hour forth the ceaseless slaying of re gret. Unlocking the gate, he gave the sig oal of return ; he entered the enshrin ing space with the joyous pulse of ex pectation. The silence at first did not shock him, the emptiness of the dimly illuminated corridor opening upon the wide sea did not at once alarm. He waited for the tremulous uplifting of that curtain which had become to him dcliciously mysterious, like the veil of a bride. He waited, but she came not. He sought her at last with the wild im pulse of one stricken with the remorse like dread of an inevitable fate. What storms swept through his breast as he tore each curtain from its place, as he stretched his groping hand into each darkling niche, as he knew step by step the growing knowledge that she had left him, that she was gone gone back forever into the breast of the dark wave upon whose crest she had been one mo ment lifted to see that life may be, might be, perhaps, sweet; what storms swept his breast, the wildest leap and most despairing wailing of the sea, that year and year dashed up beside the lonely cavern to teach it the woes of the vast abyss, were in comparison but a fairy ripple and a whispered laugh. Every heart hides its own Avemus. But strange it seems that a man like Tom Hayward, the jovial boon-companion of careless, fortunate young men, tbe bright-hearted favorite of the pirls, the generous, the gay, the smil ing, honored guest at the feast of life, should have learned that fatal descent. In the midst of some convivial scene, in the midst of music and of dance, there comes into his frank, bright eyes a dimming, absent-minded glance. Iu the very sanctum of his soul one passionate dear remembrance drags from the flower-strewn field of earth the beautiful doomed Proserpine of his life. Lei as Help Aaalaer. 'This little sentence should be written on every heart and stamped on every memory. It should be the golden rule practiced not only in every household, but throughout the world. By helping one another we not only remove thorns from the pathway and anxiety from the mind, but we feel a sense of pleasure iu our own hearts, knowing we are doing a duty to a fellow creature. A helping handorau encouraging word, is no loss to us, yet it is a benefit to others. Who has not felt the power of this lit tle sentence? Who has not needed the encouragement and aid of a kind friend ? How soothing, when perplexed ' with some task that is mysterious and bur densome, to feel a gentle band on the shoulder and to hear a kind voice whis pering, "Do not feel discouraged. I see your trouble let me help you. What a strength is inspired, what hope created, what sweet gratitude is felt, and the great difliculty is dissolved as dew beneath the sunshine. Yet, let ns help one another by endeavoring to strengthen and encourage the weak and lifting the burden of care from the weary and oppressed, that life may glide smoothly on and the fount of bit terness yield sweet water; and He, whose willing hand is ever ready to aid us, will reward our bumble endeavors, and every good deed will be as "bread cast upon the waters to ieturn after many days," if not to us, to those we love. First EzperleaeesaraCktaeaeBlaaer. At dinner, we had all sorts of queer dishes, many of them very palatable; but alas! for me, there were only chop sticks to eat with I And my predica ment was very much that of the stork when invited to dine with the fox. All my essays were in vain ; tbe dainty titbits I was longing to taste would not be coaxed between the ends of my deli cately carved chop-sticks, and my eating was a very burlesque, which my gentle manly host and his well-bred family vainly tried not to notice. At length be apologized by saying that he sup posed I would prefer, at a Chinese table, to use tbe chop-sticks; and he then ordered a knife, fork and spoon to be brought for me. Tea was served in tiny silver tea-pots that held less than half a pint, aud each was placed on a silver waiter with fine little porcelain cups, without saucers or spoons, sugar or cream. This is the way the Chinese always drink tea, and one of these miniature services is placed before each guest, while a servant stands by to our the tea and replenish the tea-pot when needed. After d'.nner we had some music, several games were played for my special entertainment, and my host showed me a rare collection of paintings done by the famous artist, Lang Qua. I was urged to remain for the night, but preferring to return, the sedan chairs were ordered to the door, and, attended by the son of my host, I took my de parture, loaded with gifts from my hospitable entertainers. As the presents were all wrapped in tissue paper, I did not examine them till I reached my own home. Each contained the card of the donor; a pair of vases from the lady of the house, a silver card-case from her husband, a wreath of wax flowers, only less lovely than her own fair self, from the gentle bride, and a pair of chop sticks, with which,I have no doubt, the donor thought 1 needed special practice, from the waggish younger son of mine host. St. Xickotas. Lee; taxis-The Hasrtasarked Masl- cImb. Long ago there lived at Aix-la-Cha-pelle two musicians both of whom were hunchbacked. But a great difference existed in their faces and characters. Friedel was well looking and aimable, a fine musician, for his soul was full of goodness and it found expression through the tones of his violin, itut Heinz had ugly red hair and a more ugly temper, and his playing was so unmusical that none ever listened to him for pleasure. Thus it happened that Fried le and his violin were always in demand for all occasions of merry making and frolic, while Heinz was lett unemployed. Now Friedel loved Agatha, the daughter of a rich wine merchant, and she, perceiving his soul and forgetting his deformity, returned his love. All went well with the lovers themselves, but knowing the pride and love of money of the maiden's father, they determined not to speak to him uulil they should be compelled to do so. At last a very rich suitor desired Agatha for his bride, and obtained her father's consent. Then it was that Friedel was obliged to speak, though with sinking heart. The wine merchant drove him away with harsh words. Poor Friedel, quite distracted, wandered, he knew not whither. It was late when the chilling dews recalled him to his senses and he sought the town. As he approached it strange sounds were in the air aud sights more marvellous met his gaze. Daws and all sorts of night birds were screaming, and above the tops of the houses the broom-riding witches were trooping. And all made their way to the fish-market, or Par wisch, as it was called, in Aix la-Cha-pelle. Friedel also went there, and great was his amazement at what he saw. The square was illuminated . by little flames in tbe air, and crowds of female figures were moving about. Then Friedel remembered that this was quarter-day, and the witches were said to hold a pinic on that day in this very square. As he thought of this a woman, who looked very much like the mayoress of the town and seemed to be the leader of the others, advanced to meet him and led him to a table loaded with all kinds of delicacies and delicious beverages. She invited him to eat, and after he had refreshed himself, placed in his hand a violin aud asked him to play music for dancing. As soon as the violin sounded, they moved away the tables and seats aud prepared to dance. It gave Friedel a very novel sensation to perceive that while all appeared to be busily talking and laughing, no sound reached his ears. Soon the lady president gave the signal to begin; then the violin of Friedel seemed as if bewitched, for In spite of him it would go quicker and more quickly, and the dancers faster and more swiftly till all was as witch like as could well be. At length Frie del fell on a seat exhausted, aud the lady-president thanked him for his sweet music, and commanded him to kneel and receive his reward. Then she whispered words of strange sound above him, and laid her hand on his poor deformed shoulders, and quickly removed the hump from them and placed it in a dish which she instantly closed. As she did this the clocks sounded the hour of one and in a twink ling all vanished and Friedel was alone. Weary and confused, he hastened home, and to bed, where for the remainder of the night strange dreams came to him. But in the morning he found the most wonderful part of all to be true. He was straight and comely in form as In face; moreover, a goodly sum of money was in the pocket of his jacket; enough to make him equal to any of the suitors of Agatha. As soon as possible be re paired to the house of the wine merchant, and told him his story under the prom ise of secresy. Now his reception was quite different from the former one, but it was more the sight of the money that decided tbe merchant to make Friedel his son-in-law than the loss of the hump. Then were the lovers made happy. Although this adventure of Friedel's was to be a secret. It escaped in some way, and among others Heinz heard the story. His envy and hatred of Friedel, which had been bitter enough before, were increased, and he reported wicked stories of Friedel and accused him of the most immoral Intercourse with the witches. But he secretly determined to attend their picnic on the next quarter day and try bis fortune among them. Now as he came to the fish-market the same scene met his gaze as that which Friedel had beheld, and Heinz advanced boldly, bearing his own violin, and making signs that he was willing to play, i'he dance was formed but Heinz was so occupied in gazing avariciously at the plate on the table that he forgot bis music and played even more dis cordantly than was his custom. Soon the dance became a race, and Heinz be lieved he was doing so well as to give the witches great pleasure, when they all ran up to him and shook their fists at him. He had also been so unwise as to call by name some wives of the town be thought he recognized. When the lady-president commanded him to kneel be thought it was time to claim a re ward, so he seized a large gold drinking cup. The lady gave him so smart a box ou the ear that be gladly dropped the cup; she then took from a tightly covered dish the very hump she had taken off the shoulders of Friedel; and fastened it on the breast of Heinz. At that instant the clock struck one and he was left alone. Who can describe the rage and despair of Heinz? He added also to his misfortune by foolishly tell ing the story, and thus became the laughing-stock of the whole city. Only Friedel felt sorry for him, and he, out of his goodness of heart, maintained Heinz comfortably all the rest of his days. Eacllsfcanea asd Cterauui Ladles. I have seen, says a writer in Fraer for January, English gentlemen intro duced without due preparation, into strictly German circles, made misera ble for a whole evening, and finally driven to the verge of distraction by the gentle persistent attention of tbe ladies of the bouse. When be realises that be is being waited upon by these fair damsels the Englishman jumps wildly and apologetically from his chair, stammers confused and bashful excuses, clutches tbe cups aud platters out of the ministering angel's hand, and subsides, red and rultied. into his seat. He hopes it will not happen again ; he devoutly trusts it is over. Bus no : scarcely is his complexion re covering its normal hue, when mother lovely being is "staying him with ap plesbringing him butter in a lordly dish or ottering sausages lit his shrine. Again he bounces out of his seat like an India-rubber ball, again clutches convulsively, apologizes, confounds himself in horrible polyglot inarticu bite excuses, and subsides exhausted in his chair. He looks round and sees that all the other men are being waited noon : be perceives that it is "tbe cus tom of the country ;" that it proceeds. not from tbe paucity or the servants, but fiom a plentitade of female devo ion. If servants were wanting, then sorely the men would wait upon the ladies. He tells himself severely that when at Koine yonr behavior should be of the strictest Koman type ; he re minds himself that the first condition of good breeding is that you should explicitly conform to the usages of the society in which you find yourself, he will submit; but when the third and most beautiful daughter of the bouse presents bim with Uanngslat his feel ings are altogether to much for him and entirely overcome his good resolu tions, lie goes through the same Iran tic formula again, with the secret im uression that he is making a most ab ject fool of himself, plunges wildly and nepainngly at the comestibles and subsides into a limp and melancholy condition. He is like a china-shop, the girls think, and they hold firmly to the family crockery, aud the best glass. "They are dreadfully restless. die Eng landerP said a young cousin to me ; "see how quiet and well-behaved our gentlemen are aud wait on their turn." That was all the poorchivalrous young Hritoii got for his pains. Paius they were tortures, agonies. Ilia Owa Detlsr. A man of high intelligence, well edu cated, and of vigorous understanding in most things, was nevertheless given to the practice of self-tormenting in regard to the state of his health. He was fairly robust, ate and drank well, slept easily, walked with remarkable energy, was capable of service aud long-sustained mental labor and of much physical exertion. L nluckily for himself he began to study domestic medicine, and straightway a too active imagination led him to simulate in his owu case the symptoms ol almost every disease he had happened to read of. He was apopletic, paralytic, rheumatic; he had heart disease, his lungs were affected, tiis liver was congested : gout threatened bun ; his vision became en feebled : obscure sensations alarmed him as to the state of his brain : fevers of one kind or another were perpetual ly hatching in his system. The roan's life became a bnrdea and a misery to him ; he half-killed himself with ter ror, and nearly succeeded in getting poisoned by a succession ot varied and opposing remedies. At last he was cured. Reading the symptoms of a condition from which it is physiologically impossible that men should sutler, he found to his horror that each particular symptom was dis tinctly maiked in his own case. He went over the ground again and again ; each renewed examination only served to bring ont the symptoms with more alarming distinctness. Then the affair became too ludicrous ; a hearty fit of laughter dissipated not only that par ticular ailment, but all the rest, and the sufferer was cured. English Von gregnttonalixt. Vlasaaw. Though many of us speak of this an cient Scotch city, comparatively few think of it as a place ot 000.000 inhabi tants. Its growth has, in its rapidity, resembled that of one of our estern cities, for a centnrv ago it had a popu lation of alraut 40,0110. A correspondent of the Louisville lourirr-Jonrnal, speaking of this remarkable growth. savs : "Iron, coal, cotton and the Clyde have made Glasgow. No one who sees the Clyde for the first time as be jour neys turongh Dumfries and Lanark a tiny stream, scarcely larger than one of our numberless American creeks could suppose that ere it has run a course of fifty or sixty miles the largest iron steamers in the world would be built upon its banks and launched upon its waters. Fed by mountain streams and deepened by dredges, from the Broomeden downwards, it expands be low the Victoria Bridge, into a broad and deep stream, capable of floating the largest war and merchant ships. Unlike most other cities in the United Kingdom, Glasgow does not depend upon a single industry for her prospe rity. In woolen manufactures she has hitherto been a competitor with Brad ford, and Leeds, and Iludderstield ; in cotton with Manchester. No city makes more chemicals, while in ship building neither the lyne nor the Mer sey can come into competition with her. The Clyde, from I lovan and Pat rick to Dumbarton, with the deafening noise from thousands of clanging ham mers, bears witness to the industry which has made Clyde-built iron ships famous all over theworld. Keep the Teas as frosa laklndaeas. Words are sometimes wounds. Not very deep wounds always, and yet they irritate. Speech is unkind sometimes when there is no unkindness in the heart; so much the worse that needless wounds are inflicted; so much the worse that unintentionally pain is caused. Keep it from falsehood. It is so easy to give a false coloring; to so make a statement that it may convey a meaning different from the truth. while yet there is an appearance of truth, that we need to be on our guard. There are very many who would shrink from telling a lie.who vet indulge them selves in such inaccurate or exaggera ted or one sided statements, that they really come under the condemnation of those whose "lying lips are an abom ination to the Lord." Keep it rrom slander. The good reputation of others should be dear to us. Sin should not be suffered to go unrebuked ; but it should be in accordance with the Scrip ture method, "Go and tell him of his fault twixt thee and bim alone." And it should be borne in mind that what is too often considered as merely barm less gossip runs dangerously near, if it does not pass, tbe confines of slander. A reputation Is too sacred to be made a plaything of, even if the intent be not jnaUcious. .Sural Xeto Yorker. Tae Talae af Jewele aad IwrlaslUes. Collectors must be curiously-minded people. One can understand a man collecting pictures or jewels which are really beautiful in themselves. - Old armor and old weapons are interesting, and so. to a certain extent, is anv old relic. Bat the passion for old china and old books, and other such things, is irrational and perfectly inexplicable. The etlitio prineep of Aristotle is worth any price almost that its fortunate possessor may choose to ask for it, bat it is no better for any practical purpose than the second or Basle edition of 1550, which can be bought anywhere for a few shillings. This being so, the only possible value of an eilitio jrrinrrp can bave mast be due- to the fact that very few other collectors have it ; and tbe man who bays anything, whether it be a book or a teacup or a Chinese monster, simply because other people have not got it, must have more money than he well knows what to do with. In a rich country, however, there will always be such people, and a pro fessional dealer and collector can eas ily make a fortune out of them. Jew ellers, it is said, do this to a very great extent, for people have already begun to put artificial prices upon precious stones with reference to their rarity and not to their intrinsic beauty. A diamond with a fly in it, if there was such a thing, would be of great interest to the chemist, as settling the question of the circumstances under which the diamond originally crystallized. But, apart from this, it would fetch literally any price as a curiosity. Fashion, too, baa a good deal to do with these things. Some few years ago the. Princess of Wales took to wearing sapphires, and a demand for sapphire oarures sprang np at once. Sapphires, of course, rose enormously in value, but they have since, we believe, falleu al most to their old price. It is said that the next stone likely to come into fashion will be tbe jacinth, and that, forseeing tbe probability of this, the leading London jewelers are "making a corner," as Americans call it. in ja- ciutbs, by buying them np and patting them bv. in the serene assurance tbat the money thus laying idle will ulti mately earn its interest and a good deal more. When the time comes at last iacintbs will be no prettier than they are at present, but their value will, for the time being, be doubled or quadrupled. London Examiner. Enlafsl Welsbsaea la the railed It late. Between the arrival of the first Welsh settlers in Pennsylvania and the com mencement of the Kevolution in ninety-four years had passed away; the emigration from Wales had been slow but constant; and in New England, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, and especially in the city of Philadelphia, many of the Welsh had become celebrated as mer chants, lawyers, doctors, clergymen, teachers and statesmen. e are justly proud to name among these Thomas Jefferson, and among the signers of the Declaration, besides the illustrious author, we find the names of the fol lowing Welshmen : Stephen Hopkins, William Williams, William Floyd, Francis Lewis, Button Gwynett, Lewis Morris, Kobert Morris. In that pro tracted struggle many of the elsh covered themselves with glory on the battle-held. Others, by their generous contributions, rendered enective aid Kobert Morris, a rich banker of Phila delphia, by his unbounded liberality and great skill as a financier gave the young republic invaluable assistance in its davs of agonv and strife. But "the tribulations of those days" had a de pressing influence on the Welsh churches. The congregations were often scattered, and the organizations abandoned. Atlantic Jlvnthly. Beaas la a Barrel. The Lowell (Mass) Courier savs: "One day last week a party in a wholesale country produce store in this city pro posed a guessing match in regard to the number of pea-beans in a barrel of that vegetable, there were several grocers in the store and their estimates varied Irorn 40,000 to 4,000,000, all giving wild guesses. It was ascertained that there are about atiC.OOO pea-beans in a full barrel; this result being obtained bv counting the number of beans in a lound weight, and multiplying that by the number of pounds in the barrel. This of course would give only an ap proximate number, as the figures lor each pound will very probably vary slightly, and tbe stated number ol pounds In a barrel may also vary. A gentleman of an advanced mathematical education who happened in was asked to guess the number or beans. lie reached a result by measuring one bean, and then figuring how many of the beans could be put in the barrel, tie placed the number in the barrel at 2,000 less than the result obtained by tne easier method of calculation, and his figures may be even more correct than those by the loose method." Ckaraeter. The character of a man's life affects thousands besides himself. Wickedness cannot be kept inside of a man's heart any more than stench can be kept in the gutter where it is generated. It spreads abroad and mingles with the air of the whole street, and all who pass the spot must breathe of its tainted odor. There is a moral atmosphere in which we all live aud to which we all contribute some ingredient. We spread contagion through it or we make it pure and healthy. We cannot remain by ourselves any more than the drop of water can remain by itseir when it is fallen into the stream. We become a part of the whole and tbe whole is af fected by the part. Sin is contagious, and therefore we bave no right to har bor It In our hearts. Impropriety is a crime not alone against ourselves, not alone against God, but also against mankind. Tbe voice of the entire race is lifted in protest against the crime and the criminal. Every day is a day of judgment, and the moral sense of the whole world pronounces condemnation upon every man that doeth evil. (foUlen fiule. frleaela. i uric aiv iiicuun w uv am uivjuus only for the hour, friends for the noon- ..iT ... .1 a i 1 tine ana tne nooa ; tney nave no reai rooting, as you discoerif your horizon gets clouded over and foul weather comes in place of fair, if your rushing waters run dry and your goodly ves- c. I otra a th. tMMUh ThBA are the parasites of life, the clinging ,w am) ma. Ha attMancrlA thnm before they die. And there are the real menus, wuo, u you get into iiou ble, stick closer to you than a brother, .nil m-h, Mil. aj1 .a 1 ,MitJWi tA ftllOW that they are of pure gold all through. But this kind is apt to be a little stiff i -.t i...n thinn trn well with you, and yon feel it rather hard that yon must be in sorrow or distress be fore you can get tne starcn out oi mem, i .n,,iii Mttmr ihf wata more fa- jju " suu . - j milar now, if less devoted then con tent to discount tne cnances ot tne iu ture for the advantage and pleasure of the present. i lorrair coixxs. Only A Fly. Has any ever told you of the wonders of a fly's body T I sup pose not, else yon would never think of finding pleasure in hurting me. God has given me wings, which are so light, and nicely fitted to my body, that 1 can fly or walk about just as I please. I can spread them out, and fly away like a little bird ; or I can fold them up, and take a walk wherever I choose. I can walk with my feet np, and my head down, just as well as on the table or on the floor. It is all the same to me. Perhaps you wonder why I do not fall. My feet are so formed, that I can press them firmly to the ceiling, and walk about there without any fear. Bat you are too young yet to know how I do that. 1 only tell yon of it now, that you may begin to know how much there is to learn in all the things that God has made. Have yon ever noticed how quickly I fly away when you try to catch me. I can see you. little boy or girl, even when you try to hide your hand behind me. Perhaps yon would like to know bow this can be. iet me tell yon. Yon think that I bave only two eyes. like yon ; but I have a great many, though they do not move about like yours. Each of the eyes that yon see in my head is made up of a great many little eyes. There are several hundred of them, though each of them is only a little point. Wit! Ii some of them I look ont before me. and with others I look behind. It is with those that 1 look behind that I see yoa when you pat yoar hand be- uiuu we. I hope that I have told yoa enough to make you feel that yon should not try to hurt a little ny. The Company I'lan. Here's some thing, my dears, that the editor of St. Michola said long ago to a crowd of youngsters. As 1 never heard of its doing them any special harm, it occurs to me that it will not hart my little folks to hear it : Did yon ever notice what an amiable, pleasant feeling steals over yoa when yoa are visiting and on your "good be havior l"1 how willing yoa are to over look anything that interferes with your comfort J how anxious to please, and how ready to take an interest in all that is going ont At theoe times yonr face lights np, your voice grows sweet and cheerful, your very move ments become giaceful. "What plea sant persons these friends are P yoa say to yourself ; and they very natu rally consider yoa quite winning and delightful. So far, so good. It is just as it should be. Of coarse, when yoa go home yoa take all your pleasaut ways with yoa. If these friends who have known you but a little while, and who care for yoa merely as friends, have power to brighten and sweeten yoa, certainly when you return to yonr own relatives, who love you so much more, you'll be brighter and sweeter than ever. Is it so T Perhaps it is. But if, by any chance, it should not be if, for instance, you choose to let yourself be sour or indifferent at home, thinking any tone of voice, any glum look, and any careless word good enough for "the folks" I'm soTy for yoa, that's all- Yoa lose a great deal of comfort, and yoa miss a great opportunity ot making o:hers happy. But it is never too late to improve. Suppose yon try the company plan. lie polite, 'sunny, aud charming at home. Commence to morrow no, to-day. The home life it only a visit, after all, for nofamilv can remain together always. St Sirnoltit. A Baly't Soliloquy.l am here. And if this is what they call the world, I don't think much of it. It's a very flannelly world, and smells of parego ric awfully. It's a dreadful light world, too, and makes me blink, I tell yoa. And 1 don't know what to do with my hands; I think I'll dig my fists in my eyes. No, 1 won't. I'll scrabble at the corner of my blanket and chew it np, and then I'll holler ; whatever happens I'll holler. And the more paregoric they give me the louder I'll yell. That old nnrse puts the spoon in the corner of my mouth in a very uneasy wav, and keeps tasting my milk herself all the while. She spiit snuff in it last night, and when 1 hollered, trotted me. That came of being a two days' old baby. There's a pin sticking in me now, and if I say a word about it, I'll be trotted or fed ; and 1 would rather have catnip tea. I'll tell yon who lam. I found out to-day. 1 heard folks say, ''Hush, don't wake np Emmeline's ba by;" and I suppose that pretty white faced woman over on the pillow is Eainieline. No, 1 was mistaken; a chap was in here jast now, and wanted to see Bob's paby; and looked at me and said, "I was a funny little toad, and looked just like Bob." He smelt of cigars. 1 wonder who else I belong to. Yes. there's another one that's "Gam ma." "It a as Gamma's baby, so it was." 1 declare I do not know who I belong to; but I'll holler, and maybe I'll find out. There comes Snuffy with catnip tea. I'm going to sleep. I won der why my hands won't go where I want them to. Sanitarian. A Chihr$ Uearen. Children of de licate natures are always fond of birds. A beautiful child of mine, who died at six years of age, was an instance of this. Seeing his end approaching I said to bim: "Are you willing to die, dear, and go to heaven f He put his little arms around my neck and was silent for many minutes, while my heart sank within me. At length he lifted his face and asked : "Are there birds and flowers in heav en, mamma V "Yes, my darling, all that is beauti ful here, we shall find there." "Then I am willing to go. In a few hours his pure spirit had passed away. Oar Dumb Animal. A little boy whose grandmother re cently died, has a new sled, but as there is no snow he is really worse off than it he did not bave if. Yesterday be remarked to his moth er: "I wonder why it don't snow V Receiving no answer to this, he con tinned : "God could make it snow if he wan ted to, couldn't he ?" "Yes." said the mother. "I wonder why he don't I he added somewhat pettishly. Then suddenly brightening np he said: "1 guess he is so busv making grand'- nia an angel that he ain't got no time to UO 11." latfiaa Cera. It is generally supposed that onr In ;an ...rt . nr maize, is a native of i !...;. kMn fnnnd among the Indians at the time of the discovery of the country. But nothing is known in regard to iu native country oejena .i;Mn it h&jt never been found growing wild anywhere. The Japanese seem to have been well ac quainted with maize for a long time nothing until of late years; but wheth er they procured it originally irom America, or the Americans from Japan, will nrnhahlv remain one of the Hn- solved maizy, problems. ATW3 Hf B&H7 Florida has 200,000 Northern visi tors. Reverdy Johnson's life was Insured for $100,000. California has a population of about 3,000 Chinese boys. Mr. Beecher has engaged his usual quarters at Twin Mountain House for next Summer. Portland, Oregon, has shipped di rectly to Liverpool in one cargo 90,000 bushels of wheat. Ablngton, Mass., has not a pauper and the Selectmen have advertised the almhouse for sale. There are nearly 200 French flat houses in New York, aud many more in process of erection. Prairie du Chien has an artesian well 717 feet deep which throws 30,000 barrels of water a day. The Pennsylvania railroad com pany has reduced the rates of passen ger fares to three cents a mile. All the employes of the Concord (N. U.) Railroad bave been compelled to sign the temperance pledge. Four hundred gamblers are collec ted at Cheyenne, ready for the opeuing season in the Black Hills country. Massachusetts expects to send three ex-Governors to Congress next year, and then have a number over. There are 21,253 Baptist churches in the United States, with 13,117 min isters, and a total membership of 1,815, 000. A bill has been introduced into the Legislature of Mississippi to make edu cation compulsory throughout the State. Three hundred and thirty-seven American hotels were burned in 1875, aud not a hotel clerk was so much as scorched. In 1S74 only one person was killed on all the Massachusetts railroads while 76 were killed by accidents in the city of Boston. Another of Boston's revered land marks has got to go. The lease of the old State House expires July 1st, and it is to be torn down. Among an invoice of old paper stock received at a Norwich paer mill recently was $.V),000,000 in can celled United States bonds. That New Capitol at Altanv, If it is ever finished, will cost $12,000,000. Yet viewed from an artistic point of view, it is pronounced a failure. The butcher's bill of a single hotel in New York city averages $2,"00 a week at this season of the vear. It av erages $1,000 a week in the summer. The amount of deposits in the Mas sachusetts savings banks is $237,848, iTM, an increase of $20,000,000 in 1875. The average rate of dividend was 6 3-20 per cent. Trov, New York, manufactures collars for the whole country. It is said that there is not a linen collar fac tory in successful operation outside of that city. It is generally believed that the stock of the Direct Cable company has passed into the hands ot the Anglo American Cable and Western Union Telegraph companies. The boring for mineral water con tinues on the camp meeting ground at Hound Lake, Saratoga county, and a depth of 835 feet has been reached, but no mineral water found. There will probably be more ice housed on the Kennetec than ever be fore. At least 300,000 tons have al ready secured a sale, requiring 2,000 vessels to carry it, or ten a day during the shipping season. The Washington correspondent ot the Virginia Chronicle says that the family of ex-Senator Nye are in abso lute destitution, and that the ex-Senator is in the Flatbush Asylum in a state oi hopeless imbecility. A bill is now before the Kansas legislature and likely to become a law offering a bounty of five dollars a bushel for collecting and destroying locust eggs, and sixty cents for every bushel of unfledged locusts destroyed. David R. Standish, who was the olilest locomotive engineer iu the United States, has been placed on the retired list by the Boston and Provi dence Railroad Company, in whose em ploy he had been since 1842. Silver mining is likely to become popular in Texas. Cher one million acres of land bave been located iu Mason county in three months. Two shafts are already sunk,and one is yield ing at the rate of $18 per ton. A reverend divine, being accused of negligence in his calling, aud styled "an unfaithful shepherd," Irom scarcely ever visiting bis flock, defenud himself by saying that he was always with them at "shearing time." The task of providing for the Queen's children and the Duke of Cam bridge, not including salaries drawn by any of them because of offices they hold In the civil, military or naval ser vice, has already cost the British pub lic $8,575,000. At a New York matinee lately in a fashionable theatre, by actual count there were 389 velvet dresses In the or chestra seats and boxes and 511 cream colored hats in the house, and all hut twenty of them supporting ivory white feathers. Tbe eleven blast furnaces in Alle gheny County, Pa., bave a capacity of 237,000 tons o'f pig iron per year, ami average of 21 ,545! tons for each fur nace; the fifty furnaces In the Ihighr Valley have an annual capacity of 533, 600 tons, 10.C72 tons for each furnace. The meanest man in America now appears to be John Stevens, of Logans port, Ind. He inherited an estate of $12,000 two years since, and spent it in riotous living, and now sues the trus tees for its value, alleging that he was not of age when the property was turned over to him. Schenectady, X. Y., will send to the Exposition groups of .life-size wax statuary among which will be forty eight figures in full Continental cos tume, representing the signing of the Declaration of Independence; also, figures representing the death of W ar ren, the capture of Ticonderoga, and the treason of Arnold. The little town of Batavia, Cler mont county, Ohio, which contains only seven hundred and fitty inhabi tants, is a good place for raising office holders, ft 1872 forty-three of its cit- t wam ff lot-. I nttfer- and at this , time twenty-four are employed in Washington, and some others hold gov ernment offices elsewhere. TTnatAt, trr . .mall cltv. and a pro vincial one' at that, has many clubs. Among them are the Athenian, Papy- .j Aiviilln Crnnmonveillh. Bovlstou. Orpheus, Art, Somerset, L inon, Tem ple, central, iremoiii, auuuia, xiru, 'I'KkmiI,. V vn i n rr SatiinlAV- Massa chusetts. Banks, and Agricultural; while those patronized by ladies are the New England Woman's, the Satur day Morning, the Brains club, and the Young Ladies' club.